The Bond Line, A Narrative — Five

This is Chapter Five of seven: Peter Bond, The Immigrant, seeks a fresh start in the British Colonies in America. We then move through several generations in Maryland, and eventually, we find ourselves moving further west to the Ohio frontier.

Preface: Be Wary Of Those K rations!

Our father Dean Phillip Bond, loved to fuss around in his summer vegetable garden every year. He was proud that he had grown beautiful, tasty vegetables which we very gratefully devoured practically every evening. As children, when we observed him taking a pause in his labors, he would rock back on his heels, and take a long drag on his ever-present cigarette, moving his arm in a long slow arc. We’re sure that he certainly thought about the demonic mosquitos and three corner flies which tormented him… but occasionally, we would see him staring off somewhere into the middle distance. Perhaps he was dreaming about his “unlived life” — that of a gentleman farmer.

 United States sailor holds a carton of Philip Morris cigarettes under one arm and a duffle bag over his other shoulder, while smoking a cigarette. (Image courtesy of http://www.azcentral.com).

Pop started smoking in WWII when he would receive K rations, which included four cigarettes, and a small book of matches. (He said that before that time, he had never smoked.) His habit eventually became a two-pack-a-day routine need, which seemed to be typical of many in his generation. Three months after our parents 50th wedding anniversary, he passed away from lung disease.

We bring this is up because there is a lot of rich irony in this history of our family. The progenitor of our line in America is Peter Bond, The Immigrant. In 1660 Peter arrived in the British Colony of Maryland and eventually prospered as he became a tobacco planter. In his era, tobacco was such a precious item that it was literally used as currency for many years. In other words, he could grow his own money.

If our father had known of this fantastical, but true story, I’m sure that he would have dreamed and desired to somehow take his cigarette butts and grow his own magic money. Or better yet, drop a penny into a garden furrow and let each one grow into a crisp one hundred dollar bill. (1)

The British Colonies Desperately Needed Workers

Until 1680 or so, due to the fact that the British Colonies in North America were large and had become quite successful, England determined that relocating “labor” to the Colonies was in their best interest. Ships from certain ports would transport people from the Mother Country to America. Each empty ship would then load up on valuable items which were much desired back home in England. This included prized commodities like cotton, indigo, tobacco, and sugar. This was a scheme where English merchants made money on both sections of the voyage.

View of Bristol Harbour with the Cathedral and the Quay. (Art by Nicholas Pocock).

From the article, Indentured Servants at Gunston Hall

“When English settlers arrived in the New World, they brought indentured servitude with them.  Under this system, people worked for a set period of time as a payment for something. — Indentured servants were men and women who willingly signed a contract in which they agreed to work for a certain number of years to compensate for their voyage to America. 

Three different types of indentured servant agreements existed in the 18th century: free-willers, King’s passengers, and redemptioners… Free-will indentured servants decided to come to America on their own merit and willingly signed a contract before departing England. King’s passengers, [also known as convict servants], were criminals who were sent to America to serve a term of seven or fourteen years, depending on the crime they committed. Finally, redemptioners were passengers who were given two weeks to redeem the price of their voyage once they got to America and if they were unable to make the payment, they were sold to the highest bidder.”

In these modern times, a phrase such as “sold to the highest bidder” gives us a bit of pause. Early on, the English had such a desperate fever to send laborers to The Colonies that many unscrupulous people, orphans, and indigents were “spirited” away [kidnapped and not at their choice], who became a commodity in places like Virginia and Maryland. The city of Bristol, England was the epicenter for this white slave trade, which was lucrative for both the merchants and their agents. England was then, and still is to some extent now, a class-driven society. One has to wonder if this spiriting practice was unfortunately due to the “undesirables and destitute” being from a lower social class? Many of these poor people didn’t last very long in the Colonies due to poor health and mistreatment.

Tobacco in Colonial Virginia, map detail.

This however, wasn’t true for all people who immigrated. For Peter Bond, and many people in his class, to become an indentured servant was not something that carried a stigma. As a free-will indentured servants, he was an immigrant who was under a contract, for a short period of years. Once he had met his commitment, he was free by having paid his freedom dues. His passage and care had been provided, and he could now practice a new trade. That is why they were referred to as Servants.

“In the 1650s, an estimated 72,000 individuals, the majority of them indentured servants, went from England to the New World.” By this point in time, to remedy the problem of many [slave] laborers dying in The Colonies, and to create a more attractive market for immigrants, the courts required that proper records be kept and they were. The existing indenture system was revitalized and its use brought many new people to America. A register, known as the Tolzey Book [1654], introduced by the Common Council in 1654, indicates that The Servants, rather than being the destitute, actually consisted of: 

Yeomen39 per cent
(yeomen were a wide range of agricultural workers) 
Artisans23 per cent
Husbandmen16 per cent
Labourers13 per sent
Gentlemen2 per cent
Unknown7 per cent 
The Servants as documented in the 1654 Tolzey Book.

After 1680, the plantation owners in North America came to the conclusion that it was too expensive to continue with the English indentured servant system to staff workers for their properties. Over the next century, servant contracts tapered off. From this period forward, they transitioned to purchasing many more slaves from Africa. Hence, the slave system became quite firmly embedded in the central and southern portion of the British Colonies, as well as the Caribbean. (2)

Example of an indentured
servant contract from 1738,
for British North America.

The Bristol Registry of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations 1654-1686

There probably was not much for Peter Bond to inherit from his family by this period. The economy in London was very depressed at that time, as a consequence of the English Civil War. So we conjecture that perhaps he wanted to try his luck in the New World — as many young men of his class did at the time.

The Bristol Registry of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations 1654-1686, page 121 detail.

At 19, Peter became a free-will indentured servant on November 29, 1659. He was one of eight people so indentured to a merchant named Henry Read, who was the agent. (This meant that he negotiated the contract(s) with the ship captain). For a few years prior to 1659, registries had become exacting by listing parents, destinations, etc., but apparently by November ’59, registries were getting “thin” and less detailed.

There are several things to note here: 1) Peter’s parents are not named because we know that both of them had died before his departure, 2) Nor is his destination given, 3) He gave his residence as Whitechapel in London which is the section of London where he was born and grew up in, which assures us that it is indeed our Peter, and 4) For the times, an indenture of four years is remarkable for all eight people. Many contracts were longer, so it certifies that none of them were criminals. Perhaps this was also indicative of their social class? (3)

The Early Settlers of Maryland

The Early Settlers of Maryland, title page.

Some other researchers propose that Peter Bond went for a short time to Virginia, and then to Maryland. Some ships in that era, would go to a port, load up on trade goods, and then go to another port. We have found no concrete evidence to support that this happened with Peter.

In fact, in the book The Early Settlers of Maryland, Peter Bond is listed as being in Maryland in 1660. We know that this is our ancestor, because he is listed as being from Anne Arundel County, which is in fact where he lived. Of note, there are two other Peter Bond(s) listed as being transported: one in 1653; another 1679. The word transported meant that they were indentured servants of some type. (We wonder if their same name(s) have confused other researchers?) Interestingly, Peter is not listed as being transported, even though we know that he had also been an indentured servant.

Peter Bond detail on page 48/525 of The Early Settlers of Maryland.

Fantastically, some people have proposed that he had a wife and child in England who traveled with him. Then his wife died, unnamed in records. Also, that he had two marriages in Maryland. Again, no concrete evidence of that. (4)

The Maryland Colony

The Maryland Colony was founded for religious reasons, not business reasons.

“The Province began as a proprietary colony of the English Lord Baltimore, who wished to create a haven for English Catholics in the New World at the time of the European wars of religion. Although Maryland was an early pioneer of religious toleration in the English colonies, religious strife among Anglicans, Puritans, Catholics, and Quakers was common in the early years…” Ultimately, due to the influx of the indentured servants, the majority of the population at that time were Protestants, and eventually they supplanted the Catholics.

“…the Province of Maryland developed along very similar lines to Virginia… and, like Virginia, Maryland’s economy quickly became centered on the cultivation of tobacco, for sale in Europe.”

British Roots of Maryland Families, page 61.

We see land ownership in the above passage from the book British Roots of Maryland Families which confirms that both Peter Bond and William Jones received their land under the “headright” system, which was used to attract immigrants to Maryland. From Wikipedia: “Headrights were granted to anyone who would pay for the transportation costs of an indentured laborer. These land grants consisted of 50 acres for someone newly moving to the area and 100 acres for people previously living in the area.” Indentured servants were not allowed to obtain rights to land until their period of service obligations had been met.

A New Map of Virginia, Maryland, And The Improved Parts Of Pennsylvania & New Jersey by Christopher Browne, 1685

There is much evidence that Peter, his descendants and associates prospered during their years in Maryland as evidenced by the extensive records of land ownership that still exist — as we wrote in the Preface, we knew he had an extensive tobacco plantation. Most of the properties our direct ancestors held were in both Anne Arundel County (AA) and Baltimore County (Bal). To our modern eyes, some of these property names seem both curious and quaint.

Settlers of Maryland, 1679-1783, Consolidated Edition.
This Book lists various Bond properties in Maryland in the 1679-1783 period, assembled here into one file. Book pages: 59-61, Digital Pages: 73-75/906.

We know that he received some land starting sometime in 1667, as written in the book British Roots of Maryland Families, on page 61. Allen Kerr Bond wrote in The Story of The Bonds of Earth, “Nine years after, he is repaid by the authorities a considerable amount of tobacco (the local currency) for services of a nature not specified; and again, in 1678, for services, not military, to the government in a brief war with the Indians.” Further, “Ten years after this [about 1688], Peter becomes a planter… along the Patapsco [river]… on “three hundred and one acres, to be recorded as Bond’s Forest on the rent rolls of Lord Baltimore.”

“It is difficult to determine where Peter lived in Anne Arundel County because the land records were destroyed in a fire in 1703, but one deed dated 12 JUL 1673 regarding him was brought in when the new court house was built that proves he owned a tract on Swan Point on the north side of the Severn River when he conveyed a 40 acre part of his plantation to James Smith.”

Alan Kerr Bond wrote further, “…in 1698 the boundary between Anne Arundel and the newly formed Baltimore County” shifted, and “Baltimore County had moved to him…” (5)

Peter Bond Marries the Widow, Alice (Cole) Gill Drury

By 1677, Peter Bond was a married man. We haven’t discovered much personal information about him, except for some land records, until his marriage to Alice (Cole) Gill Drury.

Alice’s origins are a mystery. Was she born in England or America approximately between 1650-1655, or earlier? Why was she in Maryland? We first see references to her when she appears in marriage records. Before her marriage to Peter Bond, Alice was married twice. Her first husband was Stephen Gill, Sr. and with him Alice had a son named Stephen Gill, Jr., (born about 1673). Her second husband, William Drury, a widower, left a will naming Alice as his wife on August 22, 1676. This is proved because Peter & Alice Bond sued Drury’s executor for her share of his estate in June 1678. By the time she married Peter in late 1676 or early 1677she had been twice widowed with one child.

Peter and Alice were the parents of four sons who are mentioned in his Will:

  • Peter Bond Jr., born 1676 – died, February 28, 1718
  • Thomas Bond, born May 26, 1679 – died, December 18, 1755
    (We are descended from Thomas).
  • William Bond, born 1685 – died, August 23, 1742
  • John Bond, born 1689 – died, April 17, 1720

After Peter’s death Alice Bond was married for the fourth time by May 14, 1707 to Philip Washington. The couple were living apart by 1708 and the following year an agreement appears in the records which states :

“Whereas Philip Washington and Alice, his wife, have joyously consent to separate and live apart…”, etc. — Peter Bond, Jr. posted a (£ One Hundred Sterling) bond that stated he would support his mother.

After a long, and interesting life, Peter Bond, Sr. wrote a will on August 23, 1704; probated April 28, 1705. This informs us that he died sometime during that period. He had written [concise form] —
     “I, Peter Bond, being sick and weak in body butt still In sound and perfect memory I make this my last will testamentItem I doe give and bequeth my soul to my Lord god and maker and my body to ye Earth from where It Came
     Item – I doe Leave my well beloved wife Ealse (Alice) Bond my soule and hole Execkticx
[Executrix]
     Item – I give and bequeth unto forsaid wife my plantation and the land belonging to it during her Life and afterward to my son Peter Bon
d
     Item – I give and bequeth to my three sons Thomas William and John Bond Equally divided between them 300 Acres of Land Lying in aforesaid County att the head if bush River as will appears
     Item – I give and bequeth unto my son Thomas Bond one Cos
(cow?) Called Dollor and her hefor
     Item – I give and bequeth after my wifes desease my personal Effects to be Equally Divided among my three sons Peter William and John further my will is that my two sons William and John be free and to work for them – att ye adge (age) of Eighteene Of hears unto Enter thangably sett my hand and seale ye day and years above written. Peter Bond.
” (6)

Was Peter Bond a Quaker?

The proof that Peter Bond, The Immigrant was a Quaker, is pretty thin.

As a group in Britain, the Quakers suffered great abuse for their beliefs, and the progenitor, George Fox spent much of the 1660s jailed. However, he did have adherents who continued to grow the movement. When William Penn in 1681 created the Pennsylvania Colony as a sanctuary for religious freedom and tolerance, thousands of British people immigrated there.

George Fox, English missionary and founder of the Society of Friends (Quakers),
preaching in a tavern, c. 1650. (Image courtesy of Britannica.com).

“The Religious Society of Friends, also referred to as the Quaker Movement, was founded in England in the 17th century by George Fox. He and other early Quakers, or Friends, were persecuted for their beliefs, which included the idea that the presence of God exists in every person. Quakers rejected elaborate religious ceremonies, didn’t have official clergy and believed in spiritual equality for men and women. Quaker missionaries first arrived in America in the mid-1650s. Quakers, who practice pacifism, played a key role in both the abolitionist and women’s rights movements.”

In April 1649, [Maryland] colonists voted into law An Act Concerning Religion (later known as the Maryland Toleration Act), which granted freedom of worship for all Christians. Although permanently repealed in 1692, the act was one of the first statutes granting religious liberty of any kind and was an important step toward true freedom of religion in the United States.

Quaker missionaries arrived in North America in the mid-1650s. The first was Elizabeth Harris, who visited Virginia and Maryland. By the early 1660s, more than 50 other Quakers had followed Harris. So, Peter Bond was likely aware of the Quaker Movement, but whether or not he was a believer isn’t proven. Among his sons and extended family, there were Quakers, with some even donating land for meeting houses and schools. (7)

Pierce Brosnan as James Bond 007. Since he is an avid genealogist, we consulted with him about the Quaker pedigree of Peter Bond, The Immigrant. (His expression says it all.) Image courtesy of the guardian.com.

Thomas Bond was The Father of Eight Sons and Two Daughters

Of Peter Bond’s four sons, his son Thomas became regarded as an esteemed, respected citizen of Maryland. He was sometimes written of as Thomas of Emmorton, based upon the community where he lived.

Allen Kerr Bond wrote —
“Locating with his two brothers, William and John, lads not yet of age, in the present Harford County, on the three hundred acres of ‘Harris His Trust’ given them by their father, Thomas Bond seems to have put all of his energies into the accumulation of enormous holdings of the fertile forest uplands in that vicinity.” [If you consult the Bond Properties Chart above, you will see that this is quite true.]

Thomas was likely very aware of the Society of Friends movement which had been occurring in Great Britain, which also was attracting many immigrants to relocate to the British Colonies, seeking freedom to practice their religious beliefs in peace. Maryland had attracted many believers and the founder of the sect, George Fox, had visited the area in 1672 when Thomas would have been about thirteen years old. It seems there was a lot of Quaker energy present in the area.

Thomas Bond married Anne Robison on September 20, 1770 at All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland . Her father may have been a John Robison (or Robinson) and her mother is unknown. Thomas Bond died at “Kalmia”, his Emmorton, Maryland estate on December 18, 1755. He may have been buried “under a tree” on his property, however there is no official record of his burial. Anne was born on March 28, 1680 in West River, a community in Anne Arundel County. Her death date is unknown.

Thomas and Anne had a large family of ten children. In order of their births:

  • Thomas Bond (Jr), born 1703 – died 1781
  • Peter Bond, born April 28, 1705 – died December 23, 1738
  • William Bond, born 1708 – died 1769
  • John Bond, born November 10, 1712 – died March 11, 1786
    (We are descended from John).
  • Sarah Bond, born April 29, 1715 – died, December 12, 1759
  • Joshua Bond (1), born October 8, 1718 – died March 30, 1720
  • Ann Bond, born May 29, 1720 – died, August 20, 1720
  • Jacob Bond, born 1725 – died, November 30, 1780
  • Daniel Bond, born 1727 – died (by) August 11, 1780
  • Joshua Bond (2), born 1729 – died, July 8, 1768

Observation: It is probable that John and Anne became Quakers at some point during their marriage. Their headstones probably never existed, because before the mid-19th century Quaker headstones were rare, as they are not in keeping with the plain life.

Unbeknownst to either of us, and as wonderful surprise, it turns out that two very good friends of ours, the sisters Lessley and Barbara Berry, are our (very) distant cousins. We were friends for many years before we discovered this fact! From our shared ancestor, Thomas Bond, we are descended from two of his sons, John [>Susan and Thomas] and *Jacob [>Lessley and Barbara]. The world can be a small place sometimes.

*Jacob Bond — “The most prominent of the Bonds from the standpoint of Harford history, was Jacob, who died in November, 1780. He was a prominent member of the Committee of Harford County in the Revolution, having been elected by the people, and was captain of Company Eleven, of Harford militia, in the Revolution… Jacob Bond represented Harford County in the convention which met at Annapolis in 1776 and formed the first constitution of the State… He was also one of Harford’s representatives in the Annapolis convention of June 22, 1774, which protested against the tax on tea…” Jacob married Frances Partridge on December 28, 1747 at St. Paul’s Protestant Episcopal Church, Baltimore Co, Maryland

We know from several records that some of Thomas and Anne’s children became Quakers. It can be taken for granted that those who fought in the early wars were no longer Quakers, and records show many Bonds on the early Military Records.

History of Harford County, p. 206

Thomas of Emmorton, as he was known, was generous to his fellow Quakers by providing a Friends Meeting House at Fallston, for their worship. These buildings were designed in simple, domestic styles unlike more elaborate church architecture.

History of Harford County, p. 207

Thomas Bond may have been a man of good piety, but it seems that some of his prodigy were, how shall we say, not up to standard. This generation was “the first to backslide and fall under the displeasure of the Friends Meeting.” The offenders are pointed out in the following excerpts (below) of carefully kept records from Maryland Friends Meetings. (8)

What Would These Quaker Ancestors Think About Our Time?

Below is some of the information we found regarding the discipline and dismissal of Bond’s who were Quakers. By today’s standards most of this seems extreme!

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935
Baltimore, Maryland, Gunpowder Monthly Meeting, Minutes, 1768-1784

“John Bond married out of meeting – dismissed; James Bond – plays the fiddle – disowned; Samuel Bond – joins the Militia disciplined; Ann Bond – gone contrary to principle (pretty bonnet) disciplined; Susannah Bond – taking undue liberties and going to places of diversion and dancing – disowned; Joshua Bond – plays cards – disciplined: John Bond lends a man a gun disciplined; Hannah Bond married by a priest – disowned.” (9)

Gentleman John Bond and His Wife Aliceanna Webster

What was a Gentleman in Colonial Maryland? The Colony of Virginia and the Province of Maryland carried over some of the old social class structures from England, and then remodeled them to fit life in the British Colonies. In England, the lowest level of the Landed Gentry were The Gentlemen. They lived on plantations, and unlike their forebears, they no longer had to work with their own hands. Many were involved in managing their properties and investing in business ventures. After a plantation had been settled for several generations, the Planter would be free to have himself referred to as a Gentleman, or Gentleman Planter, as he wished.

John Bond and Elizanna Webster marriage record in the U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935, Nottingham Monthly Meeting, page J4.

On May 26, 1734, John Bond married Aliceanna Webster at the Nottingham Meeting of The Society of Friends in Harford County, Maryland. This is our first solid clue of Quakerism in the Bond family. Aliceanna was born on January 21, 1716 and she died on October 13, 1768, aged 52 years. She was the daughter of John Webster and Hannah Butterworth. The Websters and Butterworths played a large role in the settling of Harford County, Maryland.

In addition to raising her large family Aliceanna was highly regarded as a midwife. Here is a transcription by (present day) Thomas Bond of her obituary:

“On the 13th day of Octr. 1768, died Alisanna Bond wife of John Bond of Fells Point, aged 52 years, and on the 18th: was Intsred [Interred] at the Burying Ground of the Quaker Meeting on Bonds Forrest where was a large _____ [?] of that family. She was Youngest Daughter of John Webster Senior, who had many good Qualities and Understood Medicine and Midwifery which she administered without fees or reward. She left 10 children to console her loose [loss] with their Father. give her the fruits of her hands ___ own works ___ praise her.”

Alisanna Bond obituary, courtesy of The Fells Point Story, addendum exhibits at near book’s end, app. page 102.

John and Aliceanna had eleven children. In the order of their births:

  • Samuel Bond, born January 23, 1736 – died October 19, 1801
  • Ann (Bond) Fell, born June 27, 1737 – died July 27, 1791
  • Thomas Bond, born September 29, 1739 – died January 23, 1791
  • Pamela (Bond) Moore, born May 30, 1740 – died September 28, 1801
  • Abigail Bond, born May 17, 1741 – died, May 26, 1805
  • Susanna (Bond) Hunt, born 1742 – died February 14, 1817
  • Jane Bond, born July 28, 1743 – died, January 30, 1812
  • William Bond, born March 8, 1746 – died unknown
    (We are descended from William).
  • John Bond, born November 30, 1748 – died December 8, 1812
  • Aliceanna (Bond) Kell, born 1749 – died, May 30, 1767
  • Hannah (Bond) Johns, is the eleventh child born (unknown) – death (unknown), however, we have her marriage record of January 27, 1757. We find Hannah in her father’s will, (see John Bond footnotes).

Having accrued a degree of wealth, our ancestor Gentleman John Bond lived his life on the plantation, and in the winter, at the Fells Point area of Baltimore. “He was a large land owner and merchant, shipping tobacco from Joppa and Baltimore to England…” He served as a justice of the peace, coroner, judge of the Orphan’s Court (1769-73).

Since he had taken an oath of office, the Quakers were aggrieved with this “going against testimony” and felt it went contrary to their principles. As a consequence, Gentleman John was “finally read out of meeting for his contumacy.” (That word means: stubborn resistance to authority.) He was an investor in not only his plantations, but also in ship building, home construction and mining. Some of his correspondence from his mercantile ventures survive, with one example shown below.

Letter from John Philpot of London to John Bond — April 24, 1766, courtesy of The Fells Point Story, addendum exhibits at near book’s end, app. page 104.

From the Maryland Genealogical and Memorial Encyclopedia — “He was a large land owner and merchant, shipping tobacco from Joppa and Baltimore to England, until he became involved in financial difficulties connected with the Bush River Company, which he and his father-in-law had organized.”

From The Bonds of Earth by Allen Kerr Bond — “Maryland contains a great variety of mineral deposits, which were worked profitably in many of her counties… Exactly when John Bond began to mine this ore, I do not know… Three years later [about 1762], John seems already to be a partner in the Bush River Company, formed by a number of Hartford County gentlemen… In 1773 it was sold out.” They had been mining iron ore (or what they called pig iron), but by 1773, the vein ran out. Prior to this time, “in the colonial days [they] were forbidden to manufacture anything from our iron. We must send the pig iron to England and buy back from that ‘Mother’ country the finished articles we needed; so that British manufacturing business might be built up.”

When the mine failed, Gentleman John found himself in debt for £3000 Stirling. His plantation home was nearly sold at auction, but it was rescued and saved by his son Thomas, “the Methodist”. His will also mentions the Fountain Copper Works, of which he and four other planters were all partners. It was located in Frederick County, not far from the town of Union Bridge. His four planter-partners must have also been English, because it is recorded that the mine closed at the beginning of the Revolutionary War, when the other partners returned to England.

Observations: This makes us wonder if John Bond and some members of his family were torn between loyalty to England, or loyalty to (the new) Maryland. Our family was involved with three groups, all of whom had a stake in the game, as it were… Many colonists were troubled about exorbitant British taxes and frustrated about how they were forced to purchase imported goods that they could have made themselves. They wanted change now. Some of the planter class were worried that their livelihoods were threatened — some wanted change and some wanted the status quo. The Quakers were pacifists, and they were having serious problems with the institution of slavery, and the idea of going to war. Quakerism had started in England, and even though many were persecuted, it was still a confusing period for them.

Eighteen yeas after his beloved wife Aliceanna died John Bond, Gentleman, died on March 11, 1786 in Harford County, Maryland.

John and Aliceanna’s daughter Ann married Edward Fell on November 2, 1758. They were first cousins as he was the son of William and Sarah (Bond) Fell. (Sarah was a younger sister of John Bond). The Fells were the original settlers of Fells Point in Baltimore. Edward and Ann lived at Fells Point and were very active in beginning to develop it as a place to live. He died six short years after their marriage and the birth of their son, William Fell. William was born on August 28, 1759 and died, unmarried, on October 6, 1786.

After Edward’s death Ann, with the help of her father, Gentleman John Bond, was heavily involved in the continued development of Fells Point. At this time in colonial history it was unusual for a woman to develop land or a community. To this day their is a Bond Street and an Aliceanna Street in Fells Point, Baltimore, Maryland. Further, “…200 years ago, it was one of colonial America’s biggest seaports, one that played a key role in thwarting the British during the War of 1812.”

In 1744 Ann (Bond) Fell married James Giles and they had three children together. Ann died in 1791 in Baltimore County, Maryland. (10)

Portrait of Ann Bond Fell by John Hesselius, 1728 – April 9, 1778
Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC.

The William and Sarah (Wrongs) Bond Family

In this generation, with this particular family, the historical record gets a bit sparse. This has required us to make some inferential observations when we lack a direct record.

William Bond was the eighth child of John and Aliceanna Bond. His first seven siblings were all born in quick, nearly unbroken succession, and then after his sister Jane, there was a pause before we meet William. That’s a lot of siblings, and there were three more after William. In general, it seems they all lived long lives. All except for William, which we will get to in a bit.

William and Sarah Wrongs were married on November 16, 1771, in St. George’s Parish Baltimore County, Maryland. St. George’s, also known as the Spesutia Parish… [was] the oldest Episcopal parish in Maryland. [The Episcopal Church describes itself as “Protestant, yet Catholic” and claims apostolic succession, tracing its bishops back to the apostles via holy orders… The Episcopal Church was formally separated from the Church of England in 1789 so that American clergy would not be required to accept the supremacy of the British monarch.]

Observation: The fact that they were married in a parish that was an Anglican order, and Episcopalian in its practice, points to the strong possibility that she might have been British and baptized into the Church of England. We have found a record in the papers of All Saints Wakefield Cathedral, West Yorkshire, England, which is part of the Church of England that may be a record of Sarah Wrongs birth. We have not found a birth record for her in America, and we first meet her when she marries William Bond.

Sarah D: of Robt Brook Wrongs [Sarah, daughter of Robert Brook Wrongs].
Baptismal record from Wakefield All Saints Cathedral, dated March 12, 1747.
South East View of the Parish Church of All Saints Wakefield, aquatint, by I. Cawthorn, circa 1807. Courtesy of The British Library.

When William married Sarah, it did not sit well with the Quakers. They had an expectation that partners would be selected from within their own community, certainly at the meeting house. In 1772, the Society of Friends, upset with both William and his brother Thomas for their marriages, removed them from participation in the Society of Friends.

Excerpted from Quaker meeting notes from the Gunpowder Monthly Meeting, Baltimore County, Maryland. (What is shown below below are from the bottom of one page, and the top of the next page).

“Where as Thomas and William Bond (sons of John Bond) have had a Birthright Among us the People Called Quakers but they having gone out in Marriage to Women of Other Professions Contrary to the good Order used Amongst Friends, Which Mission = doest [?] of theirs we Testify Against and Disown them from being any longer members of Our Society, unlike they Condemn their outgoing to the satisfaction of this Meeting and that their Conduct For later may Render them Worthy of Our Notice and Christian Care is Our Desire. Given forth from Our Monthly Meeting Held at Gunpowder the 25th of the 3rd month 1772. [March 25, 1772]

We next find William and Sarah in the Maryland Preliminary Census of 1776 which lists both of them as 30 years old. At that time, it was “taken for the purpose of setting Maryland’s quota for a tax to support the Revolutionary War.” We have not been able to identify the other people who are listed with them on this census.

Maryland Records, 1776 Harford County, Bush River Lower census cover sheet and p. 127

William and Sarah were the parents of four children:

  • John Bond, born, 1772 – died, unknown
  • Abigail (Bond) Everist, born 1776 – died, unknown
  • Edward Fell Bond, born March 4, 1777 – died, February 20, 1822
    (We are descended from Edward Fell).
  • Jane (Bond) Bradford, born 1782 – died, January 7, 1860

William Bond, being a child of the planter class, had inherited property from his father John Bond, the Gentleman. We don’t know much about his and Sarah’s life together at this point, simply because no records have been located. We can however, infer some things about William…

Observation: Even though the Quakers seriously rebuked him, we think that he may have still retained some of their pacifist tendencies. Alan Kerr Bond wrote in The Bonds of Earth, that William “was a non-associator in 1775 and 1776; yet like others in Quaker families who would not take up arms, he may have later become county magistrate…”

Like his father John Bond, William chose to disregard the Quaker prohibition against taking oaths, and we locate him as the probable “the worshipful William Bond” administering the Oath of Fidelity and Support to mustered militia men from Harford County. From Wikipedia: The term Non-Associators was applied to American colonists who refused to support and sign “military association” charters.

Also from Wikipedia: “In 1777, all Maryland voters were required to take the Oath of Fidelity and Support. This was an oath swearing allegiance to the state of Maryland and denying allegiance and obedience to Great Britain. As enacted by the Maryland General Assembly in 1777, all persons holding any office of profit or trust, including attorneys at law, and all voters were required to take the oath no later than March 1, 1778.”

Alan Kerr Bond identified William as a probable magistrate, which was defined in colonial times as “…the major figure in the colonial court system… the magistrate (a local official with limited power), often called justice of the peace or, simply, judge. This person mostly dealt with petty (minor) crimes in his local area.” Further, dictionary.com defines worshipful as — WorshipfulBritish. a formal title of honor used in announcing or mentioning certain highly regarded or respected persons.

Observation: William saw his father John suffer at the burden of British taxes on his tobacco and sugar shipments. He may have felt a need to do what he could to support and help create a new Maryland? Perhaps he felt being a magistrate was a non-violent way to participate in the cause?

Some ‘Quakers’ took up arms against the British, but some did not. Pacifist Quakers were treated with some disdain by their neighbors during and after the Revolutionary War. There are two other men named William Bond from other Maryland Counties, which we found records for, which have survived. It seems likely that our William Bond, unlike the others, never took up arms, but had found a social balance between engagement and pacifism to sustain himself and his family. (11)

The Kentucky Mystery

The rise of maintaining family histories through family bibles, journal stories, and embroidered family trees has had a long history. First, in the British Colonies, and then in the subsequent United States. By the 1800s, some families started cataloging their ancestors as a way to create their own history — “…some Americans came to see the process of learning one’s family history as a moral endeavor—a person could learn much from what her ancestors had done right or wrong… Even before the Civil War, there was ‘lineage consciousness’ among those descended from elite colonial families, who used their descent from ‘high’ birth to justify and enforce their higher social rank.”

We agree that some of these records can be filled with rich information, but you always need to verify your sources. In our research on our family lines, we have encountered two Daughters of the American Revolution publications which have asked us to call into question if they are accurate. Both state that William Bond “was killed by Indians on his way to Kentucky.” We believe that this is an error, and that this mistake was perpetuated through several other subsequent publications.

Records were kept by the new United States Confederation which documented in careful detail who was entitled to land (due to their war service), in new frontier areas (like Kentucky). William Bond’s name does not appear on any of these records, nor does his wife’s name appear on any war service pension records.

The fate of William Bond and Sarah Wrongs is a mystery. (This aspect of our family history will still continue to be researched). We know what happened with their four children. We are descended from their son Edward Fell Bond.(For more about his story, see The Bond Line — Part Six). Their daughter, Jane (Bond) Bradford’s son went on to have a high profile role in Maryland history. (12)

Where are William and Sarah Bond hiding?

Jane (Bond) Bradford and Her Famous Son Augustus

Edward Fell Bond’s younger sister Jane Bond, married Samuel Bradford on July 21, 1803 in Harford County. Their son, Augustus Williamson Bradford was born on January 9, 1806, in Bel Air, Maryland, a community near Baltimore.

Augustus was a law school graduate; politically first a Whig and then a Democrat. He was elected Governor of Maryland and served from January 8, 1862 – January 10, 1866 (essentially the length of the Civil War). As Governor, he was a staunch Union supporter and a fierce opponent of slavery.

During the American Civil War (1861–1865), Maryland, a slave state, was one of the border states, straddling the South and North. Despite some popular support for the cause of the Confederate States of America, Maryland did not secede during the Civil War. Across the state, some 50,000 citizens signed up for the military, with most joining the Union Cause. Approximately 5,000 citizens went south to fight for the Confederacy. This was a rough period for Maryland, because as a border state, it saw much conflict, due to military activity and unrest among a conflicted population.

Augustus Williamson Bradford, circa 1855-65, Photograph by Mathew Brady. Courtesy of The Library of Congress

In April 1864, both President Lincoln and Governor Augustus Bradford spoke at a fair in Baltimore, Maryland, which was held to raise funds for the welfare of Union soldiers. Certainly then, they knew each other.

Three months later — “During the War, the Confederates invaded Maryland three times. During the last of these, Bradley T. Johnson’s raiders visited Bradford’s home in July of 1864, and during his absence, burned it to the ground together with all his furniture, library, and papers.”  Learning this, it’s regrettable how much information from our family history was likely lost.

Augustus Williamson Bradford died in Baltimore on March 1, 1881, at the age of seventy-six.

Historical marker in Maryland concerning our distant relative.
(Photo courtesy of civilwarquilts.blogspot.com).

About nine months later, on April 14, 1865 the actor John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. Booth was a Marylander and a Confederate sympathizer.

Memory: In March 1975, we traveled with our parents to Washington, D.C., to see the historical sites in anticipation of the approaching 1976 Bicentennial year. Among the memories was a visit to Ford’s Theatre and the upstairs bedroom across the street where Lincoln had died. At that time, we knew next to nothing about our family history. (13)

Unused Ticket for Ford’s Theatre April 14, 1865 (The night Lincoln was assassinated there).
Image courtesy of http://www.shapell.org

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

Preface: Be Wary Of Those K rations!

(1) — two records

AZ Central
Vintage: Romantic Photos of The Soldier and The Cigarette
A United States sailor holds a carton of Philip Morris cigarettes under one arm and a duffle bag over his other shoulder while smoking a cigarette.
https://www.azcentral.com/picture-gallery/money/business/2014/04/02/vintage-romantic-photos-of-the-soldier-and-the-cigarette/7217459/
Maryland tobacco as currency:
http://www.thecurrencycollector.com/pdfs/Maryland_Colonial_and_Continental_Bank.pdf

The British Colonies Desperately Needed Workers

(2) — three records

George Mason’s Gunston Hall
Indentured Servants at Gunston Hall
https://gunstonhall.org/learn/people-of-gunston-hall/indentured-servants/

Encyclopedia Virginia
Tobacco in Colonial Virginia
https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/tobacco-in-colonial-virginia/
Note: For map detail.

U.S. History, Pre-Columbian to the New Millenium
The Southern Colonies
Indentured Servants
https://www.ushistory.org/us/5b.asp

The Bristol Registry of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations 1654-1686

(3) — three records

The Bristol Registry of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations 1654-1686
1659
by Peter Wilson Coldham
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/49090/images/FLHG_BristolRegistersofServants-0132?treeid=&lang=en-US&pId=14021
Book pages: 121-122, Digital Pages: 131-132/502
And confirmed here:
Virtual Jamestown.org
Indentured Servants Basic Search Results
http://www.virtualjamestown.org/indentures/search_indentures.cgi?search_type=basic&start_page=0&servant_ln=Bond&servant_fn=Peter&servant_place=&servant_occ=&destination=&ship=&year-ops=&year=&year1=&sex=male&agent_ln=&agent_fn=&agent_place=&agent_occ=&result_order=&submit=Initiate+Search&db=bristol_ind

Price Genealogy
Origins of Colonial Chesapeake Indentured Servants: American and English Sources
https://www.pricegen.com/genealogy-learning-center/overseas-origins/

The Early Settlers of Maryland

(4) — one record

The Early Settlers of Maryland; an index to names of immigrants compiled from records of land patents, 1633-1680, in the Hall of Records, Annapolis, Maryland
https://archive.org/details/earlysettlersofm00skor/page/n5/mode/2up
by Gust Skordas, John M, Brewer, Arthur Trader
Book page: 16 and 48, Digital Pages: 16 and 48/525
Note 1: Page 48/525 which list: our Peter, other Peter(s), and other Bonds.
Note 2: Our Peter is from Anne Arundel County and immigrated in 1660.

The Maryland Colony

(5) — six records

Province of Maryland
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_Maryland

British Roots of Maryland Families
by Robert W. Barnes
B
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/49095/images/FLHG_BritishRoots-0101?usePUB=true&_phsrc=Ovg3&pId=15510
Book pages: 61, Digital Pages: 101/686

A New Map of Virginia, Maryland, And The Improved Parts
Of Pennsylvania & New Jersey 
by Christopher Browne, 1685
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_Maryland#/media/File:A_new_map_of_Virginia,Maryland,_and_the_improved_parts_of_Pennsylvania&New_Jersey._LOC_2005630923(cropped).jpg

Settlers of Maryland, 1679-1783. [Consolidated Edition]
by Peter Wilson Coldham
B (section)
Explanation of file data: Various Bond properties are shown on this link which we have assembled into a chart for this blog chapter —
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/49058/images/FLHG_SettlersMaryland2-0074?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Xqj2&_phstart=successSource&pId=101720&rcstate=FLHG_SettlersMaryland2-0074%3A337%2C703%2C422%2C732%3B556%2C703%2C643%2C733%3B653%2C703%2C742%2C733%3B821%2C745%2C935%2C775%3B224%2C952%2C313%2C982%3B820%2C953%2C933%2C985%3B223%2C1160%2C313%2C1190%3B223%2C1241%2C313%2C1270%3B594%2C1243%2C680%2C1273%3B820%2C1285%2C933%2C1316%3B223%2C1324%2C312%2C1354%3B820%2C1408%2C931%2C1438%3B818%2C1451%2C931%2C1480%3B818%2C1491%2C931%2C1521%3B818%2C1533%2C931%2C1563%3B818%2C1574%2C931%2C1605%3B818%2C1618%2C930%2C1648%3B815%2C2075%2C928%2C2105%3B813%2C2119%2C928%2C2149%3B813%2C2160%2C926%2C2190%3B813%2C2200%2C926%2C2230%3B813%2C2368%2C926%2C2399%3B813%2C2410%2C925%2C2440%3B813%2C2452%2C925%2C2482%3B810%2C2577%2C930%2C2608%3B1500%2C2624%2C1591%2C2656%3B810%2C2747%2C928%2C2777%3B210%2C2955%2C300%2C2986%3B807%2C2959%2C920%2C2990%3B807%2C2999%2C920%2C3031%3B1030%2C217%2C1312%2C254%3B225%2C457%2C314%2C487%3B823%2C456%2C941%2C487%3B224%2C539%2C314%2C569%3B337%2C539%2C422%2C569%3B821%2C580%2C935%2C611%3B224%2C703%2C314%2C733
Book pages: 59-61, Digital Pages: 73-75/906.
Note: This book lists land ownership in Maryland in the 1679-1783 period.

Peter Bond Marries the Widow, Alice (Cole) Gill Drury

(6) — six records

The Story of The Bonds of Earth
by Allen Kerr Bond
https://archive.org/details/storyofbondsofea00bond/mode/2up
Book pages: 164-166. Digital pages: 164-166/299

WikiTree
Peter Bond (abt. 1636 – bef. 1705)
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bond-340
Note: Some smaller details in this link do not agree with other reliable sources.

WikiTree
Alice (Cole) Washington (abt. 1638 – aft. 1708)
Alice Cole, Washington (abt. 1638 – aft. 1708)
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bond-340
Note: Some smaller details in this link do not agree with other reliable sources.

Baltimore County Families 1659-1759
by Robert W. Barnes
For the Peter Bond Family
— Book page: 47, Digital page: 57/935
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/48162/images/BaltimoreCoFamilies-002226-47?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=jhl2&_phstart=successSource&pId=224348&rcstate=BaltimoreCoFamilies-002434-255%3A167%2C1264%2C239%2C1285%3B332%2C1265%2C426%2C1285%3B1241%2C1262%2C1296%2C1282%3B695%2C1363%2C759%2C1384%3B166%2C1432%2C199%2C1451%3B666%2C1431%2C728%2C1451%3B719%2C1531%2C775%2C1557%3B979%2C1529%2C1034%2C1550%3B1163%2C1563%2C1220%2C1584%3B775%2C1598%2C830%2C1617%3B656%2C1866%2C718%2C1886%3B1176%2C1864%2C1238%2C1884%3B673%2C161%2C839%2C181%3B887%2C764%2C946%2C784%3B370%2C797%2C425%2C824%3B423%2C797%2C594%2C821%3B257%2C830%2C314%2C851%3B1129%2C828%2C1187%2C849%3B999%2C863%2C1056%2C883%3B258%2C997%2C313%2C1022%3B665%2C1063%2C722%2C1082%3B167%2C1097%2C201%2C1117%3B1178%2C1228%2C1302%2C1249

Rhinehart & Bassett Family Tree
Peter Bond’s probated Will from 1705:
http://www.bassett.net/gendata-o/p10576.htm
and from the:
Maryland Calendar of Wills:
by Jane Cotten, Roberta Bolling Henry, Eleanor Janet Whitall
https://archive.org/details/marylandcalendar03cott/page/n107/mode/2up?q=bond
Book page: 49, Digital page: 108/680
Bond, Peter, Balto. Co., 23rd Aug., 1704; 28th Apr., 1705.
“To wife Alice, extx., plantation and land during life; to pass to son Peter and hrs. at her decease. To sons Thomas, William and John, 300 A. at hd. of Bush R. To sons afsd., residue of estate afsd. at decease of wife. Sons William and John to be of age at 18 yrs.” Test: Lancelott Todd, John Lockett, Wm. Felps. 3. 451

Was Peter Bond a Quaker?

(7) — six records

Quakers
https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism

Quakers in Great Britain; 1650s-1750s
https://haygenealogy.com/hay/quaker/quaker-GB.html

George Fox
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Fox

George Fox

Quakers & Slavery
George Fox’s Ambiguous Anti-Slavery Legacy
https://web.tricolib.brynmawr.edu/speccoll/quakersandslavery/commentary/people/fox.php

Society of Friends
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Society-of-Friends

The Guardian newspaper
Pierce Brosnan: I was ‘kicked to the kerb’ as James Bond after Die Another Day
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/nov/24/pierce-brosnan-james-bond-kicked-to-the-kerb-after-die-another-day
Note: For Pierce Brosnan as James Bond 007

Thomas Bond was The Father of Eight Sons and Two Daughters

(8) — six records

The Story of The Bonds of Earth
by Allen Kerr Bond
https://archive.org/details/storyofbondsofea00bond/mode/2up
Book page: 186, Digital page: 186/299

Thomas Bond
Vital – Maryland, Marriages, 1666-1970

Maryland Marriages, 1666-1970
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4V7-5M7?from=lynx1UIV8&treeref=LTV6-2WQ
and here:
All Hollows Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland (1691 — 1858)
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSMZ-Q7HL-8
Book page: 32, Digital page: 1377/1933, 10th transcribed entry, SER Number #00044-8

Baltimore County Families 1659-1759
by Robert W. Barnes
For the Peter Bond Family
— Book page: 48, Digital page: 58/935

Baltimore County Families 1659-1759
by Robert W. Barnes
> Thomas Bond, Book page: 48, Digital page: 58/935
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/48162/images/BaltimoreCoFamilies-002227-48?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=jhl2&_phstart=successSource&pId=224349&rcstate=BaltimoreCoFamilies-002434-255%3A167%2C1264%2C239%2C1285%3B332%2C1265%2C426%2C1285%3B1241%2C1262%2C1296%2C1282%3B695%2C1363%2C759%2C1384%3B166%2C1432%2C199%2C1451%3B666%2C1431%2C728%2C1451%3B719%2C1531%2C775%2C1557%3B979%2C1529%2C1034%2C1550%3B1163%2C1563%2C1220%2C1584%3B775%2C1598%2C830%2C1617%3B656%2C1866%2C718%2C1886%3B1176%2C1864%2C1238%2C1884%3B673%2C161%2C839%2C181%3B887%2C764%2C946%2C784%3B370%2C797%2C425%2C824%3B423%2C797%2C594%2C821%3B257%2C830%2C314%2C851%3B1129%2C828%2C1187%2C849%3B999%2C863%2C1056%2C883%3B258%2C997%2C313%2C1022%3B665%2C1063%2C722%2C1082%3B167%2C1097%2C201%2C1117%3B1178%2C1228%2C1302%2C1249

Ann Robinson
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/100009207/person/192283883876/facts
Note: Possible portrait of Ann Robison.

History of Harford County, title page.

History of Harford County Maryland
by Walter W. Preston, 1901
Jacob Bond
https://archive.org/details/historyharfordc00changoog/page/n226/mode/2up?view=theater
Book pages: 206-207, Digital page: 227/413

“Quaker headstones before the mid-19th century are rare, as they are not in keeping with the plain life.”
Sarah Brown Bond
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63562855/sarah-bond
Note: This gravesite is noted on this blog only for this quotation.

What Would These Quaker Ancestors Think About Our Time?

(9) — two records

Scattered Leaves : Genealogy of the Johnson – Bond and Utermoehlen (and) Bredehoeft Families
by Robert E. Johnson
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/531365/?offset=0#page=14&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q=
Book page: 10, Digital page: 12/174
Note: Excerpted from the document: “The family of Thomas Bond seems to be the first to backslide and fall under the displeasure of Friends Meeting (Quakers)”.

Susanna Bond
in the U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935

Maryland > Baltimore > Gunpowder Monthly Meeting > Minutes, 1768-1784
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1107209832:2189?_phsrc=dGC21&_phstart=successSource&gsfn=Susannah&gsln=Bond&ml_rpos=4&queryId=1fe861c3b709e46848daa11c6905627c
Book page: “50”, Digital Pages: 54/374

Gentleman John Bond and His Wife Aliceanna Webster

(10) — eight records

John Bond
in the U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935

Pennsylvania > Chester > Nottingham Monthly Meeting > Minutes, 1730-1889
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1107234025:2189
Book page: 14, Digital Pages: 16/392

The Fells Point Story, cover.

The Fells Point Story
by Norman Rukert, 1976
https://www.rukert.com/docs/FellsPointStory1976.pdf
From a section with our direct page numbers, titled “Bond and Fell Papers”
– app. page 102, Alisanna Bond obituary, courtesy of Brown’s Wharf Museum.
– app. page 104, Letter from John Philpot in London…, courtesy of Brown’s Wharf Museum.

Genealogical and Memorial Encyclopedia of the State of Maryland: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation, Vol 1
by Richard Henry Spencer
The only section is under Thomas Emerson Bond, MD. (5 pages only).
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7719/images/7719-Volume1-0057?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=tTC5&_phstart=successSource&pId=57&rcstate=7719-Volume1-0058%3A766%2C958%2C882%2C1003%3B332%2C1205%2C558%2C1262%3B694%2C1267%2C814%2C1312%3B837%2C1267%2C953%2C1312%3B1034%2C1940%2C1260%2C1998%3B514%2C2131%2C631%2C2178%3B1378%2C649%2C1499%2C695%3B97%2C708%2C213%2C755%3B294%2C710%2C488%2C756%3B97%2C894%2C216%2C940%3B326%2C958%2C446%2C1004%3B627%2C959%2C748%2C1004
Book pages: 48-52,  Digital Pages: 1-5

The Story of The Bonds of Earth
by Allen Kerr Bond
https://archive.org/details/storyofbondsofea00bond/page/196/mode/2up
Book pages: 197- 199, Digital pages: 196-198/299

Wilson Cary notes on the Bond family*
https://usgenwebsites.org/MDBaltimore/family/bondresearchnotes.html
Note: These files migrated to ancestry.com when the company was acquired. We have not been able to relocate them there — however, we did locate this in 2024.*

John Bond of Harford Co [County]
Lud [land} to be div [divided amongst] his 3 sons Samuel — John — & William 5$ ea. & no more of his R&P. est. [right & proper estate].

— To gr. son John Bond (s. Thomas) [son of Thomas] that pl. [plantation] of “Bonds Forest” where I now dwell adj. [adjoining] Jacob Rush & Wm Tnuch [?] – Wm Baxler, Spring branch Falls – including Enoch William land & Benj Lancaster ld [land] — ½ & cd [called] “Fountain Copper Mines”, ½ of the pl [plantation of resurv. [resurveyed] next adj. [adjoining] that I now hold wh. [which] is the 1/3 pl [plantation] thereof of & the other pls [plantations] that has fallen to the company by any means so ever (being a copper mine in Feda Co. [Frederick County] — also ½ of my lots w.s. [west-south of?] Thames St [Street] Fells Pt [Point] — wh. [which] prop. [property] is to be left in the hands of my son Thomas for [the] bringing up & ed. [educating] of my grand son John Bond (s. of Thos) [son of Thomas] till 21 & then to be put in full pos. [possession] 

— to gr. Son [grandson] Thomas Bond (s.Thomas) [son of Thomas] ½ of sd [said] Fountain Copper Mines & ½ Thames St Lots & so on as above 

— to gr. Son William Bd [grand son William Bond] (s. Samuel) [son of Samuel] 5A.[?] on Great Road W. the Quaker Meeting house & adj [adjoining] Wm Smith Esq [Esquire]

— Dau [daughter] Alesanna Kell (ux [wife of] Thomas Kell) the plant [plantation] where as she now lives being 2 t. [tracts] of ld cd [land called] 2d Thory pt [Thorny Point?] & 2d T. [?] improved & all that pl [plantation] of Bonds Pleast[ant] Hills that lies adj [adjoining] Prospect & Capt[ain] Thos Kell’s ld [land] & what I have before given her & no money of my est. [estate] whatever 

— to my dau [daughter] Hannah Johns ux [wife of] (Aquilla) 20₤. 

— Dau [daughter] Susanna Hunt (ux [wife of] Phineus) ₤50. 

— Gr Dau [Grand daughter] Alisana Lockwood ₤50. 

— Dau [daughter] Pameula Moore (ux [wife of William) of Balt[imore]town my ho. [house?] on Fells Pt Cd [Fells Point called] & known by name of The Coffee House and also 1 lot wh. [with] improvements & house built by Hy Carver E.S. Thames St 

— Gr. Son [Grandson] John Bond (s. Wm) [son of William] pt [plantation] of l. cd [lands called] “Bonds Forest” where Wm [William] Bond now lives & all the ld [land] that lies betw [between 2 brs [branches or brooks] Overshot & old Ives Spring Branch down to the Falls & over to the Bond’s Forest line 

— To Gr son [Grandson] EdwD [Edward] Fell Bond (s. Wm) [son of William] the pl [plantation] of (cont. [containing] 2nd Page 4a) Bonds Forest where the Strandfords now live – ho [?] & orchard estb [established] at 100A [acres} – also t. [tract] where Amos Jones lives 65A. [acres]

— Gr son [Grandson] John Bond Fell (s. Thomas) [son of Thomas] pl [plantation] Bonds Pleast[ant] Hills where Iona Ady now lives estd 100A. [acres] 

— Frnd [Friend? Quaker?] Isaac Everett l. [lots] where he now lives bdg [bordering] on Olojues Sp’g br. – [branch or brook]

Exrs [executors]
— son Thomas Bond (surv. exr [surveyed executor] at probate) & 
— s.-1. c [said 1 called] Capt Thos Kell [Captain Thomas Kell]
– Bro Jno Bond [Brother John ]

wits [witnesses] 
— George Rush 
— Enoch Williams (Quaker) 
— Benj Rush Jr. (Quaker)

*We located this data in 2024:
Baltimore County MDGenWeb, BOND Family Research Notes
Bond Family Notes of Wilson Cary, Found in Maryland Historical Society
Transcribed by Lawrence E. Alley
https://usgenwebsites.org/MDBaltimore/family/bondresearchnotes.html
Note: This transcription may not match this original transcription exactly, but it I call me hove at present. Transcription of John Bond, Gentleman’s Will based on Wilson Carey content and annotations, written in 1786:

John Bond of HarfordCo lud to be div his 3 sons Samuel – John – & William 5$ ea. & no more of his R&P. est. To gr. son John Bond (s. Thomas) that pl. of “Bonds Forest” where I now dwell adj. Jacob Rush & Wm Tnuch? – Wm Baxler, Spring branch Falls – including Enoch William land & Benj Lancaster ld – ½ & cd? “Forunlain? Copper Mines”, ½ of the pl of resurv. next adj. that I now hold wh. is the 1/3 pl thereof of & the other pls that has fallen to the company by any means so ever (being a copper mine in Feda Co. – also ½ of my lots w.s. Thames SFells Pt – wh. prop. is to be left in the hands of my son Thomas for bringing up & ed. of my grand son John Bond (s. of Thos) till 21 & then to be put in full pos. To gr. Son Thomas Bond (s.Thomas) – ½ of sd Forulain? Copper Mines & ½ Thames St Lots & so on as above – to gr. Son William Bd (s. Samuel) 5A. on Great Road W. the Quaker Meeting house & adj Wm Smith Esq – Dau Alesanna Kell (ux Thomas Kell) the plant where as she now lives being 2 t. of ld cd 2d Thory pt & 2d T. improved & all that pl of Bonds Pleast Hills that lies adj Prospect & Capt Thos Kell’s ld & what I have before given her & no money of my est. whatever – to my dau Hannah Johns ux (Aquilla) 20₤. Dau Susanna Hunt (ux Phineus) ₤50. Gr Dau Alisana Lockwood ₤50. Dau Pameula Moore (ux Wm) of Balt. town my ho. on Fells Pt Cd & known by name of The Coffee House and also 1 lot wh. improvements & house built by Hy Carver E.S. Thames St – Gr. Son John Bond (s. Wm) pt of l. cd “Bonds Forest” where Wm Bond now lives & all the ld that lies betw 2 brs Overshot & old Ives Spring Branch down to the Falls & over to the Bond’s Forest line – To Gr son EdwD Fell Bond (s. Wm) the pl of (cont. 2nd Page 4a) Bonds Forest where the Strandfords now live – ho & orchard estb at 100A – also t. where Amos Jones lives 65A. – Gr son – John Bond Fell (s. Thomas) pl Bonds Pleast Hills where Iona Ady now lives estd 100A. Frnd Isaac Everett l. where he now lives bdg on Olojues Sp’g br. – 

Exrs son Thomas Bond (surv. exr at probate) & s.-1. c Capt Thos Kell – Bro Jno Bond.

wits George Rush. Enoch Williams (Quaker). Benj Rush Jr. (Quaker)”

Maryland Historical Magazine
Mining For Copper and Related Materials in Maryland
by Nancy C. Pearre
March 1964
https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc5800/sc5881/000001/000000/000233/pdf/msa_sc_5881_1_233.pdf
Note: Page 20 mentions the the Fountain Copper Works.

Baltimore County Families 1659-1759
by Robert W. Barnes
> John Bond Book pages: 50-51, Digital page: 60-61/935
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/48162/images/BaltimoreCoFamilies-002229-50?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=jhl2&_phstart=successSource&pId=224351&rcstate=BaltimoreCoFamilies-002434-255%3A167%2C1264%2C239%2C1285%3B332%2C1265%2C426%2C1285%3B1241%2C1262%2C1296%2C1282%3B695%2C1363%2C759%2C1384%3B166%2C1432%2C199%2C1451%3B666%2C1431%2C728%2C1451%3B719%2C1531%2C775%2C1557%3B979%2C1529%2C1034%2C1550%3B1163%2C1563%2C1220%2C1584%3B775%2C1598%2C830%2C1617%3B656%2C1866%2C718%2C1886%3B1176%2C1864%2C1238%2C1884%3B673%2C161%2C839%2C181%3B887%2C764%2C946%2C784%3B370%2C797%2C425%2C824%3B423%2C797%2C594%2C821%3B257%2C830%2C314%2C851%3B1129%2C828%2C1187%2C849%3B999%2C863%2C1056%2C883%3B258%2C997%2C313%2C1022%3B665%2C1063%2C722%2C1082%3B167%2C1097%2C201%2C1117%3B1178%2C1228%2C1302%2C1249

The Society for the Preservation of Federal Hill and Fell’s Point
Rediscover
Fell’s Point During the War of 1812
https://www.preservationsociety.com/rediscover/fells-point-during-the-war-of-1812
Note: For “…200 years ago, it was one of colonial America’s biggest seaports…”

The William Bond and Sarah Wrongs Family

(11) nineteen records

William Bond
in the Maryland, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1655-1850

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/20002:7846

St. George’s Spesutia, Maryland’s Oldest Episcopal Parish, to End Worship Services
https://www.baltimoresun.com/ph-ag-st-georges-closing-1109-20121108-story.html

Episcopal Church (United States)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episcopal_Church_(United_States)

History of the Episcopal Church (United States)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Episcopal_Church_(United_States)

Sarah Wrong
in the West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Baptisms,

Marriages and Burials, 1512-1812
Wakefield, All Saints > 1747
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/9793815:2256?tid=&pid=&queryId=37e0ee6ae697c64b5a80b5cef8723c13&_phsrc=cqI3&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 14, Digital page: 7/16

Wakefield Cathedral
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wakefield_Cathedral

Baltimore County Families 1659-1759
by Robert W. Barnes

> William Bond Book page: 53, Digital page: 63/935
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/48162/images/BaltimoreCoFamilies-002232-53?treeid=&personid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=jhl2&_phstart=successSource&pId=224354&rcstate=BaltimoreCoFamilies-002434-255%3A167%2C1264%2C239%2C1285%3B332%2C1265%2C426%2C1285%3B1241%2C1262%2C1296%2C1282%3B695%2C1363%2C759%2C1384%3B166%2C1432%2C199%2C1451%3B666%2C1431%2C728%2C1451%3B719%2C1531%2C775%2C1557%3B979%2C1529%2C1034%2C1550%3B1163%2C1563%2C1220%2C1584%3B775%2C1598%2C830%2C1617%3B656%2C1866%2C718%2C1886%3B1176%2C1864%2C1238%2C1884%3B673%2C161%2C839%2C181%3B887%2C764%2C946%2C784%3B370%2C797%2C425%2C824%3B423%2C797%2C594%2C821%3B257%2C830%2C314%2C851%3B1129%2C828%2C1187%2C849%3B999%2C863%2C1056%2C883%3B258%2C997%2C313%2C1022%3B665%2C1063%2C722%2C1082%3B167%2C1097%2C201%2C1117%3B1178%2C1228%2C1302%2C1249

William Bond
in the U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1107209922:2189?tid=&pid=&queryId=e9ff387cc8a9d899f26526d32b1d3f98&_phsrc=bKo4&_phstart=successSource
Book page: “78”, Digital page: 82/374

Maryland Records courtesy of http://www.grasslandfoundation.com

Maryland Records
Colonial, Revolutionary, County and Church from Original Sources, Volume II
http://www.grasslandfoundation.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Maryland-Records-II.pdf
Book page: 122, for 1776 Hartford County, Bush River Lower Hundred census
Book page: 236, for Harford County, Oaths of Fidelity, MarchCourt, 1778 “The Worshipful William Bond’s Returns

Abigal Bond
Mentioned in the Record of Joshua Everist (Abigal Bond’s Husband)
Vital – Maryland, Marriages, 1666-1970

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4J2-CM9?from=lynx1UIV8&treeref=KHDZ-XP9

Jane Bond
Mentioned in the Record of Samuel Bradford (Jane Bond’s Husband)
Vital – Maryland, Marriages, 1666-1970

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4J7-3QC

The Story of The Bonds of Earth
by Allen Kerr Bond
https://archive.org/details/storyofbondsofea00bond/page/204/mode/2up
Book pages 205- 206, Digital pages: 204-206/299

Maryland State Archives
Guide to Government Records
Information on S961 — (Census of 1776)
http://guide.msa.maryland.gov/pages/series.aspx?action=viewseries&id=s961

Associators
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associators

Oath of Fidelity and Support
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oath_of_Fidelity_and_Support

Finding The Maryland 400
Persecuted in Revolutionary Baltimore: The Sufferings of Quakers
https://msamaryland400.com/2016/08/31/persecuted-in-revolutionary-baltimore-the-sufferings-of-quakers/

The Kentucky Mystery

(12) — three records

Why Are We All So Obsessed with Genealogy?
by Lilly Copeland
https://lithub.com/we-are-we-all-so-obsessed-with-genealogy/

William Bond
in the North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000

D > Daughters of the American Revolution > Lineage Book : NSDAR : Volume 087 : 1911
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2593487:61157?_phsrc=tuJ4&_phstart=successSource&gsfn=William&gsln=Bond&ml_rpos=21&queryId=67a251fade8a58408ae339fc2c081458
Book page: 287,  Digital Pages: 293/362
Note 1: Lineage Book, National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, volume LXXXVII, 86001-87000, published 1911, Entry 86899
Note 2: We believe that this history in in error, and that this did not happen: “…and was killed by Indians on his way to Kentucky.”

Sarah Wrongs
in the North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000

D > Daughters of the American Revolution > Lineage Book : NSDAR : Volume 021 : 1897
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1946106:61157
Book page: 236,  Digital Pages: 249/418
Note 1: Lineage Book, National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, volume LXXXVII, 20001-21000, published 1897, Entry 20672
Note 2: We believe that this history in in error, and that this did not happen: “…and was killed by Indians on his way to Kentucky.”

Jane (Bond) Bradford and Her Famous Son Augustus

(13) — eight records

Genealogy Trails History Group
Maryland Genealogy Trails, Governors of Maryland, 31st-35th
Augustus Williamson Bradford
http://genealogytrails.com/mary/governors7.html

File:Augustus Williamson Bradford – photo portrait standing.jpg
by Mathew Brady
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Augustus_Williamson_Bradford_-_photo_portrait_standing.jpg
Note: For photograph.

Maryland in the American Civil War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryland_in_the_American_Civil_War

Baltimore American newspaper front page
April 19, 1864
https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/001400/001463/tif/baltam4-19-1864.tif
and
Black Past
(1864) Abraham Lincoln “Address At A Sanitary Fair”
https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/1864-abraham-lincoln-definition-liberty/

Archives of Maryland (Biographical Series)
Augustus W. Bradford (1806-1881)
https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/001400/001463/html/1463bio2.html

Civil War Quilts
Quilts & Women’s History Focusing on the American Civil War
by Barbara Brackman
Maryland State Historical Marker (photo)
http://civilwarquilts.blogspot.com/2020/01/baltimore-marylands-sanitary-fair-union.html
Note: Photo caption, “Co-Chair Elizabeth Kell Bradford (1818-1894) was Governor Augustus Bradford’s wife. The family was enough of a Union symbol that Confederate troops burned their house a month or two after the fair in the closest raid the South made to Baltimore”.

Shapell Manuscript Foundation
Unused Ticket for Ford’s Theatre April 14, 1865 — The Night Lincoln Was Assassinated There
https://www.shapell.org/manuscript/ticket-for-fords-theatre-april-1865-night-of-lincoln-assassination/

The Narusch Line, A Narrative

Lithuania has a very long and very complicated history. Over the centuries, many people ruled the area, and depending upon which / occupier / tribe / kingdom / duchy / tsar / country / was in charge, the borders were always in flux.

Lithuania’s name first written in 1009, in the annals of the Quedlinburg Abbey, Germany. (Courtesy of Wikipedia).

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania

“The history of Lithuania dates back to settlements founded many thousands of years ago, but the first written record of the name for the country dates back to 1009 AD. The Union of Lublin [1569] and the integration of the two countries [Poland and Lithuania] notwithstanding, Lithuania continued to exist as a grand duchy within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth for over two centuries. It retained separate laws as well as an army and a treasury. Within the Commonwealth, the grand duchy made important contributions to European economic, political, and cultural life — Western Europe was supplied with grain, along with sea routes for trade… The early Commonwealth’s religious tolerance and democracy among the ruling noble class were unique in Europe.

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania within The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth c. 1635
Courtesy of Wikiwand (Sweden)
Szlachta [the Noble Class} in costumes of the Voivodeships of the Crown of the KIngdom of Poland, Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 17th and 18th century. (Courtesy of Wikipedia).

…The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth lasted until 1795, when the last of the Partitions of Poland erased both Lithuania and Poland from the political map. After the dissolution, Lithuanians lived under the rule of the Russian Empire until the 20th century… Tsar Alexander I [decided that] the southwestern part of Lithuania [would] became a part of the Russian-controlled Kingdom of Poland in 1815. The rest of Lithuania continued to be administered as a Russian province… There were several [failed] major rebellions, especially in 1830-1831, and 1863… Lithuania ceased to exist as a distinct entity for more than a century.

Large numbers of Lithuanians emigrated to the United States in 1867–1868 after a famine in Lithuania. Between 1868 and 1914, approximately 635,000 people, almost 20 percent of the population, left Lithuania.Lithuanian cities and towns were growing under the Russian rule, but the country remained underdeveloped by the European standards and job opportunities were limited.” (1)

Enter the Narusch Family

One of the easier things about researching ancestors like Joseph T. Narusch, is that not many people have a name spelled exactly as N A R U S C H. There are variations, such as Narish, or Narusis. They may also be phonetic spellings by immigration officials at Castle Garden, or Ellis Island, who were dealing with a large audience of immigrants. Or there may be families who spell their name that way. We were not able to find any definitive proof of Joseph Thomas Narusch’s arrival path and naturalization into the United States. However, some intriguing clues were found.

We have wondered why they chose Scranton, Pennsylvania as the place they would settle in? It most likely had to do with coal mining, steel manufacturing, and railroads. “How did [the] word of plentiful employment opportunities spread? Agents from the Pennsylvania’s Coal and Railroad Companies traveled throughout eastern and southern Europe, seeking cheap labor. Word spread quickly about the streets of America being paved with gold. These stories hastened the Lithuanians to head towards the ports of Bremen and Hamburg, creating a labor shortage in their own land and prompting the Russian government to prohibit lawful immigration.”

Our narrative begins with Mikolas P. Narusis (Michael P. Narusch), who was born in 1866 in Russia, which Czar Alexander I had annexed about six decades earlier. At the time, it was part of an “erased” Lithuania and Poland.

Mikolas Narusis (Michael P. Narusch) and Anna P. (Hankwicz) Narusus (Anna P. Narusch), date unknown. These are likely colorized daguerreotypes.

In the second year of the Russian Revolution, on 16 February 1918, Lithuania was re-established as a democratic state. From this time forward we start to see Lithuania appearing here-and-there on some documents. However, Russia is still documented and we see a mix of the two countries overlapping each other on records. Perhaps the use of “Lithuania” was a desire to connect with an authentic homeland, and distance oneself from a Czarist / Stalinist Russia.

Mikolas died as Michael P. Narish, in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania on May 8, 1927. On his death certificate, his place-of-birth is identified as Lithuania. The certificate was signed by Anthony Narusch, his son. Also, on this certificate it indicates that Michael Narusch father’s name was George Narish. We do not have any other information on the father George.

Michael was married to Anna (Hankricz) Narusis — there is no information on a marriage date. Anna’s birth year was 1868 and she was born in (Russia) Lithuania. She died on November 10, 1938 (as Anna Narish) in Scranton, Pennsylvania. A note on their estimated year(s) of birth: Their first child was born in 1881. If the dates are correct, Michael would have been 15 and Anna 13, when this child was born. These ages are confirmed by their respective death certificates, but, is it probable they were that young?

The Narusch family tree names eight children born to the couple, but only gives information about Joseph T. Narusch. The information below about his siblings is derived from other records, (see footnotes).

  • Joseph Thomas Narusch — born on September 17, 1881. His birthplace has been identified by others in a couple of locations. From our research, the most logical location seems to be in (present day spelling and location): Mikyciai (village), Lazdijai (municipal district), Altus (County), Russia (Lithuania). This village is located in the southwest corner of Lithuania, about 12 miles from the border with Poland. Joseph died on August 24, 1954 in Akron, Ohio. He is buried in Holy Cross Cemetery, Akron, Ohio.
  • Anthony Narish — born August 26, 1885 (likely) in Mikyciai, Russia; died October 2, 1969 (likely) in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania
  • William Narish — born March 4, 1888 (likely) in Mikyciai, Russia; died February 9, 1926 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas
  • Peter Narish — born 1888, (likely) in Mikyciai, Russia; death date and location unknown Observation: Brothers William and Peter were both born in 1888. Were they actual twins, or “Irish twins” meaning, they were siblings born in the same year.
  • Frank Narish — born June 3, 1895 in Scranton, Pennsylvania; died April 7, 1966, at the same location
  • Eva “Effie” (Narish) Kerchowskas — born about 1897 in Scranton, Pennsylvania; died in 1933 at the same location
  • Paul Narish — born January 24, 1899 in Scranton, Pennsylvania; died March 4, 1977 in San Diego, San Diego County, California
  • Anna (Narish) Staninas — born about 1900 in Scranton, Pennsylvania; death date and location unknown

On the 1930 United States census for Joseph Thomas Narish, who is living in Akron, Summit County, Ohio — he indicates that the family left Russia and immigrated to America in 1890. In the same census, his brother Anthony states 1891. We have not been able to determine what port they came through. (2)

Their New Life in The United States

Scranton, Pennsylvania, circa early 1900s.

The family settled in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, and our history continues with Joseph Thomas Narusch.

In 1903, Joseph is working as a brakeman for the railroads. Then in 1904, he is working in the same city as a bartender at the M P Narusch Saloon, likely owned by his father. Over the years, the general occupation of Joseph was related to working for the railroads.

Michael P Narusch, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania,  U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995, (ancestry.com).

In 1906, Joseph was living in Meadville, Crawford County, Pennsylvania, not far from the Ohio state line. On July 17, 1906, Joseph Narusch and Janet J. Klinginsmith were married in Meadville. Janette was from the town of Orangeville, Trumbull County, Ohio – which is on the Ohio / Pennsylvania state line. (We don’t know why her surname is written as Klinginsmith on the wedding document. Her family name is Klinesmith. If you examine their wedding certificate carefully, there is one consistent style of handwriting throughout. Perhaps someone was filling it out for them? More likely, Joseph and Janette hadn’t the ability to read and write. Being reliant on others, perhaps it didn’t occur to them to verify her name?)

Soon, Janette was expecting a baby. Unfortunately, they had an unnamed child who died from premature birth on April 1, 1907. In the 1910 Census, they are living with Janet’s parents in Hartford, Trumbull County, Ohio, not far from Orangeville. “Railroad” is listed as his occupation. In 1912, he is back in Meadville and working as a brakeman for the railroad. On June 23, 1913, having been married for seven years, Joseph and Janet (Klinesmith) Narusch were divorced in Mercer County, Pennsylvania.

Joseph Thomas Narusch, circa 1906 and Inez M. Cole, date unknown.

In 1914, Joseph was working on the railroad in Corry, Erie County, Pennsylvania. We do not know when or where he met his future wife Inez M. Cole, but we do have a record of their marriage. Joseph and Inez M. Cole were married on May 23, 1914 in Jamestown, Chautauqua, New York. Inez was the daughter of Frank Kiser Cole and Maude (Hurlburt) Cole. (3)

Frank Kiser Cole and Maude Hurlbert, of the Cole Family

Frank Kiser Cole, was born on November 6, 1863 in Mina, Chautauqua County, New York. On the 1865 New York State census, the Cole family is living in the same town. Frank’s father was Elisha Cole, who was born in 1824 in Herkimer County, New York. His mother, Lucy A. Bailey was born in 1827 in Chautauqua County, New York. There are six children listed on the 1865 census: William, age 17; James, age 13; Emily, age 11; Ida, age 6; Eva, age 4 and Frank, age one. Fifteen years later on the 1880 United States Census all of the children, except the eldest William, are still living at home. Frank is 16 years old and is listed as going to school.

1882 Bird’s eye view of the village of Jamestown, Chautauqua County, New York. Drawn by H. Brosius & A. F. Poole. Beck & Pauli, lithographers.

On the 1880 census, the Hurlbert family is living in Corry, Erie County, Pennsylvania and Maude Herlbert is 10 years old. She was born in July 1870. Her father is William Hurlbert, whose occupation is listed as a molder. (From the website, Family Tree Researcher, Dictionary of Old Occupations: “Moulder: a person who carved stone, a skilled occupation. The occupational term evolved to include casting iron”). He was 42 years old, born about 1838 in Canada, as were both of his parents. Maude’s mother is Mary (maiden name unknown) Hurlbert. Mary was 27 years old, born about 1853 in Pennsylvania. She indicates that her father was also born in Pennsylvania and her mother was born in New York. Other information about her parents is unknown. On this census we learn there is a 15 years age difference between William and Mary Hurlbert. Given that Maude was 10 years old in 1880, her mother would have been about 17 and her father 32 when she was born. Also listed on the census are two additional children: Claud(e) age 8, born 1872, and Pearl age one, born 1889.

Frank Kiser Cole, age 24 married Maude Hurlbert, age 18 on November 1, 1888 in Jamestown, Chautauqua, New York. Their first child, Hazel Irene Cole was born in 1889, and died in 1892. Their son, Ray F., was born in 1891, and died in 1918 at age 27, from the Spanish flu epidemic. Their second daughter was born in 1893, and they named her Irene Hazel, perhaps in honor of her sister. The last child born into this family is Inez M. Cole, born on May 5, 1895. 

On October 31, 1900 Inez’s mother, Maude (Hurlbert) Cole, died age 30. Her cause of death is unknown. Frank Cole was now widowed with three young children. Three years later, on September 2, 1903, he married Marjorie E. Johnston, of Harrisburg, Brant County, Ontario, Canada. They were married in Jamestown, New York.

Frank Kiser Cole, circa 1888.

Frank and Marjorie (Johnston) Cole were married for a truly short time. On April 20, 1904, Frank Kiser Cole, age 40, died of gastroenteritis. Married for less than a year, Marjorie Cole was now raising her step-children alone. In 1914, when Inez married Joseph Narusch, she named Marjorie as her mother on their marriage certificate. It is quite possible that she barely remembered her birth mother, Maude (Hurlbert) Cole. However, in 1943 on the Social Security Application & Claims Index, Inez (Cole) Narusch’s mother is listed as Maude Hurlbert.

In 1919, Marjorie (Johnston) Cole went on to marry Henry Dallenbach. (4)

The Nine Children of Joseph and Inez (Cole) Narusch

Joseph and Inez had a very large family, many of them eventually settled in the Ohio, but one son went to live as far away as Alaska. The son who carries the Narusch line forward in this narrative is: Thomas Joseph Narusch.

Thomas Joseph Narusch, circa 1938.
  • Thomas Joseph Narusch was born on Nov. 20, 1914 in Corry, Erie County, Pennsylvania He died on September 27, 1972 in Chardon, Geauga, Ohio. He was married to Mary Schott. Thomas and Mary are buried in the All Souls Cemetery in Chardon, Geauga County, Ohio.
  • Francis “Frank” Joseph Narusch was born on March 6, 1916 in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania. He died on May 2, 1966 in Alaska. He was married to Valaria E. Lashinski.
  • Joseph Narusch was born on May 12, 1917 in Akron, Summit County, Ohio. He died on November 5, 1918 in Akron, Ohio, age 1.5 years old. His cause of death was from bronchial pneumonia, as a consequence of having had the flu. The timing of his death coincides with the 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic.
  • Anna Narusch was born in 1918 in Akron, Ohio. She died on January 27, 1923 in Akron, at age 4. She should be listed on the 1920 Census, but we cannot locate a 1920 Census record for Joseph and Inez Narusch.
  • Michael John Joseph Narusch was born on October 2, 1921 in Akron, Ohio. He died on January 19, 1988 in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County,  Ohio. He was married to Doris Ann McDaniels. Michael and Doris are buried in All Souls Cemetery in Chardon, Ohio.
  • Paul W. Narusch was born on November 7, 1924 in Akron, Ohio. He died on January 30, 1998 in Akron, Ohio. He was married to Marilyn J. Vereshack.
  • James Thomas Narusch was born on July 16, 1926 in Akron, Ohio. He died on October 12, 1977 in Painesville, Lake County, Ohio. He was married to Beverly J. Shook. James and Beverly are buried in All Souls Cemetery in Chardon, Ohio.
  • Eva Mae (Narusch) Shook Stahl was born on December 16, 1927 (likely) in Akron, Ohio. She was married to Donald C. Shook, brother of Beverly Shook, who was married to James Narusch. She was also married to David T. Stahl. Eva Mae died in 2015, location unknown.
  • Mary Helen (Narusch) Allshouse was born on April 13, 1929 in Akron, Ohio. She died on January 3, 1990 in Calaveras County, California. She was married to James Allshouse. (5)

Joseph and Inez Build a Life Together in Akron, Ohio

In 1918, Joseph and Inez Narusch were living at 532 Spalding Ave, Akron, Summit County, Ohio. On his WW I Draft Registration Card, he identifies himself as a Brakeman for the Erie Railroad. He is 37 years old, described as tall, slender, with brown eyes, and dark brown hair. 

The United States established diplomatic relations with Lithuania on July 28, 1922. A poster from Lithuania celebrating the recognition of Lithuania by the United States.

Many Lithuanians, who, as part of a global diaspora from Europe, relocated as immigrants to the Akron area. “In 1920 the top immigrant groups in Akron were Germans, Hungarians, Austrians, and Russians… The immigrants during this period formed social organizations, clubs, and churches.  They settled in ethnic neighborhoods, often near the booming rubber factories that were giving Akron its claim to fame as the “Rubber Capital of the World.”  There was a Polish-American club on Glenwood Avenue, and Hungarian and German Clubs on Grant Street.  Many of these clubs and organizations still exist.  The immigrants also held picnics, parades and other cultural affairs to celebrate their cultural heritages. Most of the immigrants of the period eventually moved out of these ethnic areas by the second generation.”

Most of the information we have been able to learn from the family comes from census material. Throughout the history of the census, the questions asked can vary from one decade to the next. The 1930 census offers the most information about Joseph Narusch’s background. In this census he tells us that he immigrated to the United States in 1890. (His brother Anthony states it was 1891.) He would have been nine years old. It is fair to assume that he came to the United States with his parents, and perhaps some siblings, even though we have been unable to confirm, with documentation, when and where they immigrated. The census states that he was a naturalized citizen by 1930.

The 1930 census further tells us that the family still lived in Akron, and that Joseph owned his home which was valued at $4000. One of the questions asked was “Is there a Radio Set in the home”? [This question was asked to learn how many homes had electricity in 1930]. They reported no. At that time television was unavailable, so the radio was the major form of communication. He reports his, and his parents, place of birth as Lithuania. They spoke Lithuanian at home before they came to the United States. Joseph’s occupation is as an engineer for the Quaker Oats Company. He most likely transported Quaker Oats products, or materials to make the products, by train. There are seven surviving children living at home. Two of the children had died: Joseph in 1918, Anna in 1922.

 In the 1940 Census, the family continues to live in Akron and five of the children are still living at home. The oldest two brothers, Thomas and Francis Narusch, are located on other 1940 census. New information in this census tells us that Joseph attended school through 5th grade and Inez went through 7th grade. In this census, Joseph is 58 and does not list an occupation. He is selected for supplementary questioning and he lists his “usual occupation” as a steam engineer for the Quaker Oats Rubber Company.

Front page of the Akron Beacon Journal newspaper, December 8, 1941.

America declared war on December 8, 1941 after Japan attacked the United States Navy in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii territory. In 1942, Joseph registers for the Draft for WW II. He is 61 years old. It was very patriotic to register and enlist in the armed services. Several of his sons served in WW II. There is no evidence that Joseph Narusch actually joined one of the services.

Inez (Cole) Narusch died May 5, 1944 in Akron, Ohio of a cerebral hemorrhage due to cardio-vascular and renal disease. She is buried in Holy Cross Cemetery. Akron, Ohio. Joseph Thomas Narusch died on August 24, 1954 in Akron, Ohio. He is also buried in Holy Cross Cemetery. We were unable to locate his death certificate. (6)

Thomas Joseph — The Oldest Narusch Son, Marries Mary Schott

When Thomas was 23, and his bride Mary was 20, they married on January 4, 1938, in Akron, Ohio.

Marriage record for Thomas Joseph Narusch and Mary Schott. Photocopy provided courtesy of their granddaughter, Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham.

Mary was born on February 23, 1917 in Akron, Ohio to John and Mary (Muck) Schott. Her birth name is Marie. She grew up in a blended family with three step-brothers: Harry, George, and John Muth. At age 94, Mary died on September 6, 2011, while living in a Long Term Care home in Parma, Ohio.

Top row, left: Thomas and Mary Naurusch with son Tommy, circa 1945.
Center: Thomas and Mary, circa 1938. Right: Mary, Thomas, son Tommy, daughter Marjorie, Mary and Henry Muth, with Harry Muth behind. Bottom row, left: Inez M. (Cole) Narusch and Joseph Thomas Narusch, circa 1914. Right: Inez and Joseph Thomas, circa 1942.

After their marriage, Thomas and Mary lived in Shaker Heights, Ohio. On the 1940 Census they are living with the Athel Wood family. Mr. Wood was the general manager of the Cleveland Slag Manufacturing Company. He and his wife, Alice Wood, had three children ages 12, 4, and 11 months. Mary is listed as a servant in the Wood home where she (most probably) helped with the children. Thomas Narusch is listed as a fireman at the same slag manufacturing company where Mr. Wood worked. The census identifies them as high school graduates. Thomas’s salary was $1200 and Mary’s was $300. While they were living in Shaker Heights, Thomas registered for the World War II draft. 

They moved back to Akron where on April 7, 1942 their daughter, Marjorie Ann Narusch was born. Their son, Thomas Michael Narusch was born on April 21, 1945. At age 14 Thomas Joseph Narusch died of leukemia on February 29, 1960.  He is buried in All Souls Cemetery, Chardon, Geauga County, Ohio.

At some point the family moved to Newbury, Ohio where Marge and Tommy attended Newbury School. 

Marge graduated from Newbury High School in 1959 and was married on October 28, 1961 to John Alfred Bond. John was born on December 18, 1940 in Bedford, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, to Clarence Arthur “Art” Peterman Jr., and Marguerite (Gore) Peterman. After Art and Marguerite divorced, John was adopted by Marguerite’s second husband Dean Phillip Bond. (See The Bond Line, A Narrative — Seven).

Four generations together: Foreground: Marjorie Ann (Narusch) Bond, John Alfred Bond, Second row, left: Mary (Schott) Narusch, Thomas Narusch, Mary (Muck) Muth Schall, holding Linda Christine Bond, Betty (Hines) Peterman Lemr, holding Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham, Frank Lemr, circa December 1963. Photograph provided courtesy of their great-granddaughter Heidi Louise (Bond) Lahammer

On November 29, 1977, John and Marge Bond were divorced in Geauga County, Ohio. Marjorie Ann (Narusch) Bond passed away on April 25, 2022 from renal failure. She is buried at All Souls Cemetery in Chardon, Ohio. (7)

John Alfred Bond and Marjorie Ann (Narusch) Bond had five children:

  • Linda Christine Bond, born 1962
  • Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham, born 1963
  • Heidi Louise (Bond) Lahammer, born 1964
  • Holly Annette (Bond) Territ Bond, born 1967
  • John Patrick Bond, born 1970

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania

(1) — four records

Annals of Quedlinburg (for the opening image)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annals_of_Quedlinburg

History of Lithuania (adapted text)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Lithuania

Grand Duchy of Lithuania (for map)
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Grand_Duchy_of_Lithuania

Szlachta (for image)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szlachta

Enter the Narusch Family

(2) — fourteen records

Vil News, The Voice of International Lithuania
Hordes of Lithuanians came to Pennsylvania to work in coal mines
http://vilnews.com/2012-04-12858

The Narusch Family Tree
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/150702081/family/familyview?cfpid=152000068888

Micheal P Narish
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1971

1927 > 051001-054000
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/5164/images/42342_649063_0666-01575?pId=484386
Digital page: 1575/3278

Anna Narish
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates

1939 > 098001-101000
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/5164/images/42342_647680_0939-00575?pId=4014482
Digital page: 575/3649

Anthony Narish, date unknown

Anthony Narish
in the 1930 United States Federal Census

Pennsylvania > Lackawanna > Scranton > District 0008
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/52138255:6224?tid=&pid=&queryId=5f24940385a55a4f945ed36dd8024397&_phsrc=TXf2&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 17B, Digital page: 28/31, Entries 57 through 59.
Note: This census indicates that the family immigrated to the United States in 1891.
and [death date] here:
Anthony P. Narish Narusch
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/155396097:60525?tid=&pid=&queryId=4d449941417980af5071dc1ca41f0bdd&_phsrc=TXf7&_phstart=successSource

William Narish, date unknown

William Narish
in the Texas, U.S., Death Certificates, 1903-1982

Bexar > 1926 > Jan-Mar
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/30205817:2272?tid=&pid=&queryId=dd284fdcb788b080c1a46cac7928866e&_phsrc=TXf9&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 691/1068
Note: This record also provides his birthdate and location.

Peter Narish, date unknown

Peter Narish
in the 1930 United States Federal Census

Illinois > Cook > Chicago (Districts 251-500) > District 0384
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/104275717:6224?tid=&pid=&queryId=11055ce75a7103968159cdb3a772fa12&_phsrc=TXf13&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 15A, Digital page: 28/58, Entries 45 through 50.
Note: At age 42, he reports being born (1888) in Lithuania (Russia), but is incorrect in indicating that his family immigrated to the United States in 1910.

Effie Kerchowskas
in the 1930 United States Federal Census

Pennsylvania > Lackawanna > Scranton > District 0006
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/52108096:6224
Book page: 44A, Digital page: 65/75, Entries 14 through 17.
and here:
Eve/Effie Narush
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/159144999/person/192084084375/facts

Paul Narish, date unknown

Paul Narish
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., World War I Veterans Service and Compensation Files, 1917-1919, 1934-1948

Navy > Mutchler, Arthur F – Norstedt, Eric O (532)
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/60884/images/41744_2421406272_1138-00718?pId=503795
Digital page: 781/3441
and [death date] here:
Paul Narish
in the California, U.S., Death Index, 1940-1997
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/5278008:5180?ssrc=pt&tid=36197115&pid=112373793018

Frank C Narish
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1971

1966 > 037051-039900
Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1968 for Frank C. Narish
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/5164/images/48221_1421012671_0048-00226?treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&_gl=1*1uzf1l7*_ga*Njg3OTM4ODY1LjE2NTE1MzY2OTc.*_ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTc5MTYxOS45LjEuMTY1MTc5MTkxNS4w&_ga=2.223918616.2095495925.1651536697-687938865.1651536697&pId=14896932
Digital page: 226/2874
Note: This document records his birth date and his mother Anna’s maiden name as “Stankevitch”.

Anna Staninas
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Marriages, 1852-1968

Lackawanna > Marriage license dockets, [vol. 280-281], 2697-3091 — 1941; [vol. 282-284], 1-1283 — 1942
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/903023116:61381?tid=&pid=&queryId=96042539351939f9f64e30f6d77172ca&_phsrc=Ydb8&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 352/870
Note: This record provides her birth year and his mother Anna’s maiden name as “Stankiewicz”.

Their New Life in The United States

(3) — nine records

History of the Lackawanna Valley (for panoramic photo image)
https://www.lackawannapagenweb.com/history/scranton.html

Joseph T. Narusch 1906 marriage to Janet J. Klinginsmith, (her actual name is Janette Kleinsmith), in Pennsylvania, U.S., Marriages, 1852-1968 (right page) https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2013682:61381?tid=&pid=&queryId=717d9b9cbc23fe45b16114d921741578&_phsrc=FCW2&_phstart=successSource

Janette Narwsch
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Birth Certificates, 1906-1915

1907 > All > 036751-039750
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2280421:60484?tid=&pid=&queryId=c9085c57bc82ec240bb2530ac3aae505&_phsrc=uZJ2&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 4342/4715
Note: Birth certificate for unnamed baby boy
and [death date] here:
Janette Kleinsmith 
in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1968

1907 > 034501-038170
https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=5164&h=750079927&tid=&pid=&queryId=c9085c57bc82ec240bb2530ac3aae505&usePUB=true&_phsrc=uZJ1&_phstart=successSource&_gl=11ijdwuz_gaNjg3OTM4ODY1LjE2NTE1MzY2OTc._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTYzNzIyNC41LjEuMTY1MTYzODM3My4w
Digital page: 3376/3890

Joseph R Narusch
in the 1910 United States Federal Census

Ohio > Trumbull > Hartford > District 0214
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/22608399:7884?tid=&pid=&queryId=717d9b9cbc23fe45b16114d921741578&_phsrc=LbP7&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 12A , Digital page: 23/31, Entry lines 34 through 38.

Joseph Narusch
in the 1912 Meadville, Pennsylvania

U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995
Pennsylvania > Meadville > 1912 > Meadville, Pennsylvania, City Directory, 1912
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/180506032:2469?tid=&pid=&queryId=717d9b9cbc23fe45b16114d921741578&_phsrc=LbP2&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 216, Digital page: 110/166, Left page, near the bottom.

Joseph T Narusch
in the New York, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1847-1849, 1907-1936

Chautauqua > 1911-1940
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/963053:61377?tid=&pid=&queryId=a84882a96b3053436357aae03a13c04c&_phsrc=sPA2&_phstart=successSource
Digital page:1130/1437
Note: This is his second marriage after a divorce. We are able to determine from this document, that Joseph was divorced from his first wife Janette Kleinsmith in Mercer County, Pennsylvania on June 23, 1913.
and here:
Joseph T Narusch
in the New York, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1847-1849, 1907-1936

Chautauqua > 1910-1918
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61377/images/TH-1-159371-34794-74?pId=1050096549
Book page: 538, Digital page: 249/518, Left page, bottom, Entry #2690.
and here:
Joseph T Narusch
in the New York, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1847-1849, 1907-1936

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/963054:61377?tid=&pid=&queryId=baa60fdeda27aac55a63718e760fe758&_phsrc=DdN4&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 1093/1437

Frank Kiser Cole and Maude Hurlbert, of the Cole Family

(4) — eightteen records

World Maps Online
Historic Map – Jamestown, NY – 1882
https://www.worldmapsonline.com/historic-map-jamestown-ny-1882/

Frank Cole
in the New York, U.S., state census, 1865

Chautauqua > Mina
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/886071:7218
Book page: 15, Digital page: 8/34, Entries 18 through 25, Right page, center.

Frank Cole
in the 1880 United States Federal Census

New York > Chautauqua > Ellicott > 052
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/38319357:6742
Book page: 4, Digital page: 4/35, Left page top, Entries 1 through 7.

Maude Hurlbert 
in the New York State, Marriage Index, 1881-1967

1888 > Marriage
https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=61632&h=3541699&tid=&pid=&queryId=7e99cea473447476ee9101840e167cea&usePUB=true&_phsrc=VmU19&_phstart=successSource&_gl=11gf0wo5_gaNDE5MDU3MDQxLjE2NTE4MDM1NDM._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTc5MTYxOS45LjEuMTY1MTgxMzE4MS4w
Book page: 352, Digital page: 358/818, Left column, entry 2 under Hurlbert.

Maude Hurbbert
in the 1880 United States Federal Census

Pennsylvania > Erie > Corry > 142
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/37313828:6742
Book page: 6, Digital page: 6/58, Left page, entries 15 through 19.
Note: This census determines her birth year.

Family Researcher
Dictionary of Old Occupations
Definitions of jobs Monger – Mustarder > Moulder
https://www.familyresearcher.co.uk/glossary/Dictionary-of-Old-Occupations-Index.html
Note:Moulder: earliest use was as a person who carved stone, a skilled occupation. The occupational term evolved to include casting iron. Is also a pottery industry term for a Presser.”

Hazel Irene Cole
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/233454599/hazel-irene-cole
Note: 1892 death information for daughter Hazel Irene Cole
and [death date] here:
Hazel Irene Cole
Death – New York, Church and Civil Deaths, 1797-1963

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9KT-226N
Digital page: 1072/2208

Ray F. Cole
Death – New York, Church and Civil Deaths, 1797-1963

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99KT-29L6
Digital page: 1234/1726
Note: On this certificate, Ray’s mother is listed as Maude Colburn Cole. We believe that this is an error, and that Colburn was not her middle name.

Irene Hazel Cole
Mentioned in the Record of Frederick S Propheter (Irene Hazel Cole’s Husband)

Marriage – New York, County Marriages, 1778-1848; 1908-1937
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9Q97-YS89-H37?i=354&cc=1618491
Digital page: 1459/1998
Note: This document informs us of her age, to infer her birth year.
and here:
Frederick S Prophetre
Marriage – New York, County Marriages, 1778-1848; 1908-1937

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FF5B-1FX
Book page: 620, Digital page: 354/566, Left page, left column, entry 1, #3096.

Frank K Cole
Census – United States, Census, 1900

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DZP6-DX?i=31&cc=1325221&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AMS6J-8XT
Book page: 60 A and 60B, Digital page: 60-61/199, Entries 48 through 52.
Note: This census starts at the bottom of the left page and continues at the top of the right page.

Maud L Cole 
in the New York, U.S., Death Index, 1852-1956

New York State Department of Health > 1900
https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=61535&h=314154&tid=&pid=&queryId=164292a3fd1905c654249f1b5fff6d99&usePUB=true&_phsrc=EhO2&_phstart=successSource&_gl=11xr46xt_gaNTEyODc0Nzk4LjE2NTE4MjAwNTk._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTgyMDA1OC4xLjEuMTY1MTgyMDIwNC4w
Book page: 156 (very faint), Digital page: 159/592, Right column, entry 2. Certificate Number: 44399

Frank K. Cole
in the New York State, Marriage Index, 1881-1967

1903 > Marriage
https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=61632&h=5592763&tid=&pid=&queryId=99d8185cb2fc91c798c159b4b10feece&usePUB=true&_phsrc=nwP14&_phstart=successSource&_gl=1vxwn12_gaNzU5Mzc4MTEzLjE2NTE4NzA1MDI._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTg3MjU5Ny4yLjEuMTY1MTg3NzMwMC4w
Digital page: 180/1074, Left column, near bottom, entry 17687.
Note: For marriage to Marjorie E. Johnston.

Frank K. Cole
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/187857254:60525
and [death date] here:
Frank K. Cole
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/218240620/frank-k.-cole
and death certificate here:
Frank K. Cole
Death – New York, Church and Civil Deaths, 1797-1963

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FD1Q-J3V
Digital page: 1594/2520

Marjorie Johnston Cole
in the New York, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1847-1849, 1907-19
Chautauqua > 1917-1919

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/901047836:61377?tid=&pid=&queryId=74f694709cb40e81221953e7c768b1d0&_phsrc=nwP13&_phstart=successSource
533/2350
Note: For her marriage Henry Dallenbach.

The Nine Children of Joseph and Inez Narusch

(5) — twenty one records

Thomas Joseph Narusch, 1914 certificate of birth, (1947 duplicate). Photocopy provided courtesy of his granddaughter, Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham.

Thomas Joseph Narusch
1914 Certificate of birth
(above)
Corry, Erie County, Pennsylvania

Thomas Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2022

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/756789:5763?tid=&pid=&queryId=01cfe1b7cdb0ea3a480d0b4c3692a8fd&_phsrc=biy1&_phstart=successSource

Thomas Joseph Narusch, 1973 obituary. Photocopy provided courtesy of his granddaughter, Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham.
Francis “Frank” Narusch, date unknown.

Frank Joseph Narusch
in the U.S., World War II Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947

Pennsylvania > Nartowicz-Natale > Nartowicz, Frank-Natale, Domenico
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/2238/records/7723407?tid=&pid=&queryId=7e23591c-62a5-4115-aee1-dfc82d85c041&_phsrc=KlP5&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 13/2003
Note: For his birth date.
and [death date] here:
Frank J. Narusch
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/28693331:60525?ssrc=pt&tid=4790125&pid=112234828268
and his obituary here:
Newspaper clipping [from the]
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner,
Frank J Narusch 2 May 1966 Obit
https://www.ancestry.com/mediaui-viewer/tree/4790125/person/112234828268/media/18e97695-4e21-4d11-b7c2-f0d468da2e4c?_phsrc=DdN5&_phstart=successSource

Joseph Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/880442:3146?tid=&pid=&queryId=388f92b563f832e1ecd724816348f911&_phsrc=Qtc3&_phstart=successSource
Note: Certificate #1917067375
and [death date] here:
Joseph Narusch
Death – Ohio, Deaths, 1908-1953

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X66Z-MZ9
Digital page: 199/3291
Note: His death could be related to the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic?

Anna Narusch
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/23972759/person/13042086659/facts?_phsrc=Qtc9&_phstart=successSource
Note: For 1918 birth reference.

Anna Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2022

N
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/5406861:5763?ssrc=pt&tid=23972759&pid=13042086659
Book page: 6127, Digital page: 426/972, Entry about 2/3’s down the page and reads as follows: 77 COUNTY SUMMIT NARUSH ANNA
Note: It is reported among the family that Anna died from burns due to a fire.

Michael J. Narusch, date unknown

Michael John Joseph Narusch
in the U.S., World War II Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947

Ohio > Molarchik-Newell > Nanney, Lawrence-Nashe, Grady
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/200966930:2238?tid=&pid=&queryId=91f35abe0a2203f12b6254d27060ba20&_phsrc=Qtc16&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 1421/2213
and [death date] here:
Michael J Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2018

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1704527:5763?tid=&pid=&queryId=91f35abe0a2203f12b6254d27060ba20&_phsrc=Qtc13&_phstart=successSource
and here:
Michael J Narusch
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/133952853:60525?tid=&pid=&queryId=bbdacf6f612164d39da9479fcd16cbc1&_phsrc=Qtc15&_phstart=successSource
and here:
Michael J Narusch
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/165899123/michael-j-narusch

Paul William Narusch, date unknown

Paul W Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2022

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2340494:5763?ssrc=pt&tid=23972759&pid=1451867834

James Thomas Narusch, date unknown

James Narusch
in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014

https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=3693&h=44764536&ssrc=pt&tid=23972759&pid=1451867835&_gl=1ywup9m_gaNzU5Mzc4MTEzLjE2NTE4NzA1MDI._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1MTg5MTM2My4zLjEuMTY1MTg5ODUwMS4w
and [death date] here:
James Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2022

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1062827:5763?ssrc=pt&tid=23972759&pid=1451867835

Eva Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1906492:3146
and [death date] here:
Eva Mae Stahl
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/197619813:60525
and [death date] here:
Eva Mae Narusch Stahl
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/228118242/eva-mae-stahl

Mary Ann Narusch, date unknown

Mary Helen Allshouse
in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/45016457:60525
and
Mary Helen Narusch Allshouse
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/95117958/mary-helen-allshouse

Joseph and Inez Build a Life Together in Akron, Ohio

(6) — ___ records

Lithuania—United States relations (for the Lithuanian poster image)
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Lithuania–United_States_relations

Joseph Thomas Narusch in 
U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1802744:6482?tid=&pid=&queryId=c835d4a80e38cc46bc981c300fcd5655&_phsrc=LbP18&_phstart=successSource

Derived from: Black, White & Beyond, An Interactive History, Immigration & Migration In The Industrial Age 1870-1930 https://learn.uakron.edu/beyond/industrialage.htm

Joseph T Narusch in the
1930 United States Federal Census, entries 22 through 30 https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/69115568:6224?tid=&pid=&queryId=f44b681d1d6d1b8bb2d459925a4cb28c&_phsrc=XSp1&_phstart=successSource

Joseph T Narusch in the 1940 United States Federal Census, entries 14 through 20 and supplemental questions at the bottom of the page (link entry 14)
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/30863556:2442?tid=&pid=&queryId=7e3237663b5668ebde467f63e039cd06&_phsrc=XSp4&_phstart=successSource

Joseph Thomas Narusch in U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1802744:6482?tid=&pid=&queryId=c835d4a80e38cc46bc981c300fcd5655&_phsrc=LbP18&_phstart=successSource

Joseph Thomas Narusch in U.S., World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942 https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/8248533:1002?tid=&pid=&queryId=717d9b9cbc23fe45b16114d921741578&_phsrc=LbP1&_phstart=successSource

Joseph T. Narusch in the U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/197619751:60525?tid=&pid=&queryId=717d9b9cbc23fe45b16114d921741578&_phsrc=LbP10&_phstart=successSource

Inez M. (Cole) Narusch 1944 death certificate:

Inez M. (Cole) Narusch, 1944 death certificate. Photocopy provided courtesy of her great-granddaughter, Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham.

Thomas Joseph — The Oldest Narusch Son, Marries Mary Schott

(7) — thirteen records

Mary Schott, 1917 birth registration. Photocopy provided courtesy of her granddaughter, Catherine Marie (Bond) Brigham.

Marie Schott
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-1998

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/613877:3146
Note: Certificate #1917015887

Mary Mnarusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2022
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/9252160:5763

Mary Muth
in the 1930 United States Federal Census

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6224/images/4661198_00191?pId=69013255
Note: For “She grew up in a blended family with three step-brothers…”

Athel Wood
in the 1940 United States Federal Census

Ohio > Cuyahoga > Shaker Heights > 18-2781940
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/32797641:2442?tid=&pid=&queryId=e7711eac0668f3d13ce7749b2b891f23&_phsrc=lYM20&_phstart=successSource
Note: For their location in 1940, within their employer’s home.

Thomas M Narusch
in the Ohio, U.S., Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2018

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2655782:5763?_phsrc=lYM1&_phstart=successSource&gsfn=Thomas+M&gsln=Narusch&ml_rpos=1&queryId=cc3d108309684efb4677ef1734cf0512
Note: The Ohio Death Records correctly give the date of death as February 29, 1960.
and
Thomas M Narusch
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/98402928/thomas-narusch
Note: The Find a Grave website has it incorrectly dated as March 29, 1960.

Thomas Joseph Narusch in the
U.S., World War II Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947

Ohio > Molarchik-Newell > Nanney, Lawrence-Nashe, Grady
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/200967306:2238?tid=&pid=&queryId=cf7cef629f756b8563614324f89543e6&_phsrc=QgS1&_phstart=successSource

Marjorie Ann (Narusch) Bond, date unknown.
Transcribed text from Marjorie Ann Bond obituary, published in 2022,
in the Geauga CountyMaple Leaf newspaper.

Marjorie Ann Bond [obituary]
https://www.geaugamapleleaf.com/obituaries/marjorie-ann-bond/?fbclid=IwAR0lUuri9IOeszI7gfZ67biIo1yvaA1mTMEWuwlOuBY_16LWgynHnjiOonM

The following four documents are related to the adoption of John Alfred (Peterman) Bond by Dean Phillip Bond in 1948. The original documents were lost and in 1985, duplicate documents were sourced.

June 1985, Letter from Daniel Earl Bond to Clarence Arthur Peterman, Jr. requesting cooperation in providing evidence for adoption(s) of Jo Ann (Peterman) Bond by Dean Phillip Bond. (Family document).
1985 Telephone notes from Daniel Earl Bond’s correspondence with Clarence Arthur Peterman, Jr. Note: “She said she thinks he decided not to execute the form.”
Authorization form for adoption document duplicate.
John Alfred Bond adoption form (duplicate).

Linda Bond
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/8142348:3146?tid=&pid=&queryId=b355c7fa7c6c160905eaab17d772b14f&_phsrc=QgS20&_phstart=successSource
Note: Certificate #1962074311

Catherine Marie Bond
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/3146/records/13776144
Note: Certificate #1963072820

Heidi Louise Bond
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/3146/records/9956680
Note: Certificate #1964161995

Holly Annette Bond
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003

https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/3146/records/9562710
Note: Certificate #1967063375

John Patrick Bond
in the Ohio, U.S., Birth Index, 1908-2003
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/3146/records/8274601
Note: Certificate #1970004520

_________________________

Something to share…
In a blog about family genealogy, it is not often that one encounters something so personal about a family member. After she had passed on, I wrote a letter to the children of my former sister-in-law Marjorie Ann (Narusch) Bond. I have decided to share it for posterity, because it captures many of the simple details and nuances we pass through in Life, and these things don’t normally appear in a blog of this kind. (There are four pages which follow).

Thomas