Thursday, April 13, 2023

Thomas Jefferson Day - April 13th

 

April 13th is National Thomas Jefferson Day. According the National Day Calendar:

National Thomas Jefferson Day each year on April 13th honors the birth of the third President of The United States, Thomas Jefferson, who was born on April 13, 1743.

Most known as the primary author of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson was a stalwart of democracy. While not much an orator, his pen cut quite a swath of ink through correspondence, documents, journals, and manuscripts.

Those who write tend to read. Jefferson was no different. His vast library contained 6,500 volumes.

Jefferson was not only a lawyer, but he was also a scientist of agriculture, paleontology, and astronomy. Immensely curious, he kept detailed records of the weather and eventually established weather observers across his home state of Virginia.

Jefferson served as minister to France, Secretary of State in President Washington’s Cabinet, and ran for President for the first time in 1796 only to be elected Vice President to his opponent, John Adams, due to a flaw in the Constitution.

Four years later, the same fault in the document caused a tie within the same party between Aaron Burr and Jefferson, with Jefferson assuming the Presidency. (https://nationaldaycalendar.com/national-thomas-jefferson-day-april-13/)

 

 I have always admired Jefferson; he was absolutely brilliant. I was pleased to discover a  letter online written from one of my ancestors, John McCoy, to Thomas Jefferson. John McCoy, my 7th great grandfather, was Captain of the Augusta Co. Militia during the Revolutionary War. The letter was written March 26, 1781 and posted from Staunton, Augusta Co. Virginia, addressed to then Governor of Virginia Thomas Jefferson requesting leave to resign his military position. 

Staunton, Augusta, Virginia, March 26, 1781

May It Please Your Excellency

To address you on a subject which I do with the utmost (word unreadable), considering the situation our country is in. But nature prevails over every effort to the contrary of being able to undergo the fatigues of a campaign. Wherefore I humbly address you, hoping you would give me leave to resign my Commission as a Captain in this County Militia, which I have held for the space of five years, and am now aged fortynine; nothing would induce me to ask such a favour was it not that I am unable to discharge my duty as well as I could wish, owing to a complication of disorders which I have had upon me for sometime. Your complying with my request would much oblige.

Your Excellency’s Most Humble Servent,

C. John McCoy

To His Excellency
Thomas Jefferson Esq.
Governor of Virginia 

(https://pastvoices.com/united-states/mccoy-john/) 


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 According to a report in The Highland Recorder  on 11 June 1964


A memorial service for Captain John McCoy (1735-1796) will be held at the Doe Hill Cemetery Sunday, June 14 at 3 p.m., with descendants expected to attend from many adjacent states and counties. The grave of Capt. McCoy on the Hiner farm near Doe Hill was recently marked by interested descendants and a Revolutionary War memorial marker was placed in the Doe Hill Cemetery. [Doe Hill, Highland County, Virginia]

 

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 15: Solitude

 

Joshua Henrod Budd was born near Ottawa in Putnam County, Ohio on 3 April 1873, the only child of Zina Budd and Samantha Boggs. His father died when he was just two years old, in 1875. His mother died just a few years later, in 1881. Young Joshua lived with his grandparents, John & Julia Boggs, for a time. By 1900, however, he was in another state, working as a farm hand and living with an unrelated family. 

He married Goldie Pearl Pargin in Lawrenceville, Illinois, 2 October 1912. Although the couple had nine children, only 4 survived to adulthood. They lost four as infants and one son, James Arthur, at the age of 5. The couple divorced in 1935, and Joshua lived with his son Richard in Putnam County, Ohio, then stayed with his son John's family in Marshall, Illinois. He died 24 May 1950 in the State Hospital in Alton, Illinois, over 160 miles away from his family. He was returned to Marshall for burial in the city cemetery, but had no stone. 

I wonder if Joshua felt connected to his family or if he felt he were living in solitude?  He often had people around him, but they never seemed to be the same people for a very long time, and tragedy often struck the family.


Sunday, April 2, 2023

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 14 "Begins with a Vowel"

 



Ed Washburn and Ecora Highfill Bundy were married in Clark County, Illinois on April 2nd, 1899 - 124 years ago today!

They were the parents of 9 children, including my great grandfather, Foster Washburn.
While this was the first marriage for Ed, Ecora was married once before, to Hiram J. "John" Bundy in Clark County on March 1, 1896. John died a tragic death on June 18, 1897 when he drowned in Big Crick while washing a wagon. The couple had lost a baby in 1896, and Ecora was about 8 months pregnant when John died. Their daughter, Eliza Jane Bundy, was born July 12, 1897, just a few weeks after her father died.