Thursday, June 12, 2014

Double enumeration in the census, part five: Newark, New Jersey 1920

Howard Lutter was listed twice in the 1920 federal census.  When this happens, we call it a Double Enumeration.  The cause of the double count for Howard was marital problems.  He was staying with his mother, Clara Uhl, but was also listed in the household of his wife, Laura Winterton, with his young children.  The hint to check for a second entry was that in his mother's household, Howard was listed as married- but no wife was with him.





Gathering Loose Leaves of Trees

My great great grandparents, Patrick O'Donnell and Delia Joyce, were married in 1887 at St. Mary's Catholic Church in Bayonne, Hudson County, New Jersey.  While reviewing an online transcription of this church's records, I noted that Patrick and Delia were sponsors for the baptism of Mary Ellen "Otterbury," daughter of John Otterbury and Mary Campbell.  Delia Joyce's mother was Mary Campbell.  Mary was killed in 1870 by a train in Dutchess County, New York.  To date, I have been unable to connect Mary Campbell to her family of origin.


Otterbury is a name of interest to me because my mother shares DNA with R. S., who is also my father's third cousin.  R. S. has Ottenberg ancestors from Germany and then Jersey City.  By testing cousins in my mother's family, I was able to isolate R. S.'s match to the O'Donnell/Joyce branch of my mother's family tree.  An intersection between Delia Joyce, daughter of Mary Campbell, and "Otterbury" in Bayonne is a good lead to follow.
R. S. shares an amount of DNA with my father that is within a third cousin range, which is their documented relation.
R. S. also shares a small segment of DNA with my mother, her maternal first cousin, and two cousins of my mother's mother.
The connection between my mother and R. S. will be in my O'Donnell/Joyce branch.



John "Ottber" was baptized at St. Mary's one year earlier in 1886, likely to allow him to marry Mary Campbell in a Catholic church.  I have not found a marriage record for this couple in New Jersey, either through a church or filed with the State.


Mary Ellen Otterbury's birth in 1887 is shown in an index at Ancestry.com.


Remembering that these indexes are not records, I searched for Mary Ellen's birth certificate.  Mary Ellen Otterbury's birth does not appear in the New Jersey State index of births at Trenton.



The New Jersey Birth and Christenings index at FamilySearch.org presents a different spelling of Mary Ellen's last name- Aughtberry instead of Otterbury.




Mary Ellen Aughtberry shows up in the birth index in Trenton.




And here is Mary Ellen Aughtberry's birth certificate from the State- September 5, 1887 in Bayonne.
Her father is listed as John Aughtberry, age 33, of Sweden.  Her mother is listed as Mary Campbell, age 38, of Ireland.



These pieces of information are pieces of a puzzle, but I need more pieces to determine:
--- Does Mary Campbell, wife of John Aughtberry or Ottbury, have a relationship to Mary Campbell, wife of Patrick Joyce and mother of Delia?
--- Does John Otterbury/Aughtberry have a relationship to the Ottenberg in cousin R. S.'s family tree?


Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Revisiting a Grave



This picture of a gravestone was among the photographs I received from my aunt.  The inscription reads, "Nichols.  Emerson L.  1913-1935."  Naturally, I wondered who Emerson L Nichols was and how he relates, if at all, to my family.

I obtained the death certificate at the New Jersey State Archives in Trenton.


From the death certificate, we learn that Emerson Lambert Nichols died June 15, 1935 from a motorcycle accident.  He was 21 years old, born in Waterbury, Connecticut.  His parents were George E Nichols of Lowell, Massachusetts and Mabel G Lambert of New Hampshire.  He died on "Pompton Pike" (now called Pompton Avenue or State Route 23) in Cedar Grove, Essex County, New Jersey.  His residence was 103 Broadway in Newark.

The doctor did not "attend" Emerson.  He "saw" Emerson.

The cause of death was "highway accident motorcycle with driver and one passenger ran into side of 10 ton mack truck, fractured skull, cerebral laceration, hemorrhage and edema; ruptured lungs, ruptured spleen."  Emerson was the driver of the motorcycle.  This accident sounds horrific.

Next I set out to find the gravestone.  The place of burial is listed as East Ridgelawn Cemetery in Delawanna, New Jersey.  Delawanna is a section in the City of Clifton in Passaic County.  FindAGrave had no entry for Emerson.  (Ridgelawn Cemetery in Delawanna is listed as a separate cemetery on FindAGrave.  This should be combined with East Ridgelawn Cemetery in Clifton.)

Here is what the stone looks like today.


From the gravestone, Emerson's father, George, died in 1954 and his mother, Mabel, died in 1957.


I visited the same spot in Ridgelawn Cemetery that my grandfather stood to take this photograph almost eighty years earlier.


In the older photograph, the gravestone in the background on the right with the letters L and Y is blocked in the recent picture by the Soule gravestone.  The surname is Lay.


To the left in the old picture is a textured gravestone with two tiny shrubs in the row ahead.  Their view is completely blocked in the recent picture by large bushes and more stones.

East Ridgelawn Cemetery, Clifton, Passaic County, New Jersey

The Campbell gravestone is the textured stone behind the small bushes in the older photo.  In the eighty years since the picture was taken, the bushes grew and were chopped down.  A gravestone was placed in between the bushes for Pucillo.

I don't know how Emerson Lambert Nichols relates to my family.  He was the same age as my grandfather, so maybe they were friends.  Maybe someone will read this and let us know.