Every now and then, in reviewing documentation for the
various ancestors I’ve researched, I run across curious handwritten notes,
meant for clerical eyes only. Such was the case last year when I stumbled upon
the underlined instructions added to my husband’s maternal grandparents’
marriage license: “Don’t Publish Ages.”
As I progress through his Kelly family lines, with the next
son of Patrick and Emma Carle Kelly, I’m confronted with another such enigmatic
note.
Stephen C. Kelly, arriving on June 7, 1907, was no stranger
to clerical issues. After all, his very date of birth didn’t escape
documentation problems. The Allen County Index of Births assured me that
Stephen arrived on June 7. Now, looking back on this after having discovered
the discrepancies in his brother Emmet’s records (as we saw yesterday), I
should have looked more closely. But how was I to know when I was hand-cranking
my way through the microfilm of Saint Patrick’s Church baptismal records? I was
just overjoyed that I found anything, period.
You’d think that seeing his name on the baptismal record
spelled as Stephan Carroll Kelley might have given me a clue. But no. I chalked
it up to the usual Kelly-versus-Kelley recordkeeping, and moved on from there.
Then I got to his
marriage record and found other discrepancies. Like a totally different middle
name: Carle.
Okay, I can understand maybe a hard of hearing priest not
getting it that the boy’s middle name was intended to be his mother’s maiden
name. After all, naming a boy Carroll back then wasn’t as unusual as it might
seem today.
Sometimes I don’t know when to be patient and understanding
of those entrusted with passing on clerical records, and when to realize I
should keep looking for the real
name.
I did have a few outside clues about Stephen and his early
life, though. Unlike his older brother Emmet, Stephen showed up in a few warm fuzzy
news reports, like when the May 6, 1916, Fort
Wayne News published his name among those—including his cousin Celeste Phillips—receiving First Communion at Saint Patrick Church. And there was even
his photo in The Fort Wayne
Journal-Gazette, to the far left in the front row of graduates from the
church’s grammar school, on June 12, 1921.
But then, there was that marriage license application.
In our age of at-your-fingertips, scanned and
digitally-reproduced, duly indexed documents, there was not one entry for
Stephen Kelly’s marriage license at FamilySearch.org, but three.
I don’t know whether it was just coincidentally the time for
the Allen County bureaucrats to change their format for marriage license
applications, but Stephen’s decision to finally give up bachelorhood—he was,
after all, still living as a single man in his widowed mother’s home, according
to the 1940 census—came at a time when the county seemed to tap dance around
the changes.
First, for his license application, there was a blank page—all
except for the section on the very bottom of the empty form, where Stephen C.
Kelly and Maxine Morton Griner were duly noted as joined in marriage by Judge H.
Wayne on April 6, 1946.
That was the customary form that started off with the heading,
“Application is hereby made for a License for the Marriage of,” and the entire body
of the form left blank. I had seen that form completed and on file for so many
of Stephen’s older Kelly cousins—the left side completed by the groom, the right
reserved for the bride. Why was his left blank—all except for the bottom, where
both the clerk and the Judge signed and completed their piece?
There was more, thankfully. A second scanned entry appeared
to be an attachment stapled to the usual application. It had blank lines to be
completed only by the bride. From this form, I gleaned her date of birth—December
28, 1919, being twelve and a half years younger than her intended—and that she
was daughter of city policeman Rex Morton and his estranged wife (and tavern
owner) Alice Carey Morton. Sounded like an interesting couple in their own
right.
I also learned that this was Maxine’s second marriage;
later, I learned that she had already had a son from her first marriage.
Unlike the old, side-by-side applications, that newer second
page only yielded information on the bride. It took a third application page—once
again, stapled onto an old form—to glean the information on our groom. This
document—when I finally got to it—became the first glimpse I had of Stephen’s
father’s middle name (his middle initial “T” standing for Timothy).
It also provided me that date of birth that didn’t quite line up to what I had previously found.
It also provided me that date of birth that didn’t quite line up to what I had previously found.
Perhaps I should just heave a sigh and tell myself, “Join
the club.” There are so many discrepancies out there when it comes to
researching this family history stuff. Surely I am not the first to uncover
these research woes. All you can do is collect the documents, record your
sources, and fervently hope you haven’t just uncovered some strange sort of
coincidence—like two people with the same name and same parentage born one day
apart in the same city.
So there it was: Stephen’s application no doubt stapled
above that of his wife, all attached to the blank sheet with the judge’s
signature at the bottom. Finding each page separately was alarming, but once it
was all put together, it made sense. Maybe that was the week for changing
application forms in Allen
County. Who knows.
At this point, the question I have is: why did someone write
and underline the word, “Hold” at the top of Stephen’s license application?
Goodness knows that that "hold" is about - perhaps he didn't have the money for the filing fee or something?
ReplyDeleteIt is a little thing to wonder about...but not having the money, or missing a piece of information, would be telling, wouldn't it?
DeleteHe was probably missing some information..or the money, perhaps they changed the fee:)
ReplyDeleteGood thinking, Far Side. Sounds like just the occasion for an increase in those governmental fees :o
Delete