Sunday, July 28, 2013

Walker Children

Walker children - Topeka circa 1890.
Walker Family - Thanksgiving
To continue on the theme of last week, here are the two photographs I have of the Walker children as children. The earliest one appears to have been taken around 1890 by George Downing. Downing had served in the Ohio 1st Light Battery and opened his own photography business in Topeka in 1874. Downing bio On the back of the photograph is handwritten, To Mother. The date of the photo suggests that it was taken not long after the death of Edna's twin. From left to right are Percy (1879), Edna (1888), Lilly (1873) and Fred (1874). The two girls in front are left to right Eula (1884) and Grace (1886).
    
     The second photograph was taken in 1896, 1897 or 1898, depending on which copy you happen to be looking at. The one consistent fact is that it was Thanksgiving. That was clearly remembered because Edward had closed the drugstore that day for the holiday. I tend to go with the later date because Ada was born in May of 1893 and she looks closer to five than three in this photograph. But to identify everyone, we start with Lilly, Percy, Edward, Eula, Betsy, Fred and Grace. Then in front are Ada on the left and Edna on the right. This photograph is one of the latest ones I have found of Edward. There's a formal photograph, but I haven't figured out how to scan it yet.

Walker Christmas 1920
     The third photograph is one of the latest ones I have of most of the Walkers. It's taken at Christmas 1920 at Percy and Jenny's home in Topeka. Back row: Eula Walker Faust, Frank Faust, Grace Walker Bale, George Bale, Edna Walker Burkhardt, Ada Walker Smith, Lilly Walker Leib and Jenny Thayer Walker. Middle row: Dorothy Leib (1909) Bud Walker (1911) Fred Leib (1906) Dorothy Leib (1912). Front row: Bernice Bale (1920), Betsy Sharpe Walker, Marguerite Faust (1914), Mildred Faust (1916), Ethel Burkhardt (1917) Helen Burkhardt (1920) EA Burkhardt, Bill Smith, Walker Smith (1920), Allan Burkhardt, (1914) and Marcie Walker (1913). Six  more grandchildren were born and Betsy met all of them but Sharp Smith who was born in 1929 to Ada and Bill . Mary Grace was born to Edna and EA in 1923. George and Grace's second child, George, was born in 1924. Don was born to Ada and Bill in 1925. Also born in 1925 was Betty Jean and her twin to Frank and Eula.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Edward Walker's Citizenship Papers

Edward Walker Citizenship Papers

     Months ago Lee and I spent a couple of hours at the Kansas Historical Society in Topeka searching for information about various relatives. I looked through the Morris County citizenship records because information I had was that Edward and Betsy had lived there. But no luck. Then in February of this year Cindy handed me a new collection of family documents and there was Edward's Declaration of Intention to become a citizen. I hadn't found it in Morris County because he had filed it in Davis County. After a quick search I learned that Davis County, named for Jefferson Davis, became Geary County in 1889. Davis County was one of the original counties of territorial Kansas and named for then Secretary of War Davis in Franklin Pierce's administration. (I don't think I've quite recovered from Kansas having a county named for the president of the confederacy. John W. Geary on the other hand was briefly Kansas territorial governor appointed by Pierce and then served as a general in the Union Army.) The papers are dated June 25, 1870.
Percy Walker circa 1899, age 20.

     Edward and Betsy were married on May 31, 1871 in Morris County or at least that's the assumption. But I haven't found any records of their marriage, so maybe I should look in Davis/Geary County instead of Morris County.  There are no pictures of the two of them until 1898 so I've used pictures of their children to give us some idea how they might have looked at the ages of 17 for Betsy and 24 for Edward.
Edna - age 20

Ada - age 15
This photograph of Edna is not one that shows her at her best, but one that depicts her with a great sense of fun. It doesn't seem to be a long jump to assume that Betsy could have looked like this, with the same air of fun about her. The photographs I have seen of Edward give him a dignified air, making this one of Percy an easy stand-in. Edna remembered him walking her to school, doffing his top hat and tossing his cane in the air.  Edward first saw Betsy when he was out for a spin with his friends, probably second or third sons from English families, just as he was. It's not hard to imagine the dignified Edward noticing the jumble of jollity that was Betsy.
      They both came from England, but the contrasts were great, he of King's School in his native Chester, and she of probably very little formal schooling. He traveled alone across the Atlantic in probably at least second class. She, on the other hand, made her way across the sea as a member of a large family in steerage. But one can assume they forged a bond that lasted through a nearly 40-year marriage. Through the deaths of two infants, through the winters and the summers on the plains of Kansas.
Edward & Betsy Walker Family 1898

Saturday, July 13, 2013

William Sharpe Biography

    In an attempt to fill in some blanks in the family tree, I Googled the wife of William Sharpe, Betsy's older brother. Jessie Gertrude Oxley wed William Sharpe, Jr. in 1875 in Morris County. Unusual names like Oxley often tempt me to Google them.(In a side note, there apparently is now a Jessie Oxley who's an avid runner and one studying film in London.) But as I sifted through the results, I found the Jessie Oxley I needed.
Jessie & Billy Sharpe, 1927, Topeka
 Within a more than 1200 page Google scanned book, Portrait and Biographical Album of Washington, Clay and Riley Counties, was a section detailing the life of William and Jessie Oxley Sharpe. The book was published by the Chapman Brothers of Chicago and copyrighted in 1885. Although when I downloaded the excerpt it says 1890 as the copyright.


WILLIAM SHARPE, President of the Farmers and Merchants' Bank at Clay Centre, is likewise owner of the bank building and a fine residence, the latter being situated at the intersection of Sixth and Dexter streets. Mr. Sharpe is of English birth and parentage, having first opened his eyes to the light at New Bolingbroke, Lincolnshire, England, Sept. 30, 1851. As a boy he was ambitious and bright beyond his years, and at the age of fourteen went alone to the great city of London and commenced working at whatever he could find to do to earn an honest living. He was first an errand boy then a grocer's clerk, and finally resolved upon coming to America with his parents, who, upon reaching the United States, made their way directly to Kansas, settling in Junction City in March, 1870.
             This is almost all new information for me. The Sharpes lived near Mareham le Fen, an area a good 130 miles north of London. One of the notes in my copy of the Sharpe Bible is that William at the age of 18 was baptized at a large Baptist Church in London, close to the Thames and Parliament. That fact has always been an oddity to me because first it was in London, second it wasn't a Methodist Church and third Methodist Church believes you only need one Baptism. My thought was that the family might have been in London to book their passage to America. But the fact that I like the most is the date of travel to America as March 1870. The various Sharpes when responding to the census taker's questions about when they emigrated, give a range of dates from 1869 to 1871. No one is consistent. The question regarding year of immigration doesn't appear until the 1890 census, many of which were destroyed in a fire. I haven't found any US Census forms for the Sharpes from that census. By the 1900 census, more than 30 years had passed.

Later, the parents of our subject removed to Morris County, Kan., and William commenced working for B. Rockwell, of Junction City, with whom he remained two years and secured an education by attending a night-school. Subsequently he became the employee of Hall and Porter, druggists, with whom he remained three years. In the meantime he was married Dec. 4, 1875, to Miss Jessie Gertrude Oxley, the wedding taking place near Council Grove, Morris County.


In 1876 Mr. Sharpe with his young wife came to Clay Centre and set up in the drug business for himself, being one of the first to establish a regular store of this kind in the place, and located in a 30-foot store on Lincoln Ave. Six years later he purchased some real estate on Fifth street, where he did business from 1883 until 1885. He then put up a fine brick building on that street opposite the public square, but later sold out his drug-store and took part in the active management of the bank on the 1st of January, 1886, although he had been its president since May, 1882, and interested in the concern since 1879.


During the summer of 1886 Mr. Sharpe and his family sought the Pacific Slope, spending the summer in California, and since that time they have traveled over most of the United States.

Mr. Sharpe established himself in Clay Centre, with a capital of $175, but his credit was good and his character irreproachable, and he also possessed the good-will of Dr. C. W. Lindner, who was of great assistance to him in building up a lucrative trade. He preserved his old-time habits of temperance and spent his evenings as far as possible at his home with his family, escaping thus the many temptations which are thrown around young men. He is a man very fond of his home and his family, which consists now of only his estimable wife, their only child, Eula Maude, having died March 1, 1880, when three years old. 

Mrs. Jessie G. (Oxley) Sharpe was born in Bethel, Fairmount Co., Ohio, Nov. 6, 1857, and is the daughter of Robert H. and Rebecca (Ford) Oxley, with whom she lived in Ohio until 1871, and then the family removed to Morris County. Robert Oxley was born in Fairmount County, Ohio, where he was reared a farmer's boy, and when reaching man's estate was married to Miss Ford, a native of the same county. The latter died March 4, 1889, at the age of fifty-two years. Mr. Oxley is still living and makes his home in Missouri.
 

William Sharpe, the father of our subject, was likewise a native of Lincolnshire. England, and married Miss Rebecca Mutton.(sic) They reared a family of twelve children, of whom William was the eldest born, and all of whom came to the United States. William Sharpe is still living, having attained to the age of seventy-one years. His wife died in 1881, aged fifty-two years.
 
Portrait and Biographical Album

     This may be more than you wanted to know about Betsy's older brother, but I had a hard time cutting it.