Wednesday, September 12, 2012

A Group of Early New London Sea Captains

This is Mike writing, but writing about a sideline of some of Tam's (and Sarah's) early New England ancestors on the Boylston side. As it happens, because Lucy Foster, a descendant of those I'm talking about, married one Samuel Jerome in 1749 and among their descendants was the actress Jennie Jerome, these folks are also ancestors of Sir Winston Churchill.

Lucy Foster's great-grandfather was Captain Thomas Foster, master mariner out of New London, Connecticut. He was born about 1642, though I am not sure of a source for that date; he died in 1685.  His marriage record states that he was a "son of John Forster [both spellings seem to have been used: later descendants used Foster] of Kingsware," meaning Kingswear, Devon. You'll find many genealogies on the Internet showing him as the son of John Foster and Mary Tompkins, but they married in Salem, Mass. in 1649, so either Thomas' birth date or the identification is wrong. Nor is Thomas listed in that John Foster's will, so perhaps his father was a different John of Kingswear. Many list Thomas as being born there, others in New London; the sources seem silent though,

But Thomas, the master mariner who sailed between New London, Boston, and "the Barbadoes," is one of a group of intermarried New London sea captains. When he married Susannah Parker on March 27, 1665/66 Old Style, he married the daughter of Captain Ralph Parker, another ship captain who may also have owned several vessels. Parker was at the heart of a small maritime dynasty: his wife Susannah (perhaps second wife), was the daughter of Captain William Keeny; Parker's daughter Mary married Capt. William Condy of Boston; his daughter Susannah, as noted, married Thomas Foster, and his son Jonathan went on to become a sea captain.

I would guess family reunions of Captains Parker, Parker, Keeny, Condy, and Foster would have tended to see a lot of talk of the sea.

(The links above are to the Google Books edition of Frances Manwaring Caulkins, History of New London From the First Survey of the Coast in 1612, to 1860 (New London, 1895).

Sunday, September 9, 2012

The Two Grandfathers

One hundred years ago, in 1912, our (Kate's and mine) two grandfathers, George Garland Mehuron and Edward  M. Boylston, lived in an era much like this one: full of change, new technologies directly affecting everyday life, and new adventures. George Mehuron, like his great grandchildren, was swept up in and enamored with the new aeroplanes, telephones, etc. In his youth he raced cars with Barney Oldfield, a noted racer at the time. He was also taken with the "barnstormers," pioneer aviators who thrilled crowds with their swoops and loops and daredevil flying in the early aircraft of the time. In WWI, he was the only one in his unit in the European frontlines brave enough to go up in the airplane to release the carrier pigeons for vital messages between forces. It was amazing that he survived that vicious and terrible war, but when he returned to York he kept racing greyhounds and carrier pigeons in the back yard, which my Dad, George C. Mehuron, helped care for.

Edward M. Boylston often remarked that he was blessed to have the best of two worlds: an upbringing back east in Manlius, N.Y., that grounded him in a classical education: Latin, history, literature, etc. , along with the opportunity to go West, when there was still much frontier to explore and settle. When he was a young man he went to the train station there and plunking down a bag of money, asked the ticket master where that amount would take him. "Wyoming," said the man, to which Ed replied, "I don't know where that is, but that is where I'm going!" Soon he found himself working the oil fields in eastern Wyoming, and he was happy in that work. It was there that he met and courted my grandmother, Ann Ruth Eatough, who was working as a governess on the famous Hat Ranch in the area. Ranch life then was still very much a frontier life: we have a picture of her with the hired hands and friends stopping for a meal in front of the chuck wagon. A record in the Bureau of Land Management, Record of Patents (patent number 148713) shows that in 1910, he bought 80 acres, presumably to set up their new life together. They married in 1911, and soon they had four children: Ruth Ann, Edward, John, and Richard. But as the children grew they realized that the young raw state of Wyoming lacked the education institutions they desired for the kids, so they moved to Nebraska to farm at Chester, Nebraska, Thayer County, just 10 miles north of the Kansas state line.