Despite managing to uncover the “smoking gun” in this current genealogical adventure, as sometimes happens, the discovery came with hidden
baggage. Yes, I did confirm the relationship between our family’s John Kelly Stevens
of Fort Wayne, Indiana,
and the suddenly-deceased Lafayette
child, Raphael Kruse. But the process yielded even more questions than we had
when this quest began.
Sometimes, no matter how hard you try, you just can’t get
ahead.
How the world has conspired against me:
Why, if Eliza was the widow of someone named Clark, did her marriage record to John Stevens list her
as Eliza Murdock? The omission of that
one little detail caused me untold hours of frustration trying to locate her in
local documents—instead of as Eliza Clark, as it turned out she was listed in
the 1860 census.
Come to think of it, why can’t I (even now) find John Stevens listed in the Lafayette
census for 1860 together with his three young sons? I can find James and John
Kelly with the family unit in the 1870 census, but even then, where was the
baby, William?
Why, if Eliza’s second husband John Stevens had Eliza’s
brothers conveniently listed in his obituary, could I not find them
together with Eliza in earlier Lafayette census records before she was married? Come to
think of it, why was it so hard to find any credible candidates for those
brothers in subsequent census records?
Who was Eliza’s mom? The 1860 census suggests Sally. The
1870 census disagrees, listing her as Sibba—and no, that isn’t a case of
someone writing “a” and “l” sloppily.
On the other hand, a Find A Grave entry for Eliza’s brother James suggests their mother was named Sabina Kelly.
Sibbie. Sabbie. Sally. Sigh.
Sibbie. Sabbie. Sally. Sigh.
What about Eliza’s dad? By 1860, Eliza’s mother was already
widowed. There is no sign of Eliza’s parents in the 1850 census, but that might
have been because they had not yet arrived from Ireland. And yet, the Find A Grave
entry for the family has a note that Eliza’s father was named John Murdock. An
unsettling addition to that note claimed that he died in 1853 in Wayne County, Indiana. Why Wayne
County? Especially
considering the family had settled in Tippecanoe County.
How many miles away are those two counties? Was that the route they traveled
during immigration? Is this a likely lead? While grateful for the “free”
information, I have my doubts.
Besides, who was Eliza’s first husband, after all? They were
apparently married in Ireland,
not Indiana, if their daughter
Helen-Ellen-Nellie was also born in Ireland. But did Eliza come all the
way over to Indiana
as a young mother and a widow? Searching the old Saint Mary’s cemetery in Lafayette
for all Clarks yields no possibilities.
And searching for “Clarke” in the Saint Mary’s cemetery on
Find A Grave yields absolutely nothing.
Admittedly, Find A Grave doesn’t include every burial existent
in the cemetery, but I’d be laughed to scorn by the good folks in the cemetery
office if I called up asking for information on a Clark
with no first name or date of death.
And, oh—could you also check that for C-l-a-r-k-e, too?
Sometimes in genealogical research—even if you find that
proverbial smoking gun—you just have to succumb to leaving the scene of the “crime”
without knowing the rest of the story.
For now.
You can be sure, though, that this is one scenario I’ll be revisiting in the future.
I've found the pre-1870 censuses to be very difficult to work with - they being so "male-centric" An Irish woman on the frontier back then would have been remarkable - but many of them were as invisible as "servants" (as many of them were indentured or otherwise).
ReplyDeleteThe clue for me should have been that a single woman near a frontier region wasn't there all on her own. Likely, she was traveling with family. I think I was more frustrated with myself than anyone else, though, in getting thrown off the trail by that simple mis-labeling as "domestic."
DeletePs my latest project re: the sailors cap has me grinding teeth in frustration -
ReplyDeleteI've found a new to me cousin - but...
Hooray for the new cousin find at least! But I know you won't give up yet. Can't wait to hear what you discover.
Delete