Sunday, January 22, 2017

A HEADSTONE FOR SOPHIA ATKIN WHETTEN HUFF


                 Sophia Atkin Whetten Huff, my great, great grandmother, lay in an unmarked, unknown grave for nearly ninety years.  Suffering from dementia and convinced family members were trying to kill her, she was committed to the Arizona State Hospital in 1922 where she died December 7, 1924 of pneumonia.  No death certificate exists.  Records at the hospital in Phoenix are not open to descendants and, according to the chaplain, the book linking the grave numbers in the hospital grounds cemetery to names of those buried there has been lost.  assumed we would never know exactly where Sophia was buried.

Born in 1844 in Empingham, Rutlandshire, England, Sophia Atkin crossed the Atlantic at age thirteen with Levi, her seventeen-year-old brother.  Planning to meet their brother William in Philadelphia, William had meanwhile found work 140 miles NW in Sunbury and they were unable to locate him.  Levi turned around and signed on with a ship’s captain as a cabin boy, never to see his family again.  Sophia found various jobs, working her way first to Nebraska, looking for her brother William, and then to Wisconsin where lived her cousin William Haynes.  

In Dane County, Wisconsin, Sophia met and married Englishman John Whetten, but within three years of the marriage John died of pneumonia and widowed Sophia was left with a two-year-old son and a tiny grave holding an infant daughter.  Traveling with the John Murdock wagon train, twenty-year-old Sophia carried young John Thomas and walked across the plains to Utah with her father and sister Adelaide who had arrived from England.  Sadly, Sophia’s mother Elizabeth died prior to emigration,  but they were able to reunite with her brother William after their arrival in Utah.  

The following year Sophia married James Huff, a man whose wife had left him.  Sophia had lived with James Huff’s parents in Nebraska as she earned money to go to Wisconsin.  James, a good mechanic and blacksmith, built sawmills and shingle mills; Sophia, not afraid of hard work, would bunch the shingles together and fasten them into bundles.  James had a roaming nature and moved often to many different towns in Utah and then helped colonize the Little Colorado River area in northern Arizona.  The Indian Agent encouraged them to establish Forest Dale in 1878 and assured them it was not located on the Apache Indian Reservation, but four years later the boundary of  the reservation was moved several miles north, enclosing Forest Dale.  Harassed and threatened by Apaches, the settlers had to leave their homes mid-winter, in February 1882, under conditions of great hardship, suffering from cold and exposure.  Moving to Pinedale and then Juniper (later called Linden) the family oftentimes feared for their lives from the many outlaws in the area. 

In addition to at least two or maybe three more babies who died, Sophia bore James two daughters, Mary Adelaide and Olive, and a son, James, who lived to adulthood.  In 1894 husband James began to suffer from dropsy which proved to be progressively debilitating.  Son John  Thomas Whetten had moved to Mexico a few years earlier and James and Sophia decided to move near him.  In Colonia Garcia James again set up a sawmill and shingle mill, but Sophia was again widowed in 1903 when James died.  She was fifty-nine.

Mexico became engulfed in a Revolutionary War in 1911.  Their guns and ammunition confiscated, in July 1912 the American colonists were told their safety could no longer be guaranteed and were given little more than twelve hours to prepare to leave their homes.  Taking only the bare necessities, women left everything else behind, including family heirlooms.  Then women and children were crowded into train cars and traveled to El Paso, Texas, where they moved temporarily into sheds in a large lumber yard, hanging quilts for privacy.  Within a few years, the colonists began moving back to Mexico, Sophia and her son John among them.  

Both of Sophia’s daughters died in 1921.  In 1922 Sophia left Mexico for Mesa, Arizona and son James in hopes a change of locale would ease her fears, perhaps a remnant of terrifying days of Indians, outlaws and revolutionaries.   It did not.  She was moved to the state hospital.

Linda Despain called every cemetery in Phoenix looking for Sophia’s grave.  Greenwood Memory Lawn Cemetery answered in the affirmative.   We contacted known descendants for donations for a headstone, and once placed, we met at her gravesite, April 4, 2014 (the anniversary of her 170th birthday) for a simple service. 

Sophia no longer lies in an unknown, unmarked grave.  
 

          


Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Josiah Winslow, 1606-1674, Did he Suffer from ADHD?



                            JOSIAH WINSLOW, 1606-1674

                            DID HE SUFFER FROM ADHD?


"Incompetent" was a description attached to Josiah Winslow, my 10th great grandfather.  Josiah, youngest brother of Mayflower passengers Gilbert and Edward Winslow, was given many opportunities due to the prominence of his family, but he seems to have had a difficult time meeting expectations.

 Born to Edward Winslow and Magdalen (pronounced Maudlin) Ollyver/Oliver in 1606, Josiah was one of five boys and four girls.  The family was relatively well-off financially and the boys became well-educated. Living in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England, father Edward was Under-sheriff of the County and involved in salt production.

Brothers Gilbert (age 20) and Edward (age 25) arrived in the New World in 1620, John (age 23) the following year, Kenelm in either 1629 (age 30) or 1631 (age 32), and Josiah came in 1631 via the White Angell at the age of 25.  Neither the parents, nor do we have record that their daughters, came to the New World but remained in England.  Father Edward died in England at age 71, the same year his youngest son left for Plymouth.

Josiah's occupation was that of bookkeeper, but perhaps he should have chosen another profession.  In England, Plymouth Colony's investors hired Josiah to keep the accounts and sent him across the ocean. As his brothers Edward and John were influential in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Josiah was initially accepted.  William Bradford was the Governor at this time and Edward became Governor two years later.

Bradford wrote during the years 1630 to 1651 what has now been published under the title Of Plymouth Plantation.  Regarding their bookkeeper, Josiah, Bradford wrote that he "did wholly fail them and could never give them any account, but trusting to his memory and loose papers, let things run to such confusion that neither he nor any with him could bring things to rights." [Source:  Robert Charles Anderson, "Pilgrim Village Families Sketch:  Josiah Winslow," http://www.americanancestors.org/pilgrim-families-josiah-winslow/]

I wonder if Josiah had a debilitating case of  Attention Deficit Disorder or ADHD?  With ADHD the responsibilities and stress of everyday life may become overwhelming.  Many individuals have difficulty concentrating on a single issue.  They have an inability to focus which can lead to lack of success in work because of an inability to meet deadlines or stay on task.  This may also be accompanied by an inability to prioritize and a lack of short term memory.  [Source:  http://rmhealthy.com/10-signs-symptoms-adhd/1/]

Josiah's oldest brother, Edward, established the town of Marshfield along the coastline, 13 miles to the north of Plymouth, the year after Josiah arrived in Plymouth.  Josiah then made his home in Marshfield.

In 1636, at age 30, Josiah married 28-year-old Margarett Bourne, whose parents and other family members had come to Plymouth in 1630.  Josiah and Margarett had six children: five daughters, Elizabeth, Margaret (my ancestor), Rebecka, Hannah and Mary and one son, Jonathan.  Tragically, the oldest daughter Elizabeth was accidentally killed at age 9 by her 7-year-old brother Jonathan.

Josiah, along with his brothers, was a Marshfield selectman or member of the local town governing board.  He is listed in the Marshfield section of the 1643 Plymouth Colony list of men able to bear arms.  Josiah, like his brother Kenelm (who is also my 10th great grandfather), was Deputy for Marshfield to Plymouth General Court six times between the years 1643-1651.

At the age of 65, Josiah held a position on the Council of War in 1671 when the situation was becoming tenuous with King Philip, the Grand Sachem of the Wampanoag (Indian) Confederacy.  King Philip's War, which would begin four years later, would be not only the greatest calamity in 17th Century New England, but the deadliest war in the entire history of European settlement of North America, in proportion to its population, even more so than the Civil War 200 years later.  Over 600 colonial men, women and children would be killed and 12 towns totally destroyed with many more attacked.  In addition, 3000 Native Americans would die.
[Source:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Philip's_War]  According to this source, Josiah's namesake, his brother Edward's son who was Governor of Plymouth Colony from 1673-1680, was the person most responsible for King Philip's War. [Ibid.]

Although Josiah's wife Margarett would experience the horrors of this war, Josiah would not.  He wrote his will in April 1673; he died less than two years later.  Josiah Winslow was buried December 1, 1674, in Marshfield, Massachusetts "in his sixty-ninth year".

His inventory included one Great Bible and more than 30 additional books.  He left half of his estate, including half of his home to "Margarett my dear and loving wife," the other half to his son Jonathan.  Then he stipulated that if Jonathan should die without heirs, after the death of Jonathan's wife the property should be given to his four daughters and their heirs.

Mistake.  Attention Deficit Disorder?

Previously, at the time of Jonathan's marriage, Josiah gave the property to Jonathan as a wedding present.  Witnesses were called to verify and the Court ruled that Josiah couldn't undo the previous gift by writing something different in his will.

Margarett, Josiah's widow, died nine years after her husband, in September 1683, and was also buried in Marshfield.  She was 75.  Additionally, two of her daughters would die that same year, Margaret (age 43) and Rebecka (40).  Son Jonathan (age 40) preceded his mother in death by four years.



My Line of Descent from Josiah Winslow
Josiah Winslow, Margaret Winslow, Mehitable Miller, Theophilus Crosby, Lemuel Crosby, Lemuel Crosby, Joshua Crosby, Frances Crosby, Benjamin Brown,  Melissa Jane Brown, William J Burgess (my grandfather).



Bibliography
Anderson, Robert Charles.  The Pilgrim Migration--Immigrants to Plymouth Colony 1620-1633  (Boston: Great Migration Study Project, NEHGS, 2004)

Anderson, Robert Charles.  "Pilgrim Village Families Sketch:  Josiah Winslow." http://www.americanancestors.org/pilgrim-families-josiah-winslow/