Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
May 13, 2013
Mother’s Day was a little more special to me this year than it’s ever been before.
A few months ago, I started researching my family tree, with the help of my 88-year-old grandmother, the Internet, and an out-of-print history book on Harlan County, Kentucky that contained my great great grandmother’s notes in the margins.
The research became a rabbit hole for me, where I could lose myself for hours. I’ve discovered to my surprise that I’m as American as it gets- Every single line I’ve traced back began in England or Wales and crossed over to the United States in the 1600s or early 1700s. I’ve discovered that I’m a direct descendant of English nobility, Native Americans, Quakers, Revolutionary and Civil War heroes, a murderer, and Oliver Cromwell. I’ve read 300-year-old wills, newspaper clippings, death certificates, and census records. I’ve connected with distant cousins who’ve sent me photos of family members that I’ve never seen before, like my great grandmother on her wedding day, and I’ve made it my goal to attend a family reunion at the historic (and hard-to-get-to) Hensley settlement in Harlan County. The Hensleys, apparently, are genealogy fools, and I can’t wait to add their stories to my own records.
My favorite discoveries, though, have been the photos. I’ve found a surprising number of them. The women interest me the most, because they’re the hardest to trace. They didn’t buy land or serve in the military or vote. They were, primarily, mothers. That was their job, and it was an important one. They often had staggering numbers of children. And while I didn’t know most of them well or even at all, they each contributed in a very real way to the person I am today.
Here are just a few of their stories.
Sally Clark Eager is my fifth great grandmother. She told her children that she remembered when her father returned home from the War of 1812, walking to Harlan, Kentucky from the Mexican border. He was still wearing his red uniform jacket and he carried a small bottle of wine for her mother, encased in woven straw.
Now that’s love.
Anna Miracle Hoskins is my third great grandmother. She had three sons with my great great grandfather Ezekiel, who died in the Civil War. She remarried and had ten more children with her second husband, and she ultimately lived to be 77 years old. This photo was taken alongside husband number two. You can just tell by looking at her that she liked my great great great grandfather SO much better.
Laura Vaughn Williams is my great great grandmother. She’s pictured here with my great great grandfather. She died at the age of 52, when my great grandfather was 20, and it deeply affected him. He had been very close to her, and kept many of her things after she died.
I wish he had kept that hat.
Olive “Ollie” Jones Hensley is my great great grandmother. She had 18 children, 13 of whom survived to adulthood. Women like Ollie are rockstars on sites like Ancestry.com– Since hundreds of people can trace their roots back to her, there’s lots of information about her. Ollie wrote down quite a few of her family memories in the margins of my Harlan County history book. I feel now like I know her, even though we’ve never met.
Cassandra Davis Hoskins is my great great grandmother. She lived in the log cabin pictured here. My grandmother still remembers a time when Cassie’s husband, my great great grandfather, stood up in church and invited anyone who needed shelter during an upcoming revival to come stay with them. 70 people showed up and the Hoskins fed and housed them all, killing pigs and a cow in order to feed everyone.
Now that’s hospitality.
Zella Hensley Walker is my great grandmother. This is Zella on her wedding day. She was full of mischief, and loved playing pranks even when she was elderly. She hated cooking and her method was to shove everything in the oven and cook it on high, in order to get it done as quickly as possible. This resulted in our family’s famous “Chunky Pumpkin Pie” recipe, which is, quite frankly, to die for.
Nancy Hoskins Williams is my great grandmother. This picture was taken on her wedding day, when she was just 15 years old. I love imagining what was going through her mind when this photo was made– She must have been terrified. Don’t worry, though. It all turned out fine. My great grandparents were married 56 years and my grandmother never once saw them argue.
Jeanette is my grandmother, and the daughter of Nancy. She’s 88 now and my children agree that she’s the nicest woman on earth. I love her so much, it hurts.
Sharon is my mother. She’s a force to be reckoned with, and a great mom. I know for a fact that she’d do anything for me. She might complain about it, but she’d do it.
I never knew all that much about the women in my family until now. I feel stronger armed with this knowledge, and connected to something that’s far bigger and more complex than I can even comprehend.
I am part of a line of amazing women, who loved and lost and fought and endured and dared and suffered and rejoiced. My daughter will grow up now knowing about them, and she will be better because of it.
This Mother’s Day, I’m thinking of all of them.
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Beautiful, Lindsay. I love seeing the old photos. Have you seen the documentary “Harlan County, USA”? It may not be your family’s story, unless they were miners, but it tells an amazing story of the hardships people there encountered right up into the present day.
We just watched Harlan County USA a few months ago. I’m not related to anyone in it directly (although I think everyone who lives there is related distantly!), but it was really interesting to watch.
Love this!! I’ve got some pretty awesome women in my line too– such a gift.
Mary, momma to 10
You’re going to be an Ancestry.com rock star some day, Mary! 😉
OMG – That brought tears to my eyes! You have such a wonderful, long and rich history to keep adding to and sharing with your children.
I’m the family history fool in my family and I too can spend HOURS, pouring over my notes, and copies of birth certificates, obits, ship manifests and entering info on Ancestry.com.
Last week through divine intervention, I had a reading with a medium. My mother was front and center waiting for him to get settled and start talking. He was amazed that she has been gone 26 years as her presence was that of someone only recently passed. She said she is with my sisters and I every day. A mother’s love will never die.
You can go to my facebook page (we’re friends) and watch the video that was part of a local tv show last week.
That’s great, Nancy! 🙂 How sweet.
That’s amazing! You have inspired me to trace my family history in more depth.
Definitely get a membership to Ancestry.com- It makes tracing everything really, really easy. (And they did not sponsor this post! LOL)
Awesome. I have been doing genealogy research on my birth mother’s side. I know my birth sister, so I was able to get help with the beginning information. It has been two years of really compelling, interesting research. I, too, am almost 100% American by way of England. I have plenty of information for my daughters and I to join Daughters of the American Revolution (and several other organizations), but I cannot. I would have to list my birth mother as a point of contact to verify everything,
Wow. That’s rough. I think it’s just as good to KNOW you qualify for the DAR, though. 🙂 And? Maybe we’re related!
Fantastic post Lindsay. Fascinating!
Thanks! 🙂
Awesome! I want to do this someday. How wonderful to be able to hand down the stories and photos to your children.
There’s no time like the present! 😉
I’m now planning to “study” our relatives with the kids at the same time as they’re studying that period in history- I’ve gathered so many personal stories from all the major periods in American history, from coming to the US as an indentured servant to settling in Indian territory to fighting in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars (I had lots of relatives on both sides of the Civil War)… I think it’ll all be much more interesting to them if they can visualize it from a great great great great great grandfather’s perspective. 🙂
The young picture of Sharon = Punky, Punky, Punky lol
Ha! They are a LOT alike!
Lindsay, I’m related to Oliver Cromwell, too! My sister is on Ancestry.com all the time trying to find out all she can about our family. She hasn’t found nearly as much information as you…what’s your secret?
Sorry, I’m just now seeing this comment! I got lucky- Kentucky has excellent historical records online dating back to the 1700s– and since many of my ancestors on my mom’s side of the family fought in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, lots of history buffs have traced their (and consequently, my) genealogy back to them. On my dad’s side, it’s much harder- but from what I’ve been able to trace on his side, it all starts in the colonies and goes back to England eventually. I had no idea I was quite so… American!
I love this kind of personal history and I find the pictures and stories about your great grandmothers so interesting – thanks so much for sharing with us! I need to get back into it. I used to help my aunt (pre-marriage and kids!) with our family history on my dad’s side. She has records of that side of the family going back into at least the 1500s in Norway.
I was born in Harlan and recently went back to visit. We have no family there but it is really interesting to see the name in such an unexpected place. My Dad worked in the mines but we were only in the area for 5 years. It really is beautiful country!
I am from Harlan County. As a tip, do not believe everything on Ancestry.com. Take it with a grain of salt. Reason being is that most records that were not destroyed in the 1977 flood was transferred to Frankfort and placed in the National Archives. After so many years, the records are made public. Minimum for death records is 50 years after date of death. If you are trying to get records, you have to be next of kin. Example, I can not get a copy of my grandmother’s death cert because she has children living. They can order one, but I can not even though I am a grandchild. Ancestry.com files are made of mostly what people submit to them. Some are altered, some are census records, and so forth. As for census records, people in Harlan back in the day would record what they wanted. No one actually told the truth. Names have been altered as well as relationships. I have hit this roadblock many of times with my own research on the Creech Family.
I also have the book you mentioned above in the first photo. It is very rare. Only 20 or so copies are left in existence and there is no way to get the files to have a copy made. The publisher went out of business and destroyed the files for every book they ever handled. This book was published in 1962.
Do note that Hensley Settlement is not in Harlan County. It is just across the border on Brush Mountain, Bell County, KY at the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park. There is a place at the park where you can have your foot in 3 states at once.
From one Harlan Countain to another, keep those memories alive!
I am also a Hensley and a direct descendant from the Hensley settlement. I have been researching our family back and have got stuck on some name and can’t go back no farther. Maybe you can help me? I’d appreciate it. My grandfather was harem Hensley