Monday, January 15, 2024

John Peery Miller

John Peery Miller
Family Historian

Some of my favorite ancestors are those who were our family's pioneers in family history research.  John Peery Miller and his brother Samuel Miller were the first to do genealogical research for our Miller and Leffel families.  

In 1913, John Peery Miller published the following family history booklet:

"The Genealogy of the Descendants of Frederick and Mary Elizabeth Peery Miller" complied by  their grandson John Peery Miller, Professor of History, Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio in 1913.


In the Prefatory Notes (page 7), Miller describes his interest in and reason for writing the history of his grandparents, Frederick and Mary E. Peery Miller.  J. Peery Miller gives credit to his brother Samuel S. Miller for assistance in furnishing the early family history.


John Peery Miller 

John Peery Miller descends from Frederick and Mary E. Miller's son, John Miller (1798-1863) who married Joanna Smith (1806-1891).   John Peery was born 7 May 1847 in Bethel, Clark County, Ohio.  He was a veteran of the Civil War.   After the war, John entered Antioch College in Ohio.  For thirty-three years he was a Professor of History at the Antioch College.  John Peery died at the age of 90 years old in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Below is the information of his wife and children he included in his Miller genealogy.


J. Peery Miller Obituary



Information from the Miller book on the
Frederick and Mary Elizabeth Peery Miller Family

Our family descends through Frederick and Mary Elizabeth Miller's oldest daughter, Mary Miller, who married Anthony Leffel.  Their second daughter Elizabeth Miller married James P. Leffel, the brother to Anthony Leffel.   John Peery Leffel was a first cousin to our ancestor David Miller Leffel (son of Anthony and Mary Miller Leffel).

Frederick Miller (1760-1822) and his wife, Mary Elizabeth Peery (1769-1844), were both raised in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. After their marriage, they migrated to the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia. Their seven children were born in Botetourt County, Virginia, 1789-1811. The family migrated to Clark County, Ohio in 1818. Frederick bought a quarter section, containing forty acres of cleared land, located in Bethel township, six miles west of Springfield.
Frederick Miller died during the construction of their house in Clarke County in 1822. Frederick and Mary Elizabeth Miller are buried in the Bethel Cemetery, Bethel Township, Clark County, Ohio.  

Frederick and Elizabeth were the parents of  seven (7) children: 
  1. Mary 1789-1850, md Anthony Leffel - 10 children,
  2. Henry 1791-1866, md (1)Charity Vantassel - 2 children, (2)Sarah Beaty - 1 child,  
  3. Elizabeth 1796-1874, md James P Leffel - 7 children,  
  4. John 1798-1863, md Joanna Smith  - 12 children, 
  5. Daniel 1802-1878, md Elizabeth Neff  - 11 children,
  6. David 1805-1867, md Sarah Smith - 10 children, 
  7. Delilah 1811-1863, md William Gordon - 12 children

Miller Posts: 
Frederick and Mary Elizabeth Peery Miller    

Miller Homestead, Clark County, Ohio  
Bethel Cemetery in Clark County, Ohio  

**Note: A scanned copy of the Miller book in it's entirety is available on FamilySearch.org.  Click on the Search tab, then Books, and then search for Frederick Miller. 


Other pioneer genealogical researchers in our family:
Alta Sherrard Waugh - Weiss Family History  
Charles E Hatfield - Hatfield Family Record 


Saturday, January 13, 2024

Most Popular Posts of 2023

 There were thirty-three family history stories posted during the 2023 year on clmroots.  The number one spot of the 2023 posts with the most views was about Joseph West, an early stagecoach driver from Indiana. 

In the list below, the top10 of the 2023 family history posts are shown in order of popularity. 

  1. Stagecoach Driver 
  2. 1950's Cowboys  
  3. Find A Grave 
  4. Desert Rose  
  5. Yuma County Sheriff's Dept 1959   
  6. Marriage for Nathan Cole and Anna M Goble 
  7. Dove Creek, Colorado 
  8. Hatfield Family Record     
  9. James Wilson in Jail 
  10. Yuma City Policeman 


Below are some of the most visited posts during the 2023 year from all the previous years. 



Friday, January 5, 2024

St George Temple

 

Several months ago I had the opportunity of going through the St George Utah Temple open house.  The St George Temple is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' longest running temple and the first temple completed in Utah in 1877.  After an extensive renovation of the 146 year old temple, there was an open house for the general public last fall.  

It was an amazing experience to attend the temple open house.  Our family has a long-ago history with the St George Temple through our 2nd great-granduncle, Thomas Box.  As I walked through the temple open house, I felt like I was walking in the footsteps of one of our ancestors.  The St George Temple is the oldest building still standing that I have been inside of that one of ancestors had also visited during their lifetime.  

Thomas Box was the brother of our 2nd great-grandfather, Grief Johnson Box.  While living in Texas in 1856, Thomas and his wife, Clarkey, joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.  The next year in 1857, the Thomas Box family migrated to Utah.  Thomas and Clarkey Box soon became interested in temple and family history work.  In 1878, Thomas Box started doing temple work for his deceased relatives in the St George Temple.  It is from the early temple records of Thomas Box and Clarkey Carpenter Box that the relationships for many of the Box and Carpenter families has been established.  

To read about Thomas and Clarkey Box, click here

St George Temple 1877

St George Utah Temple info:

Monday, January 1, 2024

A Happy New Year

 A Happy New Year
From 1909


This Happy New Year's Post Card was sent from A.H. (Alfred Hatfield) to his sister, Mrs. Ray Smith (Lillie Hatfield) in 1909.  The card was embossed so it was difficult to write on and a little difficult to read.  The card has a One-Cent Benjamin Franklin postage stamp.

New Year's Post Card Back

Postmarked:
Dec 22, 1909
Oklahoma

To:
Mrs. Ray R. Smith
Sidney, Nebr. Box 331

Transcription:
Dear Sister, I will send you this post and wising you a Happy N.Y. and wishing a Merry  Xmas as well.  I can not write much on this so By By.  Ans soon, A.H.

Sideways on top left:
Lillie if you get these cards write and tell me for they are so rough that I can't hardly write on them. Good By.


Lillie Hatfield, daughter of Martin and Nancy Hatfield, married Ray Ruggles Smith on June 7th, 1905 in Alva, Woods County, Oklahoma.  About 1907, the young couple moved to Sidney, Nebraska and lived there until around 1916-1917.  Lillie and her husband Ray were living in Montana in 1918.
According to the 1910 US Federal Census, Alfred Hatfield was living at home with his parents in Woodward County, Oklahoma.  The Hatfield family moved from Oklahoma to Dove Creek, Colorado by 1916.


Posts about the Hatfield family: