Monday, December 25, 2023

Merrie Merrie Christmas

 Merrie Merrie Christmas



This Christmas Post Card was from Nancy Hatfield (1860-1946) to her great-grandson LeRoy Martin.  Nancy would have given it to LeRoy in about 1940 or before.  She was living in Dove Creek, Colorado at the time and LeRoy was living nearby in Cortez, Colorado.  The card is at least 80+ years old.  The spelling of Merrie is interesting - I don't think I have seen that spelling used on a Christmas card before.  

The only picture I can find with both Grandma Hatfield and LeRoy is the following Wilson Family photo.  LeRoy is standing right in the middle between his Great-Grandmother Nancy Hatfield and his Grandmother Pearl Wilson.  They are standing just behind the children sitting on the porch. LeRoy is goofing off by poking out his tummy.  Grandma Nancy Hatfield is standing to the right of LeRoy wearing a little black cap on her head. 
 
Wilson Family Gathering

The Charles B. Wilson family gathering photo.  The date is unknown but was probably taken around 1939-1941.  If anyone has an exact date, please leave the date in comments.
Back row from left to right:
Wilber, John, Inez, Buck, Maymie, Charles B, Pearl Hatfield Wilson, LeRoy goofing off in front, great-grandma Nancy Hatfield standing to the right of LeRoy.  Anna, Jenny, & Mary standing in the back and to the far right - Mr. Graffie and Cora Rose Graffie.
Not sure who all the younger children sitting in front belong to.

Christmas Greetings from 1960

 Christmas Greetings

This vintage 1960 Christmas Card was from my mom to my dad.  The card shows a cute Victorian couple in a one-horse open sleigh.  My parents married on December 16, 1950, so 1960 would have been the anniversary of their 10th Christmas together as husband and wife. And, that makes this Christmas card sixty-three years old this year.  The card is a folding card which gives it a three dimensional effect when folded out. 
The verse inside reads:

To My Husband
I always love you, Darling,
Every day throughout the year,
But our love seems still more wonderful
When Christmas time is here. 

To LeRoy from Verna, 1960


Saturday, December 23, 2023

Stagecoach Christmas Cards

One of my favorite "Family History Finds" this past year was an obituary for my 2nd great-granduncle, Joseph J. West.  The obituary mentioned that Joseph West had been "one of the best and most trusted stage drivers in the country".  To find out more about Joseph West and read his obituary, click here

Joseph J West Obituary


Stagecoach Christmas Cards

While going through some of my "old" Christmas Cards, I found several cards that had stagecoaches instead of sleighs.  I love that the cards remind me of our 2nd great-granduncle Joseph West.  And, I love the colors and details of each of the cards.  The detail of the stagecoach, passengers, and horses is just amazing.  The bottom card reminds me of a woodblock Arts and Crafts print.  The snow and colors look as if it was applied by hand painting.  These cards are probably from the 1910s - 1920s.  





Related Post:

Friday, December 22, 2023

My Christmas Wishes

My Christmas Wishes

I have a Christmas wish list to give to Santa -- It's a Family History Wish List.  I've been a good girl so hopefully Santa can deliver.🎅🎄
  • DNA🧬 from my 8 great-grandparents - I'd would even be thrilled with DNA from my four grandparents!
  • Maiden names for three of my 3rd great-grandmothers: Martha Ann, Jane, Rebecca.
  • Restoration of  records of the burnt Limestone County, Texas courthouse.
  • Marriage records for James Wilson and wife Martha, William Baldwin and wife Jane, Michael Box and wife Mary Fulcher, and Samuel Medlin and wife Rebecca.
  • Restoration of the destroyed 1890 Federal Census


One Horse Open Sleigh

Dashing through the snow,
In a one horse open sleigh. 

I've colorized the photo of my paternal grandfather, Elmer Martin, in his one-horse open sleigh.  This picture would have been taken about 1913 at Elmer's home in Rock Island, Illinois.  Below the photo is a 1913 newspaper article referring to Elmer and his cutter sleigh.  The Sam Love mentioned in the newspaper was Elmer's cousin.

Elmer in his one-horse open sleigh


Wonder who their "best girls" were??



Elmer Martin blog posts: 
Maymie and Elmer 
Elmer Climbed Mount Rainier 
Elmer Martin's Prize Winning Potatoes 
Shaving Mugs 
Martin Family Tree


Thursday, December 21, 2023

Wintery Scene

Wintery Scene
Cortez, Colorado
Thursday, December 21, 1967


This old newspaper clipping was in my Grandmother Maymie's papers.  It was published 56 years ago today - December 21.  Not sure if there was a specific reason Maymie clipped the picture from the newspaper, but I can definitely remember that snowy December.❄️❄️❄️

It was 1967 and my family had just moved back to Cortez, Colorado from sunny Arizona.  In Arizona, I was used to driving on nice dry roads.  Not long after arriving in Cortez, this storm hit just before Christmas.  While trying to stop at a red light on main street, my car slid into the middle of the intersection.  The intersection can be seen in the background.  Thankfully I did not run into a pedestrian or a vehicle, and thankfully a car did not hit me. 

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Popular Names in the Family

Given Names in My Family Tree 
During the Past 200 years


It has been suggested that I create a list of given names belonging to our ancestors.  Below is a list of direct ancestors' given names. Meaning only those ancestors seen on my pedigree chart going back 6-8 generations.  

Middle names are included in the list because many were known only by their middle name, especially the German ancestors.  If several ancestors had the same name, the number next to the name will show how many people had that name.

Female Names: 
Abigail, Ann/Anna(4), Barbara, Basheba(2), Bettie, Caldona, Catherine, Christina, Dorothea(3), Edna, Emeline, Elizabeth(4), Frances, Jane(3), Jemima, Judith, Justine(2), Lebitha, Mabel, Margaret, Maria(3), Martha(2), Mary(6), Maymie, Minnie, Nancy(2), Pearl(2), Phoebe, Rachel, Rebecca, Rhoda, Roenna/Rowena, Ruth, Sarah(6), Susan/Susanna(4), Theodota, Verna.

Male Names: 
Allen, Andrew, Anthony, Balzar, Benjamin, Cason, Charles(2), David, Edgar, Elmer(2), Francis, George(2), Grief, Harrison, Henry, Hezekiah, Jacob, James, Jesse(2), John/Johann(7), Johnson, Leroy, Luke, Marion, Martin(2), Matthew(2), Mathias, Michael(7), Miller, Monroe, Nathan(2), Neal, Phillip(2), Riley, Samuel, Stephen, William(4).


Palindromes

 Palindromes

According to Wikipedia, a palindrome is a word, phrase, number, or sequence of symbols that read the same backwards and forwards.  Some examples of word palindromes are madam, civic, racecar, radar, dad, kayak, noon, rotator, etc.  In Junior High school, I remember an English teacher giving us a timed test to see how many palindromes we could come up within the time limit.

One of my favorite surnames on my family tree is a palindrome: Leffel  

Not only is the Leffel surname a palindrome, it is also an uncommon surname - meaning it's easier to find when searching through records and indexes.  But it's only easier to find if spelled correctly.  I often find Leffel misspelled as Leffle or Loffel. 

Leffel is the surname for one of my four grandparents -- my maternal grandmother, Mabel Edna Leffel.  Mabel's ancestry goes back to Balzar Leffel, who immigrated to America from Germany in 1750.  Balzar Leffel's name on the Ship Passenger List (1750) was Balthasar Loeffel.  Balzar's baptismal record from Ludwigshafen, Bayern, Germany, also records his name as Balthasar Loeffel.  So it appears that the surname was spelled Loeffel in Germany prior to immigrating to America in 1750.  

The Leffel or Loeffel surname means an occupational maker or seller of spoons.  In the middle ages spoons were more commonly carved from wood.  

Once Balzar arrived in America and settled in Pennsylvania, the "o" was omitted from the Loeffel name and his name appeared as "Leffel" in most records such as census, land, and tax records.  The name on his will was Balzer Leffel.  He signed with an "X", meaning he could not read and write in English. 

Balzer Leffel signed his Will with an "X"

 All of Balzar's descendants down to the present time have used the Leffel spelling of the surname.  Balzar and Sybilla Leffel are Grandma Mabel Leffel Baldwin's 4th great-grandparents.  We descend through their son, John Leffel.  Line of descent: Balzar and Sybilla Leffel  > John Leffel > Anthony Leffel > David Miller Leffel > Charles Edgar Leffel Mabel Leffel

Related Posts: 
Balzar and Sybilla Leffel  
Happy German-American Day  
Anthony and Mary Miller Leffel Family 
David Miller Leffel  


Tuesday, October 31, 2023

More Murders

 More Murder in the Family

previous post dated 31 October 2017 listed murders found while researching the family tree. To read, click here.  Not only has another murder been found in the family, but we also have a murderer within the family.😵

Troy L Putnam
US Air Force Veteran

Troy LaDieu Putnam was murdered 7 June 1963, while working at a Fort Worth gas station. Putnam had been shot three times. His body was found laying in a storeroom. 

Fort Worth Star Telegram
8 June 1963

Troy Putnam, born 2 March 1916, was the son of Chelsea L Putnam and Rosa Leffel.  Troy joined the Air Force in 1941 and served in the military until about a year before he was killed in 1963.  In 1956, while stationed in Libya, his wife Abby joined him.  Troy retired from the Air Force with the rank of Master Sergeant.  To keep himself busy during his retirement, Troy purchased a service station in Fort Worth.   
We are related to Troy Putnam through his mother, Rose Leffel, who was a cousin to our Grandma Mabel Leffel Baldwin.

Houston Holt

In 1878, Houston Holt was charged with murder in two cases. First was the 1878 murder of a man by the name of Powers for a remark about his horse (Sherman Daily Register). Hous was also charged with a second murder that had occurred years earlier. This was the murder of a man named Beard who has accused Houston Holt's father of being a member of an insurrection party. He was mostly referring to the "Peace Party" or Unionist party that had so many members hanged in the Great Hanging at Gainesville in neighboring Cooke County.

Houston was not charged with killing Beard until after the charges of killing Powers were filed against him. He was found guilty of both murders and sentenced to life-time or a total of 104 years in prison (99 years plus 5). 

To read about his murders and his pardon from the Governor of Texas, click here.

Hous Holt, was married to Sarah Ann West, daughter of John & Barbara (Harmon) West. John West was the brother to our director ancestor, Susan Evaline West Leffel.  

Related Posts:
Murders in the Family  
Holt's Pardon   

Kibbe Murder News

Old Gila Murders Recalled  

Information about the 1910 murder of Fred Kibbe was included in a previous post, Murder In The Family.  To read, click here.  Fred Kibbe was a 2nd cousin to our great-grandmother, Minnie Peal Hatfield.  

In 1945, the Arizona Republic newspaper posted a full page article recalling the 1910 murders of Fred Kibbe and Alfred Hillpot. 


Transcription of above:

Sunday Morning, October 21. 1945, By Ben Avery.  

HANGING in a dark, dusty corner of the Gila County Jail, back under the stairs to the second-floor cells, are two hangman's knots one tagged "Goodwin," the other "Stewart." . For more than 30 years they have been hanging there forgotten by all but a few old-timers who also remember a brutal murder and one of the strangest trials in Arizona history and one or two who remember a story about a rose.  Before the story ended four men died, two were murdered and two hanged, but each of the men who climbed the gallows paid with his life for the murder of a man he did not kill. The rose entered the case too late to have much bearing on It. Maybe it had no place in the strange events at all, but two of the leading characters thought it did. One was the defense attorney, great-hearted Tom Flannigan, now a guest in the Arizona Pioneers Home, who mounted the gallows beside his client to pin the rose on his shirt.

The other was Walter Judd Scott, product of the old New York Sun school of journalists. But even a rose could not soften the crime committed by Goodwin and Stewart.  

IT HAPPENED September 14, 1910, at the old stage station of Montano, where the road from Globe to Fort Apache crosses Black river. Goodwin and Stewart, formerly stationed at Fort Apache with the Fifth Cavalry, had returned to Arizona a few months before from Wyoming where they were discharged from the army. They were staked to the stage station for a chicken and hog ranch by J. W. Tuttle, cattleman and operator of the Globe-Fort Apache stage line. 

The victims were Fred Kibbe, 26 years old, a recent arrival from the East who married into a well-to-do Globe family and had entered the grocery business, and his hunting partner, Alfred Hillpot, who owned a Globe cigar store. They were invited by Goodwin and Stewart to stay with them while on a hunting trip, and arrived from Globe that evening.  About 8:30 p.m. near-by campers heard three shots, but paid no attention to them because Stewart and Goodwin were always shooting at something. 

The next morning Ed Johnson, government teamster from Fort Apache, stopped on his way to Globe. Receiving no answer to his knocking, Johnson opened the door to the old stage station. Sitting at the table was Kibbe, shot through the head; lying on the floor was Hillpot, who had put up a fight but was clubbed, shot and had his throat cut. 

JOHNSON pushed his team into Rice and telephoned, Sheriff Henry Thompson, who took two deputies and went to the scene to organize a posse of Indian trailers.  The manhunt that followed was one of the greatest in the state's history. 

Stewart and Goodwin had taken all of the murdered men's belongings, including their horses, and headed north. Five days passed days of dogged trailing over some of the wildest country in Arizona. Then Sheriff Thompson found the horses the murderers had stolen, spent and abandoned 20 miles east of Holbrook. Then chance entered the chase on the side of the law.

When the manhunt started Sheriff Thompson sent word to other law enforcement officers to be on the lookout for the two ex-soldiers. Sheriff Joe F. Woods of Holbrook was away, but the message was received by Deputy W. B. Cross, who doubled as town barber.

Cross could not leave to join the chase because he had 14 prisoners in the county jail and no one to guard them. However, barbers have a way with them. That very afternoon John Pearce, a cowboy, rode into town and dropped into the barber shop for a shave. 

"What's the news?" he asked Cross as he leaned back in the chair. "Not much," Bill replied, "only we've got a hell of a manhunt going on." As his shaving progressed, he filled in the story. 

SUDDENLY, Pearce reared up in the chair, "Say," he said, "this afternoon I was riding along half asleep. Pretty soon I noticed my pony was following a human track. There were two of them. One was dragging his toes, so I knew he was mighty tired. They were heading straight for Adamana.  

Bill, now janitor at the Navajo county courthouse in Holbrook, quit barbering right there. He ran across the street to the depot and called Adamana, telling the telegraph operator there to send someone after Sheriff Thompson.

(Photo of  William Stewart, left, and John B. Goodwin)

KILLERS: Pictured shortly after, their capture on the steps of the Gila county courthouse are the killers, William Stewart, left, and John B. Goodwin, alias James H. Steele. Goodwin, during his trials, was nicknamed "The Tifier." 

Accounts of the actual capture differ. Bill says the sheriff and his posse waited in the Adamana station until the two hunted men approached about 9 o'clock that night, then, warned by the growl of a bulldog on the platform outside, Thompson stepped out and surprised them.  The other is that Thompson and his men waited in the shadow of the Adamana water tank where they knew the men would go for a drink. 

Sheriff Thompson started back with his prisoners the next day1 by train. In Flagstaff he learned the people of Globe were up in arms and that a lynching party was being rounded up.  He stopped off in Phoenix and everyone expected him to continue his trip by train. However, he slipped out of town the afternoon of September 25. by automobile and landed his men in the Gila County Jail early next morning. It was well he did for a crowd of about 500 townsmen had been meeting every train. 

THE BITTEREST legal battle in a murder case the state ever has witnessed was not long delayed.  The two were indicted by a territorial district court jury October 3, pleaded not guilty November 17, and were granted separate trials. These trials were for the murder of young Kibbe. Goodwin's started November 29. The jury found him guilty December 2, fixing the penalty at life imprisonment, and sentencing was set for December 10. Stewart's trial started December 3 and the same verdict was returned December 6. 

District Judge Ernest W. Lewis sentenced both men the same day. Mr. Flannigan defended both in this trial and W. G. Shute, now a Phoenix attorney, was district attorney and prosecutor.

The case probably would have ended there, but for an old-time Globe lawyer, known as Judge Sniffen who had a penchant for argument when in his cups. He argued the pros and cons of the case with Mr. Flannigan, also with the editor of the Arizona Record, insisting the district court lacked jurisdiction to try the murderers because the crime was committed on the Indian reservation by white persons. He insisted they could be freed from prison by habeas corpus on this technicality. Finally Al Cohen, editor of the Record, wrote a series of articles, based on Judge Sniffen's arguments.  These articles came to the attention, of Mr. Shute, district attorney, who called the matter to the attention of his chief, District Attorney Joseph E. Morrison.  

MORRISON had the men indicted by a federal grand jury and they were taken back to Globe to stand trial again before the same judge, only this time sitting as federal judge.

Flannigan again defended Goodwin, but Stewart was represented by Fred Jacobs, later a U. S. district judge, now retired.  

Goodwin was tried first, this time for the murder of young Hillpot, and received the death penalty. Then Stewart was tried for the murder of Hillpot and received a life sentence in the Atlanta, Ga., federal penitentiary.

Again the case might have rested there, but Flannigan fought bitterly for his client, who ironically received the death penalty for killing a man all of the evidence disclosed actually was murdered by his accomplice, Stewart. The district attorney, Mr. Morrison, motivated by much the same feeling, also would not give up easily. Flannigan appealed Goodwin's conviction to the Arizona Supreme Court, but while the appeal was pending Arizona became a state and the appeal was transferred to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. The conviction was upheld October 28, 1912.

Meanwhile, Mr. Morrison had Stewart brought back from Atlanta to be tried for the murder ot young Kibbe in U. S. District Court in Phoenix and he was convicted and also given a death sentence. Thus, Stewart was to be hanged for a murder committed by Goodwin while Goodwin was to pay the supreme penalty for a murder committed by Stewart.

There was no doubt about this strange turn of events for it was proven in the trials that Goodwin stood in front of Kibbe and shot him through the head with a revolver, while Stewart stood in the kitchen door of the log stage station and fired several shotsat Hillpot, wounding him, then clubbed him over the head with the rifle, breaking the stock. 

The evidence showed the men went out and caught their victims' horses and came back to th cabin to rob them, and that Stewart then cut Hillpot's throat to make sure he was dead. 

(Photo of Flannigan)

DEFENDER: Thomas Flannigan, widely known pioneer Arizona attorney, who defended Goodwin to the last, even obtaining a presidential stay of execution in his effort to save him from the gallows.

FLANNIGAN never gave up his fight to get Goodwin off despite the fact Stewart had tried, in every trial to place the blame for the murders on his partner. The execution was set for March 14, 1913, but Mr.

Flannigan was successful at the last minute in obtaining a 60-day stay' from President Wilson. The telegram notifying the U. S. marshal the stay had been granted arrived only a few minutes before Goodwin was scheduled to die. When the 60 days were up, May 13, 1913, Goodwin was brought from his cell in the county jail at Tucson, where he was transferred from the state prison during the course of his long wait and hanged in the courtyard behind the Gila County Jail.

It was on the scaffold the rose entered the thread of Goodwin's life to soften the hearts of two of the principal characters. 

A fearless sort with a steady eye, Goodwin stacked up as more of a man than his shifty-eyed partner, Stewart.

His last request to Flannigan was for a pair of oxford shoes, a silk shirt, a black tie and a rose to pin on his shirt. "Pin it on so it won't fall off," he asked, "and bury me with it on." He asked Flannigan and Joe Dillon, deputy marshal, to walk up the 13 steps of the gallows with him, then took them two at a time. Standing on the trapdoor he cursed a townsman employed to cut him down, who was standing on the platform with a knife in his hand. "I'm going to put the Indian sign on you, so you'll choke to death, too," he told the owner of the knife.

HE DIED at 10:42 a. m. and the man who cut the Tope collapsed as he reached the foot of the steps, and was visibly shaken when he recovered. He lived to a ripe old age, dying only a few years ago of cancer of the throat. Goodwin's body was placed on display that afternoon and hundreds viewed it.

It was buried at sundown, the rose, still pinned on his silk shirt, the only flower at his funeral.  Stewart was hanged in the same place about a year later. Both went to their deaths without confessing.

Goodwin failed to even testify at his trials.  The reason for this was explained by Flannigan, who defended Goodwin, a man of some culture who claimed to have trawled all over the world and to have worked once as a newspaperman. "Goodwin told me that Stewart had a dog that bit Hillpot on the leg, starting a melee which resulted in the double slaying," Flannigan said. "I am free to say that I believed this story, but the fact that they carried away the boys money, guns and ammunition and also attempted to set fire to the cabin, as their attorney, convinced me it would be perilous to put them on the witness stand." 

IT WAS Walter Judd Scott's editorial in the Arizona Record the day of Goodwin's execution that expressed the feelings of this pair: "For every little boy there is always some little girl with golden hair or braids brown. . . And while it is no excuse for all the things that happened maybe she never gave this little boy a rose . . . And he on his part maybe he never did really stop to look for the beautiful and the grand . . . Still if on the fateful night some good angel had only given him a rose . . .”

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Dove Creek, Colorado


Dove Creek was always just a place to drive through - going back and forth between Colorado and Utah.  And, as we drove through Dove Creek the speed limit needed to be strictly observed or else we  would most likely get a ticket.  And sometimes when driving through Dove Creek, we would stop to buy a bag of pinto beans.  Dove Creek is known as the Pinto Bean Capital of the World.  

It was not until I started working on family history that I realized our family had a long history with Dove Creek.  Ancestors from both my paternal and maternal lines were early settlers in Dove Creek.

Martin and Nancy Hatfield
1916

Our first ancestors to move into the Dove Creek area were my paternal 2nd Great-Grandparents -  Martin Monroe Hatfield and his wife, Nancy.  

View from cemetery towards Hatfield's land

Martin and Nancy moved to Dove Creek from Oklahoma in 1916.  Just two years later in 1918, Martin died at his home in Dove Creek.  According to Martin's obituary, "A plot of ground was selected on his farm for a cemetery" and he became the first person buried in the new Dove Creek Cemetery.  

The plaque attached to the headstone reads:
Martin M. Hatfield
1857-1918
First Grave in Cemetery

Martin M. and Nancy Hatfield

Obituary for Martin Monroe Hatfield:

The funeral services of Martin M. Hatfield, who died suddenly at Dove Creek Friday, were held at the Dove Creek school house Tuesday afternoon and were conducted by Rev. C. L. Flanders of the Dolores Baptist church. Music was furnished by a mixed quartet composed of O. J. Shultz, wife and daughter and Mr. McConnell. A large concourse of people were present to bear testimony of the esteem in which the deceased was held. His remains were laid to rest in the new cemetery at Dove Creek.
Martin Monroe Hatfield was born in Boone County, Iowa, April 18, 1857 and died at his home in Dove Creek, Colorado, May 31, 1918, at the age of 61 years, 1 month and 13 days. In early manhood he became a Christian and united with the Baptist Church and proved himself a good true Christian man. At the time of his death, he was superintendent of the Dove Creek Sunday School.
On New Year's Day, 1879, he was married to Nancy Abbagel McNeil at Smith County, Kansas. He leaves a wife, nine children, twelve grandchildren, three brothers and a host of friends to mourn his departure.
The deceased was a member of the Farmers Union of Dove Creek, which organization took charge of the burial. He took an active interest in all the affairs of the community that were for the benefit and uplift of the same.
The day before his death, he was at the farmer's meeting at Cahone and in the morning of his death ate a hearty breakfast and went about the place doing his usual chores. About the middle of the forenoon he was stricken with neuralgia of the heart and passed away before medical aid could reach him.
He was conscious to the last and realized his time had come and he gave directions to his loved ones as to his burial and their remaining together in this new country.
A plot of ground was selected on his farm for a cemetery and he was laid to rest amid the scenes of his hearts greatest desire while in this life.
Mr. Hatfield has been three times a pioneer. His first being in Kansas, then Oklahoma, and two years ago he came to Colorado. He loved the pioneer life and it is fitting that he should become the pioneer in the new "City of the Dead" at Dove Creek.  

Descendants of Martin and Nancy Hatfield through their son Charlie Hatfield still live in the Dove Creek area.  To see a 1924 photo of the Charlie Hatfield family standing on the front porch of their Dove Creek home, click here.


Charles and Pearl Wilson
1918

According to a family record, the Wilson family lived in Dove Creek in 1918 when their son, Clayton Ervin Wilson, was born.  Their last son born 10 years later was also born in Dove Creek.  Below is a copy of the family record of births for the Wilson family written by Minnie Pearl Hatfield Wilson.  

The Wilson family lived in an area called Bug Point just outside of Dove Creek.  Below is a photo of the Wilson family taken at Bug Point about 1926.  

Charles "B" Wilson and Minnie Pearl Hatfield Family
Back row: Alma, Buck, John, Maymie
Front seated: Dad Wilson, Pat, Pearl
Picture taken at Bug Point, Utah about 1926

Elmer Martin
1920s

By 1920, my paternal grandfather Elmer Martin had settled in Dove Creek.  Elmer, an amateur photographer,  took several photos of early Dove Creek.  At that time, the Post Office seems to be the one of the few buildings in town.  The top photo is of the Dove Creek Post Office in about 1920.  The next photo titled Dove Creek Main Street, shows the Post Office as the first building on the right.  

Dove Creek Post Office 
Early 1920's

Dove Creek Main Street

Some years later in the late 1920s a new Post Office was built.  This next photo shows the Post Office sharing a building with the General Store.  Elmer was part owner in the General Store.  Below that photo is another photograph of Main Street Dove Creek in the late 1920s.  The Post Office/General store building can be seen in the far distant center just left of the larger log building.

New Dove Creek Post Office

Dove Creek Main Street

Elmer had a large farm just north of Dove Creek and farmed potatoes.  Below is a photo of Elmer's potato cellar and trucks loaded with bags of potatoes from his farm.  Next is a photo of Elmer's Case tractor, said to be one of the first tractors in Dove Creek area.  Elmer and his Case tractor were featured in the "Case Eagle" magazine.  To read, click here.   Elmer and his family moved into Cortez, Colorado in the 1930s, so that their sons could go to school in Cortez.  

Elmer Martin Winner of Dolores County Fair

Elmer's Potato cellar and trucks loaded with bags of potatoes
One mile north of Dove Creek

First Tractor in Dove Creek

Layne Leffel
1930s

Layne Leffel is my maternal granduncle - my grandmother Mabel Baldwin's brother.  Layne homesteaded land in East Summit Point in the early 1930s.  Below is Leffel's 1939 land certificate from the General Land Office.  It was Layne Leffel that encouraged my grandparents, Jess and Mable Baldwin to move into the area.  
According to the news clipping below, the Layne Leffel family would move during the winter months so that their children could attend school.  A 1939 news item, stated that the Leffel family spent the winter months in Montrose so that their son could go to school.  Layne's sister Mabel Baldwin and family were living in Montrose in the late 1930s.  Both families can be found in the 1940 census records for Montrose.

San Juan Record

02 Nov 1939

The Layne Leffel family remained in the Dove Creek area.  Below is a newspaper clipping of the Layne Leffel Family Reunion in Dove Creek and a photo of the family in 1934.  Descendants of the Leffel family still live in the Dove Creek area.



 


Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Martin & Nancy Hatfield Family Record

This family record for the Martin and Nancy Hatfield family was found in papers belonging to their daughter, Minnie Pearl Hatfield Wilson.  It is a record of the births for the Hatfield children, also recorded are a few marriages and one death record.  The last entry was added upside down at the top of the back page in 1910.  My guess is that the record was written sometime between 1895 and 1905. This is the only record of son, James Monroe Hatfield, born 14 August 1889 and died 23 August 1895 when he was 7 years and 9 days old.

Family Record - front


Family Record - back

Transcription of the Hatfield Family Birth Record

Front page:

John William Hatfield was borned October the first 1879 in Philips Co. Kansas

Charles Orlando Hatfield was borned March the 23 1882 at Philips Co. Kansas

Lillian Victora Hatfield was borned Aprial 9th 1884 in Juel Co Kansas

Minnie Pearl Hatfield was born Aprial 27th 1886 at Smith Co. Kansas

James Monroe Hatfield was born Augest 14th 1889 Smith Co Kansas

Anna Belle Hatfield was borned January the 12th 1892 Norton Co Kansas

Back page:

Clinton Jay Hatfield was borned November the 11th 1894 Smith Co Kansas

Grace Blanch Hatfield was borned Aprial 23th 1896 Smith Co Kansas

Alfred Clayton Hatfield was ---- Dec 3th 1900 Payne Co Okla

James Monroe Hatfield died Augest 23th 1895 ) age 7 years and 9 days

Minnie Pearl Hatfield was married to C.B. Wilson Dec 24th 1902 at home

John W Hatfield was married to Myrtle Gross October 194 at Woodward Okla

Lillian V Hatfield was married to Ray R Smith June the 7th 1905 at Alva Okla

(Upside down at top)

Anna Belle Hatfield was married to S H Allen Aug 24 – 1910 at Woodward, Okla


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