In the last post, we looked at
Patrick Brown, the oldest child of Timothy and Hannah Kelly Brown while he
lived in Ohio. In this post, we will
continue to follow the story of Patrick.
Bottom of Page 3 of the David Brown Letter (click to enlarge) |
1865 Illinois State Census (click to enlarge) |
Belleflower [Bellflower/Bell Flower] Township
is located in the south east corner of McLean County at the end of a glacial
moraine, the
Bloomington Moraine.3
The glacial left an unbroken prairie with a
deep layer of top soil over a gravel bed with virtually no trees making it very
desirable farm land. In fact,
Belleflower has been identified as the “finest township of land in the State;
and perhaps, the finest in any State.”4 It is
easy to see why this area was appealing to a farmer like Patrick.
Townships of McLean County (click to enlarge) |
Patrick was able to acquire land
in Belleflower Township, township 22. In
August of 1869, Patrick purchased the northwest quarter of Section 12 in
Township 22, Range 6,5
consisting of 160 acres. This
property
is shown in red on the map of Belleflower Township at
the left. In May, 1878, Patrick sold this property back
to Ira Colby, from whom he purchased it, and, was able to purchase a larger
tract of land in Section 14 in Belleflower Township. This property consisted of the northeast
quarter of the section and one-half of the northwest section east of the
railroad right of way.6 It is shown in green on the map. In February, 1882, Patrick sold the property
in Section 14 to his new son-in-law, James Cox.
At that time, he purchased a smaller piece of property of just 80 acres.
This property was located on the north
one-half of the southwest quarter of Section 2, in Township 22, the blue
section on the map. Patrick held this
property until 1887 when it was sold to Eli Wood.7
1874 Map of Belleflower Twp., McLean Co., IL (click to enlarge) |
This last property is interesting
because the deed references a school house on the property. (See image of
Warranty Deed below
right.) The
warranty deed states that part of the property is reserved for the, “. . . present
school house site on said land as long as the same shall be used for school
purposes.” This schoolhouse was referred
to as Old No. 1. In 1875, school
district 1 was split and the schoolhouse was moved three-fourths mile south to
the land that, in 1882, was owned by Patrick. It was described as a “cozy
little house, painted white, [that] could be seen for some distance on the open
prairie, which suggested the name Prairie
Cottage School.” It was used until 1902.8
Schoolhouse Deed (click to enlarge) |
Patrick’s family continued to grow. Three daughters were born to Patrick and Ann
while they lived in Illinois: Elizabeth born July 1865; Emily/Julia born
October 1868; and, Hannah born May
1872.9 About 1875 Patrick’s mother, Hannah, and George
and James Roach, the sons of his sister, Johanna Brown Roach, came to live with
the family after the children were orphaned.
In 1878, another orphaned nephew, William H. Brown, son of Patrick’s
brother
John, joined the family. Brother
John died in 1873 as the result of a train accident. John’s wife, Ellen, a sister of Patrick’s
wife, Ann, died in 1878. (More about
Johanna Brown Roach and John Brown in future posts.) The 1870 and 1880 US Census records10 show the members of the family
living with Patrick during those years.
1870 US Census, Belleflower Twp., McLean Co., IL (click to enlarge) |
1880 US Census (click to enlarge) |
Just as any family grows, the
members also mature and leave home to create lives of their own. The first of the children to leave home was
Patrick when he married Ann Radigan in January 1880. The oldest daughter, Mary Ann, married James
Cox in January 1881. Two other
daughters, Sarah and Elizabeth married in 1884.
Two additional sons, John B. and David O. left for Nebraska sometime
around 1883. But, probably the most
devastating change for Patrick was the death of his wife, Ann, on December 24,
1878 at the age of just 47. Ann’s
sister, Ellen had died of cancer in Columbus, Ohio in April, 1878. Patrick had gone to Columbus to assist his
brother’s family and returned with one of the children, William H. How tragic that Ann, too, would have been
taken by cancer in the same year.
The death register11 for McLean County, (see image below left), shows that Ann had been ill for
approximately ten weeks. She was treated
by Dr. Hugh Ross of Gibson City in Ford County, which was just a couple of
miles east of Belleflower Township, McLean
County. Although the death was not reported until the
following January, Ann was buried in St. Mary’s Cemetery in Bloomington, a
distance of nearly 40 miles from the Belleflower farm, on December 26, just two
days after she died. It must have been
very important to the
family that she be buried in a Catholic cemetery. McLean County and Belleflower Township are
well supplied with railroads which would have been used for transportation;
but, travel at that specific time was probably very difficult. The
Pantagraph, Bloomington’s newspaper, ran an article on December 25, 1878
giving an account of snow and severe cold that was delaying rail
transportation.12
Death Register, Ann Burns Brown, McLean Co., IL (click to enlarge) |
Tombstone - St. Mary's |
Travel to Blooomington,
(Bloomington is the county seat of McLean County), in those years would have
been difficult even in the best of weather and was an item of news in the local
paper when a person from “out of town” was visiting. On March 15, 1882, The Pantagraph published a note that, “Mr. Patrick Brown, a
prominent citizen of Belleflower, was in town yesterday.” Patrick was mentioned in the paper at other
times, also. In May, 1880, Patrick was
named as the defendant in a lawsuit brought by Frederick Schonberger from Ford
County. (The verdict was for the
plaintiff for $430.00.) Patrick was
mentioned in the paper for the real estate transactions mentioned above. He was also mentioned when he hosted the
weddings at his home for his three daughters, Mary Ann, Sarah and Elizabeth. There was a train accident in 1876, and,
finally there was post on May 23, 1883 under the heading “Belleflower” news
that, “Old Mrs. Brown, Patrick Brown’s mother, is sick with dropsy, but is some
better.”13
This is probably about the time
Patrick left Illinois. Patrick had lived in McLean County about twenty years. His family was
dwindling, his wife and mother were gone, the children were setting out on
their own, getting married or moving to other states. Patrick likely felt a need to do something
different; and, so he subsequently moved to Nebraska with two of his sons.
That is where we will pick up the story of Patrick Brown in the
next post.
1.
Brown,
David Earl, Kewanee, IL, 11 May 1943, Letter to Esther _____, Columbus, OH. Letter contains genealogical information for
the Brown Family from County Limerick.
2.
Illinois
State Census, 1865, Patrick Brown, Bellflower, McLean, Illinois, p. 184, State
Library, Springfield, IL, from FamilySearch.org, FHL microfilm 972.76. available online at: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939V-5NS6-QK?wc=M8D2-QPY%3A146036401%2C146040701%3Fcc%3D1803971&cc=1803971
3.
Retreating
glaciers left large deposits of silt and gravel at the end of the moraine creating
an undulating terrain. McLean County is
situated on a prairie where there are prevailing winds from the south west in
the summer and north winds from the Great Lakes in the winter. When the winds hit the “hills” of the glacial
moraine, wind speeds increase forming a wind tunnel. Local entrepreneurs have taken advantage of this
weather phenomenon and created a “wind farm” consisting of 240 wind turbines. Twin Groves Wind Farm became operational in
2008. A short video explains more about
the operation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nL0EjOmuPwY
4.
History of McLean County Illinois, Wm LeBaron, Jr., & Co., Chicago, IL.,
1879, p. 189. The history also states
that the ground was of such a nature that it could be “broken with a team of
two horses, while in other portions of the county a team of four and even of
six oxen has been required for the purpose.”
Available online at: https://archive.org/stream/historyofmcleanc00lebarich#page/n0/mode/1up
5.
McLean Co,
IL, Deed Book, Book 85, page 215. Ira
Colby, Emma Colby, Ceiclia Roberts, Samuel Roberts to Patrick Brown for $4,680
dated 30 Aug 1869. There was a mortgage
recorded for this property.
6.
McLean Co., IL, Deed Book, Book 113, page
364. Patrick Brown and Ann Brown to Ira
Colby for $5,600 dated 11 May 1878. The
original mortgage was released.
McLean Co.,
IL, Deed Book, Book 108, page 480.
Lucinda G. Bent to Patrick Brown for $5,000 dated 5 Feb 1878. A mortgage was also recorded on this
property.
7.
McLean Co.,
IL, Deed Book, Book 123, page 601.
Patrick Brown to James Cox for $8,000 dated 10 Feb 1882. Buyer to assume mortgage
McLean Co.,
IL, Deed Book, Book 126, page 364. S.H.
Jennings to Patrick Brown for $3,050 dated 16 Feb 1882. Mortgage to Martha Smith for $1,600.
McLean Co.,
IL, Deed Book, Book 145, page 107.
Patrick Brown, widower, to Eli Woodfor $3,200 dated 7 Feb 1887.
8.
Brigham,
William B., The Story of McLean County
And Its Schools, Bloomington, IL, p 119.
Available online at: https://archive.org/details/storyofmcleancou00brig
9.
Birth
information was taken from the 1900 US Census for all three girls. Church records are not available for baptisms
of Elizabeth, Emily and Hannah in Illinois.
Holy Trinity, Bloomington, does not have records for these girls. Records in other parishes do not start early
enough. The History of St. Patrick’s Parish, Merna, Illinois in 1929, by
Margaret Larkin Kinsella states that masses were often said in the homes of area
parishioners during the 1860s and early 1870s until a church could be built in
1876; and, even then, it did not have a resident priest until 1883. Merna is located east of Bloomington and about
20 miles west of Belleflower. The
history is available online at: http://www.idaillinois.org/cdm/ref/collection/tdl/id/1491
10.
1870 U.S.
Census, Bellflower, McLean, Illinois;
Roll: M593_258; Page 29A; Family History Library Film: 545758. Indexed as Patrick “Brower.”
1880 U.S.
Census, Bell Flower, McLean, Illinois;
roll: 231; Family History Film: 1254231; Page 626B; Enumeration District: 184;
image: 0136
Both
available online through Ancestry.com
11.
Death
Register, Ann Brown, died 24 Dec
1878, County Cerk’s Office, McLean County, IL, accessed 17 Sep 2009,
Bloomington, McLean, IL. Death
notification for McLean County, Illinois was not mandatory until 1916. Some random death certificates do exist
before that time.
Image of tombstone
Photo from Find-A-Grave. The tombstone is quite large, over five feet tall.
Image of tombstone
Photo from Find-A-Grave. The tombstone is quite large, over five feet tall.
12.
“Rough on
Railroads, The Polar Wave - How its
Breakers Affected the People and the Lines.”
The Pantagraph, Bloomington,
IL. Available online through
Newspapers.com.
13.
The Pantagraph, the local Bloomington newspaper, carried
news of not only Bloomington, but, the surrounding communities and, indeed,
around the world. Notices of the
information given above were from various editions dating from 1876 to
1883. In September 1881, a news items
from Dublin, Ireland was included telling a story about the Brown’s home place
in County Limerick. “DUBLIN, September
14 – In a railway accident at Patrick’s Well, County Limerick, fifty persons
were injured.” I can only imagine their
reaction to that information. The following story was printed on page three of
the February 10, 1876 copy. “A man named
Patrick Brown was struck by the pilot [what we call a ‘cow catcher’] of an
engine on a train bound south, on Tuesday morning, on the Gilman, Clinton &
Springfield road, near Belleflower, as he sat on the ties. He was probably drunk. His skull was fractured and he was injured
internally, and will doubtless die.” The
track runs directly through Patrick’s property in section 12 (the red section
of the map). Obviously, Patrick did not
die, but, after the death of his brother, John, in 1873 from a train accident,
he really should have known better than to sit on the track. The paper made no further mention of the
accident, his injuries, or his recovery.
Once again, I am so impressed with the variety of sources and the citations. I aspire to be you.
ReplyDeleteThank-you Mary Ann for your excellent work. I enjoyed this and appreciate your dedicated, competent work. Thanks for sharing with us.
ReplyDeleteI am so happy to have found your blog! Patrick Brown and Annie Radigan are my great-great grandparents and while I've come across much of this info before in my own ancestry search, your details are fantastic. I look forward to reading more. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this blog! Patrick Brown and Annie Radigan are my great-great grandparents and while I've come across much of this info in my own search, you have filled in many gaps and provided a lot of great detail/sources. I look forward to your next post!
ReplyDeleteBridget, thanks for coming to the blog! Sorry for the delay in responding - we have been on vacation. I do have some additional interesting information for Patrick that will be published in the next installment. I'd love to hear your information about Patrick and family also! Please respond at stillsearching@gmail.com.
DeletePatrick Brown and Anne Burns are my great-great grandparents! I've just discovered this blog and my head is spinning. I'm so excited. I hope to reach out to other extended family.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by the blog. Have you been in contact with other descendants of Patrick and Anne? I do have some additional information for Patrick. I had hopped to put this in another blog post, but, I don't know how soon that will be. Contact me at stillsearching2@gmail.com and I can give you some of that information.
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