Saturday, April 18, 2020

Who are these people? Alsace Lorraine?

I am still sorting and scanning and thinking.  But I have found a pile of photos and etc for which I can not begin to figure out who they are or why I have them.  So this is a post where I will put some "stuff" and ask for help.  The first is a letter from a woman who had access to a typewriter but did not date her letter to her cousins.  She signs the letter Anna H.  Hawkins?  Hornberger?  Later as I look further into the items, I realize that the original letter was in her own handwriting.  Someone had typed the French to English translation.

Oh, my goodness!  As I arrived lower in the pile that I am going through, I saw something amazing!  I am VERY excited!  I am beginning to think that this pile is from Alsace Lorraine!  Here is what I found:



So the above in conjunction to the letter below is pointing to what I am looking at as having come from Alsace Lorraine.  I believe it likely that it was among the "things" that were in Fred Hornberger's home that my grandmother, Clara Margaret Hornberger Sammons took home with her when Emma Hornberger died.  Emma never married and probably lived in the home place.  I will do some more looking at this!  I am very excited!







So a quick google of Belmont shows the following:



From Wikipedia:  Until 1871, Belfort was part of the département of Haut-Rhin, in Alsace. The Siege of Belfort (between 3 November 1870 and 18 February 1871) during the Franco Prussian war was successfully resisted by the French until the garrison was ordered to surrender 21 days after the armistice between France and Prussia ended the war. The region was not annexed by Prussia like the rest of Alsace was. It was exchanged for territories in the vicinity of Metz. It formed, as it still does, the Territoire de Belfort. The siege is commemorated by a huge statue, the Lion of Belfort, by Frédéric Bartholdi. Alsatians not wanting to live under German rule in annexed Alsace and who wanted a French life and home in Belfort made a significant contribution to Belfort and French industry (see Société Alsacienne de Constructions Mécaniques) after 1872.

 I am continuing to look through these items a few days later.  It seems that the letter and photo were actually in my grandmother's belongings.  And Mom remembers knowing about them.  It would seem that Clara and Forest sent some money to help this relative of Clara.  Here is the address on the back of the envelope from Anna Hornberger Rougegoutte?  And she seems to be living in Mt. Rohi






And then there is the next photo.  I do not recognize these people.  







Another photo that I do not recognize is a photo of an unknown Bride in Cincinnati.  Cinn would seem to reflect the Schweickart or Hornberger family.   Perhaps Fred Hornberger and his second wife,  Anna Margaret Hummel went to Cinn for honeymoon or marriage?  And had photo snapped there.  My best guess was that there marriage was c.1902-1904 and Fred's bride was around 40 when they married.  They never had children together that I know of.  Mom said that Fred's second wife had a withered hand....perhaps this pose is chosen to hide her handicap?  I also know there were Schweikarts in Cinn....could this bride be related to them?




The next photo is of two young girls on front porch steps.  According to an article by Catherine Bliss Enslow in the Herald Adertiser in 1969, the very high, uncomfortable collars on lace blouses was stylish in the late 1800s.




Friday, April 17, 2020

Kate Schmitt Tulga

I found a photo in my grandmother's piles last night.  The photo is shown below along with the back of the photo.  My interpretation follows.



At first I tried to put Kate into the Wooten family as Sarah Jane Wooten Sammons' sister.  But After a bit of research on Ancestry and thinking, I feel certain that this is Kate Schmitt who would have been Maggie Schmitt Hornberger's sister.  Almost certainly the top writing is Emma Hornberger's ID of the photo.  I am guessing that when Aunt Emma died (Wildpat says she died in 1969....but I do not seem to have a death certificate for her) my Grandmother, Clara Hornberger Sammons, took the photos and memorabilia home with her from the home of Fred Hornberger where I believe Emma lived most of her life.  This photo would have orginally belonged to Maggie Schmitt Hornberger.

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Clara Hornberger's second grade class

My grandmother, Clara Margaret Hornberger Sammons taught school before she married Forrest Sammons.  I found this photo among her things.  If you recognize anyone in the photo, please let me know (mosesm@earthlink.net)

Anyone recognize where the photo was taken?




I will add the photo in a larger size below.....you will have to manipulate it to see faces more clearly

Dating photos by looking at clothes in photo

I have found some amazing photos that seem to have belonged to my grandmother, Clara Margaret Hornberger Sammons.  Almost certainly these photos were taken in the area in and around Ironton where Grandmother grew up and later taught.  She lived there until she married Forest.

As I try to find any identification at all, I am reading some sites that help one identify the era by the clothes being worn in the photo.  Here are some of the sites:

https://bellatory.com/fashion-industry/How-Womens-Fashion-Can-Help-Date-Old-Photographs


Wednesday, April 1, 2020

1916 Graduating Class of Louisa High School

I just found a treasure among my scanned photos on my computer!  Please if you look at this, pass it along to anyone who might have interest.  And I would love to add stories about the other girls in the photo besides the two Sammons girls!  I will put the photo on in two sizes so that you can manipulate the larger one to see faces better.

Here is the back of the photo that identifies the girls in the photo.


Hensley photos among Aunt Maes' photos

The below photo is of the Hensley home in Hensley Arkansas.  I will also add notes from my data base below the photos to explain to whom this home belonged.

Hi, to all Hensley researchers of Arkansas Hensleys:

This information is not my own research.  It will be a direct quote from a manuscript written by Ruth Salmons Nassar called My Begetters Volume II The Hensleys.  Ruth was the gr-grandchild of my Bird Hensley of Cabell County (now WV) and Clay County Illinois.  Bird's daughter, Lucinda, actually died in the household of Ruth's family.  Ruth was quite fascinated with her grandmother, Lucinda Hensley Salmons.  (If you are interested in Columbus Hensley, skip to the very end of this recital)  Here is what Ruth said about William:

Perhaps the most dashing member of the family was William B. Hensley, born in 1839 in Clay County, Illinois, who married Mary McKendree, sister of his friend George McKendree, in Cabell County.  They had one child, Willa May who married Austin Lee Wigal in Cabell County in the 1880's.  Mary my have died at the time of Willa May's birth or possibly shortly after.  William B. joined the Confederate ARmy.  Military papers describe him as being 5'3", dark complexioned, blue eyes, dark hair, age 22 in 1863.  Perhaps he had some military training, because he was elected Captain of Company F, 45th Infantry Batalion, Virginia in October 1863 (Later his was designated Company H, same batallion).  He enlisted a namesake, William B. Hensley, into Company H late 1863 or 1864 as private.  I theorize that this was his uncle William, son of Solomon, who was 20 years older than Lucinda's brother William.  The elder Hensley appears as a prisoner of war held by the Union Army at Camp Chase, Ohio, after being captured January 18, 1865.  The older Hensley was described as being 5'10", dark complexion, grey eyes, brown hair, farmer by profession from Wayne County, Virginia (now WV).

Lucinda's brother, Capt. William B. Hensley, evidently served bravely and was seriously wounded and hospitalized near Fisherville, VA. in 1864 and was removed to a hospital at Staunton, Va where he may have remained until the war's end.

......

We do not know whether Capt. William B. Hensley returned to Cabell County immediately after the war, but we do know that not long after the war's end he was settled in Pulaski County, Arkansas where he acquired a rather large plantation.  Of course, the economy of the South was in shambles and property could be purchased at distressed prices; nevertheless, one wonders how a defeated Confederate soldier happened to have enough Union dollars to make the purchase.  Perhaps he merely leased the plantation from owners who had lost their menfolks and slaves, later earned sufficient profits to purchase.  Perhaps he had some special source of good funds.  We will probably never know.  Also, we do not know how or when he met Rose Campbell, the daughter of a once-prosperous and highly respected southern family.  Nor is there a date of his marriage to Rose Campbell (I found Arkansas records to be scant), but the family Bible held by Mrs. Hilda Adams of Hensley, Arkansas, records the birth and death date of their infant son December 20, 1870.  Again the young mother was shortly to follow her infant, and Rose Campbell Hensley, who was born in 1849, died May 16, 1871.

About one year later, Capt. Hensley married Nora Dell Harris, the niece of Rose Campbell, granddaughter of William S. Campbell (Rose's father).  Her mother was Harriet Arkansas Campbell and her father was Forman Harris.  Nora's parents both died in 1863 and she was reared by her Grandmother Campbell.

William Hensley remained in contact with his Cabell County family and his father and sisters frequently visited his plantation.  His daughter by first wife Mary McKendree also was welcomed in Arkansas.  As a matter of fact, she spent most of her adult life in Arkansas with her husband, Austin Lee Wigal and their son Fred Lee Wigal who died in Arkansas in 1953.

Captain Hensley continued to acquire land as well as to manage the rather extensive plantations inherited from William Campbell.  Nora had not children, thus Willa May was his only surviving child.  He was highly regarded in Saline and Jefferson Counties, wherein much of his property was situated, and the town of Hensley, Arkansas was named in honor of him.

He died August 12, 1891 at age 51 and is buried in a bridk mausoleum on Hensley Plantation.  The plantations he had acquired he left to Norah for her lifetime then to be divided up between the heirs of his brother and sisters.  Nora lived to her late 90's dying in 1953.  The Campbell plantations which William had owned with Nora passed to her heirs.

I laud William for his loyalty to his family.  Seven daughters had been born to Byrd and Nancy Hensley.  It would have been a chore to find husbands for them even in the best of times.  The Civil War had taken its toll of the nation's manhood and Southern Sympathizers were especially ....Willam and Nora had the girls and Byrd visit the plantation, they were no doubt feted and introduced to Arkansas society, and the youngest, Tavin (Fanny) married a Dr. Lindsey and lived in Little Rock Ark.  They had two sons.

Byrd's daughters Mary Ann and Sarah remained unmarried and were quite impoverished in their old age.  Mary died in Barboursville, WV.  Both girls, of course, were heirs under William's will, however since Nora outlived them they received nothing from his estate.  Being destitute, Sarah worked out an agreement with my brother Henry to leave her share of the William Hensley estate to him in return for his purchasing a lifetime care package for her at Foster Memorial Home in Huntington, WV.  She was the only member of Byrd's family that I ever met and she was adorable old lady dresesed very properly in black who pulled from her dresser drawer an ornate perfume bottle she had saved from some long-ago extravagance.  I cherished the gift for many years.
Elizabeth, third daughter of Byrd and Nancy, married Samuel Kelley, son of Adam and Betsy Kelley of Kanawha County and had a large family.  At the time, the Bird Hensleys lived in Cabell County on Swanch (I believe this to be a mispelling) and he shot a turkey for the wedding feast, according to legend.

This is the end of Ruth's recital. I would be glad to try to clarify anything here if you have questions....Marsha in WV

Columbus Hensely, Lucinda's youngest brother, may have followed William to Arkansas and died there.  He and his wife Muscilla had a large family but I have found no record of them or their names.
200-ctx-.tiff


There are also photocopies of documentation in Ruth’s manuscript

Thomas Alfred Wooten

Among Aunt Mae's photos is one that is labelled Uncle Tommy.  I am adding this to the blog site in two sizes.  The first is the entire photo and the second is a larger version.  The larger version has to be manipulated to see details.  Uncle Tommy was Thomas Alfred Wooten.  He was the son of Silas Penix Wooten.  He was the brother of Sarah Jane Wooten Sammons.  He was the grandson of the Thomas Alfred Wooten from which I descend.  He lived from 1867 to 1946.  He was married to Mariah Chapman  (Perhaps she was Marian?)


Other Sammons/Wooten photos other than Henry Clay's family

The photo below was among the photos that I received from Susan Duncan that had been in the possession of Mae Sammons.  It is labelled Chapman Sammons (Chat).  From interpretation of the back of the photo, I believe Chapman Sammons to be the son of Bennett Sammons and his wife Rhoda Wooten.  Bennett would have been a half brother to Rowland (Bud) Salmons who married Lucinda Hensley.  And Rhoda would have been a sister to Silas Penix Wooten (father to Sarah Jane Wooten Sammons)  So clearly Chapman Sammons would have been an uncle to Sarah Jane and Henry Clay's family on both sides of the family....I am not taking the time to figure out great uncle/Uncle etc....

The first photo I made original size and it has to be manipulated in order to see faces clearly.  The second version I made smaller so that you can look at everyone at the same time.  If anyone has names to go with any of the faces, I would appreciate help identifying everyone.

(mosesm@earthlink.net)






The next photo is of Uncle Ben and Rhoda Wooten.  This would be Bennett Salmons and his wife Rhoda Wooten.