In remembrance of those who have enriched our ancestral legacy



Wednesday, April 28, 2010

THE WILL OF LUKE HUGGINS
JONES COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA

Written 8 March 1784
Proven December 1784

In the name of God Amen the eighth day of March 1784 I LUKE HUGGINS of Jones County in the State of North Carolina being in health of body and of perfect mind and memory thanks be given to God therefore calling to mind the mortality of my body and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die do make and ordain this my last will and Testament in manner and form as follows:

Imprimis I lend unto my beloved wife NELLY HUGGINS all my Lands with the plantation I now live on also all the rest of my estate of all kind whatsoever during her natural life or widowhood.

I give unto my Daughter PHEBE SHELFER one shilling sterling money

I give unto my Daughter SARAH STANDLEY one shilling sterling money

I give unto my Daughter NELLIE LITTLETON one shilling sterling money

I give unto my Son JAMES HUGGINS one shilling and heirs forever

I give unto my Son LUKE HUGGINS one shilling sterling to him and heirs

I give unto my Son ISAAC HUGGINS one shilling sterling to him and his heirs

I give unto my Son JACOB HUGGINS the plantation I now live on with all the rest of my Lands to him his heirs and assigns forever

I give all the rest of my estate of all kinds whatsoever to my five youngest Children ESTHER HUGGINS, HANNA HUGGINS, THOMAS HUGGINGS, CHARLES HUGGINS, and TEMPERANCE HUGGINS to be equally divided among them at my wife's Death or marriage

Likewise I constitute and ordain SIMON SPIGHT and JOHN PARRY Executors of this my last will and Testament I do hereby utterly revoke and disanull all other Wills or Testaments ratifying and confirming this and no other as my last Will and Testament in witness whereof I have [sworn] to set my hand and Seal this day and year above written

LUKE HUGGINS (seal)

Signed sealed published and declared as his last will and Testament in the presence of the Subscribers

NATHAN (X) BRYAN
WAXELL (X) PARRY
ADONIJAH PARRY

State of North Carolina Jones County Court Decr term 1784
Then was the written last WIll and Testament of LUKE HUGGINS deceased duly proved in Decr Court by the Oaths of NATHAN BRYAN and ADONIJAH Parry two of the subscribing witnesses agreeable to law and SIMON SPIGHT one of the named executors qualified as such agreeable to Ordered that Letters _____ accordingly

Test LEW. BRYAN CC [Clerk of the Court]

Jones County Will Book A, pp. 40-42

Tuesday, April 27, 2010



Zachariah Davis Wilson
1811 - 1894
Mormon Preacher and Member of the High Council in Far West, Missouri and Nauvoo, Illinois 1842
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Son of James Wilson and Ellender Shelfer, Zachariah Davis Wilson was born 12 Jun 1811 at Farmington, Bedford County, Tennessee. Brother to Nancy, Elijah, Levin, Elizabeth (Betsy), Ella Melissa, Thomas Green and Sarah. He married Lucinda Grant Beazley, daughter of Bozwell Beazley and Jane Spencer, 26 Apr 1836 in Lawrence County, Illinois.
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Note: Read a first person account of the missionary influence of Elder Wilson from an 1833 convert in Illinois. Biographical Sketch of James Holt 1804-1894
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[accessed 9/2008]
[Photo Credit: Leanna Pruitt]

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Documenting the Marriage of John Molyneux Barnes and Eleanor Wilson

Clues often lead to good information; but don't stop there. Always search for the original records.

Challenge: Resolve conflicting and incomplete information recorded and replicated by many descendants regarding the exact date and place of marriage for John Molyneux/Mullanics Barnes and Eleanor Wilson.

My grandmother's Book of Remembrance records a marriage date of 1852 in Salt Lake City, Utah for her maternal grandparents. The information came to her from a distant cousin who was also an accredited researcher, so...it must be correct. Right? However, no written records created in the Utah Territory could document the marriage as having taken place there. Perhaps this information was just passed on verbally or simply lost to memory through subsequent generations. Maybe they were too busy trying to survive in the harsh desert valley to take the time to record this important event. Or maybe the original records were lost or destroyed.

Check compiled records--see what someone else has already done. Did they cite their sources? A good researcher always leaves a trail for others to follow.

Clue: A respected historian and descendant posts to the internet and cites the following:

"The Frontier Guardian [Newspaper], Pottawatamie County, Iowa 1849 - 1852, Marriage Notices, listing John Barnes and Elnr Wilson."

Family Tree Submissions, www.rootsweb.com, Entries: 7686, ID Number 1470, Eleanor Wilson. Contact: Jon Stewart Baxter jonbaxter@hotmail.com, updated 30 Jun 2001.

Indexes are great finding aids. They can save a lot of time. Be cautious of omissions or errors. Your ancestor might really be in the original record but missed in the index. Or you might see a variation in the spelling of their name.

Another Clue: An online index of brides and grooms lists John Barnes and Elnr Wilson.

Marriage Notices from the Frontier Guardian 1849 - 1852, http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~iapottaw/FGmarriages.htm.

Don't stop with the index. Locate the record referenced by the index.

Good Information: A title search of the Family History Library Catalog (FHLC) at http://www.familysearch.org/ reaps rewards. This book is in the FHL collection. Books by locality for the U.S. and Canada are located on the third floor of the Library. They are grouped regionally by state and then by county. Many records relating to Pottawatamie County, Iowa will begin with the same subject call number. They will be located on the same shelves.

"John Barnes and Miss Elner Wilson, both of Pottawatamie County, Iowa, 18 March 1852, at Little Pigeon Branch, by Thomas C. D. Howell. (The Frontier Guardian, 25 March 1852)."

Notes: "A compilation of death and marriage notices taken from the Frontier Guardian, surviving issues of the Western Bugle, and the Pottawattamie High Council Minute Book. With few exceptions, the individuals named were Mormons." Valuable information in preface and list of Mormon settlements in Pottawattamie County, Iowa.

Lyndon W. Cook, Death and Marriage Notices from the Frontier Guardian, 1849-1852 (Orem, Utah: Center for Research of Mormon Origins, 1990), Marriages: Kanesville, Iowa, 1849-1852, page 38, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah, FHL US/CAN Book 977.771 V2c.

Message boards and online indexes simplify the search. But there is nothing like reading the names of your ancestors in the handwriting of the original record written in their presence on the day of their special event.

Use the Family History Library Catalog at www.familysearch.org to locate original records. They may be in the format of a book, microfilm, microfiche, or a digital image. If the FHL collection does not have the record you need, ask a consultant to help you find where the original records might be located.

Do a locality search for the county, then from the list of subjects select Vital Records to learn what records can be accessed. Earlier records may be kept at a town level, later records will be recorded by the state.

Original Records:

"State of Iowa, Pottawatamie Co. SS [Sworn Subscriber]. Marriage License issued March 15, 1852 to John C. Barnes, aged 22 years, & Ellen Wilson, aged 19 years on Recommend of her father Elijah Wilson. Signed T. Burdick, Co. Judge"

Pottawattamie County (Iowa). Clerk of the District Court, Marriage Records, 1848-1930, Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1960-1999, FHL Film 1476888, part 1, page 115, No. 34, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.

Read the catalog description to better understand the records. Make sure you don't miss anything. In this case, part 1 is the marriage license and part 2 is the marriage register, two records created three days apart.

More original records:

"1852 March 18. Married by Elder T. C. D. Howell, Mr. John Barnes to Miss Elenor Willson both of this County."

Pottawattamie County (Iowa). Clerk of the District Court, Marriage Records, 1848-1930, FHL Film 1476888 part 2, page 64.

Brick Wall Solution: Mystery solved! John [John C.] Barnes and Eleanor [Elnr, Ellen, Elenor] Wilson were married in Pottawattamie County, Iowa on the 18th of March 1852. Shortly thereafter they journeyed on to Zion as young newlyweds to establish their home and family, building the foundation for an extensive posterity.

Don't stop now! Record and then share what you have learned. Use this new information as a springboard to understanding your ancestors in the historical context of their times. Learn more about the pioneer settlements of Winter Quarters, Council Bluffs and Kanesville. When did they leave Iowa to make the journey west? What company and with whom did they travel? Did they or their traveling companions keep journals? When did they arrive in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake? Keep asking those questions and seeking the answers....

...Lest we forget
The Clothes Line

Do you have memories of your mother
Hanging wash upon the line,
When clothes dried in the gentle breeze
Warmed by sunshine from on high.
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Now we do things differently
In an effort to save time,
Still there is much to be said
For bringing back the old clothesline.
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Put your worries in a basket
Take your troubles all outside,
Hang each one with a clothespin
Before you come inside.
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Life wasn't meant to burden you
With sorrow and regret,
Take your problems to the clothesline
And soon you will forget.
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Now when the morning's over
And you head back out again,
This time bring your blessings
And twice as many pins!
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The clothesline is a metaphor
For God's most loving care.
He is watching over you,
He is always there.
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-- Laurie West Hillier


Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Lest We Forget…

The Clothes Line
Helen Mary Elizabeth Allingham, R. W. S.
English Artist, 1848 - 1926
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"I may only pass this way but once. Any good that I may do, let me do it now, for I may never pass this way again."
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