Friday, April 3, 2020

Houston, We Have A Family

Welcome back, cousins!

Today, we will wind up with a look at the youngest of the three daughters of Jonathan Montgomery (1801–1898) and Sarah Callin (1807–1830). There aren't a lot of descendants in the branch, so this will be relatively brief - and that will bring us to the end of this branch of James Callin's family!


III. Mary "Polly" Montgomery (1830–1926)

Polly was born on 23 December 1830 in Richland County, Ohio, and her mother, Sarah, died a week later on 31 December. Polly and her sister were raised by her father and step-mother, Eleanor "Ellen" Eichard (1802–1858).

She married John Houston (1827–1889) in August 1849. As far as I can tell, he was the son of Robert Houston, Sr. (1798–1863) and Sarah Owens (1804–1880), born in Ohio on 27 July 1827. They had their first three children before the Civil War, and their youngest was born a few years after the end of the war; John and Polly raised their family in Butler Township, Richland County.

     A. Sarah "Sadie" Houston (1850–1928)
     B. Nancy Jane Houston (1852–1929)
     C. Dr. Robert R Houston (1860–1890)
     D. Izora M Houston (1869–1944)

Sadie, their eldest, married in 1870, but Nannie remained at home. The three younger Houstons went along when John and Polly moved to Fulton county in 1883, where they lived on a farm four miles northeast of Rochester.

John died on 14 September 1889 and was buried in the Rochester I.O.O.F. Cemetery. Polly eventually (around 1920) moved in with her youngest daughter, Izora Sheets, whose family lived in Goshen, Elkhart County, Indiana. Her health deteriorated in her last six years, and she died there on 8 January 1926 at the age of 96. She was buried with her husband in Rochester.

     A. Sarah "Sadie" Houston (1850–1928) was born on 26 May 1850 in Butler, Richland County, Ohio, and grew up on her family's farm. She married John Minor Ford (1848–1910) on 7 April 1870. The son of Joshua Ford (1805–1883) and Elizabeth Hammond (1811–1888), born in Ohio on 6 June 1848.

John and Sadie lived on a farm in Nankin, in Orange township, Ashland County, Ohio, where they raised their two sons. John died on 12 March 1910 in Montgomery, Ashland County, Ohio. Sadie died on 19 August 1928 and they are both buried in the Nankin Cemetery.

     1. Omar Houston Ford (1872–1905) was born on 10 May 1872 in Orange Township, Ashland County, Ohio. He worked on his father's farm, and he died after a lingering illness at only 34 years of age, on 9 January 1905.

     2. Eugene Hammond Ford (1873–1949) was born on 28 October 1873 in Orange Township, Ashland County, Ohio. On 15 June 1899, he married Emma C. Smith (1874–1956). Emma was born on 3 November 1874 in Orange Township, Ashland County, Ohio, the daughter of David Smith (1824–1908) and Rosetta Bales (1834–1923).

The couple lived on a farm in Orange Township and raised their daughters there. Hammond enlisted in the U.S. Army and served in Company K, 365th Infantry 92nd Division, returning from France in February 1919 aboard the Olympic.  He was 45 years old at the time.

Hammond died at 75 years of age on 17 June 1949 in Mansfield, Richland, Ohio, and was buried in the Ashland Cemetery. Emma died on 25 November 1956 while she was visiting her daughter, Kathryn, in Akron.

     a. Kathryn Mercile Ford (1902–1993) was born on 20 July 1902 and grew up in Nankin. She married Earva Carl Bender (1901–1988) on 27 December 1930. Earva was the son of Andrew Jackson Bender (1848–1933) and Ida Alice Krum (1856–1941), born on 14 September 1901 in Barberton, Summit County, Ohio.

A farmer all of his life, Earva operated a 300-acre farm in the Cuyahoga Valley and was well known for his sweet corn and other vegetables. He and Kathryn were married for 58 years. He died on 31 December 1988 in Akron, Summit, Ohio, at Akron City Hospital, after a long illness. Kathryn died on 25 March 1993 in Akron. They were survived by numerous nieces and nephews, but no children.

     b. Helen Elizabeth Ford (1911–1994) was born on 8 January 1911 in Nankin. She married Gladimere William Schreck (1909–1987) on 17 November 1935 in Ashland County, Ohio.

William was a general sales manager for a manufacturing company. He died on 22 Oct 1987 in Lake County, Florida. Helen died on 1 January 1994 in Fostoria, Seneca, Ohio.

They were survived by their son and two grandchildren.

     B. Nancy Jane Houston (1852–1929) was born on 3 August 1852 in Richland County, Ohio, and moved with her parents to Fulton County. Nannie remained single her whole life, and in her later life, she suffered from heart trouble and other age-related illnesses. She died at the county infirmary, where she lived when she could no longer care for herself, on 18 September 1929. She is buried in the Rochester IOOF Cemetery.

     C. Dr. Robert R Houston (1860–1890) was born on 4 October 1860 in Richland County. He was a bright scholar and, when he graduated from college, had a very bright future before him. Unfortunately, he suffered from what the local newspaper described as "disease fastened upon his brain," and he died on 16 August 1890 while under treatment at Long Cliff Asylum in Logansport. He is buried in the Rochester I.O.O.F. Cemetery.

     D. Izora M Houston (1869–1944) was born on 29 October 1869 in Blooming Grove, Richland County, Ohio, and grew up on her family's farm in Butler Township.

Izora married Allen Deloss Sheets (1868–1943) on 25 November 1890. He was the son of David Sheets (1819–1874) and Sarah A Nixon (1832–abt. 1915), born on 12 July 1868 in Fulton County, Indiana. Allen's father died when he was small, and Allen grew up in the home of his mother and step-father, Isaac Good, whom she married in 1875.

Allen ran a farm and later worked as a salesman in an agriculture business. The couple raised their son in Rochester before moving to Goshen, Elkhart County, Indiana, where they appeared on the 1920 U.S. Census. Allen died on 13 May 1943 in Elkhart County and Izora followed soon after on 1 April 1944. They are buried in the Violett Cemetery in Goshen.

They were survived by their son.

     1. Everett Houston Sheets (1903–1969) was born on 17 January 1903 in Rochester, Fulton, Indiana, and his family moved to Goshen by the time he was 17. There, he met and married Edna M Glines (1900–1991) daughter of George S Glines (1858–1913) and Cora M Pindell (1865–1948), on 20 May 1922. Edna was born in Union, Branch, Michigan, on 18 August 1900, and she grew up in Mason, Branch County.

The couple settled in Elkhart, where Everett owned and operated a cabinet shop at his home address for many years. He died unexpectedly at his home in Elkhart on 5 November 1969. Edna died on 26 May 1991, and they are buried in Violett Cemetery in Goshen.

They were survived by their son and two grandchildren.

     a. Ronald Dean Sheets (1933–2008) was born on 14 August 1933 in Goshen, Indiana. He attended Concord High School in Elkhart and worked at the former Howk Motorcycle Shop in Goshen. He was a Korean War Army veteran, having served from 10 July 1956 to 19 July 1958. He loved motorcycles and collected knives. Along with his wife, he lived in the Goshen/Elkhart area for many years before moving to Marshall, Arkansas.

Ronald died on 3 August 2008 at the Veteran's Administration hospital in Little Rock, Arkansas, at the age of 74. He was survived by his wife, two sons, three grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
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If you're new to my blog, you probably don't know how much I love unusual names, and "Gladimere Schreck" is probably the best name I have found since "Zelpha Hoot" or "Thor Day." (Willadean Thunder, though; that one's pretty awesome, too!)

But - once again I think I have arrived at the point in this ongoing project where I can start compiling everything into a manuscript for the Book! As I said in "The Other Montgomery Connection," there don't appear to be any more "missing" children from the families of either John or James (the Brothers Callin, who moved to Ohio in the 1810s). The only other breakthrough I can anticipate that might delay the book any further would be to find their father, James, the Revolutionary War soldier whose records still elude us.

And if I found that, well, that would be awesome.

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We have many ways to get in touch:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!

Friday, March 27, 2020

A Second Week of Walkers

Welcome back, cousins!

Last time, we talked about the descendants of Clara A Walker Welch (1851–1932), the elder daughter of Isaiah Walker (1821–1906) and Huldah Montgomery (1829–1918). Today, we'll start with her younger sister:

     B. Mary Elvina Walker (1868–1957) was born on 18 May 1868 and grew up in Rochester, Fulton County, Indiana. Her older sister, Clara, was 16 years old when Mary was born.

Mary grew up and married Samuel Percy Terry (1861–1936) on 12 October 1887 in Fulton County, Indiana. He was born on 15 May 1861, the son of Samuel S Terry (1825–1893) and Sarah J McCloud (1831–1883) and grew up in Henry and Rochester, Fulton County.

Samuel's father was a physician who received his commission as an officer in Company S, Indiana 73rd Infantry Regiment on 27 September 1862. He served as an assistant surgeon until he was promoted to full surgeon on 29 January 1863. The younger Samuel followed in his father's profession, graduating from Notre Dame College in 1882 and practicing in Rochester in 1900. During the 1900s, the Terry family moved to Alameda County, California, where Dr. Terry was in practice in 1910. He also served as an examining surgeon in the United States Department of the Interior.

Samuel died in Alameda on 5 November 1936 and was buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. Mary died on 8 April 1957 and was buried with her husband. They were survived by two sons and a daughter.

     1. Lillian Terry (1888–1972) was born on 1 November 1888 and grew up in Rochester, Fulton Couty, Indiana. She was probably about 17 years of age when her family relocated to Alameda County, California.

On 22 January 1911, she married an optometrist named Eugene D Painter (1878–1961) in Stockton, San Joaquin County, California. Eugene was born on 13 December 1878, the youngest son of Jerome B Painter (1828–1883) and Caroline A Weaver (1837–1913).  He and Lillian had a son together, but by 1920, Lillian and her son were living back in her parents' home, and she was listed as divorced.

She soon remarried James Roy Rowe (1890–1972) on 27 March 1921 in Alameda County, and they lived in Oakland. James was the son of James F Rowe (1850–1900) and Maria (or Mariah) E Freeman (1856–1929), born on 17 January 1890 in Alameda County, California.

James died in Alameda on 18 September 1972; Lillian died just a few weeks later on 23 October 1972. Their remains were interred in the mausoleum of the Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland.

     a. Terry E Rowe (1913–1971) was born Terry Painter on 13 August 1913 in Alameda, California. Before he turned 18, however, he was adopted by his step-father and appears on his official documents as Terry Rowe after 1930.

On 31 October 1931, Terry married Mildred Lucille Kelber (1913–1992) in Alameda County. Mildred was born in Los Angeles on 28 August 1913 to George C Kelber (1884–1965) and Treasy May Cappleman (1889–1955). They had a son and a daughter together, both still living.

Terry died in Solano County, California, on 4 October 1971. Mildred, who was a secretary for the Plumas County Recorder's office from 1965 to 1980, remarried and moved to Reno, Nevada around 1990. She died in Reno on 1 January 1992 and is buried in the Johnsville Cemetery in Johnsville, Plumas County, California.

They were survived by their son, daughter, and five grandchildren.

     2. Samuel Walker Terry (1894–1964) was born on 9 February 1894 in Rochester, Fulton, Indiana. His family moved to California when he was about 10 years old. Samuel attended University of California at Berkeley and met  Ellis E Morris (1895–1995). His education was interrupted by World War I, and he saw pilot duty in France, and was discharged from the Air Corps with the rank of first lieutenant. Samuel was believed to be the first pilot on the West Coast to come out of a tailspin. He returned from St. Nazaire, France, aboard the Zeelandia in 1919.

Engagement of Samuel Terry and Ellis MorrisEngagement of Samuel Terry and Ellis Morris Fri, Jul 6, 1917 – 1 · The San Francisco Examiner (San Francisco, California) · Newspapers.com
Ellis was born in Ohio on 29 June 1895, and grew up in Alger County, Michigan. She was daughter of Henry Nelson Morris (1860–1920) and Ella Blymyer (1860–1935). Her family moved to Alameda County, California, during the 1900s.

Samuel and Ellis were both attending University of California at Berkeley in 1916, and they announced their engagement in 1917. (see right)

In 1926, with an investment of $5000, he co-founded the Aladdin Heating Corp., a 7-acre plant in San Leandro, which became one of the largest heating, ventilating and air conditioning contractors in Northern California. 

Samuel and Ellis raised their children in Berkeley and Oakland. Samuel was a pioneer in the Bay area's gas beating industry and was a director of five a firms, including the News Equipment Sales Corp. and the Aladdin Heating Corp.

Samuel died on 10 August 1964 in Hayward, Alameda, California. Ellis died on 12 August 1995 in Alameda County, California. They were buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. They were survived by three sons and 14 grandchildren.

     a. Raymond Morris Terry (1918–1997) was born on 17 July 1918 in Oakland, Alameda, California. He graduated from University of California at Berkeley in 1940 and went to Stanford University that fall.

Raymond married Marian Abbie Fisher (1919–1980) about 1941, and after graduating around 1945, he accepted a commission in the U.S. Navy, serving from about 1946 to 1956. Marian was born on 1 May 1919 in Alameda County, the daughter of Edgar Clement Fisher (1889–1927) and Abbie Gail Cleary (1890–1944).

They settled in San Leandro, San Francisco County, California, where Ray and his business endeavors grew along with the town. His invention of the first coin operated newspaper vending machine led to the establishment and success of New Equipment Company, which eventually became a division of his firm, the Aladdin Heating Corporation.

Marian died on 14 June 1980, and was buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. Ray died "after a great day fishing and with a cookie in his hand" on 7 May 1997 and was buried with Marian. They were survived by Ray's brother and sister-in-law, and by their five children, sixteen grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

     i. Raymond Lee Terry (1942–2002) was born on 27 September 1942 in Berkeley, Alameda, California. Like his father, the younger Ray Terry accepted a commission in the U.S. Navy. He died on 20 January 2002 and was survived by a brother, three sisters, his wife, a son, and a daughter.

     b. Henry Morris Terry (1921–1978) was born on 8 February 1921 in Berkeley, Alameda, California. Henry was attending Stanford University in 1942, and while the records I have found don't tell me the details, he appears to have served as a doctor in the U.S. Navy, as late as 1959. 

He married Allace Ann Heald (1924–2000), the daughter of Wallace Sheldon Heald (1890–1936) and Foss R Radebaugh (1890–1980). She was born on 9 August 1924 in Duluth, St Louis, Minnesota. Her family relocated to San Diego by 1940, and she presumably met Henry when he was stationed there. We do know that in 1974, they lived in San Diego where Henry was chief of geriatrics at the County University Hospital.

Henry died on 27 August 1978 and was buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. Ann died on 20 June 2000.

     c. Samuel Walker Terry, Jr (1925–1999) was born on 13 June 1925 in Oakland, Alameda, California, and grew up in Berkeley. He also had a commission in the U.S. Navy by 1948 - which rounds out an entire family of Naval officers, and completes three generations of service from one family.

Samuel Jr. died on 4 October 1999 in San Leandro, Alameda, California, but I don't believe that's the whole story. His father's 1964 obituary claimed 14 grandchildren, so Samuel and his brother, Henry, must have had nine children between them who I have not been able to identify.

     3. Frederick Percy Terry (1896–1986) was born on 19 March 1896 in Rochester, Fulton, Indiana. His father moved the family to California in 1904. Fred enlisted in the U.S. Army, serving from 15 December 1917 through 18 June 1919, returning home as a sergeant from France aboard the Madawaska.

Fred married Marion Adelaide McCormick (1899–1977) on 9 October 1924 in Alameda County, California. She was born on 15 October 1899 in Saginaw, Michigan, the youngest child of Walter James McCormick (1864–1908) and Maude A Speddy (1870–1922).

Marion died on 25 April 1977 in Alameda County, California, and was buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery in Saginaw, Saginaw County, Michigan, where her parents and other ancestors were buried. Fred died in Alameda County on 27 September 1986 and was buried with Marion in Saginaw.

     a. Frederick Mccormick Terry (1927–1993) was born in Alameda, California, on 6 April 1927. He married Patricia Eleanor Goggin (1929–2006) on 3 February 1951. They were both graduates of Alameda High School. Patricia was born on 10 November 1929 in Alameda, the youngest daughter of Alfred Samuel Goggin (1884–1931) and Maude E Curley (1892–1965).

The couple lived in Walnut Creek, Contra Costa County, California, starting in 1963. Patricia worked in the insurance industry before having children, then she retired to become a stay-at-home mom. Fred died on 4 April 1993 in Contra Costa County; Patricia died at the age of 77, on 28 November 2006 at her home in Walnut Creek.

They were survived by two daughters and two grandchildren.
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The Great COVID crisis continues, and I'm still sorting out what I need to do to complete my degree. No promises I'll stick to my "schedule," but for now, we're pressing on! Thanks for sticking with m, everybody!

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We have many ways to get in touch:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!

Friday, March 20, 2020

A Week With the Walkers

Hello, cousins!

So, for those of you in the future, looking back at this time, the United States has been slowly adjusting to the global pandemic of a virus called COVID-19 by the World Health Organization. I am sitting at home this week, waiting to find out whether I should plan on going back to work next week, and wondering how the rest of my final semester of school will be affected.

While I had semi-suspended posting in this blog, in favor of focusing my efforts on finishing my Bachelor's degree in music, I have found myself in the position of having time on my hands which is better spent doing family history research than worrying about the possible cancellation of my recital or other things I don't have control over. Hopefully, one day, we'll look back on this time with relief that things did not turn out too badly, considering the disruption to our lives.

That said, doing research and writing is something that I enjoy and it relaxes me, so I'm moving forward with the Montgomery family posts. Hopefully, you will enjoy the fruits of my labor!

Last time, we documented the tragic, early end of every member of Elvina Montgomery Huffman's family. Elvina was the eldest of three daughters of Jonathan and Sarah (Callin) Montgomery. This week, we'll start with the middle daughter, Huldah Montgomery Walker.


II. Huldah Montgomery (1829–1918)

Born on 7 March 1829 and raised in Olivesburg, Huldah was barely a year old when her mother, Sarah, died. She grew up with her sisters in the home of her father and step-mother, probably attending the school established on a property that her grandfather, Benjamin Montgomery, deeded to the village.

Huldah married Isaiah Walker (1821–1906) on 5 June 1849 in Richland County, and at first they lived in Jefferson Township. Isaiah was a young lawyer, born on 7 January 1821 to James Walker (1771–1844) and Lucinda Barrell (1784–1871) in Montville, Waldo County, Maine. The Walker family moved from Maine to Massachusetts, finally settling in Richland County in 1834.

Isaiah and Huldah had their first daughter in 1851, and in May of 1859, Isaiah moved his young family to Rochester, Fulton County, Indiana, where he established himself as a lawyer. He and Huldah raised both of their daughters in Rochester. Eventually, Isaiah retired and, in 1905, they moved to California, where both of their daughters' families lived.

Isaiah died from pneumonia on 5 November 1906 at the home of his youngest daughter, Polly, in Glendora, Los Angeles County, California. Huldah died on 30 December 1918 in Long Beach, Los Angeles County. She was 90 years old.

Isaiah and Huldah are buried in the Rochester I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Rochester, Indiana.

     A. Clara A Walker (1851–1932) was born in September 1851 in Mansfield, Ohio. Her family moved to Rochester, Indiana, when she was about eight years old, and she grew up there. She married Cornelius Welch (1847–1934) on 12 November 1872 in Fulton County.

Cornelius, or "Con," was born to James and Sarah Welch on 5 September 1847 in Ontario, Canada. According to his obituary in the Rochester Sentinal, his parents died before he was nine, and he went to live with Andrew Oliver, then residing six miles south of Rochester. At 18, he enlisted in Company G of the 155th Regiment of Indiana Volunteers on 17 March 1865. The war ended less than a month later, but Con did well in the army; he was promoted to Corporal on 6 May 1865 and mustered out near Dover, Delaware, on 4 August 1865. He re-enlisted with the 23rd U. S. Regulars on 12 June 1867 and was stationed at Fort Boise, Boise, Idaho. At the end of this enlistment, he returned to Rochester, where he married Clara a few years later.

In 1880, Con ran a livery stable in Rochester, but sometime after that, he moved the family to a farm in Newcastle, which is where they were in 1900. Soon after that, the Walkers relocated to Glendora, Los Angeles County, California, leaving their sons Edwin and Oliver to run the family farm.

Con and Clara lived in Long Beach for many years. Clara died there on 24 June 1932, having been ill since the previous Christmas. Con died on 10 August 1934 at the age of 86, also in Long Beach.

     1. Marguerite Beatrice "Maggie" Welch (1875–1962) was born on 17 October 1875 in Rochester, Fulton County, Indiana. She spent some time working as a bookkeeper in Chicago, where she appeared on the 1900 Census; she was in that city when her brother, Mont, died.

Maggie seems to have gone west when her parents did in 1905, and while it isn't clear where she was in 1910, by 1917, she was married to Frank McKeever Burnside (1877–1936) and lived with him in Seattle. Frank's origins aren't confirmed by the documents I've found, but I believe he was the son of Irish immigrants George Burnside (1848–1889) and Sarah Clark (1846–1912), was born on 1 May 1877 and raised in Pittsburg, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.

Maggie lost her mother in 1932, her father in 1934, and Frank on 28 December 1936 in Alameda, Alameda County, California. Maggie remained in their home on Santa Clara Avenue, again working as a bookkeeper. She died in Alameda on 29 March 1962.

     2. James Montgomery "Mont" Welch (1878–1904) was born in Rochester on 5 December 1878. He was well thought of in his community, and after working for a time at the City Book Store in Rochester, he went first to Chicago, then to Pierceton, Indiana, and engaged in business for himself. Failing health forced him to abandon his business, and he returned to his parents’ home where he "died of lung trouble" - most likely succumbing to tuberculosis, as so many of his cousins had done.

     3. Edwin Walker Welch (1882–1932) was born on 14 July 1882 in Rochester and grew up on the family farm. He was living in Chicago in 1904, when his brother Mont died, but came back to run the farm when his parents moved to California.

Edwin married Carrie M Daniel (1884–1985) on 19 October 1906 in Knox, Starke County, Indiana. Carrie was the daughter of William Smith Daniel (1860–1939) and Anna M Chapman (1862–1936), born 20 June 1884 in Paint Township, Highland County, Ohio. By 1910, Edwin and Carrie had settled in Smith, near Churubusco, Whitley County, Indiana, where Edwin worked as a jeweler. They had a little daughter there, named Margarite, possibly after Edwin's sister.

It isn't clear when they divorced, but in 1917, Edwin was living with his parents in Long Beach and working as a jeweler and watchmaker in that city. On 16 August 1922, he married his second wife, Harriet Ann Hodgin (1886–1950) in  Los Angeles County, California. They lived on Lime Avenue until Edwin's death on 29 February 1932 in Long Beach.

Carrie married her second husband, Frederick William Berg (b. 1891), on 18 June 1919 in Chicago. Fred was one of a family of German immigrants, born on 27 September 1891 in Germany to Ludwig F Berg (1862–1935) and Augusta W Haacker (1860–1943). He married Carrie just a couple of months after returning from fighting in France as part of Company D, 415th Railroad Telegraph Battalion, Signal Corps.

Carrie and Fred kept house in Davis, Starke County, Indiana, where Fred worked as a telegraph operator for the railroad. I don't know when Fred died; the last record I have for him places the family in Lansing, Cook County, Illinois, where he was working for the Grand Trunk Railroad in 1942. Carrie Berg died in August 1985.

     a. Margeret Ann "Margot" Welch (1908-1949) was born on 11 November 1908 in Churubusco, Whitley County, Indiana. Her parents, Edwin and Carrie, divorced when she was young, and she grew up in the home of her mother and step-father, Fred Berg. In 1933, she and Robert Henry Batzka (1906–1978) applied for a marriage license in Valparaiso, and their son, Norman, was born the following year.

Margeret and Robert were divorced around 1937, and Margeret (appearing in the marriage record as "Margot Batzka") remarried Andrew P Foley (1910–1994) on 23 December 1938 in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan. Robert and Norman went to live with Robert's parents in Starke County, Indiana, and Robert married Sarah Mildred Gusman (1918–1990) on 29 April 1941 in San Pierre, Starke County.

Margeret and Andrew lived in Petoskey, Emmett County, Michigan for many years. She died on 5 November 1949 at Ford Hospital in Detroit and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Petoskey. Andrew remarried and he eventually died on 10 April 1994 in Grosse Pointe, Wayne County, Michigan.

Robert Batzka retired from farming, and he and Sarah, by then a retired teacher, took a European trip in the summer of 1978. He died unexpectedly from a stroke on 8 July 1978 at the University Hospital in Bern, Switzerland. Sarah later remarried, and she died on 23 June 1990 in Markle, Wells County, Indiana.

     i. Norman Robert Batzka (1934–2011) was born on 27 May 1934 in Indiana. His parents divorced when he was small, and by 1940, he and his father were living with his grandparents in rural Starke County, Indiana. He graduated from Mackenzie High School in Detroit, Michigan, in 1953.

Norman served in the U.S. Air Force as a staff sergeant in Korea. He married Mariann Coleman (1939–2006) about 1959. She was the daughter of Elmer W Coleman (1909–1995) and Gail M Coombe (1915–1997) born on 3 October 1939 in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan.

Mariann died on 15 May 2006 in Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan. Norman died in Lenawee County, Michigan, on 14 December 2011, and they are both buried in the Great Lakes National Cemetery in Holly, Oakland County.

They were survived by their three children and nine grandchildren.

     4. Oliver Raymond Welch (1886–1907) was born on 20 March 1886 in Talma, an unincorporated town in Fulton County, Indiana. He lived with his parents on the family farm until they moved to California around 1905, and then he ran the place himself.

Oliver married Anna Pearl Kenley (1888–1966) on 16 August 1904 in Tiosa, Fulton County. They had a baby daughter together, and Anna was pregnant with their son when Oliver began suffering from stomach problems which resulted in a fatal case of appendicitis. He died on 19 February 1907 at Woodlawn Hospital in Rochester. He is buried in the Rochester Oddfellows Cemetery.

Anna, the daughter of John Kenley (1856–1899) and Armilda "Millie" Ross (1860–1895), was born on 24 December 1888 in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana, which means she was 15 when she married Oliver and 16 when Audra was born. After Oliver died, she remarried a few years later on 1 July 1911 in Fulton County. Her second husband was Clarence Clement Ailer (1878–1928). They had a son together, named Clarence Herbert Ailer (1913–1968).

Clarence died on 28 February 1928 in South Bend, St Joseph County, Indiana, and Anna seems to have married a third time. She died on 29 July 1966 in Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana, under the name Anna P. Beatty, and an "Anna Beatty" lived in Fort Wayne during the 1950s with Wilbert T. Beatty. She is buried in Fairview Cemetery in Mishawaka, St. Joseph County, Indiana.

     a. Audra G Welch (1905–1997) was born on 11 January 1905 in Indiana (most likely in Fulton County), and she was barely two years old when her father died. She grew up in the home of her mother and step-father in Fulton County and according to other researchers (I have yet to locate any documents), she married Joseph Elmer Troyer (1906–1978) on 3 September 1926 in La Porte County, Indiana.

Audra and Joe had a son, Richard (1927-1994), and in 1930 they lived in Mishawaka, Indiana. However, they soon divorced. Joseph remarried in 1931, and Audra took Richard to Cleveland. There, she worked as a secretary and stenographer. Joe served in the military during World War II and divorced his second wife after the end of the war. He died on 12 March 1978 in Garden City, Wayne, Michigan.

Audra died in Cleveland on 5 Aug 1997 and was buried in Fairview Cemetery in Mishawaka, St. Joseph County, Indiana.

     i. John Richard Troyer (1927–1994) was born on 6 June 1927 in Kokomo, Howard County, Indiana, and grew up in Cleveland with his mother. He was married in Orange County, California, in 1967. He died on 8 August 1994, in Orange County at the age of 67.

(I have not been able to find obituaries or documents that might tell us about Richard's family, or whether he left children and grandchildren behind.)

     b. Oliver Kenley Welch (1907–1978) was born in Rochester, Fulton County, Indiana, on 24 August 1907 - six months after the death of his father. He grew up in Newcastle and ended up in Pontiac, Michigan, where he was working as a draftsman in 1940. He was in his late 30s or early 40s he married Effie May Chalmers (1912–2008), and they had a daughter who survives.

Effie was the daughter of William Lionel Chalmers (1875–1938) Stella May Shoemaker (1880–1970), born on 11 April 1912 in Huntington, Huntington County, Indiana. She graduated from Huntington High School in 1930 and became a nurse, working in Toledo in 1940.

Oliver died at age 71 on 16 November 1978 in Norwood Nursing Home at Huntington. Effie died much later on 27 February 2008 in North Manchester, Wabash, Indiana. They are survived by one daughter and two grandsons.

     5. Marion Percival Welch (1889–1982) was born on 27 December 1889 and grew up in Newcastle, Fulton County, Indiana. He married Jessie C West (1890–1976) on 23 November 1910 in Glendora, Los Angeles, California. Jessie was the daughter of John Charles West (1856–1935) and Emma Frasia Cornel Hinman (1857–1943), born on 4 June 1890 in California.

Marion worked as a superintendent for the lumber yard in Blinn, California, and he and Jessie raised their son in Lomita, Los Angeles County, California. (Jessie's obituary from 1976 lists a daughter, as well, but I have yet to find any other evidence of a daughter in the available records.)

Jessie died on 31 March 1976 in Los Angeles County, and Marion died almost precisely six years later on 30 March 1982. They are buried next to each other in Green Hills Memorial Park, Rancho Palos Verdes, Los Angeles County, California. According to Jessie's obituary, they were survived by three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

     a. Wallace Marion Welch (1911-1977) was born on 11 October 1911 in Glendora, Los Angeles, California, and grew up in Lomita. He was working for his father's lumberyard when he was in his twenties.

Wallace married Laural Faye Hill (1918–1991) on 30 November 1936 in Yuma County, Arizona, and they had a son a few months later in February 1937. Faye was born on 10 December 1917 in Lebanon, Laclede County, Missouri, the daughter of Carlas Eldon Hill (1879–1980) and Laura E Gilmore (1885–1966). She grew up in Laclede County, and her family moved to California when she was in her teens.

The couple was not together for very long, however, as both Wallace and Faye were remarried to other people by 1940. Wallace married his second wife, Beth May Merryman (1916–1991), on 4 May 1939 in California. She was the daughter of William Ausian Merryman (1881–1964) and Dora Bell (b. 1887), born in Fort Dodge, Webster County, Iowa, on 10 May 1916. They also had a child (a daughter, still living), and were divorced before 1946. Beth lived in Lomita for 43 years and was a bookkeeper for the San Pedro (California) Postal Credit Union for 35 years. She died on 27 December 1991, survived by her daughter, step-daughter, four grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

Wallace married his third wife on 9 October 1952 in Ventura County, California. She was Catherine Hanes Cleland, born 15 March 1914 in Crawford, Madison, Iowa, the youngest of 14 children born to Charles David Cleland (1864–1944) and Frances R Siedel (1864–1919). She grew up in Iowa and worked in Des Moines as a waitress in 1940, before eventually moving to California.

Catherine died in Los Angeles County on 1 November 1976, a resident of Sepulveda. Wallace died the following year on 15 December 1977 in Los Angeles. He was survived by his son and daughter.

     i. Wallace Max Johnson (1937–2007) was born on 12 February 1937 in Thayer, Oregon County, Missouri, the son of Wallace Marion Welch and Laural Faye Hill. His parents were divorced when he was an infant, and Max was adopted by his step-father, Eugene Field Johnson (1909–1959), appearing under the name Johnson in his public records.

Max was married on 2 August 1961 in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, to Annie Margaret Spivey (1938–2016). Annie was the daughter of the late Thelma and Burl Spivey of Charlotte, North Carolina, born on 12 February 1938. After receiving her bachelor’s degree from Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina in Greensboro, she lived in Rock Hill and Spartanburg, South Carolina prior to moving to Greer, Greenville, South Carolina.

In 1983, Max & Ann opened Travel Planners at Eastgate Village, which they operated for many years. Max died on 24 July 2007 in Greer. Ann died at her home on 9 June 2016. They were survived by their son, daughter, and four grandchildren.

     6. Hulda A Welch (1892–1905) was born in Indiana in July 1892 and moved to California when she was small. She died at the home of her parents in Glendora, Los Angeles County, on 13 November 1905, when she was only 13 years of age. She is buried in Oakdale Memorial Park in Glendora.

- -- --- -- -

I hope this post found you and your family well, and if events proceed as expected, I should be able to tell you about the Walkers' other daughter, Mary Elvina, next week.

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We have many ways to get in touch:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Admin: School's IN

Hey, cousins!

If you're watching this blog regularly, you probably noticed I missed my Friday post last week - and I'm probably going to miss the next several posts.

We're really close to wrapping up with the descendants of the last known grandchild of James Callin, but I have to put my energy into preparing for my Senior Recital so I can finish my undergraduate degree.

So, if you like what I've been doing, and want to help, dig into my previous posts, and hit me up with your questions and corrections. I may not get back to you immediately, but I will eventually!

See you again in May - if not sooner!

Your cousin, Tad (Class of 2020, Towson University)

Friday, February 21, 2020

The Other Montgomery Connection

Hello, cousins!

Last week, I announced the discovery of Sarah Callin and laid out my evidence that she is the last unknown child in the family of James (1779-1820) and Mary (1768-1846) Callin of Milton Township, Richland County, Ohio. Now that I've had a chance to dig in and research the family of Jonathan and Sarah (Callin) Montgomery, let's jump right in.

Olivesburg and Richland County
(See the modern map on Google Maps)

Olivesburg


After becoming a state in 1803, a steady flow of settlers from the east began pouring into Ohio. The Callin Family History of 1911 says that James and John Callin, sons of "James 1st" the Revolutionary War veteran, moved to the area between what is now Richland County and Ashland County, in Milton Township.

The Callin families lived together on a farm near the village of Olivesburg, which was founded by Benjamin Montgomery in 1816 and named for his daughter, Olive. After James died in 1820, Mary Callin was listed as a founding member of the Hopewell Presbyterian congregation along with neighbors like Abraham Doty and Olivesburg's blacksmith, Abel Montgomery, a son of Benjamin Montgomery.

Both of Mary's daughters married younger brothers of Abel: Elizabeth married Caleb Montgomery in 1822, and Sarah married Jonathan Montgomery in 1824.

Jonathan Montgomery was born in Jefferson County, Ohio, on 5 October 1801. He was fourteen years old in 1815 when the Montgomery family moved to Richland County and settled in the woods, five miles from any neighbor and sixteen miles from a mill and store.
Sarah (Callin) Montgomery
1807-1830

Jonathan grew up with the country and in 1824 married Sarah Callin. They had three daughters together before Sarah's death on 31 December 1830. She was buried in the Old Olivesburg Cemetery.

Jonathan remarried on 7 August 1834, this time with Eleanor "Ellen" Eichard (1802–1858). The family continued to reside in Ohio where Mr. Montgomery was engaged in sawmills and grist mills until some time in 1850 when he became a merchant and postmaster of the town of Olivesburg. In 1850 he was elected County Commissioner.

Ellen died on 38 June 1858, and Jonathan found himself alone, as his three daughters had married. He went to California for a few months in the 1860s and then moved to Rochester, Fulton County, Indiana, where he made his home with his daughter, Huldah Walker.

Jonathan died on 13 February 1898 at nearly 96 years of age and was buried in the Rochester I.O.O.F. Cemetery.

Jonathan and Sarah's three daughters were:


  1. Elvina Montgomery (1826–1869)
  2. Huldah Montgomery (1829–1918)
  3. Mary "Polly" Montgomery (1830–1926)


       I. Elvina Montgomery was born on 16 May 1827 in Richland County, Ohio. She was three years old when her mother died, and five when her father remarried, and she was raised by her father and step-mother in Olivesburg.

Elvina married Philip Huffman (1822–1890) in Richland County on 16 October 1845. Philip was a farmer born on 2 October 1822 in Ohio. After they married, the couple established a farm in Weller Township, Richland County, where they had their first three children during the 1850s. At some point between 1855 and 1860, they moved to Indiana and were living near Rochester when their fourth child was born. Sadly, the baby died from a diphtheria infection - what the local newspaper referred to as "Black Canker."

Philip and Elvina had two more children, but Elvina died on 24 August 1869, when the youngest was only four years old. Philip moved his family from Rochester to Warsaw, Kosciusko County, Indiana, where they appeared on the 1870 Census. Philip hired a housekeeper named Mary (Goodwin) Woodward (1835–1920) and he married her on 24 December 1872.

Mary was the widow of a Union Army private named John Woodward; they had married in 1858 and had a daughter, Margaret, the following year. John enlisted in 1862 and while he was away, Margaret died in February 1863. John came home to Warsaw on a furlough, caught sick, and died that August.


Tragically, Philip had to watch each of his five surviving children succumb to tuberculosis, starting with 17-year-old Amelia in 1871 and 23-year-old Silas in 1872. They were buried with their mother in the Rochester I.O.O.F. cemetery. They were followed by 24-year-old Oliver in 1879 and 15-year-old Izora in 1880, both of whom were buried in the Oakwood Cemetery in Warsaw.

     A. Silas L Huffman (1849–1872)
     B. Amelia C Huffman (1854–1871)
     C. Oliver N Huffman (1855–1879)
     D. Martin Huffman (1860–1860)
     E. John Huffman (1861–1885)
     F. Izora Huffman (1865–1880)


John was the last to die, at 24 years of age. Philip followed on 27 February 1890. They, too, are buried in Oakwood Cemetery.

Mary remained in the home in Warsaw until she died on 1 November 1920. She was buried in Oakwood Cemetery.


- -- --- -- -

This was a sad one, but we'll continue with Elvina's sisters next week. Just be glad we have vaccines, now, and we have figured out how to combat wasting diseases like "consumption."

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We have many ways to get in touch:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!

Friday, February 14, 2020

Here We Go Again

Happy Valentine's Day, cousins!

Well, I have another breakthrough to announce -

If you've followed this blog for a while, you may have noticed some patterns emerging around the two Callin families who settled in Richland County, Ohio. I've noticed them, too. The same names keep popping up in the records and local histories, and while they never quite give me all of the details I would need to paint a complete picture, they give me an outline that I try to fill in.

The Callin brothers, James and John, settled in Milton Township, Ohio, in 1810 and 1816, respectively, and while neither man lived very long, their families became part of the growing community.

Their children and their neighbors probably attended the same church. The Hopewell Presbyterian congregation organized in 1817 and among several others, listed James's widow, Mary Callen, as a member. That church also elected Abraham Doty, who appeared on the same 1820 Census record as the Callin brothers, as an elder.

Benjamin Montgomery established the village of Olvesburg in 1816, naming it after his daughter. Benjamin and his wife, Nancy, later deeded the property to the village for building a school, a church, and a cemetery - the Old Olivesburg Cemetery, in which so many of our Callin descendants are buried.

Elections in 1817 made Benjamin Montgomery a township trustee and John Ferrell "an appraiser of property"; and by 1821, several businesses were established:

Benjamin Montgomery kept a tavern, Abel Montgomery [Benjamin's son], a blacksmith shop; John Gun, a tailor shop; Thomas Beach, a cabinet shop, and Joseph Burget, a tannery. The town is on the left bank of the Whetstone creek, about two miles north of its junction with the Blackfork of the Mohican. (from Baughman's History of Richland County, Ohio, page 417)

You should recall that Benjamin's son, Caleb, married Elizabeth Callin, who I believe to be the daughter of James and Mary Callin. I made my case for that assumption in 2018, and we just finished cataloging their descendants this month. Benjamin's daughter, Olive, for whom the village of Olivesburg was named, was married twice: first to a John Ferrell (possibly the "appraiser of property" mentioned above?), and later to a Boston Burget. Elizabeth's brother, Thomas Callin, married a Nancy Burget in 1823, and Elizabeth's daughter, Mary, married a James Ferrell in Fulton County, Indiana, in 1843.

Because of the implications of these relationships, I started digging to find out more about the Montgomery, Ferrell, and Burget families in Milton Township. While I was digging, I found an obituary for Jonathan Montgomery, another of Benjamin's sons, posted on Find-A-Grave:

Jonathan MONTGOMERY was born in Jefferson county, Ohio, October 5, 1801, when that now great and populous state was still a territory and when the public highways were only Indian paths. He lived with his parents in Jefferson county until he was fourteen years old when they moved to Richland county, Ohio, and settled in the woods, five miles from any neighbor and sixteen miles from a mill and store. There he grew up with the country and in 1824 married Miss Sarah CALLIN. Three daughters were born as a result of that union...

This is far from concrete proof, but I think I know who this Sarah Callin is!
detail from 1830 Census
Milton Township, Richland County, OH

Sarah Montgomery was buried in (where else?) Old Olivesburg Cemetery, and her headstone reports that her date of death is 31 December 1830, "aged 23 years, 8 months, 7 days." This puts her birth date on 24 April 1807 - which is precisely in the age range of the remaining unidentified female in James Callin's 1820 household.

Coincidentally, Jonathan Montgomery also happens to be one of the names listed as one of Milton Township heads-of-household in 1830 - on the same page as several Callin families: John (Sarah's uncle), Thomas (her brother), Mary (her widowed mother), and Hugh (another brother).

I have yet to uncover a marriage record or any documents from before 1830 that affirmatively tie Sarah to our Callin family, but if we accept that Elizabeth and Hugh are children of James and Mary, then that means that every record we have found and every Callin name mentioned in the local histories to this point has turned out to be someone related to one of the two Callin brothers. The fact that the only remaining "unknown daughter" has a convenient birth date suggests very strongly that Sarah is that person.

Just to sum up, this is all the evidence I have for this theory:

  • one mention of her maiden name in her husband's obituary
  • a birthdate calculated from her headstone
  • the Indiana death certificate for Sarah's daughter (Mrs. Huldah Walker), which gives Huldah's mother's maiden name as "Sarah Callin" and birthplace as "Ohio."
  • the circumstantial evidence of a girl of this age living in the household of James Callin in 1820.

I have a lot of work to do to, tracing the descendants of her three daughters, but if you come back next week, we'll get started on them!

- -- --- -- -
Yes, this discovery will delay the book, as adding one more person to that early generation will throw off the outline - but I think you'll agree, it's worth it to have a more complete picture in the end! The good news is that if my reasoning is sound, this should be the last child of James or John Callin left out there to find.

Time will tell.

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We have many ways to get in touch:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!

Friday, February 7, 2020

The Montgomery Brothers and the Gold Rush

Welcome back, cousins!

We spent the last year and a half (give or take) since The Montgomery Connection learning everything we could about the Montgomery family, but we still don't know a lot about these last two great uncles. In fact, when it comes to one of them, I feel like I haven't learned much more than what we saw in the biographical sketch about their brother, Theodore:

To these parents were born five children- Mary, now deceased;Sarah, now the wife of Henry Davidson,living in Halsey,Oregon;Theodore, of whom this sketch is concerned; Porter, deceased at Vicksburg, Miss.;and Callen, now interested in the mining business in Coloma, Cal.
(from the Fulton County, Indiana Handbook, published by Tombaugh House)

 When records can't be found, we have to make some guesses, and today's story starts with a lot of guesses.

Porter Montgomery (b. ca. 1828)

I have determined that Porter was born around 1828, because most biographies (like that attached to Theodore) list children or siblings in order of birth. We know that these two younger Montgomery boys had to be born before their mother's death in 1834, so they were almost certainly born in Richland County. Since we have a pretty good idea when his (we assume) younger brother Cal was born, and since we know how human biology works, 1828 is a good guess for Porter.

As for the rest of Porter's story, the line "deceased at Vicksburg, Miss." suggests that he might have died in the Civil War. The Siege of Vicksburg was considered a turning point in the war, taking place in the spring and summer of 1863. Porter would have been about 35 years old, so it's possible that he was there, but I haven't been able to place him there with any certainty. For one thing, there is only one record of a Porter Montgomery in the National Parks Service's Civil War Soldier database, and that person served in the 8th Regiment, Pennsylvania Reserve Infantry (37th Volunteers) - which never saw service south of Virginia.

Also, the Civil War took place from April 1861 through April 1865, so if he was alive during that time, we should expect to see Porter appear somewhere in the 1850 and 1860 Census. Instead, we find no records of a Porter Montgomery who matches our boy in any of the databases.

It's possible that, like his older brother, Theodore, Porter might have served in the Mexican War in the 1840s - and if he died in that war, he would not appear in a later census - but that war wouldn't have placed him in Vicksburg. Of course, he could have gone to Vicksburg for any number of reasons at any other time, and we may have simply not found such a record, yet.

But, as I said, these are all just guesses - at least for Porter.

Callin "Cal" Montgomery (1830–1912)

 Cal Montgomery was born in October 1829, according to the 1900 Census - which I have found can be off by a year in either direction as often as it is correct. His other appearances in the census records put his birth "abt 1831," so I suspect the correct birth date is October 1830.

(The 1900 Census was the first one to ask for a month and year of birth, but I suspect most census takers asked "how old are you?" and then did the math - which would explain why they would be a year off for people who were born in months after the one during which that census was been taken.)

We do not know much else about Cal's early life. He certainly lived in Rochester after his father remarried and moved there around 1837. Cal was not named as one of the members of his brother's party when Theodore traveled to the gold country around 1849; but Cal would have been 20 at the time, and since there is no 20-year-old Callin Montgomery listed in Rochester on the 1850 Census, it seems likely that he either accompanied his brother's party, or set out on his own soon after.

The earliest record we have for Cal is a "C Montgomery" listed in Coloma, El Dorado County, California, on the 1860 Census: born abt 1831 in Ohio, which most likely means he was born in Richland County, Ohio.
19th century placer miner (Wikipedia)

Military records suggest that he enlisted in the Union Army, serving in Company F of the 4th Regiment, California Infantry on 16 October 1861. He was stationed at Benicia Barracks in 1863, and he mustered out on 26 August 1864 at Drum Barracks.

After the war, he returned to Coloma, appearing in the 1870 Census as a saloon keeper with a wife, Laura S, age 18. While he gave the same birth date (abt. 1831), he gave his place of birth as Indiana. I'm inclined to think that one census taker probably asked that question as, "where were you born" and the other asked "where are you from" - and Cal would have been about 7 or 8 years old when his father moved the family to Rochester, Indiana.

1870 is the only time we see Cal married. Laura, who was recorded as being "3/4 white" and born in California, does not appear in any other records. By 1880, Cal was listed as single again, living in Gold Hill, El Dorado County, and working as a placer miner.

Numerous voter registration records and occasional mentions in The Record-Union of Sacramento over the years establish Cal as the kind of colorful side character you might see in an old western. He was the ol' prospector who passed word of a generous stranger in Coloma to a Wells Fargo official in Placerville, thus helping authorities solve a stage coach robbery. He was the grubby old timer who dealt with the remains of a Chinese man who was suffering from leprosy and committed suicide, leaving a corpse no one wanted to go near hanging in remote cabin. (Fair warning: that story was written to sell papers, not to pay respects to the dead.) 

Cal lived in El Dorado county until he was in his eighties, appearing on the 1910 census at a Pilot Hill address in Greenwood. The California, Death Index, 1905-1939 records his death on 3 October 1912 in Napa County, California. When he died, someone had him buried in Veterans Memorial Grove Cemetery in Yountville, Napa County, and I did find his Find-A-Grave memorial.


Callin Montgomery, on
Find-A-Grave

- -- --- -- -

So there you have it: unless we make another major breakthrough and open up another years' worth of research, I think we have tracked down as many of James Callin's descendants as is currently possible. I've already re-started the process of compiling all of the information in these blog posts into book form, and I expect it will probably take several months (if not a full year) to copy-edit and proofread all of it.

Though I'm not sure quite what to do next, I don't plan on abandoning this blog. I hope to turn my attention to puzzles and problems in other branches of my family, and I'd love to figure out a way to bridge the focus from the very specific "people I'm related" and the very general "here is how to do a genealogy" so this blog can be more useful to more people. I'm open to ideas!

As always, if you've found one or more of your relatives mentioned in this blog, please get in touch. You can comment below (anonymous comments are usually not as helpful), or email "mightieracorns" at Gmail.com.

We now have more ways to reach out:

a Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/MightierAcorns/
a Twitter feed - https://twitter.com/MightierAcorns
a Ko-Fi cup - https://ko-fi.com/mightieracorns


...and if you prefer a private group, we still have the Callin Family History group on Facebook for "cousins only" (there will be a question about how you're related to the family before you can join).

Until next time... Happy Hunting!