Showing posts with label Howe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howe. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2018

Samuel Belding Smith

View of modern day Fitchburg, Massachusetts (source)

The parents of Samuel G. Smith were Samuel Belding Smith and Mary Hall of Fitchburg, Massachusetts.

Samuel Belding Smith was born on October 20, 1807 in Winchester, New Hampshire. He was the son of Samuel Smith and Hannah Belding. Mary Hall was born on August 23, 1803 in Westminster, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Elisha Hall and Prudence Martin. They were married on July 29, 1827 in Fitchburg. Samuel and Mary had three children together:

Mary Ann Smith (b. 1828; d. aft. 1910; m. Philip Howe)
Sophia Smith (b. 1830; d. 1851)
Samuel G. Smith (b. 1837; d. 1922; m. Ellen Partridge)

Samuel B. Smith was a carpenter. The 1850 U.S. Census shows him living in Fitchburg with his family and notes his occupation. The real estate he owned was valued at $650, so it appears that Samuel was living comfortably. With him in his home was his wife, Mary, and their eldest child, Mary Ann, who was recently married to Philip Howe and had six month-old twin boys Alvah and Alvin Howe. Philip is not listed in the household, but he and Mary Ann were definitely married at the time, so it's possible that he was away for some reason at the time of the census. Another explanation is that Mary Ann and Philip may have had a household elsewhere, but Samuel and Mary might still have included Mary Ann and the twins as part of their family to the census recorder. Also living with Samuel and Mary was their 19-year old daughter Sophia and their 12-year old son Samuel. This moment, captured in the census, is bittersweet, for two tragedies were about to befall the Smith family.

On August 5, 1851, Sophia Smith died. She was twenty. The tragedy of losing their daughter must have devastated Samuel and Mary. Sophia was buried in Laurel Hill Cemetery in Fitchburg, next to her paternal grandmother, Hannah Belding Smith. Then, in 1852, Alvah Howe, their two-year old grandson, died.

Sometime between 1852 and 1860, Samuel and Mary Smith decided to leave Fitchburg. We have no way of knowing if the dual losses they suffered prompted this move, or if it was purely a decision born of economic opportunity. The couple settled in Bunker Hill, Illinois, over a thousand miles west of Fitchburg, with their son Samuel. Mary Ann and Philip Howe accompanied them, setting up their own household nearby.

The distance between Fitchburg, MA and Bunker Hill, IL.


Samuel continued to work as a carpenter in Bunker Hill. He died there on December 8, 1893 at the age of 78.

It's not clear when Mary Hall Smith died. There is a record at Bunker Hill Cemetery stating that a Mary Smith born in 1803 died on 17 May 1886 and is buried there. It would be easy to assume this is Samuel's wife, Mary. However, some peculiar information is found on Samuel Smith's probate record. This document, dated 27 December 1893, contains a statement from Samuel's son, Samuel G. Smith, which reads as follows:

Petitioner further shows that the said Samuel B. Smith died, seized and possessed of real and personal estate consisting chiefly of six (6) acres of land in the North East corner of of Section Number Twenty-Two (22) in Township Seven (7) Range Eight (8) west of the third principal meridian in the County of Macoupin and the State of Illinois, [unreadable word] old furniture, carpenter's tools, etc. 
All of said personal estate being estimated to be worth abut twenty five dollars. 
That said deceased left surviving him Mary Smith, his widow who has for a number of years resided out of the state and Samuel Smith and Mary A. Howe his children as heirs.

This indicates that Mary had not been living with Samuel for years, and was not even in the state of Illinois, much less buried in Bunker Hill Cemetery. Where was Mary? Why wasn't she living with her husband? In 1893 she would have been 89 years of age. It is possible that she'd was infirm and had gone to live in a medical facility, but why out of state? These questions don't have answers at this time. I cannot find any records for Mary Smith after the 1880 U.S. Census, which shows her living with Samuel in Bunker Hill.

Samuel and Mary Smith were the first of their immediate family to move west. This marked the beginning of the Smith family's migration from Massachusetts to California. Their daughter, Mary Ann Smith Howe, would take her family to Santa Ana, California. Their son Samuel Smith's children would later follow their cousins west to California, settling in nearby Los Angeles.


Monday, August 19, 2013

Scandalous Ancestor: Alvin Jared Howe


Alvin Jared Howe

What family history would be complete without some scandal? In my Smith line, that notorious ancestor was Alvin Jared Howe, my first cousin, four times removed. He was a renowned and wealthy doctor, enough respected by his family that my ancestor Walter Samuel Smith named his son, Glenn Alvin Smith, for him. So, how did Alvin fall from grace?

Alvin Howe was the grandson of Samuel B. Smith and Mary Hall, the nephew of my ancestor Samuel G. Smith and cousin of my great-great-grandfather Walter Samuel Smith. He was born 21 January 1850 in Bennington, Vermont. His parents, Philip Howe and Mary Ann Smith, moved their family to Bunker Hill, Illinois during Alvin’s childhood, and he lived there for a time alongside his Smith cousins. In 1863, the family crossed the plains with a wagon train, settling first in Solano County, California, and later moving to Santa Ana, in Orange County.


Alvin became a noted physician in Santa Ana. He was a Mason and an Odd Fellow. He was prominent in local politics, even serving as the second mayor of Santa Ana. He married Willella Earhart on 23 December 1874, and they had two daughters, Lulu and Ethel. Alvin Howe’s comfortable life was shattered in 1890, when he was indicted on charges of performing an abortion on a local woman. This procedure was illegal at the time. Alvin was brought before a grand jury and eventually cleared of the charges, but his reputation had been ruined. His marriage became strained, and Alvin fled Santa Ana for San Francisco, leaving his family behind.

Willella Howe Waffle

Willella Earhart Howe filed for divorce in 1897. She remarried Edson Waffle in 1898. Willella remained in Santa Ana and practiced medicine there herself, becoming the town’s first female doctor and a very respected figure. The house where she lived, first with Alvin and later with her second husband is now a historical landmark in Santa Ana, the Howe-Waffle House. Originally located at the corner of Bush and Seventh Streets, it was moved to 120 Civic Center Drive in 1975 and restored. These days, it is open to tours and available for special events. Visit the
 Santa Ana History website for more details.

The Howe-Waffle House in Santa Ana, California


Alvin Howe died in San Francisco on 11 June 1904. He was buried in Los Angeles, closer to his family.


** A note about the photos in this post. These digital images were forwarded to me by family members some years ago.  I see the same photos posted on multiple websites devoted to Howe-Waffle history.  I do not know the original provenance of these pictures, and am sensitive to the fact that they may not have originated with my family members.  If you believe one of these photos belongs to you or is copyrighted to your website, please let me know.