I’m back to that perennial struggle between staying on the
research itinerary’s timetable and stopping to smell the flowers along the
roadside.
Admittedly, I’ve spent a lot of time smelling those roses
lately. When genealogical research finally makes it back to colonial times in
this country, it’s time to really enjoy the scenery. It seems like every
surname could be connected to something of significance.
Whether it’s history or a serious case of inbreeding, I don’t
know. But it sure is tempting to follow those rabbit trails.
Take this week, for instance. I was truly repentant for
my past transgressions of following my nose onto the Tilson line—even though it
led me straight to Mayflower Society eligibility. I meant well when I promised
I’d head back to the main trail and stick to my original purposes.
But then I stumbled upon another set of surnames that made me wonder. And my resolve faltered.
Yes, I took the detour.
But it was only a small one. Really.
You see, if I want to figure out how my mitochondrial DNA
test results lead me back to an exact match with someone who was adopted at
birth, one thing’s for sure: I need to stick with the matrilineal trail that
leads from my mother to her mother to her
mother. There is no deviating from this line. After all, that’s what
matrilineal means.
Since I have one of those annoying brick wall road blocks
keeping me from moving up that trail beyond my third great grandmother, I will have
to engage in some guess work to test the possibilities of who her mother might have been.
That leaves me stuck at third great grandmother, Mary Elizabeth
Taliaferro, wife of Thomas Firth Rainey. Since both of them died in Georgia before
their daughter—my second great grandmother, Mary Rainey Broyles—married in
1871, I had to glean some clues from the nearest census record.
Fortunately, as we’ve already seen, I was able to find a
Mary “Reiney” in the 1870 census. Along with a Thomas Reiney, she was living in
the household of Charles and Mildred Taliaferro. In addition, there was a
Minnie “Broyes”—which I suspected might actually be Broyles—in the household.
Could Thomas be Mary’s brother, I wondered. Since Minnie’s
mother also turned out to be a Taliaferro, could sixty one year old Charles be
the guardian of choice for this branch of the Taliaferro family?
Looking backwards one decade, I was able to locate siblings
Thomas and Mary in the household of widowed Mary (Elizabeth Taliaferro) Rainey in 1860. One more
decade, and I had located the senior Mary’s husband’s name—Thomas Firth
Rainey—in addition to a marriage record for the couple in 1818 Oglethorpe County, Georgia.
Here’s where the guessing game revved up. Next question: so
who would have been the mother of Mary Elizabeth Taliaferro? Remember, my quest
calls for strict adherence to the matrilineal line—no wandering!
Thinking that there had to be a reason why Charles
Taliaferro took in two of Mary Elizabeth’s children after her death, I decided
to play the “what if” game and call Charles Mary Elizabeth’s brother. After
all, it is possible.
Then the quest was on to find a Taliaferro family which
included a brother-sister team of Charles and Mary Elizabeth. While the part
about Mary Elizabeth had me stymied, I did know Charles’ middle name was
Boutwell, and that there was a Boutwell maiden name in another of my Taliaferro
lines.
Checking out the family of Warren Taliaferro, sure enough,
there was a son named Charles Boutwell Taliaferro—I already knew this—but he
didn’t have a sister named Mary Elizabeth. My only options in this four-child
family were sisters Nancy, Sarah and Lucy (who also went by the name Sophia).
One published genealogy of the last century noted that Nancy married a Thomas Rainey.
Could Nancy
be Mary Elizabeth? Since I’ve yet to find any solid documentation—other than a
marriage record indicating Thomas married someone named Mary Taliaferro—I decided to continue playing the “what if” game.
So, what if “Mary” was really “Nancy” and her father was Warren Taliaferro?
Who did Warren
marry?
The answer to this, according to various published
genealogies, was Mary Meriwether Gilmer. (And, because Warren died fairly early
in their marriage, Mary married, second, a man who likely served as her family’s
minister, Nicholas Powers, with whom she went on to have six additional
children.)
This Mary becomes the next entry in my hypothetical
matrilineal line, then. And the question moves on to be, “And who was her mother?”
The answer to this next sequence is that Mary Meriwether
Gilmer was daughter of Thomas Meriwether Gilmer and his wife, Elizabeth Lewis.
By this time, the repetition of the name Meriwether,
coupled with the addition of the maiden name Lewis, started to ring a bell.
Ding! It’s Rabbit Trail Time! What name do you know that contains both a Meriwether
and a Lewis?
You know I went to check that one out.
Gone was the pursuit of matrilineal lines. Now I wanted to
follow that Meriwether line as far back as I could. I wanted to make some
connections. To continue the genealogical litany, Thomas Meriwether Gilmer was
son of Peachy Ridgeway Gilmer—yes, that was his name—and his wife, Mary
Meriwether.
Ah ha! That’s where the Meriwether surname came in!
Jumping tracks to follow her
name—and, in case you’re lost, no, that would not be part of my matrilineal
line; now it’s just for the sheer curiosity of the joy ride—Mary Meriwether, wife of Thomas M.
Gilmer was daughter of Thomas Meriwether and his wife, Elizabeth Thornton.
Now for the long descent down the other side of the family mountain.
Mary, daughter of Thomas Meriwether, had a sister named
Lucy. According to Louisa H. A. Minor’s 1892 The Meriwethers and Their Connections, Mary’s sister Lucy was “a woman of sterling sense and admirable qualities.”
Lucy was one of those women of that era whose husband’s
early demise was followed by another marriage. Though I don’t know why Lucy’s
first husband died, I do know his name and rank: Colonel William Lewis.
Lewis? Ah, now you sense what I’m after. A wedding in which
a maiden name might be blended with a married surname.
And what do you get? Meriwether Lewis.
Yes, that one.
To recap—just in case you lost track—the grandmother of my suspected
fourth great grandmother Mary Meriwether Gilmer Taliaferro Powers was sister
to the mother of Meriwether Lewis. That same suspected fourth great grandmother
was thus first cousin, once removed, from the renowned explorer, Meriwether
Lewis of Lewis and Clark fame. That could make me his first cousin, a kazillion times
removed. Even so, that’s a rabbit trail worth exploring.
Above: Portrait of Meriwether Lewis, circa 1807, by Charles Willson Peale; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: Portrait of Meriwether Lewis, circa 1807, by Charles Willson Peale; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Now that was a rabbit hole worth exploring!!
ReplyDeleteMaybe it's just that exploring is in my roots. I sure loved finding this tidbit!
DeleteDoes cousin Meriweather have a society you can join? As I've been reading your blog the past couple days, I can't help thinking you're going through the same things I am being tugged in several directions at one time. Focus -- that's the challenge!
ReplyDeleteWendy, I'm a "big picture" person, so that's where my temptation lies, unfortunately.
DeleteAnd yes, there is a Meriwether Society. Their home page shows a long list of related surnames including, of course, Taliaferro.
See you have cousins and famous ones too, to bad they are dead:)
ReplyDeleteI imagine they would definitely have been interesting to talk to!
Delete