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Where's Nellie?

Seeking Ella in Burr Oak Village, MI, 1860

 

 

•  Guiding Question
•  Evidence & Interpretations
•  Demographics of Burr Oak Village in 1860
•  Conclusions & More Questions
•  Next Chapter
 
   

Guiding Question

 

Where's Nellie? 

 

Evidence & Interpretations

     This page is inspired by a mystery:  our inability to find 12 year-old Ellen Kinsman in the 1860 census.  We know she's somewhere in St. Joseph Co, MI, probably in Burr Oak Village, but she is simply nowhere to be found in the census data.  (Right: Girl washing clothes, from www.medivia.sele.it)

     Her father Sheldon Kinsman, age 44, is listed as a farmer in Florence Township, St. Joseph County with his wife Mary E. Kinsman, 40, and their five children (Sarah, 9, Sheldon Jr., 5, Mary, 3, Jackson, 2, and Thomas, 1), as seen in the following 1860 census page excerpt:   

     Her uncle Asa E. Kinsman, age 41, is in nearby Burr Oak Township with his wife Sarah Rogers Kinsman, age 37, their six children ages 2-16, and his mother-in-law Susan Rogers [Roggers], age 56: 

     Meanwhile, her future husband Frank Lang, age 19, is working as a laborer on a farm in Springfield Township, Lagrange County, Indiana, about 10 miles southeast of Burr Oak Village (erroneously listed as "Frank Laug" in the ancestry.com database).  In August 1861 Frank comes to Burr Oak and enrolls in the Union Army:  

     Where's Ella?   A systematic search of the 1860 census reveals 28 girls age 11-13 named Ellen (20), Ella (5), Nellie (2), and Nettie (1) in St. Joseph County MI.  Four of these 28 girls were living with families bearing surnames different than their own.  They were::

Nellie Finch, 11, b. NY, in Lockport Twp, living with farmer Samuel Adams, 35, his wife Louise Adams, 29, both b. NY, and two others, nearest post office Three Rivers Village.

Ellen Tailor, 11, b. NY, in White Pigeon Twp, living with Sean Wetherwax, 40, farmer, b. NY, and wife Harriet Wetherwax, 36, b. NY, nearest post office White Pigeon Village.

Ellen Duel, 12, b. Ohio, living with Green and Bradly families in Sherman, MI, farmers; nearest post office Centreville.

Ellen Jenkins, 12, b. NY, living with James Powers, blacksmith, and family, in Burr Oak Village.

     The first three do not really fit our Ella.  All are living on farms, and the ages and birth places don't much match our Ella. 

     The fourth, Ellen Jenkins, seems to fit her very well:  her age, birthplace, and place of residence in 1860 all correspond what we would expect to find for Ellen Kinsman. 

     Thus we're left with two plausible possibilities:  either  (1)  Ellen Kinsman was missed by the census-taker; or (2) Ellen Jenkins was really Ellen Kinsman. 

     Three additional factors tend to support the latter hypothesis.  They are all rooted in several larger contexts:  namely, that Ellen and her father Sheldon were estranged; that Ellen was desperate to leave St. Joseph County and her father and his family; and that she knew that marriage was her only viable way out (see Books I and III of the Saga).  With these contexts in mind, the following facts seem important:

1.     Jenkins was a very common surname in Chemung Co, NY from the 1840s.  Census data for 1850 show a grand total of 73 Jenkins's living in Chemung Co., including nine in Southport (Ellen Kinsman's home village).  Indeed, one Chemung Co family named Jenkins preceded Asa and Sheldon Kinsman's migration to Burr Oak, St. Joseph Co, MI in the 1850s, making them one of the first white families to migrate to Burr Oak.  (Richard & Ann Jenkins & children James, Isaac, Joseph, and William; they did NOT have a daughter named Ellen.)  

     Census data from 1850 also show a 4 year-old girl named Ellen Jenkins (b. 1846) in Chemung County.  She is still there in 1860.   No other Ellen Jenkins from the 1850 census fits this Ellen Jenkins in Burr Oak in 1860.  Sheldon and Asa Kinsman knew (or should have known) of a girl named Ellen Jenkins living in Chemung Co.   It thus seems entirely possible that Sheldon lent his daughter Ellen the surname "Jenkins" when he "let her out" as a servant to the Powers in the late 1850s.  The name was familiar to him.  He knew of an Ellen Jenkins of the same age in Chemung Co.  And, we speculate, he didn't want the Kinsman's good name associated with his daughter Ellen. 

2.     Ella Kinsman was 13½ years old in August 1861, when hundreds of young men came pouring into Burr Oak to enlist in the Union Army.   In general, marriage prospects for young women living in towns were vastly greater than such prospects for farm girls.   The hypothesis is that living in the midst of the hustle and bustle of Burr Oak Village's 653 people made it possible for her to meet Frank Lang there in August 1861.

3.     Ellen Jenkins lived in close proximity to five coopers, of the total of nine coopers in Burr Oak Village in 1860 (nine of an economically active population [EAP] of 163).   Four coopers lived within two houses of Ellen Jenkins.  A fifth lived five doors down from her.  Thus, five of Ellen Jenkins' near neighbors were coopers by trade.   Frank Lang worked as a cooper all his life.  It thus seems entirely possible that because of his trade Frank knew, or came to know, one or more of the five coopers who were neighbors of Ellen Jenkins, again increasing the odds that she and Frank would meet.  (Right: Cooper at work; from the Collection of The Shelburne County Museum, Shelburne, Nova Scotia, Canada) 

     One way to better understand the social environment of Burr Oak Village in 1860 is to identify its demographic characteristics and the spatial relationships among townsfolk.

 
 
          

Demographics of Burr Oak Village in 1860

Total population:  653 persons

Household No Name Age Occupation No people in household Value Real Estate Special* Date Census Taken
1440 Patrio Joyce 28 laborer 3 $0 M9-ds 29
1441 Wm Locke 59 farmer 5 $2,300   26-Jul
1442 John Christian 33 artist 5 $0    
1443 Rufus Moore 38 laborer 6 $500    
1443 Patrick Keith 23 R R hand        
1444 Wm E Vanbrunt 55 c & joiner 4 $300    
1445 J B Graves 25 cooper 4 $200    
1446 Harriet Clark 35 [ none listed ] 5 $1,400 FHH  
1447 Justine Runyan 39 [ none listed ] 5 $600 FHH  
1448 Lucy Wilcox 52 [ none listed ] 4 $0 FHH  
1449 Hiram Churchill 39 laborer 7 $2,000   30
1450 Theodore Stratton 41 cooper 6 $0   26-Jul
1451 Ashahell Cross 28 wagon maker 3 $600    
1452 Alman C Arnold 48 c & joiner 5 $800    
1453 Calvin Root 26 harness maker 3 $0    
1454 O L Cowles 34 blacksmith 4 $1,000    
1455 George Gunthorpe 36 track man 6 $0    
1456 Michael Mulguin 26 laborer 3 $250    
1457 Herman Martin 32 laborer 9 $0 F16-ds  
1459 B F Dow 29 c & joiner 3 $700   31
1460 John Story 52 hunter 10 $200   26-Jul
1461 Theodore Saunders 51 shoemaker 7 $100    
1462 James McDonald 26 laborer 4 $0    
1463 George Whitman 34 cabinet maker 7 $600    
1464 Uriah Dow 36 [ none listed ] 5 $0    
1464 Chas Pomeroy 25 cooper        
1465 A C Arnold 33 grocer 3 $1,000   32
1466 James Mills 43 druggist 5 $0   27-Jul
1467 E P Comell 57 shoemaker 4 $0    
1468 Harvey Loomis 34 physician 4 $2,000 M13-ds  
1469 Anson Upham 45 livery 8 $800    
1470 D S Waldo 27 farmer 7 $7,400    
1471 L F Hopkins 31 tailor 5 $1,000    
1472 Geo Tyler 58 clerk 5 $0 F11-ds  
1473 Nathaniel H Soule 41 lawyer 4 $2,000   33
1474 J A Thompson 56 land lord hotel 12 $2,600   27-Jul
1474 Mary Kish 21 service     wittenburg  
1474 James McDonald 17 cutter        
1474 Joseph Crane 28 mechanic        
1474 John Casey 28 trimmer        
1474 Isaac Emory 40 farmer        
1474 George Bomester 25 shoemaker     wittenburg