My great grandfather, Isaac James Parks
8 Dec 1849 (Indiana) to 26 Feb 1904 (Iowa)
married Mary Catherine Ortman
20 Feb 1869 in Wells County, Indiana
14 children (3 did not survive childhood) all born in Iowa
His mother and father:
James Galloway Parks (1791 - ??) and
Eliza Jane Clevenger (1809 - ??), both likely died in Indiana
Mar 24, 2019
Mar 17, 2019
My Aldridge Puzzle
I
am looking for a Catherine/Katherine/Katharine (unknown maiden name) married to an
Aldridge who may have married my 2nd great grandfather in their
later years. Katharine was born in
Maryland in 1788, but in 1860 she is widowed and living in Delaware County,
Indiana. I have found court records of a
divorce between her and a James Parks who is possibly my second great
grandfather. I’m not yet sure this is my
ancestor (who is James Galloway Parks, born 17 June 1791, supposedly in
Virginia, possibly West Virginia - or not!) Can't find his parents, either.
My
James G. Parks was widowed after the death of my second great grandmother,
Eliza Jane Clevenger (first husband Isaac Thornburg) Parks, possibly about 1863. Eliza was born in Ross
County, Ohio in 1809 to John Thomas Clevenger and Nancy Maria Stothard. As a widow of Isaac Thornburg, she married
James G. Parks on 13 May 1845 in Delaware county, Indiana. James was 55; she was 36. (Their son, Isaac James Parks (1849-1904), was
my great grandfather.)
I
haven’t been able to find the death date/place of either James G. Parks or
Eliza Jane. Eliza probably died around
1863 or earlier, and the James in the court documents married a Katharine
Aldridge 19 May 1863. I have searched
for Katharine’s maiden name (using all different spellings) and have come up
with some possible former husbands, one being a Mr. Handley, and the other
Edmund Aldridge who is the only Aldridge I can find in the Delaware County, Indiana area during that time period. But I can’t find her maiden name. I’ve not found any marriage records on
Katharine other than the marriage record of 1863 in Delaware County, Indiana,
to a James Parks, as well as the court proceedings documenting a
not-very-amicable divorce and restraining order situation in the 1864-1867 time period.
Would
appreciate any assistance on the Aldridge name in Delaware County, Indiana.
Mar 16, 2019
1866 Divorce, Politics Style
1866 Apr 2, Richmond Weekly
Palladium, Richmond, Indiana
A woman in Pennsylvania has
petitioned for a divorce “because she and her husband do not agree on politics.” If that disagreement be valid grounds for a
divorce, what shall we do if females are given the elective franchise?
Early Days of Indiana
Newspapers.com
1893 Jan 20, The Muncie Daily
Herald, P3, Muncie, Indiana
Early Days
J. A. Tomlinson Tells Some
Interesting Stories
Muncie in 1828-93
A Brief Review of Facts and
Happenings When Delaware County Was a Wilderness
Mr. J. A. Tomlinson, a well-[known]
resident of Delaware county, and who is at present residing on East Jackson
street, relates the following interesting story of life from 1828 to 1893. “I came to Indiana in 1828 and resided for
five years in Wayne county two miles west of Dublin. At that time there was but one store in the
village. William Renley, a wheelwright,
made my mother a flax wheel on which she spun flax which she made into a pair
of trousers for father. Father made
shoes for the entire family, and although rude in construction, they were good
and wore a long time. The first Indians
I ever saw were camped one mile from our house.
Miami’s and the tribe numbered 200.
In 1822 we moved to Delaware county, and my father, Enoch Tomlinson,
pre-empted the land I now own on the Middletown pike. The journey from Dublin to this county was
made overland and occupied three days.
As the Middletown pike had not been made, in those days we were compelled
to cut our way from Cowan through the heavy underbrush. The first night we were quartered in our new
home the wolves howled dismally all night.
For many years the animals skulked about in the woods and often killed
and devoured sheep, hogs and calves. In
many instances they attacked men who were carrying fresh meat. My father, brothers and myself killed many
wild cats and had great sport. Our dogs
would scent cats and run them until they took refuge in a tree. Then we would shoot them and secure their
skins. In June, 1834, Edmund Aldridge,
one of our near neighbors, was stricken with the terrible milk sickness. At one time there were eight persons down
with the same disease. Many died and
five persons were buried in the same grave.
The first grave was dug in the old Heath graveyard. The first of the victims buried was Mrs.
Eliza Aldridge. The only doctor who could cure the dreaded malady resided in
Randolph county, 20 miles away, and his visits were few, as he had to come on
horseback. Dr. Anthony was also called
in several cases, but was unable to prevent the disease from spreading. The first school house we had was constructed
entirely of logs with a stick chimney, dirt hearth and split pancheon floor
daubed with mud. The seats and desks were
constructed of roughly hewn logs. Our
first teacher was Abner Perdieu, and he was a good one. We studied spelling and arithmetic. Our ink was made by soaking maple bark in
water. We added wild berries for coloring. The teacher receive[d] 27-1/2 cents every
three months for each scholar, hence you can imagine that his earnings were not
munificent[sic]. The scholars would
often scare up several deer when proceeding to and from school. There were no roads in those days and the
inhabitants of the county were forced to make them. Our neighbors and the members of our family
took axes and cut our way to where
Muncie now stands. Here we followed an
Indian trail to William Gilbert’s farm, where the Delaware county jail now
stands. The first paper printed in
Muncie was issued from a story and a half building situated on West Main street
on the banks of White river. Thomas
Gharkey was the proprietor and was considered a very smart man in those
days. One day he had trouble with a
printer who knocked him out of an upstairs window, which crippled him for
life. The first church dedicated in
Muncie was situated on East Washington street where A. L. Johnson’s residence
now stands. In 1828 John Hall was the
preacher in charge. The Presbyterian
church on south Walnut street was the second church erected in the county. Labor was 25 cents per day or $6 per
month. We made rails for 87-1/2 cents
per hundred, cut wheat with a sycle[sic] for 37-1/2 a day, but got $1 a day for
cradeling[sic]. My sisters worked out
doing housework for $1 per week and paid 5-1/4 cent per yard for calico. Deer horns were worth 25 cents each. We made our sugar and molasses, had wheat
bread for Sunday morning and corn bread and Johnny-cake through the week. We raised peaches and sold them on the streets
of Muncie for 12-1/2 cents per bushel. I
sold good poplar lumber for 75 cents per hundred and paid $9 for a pair of
bedticks of Moses Neelys, and mother spun the flax into bed cords. We hauled our wheat to Brookville, for which
we were paid 40 cents per bushel. I
hauled flour to Cincinnati for $3 per barrel.
The first gun I ever owned I traded a cow for it. The cow was worth $8. I sold two good horses for $100 on land
payments. I bought the second jail built
in Delaware county at auction for $89.
The jail was a two story brick building and stood in the west part of
the court house yard.”
Mar 11, 2019
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His Eye Is On The Sparrow
Love Joseph Fuller's version of this hymn.