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Thursday, May 31, 2018

Death of Jane E. Hartley

Jane "Jennie" (Denby) Hartley is likely the dark haired woman on the far left in the back, standing next to husband George Henry Hartley and his family.  I have to get a better quality image of this photo from my Hartley cousin Sarah who sent me this rare glimpse of Jennie.  Jennie died soon after her son, James Denby Hartley (later the Hartley patriarch), was born. Image courtesy of Sarah Bennett.

Before my great grandfather George Henry Hartley married my great grandmother Minnie Nosler, he was married to Jane "Jennie" Denby (born in 1879 in Tunbridge, Kent, England).


San Diego Union Tribune (from GenealogyBank)
8 May 1903
page 8 
Death of Jane E. Hartley 
Mrs. Jane E. Hartley died at her home in Park Villa Wednesday night.  The deceased, who was 24 years of age, leaves a husband and infant.  The deceased was the wife of George Hartley, the brother of Jack Hartley, the well known son-in-law of J. M. Dodge.
...............
Deaths
HARTLEY- At Park Villa, May 6th, 1903, Jane D., wife of George Hartley, a native of England, aged 24  years.
Funeral services will be held at Johnson & Connell's chapel, D and Seventh streets, at 2 o'clock p.m. today, and will be private.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Working on Wednesday: Georgia G. Kay (1890 - 1946) Dramatic Soprano

Georgia Kay, the wife of Henry Thomas Warren (my first cousin, twice removed) was born in Utah, the daughter of an English father and Danish mother. She appears in early records first as Alice M. Kay in the 1900 U.S. Census and then, after her 1908 Wyoming marriage to Franklin L. Arnold, as Matilda G. in the 1910 federal enumeration. I'm not sure when she picked the name Georgia by which she was later known.

Georgia and Mr. Arnold had two children together, the second of whom was born in California in 1910. Since her husband married a second time in Utah in 1919 it's clear that he and Georgia had parted before then.

The costume worn by Georgia on this advertising placard looks like it dates from the early 1920s. Unfortunately I don't know where she was performing although it's likely to have been somewhere in Southern California.

[Posted by Heather Valtee on an Ancestry.com family tree]

Cousin Henry Thomas Warren left his home in Cass County, Texas, for California sometime after the 1920 U.S. Census and Georgia married him in Santa Ana in 1924 and she seems to have ended her singing career thereafter because she claims no occupation in the 1930 and 1940 U.S. Census records.*

She died in 1946 and is buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale; he never remarried and eventually returned to Texas where he died in 1976.

*Henry was a street car conductor.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Remembering My Uncle Bob

Bob is on the right, around the time he served in Vietnam, abt 1966.  From left to right: his sister-in-law Pat (Slater) Hartley (my mom), his brother George G. Hartley (my dad), and his mother Margaret (Fister) Hartley (my grandmother).  From my personal collection.

The Uncle Bob (far right) I remember, circa 1986.  With his aunt Fern Fister, me, his mother Margaret (Fister) Hartley, and brother George G. Hartley.  From my personal collection


I think about my Uncle Bob a lot.  He was interested in genealogy and I think he would have gotten a kick out all the things I've discovered so far about our ancestors.


His plaque at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in Point Loma, CA.  Image courtesy of Ancestry user LSHamlin4604.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, May 28, 2018

Memorial Day

Originally known as Decoration Day, Memorial Day honors the memory of people who died while serving in the United States military.

[Johnston, F. B., photographer. (1899) Daisies gathered for Decoration Day. Washington D.C, 1899. 
Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2001703674/. ]

Harold Delbert "Hal" Currey, Jr. (the only son of the parents who raised me) and my uncle John William "Jack" Slater, both Second Lieutenants in the Army Air Corps, died in action during World War II. You can see their pictures and read more about them here.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, May 27, 2018

Sunday Drive: Albert Dock, Liverpool - 2013

The glorious weather we experienced on the days we spent exploring Liverpool and its environs* was amazing. Of course we visited the Albert Dock, completed in 1846 and named for Prince Albert, which is one of the main tourist destinations in the city. 

[From my personal collection]



*Hosted by our friend Pam and her husband in their lovely home.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, May 26, 2018

FindAGrave Has Made Citation Easy

My great uncle Roy Alexander Fiester's FindAGrave entry.  The source citation can be found by clicking "View Source".

I'm on the fence about FindAGrave's new look, but I was pleased to see that they now have a way to quickly generate a source citation:





© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, May 25, 2018

Gone for Soldiers: Davis Stevens Pearson (1919 - 1945), Soldier

Davis Pearson is a fifth cousin of mine--we are both descendants of Jesse Warren, Sr.* His father died when Davis was six years old and his mother married a second time when he was eleven. Military and census records state that Davis completed only one year of high school before he had to help his step-father on the farm.

He enlisted in the U.S. Army on October 22, 1940, and was killed in action on January 21, 1945. I found this blurry photo of him on Findagrave.com.

[Davis S. Pearson. Source: Findagrave.com Memorial ID 3113374;
photo added by Rhunae Helms Cross]


Here's his name on the Army's casualty list for Hancock County, Georgia:

[Page 23 WWII Army and Army Air Force Casualty List - Fold3]


From this newspaper article in the Atlanta Constitution we learn that he was probably buried originally in Belgium** and his body was shipped home to Georgia in 1947.


[26 Oct 1947, page 62 - The Atlanta Constitution at Newspapers.com]



All of this left me wanting to know where Davis died because it isn't stated in any of the above records. Fortunately his mother's application for his headstone him as belonging to Company M of the 23rd Infantry Regiment.

[Ancestry.com. U.S., Headstone Applications for Military Veterans, 1925-1963 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012. Original data: Applications for Headstones for U.S. Military Veterans, 1925-1941. Microfilm publication M1916, 134 rolls. ARC ID: 596118. Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, Record Group 92. National Archives at Washington, D.C.Applications for Headstones, compiled 01/01/1925 - 06/30/1970, documenting the period ca. 1776 - 1970 ARC: 596118. Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, 1774–1985, Record Group 92. National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.]


As part of the 23rd Infantry, here's what Davis experienced in the last eight months of his life beginning with the Normandy Invasion through his death during the Battle of the Bulge:
On 8 June, 1944, the Twenty Third Infantry landed on Omaha Beach with the first invasion forces. 
In slow, painful hedgerow fighting, the Regiment inched its way forward day after day against hard fighting enemy paratroop elements. St. Georges d'Elle, Hill 192 (which commanded St. Lo), St. Jean des Baisants, Etouvy, Vire, Truttemer le Grand and Tinchebray were scenes of bitter fighting up to August when the organized German resistance in Normandy collapsed. A short respite, the first one up to that time, was interrupted by an overnight motor march of 210 miles to Brest. From 21 August to 19 September the Regiment battled the 2nd German Paratroop Division which fanatically defended the surrounding hills and villages. Knowing that the fortress seaport, which housed German U-boats, was greatly needed by the Allies for the purpose of establishing supply routes into France, Hitler ordered the garrison to hold for at least 90 days. 
However, Brest, the scene of some of the most savage and bitter street fighting of the war, fell in 39 days. Formal capitulation of the Fortress to the 2nd Division occurred on 18 September, 1944. Its hard-driving leader, General Herman B. Ramcke, was captured the following day on the nearby Crozon Peninsula. 
Another rapid motor and train move of 720 miles on 30 September, 1944, saw the 23d Infantry crossing France and Belgium to new battle positions on the German border. Defensive positions were taken up along the Siegfried Line just north of Luxemburg.
The first ceremony of American troops on German soil was a 23d Infantry parade in November, south of St. Vith. Major General W.M. Robertson, Divisional Commander, presented decorations for heroism to officers and men of the Regiment. On 12 December, the Regiment moved 30 miles north to the vicinity of Sourbrodt, Belgium. 
The German break-through on 16 December found all three battalions of the 23d Infantry fighting savagely in the line. The failure of the enemy to accomplish a penetration in the division sector, despite repeated tank and strong infantry. attacks, upset the entire German plan of action to reach and cut off the vital supply nets at Liege. The Regiment stopped attack after bloody attack. 
This action was summed up by General Courtney Hodges, Commanding General of the 1st Army, who declared, "What the 2nd Division has done in the last four days will live forever in the history of the United States Army." 
During the period of 13 to 23 Jan. while attached to the First Division, the Regiment fought under the most severe climatic conditions. It spearheaded a drive that broke the determined enemy resistance in the vital Ondenval-Iveldingen Pass to clear the way for armored thrusts into St. Vith, Belgium. Sleet, rain and bitter cold froze the men's clothing to their bodies as they, struggled through waist-deep snow over rough terrain. The enemy forces, principally the 8th Regiment, 3rd Panzer Division, were decimated. So heavy were enemy losses in men and material that the 8th Regiment ceased to exist as a fighting force.***
Davis Pearson was one of the more than 19,000 American soldiers who died during the Battle of the Bulge. He's buried in Wisteria Cemetery in Union Point, Greene County, Georgia.


*Chapter and verse according to Ancestry.com



***This information is taken from an official booklet printed after V-E day and sent home to soldiers' families as found on the website LoneSentry.com.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, May 24, 2018

George Hartley, Former Deputy Assessor, Succumbs

George Henry Hartley holding my father and aunt, about 1946.  From my personal collection.

My Hartley obituaries end with my great grandfather, George Henry Hartley:

San Diego Union (from GenealogyBank)
17 Jun 1949
page 20 
Resident Here Since 1881
George Hartley, Former Deputy Assessor, Succumbs 
George Hartley, 70, of 2127 Second Ave., a former deputy county assessor, died Wednesday night in a local hospital.  He had resided here since 1881. 
Mr. Hartley was a deputy 5 years before retiring April 12, 1947.  He previously owned and operated a local restaurant and was once employed by the Union Title Insurance & Trust Co.  He was born in Waverly, Ia. 
Services Set 
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Florence H. Hartley, two sons, Drs James D. and George Hartley Jr.; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Treadgold; a brother, Paul Hartley, and two sisters, Mrs. Mary C. Read and Mrs. Maude MacDougall, all of San Diego. 
Private services will be conducted in Bonham Brothers Mortuary.  Cremation will follow.  The family asks that there be no flowers.


San Diego Union (from GenealogyBank)
19 Jun 1949
page 27 
Hartley Honors Set 
The 23rd Congressional District Townsend Clubs will hold memorial services for George Hartley, 70, former deputy county assessor, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Lotus Lodge, 1520 Second Ave.  Townsend Club 20, of which he was an officer, will lead the service.  Hartley died Wednesday. 



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Gone for Soldiers: The Grand Review of the Armies, Washington D.C. - May 23, 1865

On this day 153 years ago, 90,000 soldiers from the Army of the Potomac marched down Pennsylvania Avenue on the first of two days of military parades to celebrate the Union victory.*

[Mounted officers and unidentified units on Pennsylvania Avenue, May 1865. Source: Library of Congress]

And where was Dick Worden, my great great grandfather, at the time? Was he one of the marchers in Washington D.C.?

Alas, no.

After being invalided out shortly after Vicksburg in 1863, he had reenlisted early in the next year and went back to his old Company G of the 24th Iowa Infantry Regiment, then part of General Sheridan's Army of the Shenandoah in Virginia, which was in Georgia when the Grand Review took place.



*The men from General Sherman's Army of Georgia, 60,000 strong, traveled the same route the next day.
**Either Savannah or Augusta.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Mrs. Mary Jane Hartley, 'Mother' of North Park, Dies

Mary Jane "Jennie" (Tibbetts) Hartley, 1852-1940.  Image courtesy of HermitInTheValley (Ancestry user).

My final Hartley obituary related to my great grandfather George Henry Hartley (1878-1949) is his mother, Mary Jane "Jennie" Tibbetts":

San Diego Union (San Diego, CA) from GenealogyBank
10 Dec 1940
page 24
 
Mrs. Mary Jane Hartley, 'Mother' of North Park, Dies 
Mrs. Mary Jane (Grandma) Hartley, 88, often referred to as "Mother" of the North Park district, died yesterday morning at her home, 3827 Thirty-first st.  She is survived by four children--Mary C. Reed, George H. and Paul Hartley, all of San Diego, and Mrs. Maude McDougall, of Berkeley. 
Funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at the Plymouth Congregagional church, with the Revs. William Forshaw and N. C. Wallin officiating.  The Lewis mortuary will have charge.  Burial will be in Mt. Hope cemetery. 
Native of Iowa 
Mrs. Hartley was born in Waverly, Ia., in 1852, and her husband was James M. Hartley, who died here in 1904, after he had a far-seeing vision of the development of the North Park district, that is now populated by more than 25,000 persons. 
The Hartleys took a homestead at Dehesa.  Five of their children grew up there.
It was in 1894 that they bought 40 acres in the North Park district.  About the only living thing there then was sagebrush and jackrabbits.
 
City Grows Rapidly 
It wasn't long until San Diego began having "growing pains," as Grandma Hartley used to tell friends.  Mr. Hartley said he would take up the lemon trees and put on a tract development.  He started it and the family knew his vision, and after his death a son, the late J. C. (Jack) Hartley, continued the development. 
Town lots were put on the market and homes began springing up as sage brush disappeared.  San Diego pioneers have regarded the North Park growth as one of the most remarkable in the city. 
Recalls 'Hard Times' 
In a birthday interview given eight years ago, Grandma Hartley said:
"People may think they are having hard times now, but should have been here back in '98.  We really did have a desperate struggle trying to make a livelihood.  But we got along all right, just kept smiling and did the best we could."
 
Grandma Hartley led an extremely active life, and when there was a big civic gathering in the North Park district, she always was given a prominent place at the speakers' table.  High tribute was paid to her at such gatherings and friends and neighbors spoke of her in most affectionate terms. 
Enjoyed Three Hobbies 
She had three hobbies--flowers, her grandchildren and piecing quilts.  In one year she pieced 25 quilts that she gave to her children and grandchildren.  She was a member of the San Diego Pioneer society and the Women's Relief corps.  All her life in San Diego Mrs. Hartley was interested in social and philanthropic work.  She donated generously her time and money to charity work. 
Survivors listed 
There are three surviving sisters--May Jarvis, Olive Puryear and Jessie Lamb, all of San Diego.  Mrs. Dee Stevens, a daughter of Mrs. Hartley's, died two years ago.  There are 13 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. 
When the Hartleys settled in the North Park district and set out their lemon trees, they built a ranch house on almost the identical spot of the house in which Grandma Hartley died.

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, May 21, 2018

My Great Grandparents Visited the St. Louis World's Fair - 1904

St. Louis celebrated the centennial of the Louisiana Purchase by hosting an international exposition* which was officially opened by President Theodore Roosevelt on April 30, 1904.**
[1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition poster showing area covered by the purchase-image found at Porter Briggs.com]

Before it closed on December 1st, nearly 19.7 million people visited the site, including my great grandparents Lewis Logan Slater and Rufina Ellen Tomlinson accompanied by their 14-year old daughter Opal
[13 Oct 1904, 8 - Democratic Messenger at Newspapers.com]

Since the railroad line goes right through Severy I'm sure they traveled to St. Louis by train.

[Kansas railroad map - Kansas Memory. Kansas Historical Society]

The Exposition fairgrounds sprawled over 1,270 acres:

[Panoramic aerial view of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (St. Louis World's Fair) held in St. Louis, Missouri, from April 30 to December 1, 1904. View was probably made from a tethered balloon at the Aeronautic Concourse in the northwest corner of the fairgrounds, looking roughly southwest. Source: Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum]

[Ground Plan Of The Louisiana Purchase Exposition St. Louis, Mo. 1904. Buxton & Skinner Stationery Co. Publishers, Fourth & Olive St. St. Louis, Mo. Copyright, 1904 By Parker Eng. Co. Source: Davis Rumsey Historical Map Collection]


This daily program for the Exposition dates from a few days before the Slaters arrived, but it gives us an idea of the kind of event to be seen by visitors.

[An Official Daily Program from the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition for Saturday, October 8th

[Order of the day from an Official Daily Program from the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition for Saturday, October 8th

I wonder if they brought home one of these?***

[Souvenir book of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, © 2017 The Wolfsonian—Florida International University]





*Here's a French poster:

[Poster for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, informally known as the St. Louis World's Fair, painted by artist Alphonse Mucha.
Wikimedia Commons]

**And a bust of President Roosevelt sculpted in butter was a featured exhibit.

[Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print]








© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Today in History: Homestead Act - May 20, 1862

The first thing I see every day when I go online is "Today in History" from the Library of Congress. It reminds me of how various events influenced my ancestors and the Homestead Act was crucial to the settling of the West, including Alaska--80 million acres were claimed through 1900, 160 acres at a time.

["New Settlers on the Prairie." East Custer County, Nebraska, by Solomon D. Butcher, 1887.
Nebraska State Historical Society, (Digital ID, e.g., nbhips 12036)]


It's not an accident that the law, passage of which had been blocked for 20 years by a coalition of Northern businessmen and Southern slaveholders, didn't become law until 1862 when Southern interests were no longer represented in Congress.






© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Obituary for My 2nd Great Grandfather, James Monroe Hartley (1846-1904)

James Monroe Hartley, in an undated portrait (Courtesy of HermitInTheValley (Ancestry user)).
Grandson of Solomon Hartley (1775-1815), son of George W. Hartley (1805-1880) and Rebecca Paul (1806-1901), husband of Mary Jane Tibbetts (1852-1940), and father to Mary Catherine Hartley, Delia Anna Hartley, John Charles Hartley, George Henry Hartley (my great grandfather), Maud Lillian Hartley, Joseph "Joey" Hartley, and Paul James Hartley.

San Diego Evening Tribune (from GenealogyBank) 
23 Jul 1904, page 4 
J. M. Hartley Dead 
James M. Hartley, formerly a well known real estate and insurance agent and for many years a resident of this city died at his home early this morning.  He was a prominent member of the Grand Army and his funeral, which will be held tomorrow afternoon, will be under the auspices of his old comrades.  Mr. Hartley is survived by three sons and three daughters, all of whom reside in this city.  Mrs. John Hartley, a daughter-in-law of the deceased is a daughter of J. M. Dodge.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, May 18, 2018

From the Probate Files: William Freeman - Surry County, North Carolina - 1802

I haven't found any information about my paternal 4X great grandfather William Freeman before 1753 when someone of that name appears in colonial records as a resident of Chowan County, North Carolina. There is some reason to believe that he may have been of Scots-Irish descent and could have been an immigrant. Although there have been claims that he was a veteran of the Revolutionary War I don't find any convincing evidence to support them.

However, by 1784 he had become a resident of Surry County where his name appears in the 1790 and 1800 U.S. Censuses. And that's where he was living when he made his will on March 25, 1802.

[North Carolina Probate Records, 1735-1970; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:SQWX-D191-9?cc=1867501&wc=32L2-K6X%3A170003101%2C170786401]

In the name of God Amen. I William Freeman of the County of
Surry and State of North Carolina being weak in body but
of perfect mind and memory Thanks be to God for the same but
calling to mind the mortallity for all men once to die do make and
ordain this my last will and testament that is to say
  First of all, I give and recommend my soul into the hands of
god who gave it and my body to the earth to be buried in a decent
Christian like manner at the discretion of my Executors nothing
doubting that at the General Resurection I shall receive the same
again by the Power of God; and as touching such worldly Estate 
wherewith it has pleased God to bless me in this life I give demise
and dispose of the ame in the following manner and form.
   Item the 1st, And first and first I give to be beloved son
Josiah Freeman my negro boy named Hardy.
And 2ndly I give to my daughter Kiddy Mitchel a negro girl
named Chloe
   3rd I also give unto my son William Freeman one negro girl names Crease
   4th I give to my well beloved wife Sarah one mare saddle and bridle
and two cows and calves two basons and one dish and six plates and
likewise her peacible liveing on the plantation during her life time or
widowhood: Also I give her one negro man name Primas and one

                                                                                             wench

[North Carolina Probate Records, 1735-1970; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:SQWX-D191-9?cc=1867501&wc=32L2-K6X%3A170003101%2C170786401]


wench named Ruth during the same (and after that the said
mare and negroes to go to my son Tyre I also give her one
feather bed and furniture
   5th I also leave to my daughter Polly one mare named Pol
and twenty dollars in cash.
   6th I also give to my daughter Penelope Hains one negro girl
named Milly.
   7th I also give to my son Tyre all my lands and plantation
where I now live: A also give and bequeath him my still and
all the necessary utentials to her belonging, I also give him
one negro boy name Will and one horse called Sumpter also I give
him all my stock of hogs and Sheep and one feather bed and 
              & all necessary household furniture
furniture ^ and plantation tools and one cow and calfe 
   Then all the property or remaining part of my Estate I leave
to be equally divided between Noah, John, Richard and David
   And I do hereby utterly disallow revoke and disannul all and 
every other formes Testament wills legacies bequests and Executors
by me in any wise ^before^ named, willed, or bequeathed ratifying and
confirming this and no other to be my Last will and testament
   I do constitute and appoint my worthy friends James Howard
and Nathan Haynes Executors to this my last will and testament.
   In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal 
this twenty-fifth day of March in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and two.
Signed sealed and delivered in presents of us}  William Freeman {seal}
Edward Smith
Lydia Smith
Jonathan Allen

                                                                                    State of 

[North Carolina Probate Records, 1735-1970; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:SQWX-D191-9?cc=1867501&wc=32L2-K6X%3A170003101%2C170786401]

State of North Carolina Surry County, May Session AD 1802
Edward Smith and Lydia Smith two of the subscribing witnesses
to the foregoing last will and testament of William Freeman, made
oath that they saw the said Freeman sign publish and declare 
the same to be his last will and testament that he was of sound
and disposing mind and memory and at the same time they
saw Jonathan Allen sign the same as a witness thereto which
was ordered to be recorded.    Recorded according by Jo Willliams CC

There are more probate records for William Freeman's estate which I'll post about next week.

Here's how I'm related to him:

[Ancestry.com]


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Paul Hartley, Long-Time Civic Leader, Dies

Paul James Hartley with his mother Mary Jane (Tibbetts) HartleyCourtesy of HermitInTheValley (Ancestry user).


My great grandfather George Henry Hartley's youngest sibling was Paul James Hartley (1894-1969):

San Diego Union (GenealogyBank)
page 20
21 Nov 1969 
PAUL HARTLEY, LONG-TIME CIVIC LEADER, DIES 
Paul J. Hartley, a prominent civic leader and former city councilman, died yesterday at his home, 955 Harbor View Drive.  He was 75. 
Funeral arrangements are pending at Lewis Colonial Mortuary.
Hartley was one of San Diego's leading insurance underwriters for more than 30 years.  He was the Third District representative on the City Council from 1941 to 1947.
 
SAN DIEGO NATIVE 
Hartley was born in San Diego in 1894.  His parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. James M. Hartley, migrated here from Iowa in 1883 and were among the first settlers in the North Park area. 
In 1910, Paul's older brother, the late J. C. Hartley, and a business partner opened the first subdivision in the area and are now recognized as the founders of North Park.
Paul Hartley played a prominent role in the early development of Mission Bay as chairman of the first citizens committee for bay development.
 
CRASH KILLED SON 
One of Hartley's sons, the late William Hartley, also was a city councilman.  He was killed in an air crash midway through his first term of office in 1961. 
Hartley was highly active in yachting circles for 25 years until recently and his 32-foot sloop, Wings***, was one of the most common sights in and around the harbor. 
Survivors include his widow, Yolande: three sons, Capt. Paul J. Hartley Jr., USN, commanding officer of the high speed transport Dubuque on patrol in the Western Pacific, Kenneth H. and Donald J.: one sister, Mrs. Maud MacDougall, and 12 grandchildren, all of San Diego.



 A little bit more information on him in his memorial services:

San Diego Union (GenealogyBank)
22 Nov 1969
page 15 
Paul J. Hartley Services Today 
Memorial services for Paul J. Hartley, 75, former city councilman and semi-retired insurance and real estate executive who helped encourage the growth of North Park and other areas here, will be at 1 p.m. today in All Souls' Episcopal Church. 
Hartley, a member of a pioneer San Diego family, died Thursday at his home, 955 Harbor View Drive.  Although he had suffered a heart attack in July, he continued to take part in his family's insurance and real estate business. 
A leader in many civic, community and historical organizations, Hartley on the day of his death attended a reunion of members of the East End Gang, comprising former pupils of early San Diego schools. 
SAN DIEGO NATIVE 
Son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James M. Hartley, who moved here from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1883, Hartley was born in his parents' home at the corner of what is now 30th Street and University Avenue.  He attended school in a building near the site of the present Alice Birney Elementary School.  He was graduated from San Diego High School. 
Hartley's father established the family insurance business, specializing in fire underwriting because fires were a continuous menace to the early settlers of the North Park district, then semi-rural and without sufficient water to fight such outbreaks.
Paul Hartley's older brother, the late J. C. Hartley, joined the late W. J. Stevens in 1910 to open the first subdivision in a 40-acre tract between Ray and 32nd streets and University and Myrtle avenues, which James M. Hartley had developed as a lemon grove in 1892.
 
FORMER COUNCILMAN 
Hartley served as Third District councilman in 1941-1947.  One of San Diego's leading insurance underwriters for 30 years, he was a past president of the San Diego Association of Life Underwriters. 
Hartley was widely known as a civilian sailor, although he served in the Army in World War I.  HI 32-foot sloop, Wings, was a familiar site in the harbor and at San Diego Yacht Club, of which he was a member.  He was host to many distinguished visitors from this country on sailing excursions.  He was active in yachting a quarter of a century. 
Hartley in 1950 was named chairman of the Citizens Committee for Mission Bay, pushing passage of a $2 million bond issue for bay development.  In 1964, he was named  winner of the third annual community leader award of the North Park Business Club, of which he was a founder. 
OTHER ACTIVITIES 
A founder and past president of the North Park Lions Club, Hartley also was active in All Souls' Church, San Diego Post 201 of the American Legion, San Diego Historical Society, the Boys' Club and other community organizations. 
Cremation and private inurnment are planned. 
The family suggested memorial contributions to All Souls' Episcopal Church or the American Cancer Society, of which Hartley served as special gifts division chairman.  Lewis Colonial Mortuary has charge of the arrangements. 


***History: WINGS is believed to be the oldest PC in exhistance. She was built in San Diego, for Mr. Ed Depew (a builder). In fact, George Kettenburg Jr. agreed to build the boat in trade for a piece of land on Point Loma, that the Kettenburg family still owns. She was sold to Mr. George Jessop (of the Jessop Jewelry family) at a later date. Eventually sold to Mr. Paul Hartley Sr. in 1946. Upon his death, his extended family continued to enjoy the yacht. The Hartley family donated the vessel to the San Diego Maritime Museum in the 80's, when she was beginning to show her age. The museum was unable to fund a restoration, and rather than scuttle her, the museum board elected to give the boat to Richard S. "Rish" Pavelec. A member of the SDYC and active PC fleet member, Rish developed a plan to raise funds to restore the vessel and give her back to the museum. After almost 3 years of planning, work began. Koehler Kraft (of San Diego) was responsible for the restoration with Rish acting as project coordinator. The vessel was completed in early 2003 and has been sailing on San Diego Bay ever since. Soon, the rig will be removed and the hull will be put on display to be sailed only for special museum occasions.  (Source: http://www.kettenburgboats.com/pc.htm)


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Fantastic Find: 1939 England and Wales Register

If your family tree includes people living in 20th century England or Wales* you already know that census records in the U.K. are generally released 100 years after they were collected, so the most recent enumerations currently available are from 1911. (And I just discovered that their 1931 census was destroyed during World War II and no count was done in 1941 so, in any case, there's a 30 year gap in what will eventually be made public.)

However, after Britain declared war on Nazi Germany on September 3, 1939, the government created a register of its citizens "with the purpose of producing National Identity Cards, the register later came to be multi-functional, first as an aid in the use of ration books and later helping officials record the movement of the civilian population over the following decades and from 1948, as the basis for the National Health Service Register."**

If you're looking for more information about someone who was alive at that time the Register is an excellent database to search in--for instance, everyone's birth date is listed.*** Here's a page taken at random (people on the list who might be still alive have their information blacked out):

[Ancestry.com. 1939 England and Wales Register [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2018. Original data:
Crown copyright images reproduced by courtesy of TNA, London England. 1939 Register (Series RG101),
The National Archives, Kew, London, England.]

Although the lists covered the persons in each house on September 29, 1939, further information has been added in cases where the original details needed correction which include the married names of women who had been single on that date.

I've been having great fun adding this information to all the relatives of my British-born friend Margaret who asked me to help her with her family tree. Using the Register we were able to locate her maternal grandmother whose whereabouts she hadn't known before.


*But not from Scotland, Northern Ireland, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man.
**Quoted from the Historical Context of the 1939 England and Wales Register on Ancestry.com
***This is important because most of the available birth information for the U.K. is found in indexes which only give the quarter the birth took place.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Joey Hartley (lived 1883)

A linen postcard image of the Johnson Saum mortuary building (abt 60 years after Joey's death).  From ebay seller outweststv.


I have no pictures of my great grandfather George Henry Hartley's little brother Joey, as he died at 3 months old, but there are two sources I find for him:

San Diego Leaves & Saplings
Vol. 3, No. 3, Summer 1975
page 104
from Johnson Saum Mortuary records
1883
Hartley, Joey
d 5 Jun 3 months, b San Diego, --, bu City cem


A more personal mention comes from George and Joey's sister Maud Hartley:

from : Remembered Incidents in the Lives of the James Monroe Hartley Family, 1882-1940
Written by Maud Hartley MacDougall in 1950 (courtesy of Sarah Bennett and HermitInTheValley) 
On their return to San Diego, they bought a house on 19th and J, and it was here that
little Joey, the sixth child was born. He lived only three months. We all came through
the measles and whooping cough safely, but the littlest one. Mary told me that the little
thing took convultions, and mother
[Mary Jane Tibbetts] sent her for the Doctor. I can see her yet, a little girl
of ten, running all the long blocks down the hillside to 9th and F St. and the Doctor
driving back with her, but too late to save the baby. They took him the long dusty road
to the cemetery, in a rig called a Hack, drawn by two horses, two of my Aunts holding
the tiny casket on their knees, and the parents sitting opposite, facing them. It was
surely heart breaking for them and mother always missed her baby. She often spoke of
him especially on his birthday, so I grew up seeming to know him and have wondered
sometimes, what he would have been like had he lived.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, May 14, 2018

Fantastic Find: Texas and the Civil War

Half of my eight great great grandfathers fought in the Civil War. One, Willet O. "Dick" Worden, was a private in the Iowa 24th Infantry, and of the three who were Confederate soldiers*, two were in Texas and I've never been able to locate them in online military records.

So when this email from the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) arrived in my inbox this morning I jumped at the chance to learn more about what happened in Texas during the war.



Of course I don't expect to find any mention of those ancestors who reputedly enlisted in Texas regiments, but since we do know where they were living at the start of the war this information may help me focus on likely military units they would have served in.




*They were John Warren Avery (of Mississippi); the Texans were J.T.S. Warren and Abner Webb.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Celebrations: Mother's Day

Here I am, 14-months old, sitting on the sand at Doheny State Park with Bernice (Grenfell) Currey, the mother who raised me.

[From my personal collection]

Mother alway said they thought they were getting a redhead when they took me home from the hospital and into their lives.

(I bet I know someone who wants that big trailer in the background.)

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

MacDougall Funeral Held

My 2nd great aunt Maud Lillian (Hartley) MacDougall (1880-1975).  Image courtesy of HermitInTheValley (Ancestry user).

Continuing the obituaries for the siblings of my great grandfather George Henry Hartley (1878-1949), I present Maud Lillian Hartley.  She was the only one of my great grandfather's siblings who lived into my own life time, but unfortunately I never got to meet her (I was about 3 when she passed):

San Diego Union
2 May 1975
page 13 (from GenealogyBank) 
MacDougall Funeral Held 
Services for Mrs. Maud Hartley MacDougall, 94, who died Sunday in a hospital, have been held in Lewis Colonial Mortuary. 
Mrs. MacDougall, a native of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, came to San Diego as an infant with her family, the original developers of the North Park area.  A music teacher in San Diego and Los Angeles, she was the wife of Robert T. MacDougall, who died here April 10.
Survivors include two sons; five grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, May 11, 2018

School Days: First Day of School - September, 1952

This was my outfit for the first day of kindergarten at St. Rita's--we didn't have to wear uniforms until first grade. Mother made my dress (and a matching one for my doll) using a cute border print. It's hard to see the tiny polka dots on the fabric because Dad posed me facing into the sun, as usual so all detail got washed out.

[From my personal collection]



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, May 10, 2018

J. C. Hartley, 61, North Park Founder, Dies; Friends Praise His Activities

My 2nd great uncle, John "Jack" Charles Hartley (1876-1937), in an undated photo (Courtesy of HermitInTheValley on Ancestry).

On Saturday and Tuesday I presented the obituaries for Mary Hartley Read and Delia Hartley Stevens, who were my 2nd great aunts (sisters to my great grandfather George Henry Hartley).  Today I'll present their brother John Charles Hartley:

San Diego Union (San Diego, CA)
Saturday, November 6, 1937
page 1 and 2
 
J. C. Hartley, 61, North Park Founder, Dies; Friends Praise His Activities 
J. C. Hartley, 61, founder of North Park and for many years prominent in business circles in that district, died yesterday at his home, 3827 Herman Ave., after a prolonged illness. 
Funeral services will be held Monday morning at 10 at Bonham Brothers mortuary, with the Rev. William Forshaw officiating.  Burial wil be in Glenn Abbey Memorial Park. 
Mr. Hartley was a native of Bremer county, Ia.  At the age of five and one-half years he came to San Diego with his parents.  He grew to manhood on his parents' ranch at Dehesa, in the upper Sweetwater valley.  In 1900 he went to Devil's Lake, N.D.  He returned to San Diego three years later because of the illness of his father, James M. Hartley, and took over management of his father's 40-acre lemon orchard. 
Forms Partnership
In 1905 he formed a partnership with his brother-in-law, W. J. Stevens, under the firm name of Stevens & Hartley, and went into the real estate and insurance business in the downtown district.  In 1912 they moved the office to Thirtieth st. and University ave., and in 1912 Mr. Hartley put the North Park addition on the market, this being the site of his father's lemon orchard.  The tract fronted on University ave. and extended to Myrtle st. on the south and from Ray st. on the west to Thirty-second st. on the east.
 
In 1927, Stevens & Hartley dissolved partnership and Mr. Hartley moved his business to its present address. 
He helped organize the North Park Business club and the North Park Lions club and was elected as the first president of each.  He also served on the board of freeholders in preparing the city charter. 
He was married Dec. 26, 1901, to Ella S. Dodge and is survived by her and by their three children, Marian Hartley Knowlden, E.J. and John M. Hartley.  He also is survived by his mother, Mary J. Hartley, 3827 Thirty-first st., three sisters and two brothers, all but one of whom reside in San Diego, and by five grandchildren.  The surviving brothers are Paul and George.  The sisters are Adelia Stevens, Mary Read and Maude MacDougal. 
J.M.(Jack) Dodge, father-in-law of Mr. Hartley, recalled recently San Diego's big days in the baseball world. 
"This grand old boy was one of the best baseball players San Diego could boast of," said Mr. Dodge. "When I first saw him he played for me at old Recreation park, then located about where the old St. Joseph hospital stood at Sixth and University aves.
Popular Ball Player
"Jack Hartley became a member of our San Diego team and played at the old May View ball grounds.  I was in partnership with George Carey, running the pack.  Of all the ball players that played at the old park Jack Hartley displayed the most ability with the bat.  Jack was called the "Home Run King" of the bunch, and he certainly could handle the hickory.  Jack played with us for some time.  He married my eldest daughter, Ella, in 1901 and then moved to Devils Lake, N. Dakota.  It was not long before the people of that locality recognized Jack's ability as a ball player and he signed to play with the Devil's Lake professional team as an outfielder.
"The young ball players of San Diego can testify as to his ability as a player, and he delighted in getting a bunch of the young boys, members of the high school teams, to tell them many things about the game that served to be of great genefit to them later on.  He loved to have these boys gathered about him.  He certainly was a father to all of them and he loved them all as if they were his own.  Two of Jack's sons--Gene and John Hartley--were members of the high school teams, and through the training they received from their capable father they became splendid players.  No one loved the game more than did Jack, and his ball playing here will be remembered by the oldtimers."
 
"Word as Good as Bond"
Emil Klicka, bank executive, when informed of Mr. Hartley's death, said:
"In the North Park district, where Jack's word was as good as a government bond, we did some team-work in the upbuilding of North Park.  I soon learned to know him as a man of high integrity.  As a real estate man he did all he could to sell properties, but he always kept in mind a high sense of honor and ideals that made him a beloved citizen.  When I organized the old San Diego State bank, Jack became one of the directors.  Later he became a member of the advisory board of the Bank of America and retained that place up to the time of his death.  Residents in the North Park district have Jack Hartley to thank for many of the public blessings they enjoy now, because the growth of that section of the city came as a result of his leadership."
 
"Had I been called upon to say farewell to Jack Hartley, I could truthfully have said, "in all the 50 years I have known you, I never knew of you doing a questionable act," said John F. Forward jr., former mayor. "Jack put through the title company properties representing many thousands of dollars.  It was a pleasure to handle his business.  He was an ideal son, husband and father." 
Mayne Voices Tribute
George Mayne, civic leader and hotel manager, was close to Mr. Hartley for many years.  "Jack was my kind of a man--dependable to the utmost and deeply devoted to his friends and every civic movement he supported," said Mayne.  "There are a few men we have to thank for outstanding achievement in the development of San Diego when it was a comparatively small town, and Jack Hartley may be numbered as one of that class."
Mayor Percy J. Benbough characterized Jack Hartley as "A friend of man and whose death is a distinct loss to San Diego."
 
Mayor Benbough recounted some of Mr. Hartley's baseball days. "He played baseball on the square and he did business in the same way."  continued the mayor. "Young men entering upon affairs in the business world would profit well by practicing fairness and honesty in business as Jack Hartley did." F.W.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.