Thursday, March 30, 2023

John and Mariah Cruiser McWilliams - Chapter 2

 

There’s No Place Like Home


1849 Inventory of John McWilliams Estate - page 1

The inventory of John’s personal property was completed and filed by John’s friends Henry Funk and Daniel Follmer on September 1, 1849, just over a month after his death. The accounting of the couple’s furnishings, cooking utensils, farm equipment and livestock offered a glimpse into their economic status and everyday activities on their farm.[i] 

The McWilliams’ prized household possession was probably their eight-day clock that was appraised at thirty dollars. This was by far the most expensive and extravagant item among their furnishings. In fact, only their threshing machine, two-horse wagon, and horses had a higher value than their clock.

 

1849 Inventory of John McWilliams Estate - page 3

The main living area likely housed their settee, three rocking chairs, two corner cupboards, a dining table, “waiter,” and a set of six rush-bottom chairs. “One lot of carpet,” could have covered some of the bare wood floors of their home. Three tables, sixteen more chairs, and a bench were most likely scattered throughout other rooms of the house. The bedrooms were furnished with six bedsteads, one stand, two bureaus, one chest, one case of drawers and two mirrors.  One tick, six pillows and bed clothes for the bedsteads were the only linens in the inventory. A few lots of “sundry items” might have included linens for use as towels. 

Polly prepared meals for her hungry family over their fireplace and “stove and pipe” using only a few basic kitchen utensils and tools. There was one set of andirons, an iron hook, six iron pans, a copper kettle and an iron kettle. She also owned a churn, a tub, and a meat barrel. Bread could have been baked and served on her two bread trays. She probably carried and stored fruit and vegetables in the baskets listed with the kitchenware. One corner cupboard contained glazed cream-colored English earthenware dishes known as queensware. Their tables were undoubtedly lighted with the candlesticks they owned. Polly may have even made hand-dipped candles to place in the candlesticks. Kitchen cutlery was not listed, but might have been included with “sundry items.” 

The McWilliams relied on the produce from their land to feed their family. Polly probably grew potatoes, turnips, pumpkins and cabbages as staple vegetables in her garden. They stored well when placed in a cellar or buried in a pit or barrel and dug out as needed during the winter. Every family had a supply of apples, peaches and cherries from trees planted on their property. The fruits kept well after being dried in the sun. The children surely helped cultivate the garden and gathered wild fruits, berries and nuts. They may have also picked dandelion greens to eat when green vegetables were not in season.[ii] Wild honey was used for sweetening food, as was maple syrup harvested from maple trees, and molasses made from sorghum.

John died in mid-summer before his grain was ready for harvest. At his death he had sixteen acres of corn and other crops in his fields valued at $350.00. The other crops probably included wheat and buckwheat. His inventory also listed hay valued at $95.00 and oats worth $10.00.

John, like most Pennsylvanians, likely took his grains to a nearby water-powered grist mill for grinding into flour and cornmeal. Polly probably baked bread, oatmeal, cornmeal and buckwheat cakes in a Dutch oven on the kitchen hearth, while most other foods were boiled over a fire. Of course, the firewood had to be replenished at regular intervals and the old ashes had to be removed to keep the fire burning. Most homes were located close to a natural water source, such as a spring or mountain-fed creek, but all the water for cooking and household use had to be carried into the house.

The McWilliams owned a hetchel to comb flax fibers, a pair of sheep shears, wool carding paddles and basket, a wool wheel, and a spinning wheel and reel. Polly and her daughters obviously knew how to make linen from the flax they grew and were adept at spinning wool fiber from the fleece of their sheep. The women in the home typically spent evenings and long winter days occupied by the tedious labor needed to comb, card, spin, weave, and sew raw fibers into homespun clothing. Polly likely made some, if not all of the clothing, for her family. Two "sewing chairs" were also listed in the inventory. Mending and laundering by hand added more chores to the long list of responsibilities that she must have shouldered.

 

1849 Inventory of John McWilliams Estate - page 2

John owned a respectable assortment of livestock at the time of his death. His most valuable animals were a gray mare, a bay mare, a bay horse and a bay colt. The bay horse and colt were worth ninety dollars each and the mares were valued at twenty and thirty dollars. He also had three cows, two heifers, eight hogs and eight pigs. In addition to her housekeeping chores, food preparation, and bearing and rearing their children, Polly probably partnered with John in the care of their livestock.

The cows provided milk for Polly to churn into butter or process into cheese, and swine were a primary source of protein for pioneers. Hogs required little care and produced large numbers of offspring. They roamed and foraged freely in the woods during the spring and summer where they fattened before fall when all except the breeding stock were butchered. The McWilliams likely preserved the pork by salting or smoking, and the fat was rendered into lard for cooking. John probably hunted wild poultry, rabbits, squirrels and deer to provide fresh meat for roasting and stewing,[iii] but preserved meat was necessary for sustenance during periods of heavy snow or bitter cold when hunting was impossible. 

The importance of John’s horses as partners with him in the farm operation was underscored by examining the list of farm implements in the inventory. A corn plow, two harrows, a threshing machine and four sets of harness were essential for the planting and harvesting of all the McWilliams’ crops. The horses also provided transportation for the family and carried heavy loads of water, wood, grain, meat, and other essential supplies. A buggy, wagon, truck wagon, two horse wagon, two wagon beds, a single and double tree, sleigh, sleigh box, and sled were some of John’s most expensive and indispensable equipment. They enabled travel over the primitive rural roads and fields that were often muddy or covered in ice or snow. A saddle and bridle, a side saddle and lines, a couple of sets of chains, and a buffalo robe completed the gear used with the equine members of the family.

 

1849 Inventory of John McWilliams Estate - page 4

The fish hooks, grubbing hoe, shovel, barrels, boxes, watering can, grindstone, tongs, ladder, straw cutting box, and powder horn gave hints of the diverse chores John may have performed in providing for his dependents. He must have also been skilled in woodworking as he owned a shaving horse (a workbench/vise for woodworking), axe, maul, wedge, augurs, and saws. Of course, he employed some of those tools to cut and split firewood for his home. 

 

See You in Court


Lithograph from 1858 Coal Land Survey Map by Hopkins & Cleaver
from the Library of Congress


The McWilliams filed land deeds, estate papers, and other legal documents at the county seat in Sunbury. The town was described in notes in the 1850 Mortality Schedule of Northumberland County:

“Sunbury is the seat of Justice for Northumberland County, Situated on the east bank of the Susquehanna River about two miles below the confluence of the North and West branches of the same. It has a Court house, Jail, and Public Offices for the County Officers. A Post Office and daily mail. Four Churches. Episcopal Lutheran German Reformed and E.P. Methodist. Here a large Dam is built in the river to feed the Pennsylvania Canal.”[iv]

The Sunbury Gazette, July 26, 1845



The Sunbury American, July 28, 1849

 

John’s name appeared in the List of Jurors in the Sunbury newspaper in the August court term of 1845 as a Grand Juror and in the August court term for 1849 (published before his death) as a traverse juror representing Chillisquaque Township in Northumberland County. He was surely regarded as a respected citizen of unblemished character to have been selected to serve on juries entrusted with investigation and trial of criminal and civil court cases.[v]

 

Columbia County PA Orphan's Court, volume 2, page 45, April 8, 1828

John also appeared in Columbia County Orphan’s Court records in 1828 when he was appointed as guardian for his sister Eleanor McWilliams Scout’s youngest daughter, Mary Ellen Scout, after Eleanor’s husband died in 1826.[vi]



Next - Eight is Enough; The McWilliam' Children



[i] Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Recorder of Deeds, Estate Inventory, File Mc 97, 1849, John McWilliams, Northumberland County Courthouse, Sunbury, PA

[ii] Youmans, Martha Follmer, “Journal of Anna Margaret Follmer 1775-1781,” Special Issue Historical Leaflet Series Publications of the Columbia County Historical Society, pages 7, 8, 10, 18 August 1976, Bloomsburg, PA, accessed Northumberland County Genealogical Library, Sunbury, PA

[iii] “Agriculture and Rural Life,” Stories from PA History, accessed at explorepahistory.com/stories.php

[iv] 1850 U.S. census, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Chillisquaque Township, mortality schedule, p. 833, NARA microfilm publication M1838, roll 3; accessed www.ancestry.com, image 19

[v] Sunbury and Shamokin Journal, Sunbury, Northumberland County, PA, 21 June 1845, page 3, column 4, John McWilliams, and Sunbury American, Sunbury, Northumberland County, PA, 28 July 1849, page 3, column 2, accessed https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov 

[vi] Orphan’s Court, Columbia County, Courthouse, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, Orphan’s Court Docket, Volume 2, p. 45, Mary Ellen Scout (1828), Appointment of Guardian, 8 April 1828; Orphan’s Court Dockets, 1814-1869, Orphan’s Court dockets, vol. 2, 1814-1841, p. 45; filmstrip 955824, DGS 5544892: accessed www.familysearch.org, image 326

 

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

John and Mariah Cruiser McWilliams - Chapter 1

 

Married and Buried in Chillisquaque


Gazebo in Chillisquaque Presbyterian Cemetery
Site of the Church Where John and Mariah Were Married


John McWilliams and Polly Cruiser may have been a bit nervous as they stood before Rev. John Bryson in the Chillisquaque Presbyterian Church on their wedding day. The log structure was probably packed with family and friends gathered to witness the union of the twenty-five-year-old residents of Turbot Township. The young couple had grown up as neighbors on nearby farms and were about to establish a home of their own. Everyone would have been dressed in their Sunday best homespun linen and woolen garments and eagerly anticipating a few hours of respite from the backbreaking labors necessary to provide for their families. Rev. Bryson probably personalized his words to Polly and John because he had served the congregation of Chillisquaque, the first church in the area, for twenty years and was likely well-acquainted with the bride and groom.

The newlyweds must have taken their marriage oaths seriously and employed the blessings of God, Rev. Bryson and the assembled guests to fortify them throughout the joys and sorrows they would face during their lives together. They continued the tradition of raising a large family and supporting themselves by tilling the soil and raising livestock, just as their ancestors had done. Their marriage endured for over 27 years until death separated them. When their earthly journey was complete, they were buried side by side in the churchyard cemetery just a few steps from where they exchanged nuptial vows.

 

The Middle Child

John drew his first breath on a mid-summer Monday, June 28, 1784, in in Turbot Township, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania.[1] He was the seventh of thirteen children born to William and Sarah Nichol McWilliams who were married in York County in 1771.[2] Six siblings were born before him and six more entered the world after him.

His father was a Scots-Irish Presbyterian immigrant who purchased an original land warrant of 306 acres in Northumberland County in 1774.[3] William and Sarah faced incredible hardships as early pioneers in the Pennsylvania wilderness. After clearing their land, building a log cabin and planting crops with only primitive implements, they endured the menace of attack by Native Americans. During the Revolutionary War, Indians had ambushed scores of settlers, slaughtered them, torched their property, and took their scalps as trophies. The colonists whose lives were spared often suffered serious wounds or were hauled away as prisoners by the Seneca and Iroquois tribes.[4] Before John was born, his parents and four oldest siblings were forced to flee to Fort Augusta to seek refuge from the danger of Indian attacks throughout the Susquehanna Valley in the summers of 1778 and 1779.[5] They were witnesses to the rebellion against British rule in the colonies and supported the fledgling US government from its inception.[6] At age three, John became one of the original citizens of Pennsylvania when it became the second of the thirteen colonies to declare statehood in 1787.

Life was probably hectic in the McWilliams household during John’s childhood. The family welcomed a new baby every two or three years between 1771 and 1796. John had eight brothers and four sisters. It must have been crowded and noisy in the cramped living space in their log cabin! Thirteen members of the family lived in the household when the census taker visited in 1800. The offspring were robust and healthy, as all thirteen children lived to adulthood. This was highly unusual before the age of modern medicine. Disease, accidents, infection, lack of medical care, and even poor nutrition claimed many young lives at the turn of the nineteenth century.

The McWilliams did have the advantage of plenty of laborers to assist with the farm and household chores necessary to maintain their large family. William trained his sons to plow, sow and reap abundant harvests of grain in the rich soil around Limestone Creek. All of them became successful farmers. The daughters undoubtedly learned to garden, cook, spin, weave and sew at Sarah’s side as she worked from sunrise to sunset to provide food and clothing for her growing brood.

Church attendance and schooling were likely important parts of John’s upbringing. His father was one of the founding members of the original Chillisquaque Presbyterian Church built in 1774. Church records from this time period have disappeared, but 42 heads of families including William McWilliams, signed the “call” to Rev. Bryson inviting him to serve as pastor in 1790.[7]

The McWilliams would have made the weekly trek to worship on foot, by horseback or in a horse-drawn wagon. Six wooden steps led the worshipers into the entrance of the white frame church where they sat in high, straight-backed pews. A clerk “raised the tunes” in a square box at the front of the church and the sermon was spoken from a pulpit. Two services were held on the Sabbath with an hour intermission between. Before the second sermon, the congregation would gather for lunch during the intermission. The congregation was expected to spend the rest of their Sunday at home studying Catechism.[8] Church attendance surely provided social as well as spiritual sustenance for the settlers who lived in solitary cabins connected solely by narrow paths through the forests, and over mountains and rivers. The Presbyterians generally placed a high value on education, so it is probable that John attended a subscription school in the neighborhood. In, fact it seems fairly certain that all children attended school in Northumberland County. Tax laws required that the names of all poor children who could not afford schooling be recorded in the tax rolls. Both school and poor taxes were deducted from John’s estate in 1850.


John McWilliams 1809 Tax Roll 
Turbot Township, Northumberland County, PA

John worked on the family farm with his father and siblings until he reached his mid-twenties. After age 21, he appeared on the 1809 and 1810 tax rolls as a single man in Turbot Township. As such, he was taxed 33 cents.[9] He was counted as a resident in his aged father’s home in 1810, when his oldest brother James was enumerated as the head of household in the federal population census.[10]


John McWilliams, His Father William, and Brothers in the 1812 Tax Roll
Turbot Township, Northumberland County, PA


After his marriage, John remained on the Turbot Township tax rolls with his father and brothers for a few years. In 1812 and 1813, he did not own land but was taxed nine cents on his personal property and 10 cents on his occupation. He was identified as a laborer who owned one horse and one cow, assessed respectively at 6 cents and 3 cents each. It is possible that he owned more livestock, but only horses and cows were taxed. He may have continued to live in William’s house or he may have built a separate cabin on William’s property, while still working for his father.  John last appears in the Turbot tax list in 1816, when a second horse was added to his personal property.[11]

 

Going Dutch


Mary Kroesen October 2, 1785 Baptism
North and Southampton Low Dutch Reformed Church, Bucks County, PA 

John and Polly married before their first child was born in 1811, although the exact marriage date has not been determined. Polly was the third child and only daughter of Jantye Corssen and John Cruisen’s four children.[12] Several undocumented sources state that Polly was born in 1785 and her baptism in the Southampton Low Dutch Reformed Church was recorded on October 2, 1785 in Bucks County.[13] Note that both the Corsen and Cruisen surnames were spelled in several different ways in documents.


Marriage Record of John Krewson and Jane Corson
September 15, 1772, in Newton, Bucks County, PA

Polly’s ancestors emigrated to America from the Netherlands in the mid-1600s. The Kroesen (also spelled Krewson and Cruisen) and Corssen (also spelled Corson) families were some of the original colonial landowners in the Dutch settlements in Brooklyn and Staten Island, New York. Her maternal great-grandfather Benjamin Corssen Sr. left Staten Island and purchased a 250-acre farm in Northampton, Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1726. Her paternal Kroesen ancestors were in Bucks County as early as 1718. They were closely associated with the Corssens in both New York and in Bucks County and members of the two families frequently intermarried.[14] Her parents, John Cruisen and Janetye “Jane” Corson, were married on September 15, 1772, in the Presbyterian Church in Newton, Bucks County, Pennsylvania.[15] Polly came to Northumberland County in 1793 when her father purchased 105 acres of land near William McWilliams’ farm in Turbot Township.[16]


Newton Presbyterian Church Built in 1769, Remodeled in 1842,
Newton, Bucks County, PA; Used by George Washington
as a Hospital, Jail & POW "Camp" in 1776

Polly’s given name was “Mariah,” (Dutch spelling for Mary) which is inscribed on her tombstone. She was identified as “Polly,” a common nickname for Mary, in her father’s will and as “Mary” in land deeds with her husband John.[17] These documents suggest that she was called Polly by her family. There were many variations of the spelling of her surname. Her father’s headstone reads “Cruisen,” but the name morphed into “Cruiser” when it was given as a middle name in future generations of McWilliams men.


John Cruiser Monument in Chillisquaque Cemetery
Mountour County, PA

Polly’s father died in 1796 at age 46, when she was eleven years old.[18] Her two elder brothers were 23 and 15 years old, but her younger brother was only nine. The older boys probably assumed the farm duties to support their mother and younger siblings after their father’s death, although her father provided for the minor children’s care and education in his will.


Inventory of John Cruiser Estate 1796 
Northumberland County, PA, page 1


Inventory of John Cruiser Estate, page 2


Polly’s father’s personal property was appraised soon after he passed away. The list of his possessions was filed in Sunbury on November 12, 1796, and is now housed in the Northumberland County Courthouse.[19] The property in John Cruisen’s estate suggested that he was a successful farmer who lived an austere life and managed to produce a bounty of crops with a bare minimum of equipment.

His wardrobe was sparse, including only one pair of breeches, one pair overalls, one pair trousers, two shirts, three jackets, one coat, one great coat, three pairs of stockings, one fur hat and one pair of mittens. He also owned a pair of silver knee buckles and one other pair of knee buckles. He retained an impressive number of livestock on his farm, consisting of a yoke of oxen, three cows, one bull, one calf, three horses, fourteen sheep, nine hogs and some small pigs. His farm implements and tools were limited to a wagon, windmill, plow, harrow, three axes, a maul, wedges, cutting box, dung fork, pitch fork, and flax break. His harvest was probably nearly complete for the year at the time of his death in early October. The value of stacks of rye and wheat, quantities of hay and oats, and grain still in the ground (possibly corn) was also estimated.


John McWilliams and Wife Mary Heirs Deed 1822 

Polly’s brothers lived on her father's property in Turbot Township with their widowed mother until it was sold in 1815. John and Polly retained their one-fourth share of her father’s real estate, but her three brothers sold their interest in the land.[20]  At the time of the sale, the McWilliams were described as residents of Limestone Township, Columbia County, in the property deed. It is not clear whether John moved to Columbia County during this time or whether changes in the county boundaries placed his residence in a different jurisdiction. John does not appear to have been charged taxes on his and Polly’s inherited real estate. Perhaps because of its small acreage, it was under the threshold of value for taxation on real estate. They later sold the inherited land in 1822, when they were again described as residents of Limestone Township.[21]

John and Polly likely used the proceeds from their land sale to finance the purchase of a farm in Chillisquaque Township the next year. A reference to John’s purchase of 100 acres near Lime Ridge in 1826 where he lived until his death, was made in a county history book published in 1915.[22] However, the property deed from the sale of his real estate after his death confirmed that he bought two adjoining parcels of land in Chillisquaque Township in 1823 and 1828.[23] His family was enumerated in Chillisquaque Township in the 1830 and 1840 censuses and he owned 123 acres of land in Chillisquaque Township when he passed away.[24] John also appeared on the tax rolls of the township from 1824 until 1830, the last year that tax records are accessible online.[25]

Next, Chapter 2 - There's No Place Like Home

 



ENDNOTES

 

[1] Headstone, John McWilliams, Chillisquaque Cemetery, Mexico, Montour County, Pennsylvania

[2] Cuthbertson, John, Register of Marriages and Baptisms Performed by Rev. John Cuthbertson Covenanter Minister 1751-1791 With Index to Locations and Persons Visited, Washington, D.C., Lancaster Pa., Lancaster Press, 1934, page 219, William McWilliams & Sarah Nickle, Marriage, 27 March 1771, accessed https://babel.hathitrust.org

[3] Pennsylvania State Archives, RG-17, Records of the Land Office, Patent Indexes, 1684-[ca.1957], series #17.147, 154 & 155, Patent Index, “A and AA” Series, 1684-1781, Images of Each Index Page, p. 213, William McWilliams, 25 January 1774; accessed www.phmc.pa.gov, Patent Index Pages, Series A and AA, 1823-1838, Surnames beginning with “M,” page 214

[4] Meginness, John Franklin, Otzinachson: or, a history of the West Branch Valley of the Susquehanna.., Philadelphia, H.B. Ashmead, 1857, pages 192-216; accessed https://archive.org 

[5] Floyd, J.L. & Co., Genealogical and Biographical Annals of Northumberland County Pennsylvania, Chicago, IL, J.L. Floyd & Co., 1911, p. 224, William McWilliams; accessed https://archive.org

[6] William Henry Egle, Proprietary, Supply, and State Tax Lists of the Counties of Northampton and Northumberland, for the Years 1772 to 1787, Pennsylvania Archives, Third Series, Volume 19, Harrisburg, PA, Wlm. Stanley Ray, state printer, 1898, pages 506, 576; accessed familysearch.org   

[7] Finney, Rev. William Gardner, The History of the Chillisquaque Church, 1926, Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985, p. 20 & 27, Historical Society of Pennsylvania; Historic Pennsylvania Church and Town Records; Reel: 236; accessed www.ancestry.com

[8] Dr. Mary Belle Lontz, “Chillisquaque Church and Cemetery,” Proceedings and Addresses, 10 December 1990, Volume XXX, page 99-100, The Northumberland County Historical Society, Sunbury, PA

[9] Northumberland County, PA, Board of County Commissioners, Tax Records, 1774-1843, Turbut Township, 1787-1825, filmstrip 1449349, DGS 7857877, John McWilliams, 1809; accessed www.familysearch.org, image 80

[10] 1810 U.S. census, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, population schedule, Turbot Township, p. 130, James McWilliams; NARA microfilm publication M252, roll 53; accessed www.ancestry.com, image 8

[11] Northumberland County, PA, Board of County Commissioners, Tax Records, 1774-1843, Turbut Township, 1776-1791, 1787-1809, 1810-1825; filmstrip 1449349, DGS 7857877, William McWilliams; accessed www.familysearch.org.

 12] Register of Wills, Northumberland County, Courthouse, Sunbury, Pennsylvania, Wills Book No 1-3, 1772-1845, book 1, page 177, John Crusen (1796), Will, 17 October 1796; Pennsylvania, Wills and Probate Records, 1683-1993, microfilm roll 961022; accessed www.ancestry.com. image 106

[13] North and Southampton Dutch Reformed Church (Bucks County, Pennsylvania), Baptisms, Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1669-2013, page 37, Mary daughter of John Kroesen and Jane Corsen; accessed www.ancestry.com, image 2036 

[14] Corson, Orville, Three Hundred Years with the Corson Families in America…Volume I, Burlington, VT, Free Press Interstate Printing Corporation, 1939, page 43-44, 94, 109; accessed www.ancestry.com

[15] Pennsylvania Marriages, 1709-1940, database, John Krewson and Jane Corson, 15 Sep 1772; Presbyterian Church, Newton, Bucks, Pennsylvania, index; filmstrip 1313850, accessed www.familysearch.org

[16] Recorder of Deeds, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Courthouse, Sunbury, Pennsylvania, Deed Book, volume L, 1779-1802, John Cruisen (1793), 16 February 1793, page 461–463, filmstrip 961197, DGS 7903177; accessed www.familysearch.org, images 249 –250

[17] Register of Wills, Northumberland County, Courthouse, Sunbury, Pennsylvania, Wills Book No 1-3, 1772-1845, book 1, page 177, John Crusen (1796), Will, 17 October 1796; Pennsylvania, Wills and Probate Records, 1683-1993, microfilm roll 961022; accessed www.ancestry.com. image 106

[18] Finney, p. 75

[19] Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Recorder of Deeds, Estate Inventory, File C 31, 1796, John Cruisen, Northumberland County Courthouse, Sunbury, PA

[20] Recorder of Deeds, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Courthouse, Sunbury, Pennsylvania, Deed Book, volume T-U, 1795-1821, John Cruisen (1815), Volume T, page 12-13, 11 November 1815, filmstrip 961202, DGS 8036685; accessed at www.familysearch.org, image 12

[21] Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Recorder of Deeds, Register and Recorder’s Office, Northumberland County Courthouse, Sunbury; Deed Book, Volume T-U, 1795-1821, Volume T, Page 632-633, John and Mary McWilliams (1822), Land Sale 9 May 1822, filmstrip 961202, DGS 8036685; accessed www.familysearch.org, images 681-682

[22] Beers, J.H., Historical and Biographical Annals of Columbia and Montour Counties Pennsylvania Volume One, Chicago, J.H. Beers and Company, 1915, page 583; accessed http://archive.org

[23] Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Recorder of Deeds, Register and Recorder’s Office, Northumberland County Courthouse, Sunbury; Deed Book Volume JJ 1829-1853, p. 440, William McWilliams (1853), Land Deed, March 5, 1853; Deeds 1772-1914, Deed Book, vol. JJ, 1829-1853, filmstrip 961211, DGS 8086003; accessed www.familysearch.org, image 248

[24] 1830 U.S. census, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Chillisquaque Township, population schedule, p. 149, John McWilliams; NARA microfilm publication M19, roll 147, Family History Library Film: 00020621; accessed www.ancestry.com, image 9 and

1840 U.S. census, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Chillisquaque Township, population schedule, p. 129, John McWilliams; NARA microfilm publication M704, roll 475, image 270, Family History Library Film 0020551; accessed www.ancestry.com, image 5

[25] Northumberland County, PA, Board of County Commissioners, Tax Records, 1774-1843, Chillisquaque Township, 1813-1830, filmstrip 1449343, DGS 7857875, John McWilliams, accessed www.familysearch.org

 

Wednesday, March 08, 2023

DR. CHARLEEN LAVERNE McCLANAHAN VARNER; A NASA RESEARCHER IN THE SIXTIES

 


Bob and Charleen McClanahan Varner 1953 Wedding Portrait

 

Today is International Women's Day, so I feel compelled to tell the story of a McClanahan trailblazer, my first cousin, one time removed, who was quite a unique individual! She didn't have children, but was fiercely devoted to her parents, husband, sister, nieces, cousins and other extended family members. Her contributions to her community and country deserve to be remembered. 


Charleen, circa 1942

Charleen LaVerne McClanahan was born on 28 August 1931 near Alba, Missouri, on her parent’s family farm. She would have turned ninety-two years old this year, but sadly, she passed away on 8 March 2019 in Topeka, Kansas. She was a woman who had a great influence upon me during her entire life as an energetic, positive, intelligent role model. She was the most highly-educated member of our family and was a trailblazer as a career woman. She was also fiercely proud of her McClanahan name and heritage.


Twins, Roy Calvin & Rure Alvin McClanahan, 1905
Roy was Charleen's Father


Charleen's Mother Lela Smith McClanahan (right) and her Cousin
Annabelle Smith McClanahan (left) in 1915 at Coon Foot School

Charleen was my dad’s first cousin. Her father Roy and my dad’s father Rure McClanahan were twins. Her mother Lela Smith and my dad’s mother Annabell Smith were first cousins. Both couples had two children born within the space of five years; one with red hair and one with black hair. Roy’s two were girls and Rure’s were boys. The families lived just down the road from one another and made precious childhood memories together.


Charleen at Coon Foot School 1941-42. She is pictured second 
from right in the back row. Sister Kathaleen is third from the left in the back row

Charleen’s mother, Lela, was a school teacher and Charleen was a bright young lady. She and her sister Kathaleen walked with their dog, Tuffy, to nearby one-room Coon Foot School where they both excelled. The girls took piano lessons from Arthur Harbison, who came to their house to teach them, and charged 25 cents for each lesson. She and Kathaleen often played piano duets. Charleen later played piano and organ at several churches. The girls were active in the Methodist Church, 4-H, and various school clubs and activities.

 

Charleen as 1952 Homecoming Queen Candidate 
at Kansas State Teacher's College, Pittsburg, KS

Charleen graduated as valedictorian of her Alba High School class in 1949 and began her distinguished academic career in higher education at Joplin Junior College. She spent a year and a half there before completing a Bachelor’s Degree in Vocational Home Economics at Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburg, Kansas in 1953. She flexed her leadership and social skills at KSTC by membership in many organizations including Phi Upsilon Omicron, serving as a class officer, and being selected as a homecoming queen candidate in both her junior and senior years.


Charleen on the Joplin High School Faculty 1957

After graduation from KSTC, Charleen married Robert Bernard “Bob” Varner on 4 July 1953 in Gulfport, Mississippi. Bob was a Naval Air cadet in Pensacola, Florida, and she took her first job in education teaching first grade in Ferry Pass School in Escambia County. After Bob’s tour of duty in the Navy, she and Bob both taught at Joplin Senior High School when they moved back to Missouri in 1954.  She taught Home Economics and Biology at JHS for five years before accepting a contract to teach at the college level at her alma mater in Pittsburg. Bob continued to teach and coach athletics for nine years at Joplin. She soon earned her M.S. Degree in general Home Economics from the University of Arkansas.

While teaching at Pittsburg between 1959 and 1963, Charleen met the pioneering scientist, Dr. Pauline Beery Mack, at an education conference. Dr. Mack was a chemist and educator who was not a typical woman of the 1950s. She was known for her brilliant scientific mind, innovative research studies, mink stole and white tennis shoes! She was renowned as a mentor for female scientists when the field was dominated by men. Dr. Mack was conducting research for NASA on the effects of orbital space travel on bone density in the human body. It was then unknown if weightlessness and the forced immobility in the tiny space capsules initially used for travel beyond the earth’s atmosphere would result in changes in the calcium content in the bones of astronauts.

Dr. Mack was impressed with Charleen’s personality, work ethic, intelligence, energy and attention to detail. As a result, she offered Charleen a graduate assistant position at Texas Women’s University in Denton, Texas, which would cover all of her expenses to acquire a Doctorate in Nutrition and Foods.


Dr. Mack and a Group of TWU Students Who Conducted Experiments for NASA


Charleen assisted Dr. Mack in several studies at TWU involving the study of prolonged inactivity, such as might be experienced in space travel. Men who matched the height and weight of specific astronauts were kept confined to bed rest where all of their meals and other needs were provided by graduate students. The effect of their immobility on the calcium content of their bones was carefully monitored.


Charleen's name and thesis title in the 1966 Graduation Program at TWU


Most of Charleen’s time and efforts were spent on a study in the mid-1960s to compare the bone density of primates that were sent into orbit with that of earth-dwelling primates. Careful chemical and radiographic analysis measured the calcium retention in bone samples of both test groups. Her doctoral dissertation was entitled, "A Comparison of the Bone Mineral Content of Bones in Macacus Nemestrima Primates as Demonstrated by Radiographic Bone Density and Chemical Analysis Methods.” She received her Ph.D. on 29 May 1966.

After completion of her doctoral studies, Dr. Mack offered Charleen a position at TWU, but she and Bob felt that they should return to southwest Missouri where they would be closer to their aging parents and other family members. She often felt some remorse over her decision to decline such a unique and prestigious job offer in Texas.


Charleen on the Benedictine College Faculty in 1974


Upon their return to Missouri, Charleen accepted a teaching position at Central Missouri State College at Warrensburg and later assumed the role of chairperson of the Home Economics Department at Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia, Kansas in 1972. She also taught at Benedectine College in Atchison, Kansas. She and Bob moved to Kansas City and had a second home in Topeka, Kansas, when she left full-time teaching and decided to go into business as her own boss. She established a successful private consulting company as a registered and licensed dietician for a large clientele of institutions in the Kansas City and Topeka area.

Bob continued to teach history and other subjects while Charleen pursued her career goals. He worked as an adult education instructor at the Juvenile Detention Center in Topeka for a number of years and later was in demand as a substitute teacher in the Topeka Public Schools. He developed dementia in his last years and Charleen juggled the roles of breadwinner and caregiver when she was in her seventies. Bob received respite care through the VA Hospital in Topeka and eventually was a resident in the memory unit of Aldersgate Village Retirement Community. He passed away on 16 September 2011 and is buried in Friends Cemetery in Purcell, Missouri. Bob and Charleen were married for 58 years.

Charleen loved teaching and never completely left the profession until she suffered a serious injury in a fall in 2015 at age 83. She was still teaching as an adjunct professor at satellite locations for two Kansas community colleges when her fall forced to retire in mid-semester.


Charleen and Me in 2014


I enjoyed visiting with Charleen and she was always ready to chat about the McClanahans. Her memory was phenomenal. For example, she could recite the birthdates of all her nieces, nephews, grandnieces, etc. without even blinking an eye. She shared wonderful family memories with me that are now stored in my heart. She described seeing me for the first time when I was only a few weeks old. She told about playing with my dad when they were kids. She talked about my grandparents and great-grandparents and her experiences with them. I will forever miss her lively chatter and the sound of her boisterous guffaws in the middle of her anecdotes!

 

 

 


JOHANN MICHAEL AND ANNA MARGARETHA GRÄTER LIEB - Chapter Six

  Introduction  M y fifth great-grandparents Johann Michael and Anna Margaretha Gräter Lieb represent the earliest documented ancestors of m...