Showing posts with label Britton-LouisCass_b1851MO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Britton-LouisCass_b1851MO. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Census Images for Louis Cass Britton (1851-1932)

Born - 15 May 1851 in Golden, White Pine Twp, Barry County, Missouri
Parents - Riley Britton & Julia Ann Strong

Wife - Hannah Catherine Odell, daughter of Abraham Odell & Cynthia Ann Smith
Married - 1 Mar 1870 in Hartville, Wright County, Missouri
Children -
William Isaac "Ike"
Marie (died as a baby)
Sarah Alice
John (died as a baby)
Paralee
Stella
Cora Florence
Wife died - 15 Jun 1919 in Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri (age 69) after being bedridden
Louis died - 6 Aug 1932 in Chouteau, Mayes County, Oklahoma
1870 Census - Wright County, Missouri (PO: Hartville)
Odle, Abraham - 57, farmer, $500/$700, b TN
Odle, Cynthia - 49, b MO, illiterate
Odle, Enoch - 20, in school, b MO
Odle, Sarah - 15, in school, b MO
Odle, Martha - 11, in school, b MO
Britton, Louis - 20, in school, b MO
Britton, Hannah - 22, b MO
Next door - Riley/Julia Britton (no kids)
Next - Louis's sister Fannie w/ siblings

1880 Census - White River Twp, Barry Co, Missouri
Britton, Louis - 28, farmer, b MO, parents b TN
Britton, Hannah - 32, can't write, b MO, parents b TN/IL
Britton, William I - 9,  in school, b in MO
Britton, Sarah A - 2, b in MO
Next door - Perry Eldridge Britten family






1900 Census - Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri
Britton, Louis C - 49, farmer, b May 1851 MO, m 30
Britton, Hannah - 51, b 1849 MO, m 30, 5/7 kids living
Britton, Paralee - unknown age, b MO
Britton, Stella, unknown age, b MO, in school
Britton, Cora - unknown age, b MO, in school
Deaton, John - 19, b KY, servant / farm laborer
Britton, Fannie (Louis' sister), unknown age, b MO, single
2 farms away - Bilyeu family (re: Stella's story later on)
1910 Census - Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri
Britton, Louis C - 58, m 39 yrs, farmer, b MO
Britton, Hannah - 60, m 39, 5/7 kids alive, b MO, can't write
Britton, Stella - 25, b MO
Blue/Bilyue, Vernie - 4, Louis' grandson, b MO
Britton, Fannie - 65, widowed, Louis' sister, b MO
Next door - Cora (Louis' daughter) and family

1920 Census - Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri
Britton, Louis - 68, widowed, farmer, b MO
Britton, Stella - 36, single, b MO
Blyeu, Vernie - 14, Louis' grandson, b MO, in school
2 farms away - Paralee (Louis' daughter) and family
(Paralee's husband wasn't living with her at the time)
Next door - Fannie Burris (Louis' sister) - 75, widow, b MO

1930 Census - Ruth Twp, Stone County, Missouri
Lynes, Sherman - 44, 22 at 1st marriage, farmer, b MO
Lynes, Stella (Louis' daughter) - 45, 36 at 1st m, b MO
(Stella's son, Vernie, died by gunshot ca. 1924)
Lynes, Kenneth - 8, in school, b OK
Britton, Louis - 78, widowed, 19 at 1st marriage, b MO
(Fannie had died in 1924)

Background and Conclusions:
8 Oct 1840 (Parents' marriage) - Louis' parents were married in Steelville, Crawford Co, Missouri
16 Aug 1850 (Census) - Louis' parents lived in District 24 of Crawford County, Missouri
10 Feb 1851 (County) - Stone County was formed from land originally belonging partly to Crawford Co
15 May 1851 (Birth) - Louis was born at Golden, Barry County, Missouri
1860 (Census) - missing (he may have lived in Barry or Wright County, Missouri)
1 Mar 1870 (Marriage) - Louis/Hannah were married somewhere in Missouri (no record found)
18 Jun 1870 (Census) - Louis/Hannah were near Hartville in Wright Co, MO living with her parents                                                   - next to his parents and sister, Fannie
8 Feb 1873 - Louis' father died near Hartville, Wright County, Missouri
31 Aug 1874 - Probate of Louis' father, issues due to him dying without a will
1874-1876 - Louis' widowed mother married Mr. Eads
13 Nov 1876 - Louis' mother was still trying to get her late husband's land to go to her minor children

Louis lived in Stone County, Missouri for most of his adult life, with or near his sister, Fannie. Though he died before any census could reflect such, he moved to Oklahoma toward the latter part of his life. At that time, his brother, Perry, was living with Fannie there in Oklahoma. Louis lived with his daughter, Cora, and her family. In 1935, three years after Louis' death, Cora still lived in rural Mayes County, Oklahoma (the county in which Louis had died) and was at Bristow, Creek County, Oklahoma by the following year.

Monday, July 8, 2019

Clarice Evelyn Botner Price (1904-2005)

Following is the autobiography of Clarice, shared and annotated by a family member. His notes will be given in square brackets. A PDF of the story in Clarice's handwriting will be included soon at the bottom of the page. I've broken the transcription into paragraphs and changed some punctuation for the sake of better readability.

"I was born on Oct. 29, 1907, in the state of Ark [near Berryville, Ark]. Don't know the exact location, but I imagine it was in the northwestern part, as Mom & Dad's parents lived in southwestern Missouri. Mom said we lived about a block from the state line. My first recollections of anything was of living there, & only a few, for I was very young, around two I imagine, for Otis wasn't born yet & I'm just 2 years & 4 months older than he. 

"He wasn't born till after we moved to Kansas, to a little town named Neola. I don't remember the move or how long we lived there, but Otis was born there. [Otis L. Botner was born Mar. 9, 1910] I remember only two or three instances while living there: one when Dad left to go to work I cried till he came back & hugged me; another when he gave me some cough drops shaped like big butter beans. Then one evening our house caught fire. Otis was just a little baby then. I remember us getting out.

"Then we lived for a short time in a house they called a "Lodge House". I don't think we were there very long till we moved to Turon [about 6 mi. SSE of Neola, Kansas]. Although I don't recall anything about the move, just vaguely remember being at a train station. [A train does run between Neola and Turon - See map]

"From then I don't remember much till I was old enough to start to school. I do recall once when we & another family, friends of Mom & Dad, & they had children older than us kids... anyway, they decided to go fishing & drove way out somewhere on the prairie. It seemed what they called a creek or river. As I remember it, it seemed more sure like a ditch. Of course I was pretty small & probably didn't see it all. Anyway, I got into a patch of sandburs, & there are lots of them in Kansas. I was bare footed & one of the bigger boys had to get me out. Living in Kansas we were always stepping on those burrs & they really did hurt, & the worst part of it those stickers had a little hook on the end which made it difficult to pull out. Like a loose tooth, we were afraid to pull on it, afraid it would hurt worse. Ha!

"I was five years old when I started to school there [1912] & after I learned to read I would read to Otis before he started to school. Philip was born there too & when he was old enough, his hair was long enough I like to comb it & fix a curl on top. [Philip Q. Botner was born Sept. 22, 1915]

"I saw my first movie there at Turon. Mary Pickford played in it. That was the only movie I saw till I was grown & after we came to Indiana.
Nancy Catherine "Nina" Britton
Henry Lewis Britton
Norine Hagger "Noanie" Britton
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

"I was 10 years old when Dad left us in the spring of 1918. Left Mom with 5 children & nothing to survive on. Two nieces of Mom, that had visited us before, came & I imagine they had something to do helping Mom getting the job of running a restaurant in a little town about 12 miles from Turon.
[William Isaac Britton's daughters: Nora Hagger Britton born 11 Dec 1893, and Nancy Catherine Britton born 21 Jan 1899... The town of Cunningham is located about 11 miles due South along NW 170th Ave. and is on U.S. Rte. 400. I may be the town mentioned.] It was just a little town & hardly enough business to make a living at the restaurant. But when Mom got kinda settled there, they we kids went. The older one of these nieces (our cousins of course) & neither one was married yet, but the older one had a little place in Colorado that she had homesteaded & the living quarters was what they called a "Dug-Out". Anyway, she took Otis & Philip home with her till the next spring, knowing Mom could hardly work & care for the little ones.

"We had our beds in one room of a house about a block from the restaurant. We had an awful big snow that fall "1918". It drifted almost to the top of one side of the restaurant. I had the flue at the time. That was the year the flu was so bad & so many people died from it.

"We were there till spring [1919] & the man that had been a neighbor in Turon, took up a collection & gave Mom enough to get us to Missouri to Grandpa Britton's (that was Mom's father). [Louis Cass Britton in Stone County, MO about 450 miles by train] I didn't now about the collection until Ted told me not too awful long ago. Of course, Otis & Philip were back with us.

"On our way to MO, we were supposed to change trains in one place, & I guess our train was late, for when we got to where we were supposed to change, the train we were supposed to get had already gone. But there was a freight train that was to go through, so instead of us having to wait till the next day, they let us ride in the caboose. It was late in the evening when we got to our destination, so we found a place for the night & I woke up the next morning with a crick in my neck & crying... was the first time I'd ever had anything like that.

Stella
"One of Mom's sisters & her son [Stella Britton and Vernie Blyen (See 1920 US Census)] was living with Grandpa & Grandma Britton (Mom's father & mother) & they drove in to get us in a wagon. The team they drove was a big horse that Grandpa usually rode & a mule. They had to cross a stream that was swollen from a flash flood & while in it the mule balked & didn't want to go, but the horse just pulled with all the strength he had & got them through. My aunt said if it hadn't been for "Old Doc" the horse, they would have drowned.
Hannah

"Grandpa lived on a farm, & Grandma was ill & bed fast & passed away not long after we got there. [Hannah Catherine (Odell) Britton died 15 Jun 1919]

Sarah and John
We weren't at Grandpa's very long. Mom's oldest sister & husband owned some land not too farm from Grandpa's which had a one room log cabin on it. [Sarah Alice and John Thomas Hardman lived in Barry County, MO] They let us live in it. There was a little stream nearby & a big spring from which we got our drinking water. Sometimes it wasn't the best, but was all we had. We kids went to a one room country school which, I imagine, was close to 2 miles away, & of course we walked. Guess I was 12 yrs old by then. [1919]

"Part of the time "Chick" (your Uncle Chester) stayed at our uncle's, the one that owned the cabin, & worked on the farm there. Didn't make much besides room & board. One winter I stayed at another uncle's, one of Dad's brothers [Millard Elias Botner]. They wanted me to so I could walk to school, another one, with their daughter, Wilma. [Wilma D. Botner born 14 Dec 1907] She had quite a ways to walk too, & through the woods, but the reason they didn't want her to be alone... one of the older school boys had tried to molest her along the way.

"I don't remember just how long we were in Missouri, 3 or 4 yrs I imagine, but they were pretty rough years. We didn't have much, but I don't remember anyone complaining. Grandpa [Louis Cass Britton] had a little mill that he could grind corn & make meal. He would grind for others around & accept some meal as pay. When he had some to spare he would give us some. But there were times when we didn't have any & if the season was right, & the corn in the field was at the right stage, he would let us get some from the field & grate it for bread. Mom or Ted had took a big bucket &, bu taking a nail & driving it through from the inside over quite an area, it made it like a grater. I wasn't crazy about that kind of bread, but we ate it.

"In the house we had a bed & a table & a small cook stove. I don't remember where we got them. Guess someone gave them to us. A couple of orange crates stacked on end made a place for dishes and things. A ladder in one corner led up to the attic where we had a couple of beds. It was really "air conditioned". I remember Chick [Earl Chester Botner] telling about one morning one winter. He wok up & snow had blowed through the cracks & all over his bed. Ha!

"Someone had given Mom a spinning wheel & she loved to spin & make thread for knitting. First we'd have to take the seed out of the cotton. Then the cotton had to be "carded" & made into little rolls & then spun into thread. Mom could make the thread, some fine enough for crocheting or heavier for knitting sweaters, socks, gloves & mittens, all of which she did. I first leanred to do just plain knitting while in Turon, Kansas. It was during the first world war. We children in school learned to knit squares, seems like there were about 6.6 in., for to use making covers for the soldier boys. Mom knit sweaters for them too.

Louis
"While in Missouri, Mom's older sister & family [Sarah Alice and John Thomas Hardman] who lived several miles from Grandpa's, would drive up in a buggy. They had two girls a little younger than I, & once in a while I would go home with them for about a week. Once, while there, the whole family came down with the flu, & by the time I got to feeling better I was so homesick. Then Grandpa Britton came down on horseback to see how everyone was & I ask Uncle Tom if I could go home with Grandpa. He said yes, if I felt like it, so I did. Grandpa & I took turns riding & walking. Sure good to be back home. Grandpa was just the nicest person.

"Aunt Stell, mom's sister that had been with Grandpa, she & her husband went to Oklahoma & soon wanted us to come down there. [Stella married Sherman Franklyn Lynes on 21 Aug 1920 so the move to OK had to be after that.] Chester & Ted went down first, then the rest of us went. Got on a little farm with an old house on it & raised cotton & some feed. Mom made garden. I don't know where we got the animals & tools to do with. Must of got them on time for we sure didn't have any money. One year there, then we moved a couple miles from there & share cropped for a farmer, & lived in a little 2 room house close to him, & had to carry all of our water from his place. Raised cotton there too.

"We went to a little 2 room school. It only went to the eighth grade, but when us eighth graders finished that, the teacher, a man, the only man teacher I ever had, he got permission to teach the nineth, so that was as far as I got.

"Then we moved to another farm, & Chester got married while we were there. He had got a job in the oil field, & he & Callie lived in a little place on the oil lease. [Earl Chester Botner married Callie Elizabeth Johnson on 22 Aug 1926, in Drumright, OK]

"Our next move was back with the man that we had worked for, only lived farther from him, still on his property & in another little house, 2 little rooms.

"A cousin, one that had visited us in Kansas, now lived in Ponca City, Okla, north of us a ways, & still visited us... she wanted me to come stay with her & her husband & get a job there. I was 19 years old by then. [1926-27] So I went & soon got a job in a laundry. That's where I was when Dad came back. He had found out where our family was through Wilma's family. He first came to where I was & wanted me to go down home with him. I did. He had been in Indiana, I guess, all that time [confirmed by the address on his WWI draft card] & wanted us to go there. So he went back & sent us money to come on, so that is how come we are in Indiana.

"Wasn't here too long till Ted, Otis & I were working for Thompson Symon Co [located on N. 13th St. in Terre Haute - gone now], where I worked till I retired, with the exception of time off when my boys were little. And we've got Dad to thank for getting us out of the cotton fields.

"I met Phil (your dad) at a dance. We were married in 1937, a union that didn't last long & the only good thing that came from it is my boys."

[Note: The autobiographical effort of Clarice Evelyne (Botner) Price was at the behest of her youngest son, Dale K. Price, who is the "your" person referred to, as in "your father", and elsewhere; and, is the annotator of this copy.]

Monday, May 30, 2016

Louis Cass Britton (1851-1932) Source Summary


Parentage
Riley Britton: Born in Crawford Co, MO 1814, died in Hartville, Wright Co, MO 1873
Julia Ann Strong: Born in Davidson Co, TN 1824, died in Baxter, Stone Co, MO 1898

Primary Sources
  • No birth certificate
  • 1860 Census is missing, which would have shown him living with his parents
  • Death Certificate states “Don’t Know” for Louis’ parents’ names and birth places

Secondary Sources
  • 1850 Census: Riley (b MO)/Julia (b TN) listed with children Vienna, Frances, S A and G O
  • 1870 Census: Riley (b MO)/Julia (b TN) living between Louis and Fannie (Frances)
  • 1880 Census: Parents both born in Tennessee
  • 1900 Census: Father born in Missouri, Mother born in Tennessee
  • 1910 Census: Father born in Missouri, Mother born in Tennessee
  • 1920 Census: Father born in Missouri, Mother born in Tennessee
  • 1930 Census: Father born in Missouri, Mother born in Tennessee

Conclusions
  • Agree that his parents were Riley and Julia, but would like to find more conclusive proof.

Birth
15 May 1851 in Golden, White Pine Twp, Barry County, Missouri

Primary Sources
  • Bible Page: L. C. Britton Born May 15,1851

Secondary Sources
  • 1850 Census (16 Aug) Dist 24, Crawford Co, MO: Parents were there 1 yr before Louis’ birth
  • 1870 Census (18 Jun) Wright Co, MO: Age 20, Place of Birth MO (b 185o/1)
  • 1880 Census (17 Jun) White River Twp, Barry Co, MO: Age 28, Born in Missouri (b 1851/2)
  • 1900 Census (7 Jun) William Twp, Stone Co, MO: DoB May 1851, Place of Birth Missouri
  • 1910 Census (26 Apr) Williams Twp, Stone Co, MO: Age 58, Place of Birth Missouri
  • 1920 Census (28 Feb) Williams Twp, Stone Co, MO: Age 68, Place of Birth Missouri
  • 1930 Census (10 Apr) Ruth Twp, Stone Co, MO: Age 78, Place of Birth Missouri
  • Death Certificate: Date Birth May 15, 1851, Birth Place MO

Conclusions
  • Date is likely correct. Death certificate and Bible agree, the census records within range.
  • Insufficient proof of town/county, but all census records agree that he was born in Missouri.

Marriage
Hannah Catherine Odell 1 Mar 1870 in Hartville, Wright County, Missouri Primary Sources
  • No marriage certificate
  • No Bible record that includes their marriage date

Secondary Sources
  • 1870 Census Hartville, Wright Co, MO: Hanah 22, Louis 20, with her parents, listed together
  • 1880 Census White River Twp, Barry Co, MO: Louis 28, Hannah 32 Wife
  • 1900 Census Williams Twp, Stone Co, MO: Louis C 49, Hannah 51 Wife, both m. 30 years
  • 1910 Census William Twp, Stone Co, MO: Louis C 58, Hanna C 60, both married 39 years
  • Hannah’s headstone: Hannah C Britton Sept 3, 1849 - June 15, 1919 Wife of L. C. Britton

Conclusions
  • Louis’ wife’s name and information is correct.
  • There must be a marriage or Bible record that I don’t have yet, date likely correct
  • Census records suggest married 1869/1870, in line with the accepted date of 1 Mar 1870
  • Place not listed, but both sets of parents lived near Hartville in Wright County that year

Death
Died 6 Aug 1932 in Chouteau, Mayes County, Oklahoma

 Primary Sources
  • Death Certificate: Date of Death Aug 6 ’32 Mayes County, Oklahoma age 81 yrs 2 mo 17 days

Burial
7 Aug 1932 in Alberty (Bethany?) Cemetery, Sportsman Acres, Mayes Co, OK

Primary Sources
  • Death Certificate: Place of Burial Bethany Cemetery 8/7/32
  • Headstone Photo in Alberty Cemetery: Louis Britton (no dates)

Notes
The Alberty Cemetery is no longer accessible by vehicle. Due to vandalism, access was terminated by the intentional destruction of the bridge needed to get out there. You would have to hike 1 ½ miles or use a quad. This is according to Oklahoma Genweb on a page listing burials, as found in the sexton’s book on which his first name is listed as Lewis rather than Louis. A post on rootsweb states the following for directions: Hwy 69, then east on 69A until arriving at a big water tower. Turn right on that street and continue until you get to a dirt road heading east. There is a locked gate, after which you have to walk. Make a left on the first road, which is overgrown with brush.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Residence Summary of the Louis Cass Britton and Hannah Catherine Odell Families



Year

James/Frankey
Brittain
Riley/Julia
Britton
Louis/Hannah
Britton
Abraham/Cynthia
Odell
Enoch/Catherine
Odell
1800
m. 1794
Richmond Co,
Georgia




1810
St. Louis Dist.
Louisiana/
Missouri
Territory
(Missouri)

Moved there
in 1805

Names on
Memorial
James Britten
Jr and Sr

Reconstructed
Census




1820
Surely lived
in Missouri.
Can't find
census.
Riley b. 1814
Crawford Co
Missouri

Abraham b. 1814
White Co, TN

Living w/
parents in 1820
White Co, TN
male: 0-10
Enoch/Catherine
White Co
Tennessee

males: 0-10 (1)
10-15 (1)
16-25 (1)
26-44 (1)
females: 0-10 (3)
10-15 (2)
16-25 (1)
26-44 (1)
2 in agriculture
no slaves
1830
*James died
before 1828
in Missouri
Julia b. 1824
Davidson Co
Tennessee

*Cynthia b. 1822
Illinois
Tennessee?
Illinois?
1840
Frankey
Merrimac,
Crawford Co,
Missouri

likely w/ son,
Bedford

B B Britton
Male: 30-39 (1)
Female: 60-69 (1)
Slave: 0-10 (1)


Abraham/Cynthia
Pulaski Co
Missouri

male: 20-30 (1)
female: 15-20 (1)
Next door:
Samuel Odle
Same page:
Elijah Bohannon
Wm Bohannon
Enoch Odle (father)

*married 1840
Polk Co, Missouri
Enoch/Catherine
Pulaski Co
Missouri

males: 60-69 (1)
females:15-19 (1)
20-29 (1)
1 in agriculture
no slaves
1850
Frankey
Crawford Co,
Missouri
*James d. 1828
153/153

JW 48 GA
Susan 30 KY
NR 10 MO
BB 8 MO
Mary 12 MO
Vienna 12 MO
Wilbern 2 MO
Green 6m MO
BB 46 GA
Frankey 70 GA

Other Brittons
on same page
Riley/Julia
Crawford Co
Missouri
150/150

Riley 36 MO
Julian 26 TN
Vienna 9 MO
FA 4 MO
GO 2 MO

Louis not
born yet





*Catherine
b. 1849

Living w/
parents in
1850














Abraham/Cynthia
Laclede Co,
(formed from
Pulaski / Wright)
Missouri
332/332

Abraham 35 TN
Cyntha Ann 26 IL
Evan 9 MO
Samuel 7 AR
James 4 AR
Hannah 3 MO
Enoch 1m MO





Enoch
Wright Co,
(formed from
Pulaski)
Missouri
*wife d. bef 1825

Other Odells
333
Enoch 23 TN
334
Samuel 51 TN






1860


*Louis b. 1851

*Enoch d. 1858
1870

Riley/Julia
Wright Co
Missouri
312/312

Riley 51 MO
Julia 47 TN
(Louis 311
others w/
Fannie 313)
Riley sick?
Contageous?
Louis/Hannah
Wright Co,
Missouri
311/311

Hanah 22 MO
Louis 20 MO
w/ Odell family



Abraham/Cynthia
Wright Co,
Missouri
311/311

Abraham 57 TN
Cynthia 49 IL
Enoch 20 MO
Sarah 15 MO
Martha 11 MO
 Louis/Hannah
(married 1870)

1880

Julia
Richland,
Crawford Co
Missouri?

Remarried
(Eads)
Louis/Hannah
White River,
Barry Co,
Missouri
Abraham/Cynthia
Union,
Wright Co,
Missouri
119/123

Abraham 66 TN
Ann 58 IL
Martha 21 IL
Servant:
Sarah Smith 25 IL
Nathan Smith 2 IL

1900


Louis/Hannah
Williams,
Stone Co,
Missouri
Cynthia
Elm Store,
Randolph Co,
Arkansas
*Abraham d. 1899

w/Birchett family
(son-in-law)
Rite S 39 MO
Sarah M 41 MO
Virginia V 13 AR
John L 11 AR
Thomas L 6 AR
Jessie 4 AR
Charly 1 AR
Cintha Odell 77 IL

1910


Louis/Hannah
Williams,
Stone Co,
Missouri
*Cynthia died
before 1910?

1920


Louis
Williams,
Stone Co,
Missouri
*wife d. 1919


1930


Louis
Ruth,
Stone Co,
Missouri


1940


Louis d. 1832
Oklahoma


Monday, March 14, 2016

Death Certificate for Louis Cass Britton, 1932


Shared by Ellen Britton
Pertinent information:
Louis C Britton, white widower
Born - 15 May 1851 in Missouri
Died - 6 Aug 1932 in Mayes County, Oklahoma at 7:30 pm, at the age of 81
Informant - Sherman Lynes (Louis' son-in-law), of Chateau, Oklahoma
Parents (Riley Britton  and Julia Ann Strong) not known by informant
Cause of death - Lobar Pneumonia
Doctor attended him from 28 Jul -7 Aug 1932 (last saw him alive 3 Aug)
Burial - 7 Aug 1932 in the Bethany Cemetery

I think that his headstone is actually in the Alberty Cemetery, Sportsmen Acres, Mayes County, Oklahoma, as per the headstone photo on findagrave ➚ (descendant walked through the cemetery, found his headstone and took a picture, then send it to my sister, Peggy). It is possible that Bethany is the name of an old church beside the cemetery, perhaps, or that the name of the cemetery has changed since the creation of this death certificate.

Shared by Peggy Boone

Friday, March 11, 2016

Bible Pages


Bible pages can be extremely useful in obtaining firsthand knowledge of birth, marriage and death dates. Sadly, they are often nearly impossible to locate, and many old family Bibles are no longer in existence.

Family of Louis Cass Britton (1850-1932)
Shared by Peggy Boone
Family of Riley Britton (1814-1873)
Shared by Peggy Boone

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Louis Cass Britton (1851-1932)


Louis Cass Britton
Shared by Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton
Birth
Louis Cass Britton, son of Riley Britton and Julia Strong, was born 15 May 1851 near Golden, in White Pine Township, Barry County, Missouri. (Sources - Family Bible, Census Images, and Death Certificate)

Forefathers
Back in the early days, long before Louis was born, the Britton family lived in what is now Clarke County, Georgia. It is believed that they originally immigrated to Virginia from Wales and may have migrated to North Carolina before settling in Georgia. One thing we do know is that, in about 1805, they moved from Georgia to Missouri, though it was then called the Louisiana Territory. (Source - Relatives' names on petition in 1806, Territorial Papers) This was very soon after the Louisiana purchase.

I read somewhere a few years ago that the landscape in southern Missouri reminded the early settlers of the hill country of Georgia, and this added to its appeal. Many southerners settled here and some also brought their slaves with them. However, most of the slave population was concentrated along the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers, and few slaves were kept elsewhere in the region. This area was considered, at that time, to be frontier. It became known as the Missouri Territory in 1812, in order to more clearly distinguish it from the state of Louisiana, and was admitted into the union as a slave state in 1821.

Louis' paternal grandmother's family, the Pounds, left England as early as 1635, and lived for many generations in Virginia before migrating to Georgia. Her father, Reuben Pound, was a Patriot in the Revolutionary War, serving in the Georgia Continental Line, and was granted bounty land along the Oconee River in Washington County, Georgia. It is through the line of Reuben's grandmother, Deborah Lewis, that Louis Cass Britton was related to Meriwether Lewis of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Reuben was Meriwether's third cousin.

We know very little about the family of Louis' mother. When tracing back through what was thought to be her parents, William Strong and Ann Binkley, I have not found Native American ancestry. Because of this, I suspect that Louis' mother was adopted.

Background on Louis' Parents
Riley Britton was born in about 1814, during the War of 1812, in an area of the Missouri Territory that later became Crawford County. One or both of his grandfathers were Patriots in the Revolutionary War. (Source - 1779 Pay Rolls, 1784 Roster of the Revolution, 1784 Bounty Survey for 230 acres on Oconee River in Georgia, Reuben Pound) His oldest brother, William, served in the mounted militia there during the War of 1812, being received into the service the year that Riley was born. Riley was a Union Soldier during the War Between the States. (Source - Family tradition, no documents to prove this that I am aware of) Riley had lost his father by the time he was 14 years old. However, his mother lived at least into her seventies. (Source - 1850 Census)

Julia Strong was born in Tennessee in about 1824. (Source - Census records) She was at least half Cherokee and spoke in broken English, and some suspect she was in the Trail of Tears. It has long been a family tradition that Julia was either part or full Cherokee or Choctaw. However, the belief is further substantiated and clarified by a land claim application I recently found, which was filed by Julia's daughter-in-law in Shawnee, Oklahoma. You see, Louis' brother, Perry, remarried after his first wife, Sarah Rachel Cantwell, died unexpectedly. His second wife, Mary Elizabeth Boykin, applied for land in 1902 because of her own Choctaw ancestry. At first glance this may seem to have nothing to do with Julia Strong. However, among the questions asked of Mary were her present husband's name and whether or not he was white, and whether he was of Choctaw descent as well. To these she answered that his name was P. E. Britten, that he was not white, but Indian, and that his grandfather was full blood Cherokee. If she is correct in this assertion, it would surely mean that Julia Strong's father was full blood Cherokee, making Julia half. (Source - Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, 1902)

Riley and Julia were married in Crawford County, Missouri 8 Oct 1840. (Source - Crawford County, Missouri Marriages, Book A, 1829-1855) They had nine children: Vianna/Vienna, Frances "Fanny", Sarah Ann, Georgia Oliver, Louis Cass, Aree or Ira E, Perry Eldridge, Martha and Caroline. (Source - Family Bible and Census Images)

The War Between the States
This conflict broke out when Louis Cass Britton was about 10 years old. His father was a Union soldier. (Source - Bohannon Biographies) His oldest brother, George Oliver, ran away and enlisted at the tender age of 15. Louis' father survived, but George Oliver did not. Sadly, according to military records, he contracted measles and died. It is interesting that, in the inventory of George's personal effects, it was stated that he was 19 years old. (Source - As was common during the war, it appears that he'd lied about his age in order to enlist. Louis was but 12 years old when he lost his teenage brother to the war. They were close enough in age that I'm sure this came as quite a blow. During the war, Louis was the oldest male left at home, so it would have fallen to him to manage the family farm and protect his mother and younger siblings, even at such a tender age, in his father's absence.

Peace was not soon established, even after the war had officially come to an end, 9 May 1865. The years that followed were filled with turmoil, and crime abounded. Bushwackers, southern, pro-Confederate, self-governed bands of guerrilla fighters, as well as other groups such as the pro-Union Jayhawkers, roamed the countryside, burning, stealing and killing. War changes people and I think that, for some, it was difficult to shift back to normal life after so much bloodshed. The cause for which each side fought, still remained in the forefront of peoples' minds.

One instance when the Britton family was touched by such troubles came one day when Louis and his father were away from home. This may have been while his father and older brother were gone during their service for the Union, or else shortly after the war. Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton was the wife of Clarence Custer "Cub" Britton, who remembered Louis well. She recalled hearing about the incident. Some troublesome neighbors arrived at the house and stole all of Julia's furniture. When Louis returned home, possibly from the fields, he found her sitting in an empty house. Imagine his surprise! I can just envision Julia sitting there, shocked and horrified, tears streaming down her face while she looked up at her sons as they walked in the door of the cabin.

Anger was kindled, his protective nature coming to the forefront. Louis intended to see justice prevail, despite his young age. Julia obviously told him which neighbor was at fault, or else they saw the group's tracks, for Louis took his gun, a wagon and one younger brother and headed straight over there to get back their mother's things. I presume that he took with him Aree E, since he was the next oldest. He evidently left one brother, likely Perry Eldridge, there to comfort and protect their mother. It has been said that the brother, whom Louis took with him, was pretty shaken up about approaching the culprits, but he went with Louis, none the less. The three boys would have only been about ages 10, 12, and 14 at the time, assuming that this dreadful event took place right after the war – younger perhaps if the war yet raged, or a tiny bit older if it occurred a few years later.

Louis and the one brother arrived with their wagon and approached the neighbor's house, but did not even knock or give warning. Louis simply opened the door and barged in. He found a white-haired man and some younger men inside. Louis said, “I respect grey hair, but we're going to gather up this furniture and take it back in our wagon. Just keep your seat and make no fuss and no one will be hurt.” They loaded up the furniture and took it back to their relieved mother, without a shot being fired. Louis had obviously been taught well to protect and avenge his mother whenever necessary, and possessed the courage and fortitude to do so, even as a young teenage boy. It is no wonder that he later became a sheriff.

One encounter with the Bushwackers was even more terrifying. It concerned the family of Perry Eldredge Britton's future wife, Sarah Rachel Cantwell. Remember that Perry was Louis' younger brother. They burned Sarah's aunt's house, across the canyon, and left the inhabitants there in their night clothes. The men then threatened to burn their house as well. Thankfully, they did not follow through. This event was recorded on the findagrave memorials for Arlamada Ann "Macy" Bohannon Cantwell ➚ and Sarah Rachel Cantwell Britten ➚.

Right around this same time, Sarah had another hair-raising experience. As the story goes, her father was a blacksmith for the Union Cavalry. One account states that his duties kept him close to home and he was given leave to return to his own bed to sleep at the end of each day. However, my grandmother said that he was always away from home during his service, except for that one night. Either way, when he had retired for the night, wearing only his long-johns, they heard horses approaching the house. Evidently figuring that the men would not harm the females, but would most definitely not have good intentions toward a Union man, he jumped out the window. He then bounded over a fence, but accidentally hooked his toe and fell over into the snow on the other side. There he remained hidden in the shadows, his white underwear blending with the snow, while Jesse and Frank James, and one or two others of the James-Younger Gang, dismounted and entered the house!

They asked Sarah's mother to cook for them, which she frightfully did. They left their guns by the door and ate their fill. Though she was understandably terrified, the men assured her that the women would come to no harm. Sarah's aunt (her mother's sister) was there, in bed, sick with TB during all of this, likely after her own house had been burned. That, and her need of care during the grave illness, would have been why she was there living with her sister. The men did not bother her. They left a silver dollar in payment for each of their meals, for the women's troubles, which was a lot of money at that time! I'm sure these coins very much needed. Before the war the Cantwell family was fixed well with provisions, but afterwards were financially ruined. Jesse James was known for such kindness, a sort of Robin Hood of his time. It was one of the reasons that his gang ran free for so long, according to my father. They acquired the favor of the people, which ensured them meals and places to hide from the law. I am sure this was one incident that Sarah and the others never forgot! This took place in Laclede County, Missouri. It is suspected that Jesse James passed through the region frequently, as he was believed to have had a cousin living just northeast of there in Pulaski County.

The family of Sarah Cantwell's grandfather's nephew, William Bohannon Jr, also had a near run-in with Bushwackers. He was in the Confederate Army, but turned against the Confederacy partway through the war and began fighting for the Union. As a little side note, it was very hard to get salt in the south during the war but, after he joined the Union Army, his wife was able to take their team and wagon to Lebanon, Missouri to buy a barrel of salt, which she then shared with her southern-sympathizer neighbors! Anyway, back to the Bushwackers... The following is a rather interesting tale: “The Bohannons were not a people to trifle with. The Bushwackers were active in the area, and one gang came to the Bohannon homestead. They asked to see the men of the house. The women directed them to a cabin where the men were. Their directions sent the Bushwackers the long way to the cabin. While the Bushwackers were enroute, Frances and Margaret (William Jr.'s wife and sister) ran to the cabin via the shortcut. They told their men that the Bushwackers were coming. The Bushwackers rode up near the cabin; after looking the situation over, they decided they didn't want any part of the Bohannons and rode away.” (Source - Bohannon Biographies)

Anyway, I guess I got a little off topic. Back to Louis Cass Britton and his family... At some point, Louis was a sheriff in Missouri for several years, according to Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton. However, no one seems to know exactly when that was, and I am unclear as to what county he was living in at the time or whether it was before or during his married life. I suspect his days as a lawman took place in Barry or Stone County, as he lived in that area for most of his life.

Marriage and Children
Hannah Catherine Odell
Shared by Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton
Louis fell in love with a neighbor girl named Hannah Catherine Odell, a daughter of Abraham Odell and Cynthia Ann Smith. They were married 1 March 1870, likely near Hartville, Wright County, Missouri.

Hannah was born and raised near Hartville, which also saw its share of troubles during the War Between the States. The county's residents were equally split between Union and Confederate sympathies, making it a hotbed for contention. Half of Hartville, including the courthouse, was burned to the ground by Union soldiers in 1862, when Hannah was 12 or 13 years old. I'm sure she carried the memories of that frightful event, and others like it, for the remainder of her days.

The Odell family had been in this country for a very long time. Hannah's father was from Tennessee. Her paternal grandfather was born in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and fought in the War of 1812. Her great grandfather married a Quaker, was a lieutenant in the Revolutionary War, and later started a settlement at Crosby Creek, which is now in Greene County, Tennessee in 1783. This was not long before Davey Crockett was born in that area. If one traces back even farther, it becomes apparent that Hannah Odell's ancestors fled to America from England in about 1637, after making the mistake of siding with Lady Jane Grey against Mary, Queen of Scots. Interestingly, Hannah's 5th great grandmother, Rebecca Brown Odell, was one of the judges during the Connecticut Witch Trials, which resulted in a woman's hanging in 1653. Others of her family were also very early settlers and many of them were Quakers or Puritans. So, you see, both Louis' and Hannah's heritage traced back to very early American colonists.

For a while after their marriage, Louis and Hannah Britton lived with her parents on their farm near Hartville, Wright County, Missouri. Hannah was a couple of years his senior and, at this time, he was 20 years old and attending school.6 Because of the war and also their proximity to available pioneer schools, perhaps this was the first chance he'd gotten to get some education. Louis' parents, Riley and Julia, lived on the next farm over, and next to them was Louis' sister Fannie and her family. (Source - 1870 Census)

Their first child, William Isaac “Ike” Britton, was born in Golden, Barry County, Missouri, 28 May 1872. I suppose that they had moved there to try and get a start in farming on their own, but I don't rightly know. It was very close by, anyway. Less than a year later, Louis' father died near Hartville in Wright County. He was in his late 50's, which seems rather young. I don't know the cause of his early death. This would have left two or three children at home for Julia to finish raising on her own, but none of them were real young. Julia appears to have remarried, about three years later, to a man named William Eads. She was referred to as Julia Eads in Riley's estate file. On William's findagrave memorial ➚ it also states that he married Julia after his first wife died. However, I would like to find additional proof.

Louis and Hannah's second child, Marie, was born 14 Nov 1875 and died only two years later, 11 Nov 1877, presumably of illness. By this time they were living in Stone County, Missouri. They had another daughter, Sarah Alice, who was born there April 7th of that year. Next came a son, John, who died as a toddler. He was born 17 Dec 1879 and died 11 Oct 1881.

In 1880, the family was living in White Pine Twp, Barry County, Missouri and Louis was farming. He was able to read and write, but Hannah could only read. Living on the farm next to theirs was Louis' married brother, Perry. It was in White Pine Twp that Louis and Hannah were blessed with another daughter, Parilee, on the 12th of November that same year. Stella was born four years later, 19 Oct 1884. By 16 September 1877, they were back in Stone County, at which time their youngest, Cora Florence, was born. At this time they were living near Baxter. Evidently, they were not opposed to moving around a fair bit if needed. Such was fairly common in that era. Sometimes several years of crop failure spurred families to move, though there could have been any number of other reasons. It is also possible that boundary lines simply changed, and they had not relocated as many times as it appears.

Louis' Brother
In about 1892, Louis' brother Perry moved his family to the Oklahoma Territory by covered wagon. Perry is credited with constructing the first building in Shawnee, Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma. Though the area was reserved for the Indians after the War Between the States, Texas ranchers had begun driving their cattle through in the 1870's, along what was called the West Shawnee Trail. In 1889, some of the land was opened up for white settlers and a land race took place at noon, 22 September 1891. I don't know if Perry participated in that race and then returned for his families, or if he only came after the fact. Toward the end of 1894, the Choctaw Railroad was slated to come through Shawnee, and it soon became a thriving, bustling community. Please refer to the City of Shawnee History ➚ for additional information. Perry was one of the ones who helped build that railroad. I tell this because Louis eventually ended up in that area as well, although I'm not sure whether he was there as early as Perry. I get the idea that they both went there, and then Louis came back to Missouri, and again returned toward the end of his life.

More on Life in Missouri
In 1900, Louis was farming in Williams Township, Stone County, Missouri. Living with him and Hannah were their three daughters, Parilee, Stella, and Cora, as well as Louis' sister, Fannie. They also had a live-in farmhand hired to help out. By 1910, they were still there and it appears, from who their neighbors were, that they had remained on the same piece of property. Their daughter, Stella, still lived with them and was unmarried at the age of 25. Evidently she'd had a son out of wedlock and was not real young when she finally married. The 4 year old grandson, Vernie Blue or Bilyue, who lived with them, was probably her son. He was born in Missouri. Louis' sister, Fannie, was also still there, now widowed. The next farm over was run by Louis' and Hannah's daughter, Cora, and her husband, Emery Frances Kincade.

The Death of Louis' Wife
Louis' dear wife, Hannah, passed away at 9 a.m. on the 15th June, 1919 at the age of 69 in Williams Township, probably on the family farm. The doctor from Shell Knob, Missouri stated on Hannah's death certificate that she suffered from senility and extensive paralyses, so I would guess that she'd had a stroke. Louis, as the informant on her death certificate, signed his name as L C Britton and stated that his address was Nauvoo, Missouri. Nauvoo was in Stone County, about 6 miles southwest of Baxter, Missouri and less than a mile from Arkansas' northern border. It appears that he remained on the farm for a while, at least until 1920. At that time, Cora and Parilee lived nearby with their families. Still living with Louis, was Stella and her son, Vernie. Fannie now owned her own property next door, or perhaps Louis had built her a house in his yard.

Louis Moved to Oklahoma
Sometime around 1924 or before, Louis went to Oklahoma. He was living with his daughter, Cora, and her family. Clarence Custer "Cub" Britton, his grandson, was also there. He is said to have known Louis and remembered him well. Stella had brought her son and was visiting there also. It sounds like this was the year that Stella's son (likely the above mentioned Vernie Bilyue) met his untimely death. It seems that he and two other boys had stolen some tire patching at the general store and then run off. A drunk sheriff commanded them to stop, but they did not. So, he shot at them. Though the two other boys escaped harm, Stella's son was shot in the head. My grandfather, “Cub” Britton, came upon his cousin and saw him laying in a pool of blood. As he approached the fallen boy, the sheriff told him to stop, but he ignored the order. Instead, he dragged his cousin into the shade of the brush. Before he could be brought home to be cared for, he perished. When Louis learned of the incident, he was intent on shooting the sheriff for killing the young boy. However, a friend urged him to let it go saying, “Don't do it Louis. You will only get yourself into trouble.” Louis, reluctantly I'm sure, saw the wisdom in friend's words and did not pursue the man. This account was given by Cub's wife, Ellen.

Other Tidbits from Those Who Knew Him
Louis was very fond of his young grandchildren and called them all by the nickname of Toots. Cute as it is in its own right, it is important to know in the little stories that follow. In Louis' old age, his eye sight got very poor. My grandmother, Ellen, told of several incidents where this proved to be a problem for him. The following are some things she remembered being told about Louis, probably by her husband, Cub:

"Lewis Cass Britton was Homer's granddad. [Homer was Cub's brother.] When Dad [William Isaac 'Ike' Britton, Cub's father and Louis' son] and his family moved to Oklahoma, Uncle Perry [Louis' brother] was living with Aunt Fanny [sister of Louis and Perry]. His wife had died and her husband was gone, too. She was very childish then. (Nina has, or did have, a scrapbook that had been Aunt Fanny's). Aunt Fanny died while they lived in Oklahoma. After that, Uncle Perry seemed to have lived alone. Lewis Cass lived with Aunt Cora [his daughter] and Uncle Emery [her husband, Emery Frances Kincaid] and their family. When Cub or Homer or any of them went any place, they went right by the corner of Uncle Emery's yard. When Granddad [Louis] would hear them coming, he would get his hat and go out to go with them, wherever they were going. He liked to ride fast and would ask, "Is this as fast as it will go, Toots?" He called all of the grand kids "Toots." Granddad's sight got poor and he would make some funny mistakes on account of that, like one day he was in a store and when aiming to go outside, went into the big show window. Another time he was in town with Uncle Emery and Aunt Cora, and got some candy for the kids. He went out and got into the wrong car, reached back with the sack of candy and said, "Here, Toots, do you want some candy?" then looked around to see a strange woman and kids in the back seat. He left! Things like that seemed to really embarrass him.

"One time when Granddad was visiting Dad (Ike) and his family on the eastern slope [in Colorado], he got to going over to visit Grandma Guthrie [probably Homer's mother-in-law]. Once when he was over there he backed up and turned the slop bucket over and spilled it. (I don't know whether he ever went back to see her or not.)

When Granddad would get mad, he would sulk for days. One of the times they told about was once when grandma [Hannah Catherine Odell] was scrubbing the floor, she set the sloop bucket up on the end of the cook table to have it out of the way. Granddad came in for a drink, picked up the dipper and took a big swig before he discovered the difference. Another time was when he started into the corncrib. The top of the door was low, and Granddad was tall. He hit his forehead on the top of the door opening, made some exclamation, backed up, and did it again. Once when dad was a kid, Granddad was nailing shakes on the roof, with Dad carrying them up to him. Just as Dad got his head above the edge of the roof, Granddad hit his finger with the hammer. Dad left fast before he would laugh. The very next trip up the ladder with the shingles, the same thing happened. That time Dad laughed before he could get down out of sight. Granddad threw the hammer at him and said, "Laugh, you little devil, you!"

"When Brittons lived in Oklahoma they knew Granddad and Uncle Perry and liked them really well. Uncle Perry was not talkative, or didn't think the kids interested in such, or assumed they knew about his family. I don't know how many kids he had."

His Death
Louis died 6 August 1932 in Chouteau, Mayes Co, Oklahoma at the age of 81 and was buried in the Alberty Cemetery, Sportsman Acres, there in Mayes County.


Sources:

1 – Writings of Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton, family historian and wife of Louis and Hannah's grandson Clarence Custer “Cub” Britton, who remembered Louis well



4 – Perry Eldridge Britten Family Tree

5 – Bohannon Biographies

6 – 1870 US Federal Census: Near Hartville Post Office, Wright County, Missouri (living with Hannah and her parents and siblings)

7 – 1880 US Federal Census: White River Twp, Barry County, Missouri (living with his wife, Hannah, and two children William Isaac and Sarah Alice)

8 – 1900 US Federal Census: Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri (living with his wife Hannah, their daughters Parilee, Stella and Cora, a farmhand named John Deaton, and Louis' sister, Fannie)

9 – 1910 US Federal Census: Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri (living with his wife Hannah, their daughter Stella, his sisters Fannie, and his grandson Vernie Blue.  Daughter Cora lived next door with her family)

10 – 1920 US Federal Census: Williams Twp, Stone County, Missouri (living with his daughter Stella, grandson Vernie Blyeu, and sister Fannie.  Two farms away was his daughter Parilee and her family.)

11 – 1930 US Federal Census: Ruth Twp, Stone County, Missouri (living in the home of his daughter Stella, her husband Sherman Lynes, and their son Kenneth Lynes)


13 – Past and Present of Wright County, Missouri (for the part about the area being split down the middle in its loyalties and Hartville being burned – need to find that spot and insert

14 - Territorial Papers of Louisiana

15 - Department of the Interior, Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, 1902

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Photos


Riley Britton Family

Parents - James Brittain (1769-1828) & Frances Pound (1779-1850)
Born - about 1814 Crawford County, Missouri Territory
Marriage - 8 Oct 1840 Steelville, Crawford County, Missouri (26)
Wife - Julia Ann Strong - 1/2 Cherokee (1824-1898)
Died - 8 Feb 1873 Hartville, Wright County, Missouri (59)


Julia Ann Strong Britton (1824-1898)
Likely Stone County, Missouri
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member
Julia Ann Strong Britton (1824-1898)
Likely Stone County, Missouri


Perry Eldridge Britten Family

Parents - Riley Britton (1814-1873) & Julia Ann Strong (1823-1898)
Born - 9 Dec 1855 Wright County, Missouri
Marriage #1 - 13 Feb 1876 Laclede County, Missouri (20)
Wife - Sarah Rachel Cantwell (1858-1898)
Marriage #2 - 8 Dec 1901 Shawnee, Pottawatomie Co, Oklahoma (45)
Wife - Mary Elizabeth Boykin (1858-1940), after his first wife died
Died - 25 Aug 1927 Texhoma, Texas County, Oklahoma (71)

Perry Eldridge Britten (1855-1927)
Missouri, Arkansas, Texas or Oklahoma

Perry Eldridge Britten (1855-1927)
Shawnee, Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Perry Eldridge Britten (1855-1927)
(when young - maybe in his early 20s)
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Back - "Perry Britton & Family"
Perry Eldridge Britten (1855-1927)
Sarah Rachel Cantwell Britton (1860-1898)?
Two of their children
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Perry Eldridge Britten & a daughter
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Perry Eldridge Britton & Louis Cass Britton


Celia Jane Nichols (1889-1946) - stepdaughter
Charles Edgar Britten (1877-1955) - son
Etta Jane Britten (1885-1919) - daughter
Eda May Britten (1887-1981) - daughter
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Back of the previous photo






Louis Cass Britton Family

Parents - Riley Britton (1814-1873) & Julia Ann Strong (1823-1898)
Born - 15 May 1851 Golden, White Pine Twp, Barry County, Missouri
Marriage - 1 Mar 1870 Hartville, Wright County, Missouri (18)
Wife - Hannah Catherine Odell (1849-1919)
Died - 6 Aug 1932 Chouteau, Mayes County, Oklahoma (81)


Louis Cass Britton (1851-1932)
Missouri
Source - Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton

Hannah Catherine Odell (1849-1919)
Missouri
Source - Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton

Back of the next photo
Main description by Paralee Britton Botner
Bottom writing by Clarice Botner Price
(Mislabeled as Berryville, Arkansas due to failing memory)
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Home of Louis Cass Britton & Hannah Catherine Odell
Stone County, Missouri
Front porch had been removed and rocked siding added by
the time Paralee revisited it and this photo was taken
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

Louis Cass Britton & Hannah Catherine Odell
with children and extended family
Stone County, Missouri
Shared by Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton

Stella, Cora, Alice & Paralee Britton
Shared by Peggy Britton Boone


William Isaac Britton Family

Parents - Louis Cass Britton (1814-1873) & Hannah Catherine Odell (1823-1898)
Born - 28 May 1872 Golden, White Pine Twp, Barry County, Missouri
Marriage - 7 Mar 1893 Berryville, Carroll County, Arkansas (20)
Wife - Hannah Catherine Odell (1849-1919)
Died - 1 Sep 1953 Kim, Las Animas County, Colorado (81)

Siblings - Paralee Britton Botner & William Isaac Britton
Drumright, Oklahoma?
Source - Paralee Britton Botner
Shared by a family member

William Isaac Britton (1872-1953)
Drumright, Oklahoma? (see license plate)

maybe William Isaac Britton (1872-1953)
maybe Colorado
Shared by Adwyna Jackson

maybe William Isaac Britton (1872-1953)
maybe Colorado (selling a horse)
Shared by Adwyna Jackson

William Isaac Britton (1872-1953)
Colorado
Shared by Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton

William Isaac Britton (1872-1953)
Colorado (last photo of him before he died)
Shared by Adwyna Jackson

Homer, Lewis, Walt & Clarence "Cub" Britton
Kim, Las Animas County, Colorado
Shared by Ellen Lovicy Waters Britton

Nina, Lewis & Norine Britton
Colorado or Washington
Shared by Peggy Britton Boone