Friday, April 30, 2021

Friday's Featured Photo


     This is an unidentified photograph of a young woman taken at the turn of the century.  It was found in the Burrows file, along with this photo below, which I believe is the same woman.  There were no other clues written on either picture.  
                      Which photograph do you think was taken first? Which one was later? 





  Enlarged version of the first photograph.  

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Bluetts in Tuolumne County, California


   I found this picture several years ago on Pinterest while doing a Bluett search.  On the back the gentleman was identified as J. F. Bluett, and the picture was taken in Sonora, California sometime around 1870-80.  This picture peaked my interest, and I did some quick searching to see if our Bluetts were related to this Bluett.  


  
 I identified the man in the picture from Census records, naturalization records and his obituary.  His name was John Francis Bluett (1841-1916).  Here is his family tree starting with my 5X Great Grandparents: 

John Bluett m. Ann Warne (My 5X Great Grandparents),  Tywardreath, Cornwall.  They had the following children:

  *William Bluett 
  *John Bluett (my 4X Great Grandparent) who married Honor Rodda
  *Phillip Bluett (I share a DNA match with a 5th cousin from this line)
  *Elizabeth Bluett
  *MaryAnn Bluett 
  
Phillip Bluett was the younger brother of John Bluett, my 4X Great Grandfather.  Phillip married Ann Terrell in Tywardreath.  They had the following children:
 
  *Elizabeth Jane (went to Australia)
  *Phillip (went to Australia)
  *John Francis (went to Tuolumne County,  California)
  *Susanna (stayed in England)
  *Marth (went to Australia)
  *Samuel Thomas (went to Tuolumne County,  California)
  *William  (went to Tuolumne County, California)
  *Louisa (went to Australia)
  *Joseph (stayed in England, was in the Royal Navy)
  *Thomas H (went to Tuolumne County, California)
  *Ann (stayed in England)

  

John Bluett's Naturalization record from the Tuolumne County Archives 2 November 1863. 


From: A History of Tuolumne County, California Compiled from the Most Authentic Records  by Herbert O. Lang Tuolumne County Historical Society 1973


  His obituary was published on Friday, March 31, 1916 in the Sonoran Banner.  Some excerpts describe him as a "practical miner, and (he) was instrumental in locating several valuable properties among which are the Black Oak and the Live Oak in this County".    "From the first he was identified with the church, being a charter member of the Soulsbyville Methodist Church and a S. S. Superintendent for years."   "He was also a charter member of the I.O.O.F. of Soulsbyville and an advocate of the best in community life".  

Soulsbyville Methodist Church 


  John's brother Thomas Henry also lived in Tuolumne County (Tuttletown) and worked as a gold miner.  He had another brother, Samuel Thomas, who lived in Jacksonville, Tuttletown and Stockton and also worked as a miner.  Yet another brother, William Bluett also worked as a miner in Tuolumne County (Carter's South, near Summerville).  

  Soulsbyville was an enclave of "Cousin Jacks and Jinnies"  (From Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology, 1994, Vol. 7, pages 87-93).  Born in the waning days of the goldrush it boomed in 1870's-90's and withered in the 1910's after its mines closed. While the majority of Cornish miners coming to California settled in the northern mines around Grass Valley and Nevada City, a small group elected to go to the southern mines in Tuolumne County.  Land and federal census records revealed that over 80% of the population in Soulsbyville had Cornish names:  Barron, Bluett, Carne, Curnow, etc....Almost all of the men worked in the mines from superintendent, engineer, almalgamator, millwright, to the miners and day laborers. The Cornish brought very little in the way of material goods with them from Cornwall (usually only a small bag with personal possessions) but they did retain their traditions including singing (there is still a men's chorus in Soulsbyville, much like the Cornish Choir found in  Grass Valley) and of course, food.  Pasties, scalded cream of Devon and Cornwall, and saffron cake continued on as traditions, just as it occurred in Grass Valley.  Cornish men were actively recruited by the Cornish Engineer R. Inch to work in the Soulsby Mine, as he recognized the value of a stable, hardworking labor force. He encouraged the miners to send for their families as soon as possible, and their presence gave the community stability and meaning. Soulsbyville never supported more than three saloons at any one time, and there were no known gambling houses or places of prostitution.  The community never had, nor required, a full time policeman or jail. 



So, even though they were not true '49ers, the Bluetts helped develop small communities in the Gold Country of Northern California with their hard work and dedication to community.   I am proud of my deep Cornish roots and I loved being able to connect my family to yet another unique place and time in California history.  







Relationship Reference:  Me->Margaret Hansen Boothby->Harold Hansen->Vere Burrows Hansen->Elizabeth Jane Hurd Burrows->Harriet Bluett Hurd->John Bluett->John Bluett m. Ann Warne Tywardreath, Cornwall. 
  

Friday, April 23, 2021

Friday's Featured Photo



   

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I have toyed with this idea for several months, so today I am launching a new blog theme that will feature one specific photograph every Friday.....I have a growing pile of photographs full of unknown (ukn) family or friends of family.  I also have pictures that never made it into blog posts for one reason or another, and I want to add these so that family members can enjoy them as much as I have.  Any help with identification would be appreciated!  I hope you enjoy this new addition to our family stories.  

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  This photograph was in with  the Burrows family pictures, and all the identification I have is "Dolores Street" written on the back.  These two girls are simply precious, and I would love to know who they are!

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

52Ancestors52Weeks Week16: DNA. Hannah Melvina Bluett Schaffer in Dutch Flat, California: DNA Connections and A Set of Unidentified Pictures (Bluett)


 Hannah Melvina Bluett (1842-1938)
Picture shared by Rob Congdon on Ancestry.com. 






 John Bluett (1803-1852) married Honor Rodda Bluett (1804-1863) in Cornwall, England and immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1833, bringing with them their children John, MaryAnn and Martha. Eight more children were born to them in Pennsylvania.  This is the story of their daughter Hannah Melvina and her family in Dutch Flat, California.  Hannah was born in Pennsylvania and was the younger sister of my Great Great Great Grandmother Harriet Bluett Hurd, also born in Pennsylvania.  

  Hannah married Silas Schaffer in 1862 and they settled in Dutch Flat, California. At that time, Dutch Flat was an important stage coach stop, as well as the site of  large hydraulic mining operations.  Evidence of these destructive mining practices is still noticeable  in the area today, although much of it has been covered by vegetation and trees over the last 140 years. 
  Silas was a miner originally from Ohio.  In 1860 he was mining in Eureka, Nevada with his brother before he went to Dutch Flat.  He was engaged in hydraulic mining and then eventually farming at the turn of the century.  


Silas Schaffer from Find A Grave

 Silas and Hannah had a total of six children born from 1863-1877.  Their first son Phillip Henry Schaffer lived to be nine months old, and was buried in the Dutch Flat Cemetery in February of 1864.  John Wesley Schaffer was born in 1865 on the  Canyon Creek Stream where the family lived, and worked in the timber and orchard farming industry later in life.  He was buried in the Dutch Flat Cemetery in 1940. Alice Nancy Schaffer was born in 1867, married and lived in Foresthill, Placer County.  She sadly died of influenza in November of 1918 at the age of 51.  Charles Silas Schaffer was born in 1870 and worked as a rancher in the area.  He was buried in the Dutch Flat Cemetery in 1947. Katherine Melvina Schaffer was born in 1873, lived in Los Angeles where she worked as a stenographer and was buried in the Dutch Flat Cemetery.  Frank Albert Schaffer was born in 1877, worked for Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) and was buried in the Dutch Flat Cemetery in 1957.  




   I received a DNA match notification on Ancestry last summer of a 5th cousin related to Hannah.   I began to scrutinize this person's family tree.  How were we related to each other?  Did she have pictures??  Indeed, she did.   One picture especially stood out to me, as it looked vaguely familiar.  This was her picture...

 Hannah Melvina Bluett Schaffer shared by Linda Sweeney on Ancestry.com

  I had been scanning and sorting pictures from the Burrows/Hurd/Bluett side of the family most of this last summer, and I remembered that I had a set of 4 pictures of a family that was unidentified.  In one picture that stood out in my memory there was an older woman sitting in a distinctive looking wicker chair surrounded by family members.  I got my pictures out from my "unidentified" pile.  This was the one that I had...


   My picture was taken at the same time as the picture that Linda had shared!  I contacted her through Ancestry in October of 2020 and she kindly replied back.  Unfortunately, the only identification she had on the back of her photo was "Uncle Hank" (the young man with the hat and vest).  She identified Hannah from comparing other identified pictures that she had of her.  Linda does not know who the rest of the group might have been.  So, the the family behind Hannah is still unidentified, save "Uncle Hank".  But, I now know the origins of the set of four pictures in my possession.  I shared my pictures with Linda, and now we both have complete sets. 

  These pictures must have been taken around the years 1935-37, as Hannah passed away in mid May of 1938 at the age of 97.  I love the wooden walkway off the front porch and the lush northern California growth.  These pictures look like they were taken in early or mid summer. Possibly it was Hannah's birthday (July 14).  




Bluett Pictures in my collection.  Unidentified family or friends of Hannah Bluett Schaffer. Date unknown, but probably close to 1938.   Taken in Dutch Flat, California. 


Hannah Melvina Bluett Schaffer shared by Linda Sweeney on Ancestry.com
This photograph looks like it may have been taken around Hannah's 60th birthday, sometime between 1900-1910.  She is wearing a jabot lace collar.  



1914 Boy: Unk, Hannah, Eve Sullivan and Melva Francis Wilson (daughter of Alice Nancy Schaffer) with kitten.  Shared by Linda Sweeney on Ancestry.com

   Alice Nancy Schaffer married Scott Wilson (a placer miner originally from Pennsylvania) and had three children:  Melva, Robert and Alice.   I  share DNA with several  descendants of Melva Wilson as well as her sister, Alice (including Linda). This family is buried in the Foresthill Cemetery in Northern California. 

 I'm glad my DNA connections could help me finally identify where my pictures were taken and positively identify Hannah herself.  DNA cousins have been a source of added information on other parts of my family tree as well (see posts on Alexander Burrows and Charles John King).  Even though I'm not a big DNA fanatic, I have been very surprised at how easy it has been to make cousin connections.  They often have the very same questions that I do about family mysteries, and we have been able to help each other figure some things out.  When I started out on this genealogy journey, I had no idea how important those DNA connections would become!



Hannah's obituary published in the Auburn Journal    19 May, 1938
Shared by Linda Sweeney on Ancestry.com



  On my list of things to do once the COVID-19 Pandemic is over and things open back up again...a trip to Dutch Flat and the Dutch Flat Cemetery.  I have traveled over I-80 to Colfax and Sacramento many, many times and have always wanted to stop in this quaint little mining town, which has now given me a new, unique connection to the foothills of California. 

Relationship Reference:  Me->Margaret Hansen Boothby->Harold Hansen->Vere Hansen Burrows->Elizabeth Jane Hurd Burrows->Harriet Elizabeth Bluett Hurd (older sister of Hannah Melvina Bluett Schaffer)->John Bluett and Honor Rodda Bluett from Cornwall.

Friday, April 16, 2021

52Ancestors52Weeks Week 15 Theme: Brick Walls. Who Were William and Catherine King? I Think I Might Know...


 Charles John King in San Francisco.  Written on back: "Papa".  I love how someone (my great grandmother? My Grandmother? ) took a pencil and tried to fill in the faded part of the photograph. I would love to know whose picture is on the wall....

  The theme for this week is brick walls.  I have previously written about two brick wall relatives:  William Hurd and Alexander Burrows. William Hurd was my 3X Great Grandfather who came from Somerset, England.  I have not been able to find any more information on his family in England.  The only written source I have for him is a short obituary written after he tragically died in the Ophir Mine in Virginia City, Nevada in 1876.   Alexander Burrows was my 2X Great Grandfather.  His family in Ireland was a mystery until several months ago when I received several Ancestry.com DNA matches to the Burrows in Sligo, Ireland.  Luckily I have been able to communicate through email and Zoom with my newfound DNA cousins this year and we have begun to break down those brick walls together.  His origins in Ireland are beginning to become more clear, but there is more work to be done there.  

  My third biggest brick wall has been my 2X Great Grandfather, Charles John King. I knew of his life before his marriage and after his marriage to Anna Levers in St. Austell, England in 1888, but I knew nothing of his life in Stoke Damerel, Devon as a boy.  Why did he join the Royal Engineers as a young man?   Why did he work as an architect/builder? What kind of family did he come from?  His Death Certificate listed William King as his father, and the line for mother said "Catherine ? ".   That was all the information I had to go on as far as his family.   Up until several days ago! DNA may have come through again. 




    
The DNA match and ThruLines hint that came up on Ancestry.com suggested that Catherine's full name might have been Catherine Levers Brown.  That was very interesting, as Anna Levers married Charles John King! Catherine had married a William King.  So, that got the ball rolling.  Maybe if I knew more about William and Catherine King I could piece some things together and break this brick wall.   

  I am still in the process of confirming dates and places, so this information is not written in stone yet.  But, it looks like William and Catherine King might indeed be my 3X Great Grandparents! After doing a quick search I found an 1851 Census for the parish of Stoke Damerel in Devon and the town of Morice (a suburb of Devonport, now Plymouth) which listed a William and Catherine King living on Charlotte Row with their son William. William Sr. 's  occupation was Carpenter and Joiner, and Catherine was a dressmaker.  I scanned the Census page and found a Samuel and Elizabeth Brown living right next door to the Kings.  They were Catherine's parents Samuel King and Elizabeth Levers!  

 I was then able to find an 1861 England Census that listed a 37 year old William King living with a Catherine L. King in the parish of Stoke Damerel in the town of Devonport with their children William, Samuel, Susan and Laura.  William's occupation was listed as carpenter.  Knowing that Charles was born in the parish of Stoke Damerel in 1863 meant that he would not have been on the 1861 Census.  Was he on the 1871 Census??

1871 England Census 


  By 1871 the family had moved to the parish of  Saltash, Devon which is several miles across the Tamar from Devonport. And, they added another family member who was listed as John.  Which was most likely Charles John King.  William's occupation was listed as carpenter, and he worked at the Alma Cottages Small Shop.  Both Susan and Laura were employed as Domestic Servants, while Catherine's occupation was listed as Shopkeeper. So, most of the family was employed. John was a Scholar (student).  I think that I had not found Charles in previous census searches because he went by John, and not Charles or C. J. King.  

1871 England Census Occupations


    So, continuing with the 1881 Census I found the family living on Fore Street; they had previously been living at No. 90 Fore Street and now they were living at No. 16 Fore Street (Tinma Cottage).  William's occupation was now a Master Builder and Carpenter Joiner.  The only two children still at home were Laura, whose occupation was now a dressmaker, and John, whose occupation at age 17 was now a carpenter's apprentice. Catherine was enumerated as Catherine Levers King and did not have an occupation.  She was 56 at the time, and passed away the year after this Census.  

   I am still trying to find documentation that Elizabeth Lever's parents were John Levers and Catherine Rowett.  Anna Levers was the Great Grandchild of John and Catherine Levers.  Charles John King was also the Great Grandchild of John and Catherine Levers.   They would have been second cousins! 

   I am also exploring other family members' naval  careers.  Charles' older brother William was in the Royal Navy, as was his older brother Samuel. Charles John King himself spent time with the 11th Royal Engineers in 1884-1885.  The Morice Town/Devonport/Plymouth area was the sight of the Royal Dockyards and Navy and in 1880 the Royal Naval Engineering College was established.  An 1841 Census listed Samuel Brown living in Devonport and working as a shipwright. His daughter Catherine Levers Browns' baptism registration listed his occupation as "Carpenter of a Man of War" (a Royal Navy term for a powerful warship or frigate armed with cannon and powered by sails).  This area makes perfect sense for these families and occupations. The pieces fit.  


  

  By the time C. J. King married Anna Levers, he had established his carpentry business in St. Austell, which included undertaker.   According to "A Brief History of Undertakers" by Richard Rawlinson, "Early undertakers tended to work as builders, joiners and carpenters, skills that translated to coffin-making at times of death in the village."  After the family informed the doctor of the death and the local "layer out" of the body  carried out the last offices and the parish priest performed the Last Rites the undertaker was summoned to measure the body and construct the coffin.  "The undertaker would return to the house to deliver the coffin, sometimes having to remove a window as the door was to narrow." The deceased would then rest in the front parlor until after the funeral, usually three or four days after the death.   https://www.goodfuneralguide.co.uk/2012/08/a-brief-history-of-undertakers/

  Charles John King became a prolific architect and home builder after he came to Northern  California  in 1894. I can see now how he made the life choices he did, and even why he married Anna Levers!  With some more work, I think that the mysteries surrounding my Great Great Grandfather's family in Devon and the connection to the Levers family will be solved.  I like to think he has a family and a more complete story now. I can't wait to do some more research! 

Relationship Reference:  Me->Margaret Hansen Boothby->Margaret (Betty) Hayes Hansen->Emma Lavinia King Hayes VanDuzer->Charles John King->William King and Catherine Levers King

Saturday, April 10, 2021

52Ancestors52Weeks Week 14 Theme Great: "Having Reference to My Trip To America" Charles J. King


 Charles John King 
b. 14 November 1863 Stoke Damerel, Devon, England   d. 12 July 1943 Grass Valley, California. Picture taken in San Francisco sometime around the Great Earthquake of 1906. 

  The theme for this week in the 52 Ancestors in  52 Weeks Challenge is...Great.  I can think of a lot of GREATS for this weeks entry! This post focuses on my Great Great Grandfather Charles J. King.  Fortunately, several journals that he kept detailing his expedition to Egypt and his trip to America have survived.   My cousin Pam started to transcribe these several years ago.  They are a great source of material that I am just starting to delve into.  I would like to thank Pam for letting me borrow her work in progress!   Within Charles' journals  was a story about how he came to America, and the unusual circumstances which led to his voyage across the Atlantic.  The circumstances were very mysterious to be sure.  It remains a great family mystery!

  



My Great Great Grandfather married my Great Great Grandmother Anna Levers in St. Austell, Cornwall  and my Great Grandmother Emma Lavinia King was born there on April 13, 1888.  Previous to his marriage, Charles J. had been with the 11th Royal Engineers in 1884-1885 and had participated in an expedition up the Nile to rescue General Gordon at Khartum.  He earned a medal presented by Queen Victoria, and another medal struck off for those who participated in the Khartum expedition.  He emigrated to the United States of America from Liverpool England on April 26th of 1894. He came over on the ship "Alaska". 




  This is the story of his trip to America.  He titled it "Having Referance (sp) to My Trip To America".  I was more fascinated by the details of the beginning of his trip than with his descriptions of the rest of the voyage across the Atlantic.  His  observations on the remainder of his trip consisted of  daily weather reports, ship sightings and what was on the menu (breakfast, dinner and tea).  One of his quotes from this journal was..."I shall feel heartily thankful when I arrive in New York for it seems to me that almost anything on land is better than the monotony of life on board ship." He arrived in New York on May 7th or 8th of  1894, according to his journal,  so his trip was about two weeks long.  "I have been thinking a great deal about my darling wife and child and I have concluded that it will be very much better for them when they come to take passage on a fast boat for it seems to one that to save a day only of this dreary monotonous life is a distinct gain." 
   I am not sure if he wrote this during the actual voyage, or shortly after his trip.  There is a lot of detail in the little notebook pages. He may have re-written this from a daily journal that he kept during the trip. 


Charles J. King's original journal; first page. 

    
 "After making full preparation which lasted several days and employing all the female skill that we were in possession of at home.  The day of departure eventually arrived for my final farewell to all things that I had become familiar with at home and according to my own wish I determined to break through the trying ordeal of parting with those friends who had become dear to my heart.  I had been timed to leave home at 3 oclock pm on Thursday April 26 1894, up to this time I had kept from my darling child as far as possible the secret of my departure from her and in order to carry this out we had arranged to send her away to a friends house with her great aunt to spend the afternoon.  I shall remember for a great while that last kiss, she came to me full of childish innocence to say goodbye not knowing that on her return in the evening her father would be many miles away, her disappointment no doubt will be told to me on the first occasion that I receive a letter from my darling wife.  As nearly as possible to the time appointed I reluctantly and with tears took my parting with mother and sister and with my wife began the journey on foot for a short distance for it had been arranged previously that we should be picked up about two miles from home by a waggonet that had been previously ordered to drive us to Lostwithiel with a friend and my luggage that walk being the last I had taken with my wife at home I shall remember it for a very long time.  Having been overtaken as appointed we were not long making the distance to Lostwithiel.  We were kindly entertained for the time we were waiting by a friend, and it was here that I took my parting with my wife.  Of all the partings this was the most heartrending that had taken place between us during the whole time we had been married, for events had not called upon us to separate for long together but now through no fault of our own we were called upon to wrench ourselves sunder.  (Italics mine).  God knoweth the heart of all men and I trust that in that day when He cometh to Judge the quick and the dead, that it will be found that I had done what I could to avoid the calamity that had overtaken us.  I think it wise to dwell no longer on the events that transpired at this time.  They are treasured up in our hearts and come what may nothing can erase them whilst we are separated and I think when the time of our reunion arrives." 

Emma Lavinia King (left) before age 6 with possibly a cousin.   This would have been right around the time her father left for America. 

   "I left Lostwithiel by the 6:57 p.m. train to Bristol and arrived at North Road Plymouth.  I found it necessary to change carriages and shortly resume my journey to Bristol where I arrived at about 12:35 am from which place I rebooked to Liverpool but by some mistake due to the booking clerk I discovered on arrival at Birmingham by the Midland Railway about 4:30 am that because my ticket was via Birningham I was doomed to wait at Birmingham 1 1/2 hours which time I whilst in going around Birmingham that part which lies in the vicinity of the Railway station and from what I saw I should say that it was a very nice place, although I was struck with the number of offices that were apparently idle which I thought did not look very healthy for business in the city.  I left Birmingham at 6 oclock am and after a run of about 4 hours through very fine country arrived in Liverpool (Lime St) about 10 am.  I had my luggage put in the cloakroom and had a wash and brush up in the lavatory of the station for which I paid 2 (?) and was very much benefitted thereby.  My next exploit was to find Messers Fairburn Martin and Fleets establishment, the brokers with whome I had booked my passage which did not prove altogether and easy task for which it seemed to me as though no one knew where they lived.  On my way however I called into a barber shop and had a shave which if my wife could have seen me when I came out would have said had disfigured me.  I however felt that recognition under the circumstances would be more difficult hence my object in doing it.  I at length reached the place that I had been in search of and was relieved of my few traps for the time being and after inquiring after the ship, the Alaska of the Guion Line I took a walk down around the docks and wharfe.  The ship was then lying off the river taking in cargo and coal and was looking in pretty good turn nothing particular of note occurred whilst I was in Liverpool except I wrote a letter to my wife in which I told her of my safe arrival at Liverpool. "
  "In the evening of the same day several men from Cornwall arrived by train 3 men and two lads was going out by the same ship whilst one other man and a woman and a child was going by the Umbria of the Cunard Line.  I found that this person with her child was traveling to Los Angeles in lower California and seeing that our interest was so identical it was agreed that we should meet again in New York and commence the journey overland together.  The three Cornishmen before aluded to were disposed to the same room in the ship as myself.  On the following morning we were asked early and breakfasted at about 8 oclock in preparation for embarking which was to take place at 9 am but although we were on pier at the time appointed we found that want was the order so that by the time we got on board it was 11 oclock but even then the cargo was not all in and so it proved to be 4 oclock before we left our anchorage.  Dinner was served on board at about 1 oclock which consisted of soup, roast beef or mutton and rice pudding, vegetables.  Shortley after were pulling anchor and getting underway the Umbria was seen to be moving and although we began our journey at a fairly good pace it was not long before the Umbria passed us on her way to Queenstown.  Tea was provided on board at 5 oclock and consisted of corned beef, bread and butter, pickles and marmalade.  Supper at 9 pm of biscits and cheese.  I retired at about 9:30 pm and was aroused for breakfast before seven as we were nearing Queenstown (Ireland)......We left Queenstown of Sunday April 29th at about 1 pm and between 4 and 5 hours later we lost sight completely of the coast of Ireland and consequently Great Britain."  

  Guion "Alaska" by Unknown Photographer: Wikipedia
The Guion Line was a British passenger service that operated the Liverpool-Queenstown-New York route from 1866-94 and was known for primarily transporting immigrants. 


  I am not sure what calamity had overtaken Charles and Anna King, or why Charles had to leave England without being recognized.  Just several months later both Anna and my Great Grandmother Emma boarded the ship Majestic out of Liverpool with 5 pieces of baggage and  got off the ship in New York September 26, 1894.  The family eventually settled in San Francisco where Charles started a successful building and contractors business.  The family endured the Great San Francisco Earthquake of 1906, and then resided in both Grass Valley and in Los Altos, California.  Whatever had happened in England to precipitate the journey was never passed down or talked about, and still remains a great mystery to the family.  

Relationship Reference:  Me->Margaret Hansen Boothby->Margaret (Betty) Hayes Hansen->Emma Lavinia King Hayes Van Duzer->Charles J. King

Saturday, April 3, 2021

52Ancestors52Weeks Week 13 Theme: Music; Pianos, Pianos, And More Pianos (Boothby/Hansen/VanDuzer/Alden)


My son Casey playing the 1940 Acrosonic piano Nevada City, California 1987.  He inherited musical talent from both sides of his family which he continues to use. 

    

The theme this week is...Music.  I chose not to focus on any particular ancestor this time, but I am instead putting the spotlight on our family pianos. There were several!  My Mom, Margaret Hansen Boothby, helped with this post by sharing her memories of all the pianos that she could remember.  Music has been a constant thread woven throughout both my maternal and paternal sides of the family for several generations.  Our pianos are a part our family stories and  have provided us with many memories that need to be shared. 




  I remember seeing this first piano that my Mom wrote about in my Auntie Claire's living room in Angels Camp, California in the summer of 2012.  Mom and I  were helping to clear the house so that Auntie Claire and Uncle Dwight could move to a Scottsdale  nursing home for much needed care.  It was just a little upright piano, somewhat plain,  but looked like it had an interesting history of its own as I could tell the finish had melted in certain spots.  Here is the story written down by my mother.....

"The first piano I remember was a spinet, purchased by my father (Harold Hansen) shortly after he and my mother (Betty) were married in 1939.  They lived in a little apartment on Church Street in Grass Valley.  One day, someone came down the street, playing a piano on the back of a truck.  Of course, my father had to see what was going on and ran outside.  The piano was for sale, my father promptly bought it and had it brought to the apartment, and we had it all my growing up years.  In 1950 our house burned down, but some workmen ran up to the house and asked my mother if they could save anything for her.  She told them the piano and her cedar chest, so they ran into the house and got those two things.  The music rack and front of the piano were singed by the fire's heat.  Years later the music rack had become smooth due to constant use, but the rest of the front and one side were still rough where the finish had started to melt.  The piano was taken to Nana's house where it stayed in the dining room.  It went with us to a couple of other moves and then to the Lidster Avenue house where it stayed until it was given to Claire and she moved it all over the state as they were assigned different PG&E locations".  
  That little piano was used by my grandparents, my mother and my aunt, as well as my aunt's children.  I don't know how many moves it endured after my Grandfather purchased it off the back of that truck.  Unfortunately, the piano had to stay with the house in Angels Camp when my aunt and uncle moved.  So, I hope that a new family is getting some use out of the little piano that has quite a history behind it! 

  The next piano Mom remembered was purchased by my Great Grandmother, Emma King Hayes Van Duzer  on the 15th of October in 1925.  I do not have any memories of this piano, but my mother does...
"Nana had a player piano which we (she and Claire) found fascinating.  It was moved into her living room when our little piano came to live in the dining room. (The house had TWO pianos!)  The piano had a little sliding door on the front which you could open to watch the rolls go around and it would play by itself.  It was run by pumping pedals near the floor.  The piano bench was unusual in that it had a back to it which you could fold up to make your back more comfortable.  I've never seen a bench like that since.  Eventually the player mechanism was removed (I don't remember why) and I don't know what happened to it when Nana moved to town". 
   
Nana probably purchased the piano from  Sherman Clay and Company either in Oakland or San Francisco.  She did not play.  I don't know how much piano playing my grandmother did, but she did sing and read music.  Her sister Dorothy (Dot) wasn't a singer so she probably didn't play the piano, either.  Her sister Fran and Fran's husband Joe had a piano; their children Joan and Don took lessons. That piano was handed down to  Richard, Joan's son.   Joan's daughters both have pianos, and the tradition of piano lessons continued on with their families.  

The receipt for the Aeolian piano purchased by Emma L. Hayes in 1925.  $675 was a lot of money to spend at that time.  


  The next piano is still in the family and is a beautiful example of a turn of the century Chickering Upright Grand Piano...



"The large upright grand piano that was at Grandma Hansen's (Vere Burrows Hansen) was what my dad learned to play on (Harold Hansen).  It got a lot of use!  The house at 418 W Main Street had two stories on the side of Main Street hill and that piano weighed in excess of 700 pounds, so my grandfather (John H. Hansen) who was well versed in rope mechanisms devised a block and tackle arrangement attached to a plum tree in the back yard and several men hoisted that piano up to the second floor.  It stayed in the house where Claire and I would play it from time to time and my dad would sit down on a Sunday afternoon after dinner and play away from memory.  The piano was taken down the front stairs by a moving company after Uncle Jack died in 1986 (that's how I know how much it weighed) but the piano was so heavy it caused the front 2-story stairs to sway and creak.  The moving men were scared to death the stairs were going to give way!  They rolled (or rather chased) it down the hill to School Street where they could load it into the moving truck.  It then went to our house in Nevada City where it lived in the dining room next to our piano for quite a few years. (The house had TWO pianos!).  Dad and I played some 2-piano music on it and Mary Lou Langguth (the pastor's wife, church organist and family friend) used to come over for a good time doing the same thing.  When our house was remodeled, the piano went to Casey and Ali's house where Fox has been exploring it and hopefully will take lessons one day.  It is now over 100 years old and must have been at the ranch house before the Main Street house was built.  Grandpa and Uncle Jack learned to play on it." 
  The serial numbers put the piano's beginning at sometime between 1895-1900, so it was probably at the ranch off of  Idaho Maryland before being moved to West Main Street.  All three Hansen brothers either played piano, or sang.  Uncle Bob sang with the Grass Valley Cornish Choir and both Grandpa and Uncle Jack sang with their church choirs (Methodist and Episcopal) as well as the Cornish Choir.  The Bob Hansen children took piano lessons and carried on the tradition of music in Reno, Nevada. 


The house on West Main Street, Grass Valley.  The piano went down these stairs in 1986!
John Hansen (seated) with Uncle Jack before he left for service in WWII,  1941. 


  There was another piano that I do not have any memory of, but I did hear it as a baby being played while my Mom worked on her Music and Teaching degrees from the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California in the early 60's.....

"When we were in college we rented a very tiny little spinet so I could practice accompaniment music for opera students.  I could get 1/2 credit each semester just for accompanying.  I had previously taken you to practice rooms at the college in your carrier, but when you got too big for that, we rented the little piano to have at home.  The other people who lived in our apartment building said they loved listening to my practicing.  I hope so because I did a lot of it!  You grew up always having piano music in your ears, whether it was me playing or when you took lessons on your own.  Couldn't escape that!".   
  No, I couldn't.  I took piano lessons for many, many years and through high school as did my sister! 


  The next piano was the one both my sister and I learned how to play.  So many memories of hours and hours of practicing!  "Play it again!" was the familiar phrase from the kitchen or sewing room.  We even had a piano recital right in our dining room one year for all the students of  our piano teacher, Mrs. Rockwood.  My mom still uses it...

"The piano I now use is a 1940 Acrosonic (made by the Baldwin Company) purchased by Nino and Pop (Terry and Sterl Boothby, my paternal grandparents) before your dad was born because Nino wanted to be sure her expected baby would be musical.  Dad learned to play it (I think Kent took some lessons, too) and then you and Stephanie took lessons.  It has had a LOT of use over the years.  I still practice on it 3 or 4 times a week.  It's as old as I am!  It has entered the tech world, in a manner of speaking, as I use it for church music on Zoom...".  
  Yes, our piano made it into memories of the COVID-19 Pandemic of 2020/21.  



"July 3, 1941 10 weeks old"

Nino (on right) holding Dale Richard Boothby (Dad) in front of the new 1940 Acrosonic piano.  I'm working on verification of the lovely lady on the left. 



"Dale 4 1/2 years and Kent 7 weeks Nov. 1945" 
Dad used to play two piano duets with my Mom, and they even played in church together!

    

  
Me, at around age 8 or 9? The familiar 1940 Acrosonic piano is in the background with Michael Aaron practice books on the music stand.  And look at that.  A piano birthday cake!  The cake was made by my Great Aunt, Dorothy Hayes Arthur.  She was a very talented cake baker and decorator who made all of our birthday cakes. 

  Mom also wrote..."When I was growing up, or when previous generations were around it was a sign of solid middle class status to have a piano in your home.  Everyone I was friends with in school took lessons. What kind of piano you had mattered--a player piano or a grand piano were tops on the list.  When we visited someone of the older generation, I was always asked to "favor us with a number".  Good thing I memorized well.  Now, you can hardly find a modern home with a piano in it and most kids who take lessons do so on electronic keyboards.  Times have changed."

Well, I look around my house and I see...a Chickering Anniversary Baby Grand Piano from the 20's  (that very sadly needs a tuning and more playing time than it gets..) and a 120+ year old pump organ that still works and was handed down in the Alden family.  The Chickering is a more recent addition, as my children learned piano on an older upright piano that we eventually sold. I have memories of moving that piano during a March snowstorm to our new house.  Hopefully, the tradition of piano playing and piano music will be carried down many more generations in our family.  We do have an electric piano in the garage that needs dusting off, too! 

Relationship Reference:  
Me->Mom->Harold Hansen (brothers Bob/Jack)->John and Vere Hansen
Me->Mom->Betty Hayes Hansen( sisters Dorothy/Fran)->Emma King Hayes VanDuzer
Me->Dad (brother Kent)->Sterl and Terry Boothby