02 January 2013

Agnes Williams Coughlin - Obituary

Plattsburgh Press-Republican
January 3, 1973
Agnes Coughlin

AU SABLE FORKS - Agnes Coughin, 89, died Tuesday at the CVPH Medical Center.
   
She was born Dec. 20, 1881 in New York, the daughter of John and Mary (Dawne) Williams.

Survivors include three sons, Bernard J. Coughlin of Syracuse, David F. Coughlin of Jay and Daniel E. Coughlin of Leister, Mass.; two daughters, Anne Thompson of Plattsburgh and Elizabeth Coughlin of Au Sable Forks; 16 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren.

Calling hours at the Zaumetzer-Sprague Funeral Home will be today and Thursday form 2 to 45 and 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral will be Friday at 10 a.m. from the Holy Name Church. Entombment will be in the church cemetery.
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Agnes Coughlin is my paternal great grandmother.
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NOTES:
Noticed the birth year is listed as 1881 but other sources, including tombstone, state 1883. She went by her middle name of "Agnes" and her first name was "Bridget".  Also have yet another spelling for her mother's surname that I have found as Dwan, Duane, Devan....and I'm sure there are more!!




18 December 2012

Johnson Family Article

I love those "OMG" moments while doing research.  While looking for a article on another family line, I found this GREAT write up on my Johnson line.  Which is wonderful for me as I have not really researched this line.  There is so much information on the various siblings that at one point I had to laugh.  This type of article could only be found in a small town newspaper!!

My connection to this family is Ella Johnson Hall, my paternal 2nd great grandmother.

Published in The Record-Post, Au Sable Forks, NY, Thursday, December 18, 1930:


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LARGE FAMILY RAISED AT TROUT POND RECALLED

Father of Late Olive (Johnson) Kee Located on Farm Four Miles From Clintonville

(By George L. Brown)

The death of Mrs. Olive (Johnson) Kee at Glendale, Cal., which was announced in The Record-Post two weeks ago today, started a train of thought in our mind.  Looking back through the vista of years to the time when our memory runneth not to the contrary, there is pictured in our mind’s eye an old time country gentleman—the late George Johnson, sr., happily located on a farm which was surrounded by sylvan beauty.  The above mentioned farm was located at what has long been known as Trout Pond which is about four miles from the village of Clintonville on the Ausable River where then stood the largest charcoal iron making forge ever erected on earth.  This forge, according to figures furnished by our late lamented friend E.E. Banker who was superintendent there for 12 successive and intensely busy years, was 16 rods longs and 60 feet wide, the sides and ends of which were built of stone, the roof being of iron.  The ordinary forge in other sections of our charcoal iron making North Country contained 5 to 6 “fires” while the mammoth building at the dam on the Ausable River at Clintonville contained there times as many as the average.  In those days when “Iron was King” Clintonville was in the heyday of its industrial glory.  The Peru Steel and Iron Company employed hundreds of men at and around Clintonville, the latter village then being a ready market for any produce farmers had to sell.  Conveniently near this busy mart, George Johnson, sr., happy in having found what was the proper bent of his genius, calmly followed the even tenor of his way, content with his farm and family, his contentment recalling the words of Dryden:
Look round the habital world, how few
Know their own good, or knowing it, pursue.

The late John Wood, native of Ireland, solder in the Papineau War in Canada way back in 1837-38 and finally an Elizabethtown farmer after he and his son Robert H. Wood (now the most venerable all the year around male resident of the Essex county seat village) had purchased the late Willard F. Deming’s farm in the spring of 1868, often visited the George Johnson, sr., at his “Trout Pond” farm.  In this connection it may be added that Robert H. Wood also often visited Mr. Johnson and recalls the beautiful brook which meandered through the farm and the big house cat that caught the 8 and 10 inch speckled trout and took her “catch” to the house for cooking.  It was at the Johnson farm house that the late John Wood, our neighbor for 20 years, was stricken with paralysis way back in 1873, as a result of which he lived a cripple for 18 years, dying in 1891.

It is, however, of the large family of children of the late George Johnson, sr., that is proposed to speak at this time.

Besides Mrs. Olive (Johnson) Kee, a sketch of whom was given two weeks ago, there were the following:

Jane M. Johnson, who married the late George Wood, an older brother of Robert H. Wood.  George Wood was a Free Mason, being a member of Morning Sun Lodge way back in 1866.  As such he attended the funeral of the late Levi DeWitt Brown held February 6, 1866, the first Masonic conducted service in Elizabethtown after the organization of Adirondack Lodge No. 602, F. & A.M. in January, 1866.  George Wood and his wife eventually went to Montana where they settled.  George Wood went to the site of Butte, Montana, when there was nothing but a “shack” there.  He helped erect a sawmill and a smelting works.  Being a mechanic Mr. Wood found much to do in those pioneer days.  In fact he is credited with laying out the city of Butte.  He bought land for a reasonable price and later sold it off in lots at a material advance.  At the time of his death about 32 years ago he was said to have erected more buildings than any other man in Montana.  His wife was cheerful and helpful, backing her husband in making his life a success in the early days of Butte.  Mr. and Mrs. George Wood had three sons—Walter, George and Harry—and two daughters.  William Greer, formerly of Moriah, who married Fannie Patterson of Elizabethtown, was with George Wood in his last hours.

Mary Johnson married Charles Denton, who worked for the late William Simonds around the old Valley House in Elizabethtown.  John Johnson went west and died in Nevada.  Leander Johnson enlisted in the Union army in civil war days and is thought to have made the supreme sacrifice, as he never came back home.

Emma Johnson married the late John Thompson of Moriah who served as a solider in the Union army of the civil war and drew a pension.  He died on his Moriah farm a few years ago.

Orlando Johnson died in Port Henry a few years ago.

Loren Johnson went west and died in Phoenix, Arizona, of tuberculosis.

Levi Johnson went west and died in Montana as a result of trouble in a saw mill in pioneer days.

Ella Johnson married the late Ira Hall and in 1897 came to Elizabethtown where she continued to reside until her death a few years ago.  She is survived by three sons—Earl of Keene Valley, Jesse and Loren of Elizabethtown—and one daughter, Miss Beatrice Hall who is employed as a nurse at the Keene Valley Neighborhood House.

George Johnson of “Ti. Street,” Ticonderoga, is the only survivor of this large family of children.  He owns a good farm and has a productive apple orchard.
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WOW, WOW, WOW

17 December 2012

Mystery Photo Monday

I am starting my own "Mystery Photo Monday" to see if anybody can help me identify all the unlabeled photos I have inherited!!!

In the Christmas spirit, here's a Christmas card assuming from the 1960's signed by:

Wilfred, Joyce, Todd, Scott, Michele



Any guesses :)

16 December 2012

Thomas Willis - Obituary


Thomas Willis

AU SABLE FORKS – Thomas Willis, 83, died Thursday at the Keene Valley Hospital in Keene Valley.

Mr. Willis was born April 3, 1893, the son of John and Rosan (McGinis) Willis.  He was a veteran of World War I.

Survivors include his wife Mamie (Duprey) Willis, and one brother, Frank Willis of Au Sable Forks.

Calling hours will be from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the Zaumetzer-Sprague Funeral Home here.  Services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at Holy Name Church here.  Burial will be in the parish cemetery.

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Published in the Plattsburgh Press-Republican on Friday, December 17, 1976.

Thomas Willis was my maternal great uncle by marriage.  I remember my mother was very close to Uncle Tom and Aunt Mamie and was sad that she was unable to travel to New York for the funeral.  Of course travel then is not like travel today.



07 December 2012

Newspaper Nugget - December 7, 1942

From the pages the Plattsburgh Press-Republican, Plattsburgh, New York, Monday, December 7, 1942


AN END-AND A BEGINNING are marked by this first anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.  One year of war has passed-a year in which the United States met many reverses, achieved a few major victories.  Above all else, the anniversary sees the tide turning, the United States and her allies taking the offensive, the Nazi might on the wane.  Ahead lie long months of war, with its .... heartbreak, deprivations and misery.  But ahead, too, lies certain victory.

15 November 2012

World War I - Letter from Uncle Tom


Corporal "Tom" Willis Depicts Life on the Western Front

John Murphy of Au Sable Forks, boss machine tender for the J. & J. Rogers Company, is in receipt of the following letters from Corporal Thomas Willis, who has been on the western front for a considerable spell:
Co. F, 303d Inf
A.P.O. 773, A.E.F.

Dear Friend Jack:

Just a few lines to let you know that I am well and hope this letter finds you the same.  Well, Jack, I was certainly glad to hear from you also to get the address of the boys.  I probably won't ever have the luck to run across Wilfred but I wrote him just the same.  I like it over here all right.  Of course I am not a very good Frenchman but as long as a fellow has the money he is all right.  We are in a good part of France at present; the climate is pretty warm and for the last few weeks it has rained a lot.  We do not have nice large barracks and nice spring cots over here.  We sleep in what they call billets.  The billet I sleep in is pretty comfortable.  We sleep in one side of the barn and a few rabbits and chickens and a nice little mule in the other side.  About time to get up in the morning the mule will start braying and there is no more sleep.  I have seen quite a bit of England and quite a bit of France and if Germany does not throw up her hands pretty soon I will probably see what there is left of Germany.  There is lots I would like to tell you about my trip but will wait and next summer I will be back and while we are waiting to turn a reel of muisc {sic} paper I will tell you all about it.  I will in the army one year the 22d of this month, and in that time I have had one hell of a good time and I wouldn't have missed what I have seen for anything.  There is only one trouble over here:  if you want to visit a nearby town you have to walk, but we do not mind that now.  Well Jack, how are all the fellows in the mill, and what is old "Smut" doing? I suppose he is fooling with the speed wheel every time the machine is running good.  I wish he was over here.  I would like to see him in uniform carrying a rifle and a pack.  Tell him to write to me as he owes me a letter.  I guess I will close for this time hoping to hear from you soon.  I remain,
Your friend,
Tom
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05 November 2012

Eugene Duprey - Death Notice



AUSABLE FORKS MAN, 85, DROPS DEAD IN WOODS

Eugene Duprey, 85, of AuSable Forks, dropped dead at a woodlot in Swastika yesterday shortly after noon.

State police of the Keeseville substation said that death had been attributed to a heart attack.

The elderly man had accompanied a son, George, to the woodlot, state police said.

Troopers assisted in removing the body to the Quirk Brothers Funeral Home.

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Published in the Plattsburgh Press-Republican on Wednesday, November 6, 1946.

Eugene is my maternal great grandfather.

I am sure there is an obituary out there; however, the newspaper I believe it would be in, The Adirondack News-Elizabethtown Post, does not have 1946 microfilmed.  (Very sad about that~~but that's a topic for another post!!)

I am still hopeful that a cousin out there may have it.  So Cousin at least once removed, if you do have the obituary, please contact me!! Thanks :)