GeneaBlogger

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Top ten mysteries; it's a long game!

 

My top ten genealogical mysteries

 Back in 2013, I compiled a list of my “top ten genealogical mysteries.” I decided it would be interesting to see how I’ve done in a bit more than eight years toward solving them. Here’s the original list, with a status report:


(1)   Whatever happened to John Hastings? My third-great-grandfather appears in the 1850 census of Marion co. IN, and then disappears. The family story (not from my direct family, but from a much older distant cousin with whom I corresponded some years ago) is that his wife, Mary Ann (Wheeler) Hastings, died in 1852, and that John left and was never heard from again. This cousin said she always had the sense that he had abandoned his family, but she wondered if perhaps he had gone in search of land or some better opportunity, and then something happened to him and his family was never notified. In any event, in the 1860 census his younger children were “farmed out” to relatives. A couple of them lived with their oldest brother, my great-great-grandfather Oliver Perry Hastings; a couple more lived with their uncle Harvey Wheeler. So obviously John was “gone” by that time (maybe dead, maybe disappeared). What ever became of John Hastings?

 

PARTIALLY SOLVED: I’ve learned that John actually moved to Shelby co. IL, where he appears in the state census there in 1855. There is a John Hastings who is buried in Shelby co., died 1868, age 68, which would make him the right age to be “my” John Hastings; but why can’t I find him in the 1860 census.

 

(2)   What was John L. Johnson’s war record? My great-great-grandfather fought for the Confederate army. A resident of Franklin and/or Crawford co. AR, he never returned from the war. Family tradition is that he died in Texas, “on the Red River,” as he was returning from Arkansas after the war. Some years ago a descendant of his brother William T. Barry Johnson told me that his grandfather possessed an old cannon ball or shell of some kind that had resulted in his brother losing his foot as he was returning home from the war. I have tried for years to find John L. Johnson’s civil war service record, but without success. I’ve looked at service records for various other men who were his neighbors in Arkansas, trying to get clues as to what unit he might have served in. My assumption is that it would be a unit that served on the Western front, since he allegedly died in Texas, and there were some Northwest Arkansas units that did serve in Texas. But I’ve not been able to find any with a John Johnson who seems to be my ancestor. Where did he serve, and how did he die?

 

NO PROGRESS

 

(3)   Who was August Anderson’s father? My great-grandfather, born Per Gustaf Anderson in Nykil, Östergötland, Sweden, was an out-of-wedlock child. The family story is that his mother and her family were tenant farmers, and his biological father was the “son of the landowner”—one of those stories that may or may not have some basis in fact! As he grew, he was the “spittin’ image” of his biological father, and when he was 10 the paternal grandparents paid the maternal grandparents to take him to America and eliminate the embarrassment. I’ve inspected the Swedish parish records, thinking there might be some clue as to his parentage—especially since it seemed to be “known” in the community. But I’ve found nothing. Who was his father?

 

POTENTIALLY SOLVED: DNA tests have pointed to Carl Linder as August’s probable father. I have DNA matches with several of his descendants, through more than one of his children. He lived in Nykil, the same parish where August was born. I need to brush up on how to use DNA tools effectively, but this seems like an extremely likely and promising possibility.

 

(4)   When did August Anderson come to America, and where did he land? The story about him being brought by his grandparents seems to be confirmed by the fact that the boy and his grandparents are listed in the Swedish parish records as leaving for North America in 1870, but I’ve not found any records indicating their arrival in America. My great-aunt said there was a connection to Pennsylvania before they settled in Nebraska; does that just mean perhaps they landed in Philadelphia rather than New York? I really want to find their immigration records.

 

NO PROGRESS

 

(5)   Who was Frances (Elliott) Johnson’s father? My great-great-grandmother was Frances Jane Elliott who married John L. Johnson. The records suggest that her mother was Elizabeth Elliott, and family tradition says that Elizabeth’s maiden name was Booker. But who was Elizabeth’s husband? She seems to have been unmarried (presumably widowed) fairly early, as she is a landowner in Franklin co. AR and appears in the 1840 census under her own name. Who was Mr. Elliott, and what became of him?

 

NO PROGRESS, though some great progress on identifying another previously unknown daughter of Elizabeth.

 

(6)   When and where did Peter Likins and Mary Alfont marry? My great-great-grandparents were married about 1848, according to the 1900 census. But where, and precisely when? I think it is quite likely that they were married in Madison co. IN, and unfortunately one of those courthouse fires destroyed the marriage records from that period. Can I ever find confirmation of that, and perhaps some indication of the actual date?

 

NO PROGRESS

 

(7)   What became of cousin Bobby? My grandmother’s first cousin, Robert George “Bobby” Jones, moved, according to my grandmother, from Indiana to Florida, where he became a gem cutter. I have found a Bob Jones in the 1935 state census of Dade co. who is listed as a jeweler, and then another listing in the 1940 census. He is single in both listings. But then the trail goes cold. What became of him? Did he ever marry and have children?

 

PROBLEM SOLVED! I’m now convinced that my grandmother had his name slightly wrong. She claimed he was named “Robert George” for his two twin uncles, but there is a Robert Likins Jones who died in Miami, Dade co. 3 Sep 1960 and I’m pretty confident that this is he. Apparently he married one Mary Beatrice Collins, but seems to have had no children.

 

(8)   Where did Jason Wheeler come from? My 3rd-great-grandfather, Jason Wheeler, was born in 1765. He seems to have raised his family in Herkimer co. and Chenango co. NY, and then settled in Marion co. IN, where he died. But where was he born? I suspect that he came from Vermont, where there seem to be a lot of Wheelers; but I haven’t found anything that definitively ties him to Vermont. Is that, in fact, where he was born? If not, where?

 

NO PROGRESS, but this is on my radar screen to research now that we’re living in New York State. A trip to Herkimer and Chenango counties is in my future.

 

(9)   What became of Joseph Street? My third-great-grandfather Joseph Street was born in VA ca 1782, and then followed a common westward trek to North Carolina, Tennessee, and finally Arkansas. His wife, Margaret (Carmichael) Street, and one of their sons, Thomas Street, are buried in Madison co. AR. An old genealogy of the Street family suggests that Joseph emigrated to Oregon and died there, but I have found no record of him after the early 1850s in Madison county. Did he really go to Oregon? When and where did he die?

 

SOME PROGRESS. I haven’t found when and where he died, but I’ve made good progress on a couple of previously mysterious children of this couple, which may ultimately lead to figuring out where Joseph died. I do also now know that he was living as late as 1860, when he sold his land in Madison county.

 

(10) What happened to the other Hastings children? In the family of my 3rd-great-grandparents, John and Mary Ann (Wheeler) Hastings, in 1850 there are nine children. I’ve worked hard at tracing them, but there are still some holes. There is a “Wesley Hastings” listed, though the census says this was a girl; and a boy William Hastings, and a girl Almira Hastings. None of these have I found after 1850. Then there is James H. Hastings; I have followed him a good ways, and I know he married Amanda Meyer in Polk co. OR in 1872. But in the 1900 census, he is not living in the household with Amanda and their children, yet she is still listed as “married.” The 1910 census shows the same thing. Then in 1920 and 1930, Amanda is listed as “widowed.” No sight of James after 1880. What became of him?

 

MOSTLY SOLVED. I’ve found John Wesley Hastings—he moved with his father to Shelby co. IL (see #1 above), married and raised his family in Illinois. I am pretty convinced that daughter Almira is the Elmira Hastings who married Benjamin Shingle (Shinkle) and then apparently died soon after, perhaps in childbirth. William is still a mystery. Another daughter, Melissa, who also seems to have gone to Shelby co. IL, has been well followed. I still haven’t found when and where James died.

 

Not bad! We make progress slowly.

Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Street Family Updated

 My very first post here was about the Street family of Modoc county, California. Much has come to light in the last nine years, so here is a revised and updated version of that extensive analysis:


The Family Origin of Zedekiah Street of Modoc co. CA

The identification of the parents and siblings of Zedekiah Street, an early settler of Modoc co. CA, has been a genealogical project of some complication. A long series of circumstantial evidence has convinced this writer that Zedekiah was the son of Joseph and Margaret (Carmichael) Street. The purpose of this paper is to outline the evidence which has led to this conclusion.

I.  DIRECT FAMILY KNOWLEDGE.  At the time this study began, two of the grandchildren of Zedekiah Street were living—Olin Street Johnson and Elma Caroline (Johnson) Craig.  Olin was old enough to remember his grandfather well, having been 11 1/2 when Zedekiah died; furthermore, the Johnson family lived next door to the Streets during Olin’s childhood. Elma did not have many first-hand memories since she was several years younger; but she did live closer to her parents in their later years, and so had considerable information based on conversations with them. In talking with Olin and Elma, the following information emerged [based on notes taken by the writer from conversations with each of them]:

A.  Zedekiah Street came originally from “the South” (Olin thought it was Kentucky, but was not certain). He apparently came to Arkansas at some point because he was on a wagon train about 1860 from Arkansas to California which also included Caroline Hash and her sister, Emeline (Hash) Dodson), of Arkansas.

 

B.  He was married to Caroline Hash en route, in Denver, CO; they settled first in Camptonville, Yuba co. CA.

 

C.  After a few years in Camptonville, they moved to Surprise Valley in what is now Modoc co. CA (it was at that time Siskiyou co.).

 

D.  At some point in their early days there, they were joined by Zedekiah’s older brother, John Street. John died before either of these grandchildren were born, but they both remembered his widow, “Aunt Martha Street.” They believed that her maiden name was Robinson, or something similar.

 

II.  INFORMATION FROM CENSUS AND CEMETERY RECORDS.  Both Zedekiah and John Street are buried in the Cedarville Cemetery, Modoc co. CA; both appear in early census records from Modoc co.; and both also appear on the Great Register (of voters) for that county. These records add the following information:

A.  According to his tombstone, Zedekiah Street was born 11 Dec. 1826. (Note that the name on the tombstone is spelled “Zedikiah”; the spelling varies in different records, but it appears that “Zedekiah” is generally used in records such as voter registrations where he himself gave the information.) An obituary in the Surprise Valley Record gives his birth date as 11 Dec. 1828.  Normally one would give preference to the tombstone record; in this case, however, neither existing census records nor his Great Register listing support a birth year as early as 1826, and most suggest 1828/29.  All these sources also list his birthplace as Tennessee. [Sources: (1) Tombstone in Cedarville Cemetery, Cedarville, Modoc co. CA; a photograph of the tombstone is posted online at http://www.findagrave.com/; (2) 1870 census of Surprise Valley, Siskiyou co. CA, p. 14, line 16, where his age is give as 41; (3) 1880 census of Cedarville, Modoc co. CA, E.D. 67, p. 6, line 25, where is age is given as 52; (4) U. S. Census Year: 1900; Census Place: Cedarville, Modoc, California; Roll: 94; Page 5A; Enumeration District: 84, line 21; FHL microfilm: 1240094; (5) Great Register of Yuba co. CA, indicating he registered to vote 26 Feb 1867, giving his age as 38 (California State Library, California History Section; Great Registers, 1866-1898; Collection Number: 4 - 2A; CSL Roll Number: 140; FHL Roll Number: 978599, p. 96); (6) Great Register of Modoc co. CA, indicating he registered to vote 13 Sep. 1892, giving his age as 64 (California State Library, California History Section; Great Registers, 1866-1898; Collection Number: 4 - 2A; CSL Roll Number: 27; FHL Roll Number: 976938, image 142); (7) Great Register of Modoc co. CA, indicating he registered to vote 24 Apr 1875, giving his age as 44 (California State Library, California History Section; Great Registers, 1866-1898; Collection Number: 4 - 2A; CSL Roll Number: 27; FHL Roll Number: 976938. Image 15); (8) Obituary in the Surprise Valley Record, 25 Apr 1906.]

 

B.  John Street was born 12 Jan. 1816, according to his tombstone; and the date is supported by the 1880 census and Great Register records. John died in 1884, and thus only appears in Modoc co. in the 1880 census. Both census and Great Register list his birthplace as North Carolina. [Sources: (1) Tombstone in Cedarville Cemetery, Modoc co. CA; (2) U. S. Census (Year: 1880; Census Place: Cedarville, Modoc, California; Roll: 69; Family History Film: 1254069; Page: 4C; Enumeration District: 067; Image: 0009); (3) Great Register of Modoc co. CA, indicating he registerd to vote 5 May 1874, giving his age as 60 (California State Library, California History Section; Great Registers, 1866-1898; Collection Number: 4 - 2A; CSL Roll Number: 27; FHL Roll Number: 976938, image 7).]

 

C.  The 1880 census records for both brothers, and the 1900 census for  Zedekiah, agree that their father was born in Virginia and their mother in North Carolina.

 

D.  John Street’s wife, Martha Ann, is buried next to him, and her tombstone indicates her birth date was 14 Nov. 1831. A biographical sketch of their son James M Street [Source: An Illustrated History of Central Oregon (Western Publishing Co., 1905), p. 752] states that her maiden name was “Roberson,” and indicates that the John Street family lived in Putnam co. TN for many years prior to their migration to California about 1870; an obituary of one of John and Martha’s daughters, Margaret (Street) Wilder, confirms the connection to Putnam co. TN.

 

E.  A newspaper notice of the marriage of Zedekiah Street and Caroline Hash 17 June 1860 appeared in the Rocky Mountain News (Denver, 20 June 1860) and indicated that Zedekiah was from Madison co. AR. [Source: image of Rocky Mountain News, 17 June 1860, p. 3 on www.genealogybank.com, accessed 22 July 2012.]

 

F.  The 1900 census for  Zedekiah shows that there was living in his household a man named Richard L. Street, born in Arkansas in July 1851, identified as  Zedekiah’s nephew.  Also in the household was this Richard’s wife Mary and several children:

 

Richard L. Street        b. July 1851 AR                      father b. TN    mother b. ?

Mary (wife)                 b. March 1862 CA                  father b. TX    mother b. TX

May (dau.)                  b. May 1879  CA                    father b. AR    mother b. CA

Susie (dau.)                 b. March 1884 NV                  father b. AR    mother b. CA

Maggie (dau.)             b. March 1887 CA                  father b. AR    mother b. CA

Artie (son)                   b. Jan. 1889 MT                      father b. AR    mother b. CA

Gussie (dau.)               b. Jan. 1891 CA                      father b.  AR   mother b. CA

Hugh (son)                  b. Nov. 1892  CA                    father b. AR    mother b. CA

Thomas (son)              b. Feb. 1882 NV                     father b. AR    mother b. CA

 

[Source: Year: 1900; Census Place: Cedarville, Modoc, California; Roll: 94; Page: 5A; Enumeration District: 84, lines 27-36); FHL microfilm: 1240094.]

 

ANALYSIS:  It seems probable, based on the census records, that the father of  Zedekiah and John Street was a Virginian who migrated to North Carolina, met and married his wife there and began his family. At some point between the births of John and Zedekiah they apparently moved to Tennessee. Zedekiah, at least, seems to have moved to Madison co. AR; probably, since this nephew was born in AR, at least one brother of  Zedekiah Street was living in AR as well. The children of John Street are fully known, and it is apparent that this Richard L. Street was not among them. There is no evidence, in fact, that John Street ever lived in AR; all his children were born in TN.

 

III.  STREET FAMILIES IN TULARE CO., CA AND VICINITY:  A Street family which settled in Tulare county, CA, can be shown to be connected to the Modoc co. families. The chain of evidence is complicated, but can be outlined as follows:

A.  In Tulare co. a deed is recorded, dated 25 Dec. 1863, by which one Joseph Street transferred land to Patience Street, and to Joseph, Margaret, Lafayette, James, Rebeca, Catharine, and Thomas Street, “minor children of said Patience by her late husband Richard Street” and the “widow and children of his deceased brother.” 


B.  J. M. Guinn’s History of the State of California and Biographical Record of the San Joaquin Valley, California (1902) contains a biographical sketch of one Joseph J. Street, about whom the following information is given:

 

1.  Joseph J. Street was the son of Richard and Patience (Randolph) Street, and was born in White co. TN 6 Dec. 1846.  His family moved to AR when he was three years old.

 

2.  Joseph’s father, Richard, moved his family to California in 1860, settling finally near Visalia, Tulare co.; he died about 1863.

 

3.  Richard and Patience (Randolph) Street had three daughters and five sons “who attained mature years.”

 

Clearly this Joseph is the son of the Richard Street referred to in the 1863 deed, since the death date and place is the same, and the name of Richard’s wife is the same.

 

C.  Marriage records in Tulare co. indicate that Richard’s widow, Mrs. Patience Street, married A. J. Worthley 22 May 1864. Census records show that they had two children, Alfred L. and Marshall Worthley. Furthermore, Mary Catherine Street, daughter of Richard and Patience, married her stepbrother, Thomas W. Worthley (son of A. J. Worthley by his first wife).

 

D.  A series of records leads to the conclusion that Richard and Patience’s son referred to as Lafayette in the deed was the same person listed in the 1900 census as Zedekiah’s nephew “Richard L. Street”:

 

1.  As noted above, the 1900 census for Richard L. Street in the Modoc co. household of his uncle Zedekiah includes children Thomas, Maggie (Margaret?), Susie, and Gussie (and others); it lists Richard’s wife as Mary and says he was born in AR in July 1851.

 

2.  Richard Lafayette Street was registered to vote in Tulare co. CA in 1898, age 46, b. Arkansas.

 

2.  A Richard Lafayette Street died in Sebastopol, CA 6 Aug. 1939. His death certificate gives his birth date as 11 July 1851, indicates he was a native of AR, son of Richard and Patience (Randolph) Street, and it names his widow as Reina Street. An obituary of this man also names daughters Mrs. Maggie Cornett, Mrs. Susie Hoffman, and Mrs. Gussie Abbot, and a son C. J. Street. Based on the correspondence of names of his children, and the date and place of birth, it seems evident that this is the same Richard L. Street who appears in Modoc co. in 1900; and that his wife Mary had died (or they had divorced) and he had remarried a woman named Reina. Reina’s own death certificate (she died in Sebastopol in 1951) indicates that her maiden name was Talsma; the death certificate of C. J. Street (who died in Sebastopol in 1976) records his parents’ names as Cornelius Hornstra and Reina Talsma.

 

3.  A 1910 census listing for a Lafayett R. Street in Tulare co. in 1910 shows him as a single man, age 59 (i.e. b. ca. 1851), born in AR, living in the household of a widow, Reina Hornstra. Certainly this man is identical with the Richard L. Street discussed above; on the surface it would appear that his wife Mary died (or they had divorced) 1900/1910 and he married Reina, in whose home he was boarding in 1910; however, since we know that Mary didn’t die until 1953, there must have been a divorce here. Immediately adjacent to this household in 1910 was that of Thomas W. Worthley, the recently widowed husband of Mary Catherine (Street) Worthley, who (according to her death certificate) was the daughter of Richard and Patience (Randolph) Street and thus the sister of Richard Lafayette Street.

 

4.  A 1907 Tulare co. marriage record for one Ora Hamilton to Thomas Alford Street (b. NV ca. 1882, which corresponds to the Thomas listed as a son of Richard L. Street in the 1900 census) indicates his father was L. Street and his mother Mary Bryant. No doubt “L. Street” is “Lafayette,” the name by which Richard apparently was primarily known.

 

5.  Brief correspondence with the widow of C. J. Street of Sebastopol indicated that he was the “adopted son” of Richard L. Street. Mrs. Alice Street said that she had no further information on the Street family, but she enclosed (without explanation) two sheets of paper, seemingly rather old, on which were written in pencil a number of names and address, apparently of her husband’s relatives.  They included: Susie Hoffman, Artie Street, Margie Cornett, (Dot) Gussie Abbott, Grandpa Bryant. The recurrence of names (especially the reference to the surname Bryant) supports the inference that the Richard who died in Sebastopol was the same man who was first married Mary Bryant.

 

6.  An obituary in the Oakland Tribune for Mrs. Susie Hoffman, clearly the same woman named in the Sebastopol Richard L. Street’s obituary as his daughter, indicates that her middle name was Patience—no doubt for her grandmother.

 

ANALYSIS:  It is clear from the above facts that the Richard L. Street who was a nephew of  Zedekiah Street is the same Richard L. Street who died in Sebastopol, CA in 1939, and that he was the same man who is referred to as Lafayette Street in the 1863 deed, Richard Lafayette Street in the Tulare co. Great Register in 1898, and as Lafayett R. Street in the 1910 census of Tulare co. This establishes the fact that Zedekiah Street and Richard Street (father of Richard Lafayette Street) were brothers. This is confirmed by additional evidence:

 

E.  Census and other records pertaining to Joseph J. Street, known from the biographical sketch to be the son of Richard and Patience Street, indicate that he was married at least three times, and that he had at least one daughter who lived to maturity, Dora Street. An autograph book which belonged to Martha Ann Street, daughter of  Zedekiah Street, contains several autographs from persons in Pixley, Tulare co.; one of these is signed “your cousin, Dora Street” (dated Nov. 30. 1890).

 

F.  Two other autographs from this book (also dated in late 1890, when Martha is known to have taken an extended trip throughout California) are “your cousin M. R. Worthley” and “your cousin Maggie Worthley”; also “your friend A. L. W.”  It has already been noted that Richard Street’s widow, Patience, married A. J. Worthley and had two sons, Alfred L. and Marshall. One of Richard and Patience’s daughters, Mary Catherine, married her step-brother, Thomas Woodson Worthley, and had a daughter Margaret, b. 1879, who is likely this “Maggie Worthley.”

 

G.  It has previously been noted that Richard Street’s widow Patience, together with her children, were deeded land by Joseph Street, described as Richard’s brother.  The June, 1965 issue of Los Tulares (bulletin of the Tulare County Historical Society) has an article on the Yokohl Valley, in which two early settlers, Joe and Jim Street, are mentioned. “Neither ever married,” it states, “and they raised sheep, cattle and hogs together for several years. After some difference of opinion, Joe moved to a ranch at Milo where he died many years ago.” In a letter to this writer, the author of that article, Annie R. Mitchell, stated that she had interviewed Rev. E. R. Connelly, who had performed the funeral service for Jim Street; according to him, Jim and Joe were brothers who had a “falling out” many years before. The death certificates for both brothers have been inspected; no information about their parentage is given, but it might be noted that the informant on James Street’s certificate was one T. W. Street—very likely Thomas Wright Street, a son of Richard and Patience Street, and thus presumably James Street’s nephew. The death certificates also give no information as to birthplace or date of birth. Joseph, who died in 1910, is said to have been “76 years and 10 months” of age; James, who died in 1919, is said to have been born in 1841. Both these men were listed on the Great Register for Tulare co. in 1867, and there it indicates that Joseph Street, age 34, was born in TN, and James Monroe Street, age 27, was born in TN. Both also appear in the 1900 census, where Joseph is said to have been born in May 1833, and James in Sept. 1842 (though various other records suggest a slightly earlier birth date for him; probably the Great Register which suggests a birth date of 1839/40 is most trustworthy, since he himself would have given that information when he registered). In both cases, the census indicates their father was born in Virginia, their mother in North Carolina—consistent with the pattern shown in the census for both  Zedekiah and John Street.

 

ANALYSIS:  This rather complicated argument can be summarized as follows: (1) The various records pertaining to Richard Lafayette Street and his family demonstrate that Zedekiah Street was a brother of the Richard Street who died in Tulare co. in 1863. (2)  The Tulare co. deed proves that Joseph Street was also a brother of Richard Street. (3) The Tulare co. historical information indicates that James Monroe Street was a brother of Joseph Street, and this is confirmed by the fact that the informant on James’ death certificate was apparently a son of Joseph’s Street’s brother Richard. When this information is collated, it suggests a Street family with at least the following members:

 

i.  Richard Street, b. NC (?) ca. 1814/15, mar. Patience Randolph.

 

ii.  John Street, b. NC 12 Jan. 1816, mar. Martha Ann Robinson/Roberson.

 

iii.   Zedekiah Street, b. TN 11 Dec. 1828, mar. Caroline Hash.

 

iv.  Joseph Street, b. ca. May 1833, never married.

 

v.  James Monroe Street, b. TN ca. Sept. 1839, never married.

 

Furthermore, census records for four of these brothers (excluding Richard, who died too early for the censuses which asked for this information) consistently indicate that their father was born in Virginia, their mother in North Carolina; and the birthplaces of the sons would suggest that a migration from North Carolina to Tennessee took place some time between 1816 and 1828. Both Richard and  Zedekiah have been connected to Arkansas, the latter specifically to Madison co.

 

IV.  MADISON COUNTY, ARKANSAS. Records in early Madison co. AR are sparse, but they prove the presence of this Street family in the 1850s. Richard Street supposedly moved to AR when his son Joseph was three (he was b. Dec. 1846), but he does not appear there in the 1850 census of that state, so apparently had not yet arrived in time for the census taker. Both Richard and  Zedekiah left AR about 1860, and thus do not appear there in the census of that year (neither have they been found in California; the census seems to have missed them, perhaps because they were en route at the time it was taken).Yet there are relevent Madison co. records:

A.  Tax records exist for Madison co., and they show the following Street entries: Richard appears first in 1852; and Richard, Jo[seph] and Tom in 1853. According to a Madison county researcher, the listing for a particular year would indicate that the individual incurred tax liability in the county the previous fall. In the 1853 listing, the three are consecutive, which usually indicates that they went to the courthouse together to be assessed. In 1853, Joseph is not assessed a poll tax; this indicates that was 55 years of age or older, and thus exempt (so he obviously could not be the Joseph who appears in Tulare co., whom we have demonstrated is the brother of Zedekiah, Richard, James  and John).  The same three names appear in 1854; in 1855 and 1856, Richard does not appear, but the others do, as does William Street. Subsequent years are not available on microfilm and have not been inspected.

B.  Madison County Musings, the publication of the Madison County Genealogical Society, published a list of cemetery inscriptions from the Lower Camp Ground Cemetery in Madison county (VI:2, p. 81). Included in this listing are two Street graves, Margaret Street (b. 15 Oct. 1792, d. 11 Nov. 1854) and Thomas Street (b. 25 July 1827, d. 19 Feb. 1859).

C.  Goodspeed’s history of Madison co. lists early landowners, including Joseph Street in 1852, Township 17 Range 24 (SE SE Section 30). I have not tried to find the original document.

D.  There is a deed recorded in Deed Book E, page 101 [Source: FHL film 007899273, image 636]: “Know all men by these presents that I, Joseph Street senr. of the state of Arkansas county of Madison in considertion of the sum of six hundred dollars to me paid by Joseph Street Junr. in good and lawful money the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, I do hereby give, grant, transfer, sell and convey unto the said Joseph Street Jr., his heirs and assigns, a certain tract and parcel of land situate in the state and county above mentioned bounded and described as follows, viz. the SE quarter of the SE quarter of section no. 30 and the northeast quarter of the NE of section no. thirty-one in township no. 17 north of range twenty four containing eighty acres more or less with all the [?] and appurtenances […] to have and to hold the aforementioned premises that […] Street  his heirs and assigns [..] that I am […] full of the afoesaid premises that they are free from […]that I havea good right to sell and convey […] Joseph Street Jr. his heirs and assigns forever […] claims and demands of all and every person whom […] my seal this 9th day of January AD 1860. Joseph Street  Witness: P. W. Newton, J.R. Berry” 

E.  A federal land patent for Joseph Street Junior was registered in Madison co. for 40 acres in Section 29, Township 17N, Range 24W, dated Feb. 1, 1860. This is a bit puzzling, since Joseph has not been located in the 1860 census; but perhaps the land was quickly sold and Joseph left the county (or perhaps the census taker missed him; or perhaps he is in the 1860 census, but I’ve not found him!).

F. Joseph Street Junior sells the same parcel he bought from his father, along with another parcel, on 10 Apr 1860 to Jacob Owens and Drury? Wall for $700 [Source: FHL film 007899273, image 658]

ANALYSIS:  The connection of the California Street families to Madison co. AR is based on the newspaper notice of  Zedekiah’s marriage, which states he was “from Madison co. AR.”  This is supported by the appearance in Madison co. tax records of Richard Street, just at the time when the Tulare co. Richard Street is said to have located in Arkansas. If the hypothesis that these Street listings in AR are in fact the California family is correct, the following observations can be made: Joseph Street was significantly older than Richard Street (b. 1797 or earlier, compared to Richard’s 1814 birth date) and is quite possibly the father of the five known Street brothers. The Margaret Street buried in Madison co. is of the correct age to be the mother of these boys; and the Thomas Street buried there is the correct age to be a brother, who would fit between  Zedekiah and Joseph among the children of Joseph and Margaret. William Street appears first on the tax list in 1855; often this suggests that a man has turned 21. If that is the case here, William would be born ca. 1833/34 and could be another brother between Joseph and James.

 

V.  TENNESSEE RECORDS.  While all the evidence has pointed to the Street family coming from Tennessee (via AR), the only tie to a specific place in TN has so far been statements in records of the children of John Street that they were born in Putnam co. TN.  Putnam co. was formed in 1854 from portions of White, Jackson, Overton and Dekalb counties, all located in central TN.  A search of records in those counties reveals the following:

A.  Richard Street married Patience Randolph in White co. TN 25 Feb. 1846.  Certainly this is the Richard who later moved to Tulare co. CA. In the same county is the marriage record of John Street and Martha Robison 15 Apr. 1852, undoubtedly the John who settled in Modoc co. CA.  The fact that these two brothers married in White co. suggests very strongly that this is the county in which their parents were living around 1850.

B.  The 1850 census of White co. shows the following listing:

Richard Street             34             b. NC

Patience                      25             b. TN

Joseph                         4             b. TN

Chisum                        3              b. TN

Margarett                  10/12           b. TN

[Source: Year: 1850; Census Place: District 11, White county, TN; Roll: 900; Page: 103B] (It might be noted that adjacent to this family is the household of John Robinson, including a daughter Martha Ann Robinson, 18 years old—just the right age to be the Martha Ann Robinson/Roberson who married John Street of Modoc co.) 

C.  A few pages away, still in White co., in 1850, we find the following family:

Joseph Street               68        b. VA

Margaret                     55        b. NC

John                            33        b. NC

Hannah                        24        b. TN

Zachariah                    21        b. TN

Thomas                       20        b. TN

Joseph                         19        b. TN

William                       15        b. TN

James M.                     12        b. TN

[Source: Year: 1850; Census Place: District 11, White county, TN; Roll: 900; Page: 99B]

D.  Joseph Street, with a consistent family configuration, is also found in the 1840 census of White co. and the 1830 census of adjacent Warren co. TN. These earlier records suggest an older daughter b. ca. 1815/20. White co. marriage records show a Frances Street who married Jonas Deitz in 1840; she is likely this daughter, since there doesn’t appear to be any other Street family in White co. at this time.

ANALYSIS:  We had previously concluded that Richard, John, Zedekiah, Joseph and James M. Street were all brothers, who had lived in TN, possibly the area that later became Putnam co. (which would have included White co. in 1850). The Madison co. AR records suggested possible additional brothers William and Thomas, and our hypothesis was that the Joseph Street there may have been their father, the Margaret Street their mother. Here, in this 1850 census record, we have a listing that includes all these names except Richard (but there is a corresponding Richard Street nearby, married and in his own household) and Zedekiah (but Zachariah could easily be a census taker’s error). This census record strongly supports our hypothesis. The Margaret Street here was born ca. 1794/95—close enough to the 1792 date shown in the Madison co. cemetery, given the margin of error on census records; the Thomas Street here was born ca. 1829/30, again quite close to the Thomas buried in Lower Campground Cemetery in Madison county.  The brother William here is shown as b. 1834/35, exactly what we suggested for the William who apparently turns 21 in 1855 in Madison co. The dates for John and Zachariah/Zedekiah also match closely the known dates for those brothers. While this evidence is circumstantial, it must be regarded as convincing that this is, in fact, the same family that appears both in Madison co. AR and in California.

 

VI. OTHER STREET SIBLINGS. Given the list of children of Joseph and Margaret (Carmichael) Street in the 1850 census (as well as the listing, though without names, in the 1840 census), can we identify some of these additional siblings?

A.  We previously noted that there was a Frances Street who married Jonas Deitz in White co. NC in 1840, and speculated that she might be the older daughter who appears in          1830 census record of Joseph and Margaret Street. Attempting to follow this family        leads to some interesting other information. Jones Deats appears in the 1860 census of Collin co. TX, with wife Frances and four daughters, the oldest of whom is Margaret. [Precinct 1, page 33] Frances was born in NC, the older two daughters (Margaret, 16, and Ann, 12) in Tenn., and the younger two (Mary E., 8, and Rebecca M., 4) in Arkansas. This suggests that this couple was married in Tennessee, migrated to Arkansas in the early 1850s, and to Texas after 1856. The migration pattern from Tennessee to Arkansas matches that of the Streets. In the same 1860 census, in Lamar co. TX, is one Logan Dietz, age 19, wife Mary C., age 17. Dietz family genealogists say that this is the oldest son of Jonas and Frances (Street) Dietz, whose full name was Richard Logan Dietz. He had apparently recently married and moved to Lamar co.

ANALYSIS: Again this is circumstantial evidence, but it appears very likely that Frances Dietz is the daughter of Joseph and Margaret Street, and thus the sister of Zedekiah Street and the other Street brothers who migrated to California. This is confirmed by DNA matches on ancestry.com of several descendants of this couple with descendants of Zedekiah, John, and William Street.

B.  Hannah Street. There is a Hannah Street who married William Bailey Gilliland. The specifics here are a little unclear. A number of sites, including findagrave.com, state that their marriage date was 25 Jul 1858, but I’ve not found a marriage record for them. Gilliland’s first wife, Sarah (Proctor), died in Madison co. AR 25 Mar 1857 and is buried in Huntsville Cemetary. W. B. and Hannah’s first known child was born ca 1859, reportedly in Texas; but the couple has not been located in either the 1860 or 1870 census. They appear in the 1880 census in Wise co. TX; Hannah died in Parker county TX in 1882 (Wise and Parker are adjacent).  Her tombstone gives her birth year as 1822, slightly older than the 1850 census in White co. TN., but pretty close; and the 1880 census indicates she was born in Tennessee. It seems quite possible that the marriage took place in Madison co. AR soon after the death of Sarah, and if that is correct, it seems probable that the Hannah Street is the daughter of Joseph and Margaret; no other Street families are known to be living in Madison county at that time. This family is complicated to trace; there were numerous intermarriages with Gillilands; two of W. B. and Hannah’s daughters, for instance, married sons of one Benson Gilliland (presumably some degree of cousins).

ANALYSIS: It seems very possible that the Hannah Street who married William Bailey Gilliland also belong to this family, though further research needs to be done to confirm.

C.  William Street presents some interesting problems. In Lamar co. TX in 1860, adjacent to Logan Dietz, is one William Street, age 27, born in Tennessee, with wife Sarah J., 24, also born in Tennessee, and an infant (one month old) Mary E., born in Texas. This same William and Sarah are recorded in Polk twp., Dade co. MO in 1870, with daughter Mary and two more daughters, Margaret, 8, and Amanda J., 4. One might think that this is the William who appears in the household of Joseph and Margaret in 1850. This couple is apparently the William M. Street (1832-1895) and Sarah Jane (Gray) Street (1834-1891) who are buried in Viney Creek Cemetery, Barry co. MO. Logan Dietz had married a sister of Sarah Jane (Gray) Street, Mary Caroline Gray, both of these women daughters of Benjamin F. and Mary (Williams) Gray. The close connection between these two adjacent families (husbands being uncle and nephew, wives being sisters) makes it very likely that this William is another son of Joseph and Margaret (Carmichael) Street. As stated previously, descendants of this couple show DNA matches with descendants of both John and Zedekiah Street.

1.     This William Street who married Sarah Jane Gray appears in Lamar co. TX in 1860, Dade co. MO in 1870, McDonald co MO in 1880, and then apparently dies in Barry co. MO. His gravestone in the Viney Creek Cemetery there gives his birth date as 28 July 1832, death date as 15 Apr. 1895; his wife Sarah b. 24 May 1834, d. 24 Dec. 1891.

2.     We must note that there is, however, another enigmatic William Street who appears in Fresno co. CA in 1860, as follows:

 

Fresno co. Second Twp. 1860  PO Millerton

1044/1052

William Street            39        m         Trader             Ark

Jean                             36        f           HK                  Ark

Richard                       14        m                                 Ark.

Chistholm                   13        m                                

Margaret                     12        f                                  

Lafayette                     10        m                                

Kate                            6          f                                  

Emma                          4          f                                  

Elizabeth                     3          f                                            

Thomas                       2          m                                  

The children in this household very closely mirror the children of Richard and Patience (Randolph) Street. Richard and Patience have not been located in the 1860 census, which might suggest that they were “en route” to California at that time and were missed by the census taker. But it is hard to believe that the children in this Fresno co. household are not theirs. Compare the families: 

1850 Richard & Patience                    1860 William & Jean              1870 census

White co. TN                                      Fresno co. CA

                                                           

                                                            Richard b. ca. 1846                

Joseph b. ca. 1846                                                                               Joseph b. ca. 1847

Chisam b. ca. 1847                             Chistholm b. ca. 1847

Margarett b. ca. 1849                          Margaret b. ca. 1848               Margaret b. ca. 1848

                                                            Lafayette b. ca. 1850              Lafayette b. ca. 1850

                                                            Kate b. ca. 1854                      Catherine b. 1856

                                                            Emma b. ca. 1856

                                                            Elizabeth b. ca. 1857

                                                            Thomas b. ca. 1858                 Thomas b. ca. 1860

 

ANALYSIS: This Fresno county William’s age is considerably off what we would expect if he were the son of Joseph and Margaret; the Madison co. tax lists suggested a birth date of ca. 1833/34, while the 1850 census suggested ca. 1834/35; but this census record indicates a birth date of ca. 1821. Yet five of the children in this 1860 household correspond in name and date with the known children of Richard and Patience Street—and two of those names are quite unusual, Chisholm and Lafayette. It seems almost inconceivable that this is just a strange coincidence. But it raises all kinds of questions and problems. First, why are these children not with their parents? And who is this couple they are with? Furthermore, if these are Richard and Patience’s children, where are the rest of them? Joseph was old enough perhaps to be on his own, or perhaps the “Richard” here is in fact Joseph, a census-taker’s error? And who are these two girls, Emma and Elizabeth—perhaps children of William and Jean? Or is it possible that the census taker somehow screwed up the parents’ names, and that this is in fact Richard and Patience? In that case, would Emma and Elizabeth be two daughters who both died prior to the 1870 census? Or is one of them really Rebecca, Richard’s daughter b. 1858? I have not found any evidence of this “William Street” or his family after the 1860 census. While conceivably the “Jean” listed her as wife of William could be the Lamar co. William’s wife Sarah Jane, there is no evidence that this couple ever sojourned in California, and they are definitely listed in the 1860 census in Lamar co. TX with an infant daughter, so it seems very unlikely that they had come to California at this time. I’m inclined to think that the best way to understand this census record is that it is just seriously wrong.

This leaves us now with the following presumed family of Joseph and Margaret (Carmichael) Street:

i.  Richard Street, b. NC (?) ca. 1814/15, mar. Patience Randolph; d. Tulare co. CA ca. 1862

 

ii.  John Street, b. NC 12 Jan. 1816, mar. Martha Ann Robinson/Roberson; d. Cedarville, Modoc co. CA 1 Aug 1883.

 

iii.  Frances “Fanny” Street, b. NC ca. 1820, mar. Jonas A. Dietz; last known to be living in Red River co. TX 1870.

 

iv.  Hannah Street, b. TN ca. 1822/25; perhaps married William Bailey Gilliland, eventually settled in Wise and/or Parker co. TX.

 

v.  Thomas Street, b. TN 25 Jul 1827, d. Madison co. AR 19 Feb 1859, apparently unmarried


vi.   Zedekiah Street, b. TN 11 Dec. 1828, mar. Caroline Hash; d. Cedarville, Modoc co. CA 17 Apr 1906.

 

vii.  Joseph Street, b. TN ca. May 1833, d. Tulare co. CA 19 Mar 1910, never married.

 

viii.  William M. Street, b. TN 28 Jul 1832, m. Sarah Jane Gray; d. Barry co. MO 15 Apr. 1895.

 

ix.  James Monroe Street, b. TN ca. Sept. 1839, d. Visalia, Tulare co. CA 27 Apr 1919; never married.

 

VI.  NORTH CAROLINA RECORDS.  We have ascertained that the two oldest children of this family, Richard, John and Frances, were born in North Carolina, so we would expect to find a Joseph Street with this family configuration in that state in the census of 1820 (and perhaps that of 1810). A search reveals:

A.  The only Joseph Street listed as head of a household in the 1820 census of North Carolina is found in Orange co.; he is not listed there in 1830. The 1820 listing shows Joseph and his wife both aged 26-45 (i.e., born 1775-94) with two sons and a daughter under five years of age. This is exactly consistent with the family of the White co. Joseph and Margaret Street.

B.  Orange co. NC marriage records reveal the marriage of Joseph Street and Peggy Carmichael on 26 Sept. 1813. “Peggy,” of course, is a common nickname for Margaret.  Since the eldest son of our Joseph and Margaret Street was born ca. 1814/15, this 1813 marriage is just what we would expect for them.

C.  An Orange co. NC will, written in 1816 and proved in 1819, for Thomas Carmichael names his wife Mary, sons Archibald and John Henry Carmichael, and daughters Margaret Street, Jane Isely, and Nancy Smith.

D.  The 1820 census noted above lists, on the same page as Joseph Street, one John H. Comical. The 1840 census for White co. TN lists, on the same page as Joseph Street, John H. Commichel. Obviously the family of this Joseph Street has a continuing close geographical connection with this John Carmichael (in various spellings), supporting the idea that Joseph’s wife was the sister of John H. Carmichael.

 E.  Correspondence with a Carmichael genealogist, the late Dr. Louis Johnson Jr., indicates that John H. Carmichael later moved to California, settling and later dying in Sonoma co. CA. It is known that John Street, when he came to California in 1870, settled briefly in Sonoma co. before moving on to Modoc co. In the 1870 census, he and his entire family appear in the household of his presumed uncle John H. Carmichael (John’s son, Archibald, is listed as head of household). John also appears on the Great Register there in Sept. 1871). One of John H. Carmichael’s daughters, Mary Ann, married a William C. Johnson and settled in Tulare co. CA, the same county as several of the Street family. This close association of the family of John Street with the family of John H. Carmichael strongly confirms the close association, probably familial, of these two families.

F.  The 1810 census of Orange co. NC is difficult to read; no Joseph Street was found, but there is a John Street, Esq. and an R. Street (who apparently has at least two other adult males living in his household, possibly brothers).

ANALYSIS:  It seems likely that Joseph and Margaret “Peggy” (Carmichael) Street of Orange co. NC are the same Joseph and Margaret Street that later appear in White co. TN and Madison co. AR. The strongest piece of evidence here is the continued association with the Carmichael family in NC, TN, and possibly in CA. This is supported by consistent family configurations shown through the various censuses.

VII.  THE STREET GENEALOGY.  While a secondary source must always be treated with great caution, it is useful to note some information in The Street Genealogy by Mrs. Mary A. Street (1895). This book includes a section on a Street family of New Kent and Hanover cos. VA, descendants of John and Hannah (Waddy) Street. According to this book, this John Street had a son Joseph, b. 17 Dec. 1737, who after the Revolution “went to North Carolina and m. SALLIE TATE; afterward removed to Tennessee. He was living when Gen. Jackson was elected president. . . Mr. Street lived to be 98 years old, and his wife to be 96. Both d. in Tennessee.”  This genealogy goes on to list their children as follows:

1.  John Tate Street.

2.  Richard Street (“m.; no issue”).

3.  Joseph Montfort Street (“m., and in his old age emigrated to Oregon”).

4.  William Street (“m. and moved to Williamson co., Tenn., then to Robertson co., Tenn., and d. there”).

5.  Frances, m. Alexander Vincent (“moved to Williamson co., Tenn., and d. there”)

6.  Sarah, m. Charley Shanks (“moved to Williamson co., Tenn., thence to Bedford co., d. and left a family”).

7.  Mary, m. Mr Brackin (“never left North Carolina”)

8.  Hannah, m. (1) Mr. Tate; (2) Mr. Waggoner (“moved to Williamson co., Tenn; had two children”).

This information is cited because much of it can be confirmed by census records showing a very similar migration pattern as that of our Joseph Street; this leads to the suggestion that our Joseph who married Margaret Carmichael may well be the son of Joseph and Sarah (Tate) Street described in this book. For example, the 1820 census of Orange co. NC in which we found a Joseph Street believed to be “our” Joseph also includes Alexander Vincent, an Isaac Brackin, and Volluntine [Valentine] Waggoner. Orange county marriage records, in addition to the one for Joseph Street and Peggy Carmichael, include Isaac Brackin and Susannah Street (bondsman Charlie Shanks), Richard Street and Elizabeth Liner, William Street and Nelly Shaw, Uriah Tate and Hannah Street (bondsman Joseph Street), Zephaniah Tate and Hannah Tate (bondsman William Street), and Valentine Waggoner and Hannah Tate. These families all turn up later in the various central Tennessee counties named in the Street genealogy: John Tate Street in Bedford co. in 1830; Richard Street in Bedford co. in 1830 (with a man and woman in his household in their 90’s and 80’s respectively, probably his elderly parents Joseph and Sarah) and in Marshall co. in 1840; William Street in Williamson co. in 1830, then in Robertson co. in 1840-60; Frances and Alexander Vincent in Bedford co. in 1830, then Williamson co. in 1840-50; Charles and Sarah Shanks in Bedford co. in 1830; Hannah and Valentine Waggoner in Williamson co. 1830-60 (and buried in a family cemetery in Nolensville, TN). It might also be noted that in the Tate family of which Sarah (Tate) Street was a part, the name “Zedekiah” appears a number of times; and the William Street who appears in Williamson co. TN had a son named Zedekiah. While not conclusive, this certainly points to our Joseph Street who married Margaret Carmichael and had a son Zedekiah being part of this family as well.

ANALYSIS:  While positive proof is lacking, it seems a good working hypothesis to assume that our Joseph Street was the son of Joseph and Sarah/Sallie (Tate) Street. Mrs. Street’s reference to this Joseph as “Joseph Montfort Street,” however, must be treated with skepticism. There was a man name Joseph Montfort Street who was a frontier military man of some prominence, and seems to have been a cousin of this line of Streets; it seems more likely that Mrs. Street has conflated the two. The genuine Joseph Montfort Street was descended from the Montfort family of Virginia (hence the name), but our Joseph’s line was not; and Joseph Montfort Street the military man was a contemporary of this Joseph, so it is not likely that the one was named for the other. It should also be noted that Mrs. Street has this Joseph going to Oregon “in his old age.” This is possible, though no record of him has been found there. He is last known with certainty to be in Madison co. AR in early 1860. Since most of his children migrated west about that time, the possibility of his doing so cannot be dismissed.

 

Richard O. Johnson

307 Marina View Lane

Webster, NY 14580

e-mail: roj@nccn.net

 

Revised 2 March 2022