William Bennet Gray: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{IndividualAndParents|Individual=William Bennet Gray|Father=William Tell Gray, Jr.|Mother=Nancy E. Lasey|Family=William Tell Jr. and Nancy E. Gray}} ==Data== ;Birth :Abt. 1848 :Campbell, Kentucky ==Notes== ==Sources== <gallery> File:1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48.jpg|1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48 File:1880 U.S. Census - Sandsuck, ED 162, Pendleton, Kentucky, Page 512 of 835...")
 
(Added source, data, notes.)
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{{IndividualAndParents|Individual=[[William Bennet Gray]]|Father=[[William Tell Gray, Jr.]]|Mother=[[Nancy E. Lasey]]|Family=William Tell Jr. and Nancy E. Gray}}
{{IndividualAndParents|Individual=[[William Bennet Gray]]|Father=[[William Tell Gray, Jr.]]|Mother=[[Nancy E. Lasey]]|Family=William Tell Jr. and Nancy E. Gray}}
;Spouse
:[[Elizabeth Josephine Caldwell]] ''([[Family:William Bennet and Elizabeth Josephine Gray|family]])''
:After 1870
:Kentucky


==Data==
==Data==
Line 7: Line 12:


==Notes==
==Notes==
As I enter in the source records I've found for William's life, the apparent picture we get, is of a horribly broken family. William is single in 1870. In 1880, he is living alone on his own, but he is listed as a widower. During the intervening time he had started a family with Elizabeth, but, contrary to the census record, she did not die. In fact, some years after 1880, we find her petitioning the court to grant her a divorce, which it does, in 1886. In fact, she outlives William, only to eventually die of a suicide.
William for his part, reappears in Ohio, and starts a family with one Abbie Hoyt. The relationship is said to have started in 1883, and their first child is reported to have been born in 1885.
It seems clear then that William abandoned his family in Kentucky.
However, from Elizabeth's eventual suicide, we can also reason that she is likely not entirely innocent in the relationship either. (High likelihood of depression and thence abusive behavior. Not that I would excuse William for abandoning his children.)


==Sources==
==Sources==
* "United States, Social Security Numerical Identification Files (NUMIDENT), 1936-2007", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6KQM-M77D : 10 February 2023), Bennett Gray in entry for Emery Atwood Gray, .
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48.jpg|1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48
File:1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48.jpg|1870 U.S. Census - Grants Lick, Campell County, Kentucky, page 29 of 48
File:1880 U.S. Census - Sandsuck, ED 162, Pendleton, Kentucky, Page 512 of 835.jpg|1880 U.S. Census - Sandsuck, ED 162, Pendleton, Kentucky, Page 512 of 835
File:1880 U.S. Census - Sandsuck, ED 162, Pendleton, Kentucky, Page 512 of 835.jpg|1880 U.S. Census - Sandsuck, ED 162, Pendleton, Kentucky, Page 512 of 835
</gallery>
</gallery>

Revision as of 08:37, 5 October 2024

William Bennet Gray William Tell Gray, Jr. (family)
 
Nancy E. Lasey
Spouse
Elizabeth Josephine Caldwell (family)
After 1870
Kentucky

Data

Birth
Abt. 1848
Campbell, Kentucky

Notes

As I enter in the source records I've found for William's life, the apparent picture we get, is of a horribly broken family. William is single in 1870. In 1880, he is living alone on his own, but he is listed as a widower. During the intervening time he had started a family with Elizabeth, but, contrary to the census record, she did not die. In fact, some years after 1880, we find her petitioning the court to grant her a divorce, which it does, in 1886. In fact, she outlives William, only to eventually die of a suicide.

William for his part, reappears in Ohio, and starts a family with one Abbie Hoyt. The relationship is said to have started in 1883, and their first child is reported to have been born in 1885.

It seems clear then that William abandoned his family in Kentucky.

However, from Elizabeth's eventual suicide, we can also reason that she is likely not entirely innocent in the relationship either. (High likelihood of depression and thence abusive behavior. Not that I would excuse William for abandoning his children.)

Sources