Uncle Norman (1811-1885)

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Norman Lee, my 4th great uncle, passed away 134 years ago on 5 January 1885 in Mason, Ingham County, Michigan.  Uncle Norman was born 28 November 1811, in West Bloomfield, Ontario County, New York to William and Mary Summers Lee.  With his parents he migrated to Oakland County Michigan in the early 1820s.  In the  1850 Products of Agriculture Census – Town of Farmington:
Acres (I) 55
Acres (U) 25
Land Value $2,000
Livestock Value $200

The 1857 Plat Map Transcription for Farmington Twp, Oakland County, MI, states Norman Lee owned 80 acres in section 30 of that Township.

Uncle Norman never married.  He was laid to rest next to his parents in the Quaker Cemetery in Farmington, Michigan [headstones recently restored]:

NormanLee_Grave2

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Remembering 8 times great grandfather, Joseph Jenks, Jr.

302 years ago, 4 January 1717, my 8 times great , Joseph Jenks, Jr. died in Pawtucket, Providence County, Rhode Island.  He was English born in 1627 and joined his father, Joseph Jenks, Sr. (the inventor) in Saugus, Massachusetts, at the Iron Works.  He married Esther Ballard in 1655.  The couple had 18!! children: Daniel, Mary, Joseph III (1656), Elizabeth (1658), Sarah (1660), Lemuel (1661), Nathaniel (1662), James Varnum (1663), Esther (1664), Eliza (1665), Mary (1666), George Foster (1667), Ebenezer (1668), William Thompson (1669), Albert Carlysle (1671), Joanna (1672), William (1674) [my 7 times great grandfather), and Abigail (1676).

From the History of Pawtucket, RI

“Joseph Jenks, Jr. is noted as the founder of Pawtucket. He was a young ironworker, born in England, who had come to America to join his father. Joseph Jenks, Sr. had organized and operated the first American iron works at Saugus, Massachusetts. In 1670, young Joseph left Saugus intending to settle in Warwick, Rhode Island on the “Pawtuxet” River. It is not certain just how he learned of the more powerful “Pawtucket” Falls on the Blackstone River, but with a readily available supply of timber and near by bog iron ore, it was the ideal place to build his forge.

This area was still wilderness then. It was the northern boundary of Roger Williams’ settlement of Providence, but had remained quiet woodland and fertile flood plains. On October 10, 1671, Joseph Jenks, Jr. purchased 60 acres of land on the west bank of the Blackstone River. This transaction marks the establishment of the first permanent settlement of Pawtucket.

The King Philip War

The small Jenks settlement was burned to the ground in 1675 during the King Philip War. The Indians of the New England region had been feeling the expanding power and presence of the English colonists. Massasoit, the Wampanoag chieftain, had managed to maintain friendly relations with the colonists. He dies in 1660, and in 1662 was succeeded by his son, Metacomet, also known as King Philip. The Wampanoags nursed an increasingly hostile attitude toward the white men. In 1675, after a series of aggravations, the Indians finally attacked. Many colonial towns were either wholly or partly destroyed during the war which finally ended in August 1676, when King Philip was killed. The results of the conflict were disastrous for everyone and almost fatal for the Indians, who would never regain their strength in southeastern New England.

The Jenks forge was rebuilt when the King Philip war ended, and soon there was a small village clustered near the Pawtucket Falls. It included several stone-ended dwellings, the forge, the foundry, a gristmill, and sawmill. Despite the small size of the village, it was an important center for iron products such as farm tools and housewares that were vital to the survival of early settlers.”

As a side note, while residing in Saugus, Grandmother Esther was presented at the Quarterly Court, in 1652, for wearing silver lace and fined for this practice.  Come on folks, 18 children, wasn’t she entitled to a bit of fancy just for her?

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Happy 227th Anniversary, Grandfather and Grandmother Botsford!🥂

It was 3 January 1792, in Stockbridge, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, that my 4 times great grandparents, Simeon Botsford and Esther Clark married.  Simeon was born 11 June 1763 in Derby, New Haven County, Connecticut, to John and Dorcas Warren Botsford.  Esther was born 19 September 1771.  The couple had 11 children! Chloe (1794), Mary W. (1796), Esther (1797), Polly Anna (1799), Betsey (1801), Abner Clark (1803), Simeon (1805), Almira (1807) [my 3 times great grandmother], Levi W. (1810), William Clark (1812), and Aressa S (1816).  All children were born in Salisbury, Connecticut, prior to the family migration to Oakland County, Michigan.  My 3 times great grandmother, Almira Botsford, married Morris Jenks in Bloomfield, Oakland County, Michigan, on 20 November 1828.

Grandfather Simeon’s nephew, Milton Clarence Botsford (called Clarence) , purchased the coach stop on the road from Detroit to Lansing which he renamed the Botsford Inn in 1847.  The Inn is a historical preservation site.  The town of Clarenceville, Wayne County, Michigan, was named for him.

Simeon Botsford died in Southfield, Oakland County, Michigan, on 10 August 1831.  Esther Clark Botsford followed him in death on 21 November 1855, also in Southfield.

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Happy 157th Anniversary,Grandma and Grandpa Gardner!

On January 1, 1862, in Hartford, Connecticut, my great, great grandparents, William G. Gardner and Mary Ann Cummings were married.  This was the second of four marriages for Grandpa Gardner, born Wilhelm Gotthartd Gaertnter in Kleiningersheim, Württemburg on  10 March 1833 to Alexander Gaertner and Christina Regina Bauer.   He emigrated from his hometown, receiving permission to leave, in June of 1854 and arrived in New York City later that year.  He settled in Connecticut.  His first wife, Louise Kohler (married 3 July 1860) bore his his first child, William Fritz Gardner (6 May 1961), but would also bring about the death of Louise on 18 May 1861.

Grandpa and Grandma Gardner had four daughter:  Phebie Ann (1862) [my great grandmother], Sophie J. (1866), Nellie Marie (1871), and Carrie (1881).  As an explanation of the gap between the birth of great grandmother Phebie and her sister, Grandpa Gardner was serving in the Connecticut Troops of the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was at the Battle of Vicksburgh.

On 22 March 1866, Grandpa Gardner applied for U.S. Citizenship in the Superior Court, Bridgeport, Connecticut.  Soon after the birth of fourth daughter, Carrie, the family removed to Ligonier, Indiana.  It is there on 28 February 1889, Grandma Gardner passed away.   Grandpa went on to marry and divorce wife number 3, Mary McConnell and then marry wife number 4, Margaret “Jennie” Broderick Boyd.  Grandpa Gardner passed way 5 February 1913.

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William G Gardner

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163 Years Ago, Charles Norton Lee and Esther Jenks were married.

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Esther Jenks Lee, Charles Norton Lee with twin grandsons, Roy and Ray Churches, Hannah Almira Lee Churches behind.

On Christmas Day, 1855, my great, great grandparents,  Charles Norton Lee and Esther Jenks, were married in the the home of her parent, Morris and Almira Botsford Jenks, in Southfield, Oakland County, Michigan.   Charles (13 March 1833 – 23 October 1905) was the son of Horatio and Hannah Munn Lee.  Esther (24 October 1832 – 10 February 1918) was born and lived her entire life in Southfield, Michigan.  She and Grandfather Lee had six children: Emmer (1856), Effie Clarissa (1859) [my great grandmother], Lewellyn (1862), Hannah Almira (1864), Marietta (1870), and Ora (1874).  Both Grandparents are buried in the Southfield Cemetery.

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Happy 218th Birthday, Grandfather Lee!🎈 🎂

On 5 December 1800, my three times great grandfather, Horatio Lee, was born in Guilford, Connecticut, to William and Mary Summers Lee.  The family migrated West from Connecticut, stopping in New York, and while in West Bloomfield, Ontario County, New York, Horatio married Hannah Munn, the daughter of Noah Munn, Jr. and Mercy Simons, on 5 April 1825.   The family then removed to Oakland County, Michigan, where Horatio and Hannah settled in Section 24 in Farmington Township (the same section of Farmington Township where Horatio’s 4 times great granddaughter and her family have lived for the past 9 years).  Horatio and Hannah were the parents of: Caroline (1824), Clarissa (1826), Marietta (1828), George H. (1830), Charles Norton [my great great grandfather] (1833), Maria M. (1835), Emily J. (1838), Volney (1838), Mary C. (1842), Albert Lewis (1845), Thomas F (1847), and Avis (1851)!   Yes, and even dozen and only one set of twins.

Horatio and Hannah are buried in the Southfield Cemetery, Southfield, Michigan.

horatio

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It is # 222 for 4 times Great Grandparents Munn!

222 years ago on 26 November 1796, in Gill, Massachusetts, Noah Munn, Jr. and Mercy Simons were wed.  Noah was born on 10 May 1772 in Northfield, Massachusetts to Noah Munn, Sr. and Desire Hitchcock.  He died 13 May 1821 near Riga, New York.  Mercy was born in Bolton, Connecticut, in 1771 to Jonathan Simons and Thankful Isham.   Noah and Mercy were the parents of 11: Joseph (1797), Moses (1798), Miranda (1801), Jonathan (1803), Harriet L. (1805), Hannah (1807), Clarissa (1809), Moses (1811), Sarah S. (1813), Lucinda (1815), and Julius Steel (1819).   Their daughter, Hannah, my 3 times great grandmother, married Horatio Lee in New York and then became one of the early settlers of Oakland County, Michigan.  It is through Mercy Simons to her mother,  Thankful Isham, to her mother Rebecca Fuller, to her father Samuel Fuller, to his father Barnabas Fuller, to his father Samuel Fuller, to his father Samuel Fuller., to Edward Fuller that I have been able to trace my Mayflower Descendant line.

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Frohes Jubiläum Alexander Gaertner und Christina Regina Bauer (24 November 1813)

Today marks the 205th wedding anniversary of my three times great grandparents, Alexander Gaertner and Christina Regina who were married at the Evangelisch in Klein Ingersheim, Württemburg.   Grandfather Alexander and Grandmother Regina were the parents of 12 children: Johann David (1815), Christina Regina (1816), Maria Magdalena (1818), Johann Frederich (1819), Stillborn Daughter (1821), Alexander (1822), Johann Michael (1824), Stillborn daughter (1825), Johanna Regina (1827), Stillborn son (1830), Christina Regina (1831), and finally Wilhelm Gotthardt (1833).   Wilhelm was my immigrant ancestor who changed his name to William G Gardner after his arrival in the United States in 1854.

I am quite fortunate that the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints [www.familysearch.org] had microfilmed the local Protestant church (Evangelisch) records for this town that has now been swallowed up by Stuttgart which allowed me to track this  and  generations prior.  I was able to track baptisms, marriages, and deaths.

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Happy Anniversary 3 Times Great Grandparents!

On 20 November 1828, 190 years ago, in Bloomfield, Oakland County, Michigan, Miss Almira Botsford married Mr. Morris Jenks.  Almira was born 27 June 1807 in Salisbury, Connecticut to Simeon Botsford and Esther Clark.  Morris was born on 7 October 1801 in Berkshire, New York to Laban Jenks and Prudence White.   Both migrated to Oakland County in the early 1820s with their families.  Morris and Almira produced four children:  Leman Case Jenks (1830), Esther Jenks (1832) [my 2 times great grandmother], Oliver Torry Jenks (1835), and Minerva B. Jenks (1838).

Morris and Almira built the home on Berg Road in Southfield in the early 1850s that would eventually be called Deer Lick Farm – but that is another story.  Morris died 13 February 1878 and is buried in the Southfield Cemetery.  Almira died five years later, 6 March 1883.  Unfortuately, I have not found definite proof of where GGG Grandmother was laid to rest.  The records of the Southfield Cemetery do not indicate she as interred next to GGG Grandfather.  The search continues.

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106 Year Old Mistake, Aunt Essie!

106 years ago, 19 November 1912, my grandmother’s sister, Essie, married Louis Kincaid Postle in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio.  Aunt Essie was 21, Louis was 25.  The marriage was not a good one and would end in divorce.  In the 1920 census, the couple appeared to be living with Louis’ mother and siblings, but by the time the 1920 Columbus City Directory went to print, Aunt Essie was back living with Great Grandmother Koontz.

The only photograph I have of Essie and Louis together was taken on the eve of my grandparents’ wedding in April of 1918:

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That is Great Grandmother Koontz between Louis and Essie.

I knew that Essie and Louis were divorced, but never know when or why.   We were always quite glad that she married the second time to Harold Spuhler who was one of our favorite uncles who visited my grandparents long after Aunt Essie passed away in 1953.   I did finally write to the Clerk of the Court in Franklin County, Ohio asking for a copy of the decree for Aunt Essie’s divorce.  They were quite helpful and supplied the decree and the supporting docuementation – the divorce was granted on 13 October 1922, with the grounds of gross neglect of duty [possibly due to the fact that he was living in Indiana and she was in Ohio]. Filed by Essie 4/28/1922. Attorney fees: $15.00, Court Costs $12.00 – assessed to Louis Postle. Essie Koontz name restored.   She and Uncle Harold were married 30 April 1923.

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