I have been searching through the Red Bank Register, the newspaper for Monmouth County, New Jersey, available online for free. The search engine is great. I am piecing together a branch of the Duryea and Dwyer family with help from tidbits such as this detailed obituary.
While looking at older newspapers, I take a little time and browse the surrounding articles to get a feel for what was going on in that time and place. I came across an interesting article that lists the current patients of a nearby hospital, complete with their home address. Such information sharing is prohibited today and made me smile.
Growing family trees from leaves and branches. Finding lost relatives. Solving family mysteries. Concentrating in New Jersey and New York.
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Thursday, December 2, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
Roadtrip to Catskill: Tracing Cumming and Heiser
I visited the Catskill Village Cemetery yesterday in Catskill, Greene County, New York.
For years, I have been searching for the parentage of Nellie, wife of Abraham Brewer Duryea. Nellie died in Glen Ridge, Essex County, New Jersey at Mountainside Hospital on 5 December 1965. (The certificate was acquired in person from Glen Ridge- back when you could just walk in to town hall and do this. You can’t do this now.) Her mother was listed as “unknown.” Her father was listed as “? Commings.” Her birthdate was 26 January 1879 in “Catskills, N.Y.” She was cremated but not buried at Rosedale Cemetery in Orange, Essex County, New Jersey. The location of her ashes is unknown. The social security number on her death certificate is not listed in the social security death index. I wrote to the Social Security Administration for a copy of her application for a number and included a copy of the death certificate. I received a letter explaining that no such record could be found.

I was not sure if Nellie was born in the Catskills, which covers a vast region, or if she was born in Catksill, a town in Greene County, New York; or if she was born in a completely different location. I spoke with the town clerk in Catskill, New York, who advised me that birth certificates were sometimes issued in the 1870s and 1880s, but there was no birth certificate matching Nellie.
No matches for baby Nellie in the 1880 census have been found.
Next I obtained the marriage certificate for Nellie to Abraham Brewer Duryea. They were married in Elizabeth, Union County, New Jersey on 9 October 1898. Nellie’s parents on the marriage certificate appear to be Annie Hyser or Hysen and William Henry Cumming. This was great. I had names. Bride and groom were living in Jersey City. I found several families named Cumming or Cummings, and a few Hysers. But none seemed to connect with Nellie. By the 1900 census, Nellie and Abraham were living in Hoboken, Hudson County, New Jersey, with two babies and no extended relatives.

Beulah Miller provided more information than Nellie. Beulah’s birth certificate gives a date of birth of 18 August 1889 at 21 Henry Street in Jersey City; her middle name was Barton; and her parents were James L. Miller and Annie B. Hyser.
Tracking back from Beulah’s birth, I found a marriage certificate for Anna Bell Cumming, with Cumming crossed out and “Hyson” written above, to James Livingstone Miller in Jersey City on 18 June 1886. His parents were Christopher Miller and Agnes M. Barton. (Barton was probably the source of Beulah Miller's middle name at birth. On Beulah's marriage certificate, she uses a middle name of Katherine.) Anna’s father was Luman and her mother was Catherine Eckler.
Going back to Catskill, in the 1870 census we find Louman Hyser, his wife Catharine E., and their children, Katie, Charles L, Robert D., Hannah, and Nellie M. I wanted to trace the Hysers back further. They look German, but keep listing New York as their birthplace. I also needed to trace Nellie’s father, William Henry Cumming. I had a timeframe for William’s death: he died after conceiving Nellie in 1878 but before Anna remarried in 1886.
I kept posting inquiries on message boards and was contacted by a Hyser cousin. He has the last name, but with a variant spelling. He sent me a compiled genealogy on the Hysers, The Transactions of the Rockefeller Family Association, by Henry Oscar Rockefeller. This book provides several generations of the Heiser family, starting in the 1780s, when John Heiser married Margaret Rockefeller. They were the great grandparents of Anna B. Hyser. According to this book, the elusive Anna B. Hyser married William H. Cummins on 22 November 1877 and then James L. Miller on 18 June 1886. No mention of another marriage to a man by the last name of Brower. This particular branch moved to Jersey City in the 1880s or 1890s, but was buried in Catskill.
Sylvia and Reinhard Hasenkopf have transcribed the stones in the Catskill Village Cemetery and posted this information, along with a map, online. I found potential matches for the Hysers and William Cumming. So to Catskill Village Cemetery I went. I don’t know why, but for some very helpful reason, a lot of the women buried in this cemetery have their maiden names on the stones. I found the family stone for Louman Hyser, his wife Catherine Eckler, and their five children. The stone to the right is Peter J. Hyser, father of Louman. (Nellie Hyser, died 1875, is perhaps the source of the name for Nellie Cumming, born 1878.)
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Peter J. Hyser, 1796-1877 |
In a neighboring section, I found a stone for William H. Cumming, 1856-1882. A death date of 1882 would fit the timeframe for the death of Nellie Cumming’s father. This stone is next to stones for the Grant family. The Cumming connection is Annie Cumming, wife of John A. Grant, 1793-1876. I can find the Grant family in Catskill, as well as possible Cummings families with William. Are they connected? Do I have the correct William H. Cumming? I don’t know. I must keep researching.
William H. Cumming 1856-1882 |
Annie Cumming Grant, 1793-1876 |
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Reburying the Ancestors
In researching John Frazee's death, I come across a little discrepancy. His obituary appeared in the New York Times on 5 March 1852. His wife sued to collect moneys owed to him for his designs, as detailed in this post, and a date of death of 26 February 1852 was given in the case, Lydia Frazee v. United States. Some of his papers, now available online through the Smithsonian, provide a beautiful and unusual record of death and burial at Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. (I don't know who drew the picture. Obviously not John Frazee himself.)
The burial records for Green-wood Cemetery are online. A search for John Frazee turns up some family members in the plot given in the drawing, 19577. According to this online index, John Frazee was not buried here until 1870.
The burial records for Green-wood Cemetery are online. A search for John Frazee turns up some family members in the plot given in the drawing, 19577. According to this online index, John Frazee was not buried here until 1870.
I found a picture of the grave at findagrave.com. Always check here for graves, even if your person of interest was not famous. I expected to find John Frazee at findagrave because he is a little famous, though not as famous as the buildings he designed.
So now more questions: is the John Frazee buried at Green-wood Cemetery in 1870 the same John Frazee who died in 1852? If so, where was John originally buried, and why was he moved? More researching needed.
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