Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Memories Of Our Grandparents' and Their Farms

(This post will be a post-in-progress. Come back and view it from time to time, you hear? 🤠)

FARM FRESH MEMORIES OF OUR GRANDPARENTS: 
 




I remember playing in the ditch at Oklahoma grandma and grandpa's that ran in front of their farmhouse. It was especially fun when Grandpa turned on the irrigation well and the ditch became a muddy mess. We had a good ole mud slinging time then. We didn't dare go out to play without our shoes on though, for goat-head stickers were plentiful and hurt like the dickens to step on. 

Grandpa's big barn was the best place to be. They had barn cats that we sometimes got to feed and Grandpa kept extra eggs in a refrigerator in his farm office in the barn. We watched Grandpa milk cows and squirt milk into the barn cats mouths. 

Up in the barn loft we would arrange the hay bales into rooms and play house up there with our cousins. Grandpa helped me get up on a pony when I broke my right foot in senior high school before Thanksgiving that Christmas in the barn. No stirrups for me wearing a cast! 

 I remember Grandma's pork chops. They were so good! And her homemade, from scratch egg noodles. Mom disliked cooking and I grew up making convenience food from boxes except for dad's applesauce cake. 

My husband's Olean, Missouri grandmother showed me how to make bread from scratch and how to make mashed potatoes from real potatoes, not the dehydrated kind. She showed me how to cook turnips so they weren't bitter. My mother-in-law's homemade egg noodles are as good as my Oklahoma grandma's, but I have never mastered the art of making them. We used to bring home meat from my grandparents after a visit. David's Olean grandparents and parents sent home food with us after a visit. It was their way of loving us. I didn't understand that for a long time. 

When we went out to visit our Oklahoma grandparents during the summer, grandma's youngest brother nicknamed "Babe," would come out to visit for the afternoon from town eighteen miles away. Sometimes he would bring our second cousins with him and that meant more playmates! Our first cousins lived on the same farm as our grandparents and they and my siblings found all kinds of things to do on the farm, like go feed Grandpa's geese down at the pond in front of the barn or go play in the barn or in the old wooden granary buildings that were no longer used for that purpose (Grandpa had round metal Quonset huts that were more critter proof than the ones that we liked to play in). We also liked to play in an old cement car port next to the well-house that my Uncle used to drive his car up on two wooden beams cemented into the walls of the port to work on the motor. Us kids would make up "stew" in old 5 gallon metal paint cans with bits of leaves and water. I expect it rotted down into a smelly mess after we left it. I had never seen a stretch of land such as my grandparents had that was so good for catching toads as theirs was. They were everywhere and big un's too. Although, if you were able to catch one, they had a nasty habit of watering your legs and shoes down if you squeezed too hard. smile! Sometimes we'd go gather eggs from the hen house for grandma or play with the new spring kittens or sometimes Grandpa would go fetch a Shetland pony from the barn corral or out in the pasture and we would get to ride. Sometimes all of us kids would pile into Grandpa's pick-up in the back; mom, grandma and grandpa in front and bumpety-bump, go rabbit-hunting out in one of their pastures. 

I remember my Kansas grandfather standing in his living room in front of the piano and just swinging his arms back and forth while he twisted the trunk of his body. Funny what you remember. He liked to do that I guess. He was a farmer and wore blue overalls most of the week except for Sunday. Sunday he wore a nice dress shirt and tie with his Sunday suit to go to church in. 

Once, he told me to drive his pickup for him (stick shift) while he threw out hay for the cattle from the back. Then he sat down on the tailgate, just in case he said, so if I accidently ran into something,  he could jump out if he needed to. I didn't wreck his ole pick-up - I did good! smile!

My Oklahoma grandfather was a gentle man. He made pets of all his critters and I never saw him hit anyone until one day when we were climbing over the fence in his barn that separated the animal part from the garage part of the barn where he parked his pick-up. I began to climb over and my brother, impatient, pushed me as I began to swing my leg over. I lost my grip and did a face plant on the gravely dirt below. Grandpa immediately picked up my brother, gave him a good squat on the behind with his size 16 ring hand and told him that he wasn't to treat girls like that. My brother ran to mom to tattle on grandpa, crying all the way from the barn to the house and mom said to him, "If Grandpa swatted you, he must have had a good reason, so don't come crying to me." Yay! Grandpa, 1 point, Brother, none! 😁 I was always so grateful for Grandpa sticking up for me and teaching my bro some manners! 

This same set of grandparents came up to help my mom with all us children when we passed around the chickenpox one winter when we were of elementary school age. Grandma was in charge of the calamine lotion and she got to dot the itches away with the pink stuff. And boy, did the poxes itch! I also had a birthday during that time. What a way to spend a birthday! At least it was memorable!

My Kansas grandmother had bookshelves full of books in her living room. Most of them resided around the corners of her picture window that faced the dirt road out in front. I loved to read her missionary books. She used to make pretty wedding cakes for many of the young couples getting married in their country neighborhood and she saved that money to contribute to missions that the Church of God supported. My grandparents shopped most often in Satanta, Garden City, Liberal, and sometimes in Dodge City, Kansas, however, a lot of their dry goods came from catalogs that came in the mail or what we called wish books. I remember looking through some of them. Grandpa and later grandma kept them on a TV tray stand next to their lazy boy chair in the living room. 

My Oklahoma grandparents had a wonderful postcard collection that they kept in a big shoebox upstairs in a closet in their old two story home. I loved looking through it  when they lived there. Many of the postcards were from extended family members that sent Christmas postcard greetings, vacation "wish you were here" notes, and some were postcards they had collected from gift shops while on vacation as little mementoes of their trips. Sadly, the whole collection was stolen from the old house just after they moved into their new house while they were shopping in town to pick up groceries. The closest town was 18 miles away, so the thief had plenty of time to get in, look round and take what he/she wanted. The new house was a next door neighbor to the old house on the farm. It wasn't long after that, that the old house was sold and trucked to town. In that part of the country, wood is scarce to come by for building and expensive to ship in, so houses are often lifted from their foundations and taken to a new site. I loved that old house with all the interesting nooks and crannies to explore.

Grandma and Grandpa often shopped in Elkhart and Liberal, Kansas; Guymon, Oklahoma, or Amarillo, Texas. While in town, they would stop in to visit brothers or sisters and get a bite to eat before heading home. 

My maternal and paternal first cousins' parents built their homes on my grandparents' farms. Two of my uncles decided to remain on the farm and help my grandparents farm their land, so when we went to visit, there was always two extra playmates around. I was the oldest of four, so they took equal delight in having somebody to play with also.  We made the one way, 8 hour pilgrimage drive twice a year -- during summer and Christmas school vacations. 

One day, the youngest maternal cousin and I were bored and looking for something to do. She suggested that we go gather some of the rotten goose eggs from the farm pond and throw them into the farm trash dump to see what they would do. We got them and there -- I was standing behind her when suddenly she banged two of the eggs together hard and they exploded in her face. I got bits of rotten egg slime in my hair. The stench almost made her sick on the spot and we ran for our respective houses. It took us almost all afternoon of constant washing to get the smell off us. PU! 👃😝

My Kansas grandmother had a tall glass ginger jar with a lid on it. It was full of dried rose petals and smelled spicy like cloves. It sat on the dresser in her guest bedroom. I always wanted a jar of memories too.

I asked my Kansas grandmother for a pair of grandpa's blue jean overalls when he passed away. I decorated the bib and pockets with embroidered flowers. I felt close to grandpa when I wore them. 

We went to church with my grandparents when we visited. Kansas grandparents attended the Pleasant Prairie Church of God and my Oklahoma grandparents attended the Elkhart Church of God. We enjoyed meeting cousins and old friends there. 

I shared a story with my pastor several weeks ago, one my grandmother told me about putting a light in the window at night out on the prairie. She said that light could be seen for miles out on the dark flat prairies of Kansas and Oklahoma and said it was a beacon to a cold weary traveler and welcomed them to shelter. She said back in those days, farmers looked out for their neighbors and helped them when they could.  My pastor used the illustration in a sermon recently -- click here -- to listen to his sermon on YouTube. 

When I turned sixteen, my Kansas grandmother gave me a complete set of white china banded in gold. That was the beginning of my hope chest. My Oklahoma grandmother embroidered and crocheted edging on several pillowslips, crocheted doilies and gave me an afghan she had crocheted for me to put in it as well.

When hubby and I became engaged, his grandmother who lived in Henley, Missouri, crocheted a large white lacy tablecloth to go under my china set. It was a true labor of love on her part for I have no idea how long it took her to make it. 

My Oklahoma grandmother, knowing my love of vintage things, told me there was a old iron double-sized bed frame down in an unlived-in house on land they farmed and if I wanted it for our first bed together to go get it. So my hubby-to-be and I dragged it out of the house and took it home with us. We had it sand-blasted and repainted it and it was our bed for many years.

My in-laws-to-be purchased the mattress and box springs for that iron bed. My mother-in-law also crocheted doilies for our first home, a duplex, and hosted our wedding rehearsal dinner. She later made us a quilt for our bed. 

My first memory involves my Kansas grandmother and I. She and I were in her bedroom and she pointed up to a picture on her wall. She told me that was Jesus. Later I said my first word, Gee-gee (Jesus). Mom said she knew it was a word because I was pointing up at a picture of Jesus on the wall with my pudgy little finger while she was changing me. I'm forever grateful that Grandma introduced me to Gee-gee!

My Oklahoma grandmother would save up her S & H Green stamps for our visits. She and I would sit at the table and we would glue in all the extra stamps she had into her books. I don't know if she ever redeemed them for she never told me what she got with them, but I always had a nice time chatting with her. 

One of my blessings was being able to live with my buddy Oklahoma Grandmother the last year of her life. One of the sweetest memories I have of her is the duet that she sang with our son after her stroke. They sang "Jesus Loves Me, This I Know" together. 

My first Bible was given to me for Christmas by my Kansas grandmother. It was the King James Version and its cover was white leather with my name inscribed in gold in the lower right hand side. It was beautiful! 

Our son was semi-crawling by the time he was five months old. We went down to visit my Oklahoma grandparents and we told him not to get in grandma's dog, Casey's face, but he did it anyway. Yep, you guessed it - the dog bit his nose. Our son's very first words were: "dum dog!"

When our son was of kindergarten age, we used to call him "sonny boy" or "Punkin" as a term of endearment. One day , he came home from school and announced that he wanted to be called "sweetheart" instead of "punkin." So giving my husband the heads up when he got home that day, we did our best to please him. A few days later, our son said he wanted his old name back. He missed it! 🥰

After our son was born, we called all the grandparents and great-grandparents by their grandma or pa title, plus their first names, for all of them were still alive at that time except one, my Kansas grandpa who has passed away in 1977. Our son had a special name though for one of his paternal great-grandpa's and everyone knew who he was talking about when he said "the grandpa with a tractor," cause that grandpa had a big red Farmall tractor. 

Every Friday was my Oklahoma Grandma's hair-do day. She and grandpa would get up early and head into town after breakfast and morning chores were done. She would visit the hairdresser and get her hair gussied up, then they would go to the El Rancho restaurant in town to buy lunch. Sometimes they would stop to visit her brother and his family for a couple of hours or go pick up groceries or whatever they needed in town. I got to go shopping with them several times, so I pretty much knew the routine. Then they would head home which was about 18-20 miles from town.

Grandma loved flowers and had them planted in her yard around the house. She especially liked irises. 

Went with my Oklahoma Grandpa and cousin to a circus once in Amarillo, Texas. It was a LONG drive and mostly what I remember was the parade of the performers and animals at the beginning of the show. It was the Barnum and Bailey Circus. 

My Kansas grandmother showed us a game using a thimble called "Hide the Thimble." Someone is it and everyone else goes out of the room. "It" hides the thimble in plain sight somewhere in the room. The thimble cannot be hidden behind or under something, but in plain sight from any corner of the room. When "It" calls okay, then everyone comes back into the room and stands in the middle of the room. The first person who spies the thimble, is the next "It" who hides the thimble. If "It" hides the thimble so well that nobody can find it, then "It" can give clues like, "You are warm" meaning they are close to the thimble and if they are next to it and still don't see it, then they are hot. If they move away, then they are getting cold. It's a lot of fun and I taught the game to my in-law's family.

My Oklahoma grandmother had a button box with her sewing supplies. She cut off the buttons from grandpa's old shirts and kept the extras from sewing projects. I loved sifting through them and looking at all the interesting and pretty vintage and modern button treasures she had in that box. I keep my buttons in jars and they are divided into two jars, one for white buttons and one for colored. I have purchased many of my buttons from thrift stores, garage sales and Walmart. Comes in handy as the package roller conveyor in the warehouse where hubby works eats them like candy.

My Kansas grandmother complained that she didn't catch the doorbell when people made deliveries, so the next time we went to visit her, dad brought his tools with him and wired in a security alarm bell to her doorbell inside the house. I remember the first time he rang the doorbell to test it, everyone in the house about jumped out of their skins. She didn't have a bit of trouble hearing the doorbell thereafter! LOL! 

When I got older, at times I got to stay with my Oklahoma grandmother by myself. Once I caught a train one summer and rode all night, sleepy, but afraid I'd miss my stop, to visit grandma and grandpa. They picked me up at the train station in Dodge City, KS and I got to stay with them for a week and then they took me back to Dodge City to get on the train to go home. I so enjoyed my visit with my grandparents. It was scary and fun all at the same time. Another time, I was invited to stay with my grandparents after my mother, my siblings, and I had already been there for a month summer visit. I can't remember why, but my mother had to go back home, so she left some money with my grandmother to take me to town to pick out some shoes for school. I was pretty excited about that as I had been wanting a pair of saddle oxfords for some time. So, Friday came, my grandparent's usual shopping day (I have described it in some detail above) and after grandma got gussied up (the hairdresser sure was taking her sweet time getting grandma's hair done) and we had lunch, we set out for the shoe store. As I wandered around the store, grandma made her selection for me. When she called me over to try on the shoes, I looked in disgust at the shoes she had picked out. They were OLD LADY SHOES! Grandma had in hand, two black, lace-up oxfords. I said, "Grandma, I wanted saddle oxfords!" Grandma said, "Your mother said to get you oxfords and that is what you are going to get!" I was sure there was a mix-up somewhere and I showed grandma the shoes I wanted. She shook her head and insisted the shoes she held was what my mother told her to get. I went home, upset with my old lady shoes. Mom couldn't afford to replace them, and I had to endure the laughs of the kids at school at the sight of those ugly shoes. Imagine today, I'm still wearing black old lady shoes, except instead of laces, I have 3 Velcro straps across the shoes, and one shoe is built up as the doctors discovered one of my legs was short! Perhaps they can fix that when I get new knee joints.  

My Oklahoma grandmother taught me to crochet, then my Kansas grandmother showed me Christmas cards framed in crochet, so I learned how to make them. I have the pattern on my craft blog (click here). 

My Kansas grandmother's middle name was Esther and my Oklahoma grandmother's middle name was Hester. Neither one liked their middle names. When I was pregnant with our son, I would tease them and tell them I was going to name my girl after them -- Esther Hester or Hester Esther. They were horrified that I would do that to their great-granddaughter. And then with a twinkle in my eye, I would tell them that I would be honoring them by naming my daughter after them. 

My husband's grandmother showed me how to par-boil bitter vegetables to get the bitter out. Take turnips for instance. She cut the stem and root ends off, peeled and sliced them, and placed them in a saucepan with water covering them.  She said to par-boil them in water for about 10 minutes and then drain them, and all the bitter would go down the sink with the water. Then she covered them with water again, boiled them until fork soft, added a chunk of butter to the water and removed them from the fire. They were good at special dinners such as Christmas. 

I remember going with my Oklahoma grandpa and my mother to get his first glucose meter after he had been diagnosed with diabetes. He decided he had to come to the big city to get a machine, for his nearby small Oklahoma town didn't offer much.  I was visibly pregnant with our son. In those days, you had to have a prescription and the meter was a box that had to sit on a table or nightstand. Grandpa finally settled on a machine, but the technician had to show him how to use it. With diabetes, you must test your glucose blood sugar to make sure it stays even through-out the day or you could be in a heap of trouble with other disorders if it wasn't. He got stuck with a lancet (a small needle) and then for the hooey of it, I got stuck, not once, but twice when she thought her machine was malfunctioning, because I was low at 40 pts. Normal levels are between 70 and 100 pts.  She made me sit down and ran to get me an orange juice. The gal said, "I don't know how you are still standing, but as low as your blood sugar is, you need to sit down before you fall down, and you need something sweet like a banana or orange juice to bring your blood sugar back up to normal."  After I drank the orange juice and sat there awhile, then she stuck me again to make sure my levels had come back up. Yep, much better! After that, Grandpa decided that we both needed to eat, so, he treated us to lunch. I had been feeling intensely hungry and wobbly before we entered the store, but I had no idea how low my blood sugars were until the technician decided to prick my finger. 
And now you can buy the meter, the size of a cell phone and the stuff that goes with it without a prescription over the counter at Walmart. A lot can happen in 3o some years, huh?

Here's something my grandmother made from a bunch of GI Joe dolls. My uncle made the long table out in his workshop and now my mother displays it every year at Easter on top of her piano.


I was reminded today of two of the jellies my Oklahoma grandmother made every year when I went outside to get into the car for church this morning. They were definitely unusual, but delicious on buttered toast. She made dandelion jelly in the spring and corncob jelly in late summer. I don't know if Grandma made salad from the dandelion greens or not, but she stored the jelly she made downstairs in her basement and would bring up a jar or two when we came to visit. My mother-in-law and hubby's paternal grandmother loved making jellies and preserves. The first time I had pumpkin butter, it was made by hubby's paternal grandmother and spread over her homemade bread, toasted and buttered. Yum! I tried making mulberry jelly one time in early marriage and I guess I overcooked it, for it set up hard in the jam jars. The next time I tried it, it came out syrupy and we used it over pancakes. I had better success with the rhubarb-berry jelly recipe that my husband's paternal aunt gave me. It had Jell-O gelatin added to it to help it set up instead of the usual powdered pectin. Pretty good stuff Maynard! 

Both of my grandpa's were farmers and their hands often got chapped and dry. They would wash up as soon as they came into the house. My Kansas grandfather, if he was smelly from barn odors, would take a quick shower that stood next to his sink on their back porch/mud room and then throw his clothes into the washing machine that was on the other side of the upright deep freezer that stood next to the tiny shower room. Grandma kept a clean towel and house-robe for him hanging on a hook on the back of the shower door. After washing his hands though, he liked to use Cornhuskers Lotion
My Oklahoma grandfather had a little green tin of Udder Balm sitting on the sink where he washed his hands after coming in from the barn or the fields. Udder Balm was usually used on cow's udder to keep it soft in order for her calf to nurse or to be milked, but grandpa liked how it softened his hands too, to keep them from becoming raw and cracked. 
My dad, however, liked Chamberlain's Lotion for his hands as he was a air conditioning and heating serviceman and he usually out in all weathers on top of a commercial building or deep underground in a basement tinkering with a boiler or furnace. 
 
More to Read:

 Updated: 9/29/2022. Post written by Dolores J. Rush. 

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Elmaza Jane (Fletcher) Boone's Timeline

Work in Progress - Bookmark this post and come back to visit again to see progress on this timeline. 

1814 = Sarah "Sally" (Lander) Whaley was born to Henry & Margaret (Allen) Lander. Sally was a sister to Kate (Lander) Boone. See sampler below. 

1816 = Elmaza (Fletcher) Boone was born to John and Dulcena (Elkin) Fletcher (m. 1796, Clark Co, KY). She was first listed on the 1850 Clark County, KY US census record as "Edna" J. (Grandma and I believe her name to be Elmaza, as two of her granddaughters were named Elmaza or Mazie, in her memory). John was a son of William & Winifred (Garrett) Fletcher and Dulcena "Dully" was a daughter of Rev. Robert & Sarah (Reardon) Elkin, minister of the Providence Baptist Church in Clark County, Kentucky. John and Dully were members of the Lulbegrud Primitive Baptist church near Mt. Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky. 

As far as my grandmother and I were able to ascertain, she had two other siblings, Lucy, who married David Gilliam Barrows, son of Eld. David Barrows, an abolitionist minister of Goshen Primitive Baptist church near Winchester, Clark County, Kentucky and Lulbegrud Primitive Baptist Church near Mt. Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky. Lucy's daughter, Sarah, married Isaiah Boone, Elmaza's brother-in-law. Elmaza and Lucy had a brother named John, Jr.  He is buried in the Fletcher-Garrett Cemetery, along with Elmaza and their parents, near Mt. Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky. 

An interesting side-note: Eld. David Barrows, not a popular man for his views, once wrote a letter to Thomas Jefferson and Jefferson replied. 

1817 = 5 Mar. Samuel Boone was born to Eld. Thomas and Sarah (Muir) Boone (#306.) in Boone County, Kentucky. Thomas' parents were Eld. Squire Boone III and Anna (Grubbs) Boone and Sarah's parents were George & Nancy (Ferguson) Muir. 

Samuel's great-grandfather, Samuel (1728-1808), was the explorer Daniel Boone's older brother and his great-grandmother, Sarah (1731-1819), taught Daniel how to read and write. 
They were charter members of the Boone's Creek Primitive Baptist Church in Fayette County, KY., constituted on 13 November 1785.  They lie buried in Boone's Station's Cemetery outside of Athens, Fayette Co, Kentucky. 

Samuel's brothers and sisters were: Squire (b.1804), George (b. 1806), Ira (b. 1809), Harriet Rite (b. 1811), Mary (b. 1814), himself (b. 1817), James H. (b. 1819), Milton (b. 1822), Jeptha (b. 1825), Thomas M (b. 1827), Cyrus (b. 1830), and Isaiah (b. 1832). (p. 170)

The Boone family loved handing down names. For example: 
1. Elder Thomas Boone had a brother named Ira Boone (b. 17 Dec 1799). He died in Todd County, KY according to Spraker's book.
2. Thomas had a son also named Ira Boone (1809-1866). Ira Boone was born in Clark County, Kentucky and died in Lafayette County, MO.  He married Elizabeth (Liggett). 
3. And Samuel and Elmaza named a son Ira M. Boone (1849-1929). Ira M. was also born in Clark County, Kentucky and died in Higgins, Lipscomb County, TX.

1823 = Samuel's dad began preaching at the Lulbegrud Primitive Baptist Church in Montgomery County, Kentucky. He was the preacher at Lulbegrud and Goshen Primitive Baptist church in Winchester, Clark County, KY. for the rest of his life. (6 yrs)

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1833 = 1 Sep. In Todd County, Kentucky, Higgason Grubbs Boone, Samuel's paternal uncle, married Martha Marie Edwards, niece to Ninian Edwards, first governor of Illinois. (16 yrs)

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1836 = 10 Feb. Double wedding? Samuel's brother, Ira, marries Elizabeth Ligget in Clark County, Kentucky and 

1836 = 1o Feb. Samuel's older sister, Harriet Rite Boone (1811-1892) married Nelson Scholl (1815-1890), son of  Septimus and Sallie (Miller) Scholl in Clark County, KY.  Nelson was Harriet's 3rd cousin and a descendant of Daniel Boone. (19 yrs.)

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1843 = April. From the records of the Pleasant Grove Primitive Baptist church (org. 1837), Independence, MO, a J.R. Boone was dismissed by letter from the Church to be admitted to another. 

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1845 = Harriet Scholl was admitted by letter to the membership of Pleasant Grove church. 

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1849 = Sept. An Elizabeth Boone was admitted to membership of the Pleasant Grove church. 

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1850 = 30 Aug. "Edna" and Samuel and four of their boys were listed in the census record - William T. (1840-1902), John F. (b. 1842), George M. (1843-1917), and Manlius T. (1845-1909). (33-34 yrs.)

1850 = 25 Sept. Catherine "Kate" Landers (1824-1872) was living with her mother, Margaret,  during the 1850 Bourbon County, Kentucky Census. 

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1854 = 16 May. Elmaza died and was buried in Kentucky. (37-38 yrs.). But that's not the end of the story for her boys, so please continue reading. 

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1854-55 = Samuel moved his family to Jackson County, Missouri. And his 1st cousin, Samuel P. Boone (1830-1899; Isaiah, Squire III, Samuel, Squire, Sr.) moves first to Jackson County, then to Paola, Lykins Co., K.T./Miami County, KS.

1855 = 8 Mar. Samuel's paternal uncle Levi Day Boone (Squire, Samuel, Squire Sr., George III) becomes mayor of Chicago, IL. 


1855 = 22 Sept. Samuel's father, Thomas Boone dies in Clark Co. Kentucky, however, he is buried in the Lulbegrud Primitive Baptist cemetery across the county line in Montgomery County, KY. (38 yrs)

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1856 = 30 Mar. (4 Apr.)  Samuel remarried a Kate Lander. Rev. Robert Hiner, a minister of the Gospel Methodist Episcopal, South officiated their wedding in Clark County, KY. (39 yrs)

Sally Ann (Lander) Whaley's sampler. Sally was Kate's older sister. 

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1857 = March. Samuel and Ira Boone were admitted to the membership of the Pleasant Grove Primitive Baptist church in Independence, MO.  (40 yrs)

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1860 = 28 Jun. Martha A Boone (1851-1883), daughter of Ira and Elizabeth (Liggett) Boone, was 8 years old in the 1860 census. She was born in Missouri and attended school during the year. Their post office was in Independence, MO. 

1860 = 8 Aug. By 1860, Samuel was living in Lafayette County, Missouri where he appears in the census, with his second wife, Kate,  six boys and a girl = William T., John F., George M, Manlius T, Robert E.,  Ira and Fannie (1857-1935). (43 yrs.)

1860 = 13 Aug. The Pleasant Grove Primitive Baptist church adopted a subscription to discharge their (building) debt. Milton Boone gave $5.00. Ira Boone was the church clerk who recorded the church minutes.

1860 = 20 Oct. The church orders that application be made to Liberty, Big Sni-a-Bar and Marion churches for ministerial aid to assist in the ordination of Brother Ira Boone to preach.

1860 = 17 Nov.  Brother Ira Boone was ordained at Pleasant Grove church to preach the gospel. 

1860 = 15 Dec. On motion and second, the Pleasant Grove church appointed two men, one being Brother Ira Boone to preach for them for twelve months.
And then, on motion, the church orders that Brother I. Boone be released from the clerkship, and another was appointed to serve as clerk in his place.

 
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1862-1865 = Late Spring - Mid-May. Civil War. Samuel Boone might have possibly been a soldier with the rank of "Private" for the 5th Lafayette County Cavalry under Gen. Joe Shelby. (45 yrs.)

1863 = 17-18 Jun. Samuel's nephew, Daniel Boone Scholl was shot in the back by a Federal soldier near Westport (present day Kansas City), Missouri. He managed to ride about 9 miles that night and when he could go no further, he was taken to the home of a Widow Younger or Young where he died the next morning. He was said to have been buried in the Smith-Davis Cemetery in Raytown, MO.

1863 = 25 Aug. General Order No. 11 by General Thomas Ewing, Jr. This Union army directive forced the citizens of four counties in western Missouri to move from Jackson, Cass, Bates, and the northern part of Vernon. Only those citizens loyal to the Union could remain, but they had to move to the Union army outposts in order to remain in those counties.  

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1864 = 29 Aug to 2 Dec. J. Boone, Pvt. Co. D, Gordon's Regt. appears on a report of killed, wounded and missing, of Shelby's Brigade Mo. Cavalry, in the raid into Missouri. 

1864 = October 21-23. Battle of Westport (present day Kansas City, Jackson Co,  MO). 

1864 = October 25. Battle of Marais des Cygnes. Linn County, Kansas.

1864 = 15 Nov. William T. Boone appears on a report of prisoners of war received at the Gratiot Street Military Prison, St. Louis, Mo, during the five days ending 15 Nov 1864. He was captured in Lynn Co, Kansas. 

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1865 = 14 Mar. Pvt. Robert E. Boone, Samuel and Elmaza's son, was in the  Co. G, 5th Missouri Cavalry, CSA and was held at a Union Prisoner War Camp south of Indianapolis, IN called Camp Morton. He did not survive. He was disinterred from Greenlawn cemetery in 1933 and reinterred at Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana. (48 yrs.)

1865 = 16 June. Wm. T. Boone appears on a roll of prisoners of war exchange list from St. Louis to Johnson's Island, Sandusky, Ohio. 

1865 = 14 Jun. Samuel Boone and two of his sons, George M. and Manlius T., Pvt.,  Co. G. Gordon's Mo. Cavalry (residence: Lafayette Co, MO.) appeared on a roll of prisoners of war men commanded by a Capt. Jas. D. A. Warsson, C.S.A. who surrendered at New Orleans, LA, by General E. K. Smith, CSA to Maj. Gen. E. R. S. Canby, USA, 26 May 1865, and all three were paroled at Shreveport, LA, on the above date. 

1865 = 12 Nov. William T. Boone's name appeared as a signature on an Oath of Allegiance to the United States, subscribed and sworn to at Johnson's Island, Sandusky, Ohio. William's place of residence was Fayetteville, Mo. He was age 24, his complexion light, his hair was red, his eyes blue and he was 5 foot, 9 inches in height. 

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1866-7 = Spring. Elder Jacob Dunham Gossett came to Independence, MO. from Bath County, Kentucky. He frequently preached at the Pleasant Grove Primitive Baptist Church in Independence, MO.

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1867 = 18 Aug to 31 Dec. W. T. Boone appears on the Company Muster Roll of Gordon's Regiment, Missouri Cavalry. William enlisted on 14 Jan 186? in Lafayette Co, MO by Col. Elliott and he served three years during the Civil War. This regiment appears to have been variously known on the field as 1st Regiment Missouri Cavalry, Gordon's Regiment Missouri Cavalry, and Shelby's Regiment Missouri Cavalry, but it was designated by the Confederate War Department as the 5th Regiment Missouri Cavalry.

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1870 =  24 Aug. At 19, Mattie lived with her mother, Betsy (36 yrs), her older sister, Sally (30 yrs.), George Boone (27 yrs.)  and three siblings, William, Thomas, and Samuel. Their nearest post office was located at Concordia, MO. 

1870 = 27 Aug. He's still living in Lafayette County, MO. according to the 1870 census. There has been an addition to the family since 1860. Another girl named Carrie (1860-1929)! (53 yrs.)

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1871 = 1 Jan. Manlius T Boon and Mattie A Boon tied the knot this day.  E. M. Harrelson, Justice of the Peace performed the ceremony. They were first cousins. 

1871 = 22 Apr. Samuel wrote his will on this day. It was witnessed by John J. Browning and Wm. W. Tindell, in the county of Lafayette, MO. He assigned Warner T. Glover as his executor. Wife: Catherine Boone, her children: Fannie Boone and Carrie Alice Boone. Samuel's four sons William T. Boone, George M. Boone, Minalus T. Boone and Ira Boone. 

1871 = 3 Jul. Samuel died in El Dorado Springs, Cedar County, MO and was buried in the Mt. Tabor Cemetery, Odessa, MO. (54 yrs.)

 ~ ~ <> @ <> ~~

1874 = 6 May. Robert Fletcher Boone Sr. was born to George M. and Sarah Jane (Boone) Boone. 


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1875 = 18 Jun. Essie Boone was born to Manlius T. and Mattie Boon in Johnson County, MO.   (p. 1140)

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1878 = 28 Feb. Elmazie "Mazie" Boone was born to Manlius T. and Mattie Boon in Johnson County, Missouri. She married George Harmon (1875-1947). George's paternal grandmother was a Fletcher. Don't know if she is a relative of Elmaza's (1816-1854) Fletcher family or not. 

(NOTE:) I am a DNA match to a Jeff Boone, a son of Linda Lee (Harmon) and Barry Boone. However, I haven't found a connection yet between Linda Lee's Harmon family and George Harmon's family. 

1878 = 18 Sep. Odessa, MO. was platted and incorporation occurred on 3 Feb. 1880. Many of the early residents and buildings came from Mt. Hope three miles south.  Here's a picture postcard of what downtown Odessa looked like in 1908. 

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1880 = 3 Jun. Manlius and Mattie were recorded in Hazel Hill Township in Johnson County, MO during the 1880 US Census. A son, G.T. (6 yrs), and two daughters, E. (4 yrs.) and E. (2 yrs.) lived there too. Manlius was recorded as a farmer and Mattie, a housewife. Manlius, his father, and mother had all been born in Kentucky and Mattie was said to have been born in MO, but her father and mother were born in Kentucky.  Their children were all born in Missouri. 

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1901 = Quantrill Reunion. George Scholl, Boone Scholl's brother, was in attendance. 
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1914 = 106. Infant son of John BOONE (passes away.) by Dr. Schooley. 13 July (Mt. Tabor)

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1917 = 214. Geo Boone (passes away) by Ira Boone & Ira Pace. 23 Apr (Mt. Tabor.) 

1917 = 22 Apr. Samuel & Elmaza's son, George M. Boone, dies in Washington Twp., Lafayette Co, MO, USA. His Missouri Death Certificate is numbered 15385.

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1922 = 29 Jun. Samuel's nephew, George Thomas Scholl, died in Kirkwood, St. Louis County, MO. He survived the Civil War, unlike his brother, Daniel Boone Scholl who died in 1863. 
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1929 = 26 Nov. Ira M. Boone passes away in Higgins, Lipscomb Co, TX. He is buried in the Higgins Cemetery there. 
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1930 = 4 Oct. Sarah "Sally" Jane (Boone) Boone, sister to Mattie Boone and wife of George M. Boone (1843-1917), died this day. She was 90 years old. 
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1958 = 7 Oct. Ira William Boone, son of George M & Sarah Jane Boone  passes away this day. He is buried in the Mt. Tabor Methodist Cemetery south of Odessa, MO. 

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More to Read:
  1. Before Abolition: African-Americans in Early Clark County, Kentucky. By Lyndon Comstock. 2017. p. 207, 298, 363, 594. Repository: Google Books.
  2. Blue Twp., Jackson Co, MO. Census. 1860 US Federal Census. 28 Jun 1860. Page 136, Line #33. Retrieved from Ancestry.com
  3. "Bonds, Wills, & Letters: 1863-1879." Wills and Probates Records, 1766 - 1988. Lafayette, Missouri, Vol. C-E.
  4.   The Boone Family KY Genweb page. 
  5. The Boone Family. By Hazel Atterbury Spraker. Tuttle Co, Rutland, VT, 1922. p. 169-170. No. 913. Repository: Internet Archive.
  6. Boone Family Research Links
  7.  Boone Society "The First 5 Generations of the Boone Family."
  8. Clark County, Kentucky Marriage Records 1783-1965. p. 566. Repository: Family Search, Ancestry.com
  9. District 102, Hazel Hill Twp., Johnson Co, MO. John K. Byers, Enumerator. 3 Jun, 1880.  P. 5 . Line #46. Retrieved from Ancestry.com
  10. Hale County, Texas Cemetery Database and Texas Death Certificates
  11. History of Johnson County, Missouri. By Ewing Cockrell. Historical Publishing Co, Topeka, KS, 1918. Vol. 2, pp.1139-40. Repository: Google Books.
  12. History of the Lander Family of Virginia and Kentucky. By David Lander. Regan Printing House, Chicago, IL, 1926. p. 70-Part II, p. 43 - 44. Repository: Internet Archive.
  13. "Jacob D. Gossett." Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri, A Compendium of History and Biography for Ready Reference. By Howard L. Conard. Haldeman, Conard, and Co. New York, NY, USA, 1901. Vol. 3, pages 71-73. Received from Anne Gossett via Eld. Robert Webb, Primitive Baptist Library, Carthage, IL.
  14.  The Kansas City Journal, Kansas City, Jackson County, MO, Sun 4 Apr 1897. p. 13, column 5. Repository: Findagrave.com
  15. Lafayette County, Missouri, Marriage Records, 1805-2002. Retrieved from Ancestry.com
  16. "Letter from David Barrow to Thomas Jefferson."  Mt. Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky. 20 Mar 1815. Jefferson Papers, Founders Online, National Archives. 
  17. "Letter from Thomas Jefferson to David Barrow." Monticello, 1 May 1815. Jefferson Papers, Founders Online, National Archives. 
  18. The Lexington Intelligencer, Lexington, MO. September 28, 1901, Image 1. Chronicling America Newspapers. (George Scholl, farmer, High Ridge, Mo. was present.) 
  19. Library Edition of Fold 3. NARA, M322, 109, MO, Roll 0037. Series 1, Vol. 41, page 670. 
  20. Lost Souls of the Lost Township. By Paul R. Petersen with David W. Jackson. 2011. 
  21. Lulbegrud Baptist Church Minutes. 1793-1804 and Minutes of the North District Association of Baptists (Messenger Names Only) 1802-1805. Transcribed by Marvin Allen, 2009. USGenweb Archives
  22. Missouri Digital Heritage, Missouri Death Certificates
  23. Mount Tabor United Methodist Church Cemetery, Mt. Tabor Road (southeast of Odessa, Lafayette County, MO. 
  24. Noted Guerrillas, Or, The Warfare of the Border. By John Newman Edwards, Oxford University, 1877. pp.  176 & 178. Google Books. 
  25. Rev. Robert Elkin's Will. Transcribed by Marvin Allen. Will Book No. 5, Winchester, Clark Co, KY. 19 Jun 1809. page 153. USGenweb Archives
  26. "Records of Jones Funeral Service, formerly Blincoe Funeral Service, formerly Wagner Funeral Service." By Loretta B. Bingham and Marty Helm Brunetti.   MoSGA Journal, Summer 1988. p. 148-159.
  27. Sally Ann (Lander) Whaley's Sampler. Photo used by permission from:  Carolyn (Whaley) Vosburg
  28. Scholl, Sholl, Shull Genealogy: the Colonial Branches. By John William Scholl, 1869-1952. Grafton Press, New York, 1930.  p. 9-14. Internet Archive. 
  29. Some Boone Descendants and Kindred of the St. Charles District. By Lilian Hays Oliver. Chedwato Service, 1964. p. 18. Repository: Midwest Genealogy Center, Independence, MO.
  30. Three Years with Quantrill. As told to O. S. Barton by John McCorkle. Armstrong Herald Print, Armstrong, MO., 1914. p. 68,  74, 86-88, Internet Archive.
  31. "The Dunking of David Barrow and Edward Mintz in the Nansemond River." Painting by Sydney King. Encyclopedia Virginia. 
  32. The Missouri Partisan Ranger: Roster of Known Members of William C. Quantrill, William T. Anderson, George M. Todd, and John Thrailkill. MCT Internet Service, 1995. 
  33. Vital Historical Records of Jackson County, Missouri 1826-1876. By the Kansas City Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. Lowell Press, Kansas City, Mo. 1934. pp. 28-33. Repository: Midwest Genealogy Center, Independence, Mo.
  34. Washington Twp., Lafayette Co, Missouri. 1870 US Federal Census. Henry Lieman, Ass't Marshal.  24 Aug 1870. P. 47. Line #9. Retrieved from Ancestry.com
  35. White Family and Their Kin. By Mrs. Gladys Esther White O'Neal and Elma Leota White Stoops. Paper Graphics, Garden City, Ks, 1983. Repository: Midwest Genealogy Center, Independence, MO.
  36. William & Winnie (Garrett) Fletcher, Sr. and Their Family's Timeline. By Dolores J. Rush, 29 Aug 2019, Thursday. Rush Family News.

Researched and compiled by Dolores J. Rush. Updated: 15 May 2023.