When I mentioned the story about Grandma Izzy and the peanut butter stuck in her mouth to Grandma Kathleen, she laughed softly and said, "You know, my mother had a similar experience!"
Grandma Kathleen told me that when Grandma Lucy was a child, the peanut butter was stickier and had to be stirred up. Like Grandma Izzy, Lucy loved peanut butter, and would try to snitch it. Well, one day Lucy was in the pantry with a spoonful of peanut butter when she heard someone looking for her!
Not wanting to be caught red-handed, Lucy quickly put the peanut butter out of sight--in her mouth. Unfortunately, she couldn't swallow the sticky peanut butter and was caught red-handed anyway.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Pictures of pictures - Wallace side
So, here are some pictures of pictures for you to look at! I didn't have a scanner handy, so I just whipped out my digital camera and took some pictures. Therefore, the quality isn't as great as it could be (yay reflections!), but I wanted to have copies of these pictures for myself and for anyone else who was interested to see them. We have some good looking people in our family!
Lucy Henize |
Cecil Denver Wallace, Sr. |
No flash caught on this one, but it's a bit blurrier : / |
John Henry Henize, Mollie Elizabeth Chambers |
Minnie May Winspear and Clifford White |
Thursday, June 13, 2013
James William Wallace
Julia Anna Peters, James W Wallace |
Birth: March 21, 1867
Marriages:
- October 31, 1896 to Julia A. Jordan. Julia Jordan was about 20 and James was 29.
- August 20, 1899 to Julia Anna Peters. James was 32 and Anna was 26. They had two children, Adrian Floyd and Cecil Denver.
James grew up and lived in and around Green, Brown, Ohio. That combination of township and county makes me laugh every time! I think there might have been some Whites that lived in Green, Brown, Ohio, too. Oh, so many colors.
ANYway. The 1870 and 1880 censuses show that James grew up with both sets of grandparents, and many of his aunts, uncles and cousins living right next door or down the road from him. Isn't that great? I'm guessing that they all helped each other with their farms and such. I wish I could post a picture of the census with everybody labeled according to how they're related to him (James), but I recently found out that it might not be allowed to post pictures of records from Family Search on the internet, so I'm waiting to hear back on if I have permission. If I don't, I'll be taking down all the record images that I've posted on the blog. The links will still be there, though.
James was the oldest of three boys. His father passed away when he was young, so James's mother had to raise her children on her own. I'm sure having all that family around made a big difference to her, but even with all of his uncles and family around, I wonder if James felt responsible to fill the role of his father in providing for his family, as he was the oldest son?
James was very close to his family on both his father's and his mother's sides. Most of his relatives that lived on land adjacent to his immediate family were Wallaces. I also found two 1880 censuses recording a James Wallace of the appropriate age. One was listed with Elizabeth Wallace (James's mother) and the other was listed with Z. H. Kennady -- or Zedick Hezekiah Kennedy -- Elizabeth's younger brother and James's uncle. On the census, it shows that James was working on the farm, so I think he must have gone to help his uncle out with some of the farm work when the census was taken.
I did find a marriage record for a Julia Jordan (NOT to be confused with Julia Anna Peters!) and a J. W. Wallace. A John Wallace was witness that James and Julia were old enough to marry without their parents' consent and that they weren't too closely related. I'm guessing that this John was James's younger brother. This marriage took place in Clermont County, Ohio, very close to where James grew up. I couldn't find any other records pertaining to Julia Jordan after she and James married, but I think someone has because there's a death date for her on Family Search.
I was unable to find a marriage record for James and Julia Anna Peters, but documents pertaining to their two children (a birth record for Cecil Denver and a marriage record for Adrian) list James Wallace and Julia Peters as their parents. Mabel Shell, Anna Peters's daughter from her first marriage, lived with them until she either married or was of age to move out. I wonder what James's relationship was like with her?
By the 1900 US Census, Mabel is 4 years old and James and Annie had been married for about a year. They were renting a house that didn't have a farm, but most of the people living near them lived on farms.
At the 1910 Census, James and Annie seem to have a really good life going for them. They own their own farm free of mortgage! Their children are growing and going to school--at this point, they have two boys (Adrian, 9, and Cecil, 1.5 years - here's his birth record from 1908) in addition to Annie's daughter Mabel. James seems to have steady work at the sawmill, which brings in a more reliable income than the farm would. Family is close again; James's brother Robert was living close enough to be recorded on the previous page of the census.
Not much seems to have changed by the 1920 Census except that Mabel has moved on, probably to marry and start her own family. I couldn't find a marriage record for her, so I'm not sure who she married or if she did marry. James's son Adrian got married two years after the census was taken, so Annie and James were left with only their youngest child at home, making Cecil essentially an only child for his teenage years.
Sometime before 1930, Annie and James sold their farm and moved into town. James started up a grocery store, and Annie worked there as a clerk. Unfortunately, it seems like that business didn't work out for them, because in 1940 James was working at the saw mill again.
Although he had moved several times, James lived in Brown County, Ohio his whole life. I'm sure he visited other places, though, especially Cincinnati. James passed away just five days before Christmas Day, 1944. World War II was still raging, although the tides had turned and it would end a few months later. James was 77 years old when he passed and was survived by his widow, Julia Anna Peters.
1870 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M6KH-YS9
1880 Census:
- with mother: https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MZ1D-GZJ
- with uncle: https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M89W-DBB
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XDKP-42R
1900 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MMCC-1R8
1910 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MLNF-1ST
1920 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MDBS-5VX
1930 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X4S4-YXF
1940 Census:
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KWD1-6W5
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