Thursday, January 24, 2008
Lexington Farmhouse
Friday, January 18, 2008
Gilchrist Family History
Thursday, January 17, 2008
U.S. 1850 Census -- Details
Today I found a page from the 1850 U.S. Census that shows Nathan Harden back in Pleasant Township in Logan County, Ohio. It shows he is the son of Nathaniel Harden, 47 (farmer), and Mary Harden, 43. Their children are listed as John, 21 (farmer), Nathan, 19, Lewis, 17, Henry, 15, Mary, 13, Lydia, 11, and Mahala, 9. I wonder where they got a name like Mahala? Imagine what it would be like to birth a child every two years, like clockwork. Yikes!
In this census, Nathaniel has listed his place of birth as Pennsylvania, and Mary is from Maryland. Son John was born in Pennsylvania, but the rest are born in Ohio. I tried going back to earlier censuses to find a Nathaniel Harden in PA, but their records are not as neat and detailed as these. It seems only male heads of house (and perhaps widows) are named in those records, so I cannot find out from that source who Nathaniel's father was, without knowing in what county he was born, which might narrow it down.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
U.S. 1880 Census -- Questions
Monday, January 14, 2008
Update/correction to post re: Nathan and Emeretta Harden
Stake a Homestead game!
Hey there. I had to take a break from the fascinating hunt into family history when I saw this online. It's an actual game called Stake a Homestead! Before the game of Life, where blue and pink plastic pegs drove a plastic car around a fantasy land of uranium mine bonanzas and stock certificates paying huge dividends and you either ended up a Millionaire Tycoon or Bankrupt, there was this game based on the Homestead Act of 1862. Here's the description from the box:
"In 1862 congress passed the Homestead Act. A United States citizen twenty-one years old could file a claim on 160 acres of public land which he wished to own as a home for himself and his family. If he lived there for five years, had built a house and was raising crop, he was given title to the land.
"The country was wild, the problems faced by the "sod-busters" were great. Many homesteaders gave up before five years had passed. Everyone who succeeded did so through sheer determination and by using every skill or handicraft he could master.
"Players take turns drawing cards and playing them onto their Land Tracts. The cards come in 5 colors, one for each year. At the end of the game, players who have a house, crop, and 4 of the 6 other types of cards, without having the claim jumper card, win."
Oops, I just read on Wikipedia that Milton Bradley's Game of Life was created by the man himself in 1860, but the modern version was published in 1960 -- both before Stake a Homestead. Well, it's possible some of you Baby Boomers out there played this game. I don't remember it being one of the games in Great-Grandma's basement (though I do remember Chutes and Ladders and Head of the Class), but maybe it rings a bell or simply brings a laugh at the thought that the process of digging a hole out of the dirt or clay in the side of a hill for your family to live in could ever be replicated by a paper board game. Fun for the whole family!
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Obituary for Betty Harden
GOODLAND -- Elizabeth Theresa "Betty" Harden, 84, Goodland, died Sunday, Jan. 6, 2008.
Mrs. Harden was born Elizabeth Theresa Kompus on Sept. 25, 1923, in Herndon.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Ralph Wolfram.
Survivors include her husband, Lloyd Harden, of Goodland; a son, Jerry Wolfram of Herndon; a stepson, Monte Harden of Sioux City, Iowa; three daughters, Joyce Lea Brown of Murrieta, Calif., Jeanette Adams of Cheyenne, Wyo., and Roxanna Jankovits of Rochester Hills, Mich.; a stepdaughter, Marilyn Harden of Hays; six grandchildren; three stepgrandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Mountain time Wednesday at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Goodland. Burial will be in St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Herndon.
A rosary will be said at a vigil at 6:30 p.m. Mountain time today at Koons Funeral Home Chapel, 211 N. Main, Goodland 67735.
Memorials may be made to Cedar Living Center of Oberlin.
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
Pre-Revolutionary Hardens!
Betty Harden
Monday, January 7, 2008
"All history becomes subjective; in other words there is properly no history, only biography." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
(My consort, Ken, has just told me that his maternal grandmother Mayhew was at one time a professional genealogist, and that's how he knows he had seven ancestors on the Mayflower and that his seven-times great-grandfather Thomas Mayhew (he has his own Wiki page, too!) was the first governor of the colony on Martha's Vineyard. There were only 20 families on the island, so they became terribly inbred, but it is said that the Indians were treated fairly (comparatively). In one branch, he is descended from four siblings, which is why I tell Ken, "That's why you ain't right." He is mostly all right, though.)
"It is not possible for one to teach others who cannot teach his own family." Confucius
"Heirlooms we don't have in our family. But stories we've got."
Friday, January 4, 2008
Countdown to the Family Reunion -- July 4, 2008
I am putting together a book containing the history of the Hardens of Clark County and Comanche counties. My mom and Gayle Harden are sending me tons of photos and some history from the 19th century on. I know there are many branches of the family who would like to be included but for which we have few pics and info, so I invite you to send them to me (good quality photos are best, of course.) Also, if you have special memories of Paul and Florence Harden, or their children, your parents and grandparents, these would be nice to know too. Anyone who would like to be added to this blog to make entries, you are welcome. Just email me and I'll take care of it. Any large attachments should go to my jprather at duke dot edu account. Otherwise, you can use my chirpXL at gmail dotcom account.
Looking forward to seeing many of you in July!
Jennifer Prather (Judy's daughter)