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Showing posts with label A G Lloyd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A G Lloyd. Show all posts

Monday, January 9, 2023

2023 #2 Favorite Photo

2023 #2 Favorite Photo
A picture of pioneers

The picture of Albert Gallatin Lloyd and Lois H. Jasper is one of my favorites.  The background is perfect  for this couple.  Albert came west via the Oregon Trail in 1845 when he was 8 years old.  Lois traveled came across the Oregon Trail in 1854 when she was 12 years old.   They are my great great grandparents.

They married in 1858 when Albert Gallatin (A.G.)  was 21 and Lois, was 16 in Benton County, Oregon.  Their first son, John Calvin was born the next year.  Soon after his birth, they moved to Waitsburg, Walla Walla County, Washington and took up a homestead.  

A. G. & Lois were successful farmers in Waitsburg, Washington.  They were the parents of 11 children, with twins dying near birth.  The family had a long history in Walla Walla County and were among the first settlers in that area.  

A. G. died in 1915 and Lois died in 1930.  They celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in May of 1908.

I wonder if this picture was taken in 1908



I think the setting for the picture is very unique.   I don't believe I have seen anything similar.  Notice the ground cover!  


Because it is a favorite picture, I used MyHeritage colorization effect.  

It is definitely a favorite photo!

What do you think?


 

Saturday, January 23, 2021

#2-2021. Legend. Albert Gallatin Lloyd

 #2 Family Legend.  52 Ancestors in a Year


Albert Gallatin Lloyd or A. G. Lloyd




Albert Gallatin Lloyd was born in 1836 in St. Joseph, Missouri.  His family emigrated to Oregon when he was 9 years old.  Growing up in Oregon he joined the Munson’s  Co. “I”, “1st” Oregon Mounted Volunteers, First Regiment under General Nesmith in 1855 to fight in the Yakima Indian Wars.  Serving as Corporal, A. G. traveled in southeast Washington discovering Walla Walla County.  In 1858 he married Lois H. Jasper who was 16 years old at the time of their marriage.  A. G. was 21 years old.  They took up a homestead near Waitsburg, Washington on 9 August 1859, Albert and his brother Calvin trailed 180 head cattle from the Williamette Valley in 1859 to claim the land, quickly building a crude hut, with a door but no windows.  He went back to Oregon to fetch his wife and baby boy, John Calvin.  



Albert Gallatin and Lois Jasper Lloyd






Albert G. Lloyd trailed the cattle from the Williamette Valley, driving them over the Cascade mountains by the Barlow route, south of Mount Hood.  Of this band of cattle, 34 were full-blooded Durham cows.  The hard winter of ’61 and ’62 and froze the ground to a depth of a foot and three to four feet of snow fell.  Feed became scare and only 11 head of his cattle were saved.  


His legend began when he allowed the Palouse Indians to camp on his ground as they traveled back and forth to the mountains.  The friendship with the Indians developed throughout the years.  In return for being allowed to camp and well as being a friend of the Indians; they gifted Albert and his family with many items.  Gifts of baskets, purses, bags, and clothing.  The Lloyd”s often gave them food.  They lived peacefully among the Indians as their farm and family grew.  The Indians respected the Lloyd family for their generosity.  


The collection of artifacts can be seen at the Fort Walla Walla Museum in Walla Walla, Washington. Or online at https://www.fwwm.org



Albert G. Lloyd was elected to the Washington Territory Legislature in 1874.






President Cleveland appointed him as Register of the Walla Walla Land Office.  He was appointed in February of 1894 and confirmed by the Senate.  He took office in April of 1894.









RETIREMENT OF REGISTER LLOYD - Hundreds of citizens of Columbia County will be sorry to learn of the contemplated retirement of Albert G. Lloyd as register of the U. S. land office for this district.  Mr. Lloyd probably has fewer personal enemies in Eastern Washington than any other man in public life, and how the charges against him came about is not known.  The dispatches from Washington only state that the charges have been sustained to the satisfaction of the commissioner of the general land office, and that they are based principally upon the statement that Mr. Lloyd is not actively engaged in the performance of his duties, having left it to his clerks, one of whom, - Mr. E. C. Ross-is a republican.  It is understood, how truthfully we do not know, that a land office inspector visited Walla Walla recently and reported unfavorably.  The office pays $1778.65 per year.  Mr. Lloyd is one of our oldest pioneer citizens, having arrived on the Pacific coast fifty years ago and a resident of Walla Walla county for thirty-six years.  He fought in the Indian wars of 1855-56, and has always been noted for bravery, liberality and enterprise. (Original newspaper clipping). I have no idea which newspaper this article came from but I have found similar stories in The Seattle Post Intelligence on 20 January 1896 as well as the Spokesman Review.



All pictures and documents are from the Lloyd genealogy collection, Sydney Gabel

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

#28-2020 Multiples Lloyd twins


Lloyd Twins













Albert G. Lloyd and his wife Lois Hammond Jasper Lloyd had a set of twins in 1877 in Waitsburg, Washington.  Clara and Fredy were born 6 October 1877.   

Fredy died first on 12 November 1877. The next day Clara died on November 13th.

Lois planted a rose bush besides the grave.  The one that was carried in a prairie schooner from Missouri to Oregon.  And then transplanted to Dillon, Montana and then to Huntley, Montana.

The twins are buried at the City Cemetery in Waitsburg, Washington in Block 56, Lot 2, Space 1.

I do not know if the twins were born premature or if they were sick.  There maybe a newspaper mention of the funeral but there was no information in the family file.

Sydney Gabel at the graves in Waitsburg
Rose Bush



The rose bush at Sydney's in 2020



Sunday, November 4, 2018

A. G. Lloyd Memorial Address

Albert Gallatin Lloyd, (A.G. Lloyd), was born in Missouri in 1836, and came west on the Oregon Trail in 1845 with his father and family.  He was an Indian War veteran and moved to Waitsburg, Washington in 1859 after marrying Lois Lloyd in 1858. (information from Lloyd Family Bible) 

A. G. Lloyd is my great great grandfather.

My research indicates that he began serving in the Washington Territory Legislature in 1867.  Washington became a state in 1889.  He had a long distinguished career in Legislature.  A.G. Lloyd died 5 January 1915. (Washington Death Certificate).

He was honored in a Memorial Address at the Washington Legislature in 1915.  All the Memorial Addresses are in a bound book in my possession.  






Memorial Address Honoring A. G. Lloyd


MR. MASTERSON SPOKE AS FOLLOWS:

Mr. President and Associate Members of the Fourteenth General Assembly:

“Tell me not in mournful numbers life is but an empty dream, And the soul is dead that slumbers, life is not what it seems.
Life is real, life is earnest, and the grave is not its goal.
Dust thou art, to dust returneth, was not spoken of the soul”

A. H. Lloyd was born in Buchanan County, Missouri, in 1836.  At the age of nine he moved with his parents to Benton County, Oregon. There, amid the forests primeval and close to the heart of nature, his youth and early manhood was spent. There, through patient endeavor and self denial, he developed those sterling traits of character and that splendid physique which so admirably fitted him for the stern duties of a pioneer.
In 1859 he was married to Louise Jasper, and shortly thereafter moved to Touchet Valley in Southeastern Washington.
Mr. Lloyd was elected to the Legislature in 1893, and for four terms served the state in the lower house.  Though never indulging in disputation, his keen insight into the subtleties of legislation and his unfailing good humor made him a power in caucus and committee.
Mr. Lloyd took an active part in the early Indian Wars, and became Grand Commander of the Indian War Veterans of the Pacific Coast.  In 1894 he was appointed by President Cleveland Register of the United States Land Office at Walla Walla, and so well did he conduct the affairs of this then important post that he reflected credit, not only upon himself, but upon the administration which he represented.
Useful and varied as has been the public service of Mr. Lloyd, he is best known as friend and neighbor.  He was a man of cheerful disposition and he retained his clearness and vigor of intellect up to his closing day.  Though he died full of years and ready to be gathered to his fathers, the grief that is now felt is widespread and sincere.
His best monument will be the good report he has left behind him.  He exemplified, by his pure and honorable life, the teachings of the Golden Rule, and unfailingly evinced a practical piety that will long be remembered as the best of professions.
In temperament he was mild, conciliatory and candid, and yet remarkable for an uncompromising fairness which could not yield to wrong.  Men, women and children sought his counsel and sympathy, and never was a confidence betrayed, and today many there are who may justly attribute their success in life to the wise counsel or kindly admonition of this venerable neighbor and friend.
And, Mr. President, this afternoon memories of George Lloyd twine as tender tendrils around the hearts of us who knew and loved him, and wafts the sacred name of friend and neighbor down over the billowy seas of endless time to transcendent glories among the immortals.[1]



[1]Memorial Addresses In Joint Session of Senate and House, Fourteenth Legislature of the State of Washington1915. Olympia, Frank M. Lamborn,, Public Printer, 1915.
Compiled by A. J. Hoskin, Senate Reading Clerk.  Page 111-112.