Members of his second family have always been interested in his first family. We have wondered why none of them came to be with the Colonel.
Descendants of Charles Edward Broyles’ second family in Colorado may have
expressed puzzlement in mentioning “why none of them came to be with the
Colonel,” as one post to a genealogy forum revealed nearly fifteen years ago.
That, however, may not have been how the original scenario
unfolded.
Not long after Charles abruptly left his home and family in Dalton, Georgia—on
March 22, 1875, by his own reckoning in his journal—a brief item appeared in The Daily Constitution, an Atlanta newspaper. Dated
April 13, 1876—barely a year after Charles left Georgia—the
page four column labeled “Summary of State News” had this to say from Dalton:
C. E. Broyles, jr., has left for Colorada…
That “C. E.,” incidentally, would be Charles Edward Broyles’
first son by that name—the one born
in 1850 to Charles’ first wife, Lucy. That would also likely have been one of the sons
whom Charles had complained about going “back to railroading” when he had tried
to set them up in business. Perhaps this son’s railroad work was the very
vehicle enabling him to travel out west to visit his father, now so far away in
Colorado.
While the younger Charles eventually returned to Georgia—he was back in Dalton by the time of the 1880 census—it appears
he was not the only one of his siblings to head west to visit his dad. Missing
from that same 1880 census in Georgia
was the elder Charles’ second son, Joseph Frank Broyles. Whether his sole purpose in
heading to Colorado was to visit his father, “J.
Frank” stayed in Colorado
long enough to meet and marry Eleanora Kennern in 1883. By the time of the 1900 census, Frank and his wife were settled in Scofield, Utah,
where he continued to work for the railroad as a locomotive engineer.
Whether the other sons—Robert, Price, or John—left Georgia to go see their father in Colorado is difficult to
determine from census records alone. It will take some closer examination of
their life stories to check for that, which we’ll begin to take up tomorrow.
Still, to say that no one followed the elder Charles Broyles westward, or ever
saw him again, is an inaccurate representation. Whether to visit briefly in the
western state or to choose to stay in the region for a lifetime, at least two of Charles’ children from his first marriage made the attempt to
reconnect with their father within the first few years after he left home.
Above: 1849 watercolor, "The Night Train," by British landscape painter, David Cox; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: 1849 watercolor, "The Night Train," by British landscape painter, David Cox; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
So apparently the boys didn't feel totally abandoned and rejected. I wonder if Charles wrote in his journal about his sons' visits.
ReplyDeleteWendy, I would love to see what else Charles wrote, but it is not included in the part of the journal which is publicly available. I always wondered what made one stay out west, one return back east--and others never see him again. So many different stories from this same family.
DeleteScofield Utah must have seemed like the end of the world back then (it probably still is!)
ReplyDeleteI do hope the boys didn't go visiting "hat in hand" ...
That is what I was thinking, maybe they figured he had struck it rich...oh what cynics we are:)
DeleteCynics? Well, if nothing else, it does introduce yet another twist to this story...
DeleteYou are so lucky to have that journal. In so many instances with only census records to tell the story, we are left to wonder and guess about so much.
ReplyDeleteMichelle, you are so right about that. Having the words of the person, himself, to explain key points of his life does provide a guide--although, admittedly, I take even this with a large grain of salt.
DeleteIt makes me so melancholy to see all those abandoned diaries for sale in antique shops--wondering what treasures they hold for family members, if only they knew where to find them. If I had all the time in the world, I'd love to take that on as a mission: to find, scan and transcribe abandoned journals to post online where they would be searchable and--most importantly--findable.