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Thursday, May 30, 2019

Remembering Some American Revolution Soldiers of Smith Township

Earlier this week, we, as a nation, took time to remember our fallen.  While Memorial Day gained its popularity after the Civil War as the women of the South remembered their men who had fought dying for what they believed, today, we Americans remember all of our sons and daughters who fought and died during their time of service in whichever timeframe they fought--  from the American Revolution up to today.

Here is a partial list of those men who bravely risked everything so we, as Americans, can have the freedoms we enjoy.   This list of American Revolution men were residents of Smith Township in Washington County, PA, at the time of their deaths.  I wonder where they were during the Revolution?

NameAgeImplied BirthDiedBuried
Capt James Boggs6517451810Cross Creek
William Harvey6717541821Burgettstown
James Leech8317401823Burgettstown
Thomas Hays8317451828Cross Creek
James Cooke7817621830Cross Creek
Joseph Phillips7917521831Burgettstown
Joseph Aiken7517511836Burgettstown
Moses Hays8017571837Cross Creek
Alexander McCready8917561845Burgettstown
Cap Samuel FultonFlorence
John Coventry9417511845Burgettstown



Ahh genealogy.  I'm guessing the two surnames I recognize from my family who lived very close to Smith Township in the late 1700s need to be investigated further.  The old folks weren't kidding when they said we had kin in Cross Creek!


Source:  The Daily Evening Reporter, Oct 14, 1878

©2019  AS Eldredge

Friday, April 19, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Baptisms, Part 8

Today's installment
1841-1848
added in a new1834 and a new 1838
Surnames:  SMITH, PATTERSON, SIMMONS


Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
April 1838 12/28/1837 Sarah Lavina Smith d/0 Ebenezer/Susanna
Aug 29, 1841 4/9/1840 William Marquis Smith s/o Ebenezer/Susanna
1834 2/8/1834 Ambrose Patterson s/o James/Eliza
Apr 18, 1843 10/27/1841 Emily Ann Patterson d/o James/Eliza
Apr 3, 1848 7/7/47 Cornelia Ann Simmons d/o Cornelius/Martha



Ahh, genealogy.  Sometimes, extra finds are in between the lines.

©2019  AS Eldredge


Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Baptisms, Part 7

Today's Installment
1829-1840
Surnames:  SMITH, PATTERSON, McMILLAN




Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
Aug 15, 1829 6/1/1829 Ebenezer Smith s/0 James/Martha
Aug 15, 1829 6/1/1829 Joseph Smith s/0 James/Martha
Nov 22, 1829 7/15/1829 William Findley Smith s/o Ebenzer/Mary
Oct 7, 1832 6/11/1832 John Smith s/o James/Martha
Dec 26, 1836 9/22/1836 James Patterson s/o James /Eliza (Walker)
Mar 11, 1840 6/23/1839 William McMillan s/o Saml//Isabelle
Mar 11, 1840 10/10/1839 David Finley Patterson s/o James/Eliza



Ahh, genealogy.  Hey, look!  Twins!  Wonder if they both lived to adulthood?  

©2019  AS Eldredge

Monday, April 15, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Baptisms, Part 6

New!  Dates of birth!

Today's installment
1827-1828
Surnames SMITH, PATTERSON, WALKER



Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
Aug 12, 1827 4/14/1827 Sarah Smith d/o James/Martha
Feb 17, 1828 11/2/1822 Eliza Jane Smith d/o Ebenzer/Mary
Feb 17, 1828 5/7/1825 Thomas Patterson Smith s/o Ebenzer/Mary
Feb 17, 1828 3/25/1827 James Smith s/o Ebenzer/Mary
Mar 22, 1828 5/4/1823 Elizabeth Patterson d/o James/Eliza(Walker)
Mar 22, 1828 2/3/1825 Mary Amanda Patterson d/o James/Eliza(Walker)
Mar 22, 1828 3/2/1827 Thomas McCall Patterson s/o James/Eliza(Walker)


Ahh, genealogy.  It still amazes me at how often children were born in any given family.

©2019  AS Eldredge

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Cross Creek Early Baptisms, Part 5

Today's installment
1818-1822
Surnames:  SMITH and PATTERSON



Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
May 24, 1818 Robert Lyle Smith s/o Wiliam
May 24, 1818 Eliza Patterson d/o Robert
Oct 24, 1819 Martha Ann Smith d/o James
Sept 10, 1820 Sarah Smith Patterson d/o Robert
July 15, 1821 James Smith s/o Benjamin
Mar 24, 1822 William Smith, Jr s/o William
June 9, 1822 Jedidiah Smith s/o James


Ahh, genealogy.  Maybe I have solved one mystery in Burgettstown!

©2019  AS Eldredge

Friday, April 12, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Early Baptisms, Part 4

Today's installment
1814-1817
Surnames:  SMITH and PATTERSON


Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
Feb 20, 1814 Josiah Patterson Smith s/0 James Jr
Apr 3, 1814 Nancy Smith d/o Thomas
Dec 15, 1814 Maria Smith d/o Ebenezer
Oct 1, 1815 Mary Smith d/o James
Mar 20, 1816 Jane Patterson d/o Robert
Feb 9, 1817 Jane Smith d/o Thomas
June 1, 1817 Eliza Smith d/o James

Ahh, genealogy.  Guess I really need to figure out these SMITH lines in Burgettstown.  Any takers?

©2019  AS Eldredge

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Early Baptisms. Part 3

Today's installment
1808-1813
surname:  SMITH


Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
Aug 14, 1808 Prudence Smith d/o James
Nov 6, 1808 Jane Smith d/o James (s/o Thomas)
Feb 25, 1810 Polly Smith d/o James (s/0 John)
Apr 28, 1811 Thomas Smith s/o James
July 11, 1812 Joseph Smith s/o James, hatter
July 4, 1813 Elenor Smith d/o James


Now, I do have a John SMITH in my line who did have a son, James, and the timing could be right for Polly to be my cousin.  But, I am still not confident to confirm or deny.

Ahh, genealogy.  Finding one blessing at a time in Washington County, PA.

©2019  AS Eldredge

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Early Baptisms, Part 2

Today's installment  is 1803-1806
Surnames:  SMITH


Baptism Date DOB Person Baptised Parent
May 1, 1803 John Adams Smith s/0 Jonathan
July 3, 1803 Jedidiah Smith s/o Thomas
Sept 2, 1804 Sampson Smith s/o Jonathan
Jan 11, 1806 Jenny Scott Smith d/o Thomas


Ahh, genealogy.  Ain't it grand for the soul?


©2019  AS Eldredge


Monday, April 8, 2019

Cross Creek Presbyterian Early Baptisms, Part 1

It's time for spring cleaning and I've been busy like a bee.  But wait, here is a new old find.  At some point in time, someone transcribed some old Cross Creek Presbyterian baptisms and snail mailed them to me.  I wish I could remember who it was.

Cross Creek Presbyterian Church is an old church in Burgettstown, Washington, PA.  This area is of interest to me as I have been researching the John SMITH family of Hopewell Twp, Washington, PA.  Of course, I have other kin buried in their old cemetery, but that is a story for another day.

Do you know hard it is to document a name like John SMITH?  As my interest is in SMITH and PATTERSON, these were the only names transcribed.  So enjoy this beginning of the past.

Date of Baptism   Date of Birth  Name Baptized            Parents
Aug 3, 1800                                 Mary Smith                  d/o Ebenezer
Jan 11, 1801                                 John Patterson              s/o William, Jr
March 8, 1801                              William Smith              s/o Thomas
Nov 6, 1802                                  Samuel Smith               s/o Ebernezer


More later---

Ahh, genealogy.  It's a grand day for a family reunion!

©2019  AS Eldredge

Thursday, January 31, 2019

Thankful Thursday: Coming Home from Over There

Just yesterday, we were talking about my wounded World War I grandpa and his friend.  As an update, I am still trying to confirm if the other guy in the 1919 photo taken at US Hospital at Parkview is who I think it is.  I did hear from one of his distant kin who shared the picture from his obituary.  It's still hard to confirm or deny since the picture used in the obituary is one of later life.  Although, looking at the ears and eye slant still have me leaning towards the identity.

In reading the military information I found on both men, I became curious as to why they had different return dates from Europe in early 1919.  More sleuthing was needed to uncover if memories were failing or if there was more to the story.

Search, search, search.  Bingo!  The answer was in the US Army Transport Service, 1910-1939, which can be accessed through Ancestry.com.   The two buddies came home on separate ships!

John D KERFOOT left Brest, France on Jan 11, 1919, and arrived in Hoboken, NJ on Jan 21, 1919, on the USS George Washington.  He is also listed as a "walking patient requiring dressing."

Grandpa, on the other hand, left Brest, France on Jan 26, 1919, and arrived in Hoboken, NJ on Feb. 3, 1919, on the USS Agamemnon.  He is also listed as a "sick and wounded, litter class."

Another note of interest is both of these troop transport ships began their lives as German liners and were taken over by the Americans in April 1917 when America entered the war.

USS George Washington on the left with the USS Agamemnon on the right
Photo found on www.nav.source.com


Ahh, genealogy.  Thankful these two wounded World War I veterans from southwest Pennsylvania made it home from "over there".


Sources:
Ancestry.com. U.S., Army Transport Service, Passenger Lists, 1910-1939 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016.
http://www.navsource.org/archives/12/173004.htm

©2019  AS Eldredge


Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Wordless Wednesday: World War I Peas in a Pod

World War I left its mark on so many of our brave men.  No matter whether our brave veterans of the war were killed in action, wounded, or wounded and discharged with a disability, it affected the family.  What atrocities these military men saw and lived with until their deaths.

 In my possession is a  photograph taken in 1919 of my grandfather, his bride-to-be and another couple at US Hospital 24 at Parkview just outside of Pittsburgh.  Who are these other people (the ones on the right)?



Scratching my head is one way to think about this and not get anywhere in a hurry.  But, wait!  Last night,  I think, I think I know!!!!

Last night, I stumbled across the September 23, 1920, Uniontown Morning Herald newspaper article announcing the wedding of my grandparents.  So what....

The info contained in the article was eye opening as it detailed that "Mr. and Mrs. J D. KERFOOT were the only attendants at the wedding.  The groom and Mr. KERFOOT were members of the same regiment of the Fifth Division in France, both being wounded in the Argonne fighting and remaining together in the different hospitals for nine months.  There were not separated during their entire stay in the hospitals and their friendship has continued since being discharged from the Army."

Well, alrighty.

Investigation in to KERFOOT has uncovered that he was John Davis KERFOOT of Uniontown, Fayette, PA.  KERFOOT was inducted May 28, 1918, and went overseas July 1918 and was wounded by gunshot in the chest in early October 1918.  He returned back to the U.S., most likely on the USS Mercy in late January 1919 and was sent to US Hospital 24 at Parkview, where he remained until his discharge in the summer of 1919.

You can almost substitute my grandpa's information in the above paragraph by changing the dates by a couple of weeks here and there.  My grandpa went overseas April 24, 1918, was wounded by gunshot to the thigh Sept 29, 1918, in the Argonne Forest, returned back to the US in late January 1919, and was sent to US Hospital 24 at Parkview, where he remained until his discharge in the summer of 1919.

I found a headshot of John Davis Kerfoot.  It is a straight on head shot and the picture in my possession is not.  But, I think it could be the same guy on the right!  Look at the ears and shape of the eye!



I have reached out on Ancestry to one of his kin to see if they will try to confirm or deny the identity of the man in the photo.  Can't wait to hear back!

Did I mention they lived not too far from each other after the war?  Did I mention they had the same occupation?  It's almost as if they were peas in a pod.  Unfortunately, my grandfather died in 1929, while KERFOOT lived a long successful life.  If only there are any stories that have survived that his kin can share.  Is it too much to hope?

Ahh, genealogy.    Thank you John KERFOOT for being an awesome friend to my grandpa.  Who knew that the past can just jump in to the present.....



Sources:
The Uniontown Morning Herald, September 23, 1920, pg 5
Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, WWI Veterans Service and Compensation Files, 1917-1919, 1934-1948[database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
http://www.minerd.com/bio-mcknight,_pearlkerfoot.htm

©2019  AS Eldredge