Tuesday, August 31, 2010

In Memoriam: James Victor Knowlton 1937 - 2010

















James Victor Knowlton
August 30, 1937 Mt. Clemens, MI -
August 25, 2010 Twin Lake, MI

It is with heavy hearts that my mother and I and the rest of the Knowlton family mourn the loss of James Victor Knowlton, beloved uncle, brother, husband, father and grandfather, who passed away on August 25, 2010 at his home in Twin Lake, MI of a brain tumor. Jim was one of the kindest and most generous people to ever walk this earth, and he gave selflessly of himself to help others throughout his entire life to its untimely end. I have countless fond memories of Jim, as does everyone who was fortunate enough to know him, and he will be sorely missed by all.

His full obituary in the Muskegon Chronicle may be read here:
http://obits.mlive.com/obituaries/muskegon/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=144994966

In honor of his remarkable life, I intend to develop this genealogy blog over the ensuing months and years into the James Victor Knowlton Memorial Virtual Museum of the Knowlton Family, which shall serve as an online repository and exhibition space for all of our genealogical research, as well as various family images and artifacts.












Jim as a younger man with a hefty stringer of trout. Fishing was one of Jim's many outdoor passions and the one I shared the most with him.













Jim with me in the summer of 2006 with two of a large haul of smallmouth bass at my uncle Leslie Laverne Knowlton's cottage on Big Bear Lake, Lewiston, MI. One of the many, yet far too few, wonderful fishing excursions we had together. A large family fish fry ensued shortly after this photo was taken.


Thursday, August 12, 2010

Report from Ashtabula Co., Ohio

My mother and I just got back from our trip to Ashtabula County, Ohio, where we conducted research and attended a party for the 50th wedding anniversary of my uncle and my mother's brother Leslie Laverne Knowlton and his wife Karen Hunsley Knowlton in nearby Bratenahl, Cuyahoga County. Although we were unable to locate any further information regarding the seemingly even more mysterious Benjamin Knowlton, we did locate records of Robert McFall having lived in Harpersfield Township, who is the man in whose home Benjamin supposedly died. We even located the cemetery in which Mr. McFall and his wife are buried, but their tombstones seem to no longer exist. We did locate marriage records, graves and information about numerous Knowltons in the area, particularly in Morgan Township, but none seem directly related to us, instead having descended from a different one of the original brothers (Thomas) and having migrated from Connecticut.

















My mother, Jeanne Anne Knowlton, and her brother Leslie Laverne Knowlton at Les and his wife Karen Hunsley Knowlton's 50th wedding anniversary gala in Bratenahl, OH on August 7, 2010. Photo courtesy of Les's daughter Sarah Knowlton and used with permission of Mr. Knowlton.


Below are some of the tombstones we encountered in Ashtabula County.
















Stephen Knowlton (Actually Stephen Knowlton III). Descended from the Knowltons of East Haddam, CT. The seeming patriarch of the Ashtabula County Knowltons.

















Deidamia Chubb Knowlton, wife of Stephen. Lived to the age of 97 years.

















Berintha Knowlton, wife of George. We were unable to locate George's grave.

We encountered quite a few other Knowlton gravestones, but they were either too faint to be worth photographing or were overgrown with poison ivy.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Knowlton Cemetery Bedford, NY

While not containing Knowltons belonging to the line from which we are descended, the Knowlton Cemetery in Bedford, NY is where my mother and I started our genealogical research back in 2004. This past winter we revisited it and took new photos. Much to our surprise there was a new stone: Perry H. Knowlton who had died in 2007 and was the great great great grandson of Stephen and Phebe Knowlton, also buried in the cemetery.
















Stephen Knowlton.

















Phebe, wife of Stephen Knowlton.

















Elizabeth, Daughter of Stephen and Phebe.

















Robert Knowlton and wife Margaret.

















Alonzo S. Knowlton.

















James Knowlton.

















Perry H. Knowlton, great great great grandson of Stephen and Phebe.

















Sarah L. Knowlton.

















Ephraim Knowlton.

I do have photos of a few other stones from this cemetery but the names are completely illegible in the photos so I didn't see much point in posting them. More details on the ones that are up here will be added when I get them from my mother (birth/death dates, etc.).

Introduction

Hello everyone,

My name is Valinn Joseph Vincent Ranelli and I am the first and only son of Jeanne Anne Knowlton. If you know of me from my other blogs or from any other source, this one is NOT about chasing down rare insects, jumping out of boats onto irate snapping turtles, hanging off frozen sea cliffs in -20 degree temperatures photographing ducks, pulling deadly snakes from tiny crevices on perilous ledges or wrenching huge and ferocious (but usually tasty) fish from the waterways of Connecticut. No, this blog is about my mother and I tracing the history of our branch of the Knowlton family across North America (and digging up plenty of info. about other Knowltons along the way). In case you don't already know, all Knowltons in North America are descended from Captain William Knowlton of England and his three sons who landed in Nova Scotia, Canada in 1633. Captain William himself actually died on the voyage and was buried in Nova Scotia upon landing. His wife, Ann Elizabeth Smith and sons William, Thomas and John survived and began life in North America. They eventually settled in Essex County, Massachusetts, and from there the Knowltons spread out across North America. It is William, through his son Timothy, from which our line descends. Over the past three years, our research has focused primarily on the family of the rather mysterious Benjamin Knowlton, my mother's great great great grandfather, born in 1773 in Rowe, Massachusetts, as it is they who traveled across the country from New England and settled in Michigan, where my mother was born. Information about this family is quite spotty and hard to come by but what follows is a summary of what we know at this point.

Benjamin and his wife Betsey Grant had a huge family of 13 children, most of whom are said to have been born in New York, but for only a few of whom a birth town or county is listed (St. Lawrence Cty., Franklin Cty. and the town of Constable in Franklin Cty. are listed). However, according to Charles Henry Wright Stocking's monumental work "The History and Genealogy of the Knowltons of England and America" Benjamin lived for many years in the town of Le Roy, Genesee Cty., NY where he was a hotellier. It is therefore likely that many of the children without a birth county or town recorded but listed as born in NY probably were born in Le Roy. Almost all of the children are listed as having died in Ottawa Cty., MI and several have extant graves there. In the summer of 2009, my mother and I visited Le Roy and were unable to locate Benjamin's hotel. The biggest mystery about this family, however, is what happened after their time in Le Roy and what route did they travel to Michigan. Benjamin himself, according to Stocking, is said to have "finally disappeared," with his relatives having no knowledges of his location, but numerous sources state that he died in Ashtabula, Ohio and Stocking even notes that he died in the home of a man named Robert McFalls. Interestingly, his son John R. is listed by Stocking as having married a woman by the surname of McFalls, so it is likely that at least he also spent time in the Ashtabula area.

On August 4, 2010 (2 days from now), my mother and I are setting out for Ashtabula County, Ohio in an effort to solve some of these mysteries. Preliminary research has revealed many Knowltons historically present in the area, particularly in the town of Morgan, and we have also confirmed that a Robert McFall lived in the town of Harpersfield in 1840, around the time Benjamin probably died (his wife remarried in that year).

You may ask how we know we are descended from this family, and I will explain. My mother's great great grandfather, Charles A. Knowlton, is known from his age in census records to have been born in 1816. Benjamin's son Charles is the ONLY Charles Knowlton born in all of North America in the year 1816. This, combined with the fact that most of Benjamin's family ended up in Michigan allowed us to confirm them as our ancestors.