While genealogy is generally a fun pursuit, sometimes it can
get cumbersome. The tedious strain of getting all the details straight can
sometimes call for a break—time out, a breather, a change of pace.
And, while you are reading this, that is exactly what I’m
doing. I’m traveling in the Midwest, stopping in Chicago and Columbus to visit
family—and, of course, making a point to visit the very town we’ve been
puzzling over in the past few days: Lafayette,
Indiana.
Best yet, I’m looking forward to meeting some distant and
heretofore unknown cousins, discovered online during the series here on A Family Tapestry on the Dennis Tully
family descendants.
While I’m traveling from town to town—and hastily stopping
at wifi cafes along the way to check in to my online accounts—I’ve certainly
been playing the cat-and-mouse game with the puzzling entry over John Kelly Stevens’ “nephew” Raphael Kruse. Admittedly, I know the answer now. But believe
me, I didn’t know it back then, when I first came upon that news clipping. Just
consider this a tour of the path of discovery I had to endure.
There is, however, a light at the end of this tunnel. I have
found the missing link. Clue: it isn’t
a member of the Stevens family. But it is a connection to the Stevens family.
Evidently, there is a connection between the Clark family and the Murdock family. I’m sure you are
discerning the direction I’m going. You see, just as John Stevens was a widower
and remarried after Catherine Kelly Stevens’ untimely death, Eliza Murdock was
also facing the same quandary. She, too, had recently been widowed.
And—you knew this would be part of the story, didn’t you—Eliza
happened to have a young daughter when she married John Stevens.
The woman who married Henry Kruse—young Raphael’s father—was
Helen Clark, daughter of the former Eliza Murdock. To be sure, it was difficult
to find mother and daughter in the 1860 census, because they were resident in
what was most likely Eliza’s brother’s household. Only problem was, the census
had the household name as “Murdick.” Further complicating matters were the
multiple variations of the daughter’s name: I’ve seen it listed as Nellie,
Ellen, and Helen, so far. I’ve yet to find the 1860 census entry on
FamilySearch.org, but for those of you with an Ancestry.com subscription, you
can see the family together in the 1860 census here.
And so you have it: Raphael was indeed the nephew of John
Kelly Stevens. And while we’ve yet to get to the sad story of what befell him
on that day back in 1900, we can certainly agree that it pays to take those
potential newspaper “errors” to task and check them out thoroughly.
You never know whether you’ll find an entire missing branch
of the family.
Ah HA!!!
ReplyDeleteNo wonder one could find her!
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M4N7-CC1
Thanks for sharing that link, Iggy! It's so frustrating when I can't get the same results for parallel searches on two different online resources--especially in consideration of readers who might not be able to access the subscription sites. I appreciate your posting that!
DeleteTravel safely! Ah ha..or should I say congrats on finding the connection! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Far Side! It was quite rewarding to make the connection. Of course, that opened up other research possibilities, too--not to mention, more bittersweet stories.
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