Showing posts with label Alabama Township. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama Township. Show all posts

Monday, February 25, 2013

The Tragic Tale of John Abel Wight

Michigan State Prison (or Jackson State Prison) from Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection in U.S. Library of Congress

John Abel "Jack" Wight was born on the 1st of March 1889 in the Township of Alabama, Genesee County, New York, the first son and first child of Noah Wight and Ida May Ackerson. Noah was an apple farmer and worked 50 acres of land that he leased from Ida's father.

Jack's life as a young boy was probably like many other boys in the farming country of western New York. He would have needed to help his father on the farm and yet would likely have had ample opportunity to be a boy. There is no indication in any of the local papers that Jack was a troubled youth.

In 1910, Jack was living at home, but working as a fireman for the railroad and by 1915, at the age of 26 years, he had left his family farm in Alabama Townsip and was living in the big city of Buffalo. He registered there for the draft during WWI, but Buffalo couldn't hold him. We don't know for sure, maybe it was the sudden death of his father, or perhaps he could not find the kind of work he wanted there, or perhaps it was still too close for comfort to the family farm. For whatever reason, Jack moved on and found a young Scottish immigrant, named Anna with whom he fell in love. Anna was a couple of years older than Jack, born about 1887. They were married sometime before 1920 and moved to Norwalk, Huron County, Ohio where he found employment as a garage mechanic. For whatever reason children did not come to the young couple. Still, I imagine that they were mostly happy with no more than the usual problems that arise in a marriage.

But life moves on. Ohio was not the final stop on Jack's road. Sometime in the early 1920's, he and Anna moved to Flint, Genesee County, Michigan. It was here in Michigan where life began to really take its toll. First, in 1927, Jack's mother, Ida May, died on the 18th of February. He traveled back home for the funeral, but his ties to family were now weakened. Then in October of 1929 the world economy collapsed. Jobs were so hard to find. Jack was one of the millions out of work. He may have always had a drinking problem, we don't know, but during this period of his life, there is little question that he began to drink more, and drinking did not make him a happy man.

At home, Anna must have tried to hold things together. Somehow they eked by until Jack was given work with the WPA, the government's answer to the rampant unemployment of the Great Depression. But employment through the WPA, although a godsend for many, was also hard on a man. He was a second class citizen, a government supported drone who couldn't make it on his own.

Still, no matter what the problems, they did not merit the events that followed. On the 10th of January in 1939, Jack came home drunk. Anna was understandably upset and would not talk to him. Here he was spending the few dollars they had on liquor. Jack berated her and undoubtedly placed much of the blame for their troubles onto her. She still refused to talk. In his drunken state, probably not realizing exactly what he was doing, Jack proceeded to pour kerosene over Anna. He then threw a lighted match into her lap setting her on fire. It appears at this point that Jack realized what he had done and called for help to put her out. Anna, however, was severely burned and died one or two days later.

Jack was arrested and convicted of second-degree murder and then sentenced in April 1939 for a term of 25 to 40 years in the Southern Michigan State Prison in Blackman Township, Jackson County, Michigan. “Michigan State Prison or Jackson State Prison, which opened in 1839, was the first prison in Michigan. The first permanent structure was constructed there in 1842. In 1926, the prison was relocated to new building, and soon became the largest walled prison in the world with nearly 6,000 inmates. The prison was renamed the State Prison of Southern Michigan in 1935.”

Life in prison is tough. But life after prison can be even tougher. Jack was released from prison in the mid-1950s and moved to Texas where he found work as a dishwasher at a cafe. He had been in Texas for only about a year, however, when he died at his home on 2518 Seevers Street on 26 March 1956 in Dallas of asphyxiation due to an open burning stove in his apartment; the death was officially determined to be an accident, but the circumstances suggest that it was more likely suicide.

I recount this story here because John Abel Wight is my cousin, my 4th cousin 2 times removed to be exact. We both descend from the same man, David Dewers (or Duers), a ship master who lived in Dartmouth, Massachusetts. I hope that somewhere David is putting his arm around his great-great-great-great grandson and that, even for Jack, there will be redemption.




Sunday, September 25, 2011

Nichols Cemetery, Alabama Township, Genesee County, New York

This is a cemetery located in the Town of Alabama on the road just east of Wheatville, Genesee County, New York. Transcribed by Mary B. Wells and Frances H. Witmer. Image is from Family History Library microfilm 1381729 item 4. [Click on the image for a larger view]




Friday, September 23, 2011

East Alabama Cemetery, Genesee County, New York

This is a small cemetery located directly south of South Alabama Village in Alabama Township, Genesee County, New York. Transcribed by Mary B. Wells, Jean Stowell, and Frances H. Witmer. Image is from Family History Library microfilm 1381729 item 4. [Click on the image for a larger view]

Monday, September 12, 2011

Wheatville Cemetery, Alabama Township, Genesee County, New York

These are the records of the Wheatville Cemetery, Alabama Township, Genesee County, New York that were copied and typed by Mary B. Wells and Frances M. Witmer (FHL microfilm 1381729 item 4).

[Click on the image for a larger view]





Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Records of Alabama Center Cemetery, Genesee County, New York

These are the records of the Alabama Center Cemetery, Alabama Township, Genesee County, New York that were copied and typed by Mary B. Wells and Frances Witmer (FHL microfilm 1381729 item 4).

[Click on the image for a larger view]
















Friday, August 12, 2011

The Troubles of Frank Winkelman

Ida D. Thompson (daughter of Ann Eliza Hescock and Arthur P. Thompson) was born about 1872 probably in Alabama Twp., Genesee Co., New York. Ida married first about 1904 to Frank Winkelman, son of George and Sophia Winkelman, who was born in September 1885 in New York. Frank was working as a cooper in a barrel shop in 1910 and as a mechanic in a garage in 1920.

From an early age, Frank seems to have struggled. He was among a group of boys arrested in July 1903 for skinny dipping in Tonawanda Creek in Genesee County. In June of 1905 he was arrested again for brawling outside a Batavia saloon. Then in November of 1917 a fire started in an automobile at Frank’s garage and spread to adjacent buildings, destroying the entire business district in the town of Alexander, Genesee Co. He is likely the Frank Winkelman arrested with two other men on burglary charges in February 1929 who was living in LeRoy, Genesee Co.

In April 1921, The Times (Batavia) reported that Ida and Frank had moved into the Peter Bartz house, known locally as the Williams place. On 24 August 1922, The Daily News in Batavia reported that Frank took off on an automobile trip to California; no mention is made of Ida accompanying him, so they may have been separated or divorced by this time.

Ida married second on 13 August 1923 in Kalamazoo, Kalamazoo Co., Michigan Arthur Zwetsch, the son of Phillip and Minnie Zwetsch, who was born about September 1894/6 in Alexander, Genesee Co., New York. Arthur was a victim of scarlet fever as a young boy. Ida was about 13 years older than her first husband and about 23 years older than her second husband. She obviously attracted younger men and must have had a very interesting life. We have found no evidence for children with either marriage.

[If you have any additional information on this interesting family or any pictures, I would love to hear from you.]

Sources:

1. Michigan Marriages, 1868-1925, FamilySearch online database with images, FHL microfilm 2342755, v. 4, p. 8, r.n. 22460, image 533.

2. 1880 US census, Alabama Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 1, p. 32D, dwelling 311.

3. 1870 US census, Pembroke Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., p. 53-54, dwelling 465.

4. The Times, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Wednesday Evening 31 July 1918. p. 8 (www.fultonhistory.com).

5. 1910 US census, Shelby, Orleans Co., N.Y., e.d. 165, sheet 16B, dwelling 403.

6. 1900 US census, Alexander Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 2, sheet 10B, dwelling 244.

7. 1920 US census, Alexander Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 3, sheet 1B, dwelling 27.

8. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Wednesday Evening, 15 July 1903, p.1 (www.fultonhistory.com).

9. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Wednesday Evening, 28 June 1905, p.1 (www.fultonhistory.com).

10. The Times, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Saturday 17 November 1917. p. 2 (www.fultonhistory.com).

11. The Times, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Saturday 9 April 1921. p. 5 (www.fultonhistory.com).

12. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Thursday Evening, 24 August 1922 (www.fultonhistory.com).

13. The Batavia Times, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., 9 February 1929, p. 1 (www.fultonhistory.com).

14. Michigan Marriages, 1868-1925, FamilySearch online database with images, FHL microfilm 2342755, v. 4, p. 8, r.n. 22460, image 533.

15. 1900 US census, Alexander Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 2, sheet 3A, dwelling 70.

16. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., 11 March 1910 (www.fultonhistory.com).

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Frank Hotchkiss Family

Frank S. Hotchkiss, the son of George Hotchkiss and Mary Elizabeth Hescock, was born in March 1882 probably in Alabama Twp., Genesee Co., New York. He married about 1904 to Bertha M. Flannigan, daughter of Emma C. Flannigan, who was born about 1882 in New York. At the 1910 U.S. Census, Bertha is listed as having two children, both no longer living. The family moved to Buffalo, Erie Co., New York in 1915. Frank worked as a clerk and bookkeeper. They had the following children that we have been able to identify so far:

1. Lydia Hotchkiss, b. abt. 1905 in New York. In 1909, Lydia contracted scarlet fever and was taken to the hospital in Buffalo, Erie Co., N.Y. She d. bef. 1910.

2. unknown child Hotchkiss, b. abt. 1907 in New York.

3. George Sterling Hotchkiss, b. abt. 1911 probably in Oakfield, Genesee Co., New York. He was baptized in December 1911.

4. Harold Emery Hotchkiss, b. 1 January 1915 in Oakfield, Genesee Co., N.Y.

I cannot find this family in the 1920 or 1930 US censuses. I would appreciate any information, photos, or details on the family.

Sources:

1. 1892 New York State census, Alabama Twp., Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 1, p. 12.

2. 1900 US census, Oakfield, Genesee Co., New York, e.d. 14, sheet 7A, dwelling 159.

3. 1910 US census, Oakfield, Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 29, sheet 8A, dwelling 164.

4. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Tuesday Evening, 28 December 1915, p. 8 (www.fultonhistory.com).

5. 1905 New York State Census, Oakfield, Genesee Co., N.Y., e.d. 1, p. 14.

6. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., 20 April 1909 (www.fultonhistory.com).

7. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Tuesday Evening, 24 December 1912, p. 3 (www.fultonhistory.com).

8. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Tuesday Evening, 26 December 1911, p. 3 (www.fultonhistory.com).

9. The Daily News, Batavia, Genesee Co., N.Y., Wednesday Evening, 6 January 1915, p. 3 (www.fultonhistory.com).