By now, you may be getting exasperated over the trek back
through time and newspapers as we try to identify the possible source for that Fort Wayne newspaper
report about a nephew for Fort Wayne policeman John Kelly Stevens.
You may be wondering: was
there a Raphael Kruse? Perhaps there was no such person. Or perhaps he was a
resident of another city, not Lafayette.
Perhaps “Kruse” was not the right spelling—after all, the more common version
seen now is Cruz.
Or forget quibbling about typos and just assume this was a
news report in error. Somebody might have gotten the story wrong and attached
Raphael Kruse’s name to the wrong Fort
Wayne resident.
But wait. There was
that mention in the obituary for John Kelly Stevens’ step-mom, Eliza Murdock Stevens. Was there a Raphael Kruse in Lafayette?
As it turns out, there was an unfortunate ten year old boy
who died in Lafayette, Indiana, on March 23, 1900. As reader Charlie of Carolina Family Roots pointed out in the comments on Friday, his name was
entered in the local death records as Raphael K. Kruse.
As far as the “Mrs. Henry Kruse” mentioned in Eliza Stevens’
obituary, it turns out there was a Henry Kruse family in Lafayette. Checking the 1900 census—taken only
a few months after poor Raphael’s demise—shows a Lafayette family comprised of Henry, his wife
Nellie, and their five children. There was an ample four year spread between
sisters Henrietta and Laura to allow for a ten year old Raphael to fit
comfortably within the family structure, if he were still alive. And, the 1900 census also indicated how many children each mother had had—in Nellie's case, ten, five of whom were surviving at that point.
Apparently, Henry and Nellie—or Helen, as her marriage entry
lists her—were wed on May 22, 1879.
Things are looking just fine until the point in the marriage
index at Familysearch.org which displays the bride’s maiden name. Unfortunately,
Nellie was not a Stevens. Her maiden
name was Clarke.
So, while we did come by some success in pursuing local
records to prove the existence of a Henry Kruse family in Lafayette, Indiana,
we still do not have any connection to the Stevens family—or any clue as to how
John Kelly Stevens might have found himself being called “Uncle” by one little
boy with the very un-Irish name of Raphael.
Hmm.. the plot thickens.
ReplyDeleteNellie is a nickname for Hellen? I'll have to file that tidbit away.
You know, I'd heard about that nickname connection before, Iggy, but I couldn't tell you how. Sometimes I wonder how these nicknames originated. I wouldn't have guessed on my own that "Helen" would morph into "Nellie"--nor would I have guessed many of the other combinations I've run into from previous centuries. It was only learning by osmosis that afforded me that tidbit.
DeleteRaphael sounds so foreign:)
ReplyDeleteI am totally clueless on the origin for that particular name for that little guy. I'd have to take a closer look at the origin for the surname Kruse, I guess.
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