I have been thinking more about why Jane and her sons came to Kansas...I have a hunch that the new railroad had something to do with Jane and her sons moving to Marshall County. The Central Branch of the Union Pacific was completed about 1870 and ended in Waterville. From what I have read there was a lot of advertising about Kansas and all of the opportunities. Plus, there was the Homestead Act. It's like they got on the train and rode as far as they could, haha. Another factor may have been the aftermath of the Civil War. I know they fought for the Union but if I remember correctly they were drafted. Jane's father owned a very large plantation near Lewisburg so I wonder if the family really supported the Union. If they were Southern Sympathizers life would not have been fun in WV following the Civil War. Of course that just my thoughts... no way to prove such a theory.
I would also love to know why they left KS. I know life was not easy but I don't think that it was all that easy in WV at that time either. Jane had other children and grandchildren in Charleston, maybe she missed them and wanted to go home. I think one son died while she was in KS. It is possible that Jane died in KS and I just haven't found any record. Maybe they just wanted to move on to somewhere else... Goodness knows how those Carnes like to move around and travel.
Showing posts with label Jane Jarrett Carnes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Jarrett Carnes. Show all posts
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Monday, July 22, 2013
Not my Jane...
The death record for Jane Carnes arrived from the Putnam County IN Health Dept. Just as I thought, not my Jane. This Jane's maiden name was Durham not Jarrett. A little disappointing but now I know! Now I am wondering if this Jane Durham Carnes was married to one of my Carnes? That is a search for another day!
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Where did Jane go...!!!!
I
finally broke down and ordered the death record for the Jane Carnes that died
in Indiana. That should be here sometime next week. I don’t have high
hopes because I know that it may not contain enough info to be sure that it is
my Jane. In the mean time I have been
looking for her kin that lived in Indiana. I wish I could remember where/when I heard
that little nugget of information, but I just can’t. Anyway, while looking I
did find the following about Vincent Jarrett, Jane’s uncle:
Vincent Jarrett came here
in 1878. He was a native of Virginia and the father of thirteen children, all
living at the present time. He was active in church work and being a fine
singer, he added much to the interest of meetings which he usually attended. He
died nine years ago, but his widow still survives. (Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society. (1902). Historical
collections Vol XXXI. Lansing, Michigan: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. Pg 145; Goggle eBooks)
Nothing to do with Jane but it was kinda cool to
learn that someone in my family could sing!
Before moving to Michigan Vincent lived
in Wills, La Porte, Indiana. Wills, IN is about 185 miles from Greencastle where Indiana Jane died in 1889 about 2 years after Vincent died in
Michigan. Vincent was in Michigan by 1880 but maybe he had children that
married and settled in Indiana. I need to continue looking…. I got a little
sidetracked, imagine that, when I discovered that one of Vincent’s daughters (Ada) died in Los Angeles, California, cool... I probably have cousins in LA!
The search for Jane
continues….
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Carnes Land in Kansas!
July 6,
2013
Dave and
I took a trip 45 minutes north to Waterville, KS yesterday. I wanted to find
some more information about Jane Jarrett Carnes and her sons that moved there
in the late 1860’s. From records that I found earlier Isaac and Clark Carnes each
purchased 160 acres of land located in Marshall County Kansas near Waterville
in August 1868. Isaac and Catherine registered and sold the land 16 March
1877, this is a bit later than I thought and it also means that Alonzo Carnes was
probably born in KS as I expected. Isaac bought a total of 160 acres of land
but it was two ‘sections’ of 80 acres and this is how he sold the land. Eighty
acres was sold to a John Peters for $450.00 and the remaining 80 acres was sold
to a John Seih, also for $450.00. Both transactions took place on 16 March 1877
and were witnessed by Wm C Park and Charles Torly or Throly. The lady at the
courthouse said that it was common to register and sale land on the same day. She
showed us on the map where his property was likely located and Dave and I rode
out to the location. The land is out a unpaved road (little tricky on a
motorcycle) named Unicorn Road just outside of Waterville and backs up to the
Washington County line. His brother Squire bought land in Washington and I am
fairly sure that it was close to Isaac’s land. The area is beautiful and is still all farm
land.
We were surprised
to find a small cemetery, Kenyon
Cemetery, along the road. The graves were quite old but the grass was mowed
so someone takes care of the property. We did not find any Carnes graves but we
did find the grave of John Sieh, one of the two buyers of the land. A grave for a William Lowell Park was also
there but following a Find a Grave link leads to a William
Chester Park buried in another cemetery in nearby Waterville. Not sure if
there is any connection to my Carnes but it was an interesting find and makes
me feel that we were in the right place.
I need to take the time to look more closely at some of the other names
to see if they were possibly neighbors. I’d also like to find a record of who
all is buried in that cemetery because there were some obvious graves with no
markers or markers that were in such bad condition that they could not be
read.
I plan
on going back to the courthouse to get the records for Clark Carnes property
and to Washington County to get Squires. I also want to go to the Marshall
County Historic courthouse that is now the county’s history museum. Although it
is supposed to be open from 1-4 Monday – Friday it was closed when we were
there yesterday. It was open when we drove by around 1:30 but after we had
lunch it was closed. Frustrating, but it is run by volunteers and sometimes
that is just how things go!
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