If you cannot get rid of the family skeleton, you may as well make it dance. George Bernard Shaw

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

James Cruse (1844-1874), possible grandson of Jeremiah Cruse & Elizabeth Harland

This is a continuing series of articles on the possible grandchildren of Jeremiah Cruse and Elizabeth Harland through their son David Cruse who married Jane Jewell. James was their sixth child. Most of the information is courtesy of Marian Kay Abbott.


Early Life and the Civil War

James Cruse was born about 1844 in Vigo County, Indiana (1, 2, 3, 5), probably in the Honey Creek Towship as that is where his parents had property at the time of his birth. He was the sixth child born to his parents, David Cruse and Jane Jewell, and his father died when he was two or three years old. He continued living with his mother and older brothers on their farm in Honey Creek Township, no doubt working it under the direction of his older siblings.

James was seventeen years old when the Civil War broke out. Three years later on 16 February 1864 he enlisted at Terre Haute, Indiana. Eight days later, in Indianapolis, Indiana, he was mustered into Capt. Thompson's company, Company C, 31st Regiment of Indiana Volunteers. He was said to be 19 years old, to have had black eyes, dark hair, and a dark complexion. He was recorded as being five feet, eight and a 1/2 inches tall (5, 10). James served alongside older brothers Zachariah Cruse and John Cruse. Older brother William Cruse also served during the war in the same regiment but in a different company. Both William and James were charged with desertion at New Orleans, Louisiana, on 9 July 1865, but the charges were later removed (6). He was discharged on 9 July 1865 at Terra Haute, Indiana (10).


Marriage and Life in Vigo County

James returned to Vigo County after the war with "bad" eyes. He had trouble not only seeing at night, but he suffered intermittent bouts of diarrhea as well. He would suffer from these ailments the rest of his life (8 - deposition of Samuel S. Moore). 

On February 1866 he married Edith "Edy" Moore, daughter of Samuel Moore, Sr. and Edith Kirby, in Vigo County, Indiana (7) in the home of Samuel Moore, Sr. (8). Edy was the sister of Permelia Moore who had married James' brother, William Cruse, three years previous. 

Either before or after his marriage, James purchased two acres of land near Prairieton from Alexander Moore, Edith's brother. Living here put James and Edy within 50 yards of  her brother Samuel S. Moore, a mile from her brother Alexander Moore, a mile from James' brother William Cruse, and a mile and a half from James' childhood friend Jeremiah Hess. James and Jeremiah had gone to school together as boys, and James lived with the Hess family for several years before enlisting in the war (8 - depositions of William Cruse, Samuel S. Moore, Alexander Moore, and Jeremiah Hess).

James struggled financially to provide for his family. Whether it was due to his poor health, or whether he lacked the resources is not known. It is known that he farmed this acreage for the next several years, part of the time working for brother-in-law Alexander Moore, for his father-in-law Samuel Moore, Sr., and part of the time cropping for himself on rented land. He also worked a lot from place to place doing daily jobs for people in the community, because he had no team (i.e. of oxen) of his own (8 - depositions of William Cruse, Samuel S. Moore, Alexander Moore, and Jeremiah Hess). Animals such as those, in those days, was tantamount to owning a car today. They required capital to buy, and then there was the ever present need to feed, house, and maintain such beasts of burden. Many people worked years before saving enough to not only buy them but keep them.

On 30 September 1867, James and Edith sold to  Jeremiah Cruse (probably his brother) an undivided one-half of 27 acres off the south and west part of the southwest quarter of Section 28 as well as another undivided one-half of 13 acres in the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of Section 29. These tracts were in Township 11 N, Range 9 W in Vigo County. Jeremiah purchased them for $400 (9). 

James' poor health was not the only cross he and Edith bore in these early years of their marriage. In 1867, probably the spring, Edith gave birth to a daughter whom the couple named Alice Cruse. This child lived less than two years, dying between the ages of 1 1/2 to 2 years old. Around this time, Edith gave birth to another child who did not live through its birth. This child was not named. Both of these children were born and died before the 1870 census was taken (8 - deposition of William Cruse - it is possible the unnamed child was born between surviving children Julia and Amelia detailed below, but it seems unlikely). 

On 5 September 1868 James and Edith sold for $110 1 1/2 acres in Section 32, Township 11 N, Range 9 W in Vigo County, Indiana to Albert Wines. This tract was 30 rods east and west and 8 rods north and south (9). He may well have sold this and subsequent property in order to provide for his family.

On 2 February 1870, a third child was born to the couple. They named her Julia Cruse (8). 

Later that year, on 22 November 1870, James and Edith sold acreage in Vigo County to Stephen Lovell for $150. This property was three acres off the north side of 16 acres off the west end of 36 acres off the southwest quarter of Section 32, Township 11 N, Range 9 W. The following summer, on 5 July 1871, James and Edith again sold to Lovell an undivided half of 13 1/3 acres in Vigo County in the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of Section 29, Township 11 N, Range 9 W for $150 (9). 

On 5 March 1872, another daughter was born to James and Edith. This child was named Amelia Cruse (8). She was the fourth child born to the couple, but only one of two that survived to adulthood.


Sudden Illness and Death

On 22 April 1874, James spent the day making rails for a man (i.e. probably for fencing). Apparently, the weather had been cold and rainy, and he had worked and waded in cold water over his shoe tops the whole day. Around midnight he took ill with a chill and lost consciousness. 

Brother-in-law Samuel Moore, who lived within 50 yards of James,  was sent for as was Dr. Thomas Drake. Drake diagnosed James' condition as "brain fever." James never regained his mind and about six or seven hours later, about daylight the next morning on the 23 April 1874, he died. At some point the Hess family was sent for, and around daylight Alexander Moore, Edith's brother, was also sent for. By the time Alexander arrived, James was gone. It is not stated in depositions when the Hess family was sent for nor when they arrived (8 - depositions of Alexander Moore, Samuel S. Moore, William Cruse, Jeremiah Hess, and Dr. Thomas Drake).

Both Samuel Moore and Dr. Drake believed that James' death was brought on by "over exertion" in bad weather. Dr. Thomas Drake testified in his deposition when Julia Cruse and Amelia Cruse tried to get a Civil War pension on their father's service that James Cruse was a poor man financially and that he labored beyond his physical ability in order to support his family (8 - depositions of Samuel Moore and Dr. Thomas Drake).

James was only 30 years old a the time of his death. He was buried in Hull Cemetery in Vigo County, Indiana, in an unmarked grave (8). 

Edith died a year and a month later on 31 May 1875 (8). 

The girls, Julia Cruse and Amelia Cruse, were both under the age of five at the time their parents passed away. They were subsequently separated and sent to live with other families. 

They will be the subject of the next blog posting. 


SOURCES:

(1) 1850 U. S. Federal Censuses, Jane (Jewell) Cruse household, Vigo County, Indiana.
(2) 1860 U. S. Federal Census, Jane (Jewell) Cruse household, Vigo County, Indiana. 
(3) 1870 U. S. Federal Census, his household, Vigo County, Indiana. 
(5) A file in the Indiana Archives detailing James' military service and courtesy of Marian Kay Abbott.
(6) Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Indiana, Vol. 5, 1861-1865, 1866.
(7) Vigo County, Indiana Marriage document. 
(8) Civil War Pension Records for Julia Whitesides and Amelia Dawson (James Cruse), courtesy of Marian Kay Abbott.
(9) Courtesy of Marian Kay Abbott.
(10) Ancestry.com. Web: Indiana, Civil War Soldier Database Index, 1861-1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015. 

Thursday, December 8, 2016

The Joy of . . . Soap?

Occasionally I cross post articles from my author blog to my genealogy blog and back. This is one such article. The original can be found here: https://donnahechlerporterbooks.wordpress.com/2016/12/08/the-joy-of-soap/ and was first published on December 8, 2016. 

I really should get out more. I should probably shop more. (But I probably won't.)
I know this to b20161203_191656e true since the most exciting thing that happened this past week (except for the cat dangling by one foot from high in the Christmas tree) was finding out that The Vitamin Shoppe not only carries Dr. Brommer's Castile Soap, but that Dr. Brommer himself (is there such a person?) has rose scented liquid soap.
My heart nearly left my chest. I can not tell you how thrilled I was! This was even more exciting than finding the aisle with the soap only to realize that they had more than the overly large size which was the only size HEB carried. So, when I found the rose soap, I was already riding  a high since I was not going to be forced to shell out $10 for a bottle of soap that lasted me months.
Of course, by now I am certain you are thinking, between me and my nutty animals at the house, that I have lost my last marble.
Or, my last bar of soap.20161204_173950
Actually, the answer is simpler and more mundane than that. You see, my paternal grandmother, Eleanora Ressler Hechler, always had the smell of rose soap in her bathroom. Although, I must admit that I was not aware of the scent until several years ago. I was somewhere doing something (maybe a rare shopping trip?) and I smelled soap (or something) that smelled just like her bathroom.
Since then, I have been on a small quest of sorts sniffing soaps and other smelly things for the smell of a rose scent. 'Tis not been easy. For some reason, this is not a scent that is used much these days.
I do love having small reminders of my family around me - my antique hutch that belonged to my great-grandmother Lily Corinne Gray Griswold, my antique traveling trunk that belonged to a Whitehead or McQueen and probably came from Tennessee or Louisiana (or further parts unknown), the dresser that belonged to my great-grandmother Anna Lee Whitehead McQueen, as well as dishes, butter molds, and on and on.
But smells? Well, those are different, and they are very powerful for pulling forth memories and feelings of past events.And yes, for some reason when I smell the scent of rose soap, I am taken back, albeit briefly, to not only my grandmother's bathroom, but to a simpler time when I was a child with few cares and my grandparents were still around.
In the case of rose scented soap, I am reminded for just a minute, no matter how brief, of not only my grandmother's bathroom, but the glass knobs on her doors, the laroses-1566792_960_720ce curtains that lifted and waved inside the living room as the wind caressed the house, her large rooms with wooden floors that my feet pounded on as I ran through the house. And of course, there was her voice yelling at me not to run, and then as I headed for the door her admonishment to grab a scarf to keep my ears out of the wind.
Yea, I am strange. Who could get that much from the smell of rose scented soap?
Maybe my animals are not the only nutty ones around here.
Maybe it's a good thing I'm a writer, so I can put that over active imagination, er memories, to good use.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

John Cruse (1842-1864), possible grandson of Jeremiah Cruse and Elizabeth Harland

A continuing series on the possible children and grandchildren of Jeremiah Cruse of Madison County, Kentucky, and Vigo Couty, Indiana, and his wife Elizabeth Harland. This information courtesy of Marian Kay Abbott.


John Cruse was born about 1842 (1, 2) in Vigo County, Indiana (3) to David Cruse and Jane Jewell. He was the fifth child of seven known children of David and Jane. 

When John was about four or five years old, his father died. His mother continued living on their farm in Honey Creek Township. 

John was nineteen years old when the Civil War broke out. Three years later, on 16 February 1864 at Terra Haute he enlisted as a private in Company C, 31st Regiment of Indiana Volunteers under the command of Captain Thompson. He was mustered into service a week later on 24 February in Indianapolis, Indiana. He is recorded to have had black eyes, black hair, and a dark complexion. He was 5 feet 11 inches tall (3). Older brother Zachariah Cruse was mustered into the same company on the same day also under the command of Captain Thompson (3). Older brother William Cruse also served in Company C, 31st Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, but under Lt. Conover. William also did not enlist until March of 1865 (4). 

John died on 5 August 1864 of fever at Chattanooga, Tennessee. He is buried in the National Cemetery there (4). 

In 1866, John's mother, Jane (Jewell) Cruse, applied for a pension on behalf of her son John's Civil War service. Her son Jeremiah Cruse and her neighbors, S. S. Moore and Mrs. Eliza Jane Evans, provided written testimony in support of her request. They stated that John Cruse died leaving no widow or child, and that for the five years before John's death he worked as a farm hand and regularly supplied 1/2 of his widowed mother's support. He was seen on a number of occasions taking home various articles and groceries for her use. After he enlisted and received his pay, Mrs. Evans saw him give his other $50 for her support. At the time of the application, Jane owned 40 acres of land, a few household items, and one cow. The general consensus was that without his help, his mother would not live comfortably. In May of 1867, Jane Cruse was awarded a pension of $8 per month (5). 



Sources:
(1) 1850 U. S. Federal Census, Jane (Jewell) Cruse's household, Honey Creek Township, Vigo Co IN.
(2) 1860 U. S Federal Census, Jane (Jewell) Cruse's household, Honey Creek Township, Vigo Co IN. 
(3) File in Indiana State Archives regarding Federal Enlistment, transcribed and provided by Marian Kay Abbott.
(4) Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Indiana, Vol 5, 1861-1865, 1866. 
(5) Civil War Pension Records for Jane Cruse (John Cruse). 
.