Saturday, January 5, 2013

Judson Cheney: Elysian Fields

Judson Cheney
Born: May 11, 1838, Hopkinton, St. Lawrence County, New York
Died: September 29, 1864, Chaffin Farm, Virginia
Relation to Author: 2nd Great Grand Uncle

When we last saw our hero, he was with the Army of the Potomac, running away from Richmond by way of the Seven Days Battles. The battles were done and the armies separate by July 4th and the Union army found itself in Harrison's Landing. On July 7th, President Lincoln reviewed the army there. If Judson was with his regiment that day, he would have seen the president. Kreutzer describes Lincoln this way:
Every one who has seen Mr. Lincoln has remarked the "dejected 'havior of his visage," the thoughtful cast of his countenance, recalling forcibly the picture of Don Quixote, the Knight of the Rueful Countenance. To us he appeared that day "drooping, woful, wan, like one forlorn, or crazed with care."
Kreutzer tells us that the colonel of the 98th forgot to instruct his men to cheer as Lincoln passed, so McClellan, who was riding behind Lincoln, had to remind them. Whereby the men overdid their cheer a bit to make up for the lapse.

While at Harrison's Landing, "Our quarters had never been so comfortable, and our duty on picket never so light," said Kreutzer. The army didn't stay long at Harrison's Landing - on August 4th McClellan was ordered to leave the Virginia peninsula. On August 17th, the army moved out. The hardest day of marching, at least for the 98th New York was the 19th - they marched 21 miles. Kreutzer he says it was the hottest hardest march they ever made. On August 22nd they arrived at Yorktown, where they 98th stayed, while much of the rest of the army boarded boats and moved back up the Potomac with plans to join Major General John Pope's army in northern Virginia.* 

Again, I'll let Kreutzer tell us about life at Yorktown:
On the high bluffs of the York, we have a splendid cam, we have rest and ease, the necessities and the luxuries of life. The river supplies us with fish and cansvas-backs and the best oysters. The markets of Fortress Monroe, Norfolk, and Baltimore are at our command. We have Northern papers and a daily mail. We say, "The lines have fallen to us in pleasant places, eat drink, and be merry." While we breathe, let us live.

...

The garrison remained at Yorktown until the 28th of December, and was engaged in drilling, leveling the old fortifications, and making forays into the enemy's country towards Fredericksburg. The object of these was to capture horeses, grain, stock, and to destroy some salt-works along the shore of the Chesapeake.

...
There sitting in our tents during the quiet, still days of August, we fancied that we heard in the air, along the ground, dull, heavy sounds coming from Pope's artillery fighting between Germantown, Sudley Springs, Gainesville, and Manassas junction, the battles of Bull-run, nearly one hundred miles away.
Although picket duty was said to be tough during the colder months, it was otherwise a relatively easy time for the NY 98th. As they leave on December 28th (150 years and 8 days ago), Kreutzer, ever the poet, says:
York River, Chesapeake bay, and Hampton Roads were like the Elysian Fields to us. Happy with every want supplied, on them we idling dreamed the autumnal days of 1862 away. Farewell happy field, where joy forever dwells: "In dreams, I revisit thy sea-beaten shore."
So Judson and the 98th say goodbye to relative peace and quiet at Yorktown and board a steamer for North Carolina.

Update:
One thing I really neglected to mention here is what Judson and his regiment missed while staying behind in Yorktown. The rest of the troops that were part of the penninsula campaign under McClellan - the Army of the Potomac - went back up the Chesapeake with the intention of joining Major General Pope in Virginia halfway between Richmond and Washington, DC.

During the rest of that summer and fall, those troops fought two major battles (and some it seems some should have participated in Second Manassas**), both really bad for the Union: Antietam (12,400 Union casualties, though a victory of sorts), and Fredericksburg (12,600 Union casualties). So while Judson was relaxing in the Elysian Fields, his fellow soldiers on the east coast were fighting in very bloody battles and losing. He was lucky.

But we know that his luck didn't last forever. By June of 1864 if not sooner, his regiment was back with the Army of the Potomac and participating in the major battles against General Lee's army of Northern Virginia. 



*An earlier version of this post had said Washington, DC (?). I hadn't made time to find out where the rest of the army had actually gone. 

** I published this update before realizing that McClellan's troops never made it in time to join Pope before Second Manassas.

I'll be honest, tracking the armies isn't as easy as I think it should be. I still am not quite sure where McClellan's troops went from the peninsula - Washington, DC? Alexandria, Virginia? Did they make it to the Rapahannock River? We do know that after Manassas, the Pope's army and McClellan's were joined and they moved north to meet Lee's invading army.

Monday, December 31, 2012

Meeting a New Relative

Mary Enright (married name Barry)
Born: About 1845, County Kerry, Ireland
Died: Unknown
Relation to Author: 2nd Great Grandmother

Michael Barry
Born: About 1839, County Kerry, Ireland
Died: Unknown
Relation to Author: 2nd Great Grandfather

One of my relatives - also a 2nd great grandson to Mary Enright and Michael Barry, which makes us 3rd cousins - found this blog while searching for his ancestors online. That alone made my day. But he also took the picture I had posted of Mary Enright and Michael Barry and made some restorations using PhotoShop. The improved picture is posted below. Enjoy the better coloring and quality.

So a special thank you to my 3rd cousin. And good to meet you!



Sunday, December 16, 2012

Remembering Nana

Elizabeth (Betty) Charlotte Paulus (married name Cheney)
Born: November 23, 1919, Roxbury, New Jersey
Died: December 16, 2009, Randolph, Morris County, New Jersey
Relation to Author: Grandmother (Nana)

Today is the third anniversary of Nana's death. To celebrate, I am posting the remarks of her son (my father) at her funeral. After the jump is her obituary. 
Elizabeth Charlotte Paulus was born November 23, 1919 in Kenvil, NJ in a house built by her father,  Frederick Paulus, who was a stovemaker / forger [molder]. Her mother Margaret Williams worked in textile mills and later at Picatinny. Both were 1st generation born to emigrants from Germany and Wales (respectively). Their families initially settled in Scranton then came to Dover. 

She was the baby of the family - her other siblings being Edna, Frederick, and Alvin. Her father died of pneumonia [editor's note: I believe it was silicosis] when she was 14. Her older siblings worked to help support the family. 

She married Bruce Cheney on May 23, 1943. Their first child was born with a congenital heart defect and lived only months. I arrived next followed by my brother. 

Everything revolved around the family. It seemed that almost every Sunday was dinner with the Nanas. And holidays were family time as well. Each Christmas day we made the rounds to see our Aunts, uncles and cousins. Summer was picnics- first at our grandmothers and later, after we moved to Mt Fern, given the size of our yard, we became host. I also remember trekking to family reunions in Scranton. 

Education: Betty returned to work to make sure the family could afford college [neither she nor Bruce attended any college.]

Grandkids- whom she adored and tried to spend as much time as possible in Warwick attending Church children’s choir and pageants, baseball and soccer games. She then followed them closely thru college and into their careers and thoroughly enjoyed their visits and getting to know their spouses.

In the last few years how she devoted herself to the care of her husband. [Bruce had dementia.]

Conclude with why we are here in this place [at First United Methodist Church in Dover, NJ] today. I believe that all of Mom’s virtues are the result of many influences in her life and outside her family this Church and the people that are and were a part of it were of utmost importance to her.



Sunday, December 2, 2012

Leila Horton Cooper

Leila Horton Cooper (married name Cheney)
Born: May 7, 1886, Mt. Hope, Rockaway Township, Morris County, NJ
Died: December 2, 1975, Dover, New Jersey
Relation to Author: Great Grandmother
Father of Bruce Judson Cheney

On this date in 1975, Leila H. Cheney passed away. She was 89 years old and had been living at the Lincoln Park Nursing Home. Her cause of death is listed as heart failure due to arteriosclerotic heart disease, or a "a narrowing of the small blood vessels that supply blood and oxygen to the heart".

Although she died a little more than two years too soon to meet her first great grandson, she did have a long life. She was born when Grover Cleveland was president and died during Gerald Ford's presidency, having witnessed 15 presidencies, including such monumental ones as Teddy Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Eisenhower, LBJ, and Nixon. She lived through World War I, the depression, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam and the civil rights and women's rights movement. In fact, she was born before women were allowed to vote and was 34 when the 19th amendment was passed.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Evelyn Ida Leary: A Picture to Remember

Evelyn Ida Leary
Born: February 13, 1914, North Lawrence, New York
Died: November 24, 1927, North Lawrence, New York
Relation to Author: Grand Aunt
Sister of Helen Leary (married name, Keenan)

Today is the 85th anniversary of the fire at the Leary farm. I have written two posts about the fire and also posted a picture of one of my relatives that died in the fire. Here is a picture of another victim - Evelyn. She was the oldest of the four young ones that died in the fire; she was 13 years old. The picture is from the same year - 1927.

It is a great picture - maybe a school picture, showing bright eyes and a hint of a great smile you know exists - and makes the tragedy all the more powerful to us looking back 85 years later. 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Ida Elizabeth Leary - Youth

Ida Elizabeth Barry (married name Leary)
Born: September 1, 1878, Brushton, Franklin County, NY
Died: January 7, 1981, St. Lawrence County, NY (Age 102)
Relation to Author: Great Grandmother

This is a great picture of Ida Leary - probably from some time in the mid-1890s. I love that we have this picture of her so young because most of the other pictures we have of her are much later in life. In the family picture at Helen and Hub's wedding she is 58. And then we have many pictures of her with her great grandchildren (including my brother, when she was 100).

But here we have Ida in her youth. Enjoy.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Joseph Eisenberg: Where Art Thou From?

Joseph Eisenberg
Born: 1875, Mizheric, near Vilna, Eastern Europe (Lithuania or Ukraine?)
Died: January 23, 1941, Brooklyn, NY
Relation to Author: Great Grandfather-in-Law

Family lore has it that Joseph Eisenberg is from Ukraine. But when I started looking for info about where exactly he is from, I've found that it is actually a bit of a mystery. Here is what we (I) know.

The 1930 and 1940 censuses list Russia as his place of birth and Russian as his native language.

A family history written by Meyer Eisenberg, son of Joseph Eisenberg, which mostly recounts oral history, only says that Joseph was born in "Mizheric, near Vilna, which had been part of Russia, then Poland." In my internet searches so far, I cannot find Mizheric on any maps, but there is a Vilna in present day Lithuania.

Also, the same family history says that Joseph Eisenberg spoke Lettish, which is a Latvian language (in addition to many other languages). If you look at a map of Europe and Asia, you see that between Poland and Russia, there are the following current countries (north to south): Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, and Ukraine. So if Joseph spoke a Latvian language, it would make more sense for him to be from Lithuania, which borders Latvia, than Ukraine which has 350 or so miles of Belarus between itself and Latvia.

But let's go back to the part about Mizheric having been part of Russia, then Poland. Does this describe Lithuania or Ukraine? My knowledge of eastern European history is shallow, so let's consult wikipedia.

Ukraine
By the middle of the 14th century, Ukrainian territories were under the rule of three external powers—the Golden Horde, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and the Kingdom of Poland. After the Great Northern War (1700–1721) Ukraine was divided between a number of regional powers and, by the 19th century, the largest part of Ukraine was integrated into the Russian Empire with the rest under Austro-Hungarian control. A chaotic period of incessant warfare ensued, with several internationally recognized attempts at independence from 1917 to 1921, following World War I and the Russian Civil War. Ukraine emerged from its own civil war, and on December 30, 1922 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic became one of the founding republics of the Soviet Union.
If anything, that sounds like it was a part of Poland then Russia, not the other way around.

Lithuania
During the 14th century, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the largest country in Europe: present-day Belarus, Ukraine, and parts of Poland and Russia were territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. With the Lublin Union of 1569, Lithuania and Poland formed a voluntary two-state union, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Commonwealth lasted more than two centuries, until neighboring countries systematically dismantled it from 1772 to 1795, with the Russian Empire annexing most of Lithuania's territory... 

Starting in 1940, Lithuania was occupied first by the Soviet Union and then by Nazi Germany. As World War II neared its end in 1944 and the Germans retreated, the Soviet Union reoccupied Lithuania. 
This, too sounds like Poland then Russia, not the other way around. And both histories seem pretty similar. Depending on where exactly in Ukraine or Lithuania, it might have been part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth or Poland but then coming under the control of Russia.

If we look specifically at Vilnus in Lituania however, we can see a path where control went from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to Russia, and back to Poland after World War I (and then the Soviet Union, then Nazi occupation, then as a Soviet republic, then independence in 1990). So you could call that Russia then Poland.

So two pieces of evidence point more to Lithuania, but neither piece is very solid (in fact both come from an oral history). We can't fully trust that the oral history has the languages right nor can we say for sure that someone from Ukraine wouldn't know Lettish.

And the one line about the history of Joseph Eisenberg's home region is way too simple to draw any conclusions about an area of the world that had so many different power changes.

So we definitely need more information / better evidence. I have a post on a Ukrainian genealogy listserv asking if there is a "Mizheric near Vilna" in Ukraine. I haven't heard anything helpful yet, but I'll update you if I do. More importantly, I will try to find immigration papers.

In the meantime, let me know if anyone has additional information. Until then, the question in the title of this post remains unanswered.