Saturday, June 8, 2013

Famous Relatives: FDR


see below for a note...


Note that FDR is a HALF 6th COUSIN of Maggie (and all her siblings.) We and the Roosevelts share Jacomyntje Cornelisdocter Sleght as, in my case, 7th great grandmother. This chart shows Jans Barentsen Kunst, her first husband who was the father of her first three kids including the gal leading to the Roosevelts. Jacomyntje then matched up with a Foecken fellow for three more kids and finally she married Jan Roelofszen Eltinge in 1672 in Kingston in Ulster County, New York. Jan and Jacomyntje had five more kids, the fourth was Geertje Janse Elting, our ancestor.

Geertje left the Dutch folks to marry Thomas Hall, an Englishman (that did not go over well with her family - I'll speak to that somewhere else.) 








Famous Relatives - Betty Davis???





The power of exponential numbers comes into play on these things. You have two parents, four grandparents, eight ggrandparents, 16 2nd great grandparents, 32 3rd, 64 4th, 128 5th, 256 6th and 512 seventh great grandparents, the level at which Betty Davis and myself live on this chart (putting me two below Maggie where I belong.)

So with 512 people out there for both parties, there is a decent chance for a connection. The eight great grandparents level (10 generations) has 1024 people at that level, between three and four centuries ago. Go back another ten generations (20 total) or at about 1300 and you have over a million ancestors. Another ten generations (30) is about the year 900 or 1000 and you have a BILLION ancestors or about the same magnitude as the population of the planet. This gets trimmed a bit as cousins no matter how distant encounter each other a become a couple.

But still, everybody is related.

The Kinnear Family Story


Our Kinnear family, as they say, “daughters out” with James D. Rowlison’s mother, Martha Ann Kinnear (1813-1890), wife of the second Aaron Rowlison (1809-1875). The immigrants were Michael M. Kinnear (1762-1847) and his two-year old son James (1783-1847). Note: Michael outlived his son by a few months.

Michael Kinnear came from Fife County, Scotland to Belfast, Ireland where he married Margaret McDill about 1782. Their son James was born on May 22, 1783 and two years later the little family set out for America. Margaret died on the voyage and was buried at sea. There are online family trees that give Margaret’s birth as in 1760 in Belfast, but without references as far as I’ve seen.

So now we have the picture of Michael and two-year old James disembarking from their ship in Philadelphia in 1785 – an interesting time to be there.

Michael married Elizabeth Campbell on September 19, 1786 in Rockbridge County, Virginia where they had eight children, six living into adulthood. I corresponded with a couple of the descendants of Michael and Elizabeth several years ago. It appeared that extended family was close and well organized about staying in touch.

Michael Kinnear and many of the next generation are buried in the Kinnear Cemetery on the banks of Goose Creek in the midst of Section 15, Township 4 North Range 9 East in Smyrna Township, Jefferson County, Indiana. The cemetery is on the original Michael Kinnear farm which is still in the family (at least it was in 1999). We were shown the cemetery by the owner, a third cousin, Kenneth Hord (Michael Kinnear, James Kinnear, Elias Campbell Kinnear, Nellie J. Kinnear, Ernest A. Hord, Kenneth Hord) after a ride through corn and tobacco fields. The cemetery has no recent burials; the most recent one I saw was that of Eliza (Hammond) Kinnear who was buried in 1924. She was the wife of Elias Campbell Kinnear.

James Kinnear Married Martha Littrel Harris in Virginia in 1808. The whole family of eleven children was born in Virginia through 1832. The Kinnear clan moved to Jefferson County, Indiana before 1836 as we find our gal marrying Aaron Rowlison on July 29, 1836 and James D. was born almost three years later.




If you should take off on your own Heritage Tour and visit College Hill Cemetery on the east edge of Lancaster, Indiana you’ll find three graves of Aaron Rowlison’s family. I quote a thing I wrote some time back to explain possible confusion…

Martha A. Kinnear is an ambiguous name in this family. Buried next to Aaron Rowlison is Martha A. Kinnear identified by the D. A. R. in 1931 as the wife of Aaron Rowlison. Martha A. Kinnear was the maiden name of Aaron’s wife (A = Ann). The Martha A. Kinnear buried beside Aaron is his daughter whose maiden name was Martha A. Rowlison (A = Alice). Her husband and cousin Henry Kinnear is buried with her and is identified on the reverse side of the tombstone facing a tree line. Thus Martha A. Kinnear married Aaron Rowlison to become Martha A. Rowlison. Her daughter, Martha A. Rowlison married Henry Kinnear to become Martha A. Kinnear. Got that? And Martha Ann Kinnear’s mother was Martha Littrel Kinnear, maiden name of Harris. And furthermore, there is an Indiana marriage record for a Martha A. Kinnear marrying James McElvoy in 1838 which is likely someone else entirely, or whatever.
So where is Aaron's wife buried? Some evidence supports the family folklore that the marriage of Aaron and Martha was not going well at the end. Aaron died in 1875 and we know from correspondence between James D. and his Indiana attorney that settlement of his estate was contentious. Martha died fifteen years later (less than two months after James D. died in Kansas) and the story is that Martha wished to be buried somewhere other than next to Aaron. Apparently that happened but no one in the family seems to have sprung for a grave marker for her. I vaguely remember reading or my Mother learned that she's likely buried in an unmarked grave in College Hill Cemetery.
College Hill Cemetery on the east edge of Lancaster, Indiana in Jefferson County. Aaron Rowlison (and daughters Victoria Calidonia (1846-1849) and Martha Alice (1847-1893) plus Martha's husband Henry Kinnear) are buried here. Their graves are in the exact center of this photo against the tree line on the right hand (North) slope of the knoll at the back. The right tombstone is the largest, left the smallest.

 We do have some clues as to the origins of Michael Kinnear in Ireland and Scotland. There is a public domain book at Google Books titled, "The Kinnears and their kin; a memorial volumne of history, biography, and genealogy, with revolutionary and civil and Spanish war records; including manuscript by Rev. David Kinnear."

The book includes documents written by various folks about the Kinnear family(ies). One entry is by J. H. Kinnear of Kirksville, Missouri dated May 11, 1908. This would be James Henderson Kinnear (1841-1910) a first cousin of James Demetris Rowlison, a contemporary who gets a mention in the Civil War diary on January 25th, "...Got a letter from J. H. Kinnear." James Kinnear followed James and Rhoda from Jefferson County, Indiana to Kirksville, Missouri where he a local gal, Millie Grisham on March 21, 1872.

James Kinnear recounts the story of Michael and son James Kinnear (he does not mention Margaret dying at sea). he adds some details including the news that several Kinnears were killed in the Civil War except himself and one other, Thomas J. Kinnear (further research, later.).  

He notes that his grandfather had a large body of land in Indiana - that would be Kenny Hord's farm today - and that the family  were the "...old John Knox Presbyterians of the strictest kind."

Better yet was his next story quoted here:

"Many years ago I met a temperance lecturer from Illinois, who claimed that at the time England conquered Scotland, three brothers, Kinnears, left Scotland, one went to Normandy, one to Germany, the other to Ireland; that he was French;that his ancestors were officers in the French Army under the old Napoleon; that I descended from the branch in Ireland, and that the "Dutchman" got lost; he said that he and his father went to Scotland and examined the records as far back as they ran; he was  a typical Frenchman, as I never took much stock in temperance lecturers I am giving this as he told me; the Coat of Arms, he said, "was a Shield with a ladder; a dove on each round, a scroll; Motto: I live in hope; Kinnear at the base.' "
Another entry in this book was by John Kinnier of Lynchburg, Virginia dated December 11, 1911. This fellow tells of immigrating from Ireland with his parents and sister to Lynchburg in 1852 when he was sixteen. His father had two brothers who also came to Virginia plus three sisters who married and stayed in Ireland. He knew of an uncle of his fathers named Michael Kinnear who settled in Culpepper, Virginia long before his family immigrated. The uncle removed to Indiana to get away from the "clank of the chains of slavery."


The two references are entries numbered 266 and 290. There may well be important gems of evidence here that I just haven't gotten to yet. Help yourself.




Our Rowlison Ancestors through three generations before James & Rhoda


The First 16 Family Names in our 

Rowlison Lineage



O.K., you're right. Only 15 family names as we don't know the surname for Mary, wife of John Rowlison back there in New Jersey - at least I don't. There are online trees that list Elizabeth Ross as this wife's name and some list both women. I haven't found documentation for either. Anybody know anything about that?

Our major lines that go back much further include Harris, Walton, Littlehale, Hutchinson, Hall and several more that first show up earlier - Putnam, Roberts, Conant, Leach, Maverick, Davis, Pierce, Gouverneur, Staats, etc.





Our Cousin: Marine Sgt. Merritt C. Walton, b. 18 Dec 1916, KIA 7 Aug 1942 in the Solomon Islands

A Walton Story

Marine Sgt. Merritt C. Walton was the grandson of Merritt Walton (1841-1913), Rhoda's brother. The younger Merritt Walton was killed on Gavutu Island in the Solomon Islands on August 7, 1942 in the first year of World War II.
Marine Sgt. Merritt C. Walton (1916-1942)

I was writing biographies of WWII casualties for our Sutton Historical Society when I discovered a local newspaper account that claimed Sgt. Walton as Sutton's first casualty of the war. I'd not associated this cousin with Sutton although I knew his grandfather had a farm several miles southwest of Sutton in the Edgar area. This farm was one of the four where James D. & Rhoda Rowlison lived during their stay in the area around 1880.

My article on this Walton cousin can be found at:  http://suttonhistoricalsociety.blogspot.com/2011/11/suttons-first-wwii-casualty-marine-sgt.html




Here is where Merritt C. Walton fits in our family tree - Rhoda's grand nephew.


This entry appeared in the Nebraska section of the book "World War II Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard Casualties, 1941-1945."  Merritt's mother was Clara Olive Haugen (1888-1980). She divorced Cecil Cullen Walton and was remarried to Severt S. Olson probably not long after Merritt was born.



Walton Family & the Neel's Creek Anti-Slavery Society 1839-1845


A Walton Family Story

On Saturday evening, January 5, 1839 a meeting was held in the public school-house on Neel's Creek in Jefferson County, Indiana for the purpose of forming an anti-slavery society. It looks like 73 people attended the meeting and gave their names as members of the new society. Among those new members are a bunch of our relatives. Circled at the lower left is the name of Abraham Walton (1777-1859) who was Rhoda (Walton) Rowlison's grandfather. In the left column outlined in yellow is the name of Isaiah Walton, Rhoda's father. Other marked names were members of Abraham Walton's extended family, sons, daughters, sons-in-law, daughters-in-law and other connected people

The founding members of the Neel's Creek Anti-Slavery Society, January 5, 1839 in
Jefferson County, Indiana near the town of Lancaster.


To place this meeting in context, remember that Jefferson County is on the north bank of the Ohio River across from Kentucky, a slave state. And that this society was formed in the first days of 1839, twenty-two years before the Civil War.

The small town of Lancaster, Indiana promotes the Neel's Creek Society including the preserved house of Lyman Hoyt shown here.

Lyman Hoyt House, on the west edge of Lancaster, Indiana

I was told that there is the "Walton House" is also still standing but the two fellows I talked to that day "weren't sure" where it was. Pressed for time, I did not do my due diligence - maybe next time.

An online search will lead you to references, and chances to acquire, the "minute book" for the Neel's Creek Society. Thanks to correspondence with the Phillips of Franklin, Tennessee some twelve years ago, I have a copy of the transcription of the minute book. 

The Minute Book will be at the reunion. -  Jerry







Saturday, May 18, 2013

Hastings Hotel and Convention Center - update

First, the good news: we believe the problems with the Hastings Hotel and Convention Center are fixed, or being fixed.   HOTEL INFO:  402-463-6721   http://www.hotelhastings.com/

A little background:
We had some feedback from folks who saw a series of critical comments about the facility we've booked for the reunion. We looked into it. Turns out that the comments accurately reflected that the hotel had suffered from neglect several months ago. The current managers acknowledge that there were real problems.

The owner lives in Colorado and had been depending on the on-site manager to keep things running smoothly. Several key staff members lacked experience in hotel operations at this scope and the place had "gone downhill", the restaurant and the lounge had both closed, customers were disappointed and vocal.

When the owner checked back, she was at least surprised as we understand it. A bunch of new folks are in place and it appears she spent some serious funds on  the recovery effort.

Rita and I visited the hotel recently and spent some time with two of the new managers. Our main contact was Lisa whose official and main title is Catering Manager of the catering business operating out of the hotel kitchen. She described her other duties as "anything else that goes on." She readily acknowledged the earlier problems and described the work that has gone on and continues to get things back in order. The other contact was the manager of the front desk, also new to the facility but less well versed in the prior problems.

Our observations:

The restaurant was reopened in April. It is called "281" (the highway number). It is a spacious open space done mainly in white and sectioned off by open areas and an center "gezebo" unit with a large table. We had lunch - it is not an extensive lunch menu but there is a good variety. Breakfast is an all-day thing.

The lounge has re-opened as a sports bar. It is not huge but one can guess it would be a hoot on a Nebraska  football Saturday with 60 or so people.

Workmen were still in the pool area. Refurbishing the main pool was complete; they were working on the wading pool appearing to be within a day or two of done there too.

There is a private meeting room that accommodates large groups warranting the "convention center" in the name.

The desk manager opened two rooms for us. They are not spectacular but better than you might expect at this price range. They were clean, fresh, well furnished and equipped. Nothing to critique there.

This hotel is the main (probably only) facility around Hastings making a serious run at a "full-service" hotel with in-house restaurant, lounge, pool, meeting rooms, etc. They are a clear first choice for groups needing any sizable meeting space.

Contact me if you have any questions - Jerry Johnson 402-773-0222 or jjhnsn@windstream.net