Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Crittenden County News Items 1904


The Crittenden Press on Thursday, 22 Dec 1904 was full of family visits and more. The following is a sample of what appeared in this popular weekly newspaper published in Marion, Kentucky.. 

J.R. Farris, of Salem, was in the city Thursday visiting his daughters, Misses Lake and Eva, on East Belleville street.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Strachley, of Cincinnati, are expected to arrive Saturday for a short visit to her mother, Mrs. Maxwell.

Ernest Paris, of Cave-in-Rock came over Saturday to visit his mother, sister and brothers, returning home Sunday morning.

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. M. Swisher, of Tunica, Miss., are expected here in a few days to spend the holidays with the family of her father, R.H. Kemp.

Richard E. Pickens Jr., of McLeansboro, Ill., is expected home to spend Christmas with his parents here. He has charge of  one of Stinson Bros.’ big stores and is succeeding well in the mercantile business.

Dr. G.E. Shively has just completed a beautiful cottage on the corner of Kevil and East Wilson avenue and will occupy it soon. The house is as convenient and cozy as it is possible to make one. The location is fortunate, too, for a physician’s home.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whitney, of Water Valley, Miss., will arrive Sunday morning to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R.F. Dorr. After a short stay here they will go to Bowling Green to visit Mr. Whitney’s relatives before returning to their southern home.

Frank Dorroh, of Crayneville, was in the city Saturday. He received a sample box of apples from Washington Territory sent in by some of our former citizens, who are thriving in the west. Frank says the apples are fine but old Crittenden is good enough for him.

Mrs. Kit Nunn went to Repton Friday to spend the holidays with her daughter, Mrs. Henry Hartzell.

Mrs. J.W. Flynn, of Grandview, Ill., will spend the holidays with her mother, Mrs. J.P. Pierce.

 Published 17 Oct 2023, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 5, 2023

The Barner House on Charlotte Street

 The following post was originally published on the 20th of Sep 2018.

For several  years I have been researching the Barner family, along with the house they lived in, on Charlotte Street in Smithland. Benjamin Barner was the first of the family to live in this house and, about 1841, his brother and sister in law, Sterling M. and Sarah Jane (West) Barner, moved from Nashville, Tennessee to live with Benjamin. Also living in the household were Sterling and Sarah Jane's children, Mary E., Joseph, and Martha "Miss Pattie" Barner.

Unfortunately, all members of the family were deceased by 1870 with the exception of Sarah Jane. She and her grandson, Sterling Barner Taylor, child of Miss Pattie's unfortunate marriage to B. Waller Taylor, moved to Russellville, Kentucky  to live with her sister, Elizabeth Saffrans. In 1873, Sarah Jane married George Blakey and then died in 9 January 1879 in Bowling Green, Kentucky.  Through the years the  Barner house in Smithland was rented out to various tenants, including J.W. Bush,[1]  Mrs. Nannie (Haydock) Ferguson,[2] and E.G. Leeper.[3] Leeper agreed to pay rent of $125 per year.

 By 1890, Miss Pattie's son, Sterling Barner Taylor, a physician living in Columbus, Ohio and the only surviving heir of the Barner family, began to sell off the property in Smithland, including the house on Charlotte Street.  Mrs. Nannie Ferguson, who had first rented the house in 1866 and had also been living there since the summer of 1880, agreed to buy Lots #37, 38, and 39 which included the dwelling house, for the sum of $500.[4]

Nannie Ferguson died in 1901 and the Charlotte Street house and two extra lots were inherited by her children, Hamlet, Nettie and Maude Ferguson. Hamlet  was living in Kansas City, Missouri  when he conveyed his interest in the property to his sisters, Nettie and Maude.[5]   By 1919, Nettie and Maude had moved to San Diego, California and sold the house to J.E. Massey.[6]  Massey and his family lived in the property for a number of years and then it sat empty for some time. On 1 December 2009, the house was destroyed by fire. Today the lot on which the house stood is vacant with no remnant of the old house remaining.  It was said that the oldest part of the house was an original log cabin in the center portion of the house. This appeared to be true from what remained of the house after the fire. Very likely the house was enlarged to accommodate the larger number of people when Sterling moved his family to Smithland.

There are various rumors about the house on Charlotte Street. A local tradition says it was the oldest house in Smithland, but no one, to my knowledge, has offered proof.  Some people believe that slaves escaped to free territory via an underground tunnel leading from the house to the Ohio and Cumberland Rivers, just a half block from the house.  Whether this is true or not, I cannot say, but I do know that on the 1850 Livingston County Slave Schedule, Sterling Barner had four slaves listed as his property. In 1860, Sterling had four slaves and his brother, Benjamin, had two slaves. It is interesting that the 1870 Livingston County census does not show any black or mulatto persons with the surname of Barner. Did they move away from Livingston County when they were freed or did they change their surnames? 




Barner House 4 December 2009 (after the fire)

   


 

[1] Rental agreement dated 1 Jul 1865 between J.W.Bush and Mrs. Sarah J. Barner to rent part of her residence until 28 Dec 1865; copy of letter in compiler's files.

[2] Letter dated 6 Feb 1866 from Pattie Barner to her mother, Sarah Jane Barner, stating "I suppose by this time Miss Nannie has become fully installed in her new [house?]. Give my love to Mrs.  Haydock and Miss Nannie also ..." Transcription of letter in compiler's files.

[3] Rental agreement dated 7 Jan 1870 between E.G. Leeper and Sarah J. Barner to rent her dwelling house 

[4] Livingston County Deed Book 19:155-156, Sterling B. Taylor to Mrs. Nannie Ferguson, 12 May 1890; recorded 7 Dec 1892.

[5] Livingston County Deed Book 29:445-447, Hamlet Ferguson and wife Mathilde to Nettie and Maude Ferguson, 14 Sep 1903; recorded 20 Oct 1904.

[6] Livingston County Deed Book 45:472-473, Maude and Nettie Ferguson to J.E. Massey, 31 Jul 1919; recorded 27 Mar 1920.


A repeat publication on 5 Oct 2023 Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/