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Sunday, June 21, 2020

#25 Unexpected. A newsreel gave the information.

The story of events was told to us by my mother, Helen Lloyd many times.  The story always had a sadness of the way the family learned that Tony was a POW. Unexpected

Tony and my mother were cousins. (1st cousins 1x removed).  Although Tony was about 10 years older than my mother, the Lloyd family lived in the same community.  Family was important and suddenly one of their's was in WWII.  

Tony Boynton Lloyd was born 12 March 1915 at Waitsburg, Washington.   His parents were Wesley and Ina Lloyd.  

He joined the military after completing four years at the University of Washington in chemical engineering.  Tony was called up with other reserve officers in August of 1940 and was transferred to Fort Mills, Corregidor in the Philippines in September of 1941.   

In Tony's file, created by my mother, was a picture of Tony in the Philippines in April of 1942.  My mother marked the picture that it was in Life magazine.




 It was there at Corregidor  that he was taken prisoner by the Japanese in 28 April 1942.  

With limited information to the public, the family was never certain if Tony was a POW or had died.

Wes & Ina were at a movie and a newsreel was shown as was the custom in those days.  The newsreel  was showing a Japanese film of the surrender of American troops at Corregidor.   They recognized their son as POW.  The theatre reprinted a picture from the newsreel for the family.  That was the first time that they knew their son was a POW.    Can you imagine receiving news like that?
Unexpected.












It was at Christmas time in 1945 when the family received a telegram from the War Department that  their son had died in a prison camp in Japan on 7 January 1943.

Telegram Following is the text of the message received:  "The Secretary of war has asked me to express his deep regret that your son, First Lieutenant Tony B. Lloyd, died in Japan, January 7, 1943, as a result of malnutrition while a prisoner of war of the Japanese government.  I regret that unavoidable circumstances made necessary the unusual lapse of time in reporting your son's death to you.  Confirming letter follows.

For 2 years, the family after his capture by the Japanese, his family would hear rumors, giving them hope.  
It was thought he later escaped.  Consistent rumors had him serving with Filipino, and later, Chinese guerrillas, where his resourcefulness and skill with weapons were being utilized against the common enemy.  Now it is known that following the surrender he was variously at Billbid prison, Cabanatuan and finally Kokura, Japan on Shokuku island.



Wednesday, June 17, 2020

#24-2020 Handed Down. Shoes!

#24. Handed Down. Shoes from my Great Great Grandmother


In my collection of family artifacts are a pair of shoes!  And also a dress or two!


They belonged to Lois Jasper Lloyd.  Her nickname was Tiny Weenie Grandma.


Lois was born in Kentucky in 1841 and died in Waitsburg, Washington in 1930.  She had interesting life, heading west on the Oregon Trail in 1854, moving to Waitsburg in 1859.  


I believe the shoes say it all!

They are very small & dainty.  

But the shoes required lots of lacing!










I wonder which dress she wore them with!

A black dress?




Or a blue/gray dress?







Or the black dress located at the Bruce Memorial Museum in Waitsburg, Washington?
https://www.waitsburgmuseum.org

The Bruce House-Memorial Museum is owned by the Waitsburg Historical Society




Sunday, June 14, 2020

#23 Wedding. Mom & Dad's wedding


#23 2020. Wedding. July 14, 1946

Seventy four years ago, Helen Lloyd married Don Shaffner.  My parents, Helen & Don had met at Washington State College in Pullman, Washington.




 Don & Helen
July 14, 1946





Helen was from a pioneer family in Waitsburg, Washington while Don was from a ranching family in Dillon, Montana.  Don was in Veterinary College after serving in WWII in the South Pacific.  

Helen lost her father 6 weeks before her wedding.  The wedding had been planned before his death.  Helen had graduated from college in 1946.  

While I have looked at their wedding picture for years, it wasn’t until I gathered up the pictures for the blog, that I "read" the story and “looked” at the pictures.

The description of the wedding was so interesting.   Mother carried a prayer book from Eastern Star, with orchids and stephanotis.  A rose point handkerchief which had been carried by the groom's mother at her wedding!  Where is the handkerchief today???  The bride's mother wore aqua blue gown with a corsage of white gladioli while the groom's mother also wore a gown of aqua blue with black accessories. The attendants were Mom's sister, Betty Race, who wore a gown of pink jersey with an overskirt of pink net and carried a colonial bouquet.  The groom's attendants were his brother, George and a younger brother Dean, was an usher along with Betty's husband, Robert Race.  





The wedding story in the newspaper.
I do not know which newspaper.





Don & Helen's wedding party
On the left:  Betty Race, Della & John F. Shaffner
On the right:  George Lloyd and George Shaffner
Calla Lloyd (Helen's mother)



This family group picture was great!  There are Don's parents in 1946 as well as Helen's mother! 








The best part of researching this blog was finding the Bride's book and looking through it.







The invitation to the wedding.



Also included in the Bride's book was a handwritten list. Typical of Helen to include all information,  the headings were Present received, Article, Sent by, Sender's address, Where bought, Thank you written.  The list includes gifts given at her wedding showers. There is also a list for announcements, including addresses.  Which is pretty informative for a genealogist looking for information on relatives in 1946!

Mother wrote in the book about getting her engagement ring.  (information for another blog!)

There were newspaper articles/notices about her wedding showers, and a luncheon where she was honored.

Helen even filled out a brief family tree for the bride and the groom.  Limited information, but even in 1946 my mom knew her genealogy!

In the book was a listing of the wedding party.  Since her father, George Marvin Lloyd, passed away 6 weeks before the wedding; her cousin Milton Lloyd walked her down the aisle standing in for her father.  An interesting note written by Mom;  "After wedding rehearsal the wedding party went out home and were served ice cream & cake.  After that they got served something a mite stronger.  Don initiated some of the new glasses we got as wedding presents."

The Bride's book also was used as a guest register.  

And a list of all the gifts received and from whom received! 

Included in the book is the diary of their honeymoon! (another blog perhaps???)





Saturday, June 13, 2020

#22-2020. Uncertain Thomas Lloyd & Revolutionary War


22-2020.  Uncertain.  Thomas Lloyd


Was he a Revolutionary War Soldier or Not?


Thomas Lloyd is my 4th great grandfather.  


The extensive Lloyd files that I inherited contain information that he was a Revolutionary War solider.  


In the 1840 Census of Grainger County, Thomas Loyd is not listed as a pensioner for Revolutionary war or military service.


I believe this note is from Angeline Lloyd Aldrich:  Thomas Lloyd, Revolutionary soldier, was appointed Lieutenant in the Revolutionary War, April 9, 1781 and served to April 17, 1785 in the North Carolina Brigade.  


Angeline was the great granddaughter of Thomas.  Angeline was approved for admission to the Daughter of the American Revolution  (DAR) in 1924.


Thomas Lloyd’s grave in Grainger County, Tennessee was photographed in the 1920’s by  Angeline Lloyd when she made a genealogy trip to Tennessee.  I would suspect she made the genealogy trip to research information for her application to DAR.



Angeline Lloyd Aldrich 








Thomas’s grave in Grainger County, Tennessee was honored on 30 April 1954 as a Revolutionary War soldier.  It is interesting that several of his descendants attended the ceremony.  Since he had 12 children, I suspect some descendants were living in Tennessee at that time.


Thomas Lloyd's headstone







The newspaper article in The Knoxville Journal, Friday, April 30, 1954














Military information on Thomas Lloyd.  Is it accurate?  More research is needed.  The children are correct but I need further confirmation on his military service.  This record is the first time I ever saw a middle initial used.  The family files of information do not have a middle name or initial.






Lloyd, Thomas S  (b 12-26-1763 NC/d 4-15-1857 Grainger Co.) Bur in Lloyd Family Cem on farm of Henry Cabbage at Rutledge, TN, 4 mi S Rutledge on Hwy to Jefferson City, TN.  Grave marked 1856.  Rev. Sol. appointed Lt 4-9-1781 in NC Brigade.  Served to 4-17-1785.  m 1785 MARTHA JANE McCULLOUGH b 1-8-1768/d 4-28-1785 and bur near Rutledge, TN.  Ch:  George; James b 12-4-1787 m 1820 Elizabeth McNair; John b 8-22-1796 m Nancy Walker; Elizabeth b 1798 m Charles Cates; Robert b 10-17-1800 m Sarah Gibbs; Anna b 2-20-1803 m Benjamin Mitchell; Deborah m Pierce Cody; Joseph; Abner; Polly.

Ref:  DAR #447538; Office of Sec. of State, NC  TN DAR 41-41 Yearbook, p 102; SR 41-42, 42-43

Roster of Soldiers and Patriots of the American Revolution, Buried in Tennessee 1974, complied by Lucy Womack Bates, Chairman.  revised 1979 by Helen Crawford Marsh.  Published by Tennessee Society, NSDAR pages 106-107



Yet the DAR will not allow any other descendants to join under his name until further and accurate military service is documented. 


I am uncertain if Thomas Lloyd actually served in the Revolutionary War.  Genealogists have been looking for his parents, including Angeline.  We are uncertain about so much of Thomas Lloyd’s history.  




Saturday, May 23, 2020

#21-2020. Tombstone-Wimsett Tombstone

#21-2020. Tombstone. Wimsett Tombstone in Columbus Montana cemetery


Wimsett Memorial 














 Stephen and Sarah Wimsett are my husband, Leroy’s great great grandparents.

Stephen Wimsett and his wife, Sarah, emigrated to the United States from England in 1871.  He settled first in Michigan but headed west to Beaverhead County, Montana and finally settling in Stillwater County, Montana in 1886.  Stephen gained citizenship in 1889.   He received a homestead patent on 20 April 1892.  

Sarah died on 9 December 1905.  She is buried at the Mountain View Cemetery at Columbus Montana.  When her husband Stephen died on 14 March 1920.  The headstones marking their graves are plain.  But the family memorial tombstone is unique.  It is likely that Stephen created the tombstone memorial for his wife.  









A newspaper article on the sandstone headstone from the Billings (MT) Gazette of 2 June 2013.



Tales from the tombs
Gravesites offer glimpse into difficulty of early Montana life

…………..At the southwest corner of the town of Columbus sits the Mountain View Cemetery, filled with the graves of the towns earliest residents and on one side dotted with its newer ones. Many of them date to the early 1900s, as the town of Columbus began to grow. While there are more than 100 graves in the cemetery, about 30 of them stand out.  Made from sandstone blocks pulled from a quarry north of town, the 31 grave markers are intricately carved logs and trees and were all created in the first 20 years of the 1900s.  They range in size from a few feet to more than 12 feet tall, but all feature exacting detail in a very similar style. Most are either carvings of several stacked logs with a partially unrolled scroll bearing the name of the deceased or an upright dead tree trunk adorned with items such as anchors or clasped hands.  According to the National Register of Historic Places, all of them were most likely created by one of two skilled Italian stone masons in the area, either Michael Jacobs or Pasqual Petosa.  Jacobs managed the nearby quarry and eventually opened a monument business while Petosa worked at the quarry, likely stockpiling sandstone blocks, which he used to open his own monument company. While the log-and-tree-style tombstones can be found elsewhere in the United States, the Columbus cemetery has the highest concentration of them anywhere in Montana.  The 12-foot-tall stump carved for the Wimsett family is also the oldest of the three large free-standing markers.  "The earliest is the 1903 Wimsett tree stump, a massive and ornate marker that was carved in Columbus and later exhibited at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair," the historic register said. "...At about 12 feet in height with it's impressive array of carvings, the Wimsett tree stump appears overwhelming yet fragile within the cemetery."None of the sandstone carvings date past the 1920s, when both Jacobs and Petosa passed away, although their work can be found in other cemeteries through the state, including in the nearby Nye, Absarokee and Red Lodge cemeteries……..

Read more:
: viewed 19 May 2020)

Saturday, May 16, 2020

#20-2020 Travel From France to Nova Scotia in 1752



#20-2020  Travel  From France to Nova Scotia in 1752

Travel by our ancestors was not always easy.  It is hard to imagine traveling in the 1700’s, the 1800’s and even the 1900’s.  It is amazing how mobile people were.  And why would people travel to a foreign country?  The majority of time it was due to economics, political or religious motives that encouraged or forced travel.

My 5th great grandfather, George Fredric Fainot traveled from France to Nova Scotia in 1752 aboard the "Sally".  Family information in the Shaffner Bible provided the information to research George Friedrich Fainot.  He was 24 years old, a gunsmith and originally from Montbeliard, France.  

George boarded The "Sally" which left Rotterdam (Netherlands) on 30 May 1752 with 258 passengers.  The Captain was John Robinson who died on the voyage.  It arrived in Halifax, Nova Scotia between 26 August and 6 September 1752 with 218 passengers.  The passengers could not disembark until the 26th of September 1752 because of the sickness or housing for the passengers.  

As with many emigrations, a recruiter was involved.  The recruiter may have received money for each person recruited.

From the recruiter (John Dick) of Foreign Protestants for the England Board of Trade:
Emigration in 1751:

Immediately I started preparing for the next year. I had six agents recruiting in Germany, Switzerland and France. I procured passports from the King of Prussia and from the Netherlands to speed up my recruits’ transport down the Rhine. I also made improvements to the shipping arrangements. I had ventilators installed on the ships. And I made changes to the food carried on the ships to make it more suitable for people unused to eating salt meat. I made sure that extra water was carried. Still, it is expected that some people will die before reaching Halifax, as the journey is long - as much as three months - and arduous. We can only try to minimize the loss. 

(http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/edu/ViewLoitLo.do;jsessionid=427D39AC9AF41E233AB6A4507508ADE4?method=preview&lang=EN&id=12560 : viewed 16 May 2020)



I could not find a picture of "Sally", but one very similar, the "Gale".






George lived in Nova Scotia and married Francisca Menico (Menegaux) in 1753.  About 1756 they moved to New York, and five year later moving to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

Can you imagine spending three and half (3 1/2) months on this ship?  Can you imagine the stormy seas and waves?  Can you imagine the food?  Can you imagine the conditions, the smell and hope of survival?  Can you imagine seeing land?

And the recruits boarded a ship knowing the conditions.  




Friday, May 8, 2020

#19 Service. Helen Lloyd Shaffner


#19 Service.  Helen Lloyd Shaffner

“Service is the price I pay for the spot I occupy”

 These words were spoken by my mother, Helen Lloyd Shaffner, when honored in 1984 as Women of the Year in Dillon, Montana.





Helen was born 14 August 1924 in Waitsburg, Washington where her great great grandparents had settled in 1859.  Her mother, Mary Caroline Summers and George Marvin Lloyd had married in 1918.  

Graduating from high school in 1942, Helen went off to college at Washington State College in Pullman, Washington.  Helen made her first scrapbook in 1933, continuing her scrapbooking with a scrapbook of her first year of college.   Scrapbooks and keeping family history began early in her life.











Helen joined the Pi Kappa Delta sorority and graduated with a degree in sociology in 1946. But along the way, she met a student in veterinary medicine from Dillon, Montana.  They say opposites attract and I believe this to be true.  Don was born to a ranching family, grew up herding sheep, loved animals, work and had served in WWII.  Helen was born to a farming family but had allergies to animals, hated horses (bucked or fell off one), played the piano and sewed.  When they married in 1946 and she visited Dillon, Montana during the Labor Day weekend, she was shocked to see people drinking liquor as well as probably other various things that might have occurred during the “famous weekend”.  


They moved to Dillon in 1949 after Don graduated from Veterinary School as he was anxious to get back to his beloved Beaverhead County.  Life as a veterinarian was varied from day to day and the county was large with lots of cattle; so Don was often gone for hours and maybe not around much during calving season.  Helen found her niche in Dillon.  

 As her daughters grew and became involved Helen was right there to volunteer, from serving as troop leader in Girl Scouts, serving as President of the local PTA and also finding time to serve on the Presbyterian church session.  Helen served as Presbyterian church organist (and backup organist) for over 40 years. She last played for church on Mother's Day, 14 May 1995.  She always found time to play for a wedding or a funeral.  The first wedding that she played for was in 1945 in Waitsburg!  She thought her daughters needed to play the piano so she began teaching them, which progressed to her teaching piano to many others.  As a member of the community she served as a member of the Barrett Hospital Auxiliary.  She also served as a member and officer of in the local chapter of P.E.O.; as well at the Cattlewomen’s group (former Cowbelles).  When Dillon formed a Community Orchestra, Helen joined and played the timpani, an instrument she had played in college.  

She was Don’s partner in life, always supporting him.  As a partner in the Veterinary Hospital, Helen was also the bookkeeper.  Supporting her husband meant that she also was a member of the Montana Veterinary Medical Association Auxiliary, and served as President.  Don was involved in the Inter-Mountain Veterinary Association so naturally Helen joined their auxiliary and served as President.  The next step was then serving as the national secretary for the American Veterinary Medical Association Auxiliary in 1964.  



Don & Helen
1986



Supporting her daughters meant that Helen rode the ski bus every Saturday while they took lessons at Rainy Mountain (Maverick Mountain).  Somehow she had learned that kids were unruly on the bus & kids were being teased, which made it hard for the bus driver to concentrate on driving snowy roads.  Helen stepped up to serve! 

Don came home one day and decided that there was a girl at a ranch, over 60 miles from Dillon that needed a place to live during the week while attending high school.  Why of course; Helen stepped up to help and provided a room.   Since Helen was often alone with 2 small girls, it was perfect.  The girls got an older “sister”, Helen got some help but more important Helen provided a home for others.  Over the years 3 girls attended school, and lived with the Shaffner’s.  Helen never thought twice about helping out.



The "Bonus" daughters, 1996 at Don & Helen's 50th Wedding Anniversary Celebration
Lynn, Elaine and Heidi 



And then her husband realized his dream of owning a ranch.   Now Helen added the job of bookkeeper for the ranch and providing saddlebag lunches for riders, meals for branding crews and hauling lunches to the crew trailing cattle.  

Helen's knack for hauling food is legendary! 
 Sometimes it was 60 miles to find the crew!
She always had plenty of food, no one ever went hungry!




It must have a large gathering, look at the steaks!
Helen was also manning the BBQ grill at the ranch.





When you own a ranch, horses are involved.  Helen did not like horses.
This is the only picture of her on a horse!




As a woman who had lived through World War II, Helen was thrifty.  Her sewing talents included sewing clothes for her daughters, remaking clothes from others, as well as quilts. 

Living through hard times, Helen was very compassionate.  She served her community in so many ways.  One of which was food.  Food was one of Helen’s best talents.  She made sure that there was food on the table for every meal, homemade.  She was always cooking or baking; cookies, pies for the freezer.  We had a salad my sister and I dubbed the “dead salad” because whenever it appeared on the counter or refrigerator, we asked who died.  Helen was always taking food to a family who had had a death.  Don’s father ate dinner with them for 20+ years.  Living to 103 years old, when he could no longer drive, Helen took food to him.  Helen always included others at her dinner table, often sharing with a couple of widowed men who helped Don.  Holiday dinner tables were often shared with friends in the community that had no family to gather with.




Helen Lloyd Shaffner more than paid for the spot she occupied.


“Service is the price I pay for the spot I occupy”

Happy Mother's Day in heaven, Mom!