Thursday, December 27, 2018

Morris connection to Shelby and Alexander lineage in Wales

8x great grandfather Phillip Selby (Shelby) and his wife Margaretta Alexander


Notes:
a. Alexander is a 'new' last/maiden name for Margaretta Selby. With genealogy research it is always good to periodically check heritage sharing sites to see what others have gleaned through their time, energy, travel, and/or pocketbooks. As of a 3 weeks ago or so, I have not had a maiden name for Margaretta so I was delighted to discover a site listing her as an Alexander. 

b. This supplier for information says her parents are Thomas and Lucy Alexander. Thomas born in 1630 in Swaffham Prior, Cambridge, England and died in 1669 in Tregaron, Wales (an ancient market town for its area of Cardiganshire). Lucy is believed to be born about 1635 but otherwise unknown maiden name, birth location, death year, and death location.

c. Cardiganshire (county) has recently been renamed "Ceredigion".

d. Phillip Selby's occupation was a yeoman of gentleman status, owning farmland named "Derlyn" which still exists today belonging to another family.

e. According to St. Carons Church in Tregaron, the old cemetery stone markers of long ago were removed, so only a general area of the cemetery yard can be attributed for Phillip's and Margaretta's final earthly location. Phillip (1731) outlived his wife (1696).

f. Margaretta Alexander Selby lived from 1650 to 1696 however one source has stated circa 1655 with their children born between 1682-1696; married in 1673 in Tregaron:
(1) Mary/Maria born in February 1682;
(2) Elinora born in February 1683;
(3) Evan Sr. born in 1690; 
(4) Riceus born in 1693; and 
(5) Elizabeth born in 1696.

A recent source on the internet I read for their children attributed a "Rowland Shelby" with an unknown birth year and a death year of 1736 as another child of theirs.

Speculation for a 7 year gap between Elinora and Evan could be due to a miscarriage or stillborn or infant who died shortly after birth but not baptized or listed in church records. 

g. Evan Sr begat David (Sr.) who begat David Jr. who begat Charity Shelby (my "Morris" generations 4x great grandmother) married to Henry O'Neill Morris. Thus in Ohio in early 1800s the Shelby lineage enters or is 'grafted' into the Morris family tree.

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Laible cousin Eleanor Tarmann connections to Livingston County Illinois

Laible connection


Eleanor Laible Tarmann grew up in Lacon in western Marshall County, IL. Her later years were spent in Graymont to Flanagan to rural Minonk and Dana area for church at Windtown's St. Petri Lutheran Church.

http://www.pantagraph.com/news/local/obituaries/eleanor-tarmann/article_09a89f3a-d3ec-5315-8b5f-5d944091311b.html

I'm saddened that I didn't hear of her passing until after her service.

Yesterday, February 20, 2018 I had a six month follow-up ultra sound Doppler study of both legs to check for any clots after the saddle PE event in August and I had it scheduled for the OSF St. James hospital facility in Pontiac.  I begged my husband to stop by and take a few photos on our way back to Toluca. Weather was horrible with rain and wind so these pictures were taken from our car.

St. Petri Lutheran Church is east of Minonk, south of Dana, and west of Flanagan to give you sense of where "Windtown" is located. Ironically, there are wind turbines located nearby but 100-170 years ago there were reportedly lots of homes surrounding St. Petri Lutheran Church. The church grounds cover several acres with an old schoolhouse, large 2-story parsonage, beautiful architecture church, cemetery, and a few other small structures.

The church has large signs posted at Route 116 and the north/south country road (I think it is 100 North). From 116, go north 1 mile and as you continue north, the church grounds are on the NW corner as seen in the first photo below. The parsonage and church and then their cemetery are 1/10-2/10 mile more to the north.

Graymont, Eleanor's hometown, is between Flanagan and Pontiac, so from the church you would go south a mile to Route 116 and turn east traveling about 3 miles to Flanagan and continue eastward to Graymont, which is located about 1/2 mile north of Route 116.

From Windtown:




Eleanor's service was held at St. Petri however she's buried at a different cemetery closer to Flanagan.

When Earth lost Eleanor, Heaven gained a sweetheart. (Earth's loss is Heaven's gain.)

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Morris links to New Jersey state history

From the official website for The State of New Jersey:

In 1664 the Dutch lost New Netherlands when the British took control of the land and added it to their colonies. They divided the land in half and gave control to two proprietors: Sir George Carteret (who was in charge of the east side) and Lord John Berkley (who was in charge of the west side). The land was officially named New Jersey after the Isle of Jersey in the English Channel. Carteret had been governor of the Isle of Jersey.


Berkeley and Carteret sold the land at low prices and allowed the settlers to have political and religious freedom. As a result, New Jersey was more ethnically diverse than many other colonies. Primarily a rural society, the colony grew to have about 100,000 people.


Eventually, governing power was transferred back to England. For many years, New Jersey shared a royal governor with New York. The governorship was finally split in 1738 when New Jersey got its own governor, Lewis Morris.

{end quote}

http://www.state.nj.us/nj/about/history/short_history.html



Read more online about our ancestral Morris connections to:
*Morristown, NJ
*Morris County, NJ
*beginnings of Monmouth, NJ


More on Lewis Morris and some about Morrisania, NY:

http://www.boldhearts.com/lewis_morris.htm

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http://njfounders.org/node/170


more from this website for descendants of founders of New Jersey: