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A Native Daughter Abused: A Bill of Divorce in Williams County,
OH by Pamela Pattison Lash I would like to thank Jean Coy Bartholomew, Alan Benjamin, Pete Daggett, and Jacque Whetro for their assistance in providing various historical and genealogical pieces of the puzzle for this story. I will first set the stage by introducing the reader to the necessary cast of characters.Modern readers are all
too familiar with stories of spousal abuse and divorce.
Family researchers should be aware that these sociological situations are
not confined to any particular time or area, but they transcend the ages and can
affect the lives of several generations both in positive and negative ways.
This genealogical detailing illustrates these points.
I would like to thank Jean Coy Bartholomew, Alan Benjamin, Pete Daggett,
and Jacque Whetro for their assistance in providing various historical and
genealogical pieces of the puzzle for this story.
I will first set the stage by introducing the reader to the necessary
cast of characters.
Ethan Allen Daggett, the son of Orange and (possibly) Betty Sears
Daggett, was born on 10 Sept 1837 in Cortland Co, NY.
On 17 Mar 1863 in Wright Twp, Hillsdale Co, MI, Book C p 305, he at 27
years of age eloped with 16 year-old Phebe Ann Doolittle, the youngest child of
Harmon and Martha Stubbs Doolittle. This
bride and groom were both descendants of early settlers of Williams Co, OH –
the Daggetts of Bridgewater Twp and the Stubbs-Doolittles of Springfield Twp.
Anyone proving a direct connection to these people would be eligible for
admission into First Families of Williams County, OH (FFWC).
The Orange Daggett family came to
this county sometime after a sheriff’s sale in 1842 at Lisle, Broome Co, NY
and before the 23 Sept 1850 federal census records of Bridgewater Twp as
follows: Orange (45 VT), Mariah (42 NY), Mary (16 NY), Ethan (15 NY), Lucretia
(13 NY), Hannah (11 NY), and Emmaline (7/12 OH).
Orange owned a fifty-acre farm three miles north of Montpelier.
A Daggett genealogy alludes to the possibility that Orange was the second
son of Ichabod and Hannah Whiting Daggett with Orange born in Orange Co, VT,
Orleans Co, VT, or Broome Co, NY, on 14 Apr 1804.
Mariah (possibly Gleason) may have been his second wife with the mother
of the first five children being Betty Sears of CT, d. bef 1849.
Further speculation about this Mariah showed that there was a gap between
the 1839 birth of Hannah and the Feb 1850 birth of Emmaline.
It would seem she was at least the mother of Emmaline. The oldest known
son of the family, Charles W. (1832 NY- aft 1880, Chicago, Cook Co, IL; mar 1
Jan 1856, Hillsdale Co, MI, Susan Marcia or Sarah A. Martin Smith) is not on the
1850 census with the rest of the family.
This farm family established roots in the Bridgewater area and was found
in the 1860 Federal Census: Orange (55 NY), Ethan (25 NY), Lucretia (22 NY),
Charles (5 MI), and Allen (3 MI). Mariah had died in Bridgewater on 9 May 1856
@49Y 8M 3D [pos b.date of 6 Sept 1806] and was buried in Cogswell Cemetery; her
tombstone inscription says “Mother” with a substantial epitaph of love and
devotion. This decade
also resulted in the marriages of Orange’s daughters, Mary, Lucretia, and
Hannah. Mary W. (1834 NY-aft Apr
1915, Russell, KS) was first married 13 Aug 1854, Hillsdale Co, MI, to John K.
Rood; John later died in Wright Twp, 24 Nov 1866.
The two young boys, Charles and Allen, who were recorded in the Daggett
household in 1860, were her sons. She
later married Hiram Opdycke, 10 Mar 1867, Wms Co, OH, and as his second wife
Mary took on the responsibilities of rearing his children in Superior Twp plus
having three children in the marriage, Heman, Wilbur, and an infant who died.
Allen Roode (1857 MI-1931) was listed with the Opdycke family in the 1870
Superior Twp federal census records. Hiram served from 1866-1871 as a Williams
County Commissioner. As early as 29 Dec 1864 Hiram was a delinquent taxpayer,
owning lots in Bryan. By March 1876
Hiram, who had six separate mortgages on his land and a general merchandise
store in Montpelier, was forced to have a Sheriff’s Auction after one or more
of the persons who had loaned him money, foreclosed through the courts.
The Opdyckes then moved to Pella, Marion Co, Iowa and eighteen months
later to Russell, Kansas. Hiram, a
Civil War veteran, applied for a pension in 1890.
He died on 27 Jan 1906 and his widow, Mary, made an application for a
pension on 22 Apr 1906.
Allen Roode, Mary Daggett Roode Opdycke’s son, married Sarah E.
(surname unknown). Allen’s son Charles A. (1887-1946) was president of the
Farmer’s and Merchant’s State and Savings Bank of Montpelier at the time of
his death. The Roode family is
buried in West Jefferson Cemetery, Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH. How ironic that
Mary and Hiram had financial difficulties and later her grandson is involved in
the business of finances. Daughter
Lucretia T. (May 1839 NY-bet 1912-1925, Russell, KS) married James L. Dole, 6
Nov 1862, Hillsdale Co, MI, and established a home in Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH
where they were found in the 1870 and 1880 federal census records.
The Doles later moved to Kansas, first to Bunkerhill, KS (c.1887), then
to Russell, Center Twp, Russell Co, KS (bef 1900), and by 1901 to Larned, Pawnee
Co, KS. Lucretia and her family were enumerated in the 1900 Center Twp, Russell
Co, KS federal census as 61 year old Lucretia Dole b. May 1839 NY, married 26
years with 4 living children, parents both from NY; in the 1910 Larned Twp,
Pawnee Co, KS federal census the family appeared with Lucretia, 74, married 48
years with 3 of her five children living, parents both from NY.
[Note the discrepancies in age and info about children.]
Lucretia Daggett and James L. Dole were the great-grandparents of Senator
and 1996 US Presidential Candidate Robert Joseph Dole. James L. Dole was living
in Larned as late as 19 Mar 1925 according to sister Kathryn H. Dole’s
obituary. He was a widower then and
he inherited a quarter interest in his sister’s house at 215 N. Myers Street
in Bryan, OH. He died on 29 Oct
1928. Hannah
F. Daggett (1839 NY-?) married
Loren A. Smith, 1858, Hillsdale Co, MI. Emmaline,
the youngest daughter, who would be ten years old, had disappeared from the
household by 1860.
Fourteen months before Ethan eloped, Orange married his third wife, Mrs.
Clarissa Kimball Hillard, 23 Jan 1862, Ransom, Hillsdale Co, MI, Book c p236,
but Clarissa is not with the family on the 1870 Federal Census. Clarissa, the
daughter of Daniel and Sarah Kimball, was supposedly born in Canada and had
moved from Geauga Co, OH to Crawford Co, OH before her move to Williams Co.
Clarissa died on 7 Nov 1877 in Ransom Twp, Hillsdale Co, MI and is buried
beside her first husband, Perez Hillard (d. 21 Oct 1854), in Burt (Evergreen)
Cemetery. Clarissa did not obtain a
divorce from Orange in Williams Co, but may have done so elsewhere.
Phebe Ann Doolittle, daughter of Harmon and Martha Stubbs Doolittle, was
born c. 1846, Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH.
Harmon and Martha were reported to have been the first couple to marry
there in the spring of 1834. He bought several parcels of land between 15 Sept
1835 and 16 Mar 1837. Harmon built a sawmill in 1837 plus he was a township
magistrate from 5 Sept 1835-19 Apr 1848 and a county commissioner from
1847-1849. This couple was found on
the 1840 Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH Federal Census with 2 sons under 5 years
old and 1 daughter bet 5-10 years of age.
Martha Stubbs, the daughter of John and Phebe Miller Stubbs, was born in
Tompkins Co, NY, 25 Apr 1812, and came with her parents to this county c. 1833.
John Stubbs of Goshen, Orange Co, NY traveled to Viewfield, Tompkins Co,
NY in 1804; he was a captain in that state’s militia during the War of 1812
but saw no active service. His
father, William Stubbs, was a Revolutionary War soldier.
John and
Phebe were married in Tompkins Co, NY and became the parents of seven children:
William M, (22 June 1810-Nov 1900, Stryker; mar Margaret H. Collins), Joseph H
(1811 NY- ?, mar Louisa Reynolds, 20 Nov 1836), Martha, Polly H (1818 NY- aft
1869, Donniphan Co, KS; mar 1- Jonathan B. Taylor, 16 Jan 1836; mar 2-Jesse
McArt, 3 Mar 1850), Mary , John H (26 Nov 1820 NY –10 Sept 1882, Stryker; mar
Mary Polly Miller), and Moses R. (1832-bef 1869).
John was a Justice of the Peace in NY for 17 years and came to Wms. Co,
OH c.1833. John
purchased huge amounts of land at the Wapakonetta Land Office on 8 Oct 1835.
Upon moving to this county John farmed over 1,000 acres, was a county
commissioner, an active organizer of Masonic lodges in NW Ohio, and a Master of
Hiram Lodge F and AM. John Stubbs
(12 Aug 1784, Goshen, Orange Co, NY-5 Feb 1864, Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH @79Y
5M 22D) and Phebe (16 Jan 1794, Broome Co, NY-18 May 1869, Springfield Twp, Wms
Co, OH @75Y 4M 2D) were buried in Boynton Cemetery.
Harmon
Doolittle (11 Mar 1810, CT-23 Sept 1849 @39Y 6M 12D) died in Springfield Twp and
was buried in Boynton Cemetery. He
wrote his will several days before his death and left his beloved wife all his
real and personal property. He gave
her the authority to sell any of this to settle his debts and to maintain
guardianship of all four minor children until they reached the age of 21, but if
she remarried, this guardianship would cease.
The Doolittle children, all born in Springfield Twp, were: Sophia C. (10
Oct 1834-21 May 1857; mar. 17 Mar 1853, Wms Co, OH, Joseph Stockbridge Boynton),
John S. (27 June 1836-aft 2 June 1874; mar.16 Dec 1855, Wms Co, OH, Ann
Gifford), Horace H. (16 Oct 1843-bef 13 Mar 1868, pos Chase Co, KS), and Phebe
Ann. Family tradition stated that
John S. Doolittle later married the daughter of an Indian chief and subsequently
became a very wealthy man.
Martha and her children were enumerated in the 1850 Springfield Twp, Wms
Co, OH Federal Census. On 20 Feb
1853, Wms Co, OH, Martha married Jacob Boyers and moved to Bridgewater Twp bef
1860 where they were listed in that census as follows: Jacob Boyers (58 PA,
farmer), Margaret (47 NY), Horace (17 OH), Phebe (13 OH), and Matilda, Jacob’s
daughter, (28 OH servant). Note
that Martha’s name was written as Margaret.
By 21 Nov 1853 Jacob was the guardian of the Doolittle children and held
a note from the Doolittle estate against Joseph S. Boynton, husband of Sophia.
Jacob put up a $5,000 guardian bond with the court at the time of his
appointment. On 22 July 1854 he
wanted to sell the Doolittle land and wrangled in court with Jesse McArt, an
uncle and guardian for Horace, over the proposed sale of part of the real
estate. Martha agreed to the sale
as the land was north of the Tiffin River and it overflowed; the parcel was
separated from the rest of the estate and could not be fenced in with the other
land. The final account of the
property took place on 13 Apr 1864.
Along with being the Doolittles’ guardian, Jacob was also guardian to
his grandchildren, issue of his son Jacob Jr. Jacob Boyer, b. 30 Jan 1802 in
Westmoreland Co, PA and the son of Peter and Anna Margaretta Hartzell Boyer, was
first married to Elizabeth Hoover who died 22 Oct 1852 and was buried in
Fountain Grove Cemetery, Bryan, OH. Jacob
and Elizabeth were parents to William, Matilda Eliza, Jacob Jr., Margaret, Adam,
and Mary. He was a Bryan merchant
as of Apr 1850 where he advertised the acceptance of ashes on account for the
firm of Boyer and Case.
As was stated before, the Boyer-Doolittles lived in Bridgewater in 1860
where they were neighbors of the Orange Daggett family.
Ethan and Phebe met then and eventually married.
One wonders if Phebe’s mother and stepfather sanctioned this elopement.
In any event the marriage took place and Ethan and his bride established
their home with Ethan’s father, Orange. As
time passed they had 2 daughters, Annie Belle, b 1865 and Mary L. b. 1868.
What takes place next is the tragic tale of spousal abuse, so brutal that
an account of the event is found on the front page of a Wauseon, Fulton Co, OH
newspaper, Northwest Republican, on 26
Aug 1869. The original story
appeared on page four of a Bryan paper, Union Press,
19 Aug 1869. Perhaps its less
prominent position was meant to spare the feelings of the relatives who lived in
Bryan and Stryker. Further details
can be found in the journal record leading to the divorce of this couple in the
Williams County Court of Common Pleas (V7 p369, 380-381) and on the microfilm of
the proceedings from the Williams County Civil/Criminal Court (Roll 21 case
numbers 39 and 57).
On Saturday morning, Aug 14, 1869, in the Bridgewater home of Ethan and
Phebe Daggett, Phebe was preparing toast for her husband, when he began
complaining, “that she was too extravagant in the use of milk”.
A verbal argument ensued and finally “he kicked her with his feet
encased in thick heavy boots until he had inflicted a wound to the abdomen which
had caused a rupture to such an extent that the bowels and womb were
protruding”. He then “seized
and pulled her out of doors”. Phebe “pleaded to have a doctor sent for but
he (Ethan) refused to let the boy have a horse to go for one and in this
frightful condition the woman (Phebe) lay from Saturday until Monday morning
without medical attendance”. Apparently
Phebe finally “prevailed upon the boy to go on foot for the doctor”. Who the
“boy” was is left to speculation – was he a farm laborer, one of the Rood
nephews, or someone else?
During this infamous weekend Ethan “had explained to the neighbors that
his wife was sick with chills and could not go out”.
Presumably he had allowed her to return to the house sometime between
Saturday and Monday morning. The
boy found Dr. Samuel W. Mercer in Montpelier who treated her and possibly made a
personal report to the authorities. On
Tuesday morning Sheriff Edwin J. Evans of Bryan went to Bridgewater to arrest
Ethan and to take Phebe’s deposition if she was still alive.
When he arrived at the Daggett home he found Phebe was still living but
was “most severely injured”. She
was able to give him her statement of the assault.
Ethan was a “short distance from home at the house of a neighbor where
he had stopped to converse a few moments” when the sheriff took him into
custody, brought him back to Bryan, and lodged him in the county jail.
When the story broke, people in the Daggett farm vicinity became
indignant and it was “a fortunate thing for him (Ethan) that the sheriff had
taken him in charge”. The
newspaper accounts were at first misleading as the headlines read, “Brutal
Assault: A Wife Fatally Injured”.
At the time of this attack Phebe was 22 years old and was “again soon
to become a mother at the time she received her injuries”.
Whether that part of the account is true has not been determined, but
Phebe does appear before the Williams County Common Pleas Court on 19 Aug 1869
to request a divorce citing extreme cruelty.
On 8 Nov
1869 she was awarded alimony of $300, was restored to her maiden name of
Doolittle, and was given custody of the minor children, Annie B. and Mary L.
There was no mention of a living third child, an ongoing pregnancy, or
the recent death of a child. At the
time of the divorce Phebe possessed $1800, which was held by Ethan since her
marriage, but was the “sole and exclusive property” of Phebe.
In addition to this sum Phebe had brought $600 to Ethan by reason of the
marriage, which she now wanted back.
Ethan was allowed to see his children through visitation rights of four
hours on Saturdays. Phebe was given
legal ownership of the land she owned in her own right.
She was further granted “control of her wearing apparel, two feather
beds, two straw ticks, pillows, sheets, blankets, and quilts for the two beds,
two stands, and one set of chairs”. Her
$300 alimony was to be paid as follows: $100 in 60 days, $100 in one year, and
the remaining $100 in two year's time. She
was granted a lien on the property owned by Ethan who as the defendant was
ordered to pay court costs in ten days.
Poor Ethan’s financial troubles were also evidenced in a suit brought
on by Pratt and Nelson, Attorneys, on 2 Nov 1869 for money owed them by Ethan.
He had to retain another attorney, Schuyler E. Blakeslee, to settle the
matter. Lawyer Blakeslee was the attorney of record in the famous murder trial
of Andrew F. Tyler in July 1848.
In 1866 Martha Stubbs Doolittle Boyers’ sister, Mary Clark and her
family, had moved to Stokes Mound Twp, Carroll Co, MO, but later moved back here
by 1875. Three months before the
assault of Aug 1869, Phebe Daggett’s grandmother, Phebe Stubbs, had died and
her obituary listed Phebe Daggett’s mother, Mrs. Jacob Byers (Boyers), as
living in Clinton, MO. By 27 June 1870 Martha was back in the 1870 Springfield
Twp, Wms Co, OH Federal Census as Martha Boyers (57 NY) plus daughter Phebe
Boyers (23 OH) and Daggett granddaughters Annie B (5 OH) and Mary L. (2 OH) all
living together. Obviously they had
put some distance between themselves and the Daggetts.
Martha had $800 in real estate value plus $200 in personal property while
Phebe at age 23 possessed $1,000 in real estate and $150 in personal property.
What had happened to husband, Jacob Boyers, has not been determined to
date; some Boyers researchers state that he died on 8 Oct 1892.
If this is the case, then he did not live with his wife Martha Stubbs
Doolittle Boyers.
In the 1870 Bridgewater Twp, Wms Co, OH Federal Census Ethan Daggett (33
NY farmer) plus father Orange (65 NY) and a 21-year-old housekeeper, possibly
Natalie McFavorite of OH, lived together on the Daggett homestead.
Now Ethan possessed $1,000 in real estate and $200 in personal property
as head of household.
When James L. Dole sold property on 27 Aug 1876 in Jefferson Twp, Orange
Daggett witnessed the transaction. Orange left the Bridgewater area sometime
around 1887 and moved to Bunkerhill, Russell Co, KS to live with his daughter
and son-in-law, James L. and Lucretia T. Dole and the four Dole grandchildren,
Eva, Netta, Robert G, and Rutherford H. Orange
died at the Dole home in Bunkerhill, which is approximately eight miles east of
Russell, KS, on 27 June 1887 @83Y 2M 13D from gangrene of the foot and ankle.
His obituary listed him as “always industrious and a highly respected
citizen”.
Ethan and Orange sold their Bridgewater property in Section 12S c1872 and
Ethan bought acreage c.1880 in Harrison Co, IA from his brother Charles.
According to the 1880 Missouri Valley, St. John’s Twp, Harrison Co, IA federal
census p151, Ethan Daget, 39 NY carpenter and boarder of Edward and Georgiana
Coblergh, was listed as a divorced male. From
the 1885 Missouri Valley, IA state census Ethan Daggert was 60-year old native
of NY. He supposedly married a
Nancy J. Daggett (18 Aug 1841-20 Apr 1927) who is buried in the Woodbine
Cemetery, Harrison Co, IA. Whether this is true and whether Nancy obtained a
divorce from Ethan is not presently known.
On 31 Mar 1898 he married Mrs. Elizabeth Bailey Hillard in Harrison Co,
IA. Elizabeth and her husband William were next-door neighbors to the Daggetts
in Bridgewater. Elizabeth, b. 18 Sept 1828, a native of London, England, became
a widow on 18 Dec 1891. She owned
property in Superior Twp as of 1894.
The story told by Elizabeth’s grandson, John Hillard, was that “after
her husband died, she was bound to go to Iowa and marry Ethan Daggett even
though her children were against it and had a fit.
She went anyway and married him, but they didn’t get along.
One night they were fighting in bed and he got up, left the room, and got
a pail of water to throw on her; but in the meantime she slipped out the window
and went to the neighbors; all he got was a wet bed as he threw it on the bed
but she wasn’t there”.
In the 1900 St. John Twp, Harrison Co, IA federal census p229, the Dagget
family was enumerated as Ethan, born Sept 1835 (64) married two years, a
carpenter with father native of NY and mother native of CT, and his wife,
Elizabeth, born Nov 1833 (66) ENG of foreign born parents; she had 8 children
with 7 still living, and she had immigrated to the US in 1839.
This marriage lasted sometime between 1898 and when Elizabeth Daggett
moved back to Wms Co, OH where she died on 7 Oct 1906.
If she obtained a divorce, she did not do so in Wms Co. Her obituary and
probate records listed her as Elizabeth Daggett. The Hillard family never
acknowledged the marriage and she was buried beside her husband, William Hillard,
in Cogswell Cem. An
interesting point that should be made here is that Orange Daggett had married
Elizabeth Hillard’s mother-in-law, Clarissa Hillard; furthermore, Clarissa
either left or divorced Orange just as Elizabeth did with regard to Ethan.
That these Daggett men appear to have been poor husbands is an
understatement. Ethan A.
Daggett was enumerated in the 1910 First Ward, Missouri Valley, Harrison Twp,
Harrison Co, IA federal census, p179, as 70 NY, a widower, with parents from NY
and CT; his profession was carpenter. On 10 June 1912, Ethan Daggett died
hundreds of miles from his former Williams Co, OH home.
His death certificate stated he was divorced at the time of his death.
His probate record, under the name of E. Daggette (Docket 7 p289 #1693) from
Harrison County, IA needs further study, but I did obtain a copy of Ethan's obit
from the "Missouri Valley Times", 13 June 1912, which according to the
obituary writer gives a different side to Ethan's nature.
"Mr.
Daggett was laid away yesterday. I
have known him quite intimate for a number of years and have found him a good
neighbor, willing to help in any good cause.
He especially loved children. They
were always welcome to his home. The
brothers have all passed over, two sisters remain." [Note that Ethan may
have had more than the one known brother, Charles W. Daggett.]
"Ethan Dagget, born in Cortland County, New York, Sept 10, 1837,
died June 10, 1912, 75Y 9M. At 12
years of age he removed with his parents to Williams County, Ohio, and remained
there until he came to Harrison County, Iowa, 38 years ago (1874).
He was converted early in life and joined the M.E. Church where he has
been a faithful member so many years. He
has suffered much the past year and has been cared for by kind friends and
neighbors. He was removed to the
hospital some three months ago and though all that medical skill and science
could do was done, he passed away to rest yesterday.
He leaves two sisters, Mrs. Mary W. Opdycke of Russell County, Kansas,
and Mrs. Lucretia Dole of Lanard, Kansas, both of whom came to care for him the
last days and were at the bedside when death came and were present at his
funeral. 'He giveth His beloved
sheep’”. Ethan was laid to rest
in the Oak Grove Cemetery, St. John Township, Harrison Co, Iowa. Phebe
married Jason W. Beard, 3 July 1879, Wms Co, OH; the couple was enumerated in
the 1880 Summit, Smithfield Twp, DeKalb Co, IN federal census period, 16B, as
Jason W. 31 IN dry goods and grocer, Phebe 33 OH, Belle D 14 OH, May 11 OH, and
Martha Boyer 64 mother and boarder. Jason W. Beard was the son of Elisha and
Elizabeth Boyers Beard. His mother
was a sister to Phebe's stepfather, Jacob Boyers.
Elizabeth died sometime before husband Elisha married Mrs. Mary Magdalena
Noragon Kepler on 9 May 1863 and by the 1870 Franklin Twp, DeKalb Co, IN federal
census, Jason did not reside with this father and stepmother. Martha
Boyers died of dropsy on 25 July 1886 @74Y 3M at her home in Stryker. Her death
record listed her as a widow. Her burial place is unknown. The term
"widow" for Phebe is also not strictly accurate because in 1900 Jason
W. Beard lived with his wife of 20 years in Crowell, Woods Co, Oklahoma.
He had two children with wife Josephine, but only one, Clarence S. Beard
b. Feb 1887 Kansas, was listed. It
would appear that Phebe or Jason obtained a divorce or Jason was a bigamist.
Note that Jason was in DeKalb Co, IN in 1880 and apparently by 1887 or before he
and his wife Josephine lived in Kansas where son Clarence was born.
By 1900 they lived in Oklahoma but have disappeared by the 1910 federal
census. As stated before in 1886 Martha Boyers died in Stryker so it would seem
sometime after 1880 the women moved back to Wms Co, OH. A brief article in the Bryan
Press, 4 Sept 1890, mentioned Mrs. Phebe
Beard of Wauseon, formerly of Stryker, was visiting relatives in Stryker. Belle
Daggett married William F. Cole, 17 July 1890, Wms Co, OH but on 20 July 1901
she obtained a divorce in Wms Co. William,
a resident of Illinois, had been willfully absent for the past three years.
He did not contest the divorce. Mrs.
Phebe Beard testified in court on her daughter’s behalf that William was at
fault. There were no children from
this marriage and Belle was restored to her maiden name, Daggett.
Phebe’s other daughter, Mary L. Daggett, disappeared from records after
1880. Phebe A. Beard, cousin to
Phebe M. Boynton, dec as of 1915, was listed with other relatives in the will
probated in Wms Co, OH (#6050), as a resident of Stryker, OH. Phebe
appeared as a widow living at 195 Lynn Street, Stryker, OH with her daughter
Belle in the 1910 and 1920 Federal Census records.
Phebe was a music teacher and Belle was a public school teacher.
Phebe Ann
Doolittle Daggett Beard died at her Stryker home, 8 July 1926.
Her daughter Belle was living at the County Home in Jefferson Twp as of 5
Feb 1934 or earlier. Phebe’s
estate was valued at $1500 with real estate as Lot 38 Tingley’s Add, Stryker.
Her estate had unpaid funeral expenses of $225 with the estate administrator,
Wendell P. Grisier, taking care of the bill with a public auction of her
belongings on 21 July 1934 after he was unsuccessful in getting Belle Daggett to
cooperate with the probate and property sale.
Belle died 16 July 1936 @78Y, in Stryker. The burial sites for Phebe and
her daughter, Belle, have not been discovered to date. Speculation/Unanswered Questions
1.
All around him Ethan would have been among people who did not approve of
his behavior, but would they have continued to socialize with his family?
Also, what about his family – would they have felt embarrassment and
anger? On that dreadful day, who
was there to witness the assault and was there something they could have done?
Ultimately was this a reason for the Dole and Opdycke families moving to
Kansas? 2.
Ethan may have been among
people who felt Phebe, as a woman and a wife, was to blame for the assault; she
should have been more cooperative and frugal.
Perhaps they turned a blind eye to the situation.
Perhaps this was an on-going case of abuse.
Examining Ethan’s later spousal abuse with wife Elizabeth, one forms
the opinion that Ethan definitely had problems with anger management. 3.
Why didn’t Ethan serve his country during the Civil War?
He was the right age to enlist. Was
there a religious or political reason? Did
he have a physical or emotional impairment?
Was Orange, the father, too ill to work the farm alone? 4.
Phebe had a mother, a stepfather and his family, a brother John, and
Stubbs uncles and cousins. Did they
in any way threaten Ethan? If so,
is that the reason Ethan and his father eventually left for parts West?
Was the move based on financial troubles or poor credit? 5.
Ethan was 27 years old when he married the 16-year-old Phebe.
Had he been married before? 6.
What happened to Jacob Boyers? What
happened to little Mary L. Daggett? Was
there a divorce for Phebe and Jason W. Beard? Ivana
Trump, former wife of “the Donald”, is quoted as saying, “the best revenge
is living well”. Did Phebe know
such revenge? I hope so. References
Atlases/Land
Williams Co, OH Atlases, WCGS,
1864, 1874, 1894, 1904 Plat Map 1867 Personal Property
Taxpayers, Wms Co, OH, WCGS Cemeteries
Bridgewater Twp, Wms Co, OH
Cemeteries, WCGS, 1993, Cogswell Cemetery p24, 32 Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH
Cemeteries, WCGS, 1986, West Jefferson Cemetery p20, 24 Pulaski Twp, Wms Co, OH
Cemeteries, WCGS, 1989, Fountain Grove Cemetery p52 Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH
Cemeteries, WCGS, 1992, Boynton Cemetery p 21, 24 Census
1840 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p239 1850 Federal Census Record,
Franklin Twp, DeKalb Co, IN, p214 1850 Federal Census Record,
Bridgewater Twp, Wms Co, OH, p49 1850 Federal Census Record,
Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH, p24 1850 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p95B-96, 100 1860 Federal Census Record,
Franklin Twp, DeKalb Co, IN, p71 1860 Federal Census Record,
Bridgewater Twp, Wms Co, OH, p93 1860 Federal Census Record,
Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH, p179B 1860 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p61B 1870 Federal Census Record,
Franklin Twp, DeKalb Co, IN, p64 1870 Federal Census Record,
Bridgewater Twp, Wms Co, OH, p28 1870 Federal Census Record,
Jefferson Twp, Wms Co, OH, p37 1870 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p45 1870 Federal Census Record,
Superior Twp, Wms Co, OH, p40 1880 Federal Census Record,
Chicago, Cook Co, IL, ED 7 #161 1880 Federal Census Record,
Summit, Smithfield Twp, DeKalb Co, IN, p19B 1880 Federal Census Record,
Bridgewater, Twp, Wms Co, OH, p454B 1900 Federal Census Record,
Russell, Center Twp, Russell Co, KS, p116 1900 Federal Census Record,
Crowell Twp, Woods Co, OK, p7A 1910 Federal Census Record,
Harrison Twp, Harrison Co, IA, p179 1910 Federal Census Record,
Larned Twp, Pawnee Co, KS 1910 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p8B 1920 Federal Census Record,
Springfield Twp, Wms Co, OH, p7B Court Records
General Index of Common Pleas
Court, Williams Co, OH 1824-1878, Journal 7 p369, 380-381, Nov 8-9, 1869, and
microfilm Roll #21 Case #39, #57, 19 Aug 1869 and 2 Nov 1869; Journal 21 p393
Case #4547 Williams Co, OH Probate #201,
282, 2441, 4314, 4934, 8140 Death Records
Williams Co, OH Death Records,
V1 p1, V2 p39, V3 p29 Genealogies/Histories
History of Williams Co, OH,
Weston Goodspeed, 1882, p234, 318, 344, 394, 429-432, 434, 716-717, 737-740 Stories of Fountain City,
Bryan, OH, Paul Van Gundy, 1975, p21 Supplement to Section Entitled
John Doggett-Daggett of Martha’s Vineyard from 1894 History of
Doggett-Daggett, Samuel Bradlee Doggett, George and Sydney Daggett, 1974 Marriage Records
Marriages of Hillsdale Co, MI,
B-344, C-35, C-236, C-269, C-305 Marriages of Williams Co, OH,
V2 p111, 132, 159, 188; V3 p48, V4 p636 Newspapers
“Bryan Democrat”, Bryan,
Wms Co, OH microfilm newspaper collection, 17 Mar 1864 p3, 27 May 1869 p3 “Bryan Press”, Bryan, Wms
Co, OH microfilm newspaper collection, 7 July 1887, p3; 19 Mar 1925, p2 c3, 21
Oct 1926, 23 July 1936 "Missouri Valley
Times", Harrison Co, IA email copy from Harrison Co, IA Genealogical
Society, 13 June 1912 “Northwest Republican”,
Wauseon, Fulton Co, OH microfilm newspaper collection, 26 Aug 1869, p1 “Union Press”, Bryan, Wms
Co, OH, microfilm newspaper collection, 19 Aug 1869, p4 “Whig Standard”, Hillsdale
Co, MI, microfilm newspaper collection, 22 Aug 1854
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