Family Posts

Showing posts with label John Edgar O'Neil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Edgar O'Neil. Show all posts

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Arm in Arm

 Last June I posted a letter written by my maternal Great-grandpa, John Edgar O'Neil to his fiancée, Auretta Empey. Mom shared a picture from about that time, that I think gives a great visual for the letter.

Auretta and Edgar









Monday, June 8, 2020

Everyday Love Letter

While searching through the binders Grandma Margaret O'Neil Johnson assembled, I found photos, applications for Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, and letters collected by Margaret's mother, my Great-Grandma Auretta Empey O'Neil. She was definitely the genealogist of the family. What can now be sent in an email or a message on Ancestry.com or familysearch.org used to require full hand-written letters to ascertain basic facts. Among those letters, I found one sent to Auretta from her fiancé-at-the-time, John Edgar O'Neil, whom everyone called "Ed." 

During his second marriage, Ed worked as Motorman and Conductor for Grand River Valley Railway Locomotive Engineer, and then with Union Pacific Railroad as Steam Engineer and Fireman. He and Verla lived in Grand Junction, Colorado; Vallejo, California; and Provo, Utah. He left Verla around 1934. She filed for divorce in 1936, and it was finalized on April 7th of 1937. 

Uncle Laurence, Auretta, Margaret, Ed,
and Bob in the mid-1950s

Eleven days later, he and Auretta married in Las Vegas. They had Margaret one year later, and Bob arrived five years after her. Ed and Auretta were married for thirty years before he passed away in 1967.

In January 1937 while they were engaged to be married, Ed wrote Auretta from Helper, Utah.


                                                        
                                                           Helper Utah.
                                                           Jan. 10, 1937

Dearest Auretta.-
Your fine letter received last night and was surly glad to get it. Was so tired last night that I just went to bed instead of writing.
We worked 16 hours and that is about 8 more than I like to work. However it is good money as the time over 8 hours pays time and a half. This is Sunday but had to work. Made 9 hour (?) 55 minutes. Am on what they call the National mine run and expect to hold it four or five days yet.

We usally get out about 5 a.m. It is too bad "dear," that your side bothers you. Hope soon that you get over that.

It does not look as if I could get off very soon as business is holding up fine. I may have more time off than I want after Feb. Would surly like to have a few days off now as I am getting tired of working long hours and what worries me more than that I want to see you.

Yes dear, the car is snowed in again. Maybe I can have it out by the 4th of July. May try to dig it out the first day I have off.

It has been so cold here that I have to wear two suits of underwear and two pair of socks to keep warm. Was a little warmer today.

I will be glad to meet your friends from Helper that you wrote about.

Am sorry that Mother has not been feeling so good and also Dale. He is young and in a few days he will be going strong and will not know he ever was sick.

Am enclosing a letter to Mother so you can deliver it to her.

Hope she feels better now. She has too much to do but don't suppose she would be content unless she has things to do for all her boys. Wonder if she wants one more?

Dear I am anxious to see you and find out what all you have to tell me. I am wondering what I have done now that you want an understanding. Hope that it is nothing serious.

Well Sweetheart I am going to have to get to bed. I don't seem to have any news to write about. Will try to write more next time when I am not so sleepy.

                                                                    Love + kisses to my Little Auretta

                                                                    As ever your Ed.



Auretta in 1962 [colorized]

Mom was pretty young when her grandpa died, so she doesn't remember them together as a couple, just seeing pictures. Aunt Brenda is Mom's senior, so I asked her how they were together. Brenda remembered Grandpa O'Neil's repeated line to his wife.

"I love you with all my heart and all your farts!"







Thursday, April 23, 2015

Great Grandpa O'Neil's Other Family

John Edgar O'Neil
John Edgar O'Neil with 
daughter Margaret (my grandma)
 My Grandma Margaret Johnson was an amazing, determined, caring woman, but she took after her mother by holding grudges. Her father, John Edgar O'Neil, had been married twice before marrying her mom, Auretta Empey, who had been married previously as well. My Great-Grandma Auretta O'Neil had a son from her previous marriage, my Uncle Dale. She had been divorced when he was fairly young, and rather than raising him herself as a single mother, he went to live with his grandparents and uncles for a good portion of his growing up years. Still, my Grandma Margaret would see him throughout adulthood and considered him a brother.

Her father's previous family was a different story. He married Nina May Kinney in 1910 or 1911, and they had a daughter, Maxine J O'Neil. They soon divorced, and then he married Verla Vivian Day in 1915. According to the 1920 and 1930 censuses, John and Verla were married at least fifteen years, but I haven't found records of any children, or exactly what happened. It's said they divorced, and in 1937 he married my Great-Grandma Auretta Empey O'Neil, and had Grandma Margaret and Uncle Bob.

Bob, John E, Auretta, and Margaret O'Neil 
celebrating John's retirement
Growing up I'd sometimes hear Grandma refer to the "cold-blooded" relatives. I finally asked her a few years ago who that meant, finding out she was referring to her Dad's earlier marriages and families. I think she may have met a few of the family members once, and it wasn't a good experience. I don't know when this was, or what happened, but it led young Margaret to not think of them very well. I can see how from both sides divorces and "broken" families would lead to hurt feelings. I don't think I'd be very pleased if someone "stole" my dad, or if they thought I'd stolen their Dad. I even got nervous once when I had a dream that Grandma had a separate set of grandkids I didn't know. While there may have been some hurt feelings in the past, our family would like to learn more about John O'Neil's other descendants.

Auretta O'Neil had collected some of the names and dates of her husband's previous marriages for family records, as she was very good about working on family history.

The other day while thinking of my late Grandma, I decided to research those other families, thinking she might have a half-sibling still living. Using familysearch.org and ancestry.com, I found John Edgar and his wives, and his other daughter.

Excluding Auretta's previous marriage, this is the visual I created in order to understand the chain of divorces and lasting marriages starting with the O'Neils and Kinneys. [Alberta and John O'Neil were siblings, who married siblings Nina May and Victor George Kinney- both couples divorced]
Marriage record for John E O'Neil and Nina May Kinney
Maxine's death record
In 1910, his father, John S. O'Neil worked as a Superintendent for an irrigation company in Mesa County, Colorado. It's no surprise that his son John Edgar worked at the age of 19 as a laborer for the "Ditch Rider" industry. His sister, Alberta M. (17) is listed as single, but John S.'s son-in-law, Victor Kinney is a newlywed living with the family. According to the records, John E married Victor's sister, Nina May Kinney around Valentine's Day 1910 or 1911 (a significant difference, because...) a little girl, Maxine Jacqueline O'Neil, was born to them on May 11, 1911. I can't find records for Maxine or Nina in 1920, so I'm not sure if Maxine stayed with her mom or other relatives throughout her childhood.

At the age of 18 [1929], Maxine married 26-year-old Charles Rash, and they had five children (as of the 1940 census). She and Charles moved from Colorado to Oregon, then to Idaho, and lastly to Arizona. She died at the age of 33 from Tuberculosis in 1944 (when my Grandma was 6-years-old). Maxine's youngest were only 4-years-old when their mother passed away. One of whom is Zelma Rash, who passed away in 2009. As far as I can tell, Maxine's and Charles' other four children are still living. There still might be time to meet them.




Auretta and John E O'Neil
In 1920, John Edgar (28) had moved to Vallejo, California with his wife, native Texan Verla V O'Neil (22). He worked in the navy yard as a steam engineer.

As of the 1930 census John E (38) and Verla (32) were still married and living in gold old Provo, Utah, where he worked as a fireman for the railroad. Another occupant is listed in their home, nephew William Potorf (17). Since William's mother was born in Texas, I guessed that she was Verla's sister. After a little searching, I found Leona Day Potorf, and connected her to Verla. She died in 1922, which would explain why her son is now living with his aunt. This is the last I can find of Verla. Maybe her information in the 1940 census hasn't been indexed, or perhaps she'd already passed away, but I can't find anything. Grandma O'Neil indicated that John and Verla were divorced. I knew Great-Grandpa O'Neil had been married before, but I hadn't realized how long he and Verla had been married. They had been a part of each other's lives for so long, and then nothing. I even tried searching for Verla with different last names, in case she had remarried, but nothing stood out in the records.

In April of 1937, John Edgar O'Neil married Auretta Empey O'Neil, and one year later they had my grandma Margaret Alice O'Neil [Johnson]. A few years later my great-uncle Bob was born, and he still lives in the family home.

Sometimes doing research online is about very distant relatives, connected only through a chain of marriages, but this was about finding Grandma's half-sister. My great-aunt. I still don't understand what life was like for Nina Kinney, Maxine, or Verla Day, but I hope their families are doing well, and we can come together in the future.
Uncle Bob holding a picture of Uncle Dale, Bob, his mom
(Great-Grandma O'Neil), and his sister (Grandma Margaret Johnson)

Monday, March 23, 2015

Charles and Alwilda Adams

At a recent Family Discovery Day, some wise people explained how you can use puzzilla.org, linked to familysearch.org, or figure out where missing family lines and cousins might be. Last night I tried looking in my Grandma Johnson's line, through her Dad's maternal grandfather, Albert Daniel Mahany (1844-1907). Around my third or fourth try, I found a person with additional family listed on findagrave.com.

John Edgar O'Neil and Auretta Empey are my Grandma Johnson's parents.

Descendancy chart for Albert Daniel Mahany on Puzzilla
Edgar Ellsworth Adams and Anna Sarah Mahany were missing (on familysearch.org) two people Find A Grave guessed were their children. As of yesterday, only Virginia, Luella, and Gordon were listed as children of Edgar and Anna Adams, which left Charles and Alwilda unconnected to the family line on familysearch.

FindaGrave.com

At the time of the 1920 Green River, Emery, Utah US Census, the family is all together with both parents and five children. Edgar is a merchant in a grocery. This showed that they are related.

1920 US Census; E. E., Anna S, Virginia, Luella, Charles, Gordon, and Alwilda Adams

In the 1940 Census, Charles Edgar is listed as Anna's son, with a wife and two children all living together in Grand Junction, Colorado. He worked as a brakeman and conductor on steam railroad engines for The Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad throughout much of his career. Charles and wife, Mattie, stayed in Grand Junction most of their lives.
1940 US Census; Anna, Virginia, Charles E, Mattie R, Maryln, and Charles Adams Jr


Charles and Mattie in the 
Grand Junction City Directory; 1943

Slightly more complete and connected Edgar and Anna Sarah Adams family line

Going back to findagrave, I started researching Alwilda Marine Adams Smith. Some other fun discoveries yielded by ancestry are Grand Junction High School yearbook images. Alwilda sang with the Glee Club in 1928 and 1929.

Grand Junction High School Glee Club 1928

Grand Junction High School Glee Club 1929

Their family of seven started to grow with marriages and children, and they started to scatter. Their father, Edgar, passed away in 1925, and Anna Luella shortly after in 1926 at the age of 23. Alwilda was 14 or 15. As of the 1930 census, Mother Anna Sarah, Virginia, Gordon, and Alwilda live together in Grand Junction, Gordon working for the steam railroads as a Time Keeper.
Yearbook from Colorado State Teacher's College in 1933
Alwilda attended Colorado State Teacher's College in 1933. Her husband, Frank Corwin Smith, Jr served in World War II, and they are buried in Denver. He and his parents are on familysearch, so I was able to add Alwilda as his wife and connect their family again. 

There's something wonderfully spectacular about finding an ancestor in something as ordinary as a city directory or yearbook. I get caught up in finding the details of their lives in these documents, and though they are but first cousins three-times removed, I got to know them a little bit.



Monday, September 15, 2014

The O'Neil Place

Mom took Miss V and I out to breakfast with some of her siblings and uncles. We drove her Uncle Bob, (her Mom's youngest brother) home afterward, at which point he gave us a tour and shared somed stories. About 8 decades ago, my Great Grandparents went past a home for sale in Ogden, Utah, and decided to buy it right then. "For $2,000 or $3,000," as Uncle Bob explained.

My mom has memories of pretending one of the areas was an elevator, so she and her siblings could be elevator operators like their Mom, Margaret had been at one point. Bob's desk is by one of the windows in the living room facing the front of the house, alongside a built-in bench with shelving along the next wall and window facing the other street of the corner lot.

Bob shared that Great-grandma Auretta Empey O'Neil used to sit at her desk, writing letters, recording in her journal, and working on family history right there, and that the bench was always covered in her potted plants and flowers. They had to tear down the garage and built a new carport, which now houses the car that always makes me think of Bob, his classic green Chevy Impala.

The old basement with coal shoot has a modern heating system, and Bob's updated the kitchen and bathroom with beautiful tiles. You can still see the remnants of how they used to look, as the claw foot bathtub sits on the front porch waiting for a new home, and the indented space for a little fridge now holds shelves where the modern fridge won't fit. Bob makes sure the lawn and the outside of his parents' family home stays well-kept, so it's a welcome sight after pulling off the busy Ogden streets.




Uncle Bob holding a picture of his siblings and Mom: Dale, Bob, Great-Grandma O'Neil and my Grandma Margaret

Great-Grandma and Great-Grandpa O'Neil

Monday, November 14, 2011

O'Neil's Retirement

John Edgar O'Neil
John Edgar O'Neil
Grandma J went through some of her old photographs, and shared some of her father.  I love the picture at Great-grandpa O'Neil's retirement, in which he's wearing the overalls and train engineer cap.  There's also one of Grandpa J's grandma, Clemmie Nevada Peek Johnston.

Bob, John, Auretta, and Margaret O'Neil
John E. O'Neil's Retirement,
Train Engineer
Clemmie Nevada Peek Johnston