The Winchell Family
of Athens, Morgan and Hocking Counties in Ohio
This family file was researched and compiled by Richard Welch
Copyright 2002 All Rights Reserved
Reuben Winchell in Nelsonville |
Caroline Lazarus Winchell wife of Reuben daughter of Hyman and Frances Secord Lazarus |
Charles Winchell Son of Reuben and Caroline Father of Ethel and Callie Winchell |
Callie and Ethel MayWinchell From a Jobs, Ohio school group photo |
Frances
Parmelia Secord was born February 12, 1802,
Townsend Twp., County Norfolk, Upper Canada. Her father, Peter
Secord, Jr., moved to Morgan County, Ohio at the end of the War
of 1812. Her mother, Sarah (Millard) Secord, is believed to have
died around that same time. Frances married Hyman Lazarus there
on January 11, 1826. They operated a store and saloon in Malta.
Hyman died about February 25, 1851, in Malta, Ohio.
Their children were
Caroline. born August 26, 1826, in Morgan County. Died Nov 12, 1899, in East Des Moines Township, Mahaska County, Iowa. Married Reuben Winchell, March 22, 1845, and lived for many years in Nelsonville.
Mary Aurilla, born May 16, 1832, in Morgan County, died March 10, 1895, in Nelsonville. She married Solomon Kontner, March 15, 1845, in Morgan County.
David
William, born May 6, 1836, Morgan County, died June
20, 1917, South Zanesville, Ohio. He married Mary Magdalena
Swingle, October 26, 1854, in Morgan County.
Peter Hyman, born Winter of 1839/1840, per Cadwell family Bible, or 1835/36 per guardianship document.
Frances
had two children by her second marriage to James Brannon:
James
E. Brannon, Jr., born August 25, 1840, Muskingum County;
died March 1, 1904, Stockport, Ohio. He married
Jane McKibben, March 12, 1857, Knox Twp., Vinton Co., Ohio
Robert Emmett Brannon, born March 25, 1843, in Muskingum County, died Dec 17, 1928, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Married Adeline E. Piickering, December 1, 1864, in Athens, Ohio. He was superintendent of the Chickamauga National Battlefield for many years.
Besse Brannon,
born after 1843, died in infancy
HISTORY
Hyman
Lazarus left Germany (possibly Bavaria) at the end of the
Napoleonic era, as did many other young Jewish men. Hyman,
however, was unique in that he was almost 50 years old when he
emigrated. There is a family tradition from David William
Lazarus, as related by Dorine White, that Hyman came from
Germany. The boat sank and many died. Another boat picked up the
survivors. Hyman was slung over a barrel and the rocking revived
him. They then called him Lazarus because they thought hed
come back from the dead. Hymans brother came looking for
him later to find out what happened to him. He stayed a while and
then sailed back home. There is no documentation for this
story.
Hyman
became a peddler upon arrival in America, eventually settling in
the new town of Malta, Morgan County, Ohio, where he purchased
Lot 6 from Simion Pool for $30 (Deed Book A, page 18, June 2,
1819). He lived in Malta for the rest of his life:
The
first store [in Malta Township] was started in 1818 by Hyman
Lazarus, a Jew, who had previously tramped about the
country as a peddler. He had a small stock, but sold whiskey,
bought ginseng, and made some show of business. He first had his
goods in a room in the end of Youngs house, but afterward
built a story and a half log house where A. W. Walkers
residence now [1886] is, where he continued in business for many
years.
Highman
[sic] Lazarus obtained his first Morgan County license to vend
goods in Malta during the 1821 term of the Common Pleas Court
(Minute Book A, page 87, July 12, 1821).
There
are numerous references to Hyman Lazarus in the history of Morgan
County. Most are very condescending:
The
first mill in Malta was built by Isaac Baker on two
flatboats [on the Muskingum River]... it is related that the
first time Hyman Lazarus, the Jew, saw a steamboat on the river,
he came to Baker on the run, his eyes wide with
Astonishment, and shouted, Mr. Baker! Mr. Baker! Your mill
haf got loose, und he is coomin oop the river a-grindin
like the Devil!
There
are other references in the county history to the Saloon of
Lazarus, the Jew, which was probably his primary source of
income. There are numerous other references to Hyman Lazarus in
the Morgan County court and land records:
June
8, 1822, he purchased 4 acres of land for $200 along the river in
Malta from George and Lois Miller, Book A, page 164.
March
1, 1825, Peter Secord, Jr., Fannys father, married Margaret
DeVore in Morgan County, Marriage Book A.
January
11, 1826, Hyman Lazarus and Frances Secord married in Morgan
County, Marriage Book A.
December
7, 1826, Nancy Clemens was indicted in Morgan County for
assault on Hyman and Frances Lazarus, Common Pleas Minute Book A,
page 366.
1830:
William Breeze and Lyman [sic] Lazarus traded lot 74 in Malta,
(Book C, page 553), and Lot 7 (Book F, page 502).
November,
1831, Hyman and Fanny Lazarus were divorced, but probably
continued to live together.
1832,
John Pettit sold 80 acres on July 21 (Book D, page 603),
and William and Laura Pettit sold Lot 21 and a house in Malta to
Hyman Lazarus, Book D, page 604.
1836,
Elizabeth Secord (daughter of Frances brother Peter S.
Secord) married Aaron Kinney on September 1 in Morgan County,
Marriage Book A. Aaron and Elizabeth Kinney lived in Columbia
Twp., Wapello Co., Iowa, next to Peter S. and Phebe Secord, in
1860.
1842,
Frances Parmelia (Secord) Lazarus and
James Brannon (of Muskingum County) were married on
September 18 in Muskingum County.
December
1843, Hyman Lazarus filed a suit against Alexander McConnel,
founder of McConnelsville, Ohio, over a land deal.
1845,
Hyman and Fannys oldest daughter,
Caroline, married Reuben Winchell in Morgan County,
Marriage Book B.
1849,
Hyman Lazarus sold 83 acres in Section 23 to
Milton Seaman, Book S, page 256.
1850,
James and Frances Brannon were listed in the Federal census of
Clay Township, Muskingum County (page 159) with Frances
three children: David William, Mary Aurilla, and Peter Hyman
Lazarus, and their two children, James and Robert Brannon. David
William was also listed in the household of his guardian, Thomas
Campbell, in Morgan County. Hyman Lazarus was listed in the
Federal census of Malta Township, Morgan County, Ohio.
He stated he was then 80 years old, was born in Germany, was
occupied as a tailor, and owned real estate valued at $1,000.
1851,
Hyman Lazarus died in Malta about February 25. There was no
obituary in the Morgan County Herald, the local newspaper.
February
27, 1851, Reuben Winchell declined administering the estate and
the court appointed D.B. Linn, an attorney in McConnelsville, as
administrator. Thomas Campbell was appointed guardian of David
William Lazarus, age 18, on the same date. Common Pleas Minute
Book H, page 484, Special Session.
April
15, 1851, Peter Hyman Lazarus, age 15, chose
James R. Jones as guardian. Minute Book I, page 228.
1851,
April Term, Common Pleas Court, the children of Hyman Lazarus
requested that D.B. Linn be removed as administrator, but the
court refused.
1851,
date unknown, David William and Peter Hyman Lazarus sued for the
partition of property, claiming they were the sons of Hyman, and
Mary Lazarus and Caroline (Mrs. Reuben)
Winchell were also daughters of Hyman. Three men
named McClain, Goodline, and Daniels were supposed to have bought
Hymans land from Caroline and Reuben Winchell. The
purchasers claimed that Caroline was the only
legitimate heir. The court ordered the three purchasers to
withdraw their title deeds filed in the case and to amend their
petition. Common Pleas Minute Book D, page 460.
1853,
A suit by the guardian of Peter H. Lazarus vs. Mary A.
Lazarus, et.al. was filed regarding land sold and purchase
money paid. The sheriff was to deliver the deed to the
purchasers, then pay cost of the suit and lawyer fee of $15. One
quarter of what was left was to go to the guardian of Peter, and
one quarter to the guardian of David William. The remainder
was to go to Alien Daniels, Jacob Goodline, and John
McClain. Common Pleas Minute Book J, page 155, March 14, 1853.
.
1854,
David William Lazarus and Mary Magdalena Swingle married, and
Mary Aurilla Lazarus and Solomon Kontner married. Marriage Book
C.
1860,
James and Frances Brannon resided in Waterloo Township, near the
village of Mineral, Athens County, Ohio. This was the same
township to which Caroline (Lazarus) Winchell, Frances
daughter, and her husband had moved in 1852.
Frances (or Fanny as she was called) did not have a happy marriage with James Brannon. James Brannon, Jr. was a lawyer and teacher, as well as an exceptional poet. A book of his poetry, Garnered Treasures, published after the Civil War, describes an unpleasant childhood experience in The Drunkards Dying Child. The poem speaks about his father, James E. Brannon, who was at a tavern getting drunk when James, Jrs sister, Besse, was dying. It speaks of Fanny sitting at a window watching for James return and about Baby Robert crying.
The last known record of Frances is the 1870 census of Waterloo Township. It's not known when she died or where she is buried. This portrait of Frances is a Carte de Visite copy of a daguerreotype.
SOURCES
OF INFORMATION
History
of Morgan County, Charles Robertson, Chicago: W.H. Watkins
& Co., 1886, pp. 343-45.
Land
and tax records; probate court records; Common Pleas Court Minute
Books, Morgan County, McConnelsville.
Index
of the Records of the Supreme Court, Docket A 28, Record A
184, Hyman Lazarus vs.Fanny Lazarus. The actual divorce
record no longer exists.
Welch,
Richard Warren. The Assimilation of
an Ethnic Group: The German-Jewish Peddlers in the Upper
Ohio Valley, 1790-1840: A Study in Historical Geography. East
Lansing: Masters Thesis, Michigan State University,
1973.
James
Brannon Jr.s Civil War pension application, WC 570-996.
Robert
E. Brannons Civil War pension application, WC 1631-740.
Garnered
Treasures, James E. Brannon, Jr., n.d., n.p.
Letter,
Dorine Lazarus White to Richard Welch, September 14, 2000
History and Genealogy of Charles Winchell
son of Reuben and Caroline Lazarus Winchell
compiled by Richard Welch, copyright 2002 All Rights Reserved
Charles Winchell was the son of Reuben and Caroline Lazarus
Winchell and was born December 28, 1862 in Waterloo Township,
Athens county, Ohio. He married May 30, 1883 probably in Athens
county. His wife was Kathryn "Kate" Saylor who was born
August 17, 1886 in Nelsonville, Athens county (daughter of James
and Hester Ann Kittsmiller Saylor), and died June 15, 1943 in
Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio. Kate was buried in Sunset
Cemeter in Alton, Franklin County, Ohio. Charles died at the age
of 40, September 30, 1903 in the Black Diamond Mine of Oskaloosa,
Iowa. He is buried in the Forest Cemetery in Oskaloosa, Mahaska
County, Iowa.
Charles was a Coal miner/Shoeworker. He lived in Happy Hollow
near Nelsonville, Ohio and in Oskaloosa, Mahaska County, Iowa.
Kate lived in Nelsonville from 1903 to 1914 and in Columbus, Ohio
from 1914 to 1943. His religion was Methodist-Episcopal.
CHILDREN
George Edward was born March 18, 1885 in Nelsonville, Ohio
and died August 16, 1960 in Oskaloosa, Iowa. He married Ella
Ankeney. His nickname was "Ed" or "Curly".
Ethel May was born September 4, 1888 in Nelsonville and died
October 5, 1909 in Bay City, Michigan. She married Willie Harden
in Nelsonville July 25, 1906..
Callie Gay was born November 4, 1892 in Nelsonville, Ohio
and died October 1, 1962 in Columbus, Ohio. She never
married.
HISTORY
Charles Winchell and his brother, Reuben, hauled coal at the
mines in Jobs
to help support the family after their father died in 1868.
Charles was ten
years old when he began working in the mines where he was known
by the
nickname Pinch. After their marriage in 1883, Charles and Kate
lived in
Happy Hollow near Nelsonville. They were still living there on
January 3,
1887, when Kate's mother filed a pension application which
contains the only
known record of Charles and Kate's marriage. The family moved to
Oskaloosa,
Iowa, about 1899 or 1900 where Charles went to work in the coal
mines. He
was killed in an accident in the Black Diamond Mine at Oskaloosa
on the
afternoon of Wednesday, September 30, 1903. He was a member of
the
Methodist-Episcopal church and the Forester's Lodge in Oskaloosa.
Kate and her children returned to Nelsonville after Charles'
death. Kate was
forced to take in laundry to support herself and her two
daughters, Ethel
and Callie, and son, Ed. Ethel left the home in 1906 when she
married Will
Harden. Ed would not work in coal mines, so he was unable to find
a job in
Nelsonville. He returned to Oskaloosa to work for the railroad
and never
returned to Ohio. He had two daughters: Shirley Ann and Eleanor.
He later
won national horticultural awards for his peonies. It is not
known when Kate
and Callie moved from Nelsonville to Columbus, but they were
first listed in
the Columbus City Directory in 1914, living at 35 South Belle
Street,
between West Broad Street and Rush Alley, on the west side and
adjacent to
the Scioto River. Kate is listed as "Mrs. Cath" and
Callie is listed as
"Caroline". The 1920 directory lists both Kate (widow
of Chas.) and Callie
as shoeworkers. The 1923 directory shows that they had moved to
341 Rush
Alley, and Callie is listed as "Allie". They were not
listed in the
directory again until 1928 when they are shown as living at 337
Rush Alley,
but it is probable that the house number had been changed rather
than they
moved to a new house. Kate probably retired between 1930 and
1935, and in
1939 Callie is listed as being an employee of the Walker T.
Dickerson Shoe
Company, 324-328 S. Front Street, Columbus, "manufacturers
of women's fine
shoes". Some time between 1935 and 1939 Kate and Callie
moved from Rush
Alley to a house behind them at 326 W. State Street and Kate
probably died
at that house. Callie Winchell, of 326 W. State Street, gave
permission on
November 4, 1945, for her friend, John Aughe, to be buried on her
lot in
Sunset Cemetery. He and Callie were living at 187 E. Long Street,
Columbus,
in 1951 when he died. He is buried on Kate's and Callie's
cemetery lot.
Callie continued to live at 187 E. Long Street until her death in
1962. The
houses mentioned are no longer in existence and the block bounded
by Belle
Street, Rush Alley, Starling Street, and State Street is now
(1997) a vacant
lot inhabited by derelicts.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Obituary of Charles Winchell, Oskaloosa Daily Herald, Friday,
October 2, 1903, and article about the coroner's inquest
into the death of Charles Winchell, Oskaloosa Daily Herald,
Thursday, October 1, 1903.
Obituaries of George Edward "Curly" Winchell, Oskaloosa
Daily Herald, August
17/18, 1960.
Personal knowledge of John Williams, Nelsonville, Ohio, who
worked in the
mines at Jobs with Charles Winchell, and of
Mrs. Myrtie (Saylor) Hanna.
Hester Ann Saylor's pension application, National Archives,
WC393119.
Winchell, Newton H. and Alexander N., The Winchell Genealogy, 2nd
Edition,
Minneapolis: Horace V. Winchell, 1917.
Polk's Directory, Columbus, Ohio, various editions.
Father of Charles Winchell:
Reuben Winchell was born ca. 1818/1819, probably in what is now
Waldo County, Maine. He married Caroline Lazarus March 22, 1845
in Morgan county, Ohio and died May 15, 1868 in Nelsonville,
Athens county, Ohio where he is buried in the Nelsonville Fort
Street Cemetery. Reuben was the son of William Winchell.
Mother of Charles Winchell: Caroline Lazarus was born August 26, 1826, in Malta Township, Morgan county, Ohio and she died at 8 pm, Sunday, November 12, 1899, EAst Des Moines Twp., Mahaska County, Iowa. She is buried in the "Old Cemetery" of the Forest Cemetery in Oskaloosa, Mahaska County, Iowa (from funeral record). Caroline was the daughter of Hyman Lazarus and Frances Parmelia Secord. Her husband Reuben was a famer and he was "killed in the pursuit of his daily labor" per resolution of the F & AM Lodge at Nelsonville. Residences were Rokeby Lock, Morgan County, Ohio, 1850 Bloom Township, Morgan County 1845-1852; Waterloo Township, Athens county, Ohio 1852-1864; Nelsonville, Athens county after 1864. Caroline moved to East Des Moines Twp., Mahaska Co., Iowa prior to 1899.
They appear in the census records of 1850, 1860.
1870, 1880.
BROTHERS AND SISTERS of Charles
Winchell:
Mary P. Winchell was
born in Bloom twp., Morgan county, Feb 14, 1848, and she
died January 22, 1849.
James William Henry was born Dec 12,
1848 in Bloom township. He married Jennie Spencer
Sept. 9, 1887 in Jobs, Ward township, Hocking county, Ohio.
Samuel was born about 1852 in Morgan
or Athens county, Ohio. He married Anna, and unknown. He died
about 1903 in Columbus, Ohio.
Sophronia was born February 1, 1853
probably in Waterloo twp. Athens county, and died May 14, 1921.
She was married to George Caldwell.
Margaret C. (Maggie) was born
ca. 1855, in Feb 17, 1874, Waterloo Twp., Athens Co., Ohio
she married John W. Mitchell see webpage http://www.ohgen.net/ohathens/GideonDMitchell.htm
Maggie died before 1900 in Jobs, Ohio because John is listed
as a widow living in Jobs with their children, Edward Mitchell,
Rosa L. Mitchell and Golda Mae Mitchell. In the early 1900's Rosa
married John W. Davis of Glouster, Ohio. Edward married Cassie
Loper. Golda died young.
Postcard to Mrs. Annettie
Nutter from her brother John Mitchell , March 6, 1888: "Well
brother and sister, I will inform you of my bad luck. I got my
hand mashed December 1 and never worked until March 1. And on the
first day of February my wife had a stroke of paralysis in her
right side and she lays here yet helpless and can't talk. I tell
you I playced in a bad fix but didn't know where to direct until
Mr. Nutter's brother came to work on Jobs New Hopper and gave me
the number. Bill and me work together at Job's mine. Bill's folks
is all well. I guess Amos lives in Nelsonville. So goodbye and
write soon. Yours respectfully John W. Mitchell, Brashears, Ohio
Hocking county." (Postcard in possession of Nutter
descendant 2001)
Sarah "Sadie" Brooks was
born August 10, 1856 and died November 1, 1902
in Oskaloosa, Mahaska County, Iowa. . She was married May 5, 1874
to David Sullivan in Nelsonville,
Ohio.
Reuben was born August 12,
1860, married April 9, 1882 in Athens county, Ohio to Nancy
Jane McKibben
and he died August 11, 1924 in Oskaloosa,
Mahaska county,
Iowa.
HISTORY
Reuben Winchell moved from Maine to Randolph Township, Portage
County, Ohio
before 1845 with his uncles Hiram and Azariah Winchell. Reuben's
brother,
Hiram, also moved to Ohio and was raised by his uncle Hiram.
Hiram, Azariah
and Reuben later moved to Bloom Township, Morgan
County, Ohio. It was
here that Reuben met and married Caroline Lazarus. Reuben and
Caroline lived
in Bloom Township near the village of Rokeby from the time of
their marriage
in 1845, until June 22, 1852, when they bought 180 acres in
section 33 of
Waterloo Township, Athens County, near the village of Mineral.
They sold the
farm in April 1854 and moved to Nelsonville where they bought
parts of lots
13 and 28. Reuben' s nephew, John G.
Farrington, son of Mary
(Winchell) Farrington, lived with Reuben and Caroline in 1860.
John G. was
then 9 years old and was born in Massachusetts. Reuben and
Caroline sold
lots 13 and 28 in November 1866 to Solomon Kontner, Caroline's
brother-in-law, in exchange for lot 77 in Nelsonville.
Reuben Winchell was a member of both the Odd Fellows and the
Masons in
Nelsonville. He was initiated in the Entered Apprentice degree of
the
Philodorian Lodge 157, F&AM on April 15, 1867. He passed to
the degree of
Fellowcraft on April 29, 1867, and was raised to the degree of
MasterMason
on May 15,1867. At the regular meeting on November 14, 1867, he
was elected
to the office of tyler for the coming year and served in that
office until
his death on Friday, May 15, 1868. The following is an excerpt
from the
minutes of the May 17, 1868 meeting of the Masons:
"The chair announces the death of brother Reuben Winchell,
Tyler of this
lodge, which occurred on Friday evening, May 15th, instant, from
injuries
received accidentally on the 14th while pursuing his daily
labor..."
Caroline sold lot 77 on March 16, 1883, to Frank Allen in
exchange for an
acre on the road from Happy Hollow to Buchtel to the east of
Nelsonville in
section 5 of York Township. She moved to Oskaloosa, Iowa a few
years later
to live with her daughters. She died at the home of her daughter,
Sadie
Sullivan, in East Des Moines Township, Mahaska County in 1899 and
was buried
in the "Old Cemetery" in Oskaloosa according to her
death certificate.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Caroline Winchell's obituary in the Daily Evening Herald,
Wednesday,
November 15, 1899.
Minutes/records of Philodorian Lodge 157, F&AM, Nelsonville,
Ohio.
Land records, Athens County Recorder, Athens.
Census returns from Athens, Morgan, and Portage Counties, Ohio.
Gravestone inscriptions in Fort Street Cemetery, Nelsonville.
Winchell, Newton H. and Alexander N. The Winchell Genealogy, 2nd
Edition,
Minneapolis: Horace V. Winchell, 1917.
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