Thursday, July 27, 2023

The family of Adam Kemery

I thought that tracing the family of Adam Kemery would be a little easier than I found it to be.  One difficulty turned out to be that several of the children have been incorrectly identified in on line trees, and one is that some of the daughters, especially, seem to have slipped through cracks.  I hope further research will help locate some of the missing information, but still, there's a lot here that I hope will help someone.  Once again, I'm indebted to Dawna Morton's tree for the framework, and much of the information, in this post.  Sometimes, I have veered from her information, basing my decision on census data, analyzing other records, and recognizing that additional information may have come to light since that tree was worked on. 

Adam was born April 15, 1849 in Whitley County, Indiana, the son of Daniel and Susannah Essig Kemery.  He married Nancy Fannie (known as Fannie) Buchtel, the daughter of Benjamin and Barbara Burkholder Long Buchtel (later Kemery) and together they had at least seven children.

Feba/Pheba was apparently the first born daughter, in 1872.  She remained at home her entire life, and died in 1920, at the age of 47.  I don't know whether she stayed at home because of health issues, or out of a love for her parents, or simply because no other opportunities were available.  

Next born was Avelina, who is a little confusing.  Census records indicate she was born in 1875, and it appears that her name was actually Sarah Avelina, who married first Samuel Eber, the son of John and Martha Cole Eber.  They had one child, Earl, before the couple divorced in 1898.  Sarah next married Frank Walter in 1904, the son of John and Mary Shinbecker Walter.  I have not been able to locate any children for them.  Sarah Avelina died in 1961.

Cora is apparently the next born, She was 6 months old at the time of the 1880 census, so probably born in 1879.  She died in 1890.

Della (middle name Clyde-was that a thing for girl's names, then?) was born on Christmas Day in 1882.  She married William H Withers, son of William A and Barbara Cook Withers.   They have two daughters, Sue and Goldie.  Della died in 1969.

At last, there was a son born, Harvey in 1886.  He married Ada Bailey, the daughter of Sherman and Nancy Huffman Bailey.  I have not located any children for them. Harvey died in 1870. 

The last known child was Benjamin, born in 1887.  I am somewhat confused as to his marriage.  Various records seem to show his wife as Lily Shaw, Lillie Mae Fleck, and Mrs. Lillie Mae Shaffer.  Part of the problem is that this Benjamin is reported to be Benjamin B Kemery, and some of the records seem to pertain to Benjamin F Kemery, who may or may not be a different person.  If he is the Benjamin F found often in Ft Wayne newspapers, he has a very interesting story.  But since I am not sure it is the same person, I shall refrain from posting it.  This needs to be researched further, but as far as I can tell, there were no children born to this marriage.  Benjamin died in 1938.

Adam and Fannie had at least six children.  There may have been another Sarah, but if so, I am unable to locate her.  Some trees show a son Earl, but he was actually the son of the woman identified as Sarah Avelina, through her marriage to Samuel Eber.  (The census taker make a mistake and listed him as a son when he was in reality a grandson, living, along with his mother Sarah, in the Kemery household in 1900.) There may have been other children or other pregnancies, but they are not noted in any records I could find.  I suppose somewhat sadly, Adam and Fannie were grandparents to just three, a grandson and two granddaughters.  I would be delighted to learn that there were more.

Most of these children had an eighth grade education, and most stayed in Whitley County, Indiana.  There are at least 7 Kemery families listed in the 1950 census in Whitley County, and it's likely there are still families there who bear that name.  

This is the last post in the confusing Kemery family line, as Della is the one our family descends from.  We're "daughtered out".



 

 


Thursday, July 20, 2023

The family of Daniel Kemery

This post is about Daniel Kemery, the probable son of Jacob and Ann Marie Reed Kemery.  As I mentioned in my last post, Daniel is not mentioned in Jacob's will, and I've found little in the way of documentation to cement the relationship.  However, based on the location of the men in Stark County, Ohio, and some of the same first names being used over and over, I'm going on the assumption that this is correct, while continuing to look for confirming information.

We're on firmer ground with Daniel's wife and children, however.  Even though the children's information is lacking in some aspects (names of in-laws, primarily), there are death certificates, marriage records, and census records that tie this family together.  Dawna Morton, a Kemery descendant, has ferreted out much of this information, and I am grateful to her.

Daniel was in Whitley County, Indiana by 1846.  By then, he had married Susannah Essig, daughter of George and Catherine Shollenberger (or possibly Hillenburger) Essig, and their family was well started.  

Based on the 1900 census, Solomon seems to be the first born, reporting a birth date of 1841.  The census also says he was born in Indiana, which would put the Kemery family there earlier than I can substantiate.  Solomon married Catherine Shook when he was about 46 years old.  She is the daughter of George and Margaret Pontius Shook.  Their children are Ervin, Chauncey, Anna, Chestia and Elmer.  (Chestia married, as her second husband, Logan Harshbarger, the brother of Grover Harshbarger.) The 1850 census, it should be noted, gives Solomon an age of 1, indicating a birth date of 1849, which would mean he was in his early to mid 30's when he married, which seems to be more likely.  Perhaps the 1900 census is incorrect as far as the dates go.

Joseph Kemery was 10 years old in the 1850 census, so born about 1840.  I have been unable to locate him in subsequent census or other records.  Dawna's information shows him dying in 1883, but I haven't been able to substantiate that.  

Mary Ann, the first daughter, was born in 1841.  She married George W Mosher, the son of Israel and Jerusha Salisbury Mosher.  Their children are Rubin, Emma, Albert, and Alsetta.  Mary Ann died in 1888.

Next was Daniel, born about 1844.  He married Deborah, who may be Deborah Ward, the daughter of George and Eliza Roberts Ward.  (Other trees show a possibility of Deborah Helms, the daughter of Joshua and Mahala Chritman Helms. I can find a marriage record for Adam and Deborah Ward in 1866, so this seems more likely to me.)  Their children are James, William, Mary Alice, Jacob, Benjamin (who used the name Frank, for his middle name of Franklin), and Carina. Daniel died about between 1875 and 1880.  

Harriet was born about 1846 and had died before her father wrote his will in 1876.  She married William Cox, and they have at least one child, a daughter named Maliza.  

Alexander was born in 1847.  He married Margaret Buchtel, the daughter of Benjamin and Barbara Burkholder Long Buchtel.  Their children are Barbara, Elizabeth, Anna, Lora, Nellia, John, Bertha, and Via.  Alexander died in 1922.

Adam Kemery was born in 1849.  He married Fannie Buchtel, also the daughter of Benjamin and Barbara Burkholder Long Buchtel so brothers married sisters.  (It gets more complicated: Barbaraa Burkholder Long Buchtel late in life married Daniel Kemery, the subject of this post, after her divorce from Benjamin. So Margaret and Fannie's mother was also their step mother in law!) Adam and Fannie had at least 7 children: Phebe, Avelina, Cora, Della, Benjamin, Harvey, and Sarah.  I will write more of this family in my next post.  Adam died in 1926.

Albert was born the following year, 1850, or, according to the 1910 census, 1841 or possibly 1846.  (I have located him in just the one census, which is strange.)  He married Lydia Ward, the daughter of Joseph and Susanna Roberts Ward.  They have one known child, Charles.  Albert died in 1919.

Lydia was born about 1855. Her death date is given as April 14, 1924..  She married a man named Hammond, but that is all that I have found about her.  I cannot locate her in a census or find a record of her death.  I don't know whether she had children.  She is the biggest mystery of this particular family.

Amanda was born in 1858 and married Lewis T Jones, the son of David and Margaret (maiden name not yet located) Jones.  Their children are Edith, MaryEtta, Myrtle, Lois, Bertha, Dessa, Ralph, Raymond, and James.  Amanda died in 1901.

Maranda was born in 1860, and married James T Mosher, the son of Orrin and Lucinda Smith Mosher.  Their children are Dorothea, Ransom, Millard, Erma, Delphia, and Garnet/Gertrude/Gertin, depending on which census you are looking at.  There may also have been a child Harriet. Maranda died in 1925.

Finally, there is John, born in 1862.  He married Sadie May (Sarah) Powers, who was about 16 years younger than he was, apparently late in life as he was single in the 1900 census.  As far as I can determine, there were no children born to this marriage, but I'm willing to be corrected.  John died in 1948.

Most of this Kemery family were farm workers or day laborers, in and around Whitley County, Indiana.  Most of them could not read or write.  They raised their families as well as they could, and left many, many descendants in the Whitley County area.






Thursday, July 13, 2023

Another Jacob Kemery or Kemmerly

I admit that this family is giving me fits.  Not only am I not positive that this Jacob, born between 1786 and 1794, is the son of Hans Jacob Kemmerly who was the subject of last week's blog post, not only am I not positive that he is the son of Martha Punch, but I am also not positive that he is the father of Daniel Kemery, who will be the subject of next week's post.  I also appear to have mis-identified his spouse, and other trees say he was in a different location that I've placed him.  So, is Jacob, or is he not, the father of Daniel?  I hope someone reading this will know "for sure".  

As I currently see it, Jacob Kemery, formerly Kemmerli or Kemmerly, was the son of Hans Jacob Kemmerli and possibly Martha Punch.  I am unable to locate reliable dates or parentage or location for her, so this is only a suggestion.  Jacob was one of two children mentioned in the will of Hans Jacob in York County, Pennsylvania, although he was not shown as a minor and it is possible that this isn't his family at all.  

I decided in writing this post that Jacob did not marry Ann Maria Laber, as I'd thought earlier.  The only documentation I could find for a couple with those names was in Germany, and earlier than our Jacob.  I did, however, find a Jacob Kemery in Stark County, Ohio who was married to Ann Marie Reed, the daughter of George Adam and Magdalene Mountz Reed.  They were married March 12, 1811 in Stark County, Ohio.  

I'll digress here a little to talk about locations in helping us identify Jacob.  Some trees show him as having died in Georgetown, Brown County, Ohio, with the same death date as that of his wife.  (Ann Marie's headstone is in Stark County, with the same date of death as that attributed to the Jacob of Brown County, if there was one.)  The family names associated with Jacob and most of his immediate descendants are Stark County names, and that's why I currently think that this is more likely to be our Jacob Kemery.  He didn't die until 1872, still in Stark County.  I hope someone can prove me right, or wrong!

The final problem is that his supposed son, Daniel, is not listed on most of the family trees I looked at, nor is he mentioned in his father's estate papers.  It could well be that when Daniel moved to Whitley County, Indiana, prior to 1850, his father had given him money in lieu of a later inheritance.  Jacob was relatively well-to do, based on real estate and personal property values in the 1860 and 1870 US census, so it was certainly possible.  

Here, then, is a suggested but not totally proven list of the children of Jacob and Ann Marie Kemery:

Adam was born April 10, 1811, just a month after his parents married.  he married Anna Marie Reed, the daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Bordner Reed.  Their children are Lucinda, Rosanna, Aaron, and Sarah.  Adam died in 1888. I have not yet established a connection between the two Ann/Anna Reeds, but it is more than possible that there is one.)

Daniel was born about 1812, and married Susannah Essig, daughter of George and Catherine Shollenberger (varying spellings) Essig, in Medina County, Ohio.  (Medina and Stark County share borders so they possibly lived near each other.)  Their children are Mary, Daniel, Harriet, Adam, Alfred, Solomon, Alexander, Lydia, Amanda, John, and Maranda, with several born in Whitley County, Indiana.  I will write more of this family in my next post.  

Jacob was born in 1815 and married Mary Bordner, the daughter of Philip and Catherine Roedel (various spellings) Bordner.  (Again, I haven't established a connection between Mary and the Elizabeth who was the mother in law of Adam, but I wouldn't be surprised to find one.)  Their children are Mary, William, Amanda, and Heman.  Jacob died in 1900.

The first daughter was Elizabeth, born in 1819.  (From the dates of the children, it is possible that another pregnancy or birth occurred maybe around 1817, but I haven't located information about that. Elizabeth married Jesse Whitmer, the son of Johannes Peter and Maria Catherina Phillips Whitmer.  Their children are Jacob, Rosanna, Monroe, Catherine, and Herby.  Elizabeth died in 1887.

Mary was born another four years later, in 1823.  She married Hugh Snyder, the son of Daniel and Susanna Shroyer Snyder.  Their children are James, Jacob, Anna, George, Newton, Henry, and William.  Mary died in 1896.

The final daughter born to this couple as Anna, who was born in 1830.  She married first Solomon Schreffler, the son of Conrad and Catherine Bordner (that name again!) Schreffler.  Solomon died in 1872 and she married Daniel Keehn in 1876, the son of Johannes and Elizabeth Trull Keehn.  I believe the children were Solomon's.  They are Priscilla, Solomon, Ann, Malinda, John, and Conrad.

I have seen trees that also named John, George, Philip and William Kemery as sons of this couple.  I can find nothing that ties these names to this family, although it's possible that they were short=lived sons who were born and died between census reading.  Again, I'd love to see any evidence that could prove or disprove any of these names as belonging to this family.  

When Ann Marie died in 1847, Jacob married, about 4 months later, Catherine Carbaugh, who is still a mystery.  Catherine had at least one child with the last name of Carbaugh, per census records, so Carbaugh is likely not her maiden name.  Jacob and Catherine are said to have had at least two children together.  

Louis or Lewis Kemery was born about 1849 and died in 1903.  He married another Whitmer, Sarah, again one I have not yet identified.  They had Alfred or Alphaeus, Hugh, Melville, Margaret, and Clara. 

Jacob's final child, as far as we know, was Frederick, born in 1853.  He married Frances Streb or Strasse, again not yet identified, and their children are Minnie, Mary, Bertha, and Ida.  He was one of the few Kemery children who moved west, all the way to Kansas, but returned to Ohio and died sometime after 1920.  

I have also seen Levi as a child of Jacob and Catherine.  I can find no supporting evidence and wonder if someone misread a document as Levi rather than Lewis.  So he is a question mark, along with several other people mentioned in this blog post.  

Please, please contact me if you know anything about this family.  I really would like this post to be documented, one way or the other. 


 

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Harshbarger line: The family of Hans Jacob Kemmerly 1734-1791

I know this man existed, and came to Philadelphia in 1753. I know he died, and I know the names of two of his children, but that is all that I am reasonably sure of.  So this will be a short post.

Hans Jacob Kemmerly or Kemmerli is said to have been born in 1734, or in 1721, in the Netherlands or in Germany, but I've found no records to support that.  His wife is said to have been Martha Punch, who is said to have been born in 1745 and whom he is said to have married in October of 1754.  But the children supposedly weren't born until later-in the late 1780s, mostly.  Obviously, there are problems here.  Martha would not have been 9 years old when she married, and if she was born prior to 1745, she would likely not have been having children as late as 1791.  So we may have the wrong couple here, or at least the wrong mother.  

The information from an abstract of Jacob's will, written in 1791 and probated in 1792, in Windsor Township, York County, Pennsylvania, mentions two children, Jacob and Margaret.  

Jacob was born about 1789, if there isn't a generation missing here, and was married to Anna Maria Lauber or Laber, whom I've not yet identified.  They had 8 children: Adam, Daniel, John, Jacob, George, Philip, William, and Mary.  I will write more of this family in my next blog post.  

The will also mentions a daughter Margaret, who was married to a (first name unknown) Towbenberger, and a granddaughter Margaret, daughter of the above Margaret, who was married to a Peter Schoenberger. The idea that Margaret was old enough to have a married daughter makes it seem unlikely to me that Jacob, born 1789, was the son of this Jacob, although of course there could be two different wives involved here.  

And to add to the confusion, some trees list Christian, Daniel, and Jacob Joseph as sons of this Jacob.  I know there was a Christian Kemmerli paying taxes in York County in 1789, and I'm wondering if Christian might actually be the younger Jacob's father.

Obviously, there is much more work to be done on this family.  I hope this post won't mislead anyone, but I also hope it will point out some of the flaws that are on on-line trees, so we can start to untangle this mess.   Please help if you can!

Thursday, June 29, 2023

The family of Harvey Aldridge 1857-1930

There's something I haven't mentioned about the Aldridges, which I should have mentioned several generations ago.  At some point, many of them were known only, or primarily, by their middle names.  I have generally used the names as given on the first record I located, which may or may not be the name they typically used.  And I haven't included very many middle names, unless I knew that was the name they themselves used.  So, it's a confusing mix and this family of Harvey Aldridge illustrates that well.  

Harvey Homer Aldridge (I've not seen him use the middle name, but it's possible) was born in 1857 to Darlington Dart and Leah Folsom Aldridge in Rush County, Indiana.  His parents moved to Rush County, Indiana, and Harvey met and married Margaret Catherine Dunham, the daughter of Samuel Goodnight and Eliza Matilda Reese Dunham, there in 1880.  Harvey died in 1930, soon after he and Margaret (or Catherine, I usually see both of her names in records) had celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.  They had eight children together, with two dying as infants or toddlers.

Bertha was the first born, in 1882.  She married Ora B. Rector, son of Anderson and Ruth McHatten Rector, and they had at least three children: Leona, who was born in 1902 and died the following year, Flossie, and Von Garrett.  Sadly, she died in 1909, of tuberculosis.  Harvey and "Kate", as shown on Bertha's her death certificate, helped raise the two children, as grandparents too often need to do.

Frank (Ralph Franklin, officially) was born in 1885. His wife is Florence Rude, the daughter of George and Mary Jane Starr Rude.  Their children are Mary, Bernice, Lorene, Beatrice, and Paul Max.  Frank died in 1956.

Samuel Newton was born in 1887 and died in 1968.  He married Irene Hyatt, the daughter of Thomas and Evva Trowbridge Hiatt.  Their children are Pauline, Madeline, Ralph, Glen, Herman, Philip, and Chester.

Next was Lula, who was born in 1889 and died in 1890.

Della (I have seen her referred to as Selena Della, but Della is the name she used) was born in 1891.  She married Clyde Harrell, the son of Charles and Delilah Moore Harrell.  Their children are Herman, Ernest, Herbert, Lester, and Dickie.  Della died in 1943.

Dorothy was born in 1894 and died in 1940.  She married Francis Edward Huston, the son of James and Elizabeth Wood Huston.  Their children are Leroy, Guilford, Doris, Walter, Burnetta, Lois, and Marvin.  

Gretta Cleo was known as Cleo, and to her nieces and nephews was known as "Aunt Dutchie".  She was born in 1896 and died in 1980, having said final earthly farewells to all of her siblings.  She married Wilbur Beeks, the son of John and Elizabeth Wise Beeks, and together they had 16 children, eight of whom lived to adulthood.  Their children are Charles, Vivian, Kenneth, Evelyn, Eldon (those being twins), Maxine, James (the first to live to adulthood), Raymond, Anna, Mary, Norman, Norma, Bonnie, Donald, Barbara, and Phyllis.  Two of those who lived to adulthood died at an early age, so Cleo and Wilbur had a lot of sorrow in their lives.  

Harvey and "Kate" had one final child, Roy, who was born in 1899 and died in 1901.  All of the children were born in Tipton County, Indiana, and several were buried there.  Others are buried in Andrews, Indiana, in Servia, and in South Whitley.  The children lived fairly close to each other and, as evidenced by the gossip columns in the Huntington, Indiana, newspapers, saw each other frequently as adults.  

By this count, Harvey and Kate had 43 grandchildren.  43 times they, or later just she, would have answered the phone or received the message of a new member born into the family.  Despite the sorrows of their own losses, and those early losses their children had, they must have had great joy in their lives, as well as much hard work.  

This is the last post in the Aldridge family line, at least for now.  I have found no evidence that any of these Aldridge fathers I've written about worked at jobs other than farming, although Harvey did take occasional other jobs when necessary, and perhaps some of the other men had side jobs.  This family was hard-working, and contributed to the growth of America.  Their descendants have reason to be proud.



Thursday, June 22, 2023

The family of Darlington Dart Aldridge 1821-1859

Darlington, apparently known as Dart, was born in 1821 in Clermont County, Ohio and died in 1859 in Rush County, Indiana.  His parents, John Simpson and Lucinda Wheeler Aldridge (John was John Simpson Jr.) moved to Rush County in the middle 1820s and so Darlington probably had no memories of the early years in Ohio.  He married Leah Folsom, daughter of Jeremiah and Sally Lock Folsom, in 1841, when he was just 20 years old, and they were married for 18 years when he died just two days past his 38th birthday.  But in those 18 years of marriage, Dart and Leah had at least 10 children to love, provide for, and raise.

Mary was the first born daughter, in 1842. She married Samuel Walker, whom I am not yet able to further identify, except for a possibility that he was living in the home of Elisha and Mary Bever in 1850 in Rush County, Indiana and was fifteen at the time of the census. (I have not proven that this is Mary's Samuel, only that it is a possibility.) Their children are Joseph, Thomas, Richard, Mary, Francis, James, Emma, and Amy.  Mary died in 1878, so her life was a short one also.

Next born was Lucinda, born in 1845.  Lucinda married John E. Spurgeon, the son of Joseph and Fanney Lane Spurgeon.  Their children are Leah, Ida, May, Alma, Joseph, Asa, Minnie, Richard and Frederick.  Lucinda lived until 1920 in Hamilton County, Indiana.

Francis was the first born son, in 1846.  Sadly, he lived just 22 years.  He married Mary Jane Campbell, the daughter of James and Rebecca Wasson Campbell.  Their children are Leah and Pearl, Pearl being born a month after her father died.  (Mary Jane then married Sanford Spurgeon, the brother of John above, and had several children with him.)

Next born was son, John, in 1847 or 1848.  He married Sidenia Innis, the daughter of Thompson and Sarah Askren Innis.  Their children are Elva, Myrtle, Sarah, and Leah.  He died in 1924 in Hamilton County, Indiana.

Jeremiah was born in 1849.  He married three times.  His first marriage was to Synthia Francis Jones, the daughter of Thomas and Zerilda Montgomery Jones.  They had a daughter, Hannah, but Synthia died shortly after her birth.  Jeremiah then married Julia Hemerly, who I cannot yet further identify.  Their children are Newton, William, and Dudley.  Sadly, Julia died giving birth to Dudley.  Jeremiah's  last wife was Anna Marie Wheeler, the daughter of Evan and Christina Runshe Aldridge.  Their children are Howard, Ethel, Irene, Hazel, and Emery. Jeremiah died in 1920 in Huntington County, Indiana, where he had lived for about six years.  

Next was James, born in 1851.  He married Rebecca Deal, the daughter of Henry and Anna Stroup Deal.  Their children are Cora, William, Edward, Maggie, Blanche, and Carl.  James died in 1924.

Alonzo was born in 1853 and died in 1924.  He married Hannah J. Watson, the daughter of William and Lavina Chaney Watson.  Their children are Rosetta, Walter, John, Philip, Curtis, and Nina.  

A mystery surrounds their son Richard.  He was born in 1854 and is noted on the 1860 census, but after that I haven't been able to locate him.  He may have died at a young age, or left home and was not heard from again.  His name is intriguing though, because some have suggested that Richard was the name of Jeremiah Folsom's father, with no proof that I can find.

Harvey was the last son, born in 1857.  He married Margaret Catherine Dunham, the daughter of Samuel G and Eliza Matilda Reese Dunham, who is the family connection to the common ancestor to former President Barack Obama.  Their children are Samuel, Frank, Lula, Della, Dorothy, Gretta Cleo, and Roy.  Harvey died in Huntington County in 1930, and I will write more of his family in my next post.

Finally, there was an unnamed daughter who was born in 1858 and died before the 1860 census.  Leah, Dart's widow, was left with a houseful of children, and grief for both Dart and the unnamed daughter, but eventually Dart and Leah's grandchildren totaled at least 51, and surely Leah took joy in them.  


Thursday, June 15, 2023

The family of John Simpson Aldridge Jr.

Well, I thought that the family of John Simpson Aldridge Jr was well documented.  As it turns out, only most of the children are well documented, or at least, the documents for the others haven't been located yet.  However, I've found enough to help us understand a little of the family, even if we can't understand all the dynamics or interactions that this family experienced.  

John Simpson Aldridge Jr is the son of John Simpson and Mary Lakin Aldridge.  He was born February 27, 1798 in Clermont County, Ohio and married Lucinda Wheeler, daughter of Jason Wheeler and his mysterious wife, who may be Patience or Palina, and who may be a Swan, Tracy, Hamblin, or someone else entirely.  There are records showing him as a soldier in the War of 1812 in Ohio, but he would have been pretty young (not yet 16 when the war ended) so I'm not sure we are talking about the same man.  Of course, he could simply have lied about his age, particularly if he had the appearance of a robust young man.  

John and Lucinda were married in 1819 in Clermont County, and stayed there for a few years.  Sometime in the 1820s, probably before 1823, they were in Rush County, Indiana, where they stayed the rest of their lives.  Lucinda died in 1836 and John in 1842.  In their not quite 17 years of marriage, this couple had 10 children, which may have been one reason Lucinda died at such an early age.  I am not absolutely positive about the birth order of some of the children, as there are at least two who likely died as infants or children, and no records have yet been located for them.  

The first child was Darlington Dart, born in 1821, likely in Clermont County, and died in 1859 in Tipton County, Indiana.  He married Leah Folsom, the daughter of Jeremiah and Sally Lock Folsom.  Their children are Mary, Lucinda, Francis, John, Jeremiah, James, Alonzo, Richard, and Harvey.  I will follow this family in my next blog post.  

Eliza, also seen as Elizabeth, was born in 1822.  She married Uriah Bozell, who may have been the son of Henry and either Catherine Ninon Bozell or Lucinda Brandon Bozell.  Their children are John, James, Henry, Eliza, Melinda, Leah, and Sarah.   She died in 1905. 

Joseph was born in 1824, probably in Clermont County, Ohio per his Find a Grave memorial.  He married Susan Stiers, who was the daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth Creviston Stiers.  If those names seem familiar, Joseph's uncle, Nathan Aldridge, also married a daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth, as mentioned in my last post about the family of John Simpson and Mary Lakin Aldridge.  Joseph and Susan's children are Marshall, Mary, Dailey, Patience, Ada, and Rhoda.  He died in Rush County in 1903 or 1909; there seems to be conflicting information on his grave stone.

Next born may have been Mary, who seems to have no further record.  It is not unusual for children who were both born and died between census years, to not have left a record in that time period.  All we can say is that she was likely named for her grandmother, Mary Lakin Aldridge.

Jason Lafayette Aldridge was born in 1825 and died in 1888.  He married Rebecca Sapp, the daughter of George and Sarah Canter Sapp.  He spent his adult life in Clermont County, Ohio, for reasons I have not yet determined (were the Sapps family friends from when his parents lived there?), and he was a Civil War veteran.  Jason and Rebecca had no children.  

Next born was Isam Philander, generally known as Philander, in 1829.  He married Nancy Borden, the daughter of William and Rachel Corn Borden.  Sally Lock Folsom, mother in law of Darlington, married a Stafford Borden after the death of her first husband, but I have not yet made a connection between the two Borden families.  Isam's children are Sarah, Lea, Mary, Melissa, James, Sandy, and Charles.  

Ruhamah was born about 1831.  There may or may not be a hint of scandal about her.  She first married, in 1848, Oliver Abernathy, the son of Randall and Rebecca Moore Abernathy.  They had two children, Isaac and Richard.  I have not yet found record of it, but there seems to have been a divorce because in 1868 she married James W. Toler.  The Abernathy boys are living with the Tolers in Illinois, along with Susan Toler, who is one year old in the 1870 census.  The interesting thing that makes me raise one eyebrow, just a little, is that Ruhamah is 10 years older than James.  Also, Oliver died in 1880.  It would be interesting to see the divorce records in the late 1860s, but Oliver seems to have moved frequently so we don't even know which county to search.

Next born, was John Simpson Aldridge III, about 1832.  He married Mary Toler or Toller, so far not further identified.  Their children are Mary, Frank, and Joseph.  John died in 1880 in Rush County, Indiana.

Here we come to another bit of confusion.  Apparently there was a son, Barr E., born in 1835 or 1836.  At least one tree gives his mother as Mary Henderson, and his father as John Simpson Aldridge, Jr, with no supporting documentation.  I could not find any record of Barr, so he may well have lived and died between the census years.  

To further confuse matters, the last known child was Marcellus, born in 1835 and died in 1882.  Some show his middle initial as E, and some say it was B, for Barr.  It's possible that Marcellus and Barr were one and the same person, but I tend to think there were two babies.  I have no idea whether the Mary Henderson idea is correct, but Marcellus is only shown as the son of John and Lucinda.  He married Hester Beaver, the daughter of Elisha and Mary Ann Walker Beaver.  Their children are Frank, Dailey, and Winfield Scott.  

By my count, this gives John and Lucinda 38 children, assuming Barr was real and was the child of John and Lucinda.  Most of the family stayed in central Indiana, so there are still a lot of Aldridge family members nearby.