Saturday, November 21, 2009

Old Henry Cemetery

A while ago, I got a photo request from Find-A-Grave for pictures of the Old Henry Cemetery in Benton County. According to Find-A-Grave, Old Henry Cemetery was not far from my home. And the graves there are just a few of the same family and 100-150 years old. I was intrigued so I loaded up the reluctant 12 year old and headed out in search of the Old Henry Cemetery.


OLD HENRY CEMETERY
CEMETERIES of BENTON COUNTY, ARKANSAS - Volume 4, Page 46
Copyright 1975-2003 Northwest Arkansas Genealogical Society
Located about 2 1/2 miles SW of Bentonville off the Cave Springs Rd. in front of the Earl Bright Residence.
Copied by Clara Blankenship in 1974.
LAST FIRST BORN DIED NOTES
HENRY JOSEPH Feb 1811 Aug 13, 1863 husb of Mary
HENRY J. W. Sep 16, 1868 Aug 22, 1872
HENRY WM. I. May 3, 1842 Nov 18, 1883
This was an army encampment during the Civil War. Many soldiers were buried over the fields but no noticeable trace remains to be seen."

Well, this will be interesting and historical!

The instructions for finding the graves were in typical Arkansas direction-giving language.

"Located about 2 1/2 miles South West of Bentonville off the Cave Springs Road in front of the Earl Bright Residence."



Ok, so I can figure out that Cave Springs Road is what we locals still call it even though it's official name is Hwy 112 or SW "H" Street. But who is Earl Bright?

I decided to go off in search of it anyway. How hard can it be to find a graveyard on a main road? Right. So, I set my mile marker once I turned on to 112. We drove 2 1/2 miles to....a new subdivision. Hmmm. I looked at the directions. 2 1/2 miles SW of Bentonville OFF the Cave Springs Road. I spent the next 30 minutes driving back and forth - trying to figure out which road would be the "off Cave Springs Road" road. Ok. Time for some more research.

I went home and googled again. Earl Bright, Old Henry Cemetery, Joseph Henry. I finally found an old article from a newspaper about the cemetery. It said it was on Bright Road. Ahhh obviously named after the aforementioned Earl Bright.


But, I didn't see a Bright Road in all of my driving back and forth on Hwy 112. I decided it was time to get into the 21st century and get a GPS. I needed one anyway as I am so directionally challenged in the best of circumstances.

So fast forward a few hours, GPS in car, on the search for Bright Road. GPS takes me to Bright Road which is off of Airport Road (or Hwy 12). It is very close to Cave Springs Rd/Hwy 112. I run up and down this road looking for a cemetery.Ughhh. After a frustrating search I take a left on a SW Gator Rd which is more like a curve to the left. And something on the left just around the corner catches my eye - I realize it's a gravestone next to a barbed wire fence. How I saw it I couldn't tell you. It was the Old Henry Cemetery. Which should just be called the Old Henry gravesite.

We parked across the road and ran over to the barbed wire fence. I had to lean over to get a good look. It was gravestones being held up by some metal contracption with trees and vines growing up through it.

Wow. I looked out over the field the gravestones were in. This was the site of a Civil War encampment - and probably looked very similar to this then except for roofs of the houses in the new subdivisions beyond the trees. According to some, soldiers were also buried in the field. A slight breeze was blowing and except for the occasional bird song, it was quiet. I thought about those have been here in this spot looking over this same field. Their sacrifices, their lives, the families they left behind. Then, a car came down the road, and we had to move closer to the fence.




You can't read the stones, at least not from my vantage point in front of the fence. I didn't feel it would be appropriate to climb it.






So, after a few pictures, I went back home to do some research on Joseph Henry.
I plug in his name and dates into Ancestry.com and the first record found is the 1860 census

Anderson Township, Osage Mills post office, Benton County, Arkansas. Lists Joseph Henry, a farmer, born in Tennessee. He had a large family including wife Mary and 9 children listed at home.


Joseph Henry, 48
Mary Henry, 45
Matilda Henry, 24
Wilson Henry, 21
William Henry, 18
Martha Henry 14
Susan Henry, 12
Sarah Henry, 9
Joseph Henry, 7
Thomas Henry, 5
Asaph Henry, 2

We have the father, Joseph. William is probably his son. And perhaps a grandson or daughter - J.W. - who died at 4 years old. Buried in this little family plot in a field that was probably once his farm. Where are the rest of the family? I'll save that bit of research for a rainy day.
















Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Welcome to a Grave Reminder!

Graveyards are a reminder of those who have gone before us. They are a connection to our ancestors and the history of a time and place.

I have always been fascinated by graveyards - even as a kid. I remember walking through a cemetery near where we lived and imagining who the lives of the people whose names were etched into the stones. Graveyards are peaceful, beautiful places to me.

Graveyards are a wealth of genealogy information. Filling in the gaps in family history and turning up a surprise or two that were unknown to the present generation. A child who died early and was not listed in the family tree is one of the more common occurances.

Graveyard Tip: I have learned to bring the family tree when I go in search of a cemetery where an ancestor is supposed to be buried. I often find many members of the extended family and family by marriage buried there. If I neglect or forget to bring the family tree list, I usually find I could have photographed several more stones and probably found even more information.

Kinnibrugh Cemetery

Kinnibrugh Cemetery - Farmington, Washington County, Arkansas
I have been researching my brother-in-law's family tree recently and found many of his ancestors are buried in the Northwest Arkansas area. Some of these ancestors were supposed to be buried in Kinnibrugh Cemetery in Farmington.

I went in search of the cemetery one Saturday, dragging my reluctant 12-year-old daughter along for the ride. I found the directions online and they took me to a parking lot next to some sort of maintenance building behind the high school baseball fields. After wandering around a little bit, I found the small fenced in cemetery behind a small ballfield and some bushes. I was pleasantly surprised to see someone was mowing it. I know all you other graveyard hounds also appreciate a mowed graveyard - cuts down on the potential for hidden snakes and other nasty critters.

Wandering through this graveyard revealed many broken and unreadable gravestones along with some in decline that will soon be like the rest. It seems like some of the gravestones may have been replacement stones - particularly for some of the more prominent citizens of the area.

After taking photos of the headstones of the ancestors - I photographed the rest of the gravestones and cemetery. I realized from my brother-in-law's family tree list that there were several other relatives buried in the cemetery.
I headed home to do some research. There was a surprising amount of information since many of the graves belonged to prominent Farmington citizens of the time.

On the Washington County Genealogical Sociaty website - I found a picture of the 1908 Old Hawthorne School reunion with several familiar names listed. The men's long beards and women all in long dark dresses give us a peek into the styles of the day and I now have faces to go with a few of the names etched in the stones. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~arwcags/html/photos_10.html


Wilson Shreve (1808-1891)
Barbara Mock Shreve (1810-1891)
(brother-in-law's ancestors)
From the University of Arkansas Library Website http://dante.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/shreve.asp#S3
Shreve Family Papers, 1810-1975

"Wilson Shreve (1803-1891), his wife, Barbara Mock (1810-1891), and their son, William Franklin Shreve (1834-1911), migrated from Miller County, Missouri, to Farmington (Washington County), Arkansas, in 1850 where they engaged in general agricultural pursuits. William Franklin married Millie Brown (1849-1919) in 1867 and had three children -- Alfred Walter, H. Ben, and H. W. Shreve. "
Shreve descendants still live on some of the original family land in Farmington.


James Kinnibrugh: 1792-1843
Jane Moore Kinnibrugh: 1799-1872
In 1833, James & Jane Kinnibrugh moved to Washington County, Arkansas and settled in an area called "Prairie" that eventually became Farmington
According to the 1840 census of Prairie, Washington County, AR - James & Jane may have had 9 children as their household lists 12 people with 1 male about James age and 2 females about Jane's age (I assume this includes Jane's sister Mary since she's listed with Jane in 1850 and 1860.)
Source Citation: Year: 1840; Census Place: , Washington, Arkansas; Roll 20; Page: 284.
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. 1840 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. Original data: Sixth Census of the United States, 1840; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M704, 580 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C


By 1850, James had died and Jane is listed in Prairie, Washington County, Arkansas with the following children:
Jane M. - 51, Born 1800 in Virginia
Jane - 23, Born 1827 in North Carolina
James - 18, Born 1832 in Alabama
Isabella - 16, Born 1834 in Arkansas
James - 12, Born 1838 in Arkansas (why are there two James'?)
John - 8, Born 1842 in Arkansas
Mary Moore, 56, Born 1794 in Virginia (Jane's maiden name is Moore - this is her sister)
Source Citation: Year: 1850; Census Place: Prairie, Washington, Arkansas; Roll M432_31; Page: 400; Image: 205.
Source Information: Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C

I have yet to find a definitive list of the Kinnibrugh children and it seems we have children with the same name (i.e. James) and just to make things even more interesting - there is also an older John Kinnbrugh living in the area at the same time as the younger John living with his mother Jane in 1850.

Also in the cemetery there is a J.W. Kinnibrugh buried who died Dec. 12, 1863. A possible son of James and Jane. A little research on Ancestry.com and I find a Civil War Prisoner of War record for a James W. Kinnibrugh, Private, Confederate, Arkansas 2nd who died of a lung infection on December 27, 1863. Could this be our J.W.? The dates are close but not the same.

Civil War Prisoner of War Records, 1861-1865 > Confederate > Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865, Page 532





William Henry Engels: 1830-1917
Isabella Kinnibrugh Engels: 1834-1925




William Engels was a prominent land holder and grist mill operator. He was also the founder and postmaster of Farmington. He married Isabella, the daughter of James and Jane Kinnibrugh.

Following is an exerpt from the University of Arkansas Library special collections information which has many letters, documents and photos of the Engels, Kinnibrughs and related families...
"William H. Engels (1830-1917) was a farmer, miller, and postmaster in Farmington, Arkansas. Born in Batesville, Independence County, William left home in 1852 to seek work in Fort Smith were he clerked for the firm of Sutton, Griffith & Co. In 1854 he drove a herd of cattle overland to Stockton, California, following in the footsteps of his brother, Abraham Allen Engels, who had removed to Oregon two years previous. By 1856 William had returned to Arkansas where he married Isabella Kinnibrugh (variously spelled Kinnibrough, Kinnebrew, or Kinebrough) and they settled in Farmington. Isabella also came from pioneer Arkansas stock, being the daughter of James Kinnibrugh and Jane Moore Kinnibrugh who had come to Washington County in 1833. William Engels earned his living as a miller and farmer, although he also laid out the original townsite of Farmington, operated the post office for a time, and became active in the local Methodist Church." http://libinfo.uark.edu/SpecialCollections/findingaids/engels.html



The Encyclopedia of Arkansas gives details of William Henry Engels life and many contributions to the Farmington area.
http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=1005

An interesting story about William Engles cattle drive to California:
http://www.engle-family.org/bios/pengelsjr/whengels.htm

More on Kinnibrugh Cemetery in another blog posting...