Thursday, December 13, 2012

Ellen Louise (Foss) Andrews


Ellen Louise Foss was born Sept. 7, 1839 in Elmore, Lamoille, VT., the 7th of eleven children born to Luther Foss, a farmer and his wife, Minea Atwood (Andrews) Foss. 


I believe this photograph was taken in 1867.  Ellen would have been 28 at the time, married 9 years, with 2 young sons.

A young woman in the 1860s, she looked the epitome of a pioneer woman as she gazed off into the distance; the Civil War years barely behind her.

Strong, stoic, practical.

Ellen Foss was well acquainted with loss.  

In  Feb. 1844, when she was 4 ½ years old, her younger sister Martha Ann died at age 2 ½ yrs.

A few years later Ellen lost another sibling, an older brother, Luther Hale, age 19, died July 21, 1848.

When Ellen was 19 she married her 1st cousin  Christopher Atwood Adams Andrews Jr. 22, of Scituate, Massachusetts.  They were married on July 31, 1859 in Elmore, Lamoille, VT.  (Christopher’s father C. A. A. Andrews Sr. and Ellen’s mother, Minea Atwood Andrews were brother and sister, the eldest son and daughter of William Andrews and Thankful Atwood).

For several years following their marriage Ellen and Christopher made their home in Massachusetts. Their first child, William Luther Andrews was born June 28, 1861 in Charlestown, MA, shortly after the start of the Civil War.

Christopher’s Civil War years remain a mystery.  I haven’t been able to find any record of him having served in the war, even though I was able to find three of his younger brothers, all serving in Co. A, 35th Reg’t, Massachusetts Infantry.  
  • James Theodore Johnson Andrews, born June 14, 1843 in Massachusetts. He enlisted Aug. 9, 1862 as a private in Capt. S. H. Andrews, Co. A, 35th Reg’t,Massachusetts Infantry and died in camp from an overdose of chloroform, 6 months later on Feb. 4, 1863 near Falmouth VA., age 19 years. 
  • William Baker Damon Andrews was born on April 10, 1842 in Newton, Massachusetts. He enlisted in Co. A., 35th Reg't of Massachusetts Volunteers as a private July 23, 1862; was promoted to Sergeant and killed in action.  He died of a gunshot wound to the neck September 30, 1864 near Petersburg, VA., age 22 years. 
  • Reuben Snow Hayden Andrews, born Jan. 15, 1839 in Boston, MA.; enlisted August 2, 1862, in Co. A, 35th Reg't, Massachusetts Volunteers, later known as 35th Massachusetts Infantry and was discharged near Alexandria VA. June 9, 1865.
I haven’t been able to determine if Christopher fought in the war or remained in Massachusetts but I did find the answer to one question I had.

I wanted to know if  Capt. S. H. Andrews, Co. A., 35th Massachusetts Infantry and Reuben S. H. Andrews, Co. A., 35th Massachusetts Infantry were the same person.

When I purchased Ellen’s tintype, there was a cdv up for auction signed "Capt. S. H. Andrews, 35th Mass." and he was identified in the description of Ellen, as her brother.

This is not the same photograph that was auctioned. It is a photograph of Capt. S. H. Andrews that is held by the Wilson Creek National Battlefield and is used with their permission.

(Capt. S.H. Andrews WICR 31860) in the collection of Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield. 
 Image courtesy of the National Park Service.

A search proved Ellen didn’t have a brother named S.H Andrews but she did have a brother-in-law, Rueben S. H. Andrews.

Were they the same man?

They were not, but Reuben Snow Hayden Andrews and Stephen H. Andrews, son of Stephen Snow Andrews were related.

Pvt. Rueben S. H. Andrews and Capt. S. H. Andrews, were cousins.  How distant is for someone with more patience than me to unravel … their grandfather’s were brothers.

Capt. Stephen H. Andrews was born in Massachusetts, Nov., 1835.  His father, Stephen Snow Andrews, died when he was young and in 1845 his mother Rebecca married Moses Dill.  In 1850, Stephen, 14 and his sister Rudencia, 12 were living in the combined household of their step-father Moses Dill, a trader, and their mother Rebecca, but by age 16, Stephen was living on his own and supporting himself working as a store clerk.

In March 1857 Stephen, age 21, arrived in Leavenworth, KS, bought a team and wagon and settled on Smoky Hill, 7 miles above Ft. Riley where he cleared the timber, built a cabin, and began improvements to the land.

"But his sympathies were strong on the side of the Union" and at the start of the Civil War, in May 1861 he enlisted as first sergeant in Co B, 2nd Kansas Infantry.  His first experience of an important battle was at Wilson’s Creek, Aug. 10, 1861.  He mustered out Oct. 31, 1861 and was honorably discharged.

In  Dec. 1861 he returned to Massachusetts, where he was authorized by the governor to raise a company and became captain of Co. A, 35th Massachusetts Infantry, his commission dating from Aug. 1, 1862.

This would be about the time his cousins; Reuben, William and James enlisted.

Capt. S. H. Andrews and his men took part with the Army of the Potomac, in the battles of South Mountain, Antietam and Fredericksburg.   During the Battle of Antietam Andrews was wounded and never fully recovered.  In the spring of 1863 he took part in the siege of Vicksburg.  He resigned his commission April 24th, 1863, owing to the impairment of his health by the hardships of army life, and returned to Kansas.

Reuben, the only one of the three Andrews brothers in the 35th Reg't to survive the war, was discharged near Alexandria, Virginia and returned to his parents home in Massachusetts.

In the 1865 census Christopher and Ellen are living in Charlestown, MA. with their 4 yr. old son William.  Christopher’s occupation is shown as house painter.  On August 22, 1865 Ellen gave birth to their second son, Theodore Foss Andrews.

A few days after her son's birth, on August 27, 1865, Ellen’s brother, Benjamin Perry Foss, a 29 yr. old farmer in Hyde Park died of typhoid fever.

November, 1866 was a month for marriages.

On Nov. 15, 1866 Christopher’s brother Reuben married Lucy Hayden in Scituate, Massachusetts.

And on Nov. 23, 1866 Ellen’s youngest sister Cordelia A. Foss married John Foss, who had served in Co. M, Vermont 11th Heavy Artillery.

The following year, in 1867 Ellen and Christopher moved with their 2 young sons from Charlestown, Massachusetts to Wolcott, Vermont.

I think Ellen’s photograph and the previous one of Cordelia were taken around this time; after Ellen and Christopher moved to Vermont in 1867 and before the death of Ellen’s 18 year old sister Cordelia Foss on February 26, 1868.

In 1869 Ellen and her family moved again, this time to North Hyde Park, Vermont where three more children were born.

Charles Christopher Andrews b. Mar. 5, 1870 Hyde Park, Lamoille, VT
Bertha Louise Andrews b. Mar. 25, 1873 Hyde Park, Lamoille, VT
Orton Grant Andrews b. Jan. 27, 1879 Hyde Park, Lamoille, VT

Christopher and Ellen lived in North Hyde Park, Vermont until 1886.

From 1886 - 1907 they lived in  Hyde Park, Massachusetts.

In 1893 their son Charles Christopher (23) married  Mary Elizabeth Irving and in 1895 son Theodore Foss Andrews (29) married Mabel Spencer but for the most part Christopher and Ellen’s children don’t appear to have been eager to leave the nest.

The 1900 census shows son William 38, daughter Bertha 27 and son Orton 21, all still living at home.  William’s occupation, like his father’s is painter / paper hanger.  Orton is a clerk.

Christopher A. A. Andrews died January 13, 1904 at the age of 67 yrs. 1 mo. 26 days in Hyde Park, Massachusetts. His cause of death was cardiac dilatation, a condition, his doctor noted, he’d had for several years.

Ellen Louise (Foss) Andrews
Born:  September 7, 1839   Elmore, Lamoille, VT
Died:  December 1, 1907  19 Winslow St., Hyde Park, MA
Age:  68 yrs.  2 mos. 24 days
Cause of Death:  Primary: Atherosclerosis /  Contributory: Acute Indigestion
Burial:  Fairview Cemetery Boston

Sources:
Massachusettes Soldiers, Sailors & Marines in the Civil War

familysearch.org

Trans-Mississippi Theater Photo Archive

Portrait and Biographical Record of Leavenworth, Douglas and Franklin Counties, Kansas

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Corilla / Cordelia Foss




Corilla / Cordelia A. Foss was born April 29, 1849 in Elmore, Lamoille, VT.   The youngest of the 11 children of farmer, Luther Foss (1799 - 1879) and his wife, Minea Atwood (Andrews) Foss (1806 - 1880)

Early census records indicate that when Cordelia was living in her parents household she was identified as Corilla.  Later records, after her marriage, show her name as Cordelia.  

For the sake of consistency and because the tintype I have identifies her as Cordelia, I will refer to her as Cordelia.

Cordelia’s ten older siblings were:
  • Mina Amelia Foss (1826 -1896)
  • William Andrews Foss (1827-1893) 
  • Luther Hale Foss (1829 - 1848) died at age 18 and before Cordelia was born
  • Thankful Atwood Foss (1831 -1900) 
  • Harriet Malvina Foss (1833 - 1908) 
  • Benjamin Perry Foss (1835 - 1865).  A farmer in Hyde Park, he died at 29 of typhoid fever.  
  • Ellen Louise Foss (1839-1907) whose tintype was found with Cordelia’s will be the subject of a separate blog. 
  • Martha Ann Foss (July 4, 1841 - Feb. 9, 1844) died at age 2 yrs. 7 mos.  
  • Mary Jane Foss (1843 - 1926)
  • George Washington Foss (1846 - 1930)

Cordelia A. Foss (17)  married John Merrill Foss (21) on Nov. 25, 1866.  John, the son of William & Mary A. (Fellows) Foss was born in Whitefield, NH, Dec. 1, 1844 and served his country during the Civil War, being a member of Co. M, 11th VT. Heavy Artillery.

His record … according to various sources, list his service as …

Foss, John M., age: 18, cred.  Eden, VT; service: enl 9/1/63, m/i 10/7/63, PVT, Co. M, 11th VT INF, pr SGT 11/29/63, red 1/11/64, pr Hospital Steward 1/1/65, m/o 8/25/65

1st Regiment, Vermont Heavy Artillery
Side: Union
Company: A,M
Soldier‘s Rank In: Private
Soldier‘s Rank Out: Corporal

My original information said that Cordelia and John were cousins and because both of their last names were Foss, it did seem likely but I haven't been able to find the connection.

Cordelia’s older sister Ellen (Foss) Andrews (who did marry her 1st cousin, C. A. A. Andrews) moved from Charlestown, MA to Wolcott, VT in 1867.

The tintypes I purchased of Cordelia and Ellen were taken at E. N. Porter’s New Gallery, Morrisville, VT.  The  embossed design on the sleeves is identical, making me think they were taken at the same time, possibly as early as Nov. 1866 when Cordelia and John were married but more likely in 1867 after Ellen moved back to Vermont and before Cordelia‘s death in February of 1868.

Which would make Cordelia and Ellen about 18 and 28 years old at the time these photographs were taken.

I wasn't able to uncover any information as to Cordelia’s cause of death.  I did find mention of her in the obituary for her husband, John Merrill Foss, who remarried later the same year.   He married Harriet Louise Masure of Concord, N.H. on Dec.1, 1868 (his 24th birthday), and to their union were born six children, three of whom died young and three who survived to adulthood.

The Morrisville Messenger obituary, dated April 16, 1910 describes John Merrill Foss (65) as “very well known hereabouts, having been a resident of this town since 1894, coming from North Hyde Park, and having acted as traveling salesman and school teacher in different towns in the county.”

But of Cordelia herself and a life that spanned a mere 18 years, there is very little to mark her time on this earth ...

Cordelia A. Foss
Born Apr. 29, 1849 Elmore, Lamoille, Vermont
Married John Merrill Foss on November 25, 1866
Died Feb. 26, 1868, age 18 years, Morristown, Lamoille Co. VT

Madonna & Child




I found this in Tulsa, Oklahoma and that is the extent of what I know about it.   There is no information on the frame holder or the photograph and although it is a beautiful pose of mother and child, I haven’t had much luck finding other “madonna and child” photographs.  I have found a few prints with the draping and a similar ethereal quality but except for a 1926 greeting card, all were large and framed and looked like they may have been meant more as decorative art than a photograph.

Any information would be greatly appreciated.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Diphtheria ca1917


I found this in Muskogee a couple of days ago.

On the front is written:  Hazel



I suppose Hazel could be one of the women in the photograph but because the writer says she will also be sending along another picture for Mag, I think it’s more likely that Hazel identifies who this picture was meant to go to.

On the reverse it says ...



Our school is closed on the account of diptheria there was a death Sat. and one Sunday.  We are not quarantined but no children are allowed on the street.  I’ll tell you it is a mighty gloomy time.  I don’t know when we will have any more school.

I’ll send Mag a picture with yours as I don’t know her address, give it to her when she comes up.  Tell her to write once in a while.  I don’t know when Charles will come home.

The card is not signed.  There is no address and no postmark.  In the stamp box on the reverse is the word “AZO.“  I thought it might mean Arizona.  I was wrong.

What it meant was the postcard was printed on Kodak Professional Azo paper and the 4 triangles pointing up dated the postcard to 1904 - 1918.

After I studied the postcard for awhile,  I started to wonder if someone reading the same words and seeing the same image would infer the same things or would they see it all differently?

There are so many ways this story could spin.

The writer refers to school twice, saying, “Our school is closed on account of diptheria” and “I don’t know when we will have any more school.”   The ladies look a bit old to be students.

Could my writer have been a teacher at the school closed after two deaths?

Until the late 20s, diphtheria was one of the leading causes of death among children.  A highly contagious disease, it is spread by coughing, breathing, direct contact or contaminated food.  There's a brief incubation of 2 - 4 days.  Symptoms include a sore throat, fever, swollen necks glands, and difficulty in swallowing and breathing. Often there is a membrane that forms in the throat, as it grows it can interfere with swallowing.  If it extends to the windpipe, it blocks the airway causing suffocation.

Children are said to have died “horribly and suddenly,” literally strangling to death.

At that time most state health boards left the control of diphtheria outbreaks to local public health departments and individual practicing physicians.

Who, more often then not, argued against the closing of schools.

One M.D wrote in 1916, "My conclusions are that in a threatened outbreak of this disease, the city schools should not be closed, but if put under proper medical supervision they may be kept open and instead of spreading, will help stamp out the disease."

Other arguments against closing were of a financial nature.

In the end many schools had to close anyway.  

Kansas was one state I ran across that had a more definitive approach …

Kansas (1915) - Should the disease show a tendency to become epidemic, the public and private schools must be closed, and, in extreme cases, church services suspended and public assemblages of people at shows, circuses, theaters, fairs or other gatherings prohibited.

The writer’s words indicate that wherever she was, the outbreak was being taken seriously.  Her tone is somber as she writes, “I'll tell you it is a mighty gloomy time.”

And that they are not quarantined but no children are allowed on the street.

She ends her missive with “I don’t know when Charles will come home.”

And who is Charles?  Her husband? and if so why doesn't she know when he will come home?  Is it not knowing when the outbreak will end or is it because he’s a soldier, off fighting in a war?

Diphtheria outbreaks appear to have been especially prevalent during 1916 - 1917.

The stamp box dates the postcard to 1904 - 1918.

I'm not going to try dating by clothing.  I’m hoping that's one of those skills that gets better with practice and I just haven’t had enough practice.

For now I’m going to give it a tentative date of 1917 and maybe one day I'll run across mention of  Hazel, Mag and a man named Charles, who might have been a soldier in WWI.

And might have had a wife who was a teacher.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

A Lady & Her Dog


There wasn’t a single identifying mark and it was stained and torn.

And I found it irresistible …

Many of the larger breeds of dogs are gentle giants.  Such seems to be the case with this big guy.  His owner looking relaxed and amused stands with one arm draped over his back and the other hand resting lightly against his chest, confident a gentle touch is enough to insure he will stand obediently, his front legs in the seat of a wicker chair.

Perhaps she is amused by the photographer.

One wonders if he shared her confidence.





Thursday, November 15, 2012

Andrews & Foss









These two tintypes were from the same seller.  Both young women, both identified and both in identical embossed sleeves that bore the same photographer's name and city.

I had an idea they were related.

Ellen Andrew’s listing mentioned she was the sister of a Capt.
S(tephen) H. Andrews, whose image was also up for auction.

I looked for Capt. Andrews and found a cabinet photo of a Union soldier, signed S.H. Andrews Capt. 35th Mass.  The bidding had only begun and already Capt. Andrews was out of my league.  I filed his information away for future reference and purchased the tintypes.

I started my search with Cordelia Foss.  The back of her photo said she was the daughter of Luther Foss and the wife of John M. Foss and she died young.

And it turned out she was the daughter of Luther Foss and the wife of John Foss and she did die when she was only 18.  But her name wasn’t Cordelia … it was Corilla.

And Corilla and Ellen were indeed related.  They were sisters, born 10 years apart.  

In Corilla’s listing she was described as the 1st wife and COUSIN of John M. Foss and because they shared the same last name, it did seem likely … only it wasn't … at least not in the 4 generations I checked.

But older sister Ellen DID marry her first cousin … Chistopher Atwood Adams Andrews.

Only Ellen didn't have a brother named S. H. Andrews.  Her brothers were William Andrews, Luther Hale, Benjamin Perry and George Washington FOSS …

but her husband Christopher DID.

He had a brother, Rueben Snow Hayden Andrews, Co. A, 35th Reg’t, Mass.

I wonder if he was a Captain?

Sunday, November 11, 2012

William Stevens Perry, Bishop of Iowa


I’d gone searching for old photographs and there they were; a stack of cabinet cards in beautiful condition.  Most were done by photographers in the Davenport / Dubuque, Iowa area, but as I searched through them I realized, there were no clues as to who any of these people were; no writing on them ... except the last one … a photograph of an older “priestly” looking gentleman.


I couldn't work up much enthusiasm for a photograph of an old man … not even a kindly old man, but the writing on the back did catch my eye.  It said “Bishop of Iowa” and that, I thought, was a lofty sounding title worth investigating.

Or maybe the kindly gent had visions of grandeur.

I took him home to find out.

At home, I studied the reverse side but wasn't able to make out the complete inscription. What I could make out was, “Faithfully yours …. Perry, Bishop of Iowa.”  I entered what I had and hit the search button.



And found the Right Reverend William Stevens Perry, II Bishop of Iowa.  There was no doubt I had the right Perry. The article was accompanied by the same photograph.

The amount of information I found on Bishop Perry was overwhelming.  I have tried to condense it but suffice to say, he was a very busy man.

William Stevens Perry was born in Providence, RI. January 22, 1832. He was the son of Steven Perry and Katharine Whittemore (Stevens) Perry.

He was of English origin, his first American ancestor on the paternal side, John Perry, having arrived in New England in 1636, a fellow passenger with John Eliot, and referred to as "cousin" in a preserved letter from “that distinguished Puritan Apostle.” His great-grandfather, Abel Perry, was an officer in the Revolutionary War. Among his maternal ancestors were William Stevens, of Falmouth, Maine, who served as a privateer's man on the frigate Boston, and the latter's son of the same name, who held a Lieutenant's commission in the United States Army during the War of 1812.

Perry graduated Harvard in 1854.  He studied theology at Virginia Theological Seminary, but finished his studies privately because of ill health.   He was ordained a deacon in 1857 and a priest the following year at St. Paul’s in Boston where he spent the first year of his ministry.    His parish ministries included positions at St. Luke‘s Church, Nashua, NH, St. Stephen‘s Church in Portland, Maine, St. Michael‘s Church in Litchfield, CT, and Trinity Church in Geneva, NY.

On Jan. 15, 1862, at the age of 24 the Rev. William Stevens Perry, rector of St. Stephen’s Church in Portland, Maine married Sara Abbott Woods Smith, 18, youngest daughter of Rev. Thomas Mather and Mary Greenleaf (Woods) Smith.  They were married in Rosse Chapel, Gambier, Ohio by Dr. Gregory Thurston Bedell.  

Among Sara’s paternal ancestors are some very interesting people … John Cotton, first minister in Boston, Increase Mather, President of Harvard College, Rev. Cotton Mather Smith, of Sharon, CT and the latter's son, the Hon. John Cotton Smith, 23rd  Governor of CT.

From 1871 - 1873 William Perry was a professor of history at Hobart College and served as president from April to Sept. of 1876 but resigned when he accepted the position as Bishop of Iowa.

Bishop Perry’s work in the Diocese of Iowa is impressive.  I still find it difficult to comprehend all this one man accomplished in his lifetime.

He is credited with reopening Griswold College, founding Katharine’s Hall for girls, Kemper Hall for boys, Lee Hall for training candidates for orders and several other schools throughout the dioceses.

Three hospitals were founded during his episcopate:  Cottage Hospital in Des Moines, St. Luke’s Hospital in Cedar Rapids and St. Luke’s Hospital in Davenport, and two Homes for the Friendless were started, one in Dubuque and another in Davenport.

He created the Office of the Registrar to collect and preserve historical documents of the church;  created more than 30 new parishes and missions and ordained dozens of priests.

He was also a prolific writer and published more than 100 books and pamphlets.  famousamericans.net credits him with publishing more books “probably than any living clergyman in the Episcopal church.”

In his book Some Summer Days Abroad, published 1880, there is a dedication that reads:

Sara A. W. Perry:
The Best of Wives and the Best of Travelers
These Sketches of 
Days Spent Together Abroad
Are Inscribed.  

Mrs. Perry is described as a woman who was attractive, gentle and sweet, a gracious hostess and an avid supporter of her husbands plans, commending herself to all classes and conditions of men by loving words and deeds.  She shunned notoriety even for well doing.

In 1887 Rev. Perry was unanimously elected “Lord Bishop of Nova Scotia” … but he declined this honor, one that had never before been offered to any one other than one of English birth and allegiance.

In the latter part of his life William Perry suffered ill health and took several trips to Europe to recuperate.

While in England in 1897 he was invited to preach at St. Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Abbey, Chester Cathedral, St. Paul’s in Oxford, Kensington Palace Royal Chapel, Royal Savoy Chapel and Holy Trinity, Stratford-upon-Avon.

He returned from Europe with his wife and niece, passengers on the Lucania, reaching NY on Oct. 23, 1897.  Mrs. Perry had been ill, and in deference to her desire to return to her home her medical advisers in London consented to her sailing.  She reached the home of her aunt Mrs. Stevens in Philadelphia where she died at a few minutes before 3 o’clock Wednesday morning, Oct. 27th, 1897.

The Rev. and Mrs. Perry were married 35 years.

The following spring, on May 12, 1898 while on an Episcopal visitation to Dubuque, Iowa, Bishop Perry suffered a paralytic stroke and died the following day. His funeral was held in St. John’s Church in Dubuque.  He was buried in the churchyard of the Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

William Stevens Perry (January 22, 1832 – May 13, 1898), a 19th century bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, educator and author. He served as the second bishop of the Diocese of Iowa from 1876 - 1898 ...

and he is the man in the photograph.