Friday, December 31, 2021
Automation Doesn't Create Markets, Jobs Do!
Thursday, December 30, 2021
A Time for Giving
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Plane, Train, Bus, and Ship Passengers Should be Vaccinated
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Jingle Jangle, Another New Holiday Tradition
"We have chocolate that jingle jangle jingles . . . well, when you shake the tin. Anyway, there's a party - of bite-size, dark & milk chocolate-covered, salty sweets - inside every tin. Gather your friends, satisfy your chocolate cravings, and give it a jingle . . . jangle."
Monday, December 27, 2021
Flammable Fruitcake
Sunday, December 26, 2021
One SMITH Family: (Part 3)
Last Will and TestamentKnow All Men By These Presents,That I, W.C. Smith, of the County of Newton, State of Missouri, being of sound mind and memory, do make and publish this, my Last Will and Testament, in manner and form following:That I desire and request that all of my just and legal debts be paid. That all of my property both real and personal of every description whatsoever be divided equally between the heirs of John A. Smith, A.J. Smith, Elizabeth Boyd, Mary Scarbrough, Martha Parthena Cline, and Sallie Ann Hankins, all to share and share alike.
The inheritors of the estate of William C. SMITH were determined in the following manner: any surviving children of any of the six named siblings each received one share. In the event that any of those inheritors had preceded William in death, their children became inheritors with one share of the estate each. And, in the event any of the inheritors from that generation had preceded William in death - as was the case with a couple - their survivors each inherited a share.
31. John CLINE 32. Clarence CLINE; 33. Oscar REED; 34. Mamie SMITH; 35. Ara WILLIAMSON; 36. Lee F. REED; 37. Alta QUICK; 38.George HANKINS; 39. Andrew HANKINS; and, 40. Parthena HANKINS.
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Merry Christmas from Pa Rock and Rosie!
Friday, December 24, 2021
Tourists Trapped on the High Seas
Thursday, December 23, 2021
The Space Trilogy by C.S. Lewis
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
One Smith Family: (Part 2)
1. Mary Jane SMITH
Mary Jane, the oldest sibling, was born in Tennessee around 1828. She did not leave much of a paper trail during her nearly forty years as a pioneer heading from Tennessee (where she was born and grew up), to Kentucky (where she married), to Missouri, and finally to Texas (where she likely died). As already mentioned, Mary Jane was living in the household of Catherine SMITH, who was likely her mother, in the South Division of Smith County, Tennessee, in 1850.
Also previously mentioned in this profile was the fact that Mary Jane married James Mayberry SCARBROUGH in Logan County, Kentucky, on August 7, 1856. At that time the couple already had a daughter, Sarah “Sallie” A., who had been born in 1853. Sallie was either born without the benefit of married parents or she was James’ or Mary Jane’s daughter from a previous relationship. The couple’s second child, Nancy Anthaline SCARBROUGH (my great-grandmother), was born in Missouri on May 28, 1857.
James and Mary Jane and their oldest daughter moved from Kentucky to Missouri between August of 1856 when the couple were married and May of the following year when Nancy Anthaline was born. When the 1860 census was taken they were living in Sarcoxie Township, Jasper County, Missouri. Mary Jane’s birth family, the SMITHs and her married sister, Sarah “Sallie” Ann (SMITH) HANKINS and her family were all living in McDonald Township of Jasper County, a township which was adjacent to Sarcoxie Township.
Catherine, the third SCARBROUGH child, was born in Missouri in 1862, and James William SCARBROUGH, the fourth and final child was born (according to his obituary) in Sien, Texas, on December 13, 1868.
(This researcher has been unable to locate any record of a Texas community by the name of “Sien.” Mary Jane’s youngest sister, Martha Pafrthena F. SMITH, was married to D.M. CLINE on Christmas Day in 1864 in Marion County, Texas, so it is possible that James and Mary Jane SCARBROUGH and their family were living in that area.)
After the birth of James William SCARROUGH in Texas on December 13th, 1868, James Mayberry and Mary Jane (SMITH) SCARBROUGH both disappear from the public record until they are noted posthumously in the marriage and death records related to their son, James William SCARBROUGH and by their surnames only in the death certificate of their daughter, Nancy Anthaline (SCARBROUGH) ROARK.
By the time of the 1870 US census the four SCARBROUGH children were listed in the household of their maternal uncle, William C. SMITH, of Buffalo Township, Newton County, Missouri. That census listed the names and ages as: Nancy A. Scarbrough (13), Catharine (8), William (4), and Sarah A. (22). (William would have been a little less than two-years-old, and Sarah would have been around seventeen. Sarah’s age might have gotten conflated with that of Lucinda, William’s wife, who was twenty-two.)
Neither Mary Jane nor James Mayberry SCARBROUGH were in the William C. SMITH household at that time, leaving open the possibility that they died in Texas and the children were removed to the care of a relative who was able to offer them a home where they all could remain together.
James William SCARBROUGH’s obituary in 1911, which was likely written by his sister, Nancy, stated that his parents “died young.”
2. Sarah “Sallie” Ann SMITH
Sarah “Sallie,” the second oldest sibling, was born in Tennessee around 1830. By the time of the 1850 census she was already married to Timothy W. HANKINS, a farmer, and the mother of a one-year-old son. At that time they were living on the same property as Sarah’s birth family in the South District of Smith County, Tennessee, and Timothy’s younger brother John and his wife, Mary, were also residing in that household.
By the time of the 1860 census Timothy and Sarah and their family were living in McDonald Township of Jasper County, Missouri, again in close proximity to Sarah’s birth family, and John and Mary HANKINS were no longer part of their household. In addition to Timothy W. HANKINS (age 35) and Sarah A. HANKINS (age 29), the household also included the following HANKINS children: William F. (9, TN), Andrew T. (8, TN), John H. (7, KY), Louisa C. (4, KY), and Parthena J. (2, MO).
Thus far those two census records represent the extent of what is known about Timothy and Sarah “Sallie” Ann (SMITH) HANKINS. Two of their children, Andrew and Parthena, went on to become heirs of William C. SMITH.
3. John A. SMITH
John A. SMITH was born January 11, 1831, in Tennessee. He died at the age of sixty-nine in Lincoln County, Oklahoma, on November 15, 1900, and is buried at Arlington Cemetery in Prague, Lincoln County, Oklahoma.
John was living with his birth family when the US censuses fr 1850 and 1860 were taken. He married Delania POE. As of yet he has not been located on the 1870 US census, but by the time of the 1880 census he was living with his wife, Delania, in Buffalo Township of Newton County, Missouri, along with their first three children: Melvin N. SMITH (age 9), Nancy A. SMITH (4) and Joel W. SMITH (1).
Delania (sometimes referred to as “Delana” and “Delamia” in various records) was the daughter of Bennett and Susanna POE of Pineville, McDonald County, Missouri. She was born in September of 1851 in Missouri. At the time of the 1860 census Delania was eight-years-old and living with her birth family. Also in that household were her father, Bennett POE (53), mother, “Susannah” Poe (42), and siblings (all POEs): Elizabeth (20), William (15) Joel C. (12), John (4), and Martha J. (1). By the time of the 1870 US census she was still living with her birth family and listed as “Delana” (age 18). Also in the household were her mother, Susanna (53) and sister, Martha J. (11).
By 1880 Delania POE was married to John A. SMITH and had three children. That suggests that John A. SMITH and Delania POE were married sometime between the time the 1870 census was taken and the US census of 1880, and likely in 1870 or 1871 prior to the birth of their first child, Melvin N. SMITH.
John and Delania (POE) SMITH went on to have at least eight children (Melvin N., Nancy Delilah, Joel W., Stella May, James Carroll, Bennett A., Hugh Elmer, and Robert M. - seven of whom became heirs to the estate of their uncle, William C. SMITH. Joel W. SMITH, who was born around 1879, was the only non-heir. Joel was no longer with the family by the time the 1900 US census was taken. He may have died in the interim between 1880 and 1900, or moved away and become estranged from the family.
Five of the SMITH children were living at home with their mother, Delania, when John died in 1900. Delania (POE) SMITH has not been located on the 1910 census, but when the census was taken in 1920 she was at the home of her son, Hugh Elmer SMITH and his wife, Mary, in Madilla, Marshall County, Oklahoma. Various family sources at Ancestry.com suggest that she died in 1926.
4. Andrew Jackson SMITH
Andrew Jackson SMITH was born in 1836 in Tennessee. He died on March 11, 1900, and is buried at Potts Cemetery, Charleston, Franklin County, Arkansas, next to his wife, Clarinda (1847-1901).
Andrew married Clarinda CARR, the daughter of George W. and Allison (LOGAN) CARR, in Pope County, Arkansas, on October 17, 1869. Their first child, Nancy Katherine SMITH, was born on July 28, 1870. Nancy had not been named by the time the 1870 census taker arrived, and she is listed on that census as “Not named Smith” with an age of 1/12. Also in the SMITH family household in Illinois Township, Pope County, Arkansas, in 1870 was Clarinda’s younger brother, Thomas CARR, age 21.
By the time that the 1880 US census took place, the SMITH family was residing in Prairie Township, Franklin County, Arkansas. At that time they had three children: Nancy Katherine (listed as “Nancy C.”) age 9, Mary F. (8), and James Washington (listed as “James W.”) age 5.
The family of Andres Jackson SMITH was located in Washburn Township, Logan County, Arkansas, when the 1900 census was taken. Nancy and James had already left the family by that time, and Mary F. had disappeared from the public record. Two new children had been added to the family during the interim between the 1880 and 1900 censuses: Thomas Walter (listed as “Thomas W.”) age 16, and Theodore Newton (listed as “Theodore N..”), age 12.
All of the children of Andrew Jackson and Clarinda (CARR) SMITH went on to become heirs of Andrew’s brother, William C. SMITH, with the exception of Mary F. SMITH who likely died sometime prior to 1900.
5. William C. SMITH
William C. SMITH was born December 18, 1839, in Tennessee. He died on February 8, 1920, at his home in Seneca, Newton County, Missouri, and is buried in the Swars Prairie Baptist Cemetery in rural Newton County, Missouri. William was married to Lucinda (maiden name unknown) in 1868. Lucinda was born in January of 1848 in Tennessee. She died in 1909 and is buried next to William in the Swars Prairie Baptist Cemetery.
William and Lucinda had no children of their own but at various times they opened their home to relatives and others. The four children of William’s oldest sibling, Mary Jane (SMITH) SCARBROUGH were residents in the home of William and Lucinda SMITH of Buffalo Township, Newton County, Missouri, when the 1870 census was taken. The children were likely orphans at that point. William and Lucinda had been married less than two years when Sarah A., Nancy A., Catherine, and James William SCARBROUGH came to live with them.
Nancy Anthaline SCARBROUGH was married to Samuel James ROARK in the home of William and Lucinda SMITH on December 10, 1876. James William SCARBROUGH was still in the William and Lucinda SMITH household when the 1880 US census listed him as “James W. Scarbrough,” age 14. The other two SCARBROUGH siblings, Sarah “Sallie” A. and Catherine, were no longer in that household in 1880.
Lucinda SMITH passed away in 1909, and by the time the US census was taken the following year in 1910, William had three apparent non-relatives living with him. James STEVENSON (22) was listed on the census as a “farm laborer” to William, and James’ wife, Pinar L. STEVENSON (17) was noted as William’s housekeeper. The STEVENSON’s had an infant daughter, Ova M. STEVENSON, who was less than a year old and also a member of William's household.
William C. SMITH died on February 8, 1920, but was included on the 1920 census. At the time the census was taken, though William was already deceased but counted, his niece, Martha Alene “Allie” CLINE REED (the daughter of William’s younger sister, Martha Parthena SMITH CLINE), along with her husband, Edward Earl REED, and daughter, Eunice E. REED, were all living in William’s house. Allie (CLINE) REED was later an heir to William’s estate, and one of the defendants in the subsequent court action over the estate.
6 Elizabeth M. SMITH
Elizabeth M. SMITH was born in Tennessee around 1841. She was residing with her birth family in the South Division of Smith County, Tennessee, when the US census was taken in 1850. Elizabeth married David Wilson BOYD (born November of 1838 in Missouri) shortly after she and her family arrived in Missouri in 1856 or 1857.
So far it has not been determined where Elizabeth and David (and either one or two very young daughters) were living when the 1860 US census was taken, but by the time of the 1870 census they were residing in Granby Township of Newton County, Missouri, along with five children: (Sarah (12), Martha (10), Mary (8), Margaret (2) and James (2/12).
Also in the BOYD household in 1870 were two male “farm laborers” whose ages were both listed as twenty. Those young men were James SMITH, possibly Elizabeth’s youngest sibling or perhaps a cousin, who was born in Tennessee around 1849 and grew up in Elizabeth’s birth household, and William HANKINS, likely Elizabeth’s nephew, the oldest child of Timothy and Sarah “Sallie” A. HANKINS (Elizabeth’s older sister), who was born in Tennessee around 1849.
The BOYD family was living in Erie Township, MdDonald County, Missouri, when the 1880 US census was taken. At that time David and Elizabeth had four children remaining at home: Mary E. (17), Maggie (13), William (10), and Johnnie (8). “William” of the 1880 census was likely “James” of the 1870 census, perhaps named after James and William, the “farm laborers” and likely relatives who were in the household at the time of his birth. (Elizabeth SMITH BOYD’s oldest sister, Mary Jane SMITH SCARBROUGH, also has a son named James William.)
David Wilson BOYD was living in Anderson, McDonald County, Missouri, at the time of the 1900 US census, and he was listed on the census as a widower, an indication that Elizabeth had died sometime between 1880 and 1900.
7. Martha Parthena F. SMITH
Martha Parthena F. SMITH was born around 1844 in Tennessee and was residing with her birth family when the 1850 and 1860 censuses were taken. She married James D.M. CLINE in Marion County, Texas, on December 25, 1864. By the time of the 1870 census six years later, James and Martha (SMITH) CLINE were living in Illinois Township, Pope County, Arkansas, along with three children: Cassandra J. (age 3), Lydia F. (2) and James W. L. (3 months). Martha P.F. CLINE was listed as 25 on that census, and James D.M. had his age recorded as twenty-nine.
The CLINE family was in Holly Bend, Pope County, Arkansas, at the time of the 1880 US census. That census taker listed all family members by initials along with their complete surname. Present in the household were J.D.M. (James) CLINE (39), M.P.F. (Martha) CLINE (36), C.J. (Cassandra) CLINE (12), L.F. (Lydia) CLINE (10), J.W.L. (James) CLINE (9), J.A. (John Andrew) CLINE (7), B.D.H. (Ben) CLINE (1874-1880), and H.M. (Henry) CLINE (2).
Martha Parthena F. (SMITH) CLINE presumably died prior to October 1, 1896, when James D.M. CLINE married his second wife, Tennessee HOOKER, in Pope County, Arkansas.
8. James W. SMITH
James W. SMITH, who was a one-year-old in the SMITH household of 1850 in South Division of Smith County, Tennessee, was possibly a sibling of the older SMITH children. He disappeared from the public record after the 1870 census and was not an inheritor in the 1920 estate of William C.SMITH.
(Part III of “One SMITH Family” will focus on the court action over the estate of William C. SMITH.)
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Missouri Cop Threatens to Report School Bus Driver Over Face Masks
Monday, December 20, 2021
Sarah Palin Can Just Be Damned!
Sunday, December 19, 2021
NRA Leaders Disparaged Members as Wackos, Fruitcakes, and Hillbillies
Saturday, December 18, 2021
House Committee on January 6th Is Making Progress
Friday, December 17, 2021
Happy Birthday, Molly Files!
Thursday, December 16, 2021
One Smith Family: (Part 1)
Preamble: Both the US Census Bureau and Ancestry.com identify the name “Smith” as the most common surname in the United States, and really common surnames such as Smith, Johnson, Williams, Brown, Jones, Garcia, MIller, Davis, Rodriguez, and Martinez (identified by the Census Bureau as the ten most common surnames in the US) can play havoc with family tree researchers. Coming upon a “Smith” or one of those other extremely common names in research often signals an end to that line of inquiry, or at the very least, a complicated road ahead.
Several years ago I came across a cache of information on fifty-three descendants of a SMITH sibling group of six. Those descendants were involved in a court battle over the estate of the seventh member of the sibling group who had recently died and at the time of his death had been the last survivor of the sibling group.
That man, William C. SMITH of Newton County, Missouri, had passed away in 1920, a widower who had fathered no children of his own. A couple of years before his death, William C. SMITH visited with an attorney and drew up a will in which he left his entire estate - including cash and land in Missouri as well as land in Oklahoma - to the fifty-three heirs of his six siblings. Upon William’s death on February 8, 1920, six of the inheritors went to court in an effort to partition the remaining forty-seven out of their share of the inheritance.
William C. SMITH was my great-great-granduncle.
My great-grandmother, Nancy Anthaline (SCARBROUGH) ROARK was a niece of William C. SMITH who had grown up in his household. Nancy was also a member of the unhappy six heirs to William’s estate, and her name was always listed first in the newspaper legal notices regarding the legal action, giving the impression that she may have been the ringleader in the effort to disenfranchise the other forty-seven inheritors.
As I reviewed this matter, the thought struck me that I had a remarkable amount of genealogical information on a large SMITH family, and I resolved to explore the family as far as I could and then place all of that information in the public record where it could hopefully assist a future researchers who encounter a SMITH in their family tree.
I began by looking backward to try and learn as much about the original SMITH sibling group as I could. The siblings were (from oldest to youngest, as identified by William C. SMITH in his will and other subsequent sources): Mary Jane SMITH; Sarah “Sallie” Ann SMITH; John. A. SMITH; Andrew Jackson SMITH; William C. SMITH; Elizabeth M. SMITH; and Martha Parthena F. SMITH.
Being armed with their names, I next turned to the 1850 census, the first to list every family member by name, and was able to locate the family in the South Division of Smith County in north-central Tennessee. (There is nothing in the historical record to show that this family had any connection to Revolutionary War veteran, Daniel SMITH, for whom the county was named when it was formed in 1799.)
The family whom I was researching had ten members listed in the 1850 census. They were all named SMITH and included: Catherine (age 40, born in Kentucky); Elizabeth (37, KY); Mary (22, TN); John (17, TN); Andrew (14, TN); William (11, TN); Elizabeth (9, TN); Martha (6, TN); James (1, TN); and Elizabeth (1, TN). Clearly the six in the middle - Mary, John, Andrew, William, Elizabeth, and Martha - were the siblings I was seeking, with only the second oldest, Sarah “Sallie” Ann missing. The missing daughter was located in the preceding census entry as the spouse of Timothy W. HANKINS, along with their one-year-old son, William, as well as Timothy’s brother, John, and his wife, Mary. (The property for both families appeared to be a single parcel worth $350 and owned by Catherine SMITH.)
That 1850 census entry for the SMITH family in the South District of Smith County, Tennessee, left several questions unanswered. First, there were no males listed who could have been the father of the older siblings. Of the two women listed who were age appropriate to have been the mother, Catharine and Elizabeth, there was no way to definitively recognize either as the parent. Catherine was the most likely candidate because she was listed first on the entry, the place generally given to the “head of household,” and she was the only one indicated to have been a property owner.
The relationship of the two older ladies to each other is also unclear. They could have been sisters, sisters-in-law, cousins, or no relation whatsoever.
There is an obvious question as to the relationship of the two youngest children, the one-year-olds, to the rest of the children. The fact that they were listed as being the same age might suggest that they were twins, or perhaps cousins with one belonging to Catherine and one to Elizabeth - or perhaps even one to Mary Jane. It is unlikely, however, that the baby Elizabeth and the nine-year-old Elizabeth, having the same given name, would have both been born to the same mother. A sample scenario could be that Catharine was the mother of the seven older siblings and that she named her daughter, the older Elizabeth, for the adult female Elizabeth, and then when the adult Elizabeth had a daughter of her own, she also chose that name, perhaps to honor her mother or some other relative named Elizabeth.
The baby, Elizabeth, had disappeared from the family by the time of the 1860 census, likely due to a childhood death, but the baby, James, was still with the family in 1860 and listed as James W. SMITH, aged 10 and born in Tennessee. He was also still a part of the family in 1870 when he and William HANKINS (Sallie’s son) were listed as farm laborers in the home of Elizabeth (SMITH) BOYD, who was William’s aunt and possibly James’ sister. James W. SMITH disappeared from the public record after 1870, so even if he had been a sibling to the older group of SMITH’s, if he died childless at a young age, he would not have figured into the estate of William C. SMITH.
The 1860 census found the bulk of the family living in McDonald Township, Jasper County, Missouri. (McDonald Township was created from Sarcoxie Township on July 18, 1854, and today it is considered an "inactive" township.). The first name listed in Dwelling # 367 and Family # 352, was that of Louisa C. SMITH (Louisa Catherine ?), age 50 and born in Kentucky. The final name listed of the seven individuals in that household was Elizabeth LUCAS, age 46, TN, who was likely the Elizabeth SMITH who was in the Smith County, Tennessee household in 1850, although that census listed her place of birth as Kentucky. Elizabeth might have married a Mr. LUCAS between the 1850 and 1860 censuses, but agiain there were no males in the 1860 household entry who could have been husbands to Louisa C. SMITH or Elizabeth LUCAS.
The other five members of that household in Missouri were all named “SMITH.” They were: John A. (28, NC*); Andrew J. (23, TN); William C. (20, TN); Perthinia F. (15, TN); and, James W. (10, TN). (John A.’s state of birth had been listed as “Tennessee” on the 1850 census, so the North Carolina listing on the 1860 census might be an important clue as to the family’s place of origin.)
Sarah “Sallie” Ann (SMITH) HANKINS, the second oldest daughter, had been married and out of the primary household when the 1850 census was taken - although living next door on what appeared to be the same parcel of property. By the time of the 1860 census, Sarah and Timothy were also in McDonald Township, Jasper County, Missouri, and still living in close proximity to Catherine’s household and her younger siblings. But by 1860 Mary Jane, the oldest daughter, and Elizabeth, the third oldest daughter, were also out of the SMITH home.
Mary Jane SMITH had married James Mayberry SCARBROUGH in Logan County, Kentucky, on August 7, 1856, and by the time of the 1860 census she and James and two young daughters were living in Sarcoxie Township of Jasper County, Missouri, near where the bulk of the SMITH family was residing in McDonald Township. Elizabeth SMITH had married a Missouri native, David Wilson BOYD, shortly after her family arrived in Missouri in 1856 or 1857. So far it has not been determined where Elizabeth and David and their very young daughter or daughters were living at the time of the 1860 census.
(Part II of “One Smith Family” will profile the seven, or possibly eight, original SMITH siblings in greater detail.)