Showing posts with label Troy NY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Troy NY. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Sleuthing the Kirkpatricks

It has been a very long time since I have posted. I have been researching, but apparently haven't felt like blogging in a long time.

With that being said, I am meeting with a DNA cousin tomorrow and I brought a ton of unlabeled photographs to share with him in the hopes he might recognize some people. I have also been posting photos on the Kirkpatrick Genealogy Facebook page, hoping maybe someone there might know the people. Alas, it seems that there are many Kirkpatricks which came to this country in the mid-1700s, but mine came over in about 1831, and I have yet to meet a Kirkpatrick cousin from that larger group. Whereas my family stayed in Troy, NY, the rest of the Clan seems to have headed south and west.

BUT, the person I am meeting tomorrow is absolutely a Kirkpatrick cousin and from the Troy, NY area. So I know he is family.

I recently had an "aha!" moment when I realized that I recognized a house in the background. Guessing on the children, I assumed the photograph was from 1900 and I looked at the census for that address and sure enough, the people I assumed were in the photograph were all living in the house together at the time.

The first photograph below I know all the people.

Nellie Jane Kirkpatrick Lee with sons Herbert "Herb" and Horace "Harry"

This photograph was labeled - and I do know the house - Kirkpatricks after the porch and fence taken.


And this third photograph was the mystery. But based on the known children above, the 1900 Census, and other photographs of the house, I think this must be Martha Jane Wright Kirkpatrick holding Harry with little Herb standing in front.


As of a few years ago, the house looks like this:





The house has seen some better days.

This was a house in my family for generations. Through the census documents, one can see first that Charles and Nellie Jane lived there with her brother and sister-in-law, and Nellie and Oliver are in and out a couple times, and then Martha Jane's father is there with them for a while before his death, and then Oliver and Nellie raise their children there. Must have been a sad day when the house was sold and Olive moved with her parents Oliver and Nellie to Bronxville, NY.

Monday, August 22, 2016

Recent Irish Immigrant buys real estate - Thomas L. Wright

Gosh, so pathetic.... I did this research a while ago, but never put anything into context. I remember being delighted while searching through the dusty tomes in the Troy City Hall or Recorder of Deeds or some such place - see, sad, I don't even know where I was. What a terrible researcher I am.

I know from directories of the time that he lived at 301 4th Street. Here is an image from Google maps of the house as it appeared when the Google car went through the neighborhood.



In book 139, page 497 I took the following notes:

Thomas and Jane Wright
sold for $1,700
West side of 4th Street between Adams and Jefferson
certain map of the south part of the city of Troy made by Jared S. Weed for the Warren Farm Company - 11.17.1847
as lot 67
25' wide
120' long



I see that Prospect Park was not given to the city of Troy until 1902, so should we assume that the Warren Farm Company owned that land where the Park currently exists? Was the Warren Farm Company also the Warren Family, as mentioned at the Prospect Park website?
Prospect Park is a city owned park centrally located within the City of Troy. One of three major parks in the City. The park consists of approximately 80 acres of land conveyed by the Warren Family to the City of Troy by deed dated December 23, 1902. Prospect Park opens each season in early April and remains open through early November.

I found an extensive biography of the Warren Family of Troy here. Obviously very well-to-do. They sound a bit like that other Oliver Lee mentioned in a previous post here.

What a time to live, eh? Obviously it was not easy, but don't these stories make it sound like it *was* easy to make a fortune?

More notes, though with less information...

Book 60, Page 129 (so isn't this an earlier purchase of property?)
Thomas Wright with
Francis M. Mann, John P. Cushman Jacob

(What could that mean? I think I may have looked those people up in the Troy directory and I *think* they were lawyers or some such, so maybe Thomas *did* hitch his wagon to other up and coming people in town.)

Book 111, page 165
Thomas L. Wright
West side of 4th street between Adams and Jefferson
Lot 67
boarded by an alley

What was I telling myself? My notes don't seem helpful, do they? Argh!

Saturday, August 20, 2016

A Little Exploration in to Thomas L. Wright

My knowledge of the Civil War is significantly limited. Only as I research family does small snippets come into focus. I am Googling places and battles and maps as I am reading the discombobulated memoirs of Thomas L. Wright. I hadn't realized, for example, that he signed up almost immediately after the shelling of Fort Sumter. Thomas must have felt very strongly about it. The man was a recent immigrant from Northern Ireland. The man was middle aged! (No disrespect intended.) So what was it that he felt strongly about? Keeping the nation together? Or was he more about Civil Rights and the abolition of slavery? What motivated the man?

His memoirs are very discombobulated, but he writes:
From Washington we march on Monday to Brightwood in Md. There we encamped for three weeks. We received orders about 2 o’clock P.M. to march for Bulls run, when within a short distance of that place we met the retreating forces from that disastrous battle. They informed us that the Union forces had met with a serious defeat.  



I know that Thomas registered (is that the right word?) in April 1861. He was mustered in in June 1, 1861, in Troy, NY. Obviously, he made his way with the 30th NY Infantry to Washington, DC. How long did that take? I don't know where Brightwood, Maryland is... but there is a Brightwood neighborhood in DC. And then it seems to be about 13 hours of continuous marching to get to Bull Run, VA.

So, time in upstate NY with his new regiment. A week? That brings us to June 8th or something. Marching to Washington? Wagons? Trains? Trains, probably. (Maybe there will be a clue if I just keep reading.) So, in Washington by the 15th of June? At which point he marches to Brightwood and trains for 3 weeks... That chronology brings us to the first week in July, which makes sense. I wonder why it was important enough to him to mention that orders came at 2 pm? Does that mean they marched through the night?

I took this blurb from here, the website for the Civil War Trust.

Though the Civil War began when Confederate troops shelled Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, the war didn’t begin in earnest until the Battle of Bull Run, fought in Virginia just miles from Washington DC, on July 21, 1861. Popular fervor led President Lincoln to push a cautious Brigadier General Irvin McDowell, commander of the Union army in Northern Virginia, to attack the Confederate forces commanded by Brigadier General P.G.T. Beauregard, which held a relatively strong position along Bull Run, just northeast of Manassas Junction. The goal was to make quick work of the bulk of the Confederate army, open the way to Richmond, the Confederate capital, and end the war.

The morning of July 21st dawned on two generals planning to outflank their opponent’s left. Hindering the success of the Confederate plan were several communication failures and general lack of coordination between units. McDowell’s forces, on the other had, were hampered by an overly complicated plan that required complex synchronization. Constant and repeated delays on the march and effective scouting by the Confederates gave his movements away, and, worst of all Patterson failed to occupy Johnston’s Confederate forces attention in the west. McDowell’s forces began by shelling the Confederates across Bull Run. Others crossed at Sudley Ford and slowly made their way to attack the Confederate left flank. At the same time as Beauregard sent small detachments to handle what he thought was only a distraction, he also sent a larger contingent to execute flanking a flanking movement of his own on the Union left.

Spectators at Bull RunFighting raged throughout the day as Confederate forces were driven back, despite impressive efforts by Colonel Thomas Jackson to hold important high ground at Henry House Hill, earning him the nom de guerre “Stonewall.” Late in the afternoon, Confederate reinforcements including those arriving by rail from the Shenandoah Valley extended the Confederate line and succeeded in breaking the Union right flank. At the battle’s climax Virginia cavalry under Colonel James Ewell Brown “Jeb” Stuart arrived on the field and charged into a confused mass of New Yorkers, sending them fleetly to the rear. The Federal retreat rapidly deteriorated as narrow bridges, overturned wagons, and heavy artillery fire added to the confusion. The calamitous retreat was further impeded by the hordes of fleeing onlookers who had come down from Washington to enjoy the spectacle. Although victorious, Confederate forces were too disorganized to pursue. By July 22, the shattered Union army reached the safety of Washington. The Battle of Bull Run convinced the Lincoln administration and the North that the Civil War would be a long and costly affair. McDowell was relieved of command of the Union army and replaced by Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan, who set about reorganizing and training the troops.

I guess we know that the 30th NY Regiment was not the New Yorkers mentioned above.... And the safety of Washington, is that Arlington Heghts, mentioned by Thomas?

Friday, August 12, 2016

Getting closer to answers (of as yet unasked questions)

Another estate spoken of in the newspapers.... This time for Berdella Doring, the widow of Joseph C. Doring, a jeweler of Troy, NY.

I have several photographs and mentions of a Berdella in all my family stuff. I have photographs of the Lees in Mr. Doring's garden, for example. I wish I had them neatly labeled on my computer to share within this post. Not to mention to look at, just in case more clues can be had.

Take a look to this post which has a photograph of Berdella with Margaret and Olive. Herb mentions giving her one of his photographs here. And I suspect Berdella Ewig of York, PA is also in that photograph shown in the above post. I guess that is Berdella's daughter, Berdella.  What an unusual name. I guess now I can do some research on that family! I don't think I knew Berdella and Mr. Doring were together. Yay!

For a better look at the article, check here.


Mrs. Doring and Ada Sherman


Sisters Ada and Nellie Jane Kirkpatrick were kindly left a little something from Berdella Doring. How thoughtful of her. (I am currently wearing a beautiful, but worthless, topaz ring that was Nellie Jane's... I wonder if this was purchased at Mr. Doring's store. Seems likely, perhaps, if Oliver bought it for Nellie Jane.)



Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Nellie Jane and the Red Cross

Seems that Nellie Jane did her part to help the War effort. I wish I knew what it was that they were sewing. I wonder what she might have done to help during The World War, other than worry about Herb. (I hope I didn't transcribe some hint in Herb's letters but not remember it right now.)

The Red Cross and Nellie Jane

I wonder if Nellie Jane was a good sewer, or if, like me, no matter how hard she tried, her stitches (were necessary for the cause), but crooked and uneven. Was she ever found weeding a Victory Garden? Did she cultivate worms? Did she worry about germs? Would she think her grandchildren are spoiled and obnoxious? Or would she be fiercely proud of her grandson who accelerated his time in high school so that he might serve in the Navy? Was she thankful that he was still a little young to be in the throes of the fighting?

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Furniture left to the Lees in Kate Clexton's Will

What hints can we take from this article? First off, weird that this is published in the Troy Record newspaper. I guess the value of estates is public information, but still... now we know that the Lees have some furniture that someone thought was significant enough (significant, but not necessarily valuable... admired?) to bequeath. I wish I knew what/which pieces they were, as then maybe I could ween some of "the Tyranny of the Heirloom" pieces I am now contemplating reupholstering! But, if they have lasted this long, I should save them - better than the crap made in China we buy nowadays, right?

We know this is Nellie Jane because her daughter is mentioned directly after her. Too bad I have not written anything about Margaret - though she is mentioned in Herb's letters.

Who are these people and why are they leaving my family furniture?

But who is Kate M. Clexton? Merely a family friend? A neighbor? Could she have been a relative?

Doing a search on Ancestry.com she pops up in a tree created by Garth Burger, though I can't see anything. His information suggests she neither married nor had children. In 1865, at the same age as her cousin, 11, she was living with her aunt and uncle in Albany, NY. She was either born in Missouri or Indiana. By 1910 she is living alone - or at least as the head of household - and working in the Collar business. Of course this was a huge business in Troy and Olive worked for Cluett-Peabody her entire life. We find Kate again, as a collar worker and living as the head of household, in Troy in 1925.

In the 1940 census, she still lives as the head of household, though she no longer claims a profession. She does have a little more education than others on the same page - she claims 2 years of High School education.

So, was she gay? Was she fiercely independent or was she always sad she never had kids? Did she fight for women's suffrage as a young person? Was she so beautiful that she had so many suitors that she couldn't decide? Was she living in sin with the a man she met at work?

After contemplating my questions, I suspect she was a family friend. I can't find her in the Findagrave database, unfortunately. I just sent a message to Garth. Hopefully he will respond and have lots of information about his relative Kate Clexton.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Researching Oliver Lee in the Troy, NY Newspapers

Clearly being a letter carrier was a huge part of Oliver Lee's identity - in stark contrast with the Millenial archetype who lives for balance and recreation. Of the lucky times we find Oliver in newspapers, they are all about his profession. A couple articles have his image, which is always a tremendous find.

I have the fifty-year gold card mentioned in this article. Can I express in no uncertain terms how grateful I am for my great aunts that they saved these things? The card is about the size of a modern day business card. It is not made of gold... gold tone, shall we say?

I need to learn what is available at the National Archives for information on postal carriers. Someday maybe I will follow that lead...

Too bad there is no more information about Oliver in this article... now we move on to planning the dinner dance. I wonder if his daughters were in attendance along with wife Nellie Jane? Did he invite his sons to come? I believe he was living in Yonkers with his daughter Olive when this celebration took place. How dressed up did he get? Did the family agonize over what they would wear? Was this a big deal because they were humble people? Did he buy his wife a corsage so she would look pretty and feel special as he got his recognition? Did he have trouble walking? Was he called to a stage or merely to stand at his place? Did he end up drunk at the end of the meal? (Man, I am cruel, aren't I? But I am just imagining the possibilities.)

Postal Men Honor Oliver Lee
Add caption
This next photograph appeared in the paper 6 years after Oliver's death. I guess it was in the paper because it was 50 years after the photograph was taken. I wish I knew how to highlight Oliver in the photographs for you, my readers.

Who submitted this photograph to the newspaper? Is there a letter carrier archive in Troy? Is there one proud letter carrier who has saved all this stuff? Man, I really need to spend more time on this.

Oliver Lee as a postal carrier in 1900

And there is absolutely no way to see him in this group, but he is called out by name, so someone liked him enough to do so.

Oliver Lee was clearly active and proud of his profession

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Olive Lee is accepted to college

We are talking going to college in 1922 for a woman. I am very happy about it. As we have already mentioned, Herb was the first to "attend" college in my family, at least the Kirkpatrick/Wright side. I assume the Lee side, too. But Olive graduated! I should imagine her parents were exceedingly proud. I am, 94 years later.



So, no long essays, I guess. What a difference a century makes for applying to college!

We see that Secretary Doris L. Crockett signed Olive's acceptance letter. It seems that Secretary Crockett became Dean Crockett and has an award named after her:
Crockett Medal Award

(Dean Doris L. Crockett award for distinguished service)
Criteria:
To be considered for the Crockett Medal Award, the highest award given by the Alumnae Association, candidates should meet the following qualifications:
Should have shown loyalty to and consistent interest in the College.
To have demonstrated outstanding achievement in a chosen career field or in significant community service.
Be recognized for having high level of integrity of character.

Monday, February 29, 2016

Olive Lee Retires - February 29, 1968

I post Olive's announcement forty seven years after she announces her retirement after forty three years of service to Cluett Peabody & Company. She doesn't sound exactly thrilled at the company, which is a shame.

Just as an FYI, from wikipedia:

Cluett Peabody & Company, Inc. once headquartered in Troy, New York, was a longtime manufacturer of shirts, detachable shirt cuffs and collars, and related apparel. It is best known for its Arrow brand collars and shirts and the related Arrow Collar Man advertisements (1905–1931). It dates, with a different name, from the mid-nineteenth century and was absorbed by Westpoint Pepperell in the 1980s. The Arrow name is still licensed to brand men's shirts and ties.

The company manufactured shirts and collars in a historic building at 123 First Street in Leominster, Massachusetts.

The building was constructed in 1902 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

I have no idea what happened - did she break her leg/hip at work, hence the joke? Obviously she was at home for quite a while recuperating.

And who is 'we' she refers to? I know her mother, Nellie Jane, was living with her. Were sister Margaret and husband Myron living with her, as well? It seems she has moved with her mother to Bronxville by November of 1968.



I'm afraid I don't recall where I took these Cluett Peabody & Co. photos - I can't seem to recreate my search to give them credit. Oops. Could have been wikipedia or could have been the Rensselaer County Historical Society.






Olive is the third from the right in the back row.
The Cluett Peabody Ladies 


Olive is standing on the far left
Was this her retirement luncheon?

Thursday, January 14, 2016

New Orleans Cousins

I have fallen in love with New Orleans. There is something about the city which hits me viscerally. I have no way to explain it. And it's not the Creole or Cajun food or the jazz music particularly... it's the architecture and feel of the city. Wait, I need to amend that, as I love the Zydeco music!) I don't know what it is really, but I am very happy in New Orleans, but not for the reasons others may love NOLA.

You may understand, then, how excited I was to find a DNA connection with people born in New Orleans. Now I have fantasies that my DNA aligns to the city like a compass to magnetic north! I have not yet been able to connect their trees to my tree, but they also have Irish heritage and they have the Oliver name in their tree, as do I, through my 2nd great grandmother. Though my second great grandmother and her husband settled in Troy, NY, not Louisiana. So, where is the split? Did one of her brothers go to NOLA while she headed to NY? Or was the immigrant further up the tree?

I have communicated (and soon to meet) a fellow genealogist who is related the the wife of the man I believe to be the patriarch of the branch I am researching - so the younger generations tie us together, but we are not biologically related. She has not researched the Oliver family in New Orleans, but perhaps she can point me to some of the resources not yet available on Ancestry.com which can help me climb the tree. My new friend has been researching for 20 years.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

OMG - so much to research now....

I was researching a branch of the tree and I came across this article in the Troy Times Record - The Times Record, 7 Dec 1959, Mon, Pages 18 & 37 - on Newspapers.com.

How unbelievable to get a glimpse in to the history of my family as told by a cousin. Now I just need to find the article which she read which compelled her to write in to the Times Record in 1959.

And I have a lot of leads here which might help me understand. I mean, this might be a female line, but to know when the family arrived in Troy? How wonderful.



Sunday, September 13, 2015

William A. Kirkpatrick

I'm not sure where he might fit in my tree, but his death caught my eye so I did a tiny bit more research and found the follow article which I clipped from Newspaper.com.



We met William here. He is buried at Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, NY. Poor William was only 32 years old. What a tough way to go.


Saturday, September 12, 2015

A little Vacation for Herb in Aix Les Bains, France

Seems that Aix-les-Bains was/is quite a nice little resort town. Currently one can visit some of the sulfur baths here and the Casino here.


September 12, 1918
Dear Mother,

I’ve been here in Aix-les-Bains now six days, although this is the first time I’ve written you. I caught some sort of a rotten cold or la grippe or something on the way down – we were three days getting here – and up till yesterday I felt pretty rotten. I wasn’t seriously ill at any time but I certainly did feel all dragged out. Naturally my leave hasn’t been a very exciting affair. I’ve lounged around mostly and taken things easy so as to get better and today I feel quite myself again. Of course I went to the Doctor and he gave me some pills which seemed to help me. I also took several of the natural hot sulfur baths they have here and I think they helped to drive it out of me.

We didn’t have the good luck to get a good hotel, but drew a sort of second rate boarding house instead. Honestly the meals we regularly get at the front are much better. However, it’s been a relief to be in a really quiet place for one thing and the Y.M.C.A. has quite a few stunts and concerts to amuse the boys so it isn’t a bad place altogether. There are quite a few civilian visitors here – mostly women, but of course it’s nothing like it was before the war, when it offered summer attractions like those of Monte Carlo in the winter. My cold and general languid feeling kept me from going up the mountain here to look over at Mt. Blanc but I’m not losing any sleep over that.

I ran over Maxwell MacDowell here three or four days ago and have seen him several times since. We had a fine time talking over the good old days in the High School and swapping gossip about everyone we used to know. Kenneth Lavin from the ‘Burgh is also here and I had a nice long talk with him last night. He’s in the same Section with Herb Blake. There are quite a few Ambulance Service men here and I’ve seen a lot of the boys I knew in Allentown. We’ve had a fine time relating experiences.

Tomorrow we start back and will probably be back with the Section in a couple of days providing they’re still in rest billets. If they’ve moved we will of course have to follow them. I hope there’s lots of mail when I get there.

With love to all,
Your affectionate son,
Herb

We can see that Herb Blake and Kenneth served together in Section 630. Maxwell, however, is a different matter... He seems to have joined the Ambulance Corps while he was in Paris. Could that be right? Of course it could be.... I wonder why.











I have found Maxwell in the 1920 Census and he has no profession... which is unnerving. I hope he did not suffer from the war. WAIT! I have found another document - Maxwell was awarded the French Croix de Guerre and a silver star.

I took this description from wikipedia:
The 3/16 inch Silver Citation Star to the World War I Victory Medal was authorized by the United States Congress on 4 February 1919. A silver star was authorized to be worn on the ribbon of the Victory Medal for any member of the U.S. Army who had been cited for gallantry in action between 1917 and 1920. In 1932, the Silver Citation Star was redesigned and renamed the Silver Star and, upon application to the United States War Department, any holder of the Silver Citation Star could have it converted to a Silver Star decoration.



And now look what I have found... a passport photo of Maxwell.



What a handsome young man. It appears, if my research is correct, that he went on to be a lawyer, got married and had children. I'm pleased.

OK, And I just keep going... to answer my own question about this chap Maxwell... Look what I found with his passport application:





Thursday, September 10, 2015

You know what Makes Me Sad?

What makes me sad is knowing that Ada Kirkpatrick Sherman had only one child, Helen Sherman Ferguson, and Helen had only one child, William Arthur Ferguson, and he had no children. He is the end of that line. I recognize we have so many people on the planet and we certainly don't need more, but when my cousin died in 2010 he was the end of the mingling of histories and DNA.

When Ada and William got married, as announced here, they didn't know what their legacy would be... I pray that they were happy together.

I have a number of photographs of Ada's family. I wonder what happened to William's things when he passed. I feel blessed to have the photographs I do have in order to remember my cousins.

Helen was clearly a good friend to Olive and Margaret.

Helen Sherman Ferguson as a baby

Helen and baby William Arthur

Your verbose blogger and Helen Sherman Ferguson in 1999 in Glens Falls, NY

we have seen this photo before - Olive, Helen and Margaret on Lake George


Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Southern Adirondack Fiber Festival

This will happen on September 26th and 27th this year. (The card below is old! I had picked it up in 2014, but was unable to attend.)
I went in 2013, but not since. It is a small festival, but growing, I am sure.
Check out their web site to get more information.



The Washington County Fairgrounds are only 30 miles from Troy, NY - where Herb grew up.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

More Kirkpatricks at Oakwood Cemetery

OMG - I had no idea....

I just discovered a list of Oakwood Cemetery interments, 1851 - 1872. So easy to search through. I can find my earlier Kirkpatrick relatives... and all the others. And this lists parents of the deceased! What a gold mine!

So, my missing grave entries...

826 01/07/1856 Rachel Kirkpatrick Lansingburgh, N.Y. 17y 2m 7d Lansingburgh, N.Y. Consumption Andrew Kirkpatrick Jane Kirkpatrick A19

I can now tie her to her parents in Findagrave!

828 03/05/1858 James Kirkpatrick Lansingburgh, N.Y. 1y 7m Lansingburgh, N.Y. Inflamn of Bowels James Kirkpatrick Mary Jane Kirkpatrick ?

1250 05/03/1861 John J. Kirkpatrick Green Island, N.Y. 4y 2m Green Island, N.Y. Drowned John Kirkpatrick Sarah J. Kirkpatrick S106

1884 07/13/1864 Andrew Kirkpatrick Lansingburgh 22y Lansingburgh Fever Andrew Kirkpatrick Jane Kirkpatrick A19

This is the Andrew who died while serving in the Civil War.

2447 07/11/1866 Lotta Viola Kirkpatrick Green Island, N.Y. 1m 12d Green Island, N.Y. Whooping Cough Samuel E. Kirkpatrick Charlotte Kirkpatrick G133

2506 01/22/1850 Arthur (Snr) Kirkpatrick Ireland 58y Saratoga Coy, N.Y. Consumption Henry Kirkpatrick Mary Kirkpatrick K40

2507 02/15/1855 Margaret Kirkpatrick Ireland 70y Schuylerville, Sara. Co, N.Y. Old Age . . K40

2508 01/29/1847 Arthur Kirkpatrick Ireland 19y 7m Troy, N.Y. . Arthur Kirkpatrick Margaret Kirkpatrick K40

2870 01/06/1868 James Kirkpatrick Canada 38y Green Island, N.Y. Consumption Joseph Kirkpatrick Grace Kirkpatrick S106

2926 04/11/1868 Lillie Kirkpatrick Aspinwall W. S., Columbia, S.A. 4y Wilmington, Delaware Scarlet Fever Saml E. Kirkpatrick Charlotte Kirkpatrick G133

2978 07/11/1868 Lottie V. Kirkpatrick Green Island, N.Y. 1m 21d Green Island, N.Y. Hooping Cough Samuel E. Kirkpatrick Charlotte N. Kirkpatrick G133 Died July 11, 1866

3661(2) 07/22/1871 William A. Kirkpatrick Reading, N.Y. 32y 7m St. Albany, Vt. Railroad Accident John Kirkpatrick Jane Kirkpatrick N44

Monday, September 7, 2015

Oakwood Cemetery Section A, Lot 14 - Alex Kirkpatrick's family

Here we begin to see some married names of the daughters.... the Groesbecks and the Neals for example. William Groesbeck's parents - Gates B And Ella F. Kirkpatrick Groesbeck - are in this plot. We met cousin William with Herb here.

In Section A, Lot 11, bought by Alex Kirkpatrick on April 6, 1859, we have the following people:

Burial Number       Grave Number       Interments
827                                1                      Andrew Kirkpatrick, age at death 3-1/2 (This child was named                                                                  after his grandfather.)
7113                              2                      Jane Ann Kirkpatrick, age at death 22
12253                            3                      Alex Kirkpatrick age at death 59
13438                            4                      Morris K. Groesbeck, age at death 7 mos.
                                      5                      Maria w. FredK A Neal, age at death 23
19317                            6                      Agnes w. Alex Kirkpatrick, age at death 72
25639                            7                      Gates B. Groesbeck, age at death53
                                      8                      Morris E. Kirkptrick, age at death 75 (later moved to Section                                                                   13)
38281                            9                      Ella F. Groesbeck, age at death 70

I believe this Alex is the oldest brother of William, discussed here.

So, why did Alex buy this plot in 1859? His first child, Andrew, seems to have passed a couple years before. And where would this child have been buried first, if not here? No mention is made about a re-interment.

The second burial is Jane Anne Kirkpatrick and we know she was 22, but we know very little else about her. I assume she was not married... but, that could also be her married name.

The purchaser of the plot is the third to be buried there.

I had to look up: Mitral regurgitation is leakage of blood backward through the mitral valve each time the left ventricle contracts. A leaking mitral valve allows blood to flow in two directions during the contraction.










This is what I have put together in Ancestry.com about this group of people who share a burial plot. I am not saying it is right, but it's what I found and it can be found here for more review and analysis.



PS - Happy birthday, Frances!




Sunday, September 6, 2015

More Dead Kirkpatricks - the Plot thickens...

Well, I say 'the plot thickens,' but all I really mean is that we have another plot at the Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, NY with more people.

In Section H, Lot 168 , bought by William Kirkpatrick on July 28, 1873 (see Chas Kirkpatrick 246 Second Avenue) we have the following people:

Burial Number       Grave Number       Interments
4255                             1                       Hattie W. d. Wm Kirkpatrick d. 7/27/1873, Cholera Infantium, age at death 1y, 10m, 14d
4290                             2                       Freddie S. Kirkpatrick
3508                             2                       Still born of Kirkpatrick 4418
13437                           3                       Samil Kirkpatrick 58 (Samuel?) d. 8/13/1892, died of Bright's Disease, father Andrew Kirkpatrick, mother Jane Kirkpatrick, age at death 58
19420                           4                       Geo H Kirkpatrick 28 d. 1/9/1905, died of Pulmonary Tuberculosis, William Kirkpatrick, brother, age at death 28 and single
19459                           5                        Chas Kirkpatrick 42 d. 2/1/1905, died of Pulmonary
Tuberculosis, age at death 42
21023                           6                        Wm. Kirkpatrick 64 d. 12/4/1907, died of Chronic Bright's  Disease, Charles Kirkpatrick, brother, age at death 64 and married
29846                           7                       Lottie A. Kirkpatrick 73 d. 9/18/1923, died of Chronic Bright's Disease, daughter, Mrs. Emery Williams, age at death 73 and a widow

According to Wikipedia, Bright's Disease is:
a historical classification of kidney diseases that would be described in modern medicine as acute or chronic nephritis. It is typically denoted by the presence of serum albumin (blood plasma protein) in the urine and is frequently accompanied by edema and hypertension.

Poor William Kirkpatrick must have gone out and bought the plot because his beautiful daughter, Hattie W., died of Cholera Infantium the day before. My goodness, your daughter dies and then you have to go spend $37.68 for 304 SF of space in a cemetery. (I can't calculate today's equivalent because the CPI calculator I found doesn't go earlier than 1913.)

We see that two other children also passed, one still born and the other, Freddie S., we don't know, but we have each child's burial sequence... it looks as thought the still born child died first, and was then perhaps re-interred as burial number 4418 in this Kirkpatrick plot.

On the bottom of the form provided to me by the cemetery, it seems that the cemetery did ask for the names of the parents of the deceased before 1900; after 1900 a relative or friend's name could be provided.

William Kirkpatrick died in 1907, at which point I assume that Charles takes over the maintenance of the plot. It seems that it is Charles who informs the cemetery of the passing of William.

I think it is interesting that both George and Charles died of Pulmonary Tuberculosis only a couple weeks apart, though the records indicate that George was living in New York City when he died and Charles was living in Troy.

I found this on Harvard University Open Collections Program web site:

Tuberculosis, also known as “consumption,” “phthisis,” or the “white plague,” was the cause of more deaths in industrialized countries than any other disease during the 19th and early 20th centuries. By the late 19th century, 70 to 90% of the urban populations of Europe and North America were infected with the TB bacillus, and about 80% of those individuals who developed active tuberculosis died of it.

Causes of Tuberculosis

For most of the 19th century, tuberculosis was thought to be a hereditary, constitutional disease rather than a contagious one. By the end of the 19th century, when infection rates in some cities were thought by public health officials to be nearly 100%, tuberculosis was also considered to be a sign of poverty or an inevitable outcome of the process of industrial civilization. About 40% of working-class deaths in cities were from tuberculosis.

Robert Koch’s identification of the tuberculosis bacillus in 1882 helped to convince members of the medical and public–health communities that the disease was contagious. Preventing the spread of tuberculosis became the motivation for some of the first large-scale public health campaigns.

Sanatoria

The sanatoria movement, which began around 1880, was an attempt to cure tuberculosis naturally and to prevent its spread by moving patients into quiet environments, isolated from normal life, where the air was pure and freely circulating. Major sanatoria included those in Davos, Switzerland, and Saranac Lake, New York.

At a sanatorium, rest in the open air was of paramount importance, and special houses, porches, and cabins were built to allow easy access to the outdoors. Because the sanatorium cure involved long periods of separation from home, work, and family, it was sometimes avoided until the disease was well advanced. Cost also was a deterrent.

The sanatorium model was adapted for use in urban environments, and dispensaries, free public clinics for the poor, also advised patients using the sanatorium model. However, following the dispensary’s advice was often difficult because of urban living conditions. If a patient had the means and the opportunity, moving to a different, more beneficial climate was another way to attempt a cure.









Saturday, September 5, 2015

Sherman-Kirkpatrick wedding - March 1899

My goodness... you'd think listing all the gifts would just be an invitation to those who intend evil....

But, it's nice to know that there was "overwhelming proof of the popularity of the young people."

We can see Oliver and Nellie Jane Lee in attendance... the bride is her sister, after all. So, are Mr. & Mrs. Lee Oliver's parents? We will never know, will we? I have seen some Lees in the same Cemetery as Oliver and Nellie Jane are buried. Wow, is there any possibility that the Troy Lees are related to my Lees?

And who are all those other people? Obviously friends and family... so, who are family and who are friends? Perhaps I should go back to that church record in Philadelphia and look at some of the baptismal records; that might be give me a clue. I see all those people with the last name Wright - where do they fit in? They have to be related, right? Ada Belle's mother is a Wright...

Friday, September 4, 2015

Dead Kirkpatricks....

I am sorting through all my papers in my genealogy files and I am trying to figure some out and share them with the world in the hope that perhaps someone will be able to benefit from the investment.

I am uploading the documents a Facebook page for Kirkpatrick Genealogy - so fabulous to have that resource.

But, here they are for the world to see. I have not connected these people to my own family, just the larger clan....