The counterpoint to yesterday’s unexpected discovery makes
for both a lesson in paying attention to those little snippets of family oral
history and a challenge to search through not-yet-indexed documentation.
So who were those twin sons of Samuel and Maud Woodworth Bean? One I know directly from family stories and photographs—there were people
I knew who had actually spent lots of time with him. That son, with the
matching 1926 birth date of July sixteenth, was Earle Raymond Bean. Earle was
the father of Gregory, the one whose story started off this entire series of
entries on the Bean family.
The other son, however, was one I never met—or, for the most
part, had even heard about. I do vaguely remember Greg’s mother mentioning the
possibility of twins running in the family, and joking about “Earle and Merle.”
But I never thought much about it. I had no idea who Merle was, so I put that
little hint out of mind.
Once I read the newspaper report in the Covina Argus
announcing the twins’ birth, however, those memories came back. It wasn’t a
cute joke, after all, this talk about Merle and Earle—even though that might
have been a way to rib a poetic papa for his more corny attempts at verse. Earle
and Merle were both real people.
And Merle wasn’t just a joking nickname for Earle’s brother
Sammie. I knew about Sammie. Though I
had never met him, I knew what he did, what he was like, what he looked like. At
the time I heard that comment about Merle and Earle, not knowing whether Sammie
or Earle was the older brother, I thought maybe Merle was just the family’s pet
name for brother Sam.
So who was Merle?
To start a search, I had to assume there was a real person with that name. The Argus article didn’t mention the twins
by name, though I knew by birth date that it would be Earle, not Sam, and
another brother. I decided to plug in the name from that joking reference and
see if it produced any leads.
Result? Nothing.
That was from a look at Ancestry.com and also in
FamilySearch.org.
I wasn’t ready to give up quite yet, though, so I hunkered
down for a long night at the computer. Scrolling to the bottom of the landing
page for FamilySearch, I checked to see what resources from the state of California were
available in their collection.
As it turned out, there was a digitized collection which had
not yet been indexed, but was available for browsing.
Browsing—oh, groan! The pages load so slowly. The images
take forever to come into focus. Any
success comes mostly from persistence and patience. And lots of time.
Since nothing surfaced in the various California
files for birth records, the collection I zeroed in on was—logically—"California, Death Index,1905-1939." Logically, I say, because neither I nor any of the family
members I knew had ever come in contact with this person. Unless he was a total
renegade from family association—so alienated from the rest that his name wasn’t
so much as mentioned in normal family discourse—he had to have been long gone.
Thankfully, the 5,692 item Index was divided into clickable
sections, partially narrowing down the search. First, the options given were
two: a date range from 1905 through 1929, and a second set from 1930 to 1939. I
chose the former, guessing that maybe Merle had not made it out of his infancy.
The next hurdle was simple: choose from six
alphabetized sets of surnames. That honed my search to a set of surnames from “A,
Yi” to “Emerson, George.”
Then, let the hunting and pecking begin! It was sheer
guesswork where in that alpha range the surname “Bean” would fall. As it turned
out, I hit my target on image 190 of 853, under the column subheading numbered 672. (Don't ask me how many guesses that process took!)
Entry number thirty two listed a Merle J. Bean. At this
point, I needed to look up the key for the age codes, for a closer look at the Index
showed that Merle died on July 9, 1927, with an age unit listed as “eleven.” If
that was our Merle, that date was not quite a year since his birth. Finding
the key on page six (once again loading painfully slowly), I could see the “2”
code next to this age entry was for age in the unit of months, not years. Eleven months would be just
right.
A second double check was to verify the county of death. Of course, with Maud having recently returned from Texas, of all places, one could never be quite sure where the family might surface next. Primarily, though, Sam’s home had always been around the Bay Area in northern California, so that—rather than a southern California location—would be expected for Merle’s place of death.
That required yet another consultation with the information
page for the Index, which included a chart detailing the code numbers for each
of the California
counties. The Index had given “90” as the code for Merle’s place of death. That
was the code, according to the chart, for the county of San Francisco.
Very possibly, from their nearby residence across the Bay, Sam and Maud may
have had to rush their baby boy to one of the university hospitals in San Francisco equipped to
handle unusual health emergencies. While the Index does not provide cause of
death, the location given seems to indicate use of one of San Francisco’s specialized health centers,
rather than a local general hospital.
There is no indication in any of the previously-chatty
newspapers about this sudden sadness that befell Sam and Maud and their family.
Only in a distant retrospect do the signs of a long-past tragedy realign
themselves, piece by separated piece, through the help of the digitized records
now at our fingertips.
You solved the mystery. Good for you! Back in those days..the loss of little ones was more common than it is today and often families did not speak of them..I am not sure why.
ReplyDeleteRhyming names..almost as bad as when the children's names all start with the same letter..and they keep having more kids and have to make up names:)
Well, I guess they were not the first in this family to have confusing twin names. Keep in mind that Sam and his twin were given names in reverse of each other: Samuel William and William Samuel. And Sam and Bill's father married a second wife, Emma, whose sister's name was Clemma. Sorta makes you wonder what parents are thinking when they come up with stuff like that.
DeleteOf course, I should talk...
I'm sad for two things. One, that Merle passed away so young, and two, that his name wasn't Raymond Earle.
ReplyDeleteI guess the "Poet" side of Sam got the best of his "Family Tradition" side, or it would have been quite likely that Raymond Earle would have been a strong contender in the twin-naming event.
DeleteOh, my. It must be incredibly sad to find a death record at the end of a search -- and what a painstaking search you had! So in fact there was a "Merle and Earle" pair, but only for a short time, and with no joke to be made. Your incredibly patient sleuthing paid off, in a sad but true way. At least you know.
ReplyDeleteI only wish Earle's wife was still here so I could tell her about finding this. She would feel so vindicated. I always thought she was just joking...
Delete