My name is Sandra Walker; my
grandmother was Augusta Webb Ford and her mother was Augusta Ware Webb,
daughter of Cassandra Francis Ford and Dr. Charles Henry Webb, Jr. Cassandra
Francis Ford was the daughter of James Ford of Crittenden County, Kentucky. My grandmother used to tell me stories, one of
which was about the Lucy Walker steamboat disaster. I was grown before I knew the stories were
based on fact.
I thought you might like to know a
little more about the disaster than was reported in the newspapers. The
disaster happened on Wednesday, 23 October 1844 about five miles below
Louisville when the boilers exploded, set the boat on fire and caused it to
sink. On the Lucy Walker were Dr. Charles Henry Webb, two of his
daughters, and his wife’s half brother, Jim Bobby.
Dr. Charles Henry Webb had gone to
visit his mother, Polly Ware Webb, and took his daughters, Cassandra and Nancy Winifred, and Jim
Bobby. Fourteen-year-old Jim Bobby had
gone to check on the horses when the boiler exploded. His body was never found.
A piece of metal hit Dr. Webb in
the throat and he knew he was dying. The
two little girls were running around what was left of the ship. A passenger
threw a mattress into the water and threw the little girls after it. They
couldn’t get on the mattress because it tipped. Sparks from the fire ignited the
mattress. The girls were on either side
of the mattress and when the fire got too close, Nancy Winifred told Cannie not
to be afraid and when she counted to 3, they would let go.
Cannie had had diphtheria and her
hair had been cut short. A man in a boat saw something in the water and reached
down and grabbed hair and pulled up a little naked girl. The current had torn
her clothes off; they gave her a dress and when she said that was a servant’s
dress, they knew she was from wealth. She could not tell them who she was. The
man took her upriver to where the survivors were. She didn’t recognize anyone.
Her father was there with his throat in a bloody bandage, but obviously that
was not what her father looked like. He motioned for paper and pencil and wrote
this is my daughter and how to reach her mother.
Dr. Webb’s wife, Cassandra, was
expecting a baby and stayed home with the other children. She made the trip to
claim her living daughter and identified her dead husband and her other
daughter.
When the new baby was born she was
named Cassandra for her sister that died. She was also called Cannie and later
Tonnie, possibly for Tante’ Aunt.
Cassandra Ford Webb lived with her niece Cannie Ford Trimble in Seattle
until her death in 1924.
Everything I have read says James
Ford’s middle initial was N and his son by his second wife was Jr, however I
have always heard him called Jim Bobby.
In a letter from my grandmother about what Papa told her of his parents,
her Papa referred to Jim Bobby.
Submitted by Sandra Walker
Copyright © Sandra Walker, 2020
Published 29 Oct 2020, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/
I love to read or hear family river-related stories . . . very special, even if tragic like this one. Robert Swenson, Carbondale and Metropolis, Illinois robert.swenson41@gmail.com
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