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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Solomon Millikan


Samuel>William Sr.>William Jr.>Solomon>Jesse>Henry>Emma Jane Millikan


Solomon Millikan Original Headstone

Solomon and Nancy (Morgan) Millikan Restored Headstone

Solomon Millikan was born February 28, 1784 in Guilford North Carolina to William and Eleanor (Smith) Millikan. On June 5, 1804 he married Nancy Morgan in Grainger, Tennessee, the daughter of Henry and Nellie Gertrude (Cole) Morgan.  The Bondsman for the marriage was Charles Smith, They were married by the Justice of the peace Samuel Yancey. This union produced 14 children.

Children of Solomon and Eleanor:
William Millikan 1807-
Henry Millikan 1808-
Benjamin Millikan1810-
Eleanor Millikan 1811-1863
Susan Millikan 1814-
George Russell Millikan 1816-1878
Ellis Riggs Millikan 1819-1908
Louisa Millikan 1820-
Catherine E. Millikan 1821-1889
Nancy Millikan 1822-1890
Abraham Millikan 1823-1900
Solomon Jr. Millikan 1824-
Elihu Millikan 1825-1911

Solomon and Nancy lived in Grainger County, Tennessee. In November 1847, the family moved to Marion, Kentucky.  Solomon was a skillful gunsmith and early in life had a shop in Allen's Station, Tennessee, where he made rifles and holster guns. After his settlement in Kentucky he repaired and stocked guns and rifles. It is stated that his long rifles with hand forged barrels, cherry wood stocks and cunningly engraved brass mountings were considered to be fine shooters and Solomon was quite celebrated.

In 1999, Solomon's original headstone was still located in the middle of a field under a tree on the old homeplace, a short distance from the cemetery.  A commemorative gravestone has been placed in the Brown Wring Cemetery, sometimes called the Childress and Millikan Cemetery located off View Road, down a logging road.   


Source:
Headstone photos located at the Moesner-Arrick Family Tree
The Millikan/Hinrichs Connection by Ilona Hinrichs Stone

More Information on William Millikan Sr.

The purpose of this letter written by William Millikan Sr. on behalf of his friend Abraham Woodward.

Abraham Woodward's letter

William Millikan's Letter

The birth of his daughter in 1764 apparently encouraged Abraham Woodward to try to make his amends with the Quakers. He wrote the following apology for his conduct: "Dear Friends Under a consideration of the necessity of a regular conduct I could not be satisfied until I could inform you of my sincere acknowledgement of my fault which I do with all my heart declare to have been a great deal of trouble to me since I left you but if you will favour me by receiving me into unity again as there is nothing I desire more. I hope my conduct for the futer shall be more satisfactory hopeing you will favour me with a certificate and send by Samuel Millikan. I recommend this acknowledgement to friends belonging to Bradford Monthly Meeting. /s/ Abraham Woodward". The Millikans were neighbors of the Woodwards in Rowan County, and Samuel's father

William Millikan wrote a note to accompany Abraham's request: "These are to certifie to you that since Abraham Woodward hath come to live in our parts that he hath behaved himself orderly and we think more and more so, he perceiveing more of the nobility and substance of his education and profession and as such we recomend him Sept the 24th 1764 /s/William Millikan". Four other neighbors affixed their signatures to the note: John Mills, William Thornbrough, John Frazier, and James Davis. While the documents contain original signatures, the body of each seems to have been written by the same person and the handwriting matches more closely with William Millikan's signature than with Abraham's.

Samuel Millikan duly took the documents to Chester County, Pennsylvania, where Bradford Monthly Meeting records his arrival on the 9th month 29th day 1764. The Bradford Quakers did not find Abraham's apology sufficient and did not prepare the requested certificate (Quakers were required to specifically spell out their fault and apologize for it and Abraham's note did not do that.) There the matter stood for another year.

In the 10th month of 1765 Abraham Woodward himself went to Pennsylvania. Bradford Monthly Meeting records the receipt on the 18th day of 10th month 1765 of the following acknowledgement: "Whereas I Abraham Woodward was educated in the profession of the people called Quakers but not having so strict regard to the teachings of Greace in my own heart, as could have been desired, but gave way to my own liberty & inclanation, so far as to have carnal knowledge of one Alic Simcock & afterwards accomplished my marriage with another Woman by the assistance of a priest, therefore I acknowledge my faults & misconduct desiring that friends may pas it by & take me under their care to be in a membership again. /s/Abraham Woodward".

The Bradford Quakers accepted this specific apology. The following certificate was prepared: "From our Monthly Meeting of Bradford held at Bradford the 18th 10th Month 1765 To the Monthly Meeting of New Garden in North Carolina Dear Friends, Whereas application was made to us by ye bearer hereof Abraham Woodward for a certificate in order to be joined to your meeting, these may therefore certifie that the necessary care hath been taken concerning him, and we do not find but that his outward affairs are settled to satisfaction, and that he hath made sattisfaction for his misconduct whilst amongst us, and we look upon him to be a Member of our Christian Society as such therefore we recommend him to your Christian care and oversith desiring his growth and prosperity in the best things, and subscribe ourselves. Your Friends Signed in and on behalf of our meeting by-- William Woodward, John Coope, Evan Jones, James Trimble, Richard Barnard, Humphry Marshall, James Kenny, Richard Baker, Jonathan Parke, Caleb Kirk, Joel Baily, Samuel Fisher, James Marshall, Samuel Coope, Eleanor Worth, William Cooper, Richard Buffington, Isaac Coates, Nathan Coope". Many of the people who signed the certificate were Abraham's relatives including the first signer, William Woodward, his own father.

Abraham Woodward presented his certificate at New Garden Monthly Meeting in Rowan County, North Carolina, on 30th day 11th month 1765. Because of this record, some genealogies have given the Woodwards' arrival date in North Carolina as 1765 but it is clear from the sequence of events and Abraham's presence in the 1762 census that they arrived much earlier. This is the only record for Abraham Woodward at the New Garden Monthly Meeting.

Source: The Woodward Genealogy Website

Friday, October 28, 2011

William Millikan Jr.



Samuel>William Sr.>William Jr.>Solomon>Jesse>Henry>Emma Jane Millikan
William Millikan Jr. Grave Marker
William Millikan Jr. was born on January 7, 1753 in Chester, Pennsylvania to William and Jane (White) Millikan. William married Eleanor Smith in Guilford County, NC on August 10, 1776, the daughter of David and Ann (Bryant) Smith of Richmond, Virginia.  The union between William and Eleanor lasted 61 years until Eleanor’s death on February 5, 1837.  William passed away the following year on September 2, 1838. The couple had 13 children, 10 of which lived into adulthood.

Children of William and Eleanor:
David Millikan 1776-1855
Sarah Millikan 1778-1778
Nancy Millikan 1779-1779
Jonathan Millikan 1781-1781
Eli Millikan 1782-1849
Elihu Millikan 1785-1864
Alexander Millikan 1789-1880
William Millikan III 1789-1812
Samuel Millikan 1792-1873
George Washington Millikan 1794-1864
Hannah Millikan 1796-1881
Eleanor Millikan 1800-1875

" The family apparently had strong anti-slavery leanings, as  William Millikan, Jr. was one of the early members of the Tennessee Manumission Society in Greene County, Tennessee. The Society was formed in Jefferson County, Tennessee (see Quakers & Slavery) in 1814, but quickly spread to other Tennessee counties. A  son of William, Jr.'s, Elihu Millikan, was drafted in Jefferson County in 1814 and served in the War of 1812, fighting under Andrew Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans. His mother was a Baptist and  Elihu chose that faith and became a Baptist minister after the war. This information is from Jefferson County, Tennessee Families and History 1792-1996, and was submitted by a descendant of Elihu Millikan. 

In 1792, William crossed the Great Smokey Mountains and settled on a land grant of 400 acres 3 miles northwest of Morriston.  The site commanded a view of the Clinch Mountains to the north and the Great Smokey Mountains to the south.  William was employed as a farmer, blacksmith and land surveyor.  His house in Tennessee was built of large chestnut logs, hewed square, and was on the ground 20x30 feet, 2 stories, with a large cellar. 2 porches of 2 stories were on the north and south sides, and the larger chimney's were laid of limestone rock. Some parts of the house stood for more than 100 years.  William remained on the farm until Eleanor's death in 1837, then spent his last days in the home of his son-in-law, Jesse Howell where he died at the age of 84 years old.  William weighed not less than 300 lbs.  His eyes were blue, his hair rather light and his complexion fair and florid. He had been a blacksmith and gunsmith shop owner where he made guns and farm implements, he also did some silver-smithing.  A grandson, John S. Howell, owned a coin silver sleeve button made by William and a large armchair once owned by William, the posts of which are nicely turned sugar wood, the rungs of the best hickory, and the seat of split white oak.  He served in the Revolutionary War, state records lists him as a private in Captain Adam Alexander's Company made up of men from Mecklenberg, North Carolina.  William Millikan, Jr. and his wife Eleanor Smith are buried in Economy Cemetery at Morristown, Tennessee

Source: Randolph County, 1779-1979, published by Randolph County Historical Society and the Randolph Arts Guild, Hunter Publishing Co., Winston-Salem NC 1980
Book: Millikan/Hinrichs Connections by Ilona Hinrch Stone
DAR application for William Millikan
Eleanor's parents - Abstracts of Wills and Inventories of Bath County, Virginia 1791-1842 (Will Book I)


Samuel Millikan



Samuel>William Sr.>William Jr.>Solomon>Jesse>Henry>Emma Jane Millikan

From the book "Posterity of William Millikan" by G. T. Ridlon, PREAMBLE: "Three pioneers of the Milliken family sat down in North Carolina. We are not dependent upon tradition for our knowledge of their existence there. Old documents, public and personal, mark their footprints upon the sands of time. Letters containing many names written by the pioneers, yellowed with age and stained with tears and finger-marks, have been preserved with sacred care; letters of considerable length pregnant with particulars relating to removals and settlements, with dates, which establish genealogical connections. Several early wills made by heads of families contain many names of children and of those who intermarried. Extensive research, however, in Pennsylvania and North Carolina fails to reveal any information relating to the ancestry of the heads of the three great families. The tax-lists of Chester county--some are missing--show that from 1739 to 1763, seven persons who bore the Milliken name owned estates there; and we naturally inquire how did it happen that so many Millikens--the surname was spelt in a variety of forms--should have appeared in this Quaker neighborhood contemporaneously? Some mutual interest must have brought them together, and we reasonably assume that they were relatives who had removed from some distant locality.


All had attained their majority and were Yoemen. As some were designated "unmarried", we suppose they were young men. One only, Richard Milliken, was called a "Renter". Another, George Milliken, was styled "Inmate". The name Patrick is a hint that points to Ireland as his place of nativity, or the home of his ancestors. The name Moses which appears on the tax-list from 1753 to 1763, is not common in the Milliken families; it is of frequent occurrence, however, in the branch settled in Brunswick Co., NC., but an intelligent old lady down there assumes, without any doubt or hesitancy, that her grandfather and granduncle were from Maryland.

The most singular circumstance concerning this group of Millikens in Chester Co. was their disappearance from the locality almost simultaneously. Whither did they journey; where pitch their moving tents? Examination of the county records of more recent dates fails to reveal the names of their posterity. Like a flock of birds they seem to have risen with one accord and flown away. One only has been traced with certainty. We know that during the great Quaker migration to the South, William Millikan and his family went to Rowan, now Randolph Co., NC. Numerous letters written by him have been found, but not in one instance does he mention any Millikans save his own son, and we have no evidence of the removal with him of any person bearing the name. His descendants have been traced. We find the name of James Milliken on the Chester county tax-list in 1753 and 1754. Knowing that a person of this name removed from Chester to Westmoreland county about this time, we imagine that they were identical, but we have no proof. The name of George Millikan designated "of Kennet, Inmate," appears on the tax list in 1763. The George Milligan who had a grant of land on Chartier's Creek, Washington Co., PA, in 1786, called Milligan's Brewery, may have been the same; but proof is wanting.

It is not reasonable to suppose that these seven men, having reached their majority and had acquired estates upon which they paid taxes for twenty years, all died issueless; and we have no hesitancy in assuming that they had families whose descendants are now living somewhere within our broad domain.
Turning our attention again to North Carolina, we shall find that William Millikan and Charles Millikan were living in Chatham and Randolph counties, adjoining, as no distant neighbors, side-by-side, as many as sixteen years. Shall we believe that their settlement so near each other was accidental? Family tradition says that they were intimate in association and that their descendants claimed to be relatives. They certainly must have been acquainted, as William Millikan was a land surveyor and well known in several counties where he served under the agent Lord Granville. They may have been brothers who had emigrated from Ireland at different times and were separated for some years until they settled near each other in North Carolina. We must leave the family history somewhat in obscurity. The citations of evidence as presented seems worth preserving and we record it for what it signifies.

From an extensive correspondence extending to every known family of the name, and a study of their temperaments, habits, physical types, business methods, etc., I am more and more impressed with the strong resemblance between the descendants of William Millikan who settled in Randolph Co., NC., and the families settled in Washington, Westmoreland, Huntington, Mercer and Juniata counties of Pennsylvania. The majority of the men, especially of the earlier generations, have been tall, rawboned, muscular and of fair and medium complexion. They were men of motive temperaments and many possessed great natural mechanical ability. Not many of the pioneers were educated, but all were fond of reading and were well informed. They have not taken kindly to the pen."

Note** William Millikan of Miami Co., KS, about the year 1848, assisted in driving a herd of cattle over the mountains from Ohio to Philadelphia, and when passing through Lancaster, PA., he met a Millikin from Washington Co., PA., and discussed with him family tradition. On returning home William's mother told him that his grandfather (meaning his great-grandfather probably) had come over from Ireland with a brother both of whom first settled in Pennsylvania; but they were separated and William Millikan removed to North Carolina. There may be truth in this tradition, for we know that Thomas and James Millikan, brothers, who settled in Westmoreland and Juniata Co.'s, Pa., removed from Chester Co., PA

Children of Samuel Millikan:

Source: "Posterity of William Millikan" by G. T. Ridlon, PREAMBLE:

Thursday, October 27, 2011

William Millikan Sr.


Samuel>William Sr.>William Jr.>Solomon>Jesse>Henry>Emma Jane Millikan

William Millikan Sr. Grave Marker

William Millikan Sr. was born April 6, 1720 (This birth date is used by many researchers and the year 1720 was accepted by DAR as is his death year 1804).  William was born in Dromore, Down, Ireland, the son of Samuel Millikan also born in Ireland in 1694. 

William married Jane White in 1740. The 1907 book “History of the Families Millingas” mentions that Jane White Millikan was more than likely the daughter of Alexander White of Chester County, Pennsylvania. This marriage produced 10 children.  After the death of his first wife William married Hannah Rowan on June 19, 1759.  It is believed that Jane is the mother of all his children.   

Children of William and Jane:
6 A High Point Enterprise
August 7, 1976



Abigail Millikan (Frazier) 1741-1806
Samuel Millikan 1742-1817 
Sarah Millikan (Mills) 1743-1826
David Millikan 1745-
Mary Millikan (Brattain) 1747-1814 
Martha Millikan (Frazier) 1748-1837 
Benjamin Millikan 1755-1842
Hannah Millikan (Blair) 1756-1852 
Alexander Millikan 1757-1830

William served Randolph County, North Carolina (formed from Rowan in 1779), as a Justice, a Register of Deeds, and Clerk of Courts. Based on his status as a Justice of the Peace, Clerk of the Courts and Registrar of Deeds, William Millikan Sr. and his descendants have been granted membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution. William Sr. is Ancestor #A079802 and there is a long list of descendants with corresponding membership numbers.

William is often referred to as a Quaker.  Quaker Meeting records of his children in North Carolina indicate they were birthright Quakers. The book called "Carolina Cradle" by Robert W. Ramsey states that many Quakers gave up their faith in order to run for county offices, as William would have had to do during the American Revolution while in office.

Being a Quaker, William Millikan was non-combatant during the American Revolution.  He was against fighting but was in favor of establishing the new country.  William and his family were intensely patriotic.  His sympathies made him an enemy to the English.  In 1782, William was living on Back Creek in Randolph County, near the Guilford County line. On March 10, a band of Tories came to his farm. Finding William absent, they burned his house to the ground. Still he, himself, was never caught. The story is given in the “Millingas History” as follows: "On Sunday, March 10, 1782, Col. David Fanning went to the house of William Millikan Esq. who lived on Back Creek, about two miles from Johnsonville, on the old cross road. As Millikan was away (it is said that he was driving his cows home) from home they burned his buildings and destroyed everything they could. While the house was on fire, Mrs. Jane Millikan carried out a favorite feather bed, but they carried it back and threw it on the fire. When the bed began to burn, they twisted a stick into the feathers and scattered them over the house. When the blazing feathers, as they flew in every direction through the room, caught in a bundle of yarn which was hanging on the wall, they taunted Mrs. Millikan and said: “Look at your yarn old woman.” When leaving Millikan's they compelled his son, Benjamin Millikin, to pilot them to the house of Col. John Collier. (Col. John Collier was Lieutenant of Randolph Militia, Sheriff, County Surveyor and a member of the Legislature).  Col. David Fanning came up after night. Collier was asleep, but before he lay down he put a young man out as sentinel on a pile of rails a few rods from the door. Col. David Fanning made Benjamin Millikan answer that they were friends.  Col. David Fanning took Benjamin Millikan and the young man out to hang them, and that while they were stringing the other up to the branch of a tree, Benjamin Millikan managed to escape. There are men now living (year 1903) who remember having seen the stump of the tree on which the young man was hung.

After the war William and his daughter Hannah Blair were pensioned by the government for their heroic acts of patriotism and on November 2, 1784 he acquired 400 acres on Back Creek.  William Millikan Sr. died intestate, and an inventory of his estate was reported in the December term 1793 of the Randolph County Court as follows:

Samuel Millikan, administrator of the estate of William Millikan deceased
Returns the Inventory Joined with the account of sales of said estate:
39 - 10.7 (Pounds) Amount of the Sales of personal Estate
60 - 5 Account of sundry notes on hand
106 - 11.8 Cash on hand
14 - 10 Book debts
220 - 7.3 (Pounds total)
5 - Notes on James Robbins for Indian corn amounting in the whole to two hundred bushels.

The fact that Samuel was termed "administrator" rather than "executor" tells us that William Millikan Sr. had no will. 

Monument at Springfield's Meeting House Cemetery High Point
Guilford County, North Carolina, USA Plot: Section 1, Row 10

Documents of William Millikan Sr. (Click on picture for more information)



Source: Biography written by Debbie West from a compilation of the following:
DAR application for William Millikan filed 1979 by Janice Lee Johnson Klaus
History of the Families Millingas and Millanges," by Rev. G. T. Ridlon, 1907
The Millikan/Hinrichs Connections by Ilona Hinrichs Stone
Ancestry.com - Family Data Collections, Millikan Websites 

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Emma Irene Morse (Neal)

Sisters
Dorothea Lorene (Morse) McClellan and
Emma Irene (Morse) Neal

Sisters
Dorothea Lorene (Morse) McClellan and
Emma Irene (Morse) Neal

Charles "Charlie" Morse

Charlie Morse and niece Dorothea (Morse) McClellan

Edwin F. Morse

Walter Morse




Richard Wilson McClellan

Richard Wilson and Velma (Cates) McClellan

Richard Wilson McClellan was born on Oct 6, 1914 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri to James Henry McClellan and Ellise Emma Belle (Daniels) McClellan.  Richard was 1 of 9 children born into the family.  At the age of 6 years old, the family removed to Sikeston, Missouri where he completed his education before enlisting into the United States Army Air Corps.  He received his military training in Greenville, Mississippi and Kearns, Utah and served in the South Pacific war area.  During his service he married Velma Clara Cates on April 23, 1944 in Greenville, Mississippi, the daughter of Ira and Ida Nee (Koetting) Cates. This union produced 3 children, all living into adulthood.  Richard supported his family by working for the McDonnell’s Aircraft Corporation in St. Louis, Missouri, where he was employed for 30 years.  He passed away at the age of 65 in December 1979 at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Waterloo, Illinois.  Velma lived another 30 years and no supporting documents confirm she remarried.  Velma passed away September 1, 2009 in Waterloo, Illinois.  The couple are buried in Memorial Park Cemetery in Sikeston, Missouri.

Sikeston Herald
April 27, 1944
Sikeston Herald
September 24, 1944 
Sikeston Herald
July 9, 1953
Children of Richard and Velma: 
Richard "Ricky" Wilson McClellan II
Cherry Nell McClellan (Generous)
Deborah McClellan

Velma (Cates) McClellan
Headstone
Richard Wilson McClellan
Grave Marker

Source: Biography written by Debbie West
Richard Wilson McClellan Obituary
WWII Army Enlistment Database
Social Security Administration
Photo of Richard and Velma provided by Carolyn McClellan
Grave Photos provided by Sondra Jones Wills from Find A Grave.com Memorial #36455465

Walden Lynn "Big Boy" McClellan



Walden Lynn "Big Boy" McClellan twin to Walker Glenn "Little Boy" McClellan was born in Sikeston, Missouri on May 5, 1930 to James Henry and Emma (Daniels) McClellan.




Ralph Edwards McClellan

Sikeston Herald
Nov 8, 1945




Ralph Edwards McClellan Grave Marker
Memorial Park Cemetery, Sikeston, Missouri

James Newton McClellan

James Newton McClellan
Memorial Park Cemetery, Sikeston, Missouri

James Newton McClellan was born June 28, 1909 to James Henry and Emma (Daniels) McClellan.


Sikeston Herald
July 9, 1953 pg 2

Headstone photo created by Sondra Jones Wills from Find A Grave Memorial #36455406

Walker Glenn "Little Boy" McClellan

Walker Glenn "Little Boy" McClellan twin to Walden Lynn "Big Boy" McClellan was born in Sikeston, Missouri on May 5, 1930 to James Henry and Emma (Daniels) McClellan.





Walker Glenn McClellan Grave Marker
Memorial Park Cemetery, Sikeston, Missouri

SSGT US Air Force (Korea) Photo Created by: Sondra Jones Wills Record added: Apr 28, 2009 Find A Grave Memorial# 36483107


Mildred Golden McClellan

Garden of Memories Cemetery, Sikeston, Missouri

Preston "Pres" Hodges

Bettie Ruth Hodges




Under Construction

Sikeston City Cemetery

Inscription: Together Forever Married Sept 14, 1945 Created by: Sondra Jones Wills Record added: Jul 10, 2008 Find A Grave Memorial# 28173062


Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Emma Jane "E. J." Millikan

Top left to right : Dorothea (Morse) McClellan, Bess Morse (Charles Morse wife),
Emma Jane Millikan (Grandma White), Barbara  (McClellan) Burton
Bottom left to right: Glenda (McClellan) Glaus, Carolyn McClellan and Bobby Morse

Emma Jane “E. J.” Millikan was born on July 24, 1880 in Marion County, Kentucky to Henry Anthony Millikan and Amanda (Eaton) Millikan. By 1900, the family removed to Crittenden, Kentucky.  Emma married widowed farmer, John A. Sherfield who was 68 years old, she was 20 years old.  This was John’s 3rd marriage and Emma’s 1st .  They married on July 2, 1901 in Crittenden, Kentucky; the union produced 1 child that lived into adulthood.  John passed away in 1903, shortly after birth of his child.  He died in Crittenden, Kentucky.

Children of Emma and John:
John E. Sherfield 1902-1979

In 1905 Emma remarried Daniel “Bud” Edwin Morse, this union produced 3 children.  By 1910, the family removed to Pemiscot, Missouri where Daniel supported the family as a laborer in a sawmill.  Emma's son John E. Sherfield took on his step-father's last name Morse.  By 1920, Emma is widowed and living in Big Prairie, New Madrid, Missouri with her 4 young sons.  On September 2, 1922 Emma married O. L. White in Knoxall, New Madrid, Missouri and unfortunately is widowed again, this would be her last marriage.  Emma was known to her surviving great grandchildren as “Grandma White”.  She passed away in Barnes Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri at the age of 77 on September 25, 1957 and is buried in Memorial Park Cemtery in Sikeston, Missouri.

Children of Emma and Daniel:
Charles Morse 1906-
Walter Morse 1907-1943
Edwin F. Morse 1909-1949


Emma's Grave Marker
Emma's Death Certificate











*You may leave virtual flowers for Emma at http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=white&GSfn=emma&GSbyrel=all&GSdy=1957&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=36818891&df=all&


Source: Biography written by Debbie West
United States Census
Missouri Vital Statistics: Death Volume File #34312
Grave marker photo created by Sondra Jones Wills, Find A Grave Memorial 36818891

Sunday, October 16, 2011

John E. (Sherfield) Morse

John and Flora Morse
John E. Sherfield was born on July 11, 1902 in Crittenden, Kentucky to John A. Sherfield and Emma Jane (Millikan) Sherfield.  His elderly father passed away shortly after his birth in 1903.  By age 4, John’s widowed mother re-married Daniel Edwin “Bud” Morse and the family left Kentucky and John’s 6 half brothers and sisters from his father’s first marriage (Charles, Augusta, Arthur, James, Rosa and Lulu Sherfield) and settled into Hayti, Pemiscot, Missouri. His mother’s union with his step-father produced 3 children (Charles, Walter and Edwin) and John ultimately took on the Morse last name.  John’s step-father passed away by 1920 before John turned 18.  His mother, widowed again moved the family to Big Prairie, New Madrid, Missouri where he met and fell in love with Flora Ellen Hodges, the daughter of James Samuel Hodges and Mary Irene (Arnold) Hodges. The young couple married in Sikeston, Missouri on December 31, 1923 and removed to Anderson, New Madrid, Missouri. This union produced 5 children, all living into adulthood.

Children of John and Flora:
Bill "Billy" Morse
Donald Egugene “Hootie” Morse
John Gale “Johnny” Morse 1935-2011
Emma Irene Morse (Neal) 1924-2002            
Dorothea Lorene Morse (McClellan) 1926-1993
 
Years later John and Flora moved to Keeler, Michigan where he began working at the Burnett Farms Packing Co. where Flora and their son Johnny came to be employed.   He also owned and operated a salvage yard at his residence on Territorial Road in Keeler, Michigan.  John and Flora were members of the Sister Lakes Community Church and were married for 56 years until John passed away at Lee Memorial Hospital in Keeler, Michigan on August 12, 1979.  Flora passed away on January 13, 1993

John, Flora, Billy, Dorothy,
Johnny and Hootie Morse.
Charles Morse (John's brother in back)
Boy kneeling: Sonny Hobbs
Standing: Billy, Hootie and Johnny Morse
Irene (Morse) Neal
Sitting: Dorothy (Morse) McClellan
Child: Stephen McClellan (Dorothy's son)


John and Flora Morse
John and Flora's Marriage  License

John Elzy Morse
Death Certificate
Source: Biography written by Debbie West
John’s granddaughters Barbara (McClellan) Burton and Carolyn McClellan
John E. Morse Obituary/Michigan Death Index 1971-1996
Photo's provided by Carolyn McClellan
John's death certificate provided by Sue (Neal) Van Hattem
United States Census
                                                    

Friday, October 14, 2011

Lawrence Elzie "Mac" McClellan

Lawrence Elzie “Mac” McClellan was born on August 4, 1918 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri to James Henry McClellan and Ellise Emma Bell (Daniels) McClellan.

Shortly after Lawrence’s birth in 1919, his father removed the family from Cape Girardeau, Missouri to Sikeston, Missouri where he spent much of his young life.  He ultimately met and fell in love with Dorothea Lorene Morse, the daughter of John Elzy Sherfield Morse and Flora Ellen (Hodges) Morse.  The couple married in Charleston, Missouri on March 30, 1942.

Lawrence worked at the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. in Sikeston, Missouri for 18 years until he moved his family to Houston, Texas in 1965 where he worked at Royal Crown Bottling Co. until the company was sold and then worked for the 7-Up bottling Co. of Houston, Texas for 20 years until he retired in 1987.  Lawrence spent much of his retirement on 1545 Scharpe St., in Houston, Texas doing carpentry work from his garage crafting tables, end tables and lamps for family members.  He also raised pigeons and an occasional turkey at his property where he built a walk-in pigeon coop in the back yard. Lawrence had a true love for baseball and country western music stemming from childhood.  He was an exceptional guitar player and baseball player in his youth, unfortunately a hip fracture as a young adult prevented him from progressing into the sport professionally.  Sadly, this hip fracture also prevented him from entering the United States Military which devastated him as all of his 6 brothers were service men.       

The union between Lawrence and Dorothea lasted 47 years until his death from a stroke.  He passed away in his home on April 21, 1989.  This union produced 5 children, 4 of which lived into adulthood.  He is buried next to his wife at Forest Park (Lawndale) Cemetery.  He was preceded in death by both parents, 1 son, 1 grandson, 5 brothers and 1 sister.  His wife, 4 children, 14 grand children, and 6 great grand children survived him.  Dorothea passed away on March 20, 1993.  Lawrence, aka "Mac" to his friends and “Paw Paw” to his family is deeply missed by his surviving children and grand children. 

Children of Lawrence and Dorothea:
Glenda Joyce McClellan (Glaus) 1942-2010
Barbara Jean McClellan (Burton) 1944-
Carolyn Joan McClellan (West, Maharaj) 1947-
Lawrence "Larry" E. McClellan 1958-1974
Terry Stephen McClellan 1963-

Lawrence McClellan
Newspaper Article 
Lawrence McClellan is
4th standing on back row

Lawrence McClellan
Dorothea (Morse) McClellan
                                                                                                                 
Source: Biography written by Debbie West
Information and pictures provided by Carolyn McClellan, his daughter
Personal knowledge 

George W. McClellan

Earliest records found on George W. McClellan, is the Pope County, Illinois 1870 Census and his marriage certificate from Pope County, Illinois for that same year.  He was listed as Geo W Mccleland born in Indiana.  This census was taken on July 11, 1870, just a month before his marriage to Nancy Wilson Dill who lived two houses down from the Trovillion farm where he worked as a mill hand during that time.  In the same 1870 Census, the Dill family record reveals Nancy’s household.  She is just 16 and living with her father Jno Dill, head of household born in Tennessee abt 1810.  Jno Dill has an unknown white female born in Tennessee living with him, her occupation is listed as “Keeps House”.  This is more than likely Jno’s second wife second wife Eliza Waters as Nancy’s mother Mary Belle Jarrell Dill passed on June 12, 1863 and would not have been in the 1870 Census.  Living in the same household are the following children: Samuel H. Dill born in Tennessee abt 1851 (age 19) and Mary Dill born in Illinois abt 1856 (age 14).    

In the Pope, Columbus, Illinois 1880 Census, George W. McClellan is listed as G. W. McClellan born in Indiana, (age 32).  George is an apprentice to blacksmith and living with his wife Nancy W. McClellan born in Illinois, (age 26) and their daughter Alta McClellan born in Illinois (age 2). The Census was taken on June 19, 1880.
Nancy Wilson (Dill) McClellan

George’s parents’ birth of place shows his father as being born in Indiana and his mother as being born in KentuckyNancy’s parent’s birth place is not provided on this 1880 Census.

Alta was born eight years into this marriage, which is quite unique, as research tends to prove that children were born in the first or second year of marriage during this era.  It is believed that George and Nancy had other children before Alta McClellan’s birth that did not survive. (Later in the 1900 and 1910 Census, Nancy is listed as a widow of 10 children with only 3 living).

In the same 1880 Census, living next door to George and Nancy is Nancy’s step-mother, a widowed, Eliza Dill born abt 1819 (age 61). Eliza Dill is living with the Grisham family, possibly a daughter from a previous marriage.   

George W. McClellan passed away on September 30, 1886, (age 38) from prolonged hiccups, causing heart failure.  (This date has not been confirmed). In 1921, the building holding the entire United States 1890 Federal Census was destroyed by a fire and lost forever.   The next available Census is the 1900 Census.  The Johnson, Vienna, Illinois 1900 Census does show Nancy as a widowed carpet maker and head of house hold of two male teenage boys.  George McClellan born in Illinois, January, 1882 (age 18) and James McClellan born in Illinois, August, 1884 (age 15).  (James’ obituary states that he was born in Johnson County, Illinois).  Being that James was less than two years old at the time of George’s passing and he was born in Johnson County, Illinois, it is assumed that George died there in Johnson County, Illinois.  Alta McClellan would have been 23 years old during this Census.  She was married and no longer living in the home. Nancy lived 48 years after the death of George.  No records have been found to support that she re-married.  Census records show her living with her adult sons George Elzie and James Henry McClellan during those years until she moved to Bloomington, Illinois a few years before her death on July 9, 1934.  George's place of burial has not been discovered as of yet, however Nancy is buried at the Park Hill Cemetery in Bloomington, Illinois. 

Children of George and Nancy:
Mary Alta McClellan (Hamlyn) 1877-1951
George Elzie McClellan 1882-1948
James Henry McClellan 1885-1961

George and Nancy's Marriage License
George and Nancy's Marriage License













Source: Biography written by Debbie West
Nancy's photo provided by Helen Iris (McClellan) Lambeth and Carolyn Ranft
1870 and 1880 Pope County, Illinois U. S. Census
1870 Pope County, Illinois issued marriage license
Nancy is buried at Park Hill Cemetery in Bloomington, Illinois Section K-575-4

About Me

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I started researching my family tree last year. My father is a West and my mother is a McClellan. Researching my family history has truly been a monumental task. I’ve spent untold hours searching for long lost relatives… Where’s a ghost whisperer when you need one? With the surname McClellan being so popular due to General George B. McClellan and the surname West being a geographical direction, the hunt was hindered on many occasions. Search engines have run me through the ringer. The fact is, I threw my hands in the air and swore to walk away from this project more times than I can remember. It really is a roller coaster ride. This project has caused me tears of anger, tears of joy and has heightened my already existing anxiety disorder to its limits. It has forced me to be patient when I didn’t want to be and caused me to be organized and detail oriented, which that in itself is a huge achievement. But most of all, it gave me hope and a sense of belonging.