I have had several people in
the old family tree who have presented me with challenges in finding
information about them. However none
have been as challenging as my third great grandmother, Emelia (Lee) Whetstine.
The Whetstine line has been interesting anyway. There were two men named Mathias Whetstine,
born around the same time. One of them
was the son of Mathias Whetstine, Senior.
Since Emelia’s husband Mathias went by Mathias Whetstine JUNIOR one
would assume he was the son of the Senior.
But there are naysayers out there who say that their Mathias Whetstine
was the Junior and mine was the imposter.
That should be challenge enough.
But Emelia….well, Emelia has been an altogether different story.
Emelia Lee was born 11 October 1812 in Indiana. Who were her parents? Well, that is a very good question! Emelia married Mathias Whetstine Junior on 21
August 1834 in Morgan County, Indiana. In Indiana, they welcomed five of their
six children: Rufus (18 August 1838), Enoch (7 Dec 1839), Catherine (25 July
1842), Thomas (born in 1845) and John (1 Nov 1848). From there they moved to Washington County,
Iowa where my great-great grandfather was born, Anson Dunham Whetstine, born 24
October 1854. From the large gaps
between several of the children, I imagine that there may have been other
children born to them that did not survive, just another mystery for me to
solve.
Around 1870 the Whetstine family moved to Washington
County, Kansas, less than an hour from my current home. Emelia passed away on the 7th of
May 1887 near Linn, Kansas. Mathias died
twelve years later. Mathias was a GAR
member as he had enlisted and fought in the Civil War at nearly 50 years old!
I spent hours in Washington County, Kansas looking
for any type of clue as to who Emelia’s parents were. Nothing.
I looked for an obituary.
None. Just a tiny little mention
that she had died. I tracked each of her
children, hoping for some little tidbit to give me a clue.
Finally, in the Clay County Kansas County History
book, in a biograph of her grandson I found a clue. It talked about Mathias Junior being the son
of Mathias Senior (go figure), Mathias Junior’s enlistment in the same company
has his son Enoch during the Civil War and the following sentence: “He married
Emelia Lee, whose father was a brother of Colonel Lee, a well-known pioneer
circus man.” YIPPEEE!!! The clue I needed, right? How hard can it be to track down a well-known
pioneer circus man? Well, it is a lot
harder than one would think. I spent
more hours trying to track down the infamous Colonel Lee and found nothing for
him either.
Eventually I hope to break through the Lee family
brick wall. New records and newspapers
are added to digital archives daily.
Occasionally I go back and search for Emelia and her famous uncle
again. One day this challenge will just
be a memory. A frustrating, infuriating
memory!
This is really neat!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great start to your blog! Love the layout. I will be following you!!! Thanks for your help.
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