Before pursuing the unexpected discoveries I stumbled upon
in researching the death of young Timothy Kelly of Fort Wayne, Indiana,
let’s regroup and check out the documentation that is now available online to
verify where we stand with Timothy’s records.
Keep in mind, of course, that when I first researched his
case, I was doing it through a pretty primitive edition of Ancestry.com,
available at my public library, oh, a kazillion years ago. And I was saving up
all my additional research time for the next visit back east, in which I got a
spare couple days to cram in an interminable set of questions.
Now you understand why, yesterday, I attributed the cemetery
clerk with a heavenly dose of grace. You’d need it, too, if you saw me come in
your office door an hour before closing, with a huge laundry list of burial
records I was seeking.
Just to lay it all out in this post, I want to first review the
links where these details may now be found online, before moving on to examine who might be the owners and occupants of the Kelly family plot. Of course, never-ending
thanks go to the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center and the many databases they now share, for free,
online. What took me seeming ages to locate back then may be had for a simple click
of a mouse, now—thanks to the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne.
So, here’s the whirlwind tour of simple clicks through the
documentation available:
My first verification of the date of Timothy Kelly’s death
was through the Allen County Indiana Death Index. (That index information, by
the way, is now also provided by FamilySearch.org, too.) As you can see by
clicking the hyperlinks, that record showed Timothy’s date of death to be January
20, 1876. Despite how you may feel about relying on indexes rather than source
documents themselves for vital statistics, it was at least a partial
reassurance to me to see his age given as sixteen, rather than the newspaper’s
report of nineteen years of age.
While the Genealogy
Center has provided a
synopsis of older obituary records online for many years, as I’ve mentioned
before, I still haven’t been able to locate the January 20 entry they provided
in any other historic newspaper collections. However, the cogent points they
provided—“died at 16 years…son of John, 81 Hoagland”—corroborate the other records I’ve
found.
Now, the ACPL Genealogy Center
also includes databases for church burial records and even my hard-won Catholic Cemetery records. Yet, I couldn’t locate
this Timothy Kelly in their Church Burial Records database—until I remembered
the arbitrary nature of spelling during that time period.
Sure enough, after checking “Kelley” rather than “Kelly,” I
found my man: young Timothy was entered under the alternate spelling,
confirming the same date of death, same age—and adding the information that he
was born in Ireland and flagging the source of the record as Cathedral of the
Immaculate Conception in Fort Wayne.
The next database I discovered in this website provided me,
in one quick sitting, everything I had so tediously gleaned from that visit to Fort Wayne so many years
ago. See for yourself, under the heading for “Kelly,” the record for Timothy Kelly’s burial location. Using his date of death to help differentiate his
record from the other two Timothy Kellys listed—plus an additional “Tim Kelly”—we
see his burial information confirms the vital statistics we’ve already uncovered,
and find the grave location to be Section C, lot number 232.
Lot 232, by the way, was a
family plot, not an individual plot.
If you think like me, you probably took a look around that Catholic Cemetery page to see who else might have
been buried in that same lot.
If you don’t think
like me, but prefer to wait ’til I tell you, rest assured, there were several
others buried in that plot.
Including the two other Timothys.
Oh my. "The plot thickens."
ReplyDelete(pardon my horrid pun)
curious and curiouser...is that a word:)
ReplyDeleteI believe it is...at least, if you agree with Lewis Carroll...
Delete