Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Did Barclay Jarrett find adventure out west?

What happened to Barclay Jarrett?  In 1856, he left his wife, Sarah L. Kirk, in Philadelphia for Iowa and the Dakota Territory.

The Jarretts had lived in Pennsylvania for over 100 years.  They were descendants of some of the original founders of Germantown, who had come to the new world to escape religious persecution.  They were members of the Religious Society of Friends, who called themselves “friends of truth” but were also known as “children of light” and Quakers.  William Penn had founded Pennsylvania for the Quakers in 1681 and many found refuge there in the late 17th century.

Barclay Jarrett was born in 1814, the 6th generation of his family to live in Pennsylvania.  He was the son of Isaac Jarrett and Mary Trump, who were both born in Bucks County shortly after the Revolutionary War.  Barclay had 2 older sisters, Rebecca and Margaret, and 4 younger brothers, Jesse T, Edward, George, and Richard.

Sarah Lukens Kirk’s family had been in Pennsylvania as long as the Jarretts.  Sarah’s father John was of the 4th generation of Kirks to live in the commonwealth, the original John Kirk having immigrated from Derbyshire, England in 1687.  Born in 1774, Sarah’s father was a farmer and limeburner in Abington Township of Montgomery County.  Like Bucks County, it is just outside of Philadelphia.  A limeburner was someone who baked lime rock in a large kiln for use in plaster and mortar.  It was difficult work but profitable, since plaster and mortar were in demand.  Sarah’s mother, Tabitha Lukens, was also from an old Quaker Pennsylvania family, having descended from Jan Luckens, one of the original “33 Dutchmen” of Germantown who immigrated in 1683.  Tabitha’s father, Seneca Lukens, was a well-known clockmaker and her brother, Isaiah, made the clock for the steeple of Independence Hall in 1828.  Sarah was born in 1817.

Sarah and Barclay married in 1837 and settled on a farm in Moorland Township in Montgomery County.  Over the next 20 years, they moved to Abington and grew into a family of 4 sons and 3 daughters:  Mary Anna Jarrett (1838), William H. Jarrett (about 1841), Benjamin Franklin Jarrett (1843), Isaac Jarrett (1846), Tacie Elizabeth Jarrett (1848), Elma J. Jarrett (1852), and Harvey Jarrett (1856).  Their farm was successful, with a value of $6000 in 1850.  They employed several laborers to help with the work.

While Barclay and Sarah were raising crops and children in Pennsylvania, Barclay’s younger brother, Jesse T. Jarrett, had left for the frontier town of Dubuque, Iowa.  Arriving in 1846, Dubuque wouldn’t even have a courthouse or a jail for another decade.  There had been a “lead rush” of new settlers and Jesse worked as a miner in the winter and a surveyor in the summer.  Lead was in demand for shot, used in muskets.  Rich veins in crevasses near the surface were easy to find and Jesse did well.  In 1850 he was living at an inn.  The other men living at the inn were clerks, merchants, a bricklayer, carpenter, confectioner, lawyer, and a physician.  There were also a few women and children.

Jesse married Amanda Farwell in 1854 and they moved to their own place in Julien Township, Dubuque County.  At around this time, Jesse gave up mining to survey full time.  In 1856, Jesse’s brothers, Ed and Barclay, joined him on the frontier.  Barclay was accompanied by his oldest two children, Mary Anna (age 18), and William H (age 15). 

In May 1857, Jesse was appointed an agent of the Western Town Company.  Barclay was employed with him and together with 3 other men traveled almost 400 miles across Iowa to the Missouri River.  There, they laid out 320 acres for a town site by the Sioux waterfalls.  This would become Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Jesse returned to Dubuque to Amanda where in 1860 he was appointed Deputy Sheriff.  He went on to serve in several other political offices over the years.  He partnered with his brother, Ed, as a grain dealer and lived in Dubuque the rest of his life.

Barclay became a farmer.  He left to go off on his own and in 1860, was homesteading on 160 acres worth $300.  Only 10 acres were farmed so far but he had 2 milk cows worth $75 and had produced 40 bushels of wheat and 50 bushels of Indian corn.

Back in Pennsylvania, Sarah moved to Philadelphia in 1858.  She worked in lady’s fashions, listed in the 1859 city directory under “Trimmings (Ladies') and Varieties”.  By 1860, Mary Anna (21) had returned home from Iowa and they lived in a boarding house with the younger children, Tacie (12), Elma (8), and Harvey (4).  Sarah was listed in the city directory under “Gloves and Hosiery”, and her personal property was valued at $1000.  The boarding house was populated with clerks and salesladies and some Kirk and Lukens cousins.

The boys were not living with their mother in 1860.  William H. would have been 19 but there is no evidence that he returned from Iowa.  Kirk family history says he died young without children but not where nor when.  Isaac (14) was living on a farm with a Jarrett cousin in Montgomery County.  Benjamin Franklin (17) appeared to be apprenticing as a mechanic in Bucks County.

Philadelphia at this time was one of the largest cities in the United States.  The union was in danger of dissolution over slavery.  Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860 and the first shots of the Civil War were fired in January 1861.  Barclay and Sarah's son, Benjamin, fought for the Union in the war.  Some of the other brothers or Barclay may have also but the records have not been found.

Sarah was facing business changes during 1862.  She retired from retail and began work running a boarding house.  The location of her boarding house moved every year or two, over the next few years.

In July 1862, Sioux Falls was still considered the frontier. Mail was delivered by horseback once a week.  However, the people were organizing politically and Barclay was involved as a Minnehaha County delegate to the Republican Territorial Convention in Vermillion.  The Republican Party was formed less than a decade earlier for the express purpose of denying slavery in the new territories.  The Vermillion Convention in 1862 endorsed Lincoln’s policies, the fight for the Union, and the Homestead Law.

In August 1862, a general Indian war broke out between the Little Crow Sioux and settlers in Minnesota.  The Sioux, driven from Minnesota into Dakota, separated into small war parties and descended on the Dakota settlements.  Sioux Falls was the site of the first fatal encounter, with the murder of a man and his son while cutting hay. The other settlers in the area were evacuated by the army to Fort Yankton.  Barclay Jarrett was one of the 8 households evacuated.  They stayed at the fort through the months of September and October.  Then, in November, Barclay and 5 other of the civilian men were escorted by 12 soldiers back to their homes in Sioux Falls to retrieve some of their personal belongings. When they arrived, there are 20 Sioux near the settlement and there was a confrontation between them and the soldiers.  One Sioux man was killed and the soldiers and civilians withdrew.  During the next six years, Sioux Falls remained unoccupied by whites.

Barclay was forced to leave his 160 acres in Sioux Falls at the end of 1862.  Kirk family history tells us he died in 1865.  Back east, in the 1867 Philadelphia city directory, Sarah was listed as a “widow”. 

UPDATE:  12 Jan 2021 - Barclay moved to Yankton, SD in 1862, when white settlers were removed from Sioux Falls.  He died March 25, 1865 after a fight in a saloon which he co-owned with Charles Presho in Yankton.




The years after the civil war were ones of growth for Sarah’s family.  In 1867, Benjamin married Elizabeth Childs Thomas, and Isaac married Helen Prackett.  Mary Anna married John Moore in 1868, and Tacie married Thomas Elder in 1871.  The younger siblings didn't marry for a while longer, Elma to Robert William Davis in 1882 and Harvey to Gertrude Hughes, in 1887.

Mary Anna’s marriage was within the Society of Friends but Isaac’s to Helen was in the Methodist Episcopal Church and Tacie’s to Thomas Elder was in the Presbyterian Church.  If Sarah was a practicing Friend, she did not attend the same Meeting House as John Moore's family.  Barclay was disowned by the Quakers for the first time when he was 14, later rejoined, and again was disowned in 1854.

Benjamin returned to the city, and apparently did not become a mechanic.  In 1866 he lived in his mother’s boarding house, working as a salesman.  He ended up a grocer in Philadelphia for the rest of his career. [UPDATE 12 Jan 2021 - The grocer, BF Jarrett, may be a different man]  He and Elizabeth had 4 children: Emma James Jarrett, Jonathan Thomas Jarrett, Sara Jarrett, and Benjamin Franklin Jarrett, Jr.  Jonathan died at age 18 in 1889 but the others married and most had children of their own. 

Isaac brought his new wife to live at his mother’s boarding house on Vine Street.  According to the Philadelphia city directory, in 1868, they had moved out and Isaac worked as a clerk.  He and Helen lost their infant first born child, William H, in 1868.  Although in Philadelphia in 1870, they had moved across the river to Woodbury, NJ by 1880.  Isaac and Helen had 4 more children and ended up in Oakland, California.  The children were Evelyn J. Jarrett, Harry Barclay Jarrett, Alfred Jarrett, and Isaac Lewis Jarrett.  The Kirk Family history notes a second wife, Carrie Stuart, but it is unknown if she was the mother of any of Isaac’s children.

Harvey, Barclay and Sarah’s youngest child, probably never knew his father, being born the year that Barclay left for Iowa.  Harvey grew up in his mother’s boarding house.  By 1880, he had moved to Clay County, Florida, to be a farmer, and later a horticulturist.  There he married Gertrude Hughes, (who was his second wife) and they had 2 children, Grace Elivira Jarrett and  James Thomas Jarrett.  Sometime before 1920, the family moved to Miami where Harvey retired.

In 1880, Elma and her mother were living with a servant to help out at 525 Vine Street.  This was the home where they had kept boarders for almost 20 years.  It must have felt empty where a decade earlier, 14 had lived.  Elma’s British husband, Robert, was naturalized in 1880 and became a lawyer.  In 1920, they lived in Montgomery County.  They had 2 children, Robert William Davis and Elizabeth J. Davis.

Barclay and Sarah's oldest child Mary Anna had likely helped raise her siblings while her mother was taking care of the business.  Tacie Elizabeth was 10 years younger.  They both were living in Philadelphia with their new husbands in 1872 when Tacie was pregnant with her first child.  Tragically, Mary Anna contracted typhoid fever in the fall of 1872, and died at the age of 34, on 22 September.  Five weeks later, Tacie gave birth to a daughter.  She named the child Mary Moore Elder as a tribute to her sister.  Mary Anna (Jarrett) Moore didn't have any children of her own.

Thomas Elder, Tacie's husband, worked as a traveling salesman.  His travels took him to Dayton, Ohio, which he saw as a promising location for a business.  Thomas and Tacie moved to Dayton in 1883 where he started a dry goods store.  They called it "The Boston"; and it eventually became Elder & Johnston and later Elder-Berman, a successful department store chain that exists today.  They had two more children, Florence Elder and William Woolston Elder, who died in Philadelphia and three once they moved to Dayton, Robert Jarrett Elder, Elsie Jarrett Elder, and Helen Tacie Elder.

According to the Philadelphia City Directory, Sarah continued to keep boarders on and off throughout the 1880s.  However, by 1897 she had retired to live with her son Benjamin’s family at 748 N 19th Street in Philadelphia.

Did Barclay abandon his wife and family for adventure in the west? It is interesting that he took Mary Anna and William H with him in 1856.  It is very sad he left Sarah with newborn baby Harvey.

Sarah seems to have enjoyed living in the city.  She would have had to be smart, strong, and independent, to start and run her own businesses.  Firmly in the middle class, she probably had other options but preferred to stay in the city.   She lived the rest of her life in the heart of Philadelphia, near her children, siblings, and cousins.
_______________________________________________________

Epilogue:

John Moore, Mary Anna’s husband, moved back with his parents after his wife's death.  He worked as a dry goods merchant.  He married Esther Aldrich in 1880; and they moved to New York where they had 4 children.

Benjamin died at age 66, in 1909 in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania

Tacie died at the age of 85 in 1933 in Dayton Ohio.  Descended from her daughter, Mary Moore Elder, the author of this blog named her oldest daughter, Tacie Elizabeth.

Elma died at age 80, in 1932.

Harvey died in Miami, Florida at age 78, in 1934.

Sarah died at the age of 85 in 1901.  She lived in Melrose Park on Stratford Avenue.  However, she was not living with Benjamin or any other of her children in 1900.  She was buried in the West Laurel Hill Cemetery, Bala Cynwyd, Montgomery County Pennsylvania.

UPDATE: 12 Jan 2021




Barclay’s grave is elusive.

_____________________________________________________

Appendix A:
Who were Barclay Jarrett and Sarah Kirk and why do I care?
They were my great great great grandparents on my mother's Elder side of the family.  See where they fit in the family tree starting with Robert Dickson Marshall III.




Appendix B:
Unanswered questions:
            What happened to William H Jarrett?
            How did Barclay die and where is he buried?
            How did Sarah die and where is she buried?

Appendix C:
Some avenues for further research might include:
            Quaker records – it is not apparent Sarah and her family are religious.  There were not found in any Quaker records on Ancestry.com except for Mary Anna’s with her marriage to John Moore.
            Census records, I have not found the following:
                        Sarah – 1900
                        William H – 1860, 1870, …?
                        Benjamin Franklin – 1880
                        Isaac – 1900, 1910, …?
                        Elma – 1900, 1910
                        Harvey – 1910
            Property and tax records
Death certificates and obituaries (if they exist) for Barclay, Sarah, William H, Isaac, and Elma.
Many records were indexed or misinterpreted the name “Jarrett” as “Janett” so both should be investigated.

Appendix D:
            There are likely photos of Sarah, possibly Barclay, and their children.  Maybe there are old letters too.  However, I do not have any in my possession.  I would love to get some high quality scans of photos of this family.  I’d also like to see what 525 Vine was like.

Appendix E:
Source documents
Much information came, with grateful thanks, from William H. Johnston's "Descendants of John and Tabitha Kirk"

Census

1840 US Census, Barclay Jarrett and Family, Montgomery County, PA

1850 US Census, Barclay Jarrett and Family, Abington Twp, Montgomery County, PA, page 1
1850 US Census, Barclay Jarrett and Family, Abington Twp, Montgomery County, PA, page 2 
1850 US Census, Isaac Jarrett and Family (Barclay's parents), Warminster Twp, Bucks County, PA

1850 US Territorial Census, Jesse Jarrett, Dubuque, IA

1856 US Territorial Census, Jesse and Amanda Jarrett with Ed, Barclay, William and Mary Anna, Dubuque, IA

1860 US Census, Sarah Jarrett and Family, Philadelphia, PA
1860 US Census, Barclay Jarrett, Sioux Falls, SD
1860 US Agricultural Census, Barclay Jarrett, Sioux Falls, SD

1860 US Census, Benjamin Franklin Jarrett, Warminster Twp, Bucks County, PA

1860 US Census, Isaac Jarrett, Horsham Twp, Montgomery County, PA
1860 US Census, Mary Trump Jarrett, Barclay's mother, Moreland Twp, Montgomery County, PA

1870 US Census June, Sarah Jarrett, Philadelphia, PA

1870 US Census November, Sarah Jarrett, Philadelphia, PA page 1

1870 US Census November, Sarah Jarrett, Philadelphia, PA page 2

1870 US Census, Benjamin Franklin Jarrett and Family, Philadelphia, PA

1870 US Census, John and Mary Moore, Philadelphia, PA

1870 US Territorial Census, Jesse and Amanda Jarrett, Dubuque, IA

1870 US Census, Isaac and Helen Jarrett and Family, Philadelphia, PA

1880 US Census, Isaac and Helen Jarrett and Family, Woodbury, NJ


1880 US Census, Thomas and Tacie Jarrett Elder, Philadelphia, PA

1880 US Territorial Census, Jesse and Amanda Jarrett, Dubuque, IA
1880 US Census, John Moore living with his parents, Philadelphia, PA
1885 US Territorial Census, Jesse and Amanda Jarrett, Dubuque, IA
1900 US Census, Benjamin Franklin Jarrett and Family, Philadelphia,PA

1900 US Census, Harvey Jarrett and Family, Lakeside Pct., Clay County, FL
1900 US Census , Thomas and Tacie Jarrett Elder, Dayton, OH
1910 US Census, Thomas and Tacie Jarrett Elder, Dayton, OH

1920 US Census, Thomas and Tacie Jarrett Elder, Dayton, OH


1920 US Census, Robert and Elma Jarrett Davis and Family, Cheltenham Twp, Montgomery County, PA
1920 US Census, Harvey Jarrett and Family, Miami, FL
1930 US Census, Harvey Jarrett and Family, Miami, FL
1930 US Census, Thomas and Tacie Jarrett Elder, Dayton, OH


Histories

Annals of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania


 History of Dakota Territory








 Misc.

Tacie Elizabeth Jarrett Elder's Obituary, 1932
1909 - Benjamin Franklin Jarrett's Death Certificate




1868 - William H Jarrett's death certificate, Isaac and Helen's baby

 Church Records


1868-9 Philadelphia Monthly Meeting (Quaker) Notes:  1868,2,12.  Mary Anna Jarrett recrq (received by request from another meeting house).  1869,1,20.  Mary Anna rmt John Moore (reported married to) 





Philadelphia City Directories