Lucia Ann 8 BIGELOW




159B1.171      Lucia Ann 8 BIGELOW, dau of Ferrand 7 ( Elisha 6 , Elisha 5 , Elisha 4, Isaac 3, Samuel 2, John1 and  Caroline (HIBBARD) BIGELOW, was born at Eagle, Waukesha, WI on 03 (02) January 1839 and on 17 August 1858, she married James Hopkins the son of James Wheeler Hopkins. He was born 17 December 1834 in MI. They lived at Dale, Outagamie, WI a number of years and then moved to Whiting, Monona co, IA. She died there on 03 January 1912 and James there on 23 February 1915. Mrs. Ralph Shinn supplied the newspaper photo above and article below.

Children of James and Lucia Ann (Bigelow) Hopkins, all born at Dale, Outagamie co, WI:

159B1.1711     Arthur A. Hopkins, b 31 Oct 1859; d 13 Feb 1934 Winneconna, WI; m __ 1910 Annie Otis;.

159B1.1712     Elmer Elsworth Hopkins, b 17 Feb 1861; d 10 July 1946 Whiting, IA; m 24 Feb 1897 Louisa Jane "Jennie" Bigelow.- 159B1.1732 (dau of Elverton P. Bigelow )

159B1.1713     Ferrand William Hopkins, b 0l Sept 1862; d 13 Oct 1936 Venango, Perkins co, NE; m 15 Feb 1893 Ellen Kate Watkins

159B1.1714     Ella Hopkins, b 14 Sept 1864; d young.

159B1.1715     Nellie Ellen Hopkins, b 10 Jan 1868; d 21 June 1952 Dale, WI; 29 Jan 1885 Wallace Dwayne Clemans;.

159B1.1716     Carrie Miranda Hopkins, b 20 Feb 1870; d 20 Oct 1952 Holyoke, CO; m 22 Nov 1892 Frank Watkins.

159B1.1717     Paul J. Hopkins, b 14 June 1873; d 30 Oct 1938 Whiting, Monona co, IA; m _ June 1897 Jessie Franzen;.

159B1.1718     Frank Hibbard Hopkins, b 20 July 1876; d 10 Nov1951 Venango, NE; m 01 Jan 1903 Serena Theresa Perrott.

159B1.1719     Hiram Wede Hopkins, b 22 Feb 1879; d 06 July1941 Whiting, Monona co, IA; m 20 Feb 1912 Stella Pearl Yennie.

Sources:
Bigelow Society,The Bigelow Family Genealogy, Vol II, pg 434-435;
Histories of Walworth and Waukesha Counties, WI;
vital records WI;
Bigelow Society records.
Descendant note:  see also  David Bigelow 10 Parkinson
   Have you anything on Charles Hawkes Bigelow, who married circa 1845 to a Miss Briggs?  Marriage was in Northhampton or Springfield MA. (I also have an extensive line in Briggs)
   Just got some information on my Temple line, and several Bigelows tie in there also. Same for my Hoag & Haseltine lines.
I keep collecting folks.  I take all branches of families, as one never knows when one will find a vital connection.
   Will have to wait a bit for Ferrand's line.  I didn't connect with cousin Lucille, so I do not have her branch yet.  She is descended from Ferrand's youngest, Sarah.
   I have Civil War service cert. for Elverton, William and Franklin B. ;all sons of Ferrand. Elverton and William both served most of the war. Franklin enlisted and was killed in the mine explosion at Petersburg, VA. Also have cert. for Francis A. Bigelow.
   I also have letters Elverton wrote, one in 1865 when the armies were gathering around Washington DC to be mustered out.  As soon as I can gather info., it would probably make an interesting article for the Forge.
   I also have info. on Elverton's granddaughter Ethelyn Minerva Parkinson, dau. of Ethel Bigelow and James Nelson Parkinson. She is still living at 92.  She made her career as a children's books author.  This might also be of interest to the Forge.  Her "double cousin" was David Bigelow Parkinson, son of Truman David Parkinson & Minnie Bigelow. There has already been an article about him in the Forge.   Kathy Parkinson   E-mail    wraith@lakefield.net

Pioneer Story
     When my grandfather was nine years of age he and his parents, five brothers and two sisters came from Dale, Wisc., by train. They arrived in Ogallala the later part of February 1886. The day that they arrived , the children of Ogallala were going barefoot and the weather seemed as warm as a June day.
     They moved out 40 miles southwest of Ogallala with an oxen team. It took them two days to travel the 40 miles. The second day at noon they stopped for dinner at 'a store and postoffice called Tyghe. Both store and postoffice were a dug-out about 12 x 20. It was located about 10 miles northwest of where Grant is now. The seoond day after dark, they reached their homestead and slept in hay-tick beds.
     My grandfather's parents had the first store and postoffice in this part of the country. They named it Winchester. Harvey Gollner lives on the place today, and it is just across the Perkins County line about 8 miles, south of Venango. Before they could even :put up their sod building goods were sold out on the open prairie. The groceries and mail were hauled by ox team from Ogallala. The house. barn. store and postoffice, also schoolhouse which the Hopkins children attended. were all made of sod. The store was sold out in 1887 as the railroad between Holdrege and Sterling was completed and towns were springing up about every nine miles along it. Venango was starting to build. The Winchester postoffice was discontinued in 1890.
     People hauled water f'rom my grandf'ather's 'parents' dug well from eight miles around. It was hauled in barrels for bath. drinking water and stock. . Wild life was abundant in those days and consisted of lots of antelope,once in a while a buffalo, and lots of wild fowl. Buffalo calves were caught during the summer of 1886. There were also lots of wild horses on the prairie. The blizzard of Jan. 12. 1888. was the worst in history. The day started as a nice warm day until noon. The blizzard struck about 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon and swept through many states taking its toll of lives and livestock
       (By Norma Jean McCormick- as told her by Frank Hopkins)

     The Hopkins brothers made life very enjoyable for everyone who knew them. Their jokes, gayiety, and their wonderful sense of humor seem to live on through the generations. I hope to include in this writing a few of the jokes and stories of the Hopkins brothers which have always fascinated me from childhood. Of course, they will be stories that have been handed down from one generation to another. My grandfather, Fern W. Hopkins. came to western Nebraska when he was 21 years age from near Fond du Lac, Wisc, in the year of 1886. He came to Ogallala bv train and was met by his brother, Elmer, who had come in 1885.
     Elmer Hopkins, Lou Clemmons and Jack Gitlinger left Dale, Wisc. in the spring of 1885 and started west to Chamberlain. S. D., enticed by a ·land drawing. In .South Dakota they found land open for homesteading and filed as others had, but the Indians began to make trouble. The U.S. Government encouraged those who had homesteads to relinquish their claims and move out. Having to change plans and responding to a call of the wild, they bought a yoke of oxen fitted up a covered wagon and took out for the' promised land of western Nebraska. They started on this daring trip in May and got to Nebraska just .in time to dig in' for the winter. It was the funny' things that happened to them along the way and the troubles that they had on the trip that Elmer enjoyed telling about whenever he could get an audience to listen.      Once as they were traveling to the west. the front wheels of the wagon dropped into a bog hole and the oxen could not get a footing to pull it out. After much fooling around and exhausting the .good will of the oxen, they unhooked the team and hitched it up to the back of the wagon. Being a bit over-enthusiastic, and each doing" a bit to encourage the oxen. they over did themselves, and the oxen not only pulled the wagon out. but continued to pull'the wazon backwards at quite a pace. The wagon overturned, spilling out.................................................

     "Oh. well. then what the heck did you bring the gun along for?" Elmer, Lou and Jack drove their oxen all the way across Nebraska to Perkins County (then south Keith County ). There they stopped to file on homesteads and to to dig in for the winter. Sorne of the land had been filed on but there were few settlers. Elmer finding this level land could see the opportunity of a fortune in a few years. So he wrote to his brother, Fern, and told him to come out and wrote that he would 'meet him on a certain day in Ogallala.
     Fern told his father that he would not disappoint Elmer who had to............

     Settlers were coming into the area so fast by this time there was need for a Post Office. This copy of a petition to establish a Post Office in the Hopkins home (just across the road from Perkins (then Keith) county was preserved in some of the Hopkins family records: "There is a Petition for Post Office to First Assistant Postmaster General; Washington, D. C "We. the undersigned citizens of Chase ,County. Nebr., hereby respectfully petition to have a Post Office established at the store of J. W. Hopkins, said store situated on Section 2 Township 8 Range 41 in Chase County and state aforesaid ...........

     Arthur, the oldest brother, homesteaded just across the road from Winchester. The boys had built a blacksmith shop on his land where Elmer spent many hours along with helping Wede to learn the trade. Whenever Wede made a mistake he would burv it outside the shop so Elmer wouldn't know about it. And to this day the people who live there are still finding Wede's mistakes. One evening Fern, Elmer and Wallace Clemons, a friend of the family, were visiting at the home of Richard Watkins. On their way home they decided to give their brother Arthur,a good scare and make him think horse thieves were around the country. Arthur and James, father of...................(these breaks are where the newspaper article was ripped...........ROD)


Modified - 05/20/2009
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Rod  Bigelow - Director
rodbigelow@netzero.net

Rod Bigelow (Roger Jon12 BIGELOW)
Box 13    Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
rodbigelow@netzero.net
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