Adventures in Genealogy

Photo: My grandparents, Jackson Co. natives Cecil and Pearl (Hopson) Stoll on their wedding day in 1937.

I love doing genealogy! It's like putting a puzzle together or solving a mystery, sometimes working from the tiniest of clues. And most of my genealogical adventures have a link to Jackson County, Iowa, home base for all of my family lines at some time. So I am inviting you to join me on my quests and enjoy the ride with me. Please let me know how you like my blog. [sic] - means that I left the spelling just as I found it in the original record. Anything else in [square brackets] is my addition for clarity. And since genealogy research works best as a group effort, feel free to add corrections or point me to more information. But most of all, Enjoy! LuAnn

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Troubled Family

I came across this February 1907 article regarding a family in dire trouble. 
Spent the afternoon researching this family that was literally torn apart.  The father, John Welch, died in what the paper termed “a hovel” near Godard’s mill in South Fork Twp.  His wife, named Juliette, and six boys moved in with her parents, Moses & Sally Prindle.  In January 1907, Grandma Prindle died, the boys’ mother became ill and the youngest boy broke his leg, all in quick succession. 
According to the grandfather, Moses Prindle's, obituary , four adult members of this household died within a month. It was then that the family’s extreme poverty and deplorable living conditions came to the attention of the township trustees.  The article also said that all the boys were “without education” and “afflicted” in some way “with hair lip, club foot or some other deformity.”  The trustees sent the family clothes and provisions and took the injured boy to the hospital for treatment. 
Then the Des Moines Finding Home Institution offered to take the five youngest children, ages 3-11, and put them up for adoption, for the consideration of $30 apiece.  The institution would not take the oldest boy, age 12.  All the others but the boy in the hospital were immediately sent by train to Des Moines.  Someone would come for the youngest boy later.
  Grandpa Prindle died later that month. 
In the 1910 census, Julia Welch is listed in Maquoketa with the two youngest boys, Arthur, age 8, and Enoch, age 5.  She is employed as a laundress at the Hurst Hotel. 
In the 1920 and 1925 censuses, both of these boys are listed in Glenwood, Mills Co., Iowa as inmates in the Institution for Feeble Minded Children.  Enoch is still listed there in the 1930 census.  Does anyone know what became of these children?


© 2011 LuAnn Goeke

McCaffrey and McGee

I saw a post regarding Edward Turner who married Margaret (McGee) from Garryowen, requesting information on Edward’s origins.  Their son, John Turner was murdered and when I found an article on that, it stated that John’s cousin was Owen McCaffrey.  I had done some research on McCaffrey’s origins, so started trying to find their connection.  This led me to Patrick (pfturner)’s Turner-Faber online genealogy which included both men and their ancestors.  Turns out that Owen’s mother, Elizabeth (McGee) was a sister to Margaret (McGee).  Turner-Faber also had more information on Owen’s grandmother, Bridget, who raised him and his sister after their parents died in a cholera epidemic.  This led me to a post by Patrick regarding Owen’s first wife, Bridget McCaffrey.  Her obituary in a Maquoketa newspaper said she was buried in Deep Creek cemetery and he wanted to know if that cemetery still existed.  Suspecting that it was in Clinton Co., I checked their genweb.  On a listing for Assumption Cemetery, I found an entry for “Brogeta McCaffreu” whose death date closely matched that of Bridget McCaffrey.  So Assumption Cemetery was apparently known as Deep Creek Cemetery at one time.  I still cannot find Owen in census records between 1856 & 1880.  © 2011 LuAnn Goeke