William Loch Weems was born in 1792 at Billingsley Plantation in Prince George's County MD, the eldest son of Nathaniel Chapman Weems and Violetta Van Horn. In 1814, he married Elizabeth Taylor Burch, also of Prince George's County MD, the daughter of Joseph Newton Burch and Eleanor Taylor. He and Elizabeth had six children before their move to Hickman County Tennessee in 1825. Elizabeth died in Tennessee, shortly after the birth of their seventh child, Cornelia Weems, in 1825. About 1836, William married Elizabeth Ann Burchett of Virginia and had a son with her, Phillip Van Horn Weems, who was killed outside Atlanta during the Civil War. One of William's main claims to fame is founding the Bon Aqua Springs resort in Hickman County, shortly after his marriage to Elizabeth Burchett. He purchased some 1800 acres around the springs,erected cabins and began to advertise the spot as a health resort. William died in Hickman County in 1852 and his wife Elizabeth died there in 1855. In the published family histories, this was the extent of William's marital adventures.
However, while searching through the Chancery Court records at the Maryland State Archives, I came across a case that proves that William had another wife and child between the two Elizabeths--Mary R. Hatton, the daughter of Henry Hatton and Ann Davison of Prince George's County MD.
As told in Chancery Court Case 12370, Mary R. Hatton was one of two children of Henry Hatton, along with her brother, Henry Davison Hatton. Henry's 1824 will had left property to Mary during her lifetime and to her children afterward. If she had no children, then the property reverted to Mary's brother, Henry Davison Hatton. In 1832, the 37-year-old Mary was unmarried and living with her brother.
William Loch Weems, widowed for seven years, returned to Prince George's County from Tennessee about this time, and, according to Henry Hatton, tricked Mary into marriage while her brother was away. Henry claimed that Mary was "weak-minded," unable to manage her own affairs and "subject to frequent fits of derangement." In 1832, shortly after the marriage, William and Mary filed suit against Henry claiming that he was withholding the property to which Mary was entitled. William and Mary returned to Tennessee, where, William reported, Mary had given birth to a daughter, Mary Ann Weems, in 1835. Both mother and child died shortly after the birth. Weems then returned to Maryland and filed a claim for his daughter's inheritance from her mother--namely Henry Hatton's bequest.
The case includes fascinating depositions from the Hatton's neighbors in Prince George's County supporting Henry's claim that Mary was incompetent. Apparently, she threw tantrums and locked herself in her room whenever she did not get her way. Weems likewise provided depositions from the midwife and the doctor to support his claim that he had had a daughter with Mary.
In the end, the court ruled against Hatton and required him to turn over Mary's inheritance to Weems, including several dozen slaves, whom Weems promptly sold. It is interesting to speculate that this was the source of his funding to purchase Bon Aqua Springs.
The case file also included a sad letter from a lawyer in Tennessee telling Henry Hatton that Weems had apparently mistreated Mary during the marriage.
In any case, the brief Weems-Hatton marriage seems to have been quietly ignored by family historians.
Monday, September 21, 2015
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Henry Whittington and the Genealogy Hat Trick: Obituaries, Cemetery Records and Death Certificates
Newspaper Obituaries, Cemetery Records and Death Certificates are among a genealogist's best resources. With more and more newspapers digitizing their past issues and making them searchable, it has become much easier to find obituaries. These records can provide not only the date of death, but frequently mention the names of relatives and the cemetery where the person was buried, and these in turn open up further avenues of research. But if no newspaper obit shows up, Cemetery Records and/or Death Certificates can still lead to genealogical gold.
Take the case of Henry L.Whittington. He's been a dead end for quite a while with no known date of death and conflicting reports about his parentage and about his wife's family. I knew that he lived in Baltimore and he did show up in city directories up until 1904. So, I assumed that he died in Baltimore sometime around 1904. But I had no luck finding a death notice or obituary for him in the online issues of the Baltimore Sun and published indexes for the Sun did not cover past 1896. I also tried checking the clippings file at the Maryland Historical Society, but Henry was not to be found there either.
My next attempt was to search in Find-A-Grave for Whittingtons buried in Baltimore. That did turn up Henry's son Joseph who was buried in Loudon Park Cemetery. A little research on Loudon Park informed me that their records were available on microfilm at one of the local Family History Centers. So I took myself there hoping that perhaps Henry had been buried in his son's plot. I did find several other family members listed in the Whittington plot (who were not shown in Find-a-Grave, probably because they didn't have headstones), but, alas, neither Henry nor either of his wives were there.
The best chance of finding a death certificate in Maryland is knowing when the person died, but the Maryland Archives has been digitizing death records, so I decided to take a shot at browsing the records in hopes of spotting Henry. I started with 1903, since the city directories are often a year or so behind death records. That is, if he died in 1903, he might still show up in the 1904 directory. The 1903 records are arranged by date, so it was a slog to check them and I didn't find Henry. Fortunately for me, in 1904, Baltimore started arranging alphabetically by date, and I found Henry pretty easily in the 1904 index. I could then go down the Archives and pull up the death certificate. Voila, I had his address, his parents' names, his (second) wife's name, Matilda, the cause of death and the cemetery where he was buried. I haven't yet discovered the records for the Baltimore Cemetery, where Henry was interred, but I hope to find them and see if there are other Whittingtons buried with Henry, such as perhaps his first wife. (Update: I did check the cemetery records and no other Whittingtons buried with Henry.)
Unfortunately, Henry's first wife died before Baltimore started recording death certificates, so I couldn't use that trick for her. But with the name of his second wife, I did another newspaper search and I did turn up an obituary for Matilda Whittington that included, besides her date of death and the fact that she was the widow of Henry, the name of her granddaughter, with whom she was living and the cemetery where she was buried. A visit to the Archives produced her death certificate with the names of her parents. And while I was there, I found death certificates for Joseph, which listed his mother, Henry's first wife, and Henry and Matilda's daughter, Florence.
I entered the new information into Find-A-Grave so I could create links with Henry and his wife and children. I'm grateful to all those folks who have built Find-A-Grave memorials that have helped me fill out some of my research, so I always try to create a record there when I do find burial information.
Take the case of Henry L.Whittington. He's been a dead end for quite a while with no known date of death and conflicting reports about his parentage and about his wife's family. I knew that he lived in Baltimore and he did show up in city directories up until 1904. So, I assumed that he died in Baltimore sometime around 1904. But I had no luck finding a death notice or obituary for him in the online issues of the Baltimore Sun and published indexes for the Sun did not cover past 1896. I also tried checking the clippings file at the Maryland Historical Society, but Henry was not to be found there either.
My next attempt was to search in Find-A-Grave for Whittingtons buried in Baltimore. That did turn up Henry's son Joseph who was buried in Loudon Park Cemetery. A little research on Loudon Park informed me that their records were available on microfilm at one of the local Family History Centers. So I took myself there hoping that perhaps Henry had been buried in his son's plot. I did find several other family members listed in the Whittington plot (who were not shown in Find-a-Grave, probably because they didn't have headstones), but, alas, neither Henry nor either of his wives were there.
The best chance of finding a death certificate in Maryland is knowing when the person died, but the Maryland Archives has been digitizing death records, so I decided to take a shot at browsing the records in hopes of spotting Henry. I started with 1903, since the city directories are often a year or so behind death records. That is, if he died in 1903, he might still show up in the 1904 directory. The 1903 records are arranged by date, so it was a slog to check them and I didn't find Henry. Fortunately for me, in 1904, Baltimore started arranging alphabetically by date, and I found Henry pretty easily in the 1904 index. I could then go down the Archives and pull up the death certificate. Voila, I had his address, his parents' names, his (second) wife's name, Matilda, the cause of death and the cemetery where he was buried. I haven't yet discovered the records for the Baltimore Cemetery, where Henry was interred, but I hope to find them and see if there are other Whittingtons buried with Henry, such as perhaps his first wife. (Update: I did check the cemetery records and no other Whittingtons buried with Henry.)
Unfortunately, Henry's first wife died before Baltimore started recording death certificates, so I couldn't use that trick for her. But with the name of his second wife, I did another newspaper search and I did turn up an obituary for Matilda Whittington that included, besides her date of death and the fact that she was the widow of Henry, the name of her granddaughter, with whom she was living and the cemetery where she was buried. A visit to the Archives produced her death certificate with the names of her parents. And while I was there, I found death certificates for Joseph, which listed his mother, Henry's first wife, and Henry and Matilda's daughter, Florence.
I entered the new information into Find-A-Grave so I could create links with Henry and his wife and children. I'm grateful to all those folks who have built Find-A-Grave memorials that have helped me fill out some of my research, so I always try to create a record there when I do find burial information.
Saturday, May 23, 2015
The Sad Downfall of St. Charles Benjamin Gaither Gwynn
St. Charles Benjamin Gaither "Bloke" Gwynn was born in Spartanburg SC on December 11, 1874. He was the second son of Confederate Captain Andrew Jackson Gwynn and his wife Marie Louise Keene, both Marylanders, and the brother of my great-grandmother, Louise Gwynn Scrivener. Great-grandmother Scrivener was a scrapbooker and saved many clippings about her family members. In fact, it was her interest in family, and the fact that her notes and clippings were passed along to me by my grandfather, that started me working on genealogy many decades ago.
St. Charles, or "Bloke" as his friends called him, was by all accounts a genial fellow with a silver tongue. One story in great-grandmother's scrapbook recounts that his fellow cadets at the Citadel regarded him as the most accomplished orator of the academy and was frequently called upon to write excuses for delinquents. "It was," the newspaper writer noted, "a hard case when he couldn't write an excuse that would get the transgressor out of the demerits and consequent curtailment of leave." And, he added, "the Bloke had troubles of his own for which he had to write some masterpieces in the way of excuses." The Bloke was frequently in charge of setting of parties and generally regarded as a "prince of good fellows."
His classmates apparently never thought of him in any other light than as a future barrister. After his graduation from the Citadel in 1894, he went on to Georgetown Law where he was elected president of his class and graduated in 1897.
Before settling in to practice law in his home town of Spartanburg, St. Charles served as a 1st Lt. in the 3rd Engineers Division during the Spanish-American War. He returned to marry Alabama-born Moselle Hayes in New York City in November 1898. His brother, Rev. Andrew Gwynn, officiated at the wedding, but he was the only family member in attendance. According the news account of the wedding, Miss Hayes was "a stranger to his father's family, not having been seen before by any member of the family." After the wedding, the couple hurried back to Gwynn's military post in Macon, Georgia, without stopping in South Carolina to meet the family since Gwynn's 10-day furlough was up. (One has to wonder how the family reacted to this.)
In any case, St. Charles was soon back in Spartanburg and started up a law practice but by 1900 he and his wife and one-year-old son, Marion Hayes Gwynn, were in Manhattan. By 1901, Gwynn was the lawyer for and a member of the Board of Directors of Consolidated Liquid Air Company, a reorganization of Tripler Liquid Air. This was the beginning of the end for Gwynn.
Charles Tripler, a New York inventor, had come up with a process for efficiently manufacturing liquid air and touted its benefits for many industries. He was able to raise quite a bit of capital, but investors lost their shirts when the company couldn't produce as promised. Consolidated Liquid Air was an attempt to restructure the company involving two former US Senators, Marion Butler of North Carolina and R.F. Pettigrew of South Dakota. This venture did not fare any better.
Gwynn must have invested everything he had in the company. By 1904, there were judgments against him by several creditors and by 1906, his mortgaged property was being auctioned off in New York.
In 1907, Moselle set up a Women's Exchange in Spartanburg, probably as a way of making some money, and by 1910, she listed herself in the census as a widow and two of the three Gwynn children were in an orphanage in York County SC, St. Charles, age 7 and Edith, age 5. I was not able to find St. Charles Gwynn in the 1910 census and for many years, I assumed that he had died before that date.
However, I then read some of great-grandmother's clippings more closely. When St. Charles's mother Louise Keene Gwynn died in 1913, her obituary lists her son St. Charles as a survivor. Likewise, when his brother John Bowie Gwynn died in 1918, his obituary also mentions his brother St. Charles, and says he is in the English Army. Did he go to England to join in fighting World War I? I have not been able to find a record of him in England or coming back to the US. Perhaps someday, that record will turn up and I'll know the ultimate fate of the Bloke.
St. Charles, or "Bloke" as his friends called him, was by all accounts a genial fellow with a silver tongue. One story in great-grandmother's scrapbook recounts that his fellow cadets at the Citadel regarded him as the most accomplished orator of the academy and was frequently called upon to write excuses for delinquents. "It was," the newspaper writer noted, "a hard case when he couldn't write an excuse that would get the transgressor out of the demerits and consequent curtailment of leave." And, he added, "the Bloke had troubles of his own for which he had to write some masterpieces in the way of excuses." The Bloke was frequently in charge of setting of parties and generally regarded as a "prince of good fellows."
His classmates apparently never thought of him in any other light than as a future barrister. After his graduation from the Citadel in 1894, he went on to Georgetown Law where he was elected president of his class and graduated in 1897.
Before settling in to practice law in his home town of Spartanburg, St. Charles served as a 1st Lt. in the 3rd Engineers Division during the Spanish-American War. He returned to marry Alabama-born Moselle Hayes in New York City in November 1898. His brother, Rev. Andrew Gwynn, officiated at the wedding, but he was the only family member in attendance. According the news account of the wedding, Miss Hayes was "a stranger to his father's family, not having been seen before by any member of the family." After the wedding, the couple hurried back to Gwynn's military post in Macon, Georgia, without stopping in South Carolina to meet the family since Gwynn's 10-day furlough was up. (One has to wonder how the family reacted to this.)
In any case, St. Charles was soon back in Spartanburg and started up a law practice but by 1900 he and his wife and one-year-old son, Marion Hayes Gwynn, were in Manhattan. By 1901, Gwynn was the lawyer for and a member of the Board of Directors of Consolidated Liquid Air Company, a reorganization of Tripler Liquid Air. This was the beginning of the end for Gwynn.
Charles Tripler, a New York inventor, had come up with a process for efficiently manufacturing liquid air and touted its benefits for many industries. He was able to raise quite a bit of capital, but investors lost their shirts when the company couldn't produce as promised. Consolidated Liquid Air was an attempt to restructure the company involving two former US Senators, Marion Butler of North Carolina and R.F. Pettigrew of South Dakota. This venture did not fare any better.
Gwynn must have invested everything he had in the company. By 1904, there were judgments against him by several creditors and by 1906, his mortgaged property was being auctioned off in New York.
In 1907, Moselle set up a Women's Exchange in Spartanburg, probably as a way of making some money, and by 1910, she listed herself in the census as a widow and two of the three Gwynn children were in an orphanage in York County SC, St. Charles, age 7 and Edith, age 5. I was not able to find St. Charles Gwynn in the 1910 census and for many years, I assumed that he had died before that date.
However, I then read some of great-grandmother's clippings more closely. When St. Charles's mother Louise Keene Gwynn died in 1913, her obituary lists her son St. Charles as a survivor. Likewise, when his brother John Bowie Gwynn died in 1918, his obituary also mentions his brother St. Charles, and says he is in the English Army. Did he go to England to join in fighting World War I? I have not been able to find a record of him in England or coming back to the US. Perhaps someday, that record will turn up and I'll know the ultimate fate of the Bloke.
Moselle Hayes Gwynn filed for divorce in 1914.
Meanwhile, by 1925, Moselle and all three of her children were back in New York City. Moselle did not remarry and died in New Jersey in 1968.
Meanwhile, by 1925, Moselle and all three of her children were back in New York City. Moselle did not remarry and died in New Jersey in 1968.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
The Elusive Eleanor McPherson Garner
Since I spend so much of my free time doing genealogy research, I thought it would be fun to write about some of the discoveries I've come across or the one's I'm still trying to make.
One of my more elusive cousins is Eleanor McPherson Garner. Eleanor was the daughter of Robert Franklin Garner and Lillian Scrivener. Lillian is a great aunt, the sister of my great-grandfather, Frank Scrivener. Lillian married Robert, in Baltimore in 1900. Eleanor McPherson Garner was born in Baltimore MD a year later on 14 March 1901. From there on, Eleanor becomes very hard to track.
I have never been able to find her in the 1910 Census. In 1920, she is 18 and living in the household of Frederick Stieff, a piano maker in Baltimore. The census says she is his daughter, but this is probably not the case since he is only 27 at the time. I'm guessing she was working for him, perhaps as a nanny for his infant daughter.
1930 and 1940, nothing. She's not with the Stieffs any more. She's vanished. I figured she was probably married, but I didn't know to whom.
My only lead on Eleanor came from the funeral booklet of my great-grandfather, Frank, which my great-grandmother thoughtfully saved and which was passed along to me by my grandfather when he realized I shared her interest in family history (along with a treasure box of other notes and memorabilia she had saved. But that is another story.) Anyway, in the guest register of the funeral booklet (1939), Eleanor Garner Wheelock appears. It's got to be her, right? And, bonus, later in the book she appears as a sender of flowers: Mrs. Thomas Gordon Wheelock. Now I have something to work with.
So, I looked for Thomas Gordon Wheelock.
First, I just Googled him and lo and behold, he turns up--as the fourth husband of actress Mary Astor! I even found a picture of him eventually. Now this is strange. How did a poor girl from Baltimore hook up with this guy? Thomas was from a wealthy Boston family of China traders, spent the early part of his life in Shanghai, attended Harvard. His sister Florence was a famous travel writer. In 1929, Thomas married Chicago socialite Dorothy Rend at the St. Regis Hotel in New York. Hot stuff. In 1945, Thomas marries Mary Astor. I began to wonder if this could possibly be the guy that Eleanor married. He seemed really out of her league. But if he married Eleanor, it had to be sometime between 1929 and 1939, with a divorce from Dorothy in between.
My next clue showed up some years later when I had access to an online newspaper database. By this time, I just automatically put in Eleanor's name when I find a new database, on the off-chance that something will turn up. Well, this time something did--a report of the divorce of Eleanor and Thomas in Arizona in 1945, just before he married Mary Astor. So at least I did know they were married but not where or when.
I tried another tack, focusing on Eleanor's father, who seemed to have disappeared shortly after her birth. Lillian and Robert are in the 1900 Census of Baltimore as newlyweds, but after that, nada. However, Lillian does show up in the early 1900's in the Baltimore City Directory as the widow of Robert. So what happened to Robert? In one of my periodic checks for him on Ancestry, I found a reference to a military pension file. I copied the numbers, went online and ordered up his record from the National Archives and found the very sad story. Robert was an Indian fighter. His file even included letters he had sent back to his family telling of his life out west. (Lillian submitted these as proof that he had served in the Army.) However, he became ill with pneumonia at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and died there in 1904. I found his grave later on Find-A-Grave.
The file also included info about Eleanor and her birth and that she and Lillian had traveled out to Kansas to be with Robert. Eleanor got sick and they had to return to Maryland. In the pension application, Lillian is begging for an increase in her small pension, which she eventually got after several rounds of petitions, but not in time to do her much good. She died impoverished in 1948. The only additional mention of Eleanor is a letter in the file in which she states that her mother is not competent to manage her affairs. So, I now know that Eleanor is alive in 1948 and still called Eleanor Wheelock.
I also found Eleanor on Ancestry on a ship's passenger list returning from a trip to Italy, also in 1948, so she must have still had some money. Makes me wonder why her mother was barely able to support herself?
My next clue turned up in another newspaper clipping when I again input Eleanor's name into a new database. This time I found the marriage of Eleanor and Thomas Wheelock reported in the Chicago Tribune in 1938. Eleanor was called Mrs. Eleanor Garner Wilder (aha! another marriage),who had divorced about a year previously, and both Eleanor and Thomas were called prominent Chicago residents. Unfortunately, it did not mention Mr. Wilder's first name and so far, I haven't found the prominent Mrs. Wilder anywhere else in the Chicago papers. ;-(
Auburn, N. Y., Feb. 10.-[Special.] -Two prominent Chicago residents, Thomas Wheelock, a broker and a descendant of the Rev. Elcazar Wheelock, founder of Dartmouth college, and Mrs. Eleanor Garner Wilder, will be married tomorrow noon at the home of Mayor Charles D. Osborne here. The mayor will perform the ceremony. Mr. Wheelock is a nephew of Mrs. Osborne.
It will be the second marriage for both Mr. Wheelock and Mrs. Wilder. Mrs. Wilder was divorced about a year ago. Mr. Wheelock was divorced from Mrs. Dorothy Rend Wheelock. The couple will be unattended.
The couple came to Auburn early in the week and have been guests at the home of the Osbornes. They plan to return to Chicago to make their home after the wedding.
Mrs. Wilder is a daughter of Robert F. Garner, formerly of Maryland. Mr. Wheelock is a son of the late Geoffrey Wheelock of Chicago and Shanghai, China. Mr. Wheelock's Chicago home is at 200 East Chestnut street.
I did find Thomas's divorce from Dorothy in the papers, apparently a messy affair in which she claimed cruelty and lack of support. Again, I have to wonder how little orphan Eleanor ended up with Thomas.
Very recently, after I retired and moved back to Maryland, a helpful librarian pointed out that the Pratt library had The Baltimore Sunpapers database and that, as a Maryland resident, I could get a Pratt Library card, which I promptly did. When I put in Eleanor's name, she showed up with another marriage, her first one, in 1923 to Gilbert Loutrelle Lucas, a Baltimore printer. They were married in New York at the Park Avenue home of Eleanor's aunt, Harriett Garner Phillips. This at least gave me some idea of how Eleanor had an entree to meeting her wealthy husbands. She was divorced from Lucas in Florida in 1929.
My last sighting of her, so far, is in the Manhattan City Directory in 1953, Mrs. Eleanor G. Wheelock.
Oh, I can't wait to find out the rest of this story, although I'm afraid it might not happen in this lifetime. Perhaps I should take a trip to Chicago for some research.
3 May 2016
Updates on Eleanor:
I finally found Mr. Wilder's first name in Eleanor's application for a marriage license in New York. Her application stated that she was divorced from Paul Wilder in Los Angeles in 1937, the year before she married T.G. Wheelock.
Some poking around in online newspapers from California turned up a marriage between Paul Wilder and Eleanor Bullen. What? Had to be the same woman, right? Another marriage? Yep.
Turns out that right after Eleanor divorced her first husband in Florida, she hooked up with Richard Nixon Bullen, as his third wife. Bullen, a stockbroker from Wisconsin, was divorced from Eleanor in 1935 and died in 1936. Eleanor married Paul Wilder as his second wife in Pebble Beach CA just five days after her divorce from Bullen.
Wilder was born in Illinois and attended Cornell University. Not surprisingly, the marriage to Eleanor didn't last long. The divorce papers presented an extravagant Eleanor who was spending her husband into bankruptcy.
So, I still don't know what happened to Eleanor after her divorce from TG Wheelock, but what a ride she had: four marriages and at least one stint living in Paris. Her Wilder divorce also revealed that she was the heir to her aunt Harriett Garner Phillips, which probably explains her moving back to New York City.
I would not be at all surprised to discover that she married for a fifth time, but so far, no clues about that.
26 June 2018
Finally turned up a picture of Eleanor, taken in 1923 about the time of her first marriage. She certainly seems to be a very beautiful young woman. The newspaper clipping indicates that she was well known in Baltimore art circles and had posed for various artists, including a well-known artist: Erik Guide Haupt. It would be interesting to find a picture that she posed for!
One of my more elusive cousins is Eleanor McPherson Garner. Eleanor was the daughter of Robert Franklin Garner and Lillian Scrivener. Lillian is a great aunt, the sister of my great-grandfather, Frank Scrivener. Lillian married Robert, in Baltimore in 1900. Eleanor McPherson Garner was born in Baltimore MD a year later on 14 March 1901. From there on, Eleanor becomes very hard to track.
I have never been able to find her in the 1910 Census. In 1920, she is 18 and living in the household of Frederick Stieff, a piano maker in Baltimore. The census says she is his daughter, but this is probably not the case since he is only 27 at the time. I'm guessing she was working for him, perhaps as a nanny for his infant daughter.
1930 and 1940, nothing. She's not with the Stieffs any more. She's vanished. I figured she was probably married, but I didn't know to whom.
My only lead on Eleanor came from the funeral booklet of my great-grandfather, Frank, which my great-grandmother thoughtfully saved and which was passed along to me by my grandfather when he realized I shared her interest in family history (along with a treasure box of other notes and memorabilia she had saved. But that is another story.) Anyway, in the guest register of the funeral booklet (1939), Eleanor Garner Wheelock appears. It's got to be her, right? And, bonus, later in the book she appears as a sender of flowers: Mrs. Thomas Gordon Wheelock. Now I have something to work with.
So, I looked for Thomas Gordon Wheelock.
First, I just Googled him and lo and behold, he turns up--as the fourth husband of actress Mary Astor! I even found a picture of him eventually. Now this is strange. How did a poor girl from Baltimore hook up with this guy? Thomas was from a wealthy Boston family of China traders, spent the early part of his life in Shanghai, attended Harvard. His sister Florence was a famous travel writer. In 1929, Thomas married Chicago socialite Dorothy Rend at the St. Regis Hotel in New York. Hot stuff. In 1945, Thomas marries Mary Astor. I began to wonder if this could possibly be the guy that Eleanor married. He seemed really out of her league. But if he married Eleanor, it had to be sometime between 1929 and 1939, with a divorce from Dorothy in between.
My next clue showed up some years later when I had access to an online newspaper database. By this time, I just automatically put in Eleanor's name when I find a new database, on the off-chance that something will turn up. Well, this time something did--a report of the divorce of Eleanor and Thomas in Arizona in 1945, just before he married Mary Astor. So at least I did know they were married but not where or when.
I tried another tack, focusing on Eleanor's father, who seemed to have disappeared shortly after her birth. Lillian and Robert are in the 1900 Census of Baltimore as newlyweds, but after that, nada. However, Lillian does show up in the early 1900's in the Baltimore City Directory as the widow of Robert. So what happened to Robert? In one of my periodic checks for him on Ancestry, I found a reference to a military pension file. I copied the numbers, went online and ordered up his record from the National Archives and found the very sad story. Robert was an Indian fighter. His file even included letters he had sent back to his family telling of his life out west. (Lillian submitted these as proof that he had served in the Army.) However, he became ill with pneumonia at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and died there in 1904. I found his grave later on Find-A-Grave.
The file also included info about Eleanor and her birth and that she and Lillian had traveled out to Kansas to be with Robert. Eleanor got sick and they had to return to Maryland. In the pension application, Lillian is begging for an increase in her small pension, which she eventually got after several rounds of petitions, but not in time to do her much good. She died impoverished in 1948. The only additional mention of Eleanor is a letter in the file in which she states that her mother is not competent to manage her affairs. So, I now know that Eleanor is alive in 1948 and still called Eleanor Wheelock.
I also found Eleanor on Ancestry on a ship's passenger list returning from a trip to Italy, also in 1948, so she must have still had some money. Makes me wonder why her mother was barely able to support herself?
My next clue turned up in another newspaper clipping when I again input Eleanor's name into a new database. This time I found the marriage of Eleanor and Thomas Wheelock reported in the Chicago Tribune in 1938. Eleanor was called Mrs. Eleanor Garner Wilder (aha! another marriage),who had divorced about a year previously, and both Eleanor and Thomas were called prominent Chicago residents. Unfortunately, it did not mention Mr. Wilder's first name and so far, I haven't found the prominent Mrs. Wilder anywhere else in the Chicago papers. ;-(
11 Feb 1938 Chicago Tribune
Thomas Wheelock and Eleanor Wilder Will Marry Today
Thomas Wheelock and Eleanor Wilder Will Marry Today
Auburn, N. Y., Feb. 10.-[Special.] -Two prominent Chicago residents, Thomas Wheelock, a broker and a descendant of the Rev. Elcazar Wheelock, founder of Dartmouth college, and Mrs. Eleanor Garner Wilder, will be married tomorrow noon at the home of Mayor Charles D. Osborne here. The mayor will perform the ceremony. Mr. Wheelock is a nephew of Mrs. Osborne.
It will be the second marriage for both Mr. Wheelock and Mrs. Wilder. Mrs. Wilder was divorced about a year ago. Mr. Wheelock was divorced from Mrs. Dorothy Rend Wheelock. The couple will be unattended.
The couple came to Auburn early in the week and have been guests at the home of the Osbornes. They plan to return to Chicago to make their home after the wedding.
Mrs. Wilder is a daughter of Robert F. Garner, formerly of Maryland. Mr. Wheelock is a son of the late Geoffrey Wheelock of Chicago and Shanghai, China. Mr. Wheelock's Chicago home is at 200 East Chestnut street.
I did find Thomas's divorce from Dorothy in the papers, apparently a messy affair in which she claimed cruelty and lack of support. Again, I have to wonder how little orphan Eleanor ended up with Thomas.
Very recently, after I retired and moved back to Maryland, a helpful librarian pointed out that the Pratt library had The Baltimore Sunpapers database and that, as a Maryland resident, I could get a Pratt Library card, which I promptly did. When I put in Eleanor's name, she showed up with another marriage, her first one, in 1923 to Gilbert Loutrelle Lucas, a Baltimore printer. They were married in New York at the Park Avenue home of Eleanor's aunt, Harriett Garner Phillips. This at least gave me some idea of how Eleanor had an entree to meeting her wealthy husbands. She was divorced from Lucas in Florida in 1929.
So, I now have three marriages for Eleanor, one to the mysterious Mr. Wilder.
My last sighting of her, so far, is in the Manhattan City Directory in 1953, Mrs. Eleanor G. Wheelock.
Oh, I can't wait to find out the rest of this story, although I'm afraid it might not happen in this lifetime. Perhaps I should take a trip to Chicago for some research.
3 May 2016
Updates on Eleanor:
I finally found Mr. Wilder's first name in Eleanor's application for a marriage license in New York. Her application stated that she was divorced from Paul Wilder in Los Angeles in 1937, the year before she married T.G. Wheelock.
Some poking around in online newspapers from California turned up a marriage between Paul Wilder and Eleanor Bullen. What? Had to be the same woman, right? Another marriage? Yep.
Paul Wilder |
Turns out that right after Eleanor divorced her first husband in Florida, she hooked up with Richard Nixon Bullen, as his third wife. Bullen, a stockbroker from Wisconsin, was divorced from Eleanor in 1935 and died in 1936. Eleanor married Paul Wilder as his second wife in Pebble Beach CA just five days after her divorce from Bullen.
Wilder was born in Illinois and attended Cornell University. Not surprisingly, the marriage to Eleanor didn't last long. The divorce papers presented an extravagant Eleanor who was spending her husband into bankruptcy.
So, I still don't know what happened to Eleanor after her divorce from TG Wheelock, but what a ride she had: four marriages and at least one stint living in Paris. Her Wilder divorce also revealed that she was the heir to her aunt Harriett Garner Phillips, which probably explains her moving back to New York City.
I would not be at all surprised to discover that she married for a fifth time, but so far, no clues about that.
26 June 2018
Finally turned up a picture of Eleanor, taken in 1923 about the time of her first marriage. She certainly seems to be a very beautiful young woman. The newspaper clipping indicates that she was well known in Baltimore art circles and had posed for various artists, including a well-known artist: Erik Guide Haupt. It would be interesting to find a picture that she posed for!
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