Showing posts with label Ancestors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ancestors. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

An Unusual Death, A Darker Side of My Family Tree


 

Richard O. Allen and Charlotte Golden are my 2nd great-grandparents.  It took me years to know their story, though mysteries about Charlotte remain.  They spent much of their adult life in southwestern Indiana.  Richard was a farmer, having come there with his parents from Mason County, Kentucky, between 1816 and 1820.



                                           Wheat Field in Daviess County, Indiana.  Public Domain.

 

Charlotte was born in Ohio.  She moved to Daviess County, Indiana, with her parents between 1817 and 1821.   I didn’t know her parent’s names, and because of this, I did not know much else beyond her marriage to Richard. 

 

I soon learned that she had a previous family, as did Richard.  She was first married as a seventeen-year-old to Robert Akester, with whom she had 7 children.  Robert died in 1845, and by 1848 she had married Richard.  Richard had 3 daughters with his first wife.  These children appear on the 1840 census with him and his first wife but disappeared from any further census documents.

 

Many of Charlotte’s children from her first marriage would go on to live with Richard and Charlotte after their 1848 marriage.  Court documents show Richard as their guardian.  They had 3 children, one of whom died as a 7-year-old child.  My great-grandfather, William, was born to the couple in 1848.




                                       Marriage License of Richard O. Allen and Charlotte Golden

At some point, through communication with other researchers, I identified her family line.  Her father and stepmother met in Ohio and married.  Charlotte’s mother was Elizabeth Lynch.  Her family came to South Carolina from Ireland.  They had several indigo plantations along the Saluda River.  Elizabeth’s parents lived in central South Carolina.  Her father struggled with slavery.  He started attending a Quaker meeting house, though he never became a Quaker.  When his wife died, he married a Quaker woman.  They decided to take Elizabeth and her sibling to Ohio, a free state.  

 

Charlotte’s father came from Virginia to Ohio sometime before his 21st birthday.  He married her mother, Elizabeth, in 1811.  Not much is known about Elizabeth’s paternal grandparents, except they were in Ohio by 1809.

 

The story is a classic tale of families looking for new opportunities, seeking opening lands and the fertile soil of the Midwest.  Families who worked the land raised their children and died quiet deaths in their homes.  What I found instead is a much more profound and disturbing tale.  

 

By 1888, Richard and Charlotte were an elderly couple living on their farm, attended to by servants.  All the children were out of the home, most with their own families.  In 1887, my great-grandfather, William, was visiting his parents.  He died while there at the young age of forty-one.  He left a wife and 5 children living in southeastern Kentucky.

 

 A few months ago, a woman contacted me with questions about Richard’s first family.  She had also found a rather shocking newspaper article indicating that Richard had committed suicide by tying himself to a tree and slitting his own throat.  The article was unbelievable, but with further research, I found several other articles that shed light on the story.  



                                                Death Thought to be a Suicide.  Newspaper Archives.

 

One article reported on the coroner’s inquest.  The coroner believed Richard was somewhat feeble-minded and distressed because he had been accused of selling his vote in the November election.  The coroner thought he had committed suicide.  The final article, written months later, revealed the true story of what happened to Richard.  Charlotte had murdered her husband.  She described the entire circumstances first to her servants and then apparently to the police.   Charlotte recounted that because of an argument about their property, she drugged him, dragged him to a tree, tied him up, and finally slit his throat. 



                                              Confession Leads to a Story of Murder.  Newspaper archives.

 

I found no further articles.  Charlotte died in 1894, years after the murder.  She is buried in the cemetery with Richard, her son William, and many other family members.  I don’t know what happened to Charlotte after her confession.  She was seventy-seven years old when she murdered Richard.  I am also curious about William’s death.  He was in his early forties when he died.   Is there a story there?  I looked for any news articles about his death and found nothing.  The next step is to locate court records about the murder and perhaps information about William’s death.


                                                           Richard O. Allen Headstone.  Find a Grave

Originally published in Generations, a newsletter of the Southwest Colorado Genealogical Society.

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Western Surveyor, Map Maker, and Explorer, Hubert Page

Hubert DeForest Page is my great-grandfather.  He was born in 1865, three miles from the shores of Lake Ontario, in Richland, Oswego County, New York.  By age five, he had moved with his family to La Crosse, Wisconsin, where he attended school.  After high school, he started working in the office of county surveyor H. I. Bliss. This was to be the start of his career as a noted surveyor, map maker, and civil engineer.  


 

Hubert married my great-grandmother, Emma Kaiser, in Box Elder County, Utah, in 1890.  My great-grandmother was a seamstress, making her wedding dress and most of her other clothing.  She made a lovely dress for a dance she was going to attend and this is where she first met Hubert. 

      
                                             Emma Kaiser and Hubert Page Wedding
                                                          Collection of the author

Their union would lead this couple and their eight children on years of adventures around the western United States.  Their first son, Hubert, was born in Vancouver, Washington.  The rest of the children were born in Utah and Idaho.  The 1890 census shows Hubert as being a surveyor operating out of Brigham City.   

 

Returning from an 1892 survey for the government in the Blue and La Sal mountains of southeastern Utah, Hubert said, “he is deeply impressed by the future possibilities in the La Sals and predicts great mining activity in that section.”  An 1896 newspaper article from Salt Lake City notes the return of the family from California, “where they have been living for the past few months.”  Another article notes that H.D. Page was running the field crew in 1896, surveying a route for the Salt Lake and Pacific railroad into Deep Creek territory in western Utah, along the Nevada border.  This was a short spur route going into the gold fields surrounding Gold Hill. 


                                                        newspapers.com

In 1899, Hubert Page and James Lentz were subdividing the southeasterly most township in Utah.  While completing the survey in the area of the Four Corners, they discovered the original Chandler Robbin’s monument for the corner was broken and disturbed.  Page and Lentz marked and set a new stone in the original location of Robbin’s marker.

 

                                                           Four Corners Marker
                                                        Creative Commons Zero

By 1902, the family had moved to Salt Lake City, where Hubert was listed in several city directories as a civil, hydraulic, and mining engineer. He went to San Francisco in April to submit a bid for the grading of the Ogden-Lucin railroad cut-off west of the Great Salt Lake.  The work was expected to cost $350,000.  Later, in 1902, Hubert was surveying various mining claims in the Deep Creek region, where he had been involved in developing the spur railroad line.  He describes a find of a high-grade lead-silver deposit in the region of Dutch Mountain.


                                                                Hubert D. Page
                                                           Collection of the author

In June 1905, a large article was printed in the Salt Lake Herald regarding the opening of the Uinta Indian Reservation.  The article was technical in nature, referring to various legal descriptions of the area.  It was some time before I realized the map that was printed with the article was the same map I had framed on my wall.  He would later sell copies of the map to settlers for 55 cents. The map was made to facilitate opening Ute land to white settlers. 


                                                      Page Map of High Unitah
                                                        Collection of the author


 By 1906, Hubert was involved in a very large project called the Payette-Boise Irrigation Project.  This included building the New York Canal.  Hundreds of men and some women were employed on the project. Total costs for the project were expected to exceed $7,800,000.  Funding for this project had always been problematic.  The original private developers ran out of money, and the federal government did not pay their bills in a timely manner.  My great-grandfather had to get some of his payment through a special congressional bill shepherded through Congress by his senator. 


                                                                 New York Canal
                                                           Collection of the author

Page Camp Cookhouse
Collection of the author

Hubert had been to Washington D. C. several times pursuing claims against the U. S. Government for lack of compensation for the Payette-Boise Irrigation Project.   C. C. Calhoun was his lawyer during these disputes with the government.  He wrote letters home describing his trials and tribulations, including his deteriorating health.  He also kept a small journal.

                                                   Page 1913 Journal                                                     
                                           Collection of Hubert "De" Page

A frustrated and worn-out Hubert died on his final trip to Washington on the 21st of June 1913 with my great-grandmother, Emma, by his side.  He was 47 years old.  Hubert was a 32nd-degree Mason.  My great-grandmother enlisted the assistance of the Masons in procuring transportation by train back home to Idaho, where he was laid to rest in the Morris Hill Cemetery in Boise.

                                                              
     Page Family
                                                            Collection of the author


I used dozens of newspaper articles to flesh out the details of Hubert's life.  Hubert became a true Westerner.  He rode by horseback to many of his assignments and camped under the stars while he worked.  He would be gone for many days, even months, while he pursued his work, leaving Emma at home alone to raise their children.