Housekeeping- Feed Changes

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"We Help Mommy" c 1956
“We Help Mommy” c 1956

Due to WordPress emails not showing the posts well on all computers, I have changed so that feeds so only receive a summary of a post is emailed. The email will contain a clickable link to take you to the remaining/actual post. This system will also help when posts are updated- you will always have the most current info by clicking on the blog post. Hope this doesn’t inconvenience anyone, but it will be the better choice now for the blog.

Flag Day with the Helblings

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U.S. Flag Day Poster- 1917
U.S. Flag Day Poster- 1917

On June 14, 1777, the Second Continental Congress adopted the official flag of the United States of America. That date has been commemorated throughout the years with parades and picnics, a rite of summer across the land. Although the oldest continuous Flag Day parade may have been in 1909, Flag Day was not officially proclaimed a holiday until 1916, when Woodrow Wilson established June 14 as Flag Day.

The people of America didn’t need an official proclamation, however, to celebrate their pride in our flag and all it represents. Our Helbling family documented their Flag Day celebrations through the years, and preserved them in family photo albums.

From left: Vi Helbling, May Helbling, and Edgar Helbling, in front of their home at 5136 Page in St. Louis, Missouri.
From left: Vi Helbling, May Helbling, and Edgar Helbling, in front of their home at 5136 Page in St. Louis, Missouri.

The above image shows the children of Gerard William Helbling (AKA G. W. Helbling) and Anna May (Beerbower) Helbling in front of their home at 5136 Page Ave. in St. Louis, Missouri. Edgar Helbling was about 9, May Helbling 6, and Vi Helbling just 4 years old.

From left: Edgar B. Helbling, (Anna) "May" Helbling, Vi Helbling, and Gerard William Helbling, on Flag Day 1914.
From left: Edgar B. Helbling, (Anna) “May” Helbling, Vi Helbling, and Gerard William Helbling, on Flag Day 1914.

Other photo albums hold earlier years of Flag Day celebrations. This picture shows G.W. Helbling in front of their home with their three oldest children. (Three more were to be born to them in subsequent years.) Edgar looks so stoic, the little soldier, the big brother, flag on his shoulder, ready to march off into history to show his pride. (…in his little short pants ;D) Little May Helbling is upset- is she scared of all the flags? Not wanting to pose for a picture? Maybe it is that giant bow on her head??? G.W. seems like such a loving father, trying to comfort her and get her to participate.  (His youngest daughter, however, remembered him as very stern.) Cute little Vi Helbing, just one year old, is taking it all in- she always was so even-tempered when I knew her as an adult, and being a middle child, may have been that way too when young.

Note the sign on the house- “G. W. Helbling, Undertaker.” The 1914 St. Louis, Missouri, City Directory lists Gerard W. Helbling as being “with Ellis Undertaking Co, 727 King’s Highway boul.” His daughter Mary remembers that 10-15 years later, when she was young, he had his undertaker’s equipment down in the basement of the house. Visitation for the deceased’s family was on the first floor living area, and the children would stay upstairs on the second floor and have to be quiet. Wonder why the funeral home address was given in the City Directory, when he had the sign in front of the house? Maybe he had left the employ of Ellis Undertaking by this date and had his own business.

People were much closer to death, back in those days. Mary remembered that it didn’t seem strange or creepy at the time to have a dead body in the house- mostly, it was just hard to be stuck upstairs and be very, very quiet as a young child.

The family was living at 4927 St. Louis Ave., St. Louis, per the 1914 St. Louis City Directory. This address is between N. Kingshighway and N. Euclid Avenue, and has sadly declined very significantly. (Although valued at $40,000-50,000, the building sold in 2013 for just over $7,000.) Today’s websites, like GoogleMaps, Trulia, or Zillow indicate that the home was built in 1906 and currently has 2,482 square feet; it has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. It is currently a multifamily home, and probably also was when the Helblings lived there. Husband and wife, Grandma (Anna May’s mother) and three children, all in 2 bedrooms and 1 bath- people lived a lot ‘closer’ back then.

Of course, back then you didn’t just display the flag in front of the house- you participated in a parade!

Anna May (Beerbower) Helbling holding 16 mo.old Viola Gertrude Helbling, Anna May's mother to her right is Anna Missouri (Springsteen) Beerbower, 3 y/o Anna May Helbling (called May), and 6 y/o Edgar Bradley Helbling in front by steering wheel. Flag Day, June 1914.
Anna May (Beerbower) Helbling holding 16 mo.old Viola Gertrude Helbling, Anna May’s mother to her right is Anna Missouri (Springsteen) Beerbower with 3 y/o Anna May Helbling (called May), and 6 y/o Edgar Bradley Helbling in front by steering wheel. Flag Day, June 1914.

It didn’t always go well, however. Getting everyone dressed, primped, hats attached so they didn’t blow off in the wind (long hatpins to the rescue), finding umbrellas to shade delicate young (and older!) skin from the brutal St. Louis summer sun, and into the car was probably a challenge, especially with three little ones.

G. W. Helbling, Flag Day June 1914.
G. W. Helbling, Flag Day June 1914, and portion of scrapbook page.

Oh, oh- trouble! A slight delay…

Looks like G. W. was a master of all trades- artistic and creative, but he could also build a garage or repair an automobile. The caption on the scrapbook page was written by Anna May (Beerbower) Helbling, we believe. G.W. had wonderful handwriting too, so it may have been his note.

Note that the steering wheel is on the right, and the windshield is split (on purpose). The lights that can be seen on the sides of the car would help in identification of the car type, and although I have looked, it is hard to determine which model they had. (Car model ID is definitely not my forte.) It may have not been the most current model, especially since there appears to have been some trouble. Hope they got to the parade or picnic on time!

 

Notes, Sources, and References:

1) Flag Day Poster, 1917- United States Library of Congress‘s Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID cph.3g06262. Public Domain.

2) Flag Day entry on Wikipedia, Accessed 06/08/14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_Day_(United_States).

3) Gould’s St. Louis [Missouri] Directory for  1914. Ancestry.com. Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011. Accessed 06/07/14.

4) 4917 St. Louis Ave was sold in 2013 for just $7,237- sadly, the neighborhood has been in decline for a long time.

5) A great website of images of American autos through the years may be found at http://www.earlyamericanautomobiles.com/1900.htm. Pages 9-12 have some charming photographs of cars out on the streets of America, sometimes with famous people in them or nearby.

6) Helbling family photo albums owned by the author.

 

Please contact us if you would like a higher resolution image.

Copyright 2013-2014 by Heritage Ramblings Blog and pmm.

 
We would love to read your thoughts and comments about this post, and thank you for your time! All comments are moderated, however, due to the high intelligence and persistence of spammers/hackers who really should be putting their smarts to use for the public good instead of spamming our little blog.

Wordless Wednesday: Irving I. Cooper’s Needlework

This entry is part 2 of 4 in the series Irving I. Cooper's Needlework
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Irving I. Cooper's Needlework- Tiger, early 1970s.
Irving I. Cooper’s Needlework- Tiger, early 1970s.

Needlepoint done by Irving I. Cooper (1908-1992).

Notes, Sources, and References:

1) Family treasure owned by one of Irving’s daughters.

Please contact us if you would like a higher resolution image.

Copyright 2013-2014 by Heritage Ramblings Blog and pmm.

 
We would love to read your thoughts and comments about this post, and thank you for your time! All comments are moderated, however, due to the high intelligence and persistence of spammers/hackers who really should be putting their smarts to use for the public good instead of spamming our little blog.

Amanuensis Monday: The Bible Record of Hannah Ford Benjamin-Part 1

This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series Amanuensis Monday: The Bible Record of Hannah Ford Benjamin
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Hannah (Ford) Benjamin- Bible Record Transcription
Hannah (Ford) Benjamin- Family Bible Record Transcription

Sorry I have been MIA, but there has actually been a lot of action around here! Family things, of course, but I have also been working on an article to be published this month. I will share more once it is in print, and am really excited since it has to do with my great-great grandfather, Edward B. Payne, that I have been so obsessed with researching.

I thought I could get back to the blog once the article was submitted and image permissions secured, but then remembered- on Friday- that Fri-Sun was the Southern California Genealogical Society’s famous “Jamboree.” Thankfully they are on Pacific time, so I had not missed any of the sessions as I quickly registered. “Jamboree” is a fabulous conference, but even MORE fabulous is that they offer free live-streaming (partially underwritten by Ancestry.com) of one session for each block of time during the three days. (This year they also offered a for-pay streaming event of their DNA Day on Thursday. Recordings may also be available to SCGS members, which is worth it for the access to databases and archived webinars for members. Webinars are free at the time of broadcast.) I try to work in as many sessions as I can, and today, while listening to D. Josh Taylor talking about the excellent resources at the DAR Library, my mind circuits were hoppin’. He mentioned that the resources of the library were behind database walls, so Google and other search engines cannot pick them up. The light bulb went on- among other items posted, the above image of the bible page of Hannah Ford Benjamin, already posted in Sentimental Sunday:Jonathan Felix Benjamin, will probably only have her name picked up, because it is in the caption.

I already type out full names, and if there are initials or nicknames, try to make sure my post includes that name alongside the surname, so Google can find all those variations. (I know it seems redundant, but it is important to be smarter than the search engines.) The above transcription, being typed, may not be picked up, at least until image recognition is  improved. So I thought I would list all the information as search engine bait, and add a few details about the people listed, so that other researchers in the future can find their ancestors. It will need to be broken up into multiple posts since I am adding information. I am also including marriages and deaths with the names as listed, for clarity. All my notes are in brackets: [  ].

An ‘Amanuensis’ is a person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

Please note that this page has been transcribed, so error may have occurred in transcription, plus the bible was printed in 1837 so some of these records were recorded long after the fact.

This is just one page from a typewritten copy given to me by family back in the 1960s entitled:

“Notes on

the Life and Family of

JONATHAN BENJAMIN, 1738-1841,

Frontiersman and Revolutionary War Veteran,

________

Compiled from Local Histories

and Family Records,

with a List of Some

of His Descendants.”

 

This information was collected and edited by Robert Benjamin Kilduff, with the mimeographing sponsored by Bert R. Benjamin. It was printed in Chicago, Illinois in 1943, and passed on to my McMurray family in Iowa.

 

BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, and DEATHS as RECORDED in the BIBLE of HANNAH FORD BENJAMIN

(Bible printed by H. & E. Phinney, Cooperstown, (N.Y.), in 1837, and now [1943] owned by Orletta Hatch Foreman.)

Births:

Arestine P. Benjamin [born] 4-13-1843 [Daughter of Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford. She married James Polk Hatch, and their daughter, Orletta, had the bible in her possession when the history was written in 1943. Arestine died 12-3-1914 in Newton, Jasper, Iowa.]

Cordelia A. Benjamin [born] 9-12-1830 [Daughter of Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford, married William Dixon and died in Oregon City, Clackamas, Oregon on 18 June 1905.]

Dorinza E. Benjamin [born] 12-18-1823 [Daughter of Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford, name also spelled Derinza; middle name was Emaline. Born in Licking Co., Ohio. She married __Ryan, child Mabelle b. 1862. Dorinza died in Peoria County, Illinois, on 17 Feb 1903.]

Edson V. Benjamin [born] 1-29-1863. [Son of Jonathan Felix Benjamin  and Hannah E. Marple, b. in Ohio. Married Martha Jennie Munger, and died on 23 Mar 1901 in Washington state.]

Emma A. Benjamin [born] 8-5-1872 [in Iowa to Jonathan Felix Benjamin  and Hannah E. Marple. Married Herman B. Lufkin and had a son, Percy Lufkin, about 1895 in Iowa. She died 18 May 1953 and is buried in Newton, Iowa.]

Jonathan Benjamin [born] 10-14-1739 [per bible, but 14 Oct 1738 in Goshen, Orange, New York per other research. Revolutionary War soldier, married Margaret Brown. Maternal grandfather of Hannah E. Ford, bible owner. Died 26 Aug 1841 in Licking Co., Ohio.]

Jonathan Benjamin [born] 10-11-1797 [per bible, but 10-12-1799 per other research. Middle initial probably N. Son of David Benjamin and Elizabeth__ -maiden name unknown. Married Hannah E. Ford, who owned this bible and recorded some of this information.]

J(onathan) F(elix) Benjamin [born] 10-3-1838. [Son of Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford; born in Licking Co., Ohio. Married Hannah E. Marple, six children: Edson, Roland E., William -2 of them?- Emma, and Orlin Dell Benjamin. Died Mar 1913 in Jasper Co., Iowa.]

Mary Benjamin [born] 3-22-1777 [Lycoming Co., Pennsylvania, to Jonathan Benjamin (1738-1841) and Margaret Brown. Married Phineas Rowlandson Ford and was the mother of Hannah E. Ford, the owner of the bible.]

Roland E. Benjamin [born] 10-16-1868 [in Iowa to Jonathan Felix Benjamin and Hannah E. Marple. Married Sarah __ and had three children: Evert Benjamin, Viola Benjamin, and Don Benjamin. Lived also in Minnesota and Wisconsin.]

S(ylvanus)R(ufus) Benjamin [born] 2-20-1819 [other research states birth year as 1821, in Licking Co., Ohio to Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford. Married Sarah Ann Palmer and had four children: Cynthia Adeline Benjamin, Frances “Fannie” Drucilla Benjamin, Jonathan Elliott Benjamin, and Hannah Melissa Benjamin. Died 30 July 1892 in Newton, Jasper, Iowa.]

Syntha A Benjamin [born] 3-2-1828 [Daughter of Jonathan N. Benjamin and Hannah E. Ford. Has old headstone with name as Syntha, newer stone with Cynthia. She was only 16 months old when she died.]

William R. Benjamin [born] 10-4-1866 [son of Jonathan Felix Benjamin and Hannah E. Marple. Probably married Elizabeth __ and lived in Newton, Jasper, Iowa, at 1900 US Federal census.]

 

More to follow next Monday!

 

Notes, Sources, and References:

1) “Notes on the Life and Family of JONATHAN BENJAMIN, 1738-1841,

Frontiersman and Revolutionary War Veteran” edited by Robert Benjamin Kilduff, typewritten copy owned by author.

2) Edited slightly for clarity 6/13/14.

 

Please contact us if you would like a higher resolution image.

Copyright 2013-2014 by Heritage Ramblings Blog and pmm.

 
We would love to read your thoughts and comments about this post, and thank you for your time! All comments are moderated, however, due to the high intelligence and persistence of spammers/hackers who really should be putting their smarts to use for the public good instead of spamming our little blog.

Sorting Saturday: Harley Rupert Wiley

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Harley Rupert Wiley, or Harlen R. Wiley, in the 1914 "The Graduate" yearbook of the University of California Medical Center, page 12. HathiTrust, public domain.
Harley Rupert Wiley, or Harlen R. Wiley, in the 1914 “The Graduate” yearbook of the University of California Medical Center, page 12. HathiTrust, public domain.

Sorting your research is a daunting project but necessary to tell the stories. I have been deep into sorting and compiling- all to culminate in an exciting event, which is why the blog has been so quiet lately. But I digress… and will share soon.

A good review and sort will help one to see patterns, aid in putting two and two together now that you know more, and help you to find where there is conflicting information. One tip that I find really helpful is to title my files in a standard way. (See my previous posts Tuesday’s Tip- Let your computer create a timeline! and Tuesday’s Tip-Organizing Computer Files.)

Looking through my files lately has helped me realized that some dates were inconsistent, or just couldn’t be correct- very easy to see when they are side by side. It also made me realize as I sorted through that some things that needed to be together weren’t, and others that should have been were not, so I corrected that. More lightbulbs went on as I saw these new files ‘automagically’ sorted together.

While working on my exciting project and trying to identify people in a wedding party picture, I realized that I had never seen a picture of Harley R. Wiley, though I had a hunch he might be in the photo. Harley was a professor of pharmaceutical (sometimes called ‘pharmacal’ in those days) jurisprudence at the University of California. He lectured at both the Berkeley and San Francisco campuses, and had an office in San Francisco while residing in Berkeley.

Harley R. Wiley listed as Faculty in "The Graduate" yearbook of the University of California Medical Center, page 93. Hathi Trust, public domain.
Harley R. Wiley listed as Faculty in “The Graduate” yearbook of the University of California Medical Center, page 93. Hathi Trust, public domain.

He wrote a book called, “A Treatise on Pharmacal Jurisprudence with a thesis on the law in general,” The Hicks-Judd Company, San Francisco, 1904. The book was self-published, as he was a pioneer in the field and there were, at that time, no textbooks on pharmacy and the law.

Harley also wrote numerous poems, many published in the literary magazines of the day, or as fillers in other publications. He wrote with the idea of nature as spirit. Some of his poems include, “The Soul of a City,” “Star of Bethlehem,” “The Desert,” and “Dust and Flame.” Harley’s California Biographical Index card lists Appleton’s Booklovers Magazine, The Overland Monthly and Out West magazine, and The Raven-Western Field as periodicals for which he had written.

Harley spoke to many groups, with the historian James Redpath commenting, after an address by Wiley, that he had “eloquence and good sense in rare combination.”

In early California, land speculation was popular. At one time, Harley owned 2,000 acres.

Although one would think that being a published poet, lecturer, professor, land speculator, and lawyer would be enough, Harley had another claim to fame- he was the brother of Ninetta (Wiley) Eames Payne (Springer), who raised Charmian Kittredge; Charmian would later marry Jack London, the author. Ninetta worked with Jack London closely, managing many of his business affairs. Ninetta, like Harley, traveled in California literary circles as she too was a writer and host of many summer camps for (adult) intellectuals. Edward B. Payne, a writer, minister, lecturer, and philosopher, was Ninetta’s second husband, and he was very close to his in-laws Harley and Villa. Harley participated in many of these same gatherings, whether they were just family or for the intellectuals of the Bay Area or Sonoma County; many of the events included Jack London.

Learning more about Harley corroborated a story that Ninetta told of the family’s 1865 migration to Utah and then California, in which their wagon train was attacked. The party was split and the other  group was massacred by the Indians, with the Wiley family barely escaping. Ninetta was sometimes ‘flowery’ in her descriptions, so some researchers had wondered how much of the story was true. Reading about it in Harley’s biography- collateral kin research- makes us realize that the horrors of the story were real, not imagined nor exaggerated.

A bit of the Harlen Rupert Wiley vitals-

– He was born 5 Apr 1855 in on a farm 14 miles outside Oshkosh, Wisconsin to Jacob Scott Wiley and Catherine Growall, the youngest of seven children.

– Harley lived in Santa Barbara, Monticello, Redding, Berkeley, Oakland, and San Francisco, California. There are censuses and city directories that seem to have conflicting information for a certain date, but that is because he had offices in other cites at times.

– Graduating from Christian College at Santa Rosa, California, in 1877 with an A.B. degree after just three years of study, he had also taught bookkeeping, arithmetic, and algebra while himself a student.

– Harley also graduated from the University of California, Class of 1897, L.L.B. Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco.

– Becoming a Christian while at Christian College, Harley was ordained a minister around 1877 when he graduated.

– Harley married first Sarah Prudence Seawall about 1878. They had two children together: Lucille, one year old in the 2 Jun 1880 census (although 1900 census states she was born Sep 1878), and a son born in Dec 1879, who was 6/12 months per same census, but name not recorded. In 1900 Sarah was listed as Prudy Wiley in the census, listed as a widow and living with her daughter. Her son was still alive, and their daughter Lucille was a bookkeeper, a skill that Harley probably taught her. Harley remarried and is found in the 1900 census, so apparently the couple had actually divorced.

– His second marriage was to Villa Chappell 26 Dec 1885 in Redding, California. They had two children- Villa Elizabeth Wiley, born Nov 1888, and Esmond F. Wiley (or Don Esmond Wiley), born 1890.

– An excellent description of Harley’s early life may be found in the  “Memorial and Biographical History of Northern California,” pages 535-6, 1891- see below for links.

– Harley died 17 Sep 1921 in Alta Bates Sanitorium in Berkeley after a protracted illness, at the age of 65. We have been unable to find where he was buried. (Many of those in this social group were cremated, so that may be the case with Harley as well.)

Harley R. Wiley obituary, Oakland Tribune, 17 Sep 1921.
Harley R. Wiley obituary, Oakland Tribune, 17 Sep 1921.

The ‘Wiley House’ and cottages that were owned by Harley and Villa Wiley at 2545 Benvenue Avenue until 1921 are listed as Historic Landmark #199 in Berkeley, California.

 

PS- I really can’t tell if it is Harley Wiley in the wedding photo that started all this. But it was great to learn more about him and have an opportunity to tell his story.

 

Notes, Sources, and References:

1) “A Treatise on Pharmacal Jurisprudence with a thesis on the law in general”  may be read online at   https://archive.org/details/treatiseonpharma00wile. Accessed 05/31/2014.

2) Harley R. Wiley biography in “Memorial and Biographical History of Northern California,” page 535-6,  Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago, 1891. See http://books.google.com/books/about/A_Memorial_and_Biographical_History_of_N.html?id=m8FQAQAAIAAJ. Accessed 05/31/2014.

3) 7) California Biographical Index Card for Harley R. Wiley, 1906, through California State Library, now on Ancestry.com. Accessed 5/31/14.

4) “The Graduate” yearbook of the University of California Medical Center, 1914: http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31378008244504;view=1up;seq=1. Accessed 05/30/2014.

5) Berkeley Landmarks by Susan Dinkelspiel Cerny, Berkeley [California] Architectural Heritage Association, 2001. Accessed on 5/31/14: http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/citycouncil/2002citycouncil/packet/121002/2002-12-10%20Item%2025%20Staff%20Report%20Backup%2010.pdf

 

 

Please contact us if you would like a higher resolution image.

Copyright 2013-2014 by Heritage Ramblings Blog and pmm.

 
We would love to read your thoughts and comments about this post, and thank you for your time! All comments are moderated, however, due to the high intelligence and persistence of spammers/hackers who really should be putting their smarts to use for the public good instead of spamming our little blog.