Writing can be labor-intensive, but family history, or the family memoir, for me, is more difficult than any other kind of writing. The reason for that is the enormity of the stash of documents, research facts, photos, scans, and on and on and on...
In the midst of composing, the actual writing, I dislike taking my fingers off the keys to capture a fleeting thought that I truly need to remember. Working on this book, I'm uncovering ways to be as efficient as possible while still staying in the creative zone. Since I work on a computer, it's a lot easier to keep my notes and reminders on the computer as well.
I've gotten to where, as I'm typing up a storm, if a thought strikes me that I know I'll forget, I punch the enter key four to six times to moved down to an isolated white space, type a couple of ****'s to let me know this is an informational note of some sort, I quickly type what it is I need to do, remember, or research, whatever. Then I go back up the page to the paragraph or sentence in progress and forget about everything else. When I feel like it, I'll send the notes or to-dos, ideas, to Evernote (EN). All I have to do is click the top menu icon.
I've customized my EN program to file every item I send to my "inbox." No tags or anything. Just straight to inbox. The idea is to get rid of the note or idea, get it out of my head, get it someplace safe quickly. Quick is my keyword. I can't make a chore out of saving thoughts and ideas when I'm trying to write a story. Then later I'll assign folders, tags, and the like, or actually perform the to-do I saved and just delete the note entirely.
I also use Scrivener which has boosted my productivity and I've recently figured out an outlining method that keeps me mentally focused and also a good news-feed organizing system. For the blog-to-book, I've come up with a good way to keep the many photos and documents organized, but right now I gotta get back to work.
Mondays are my "sharpen the saw" days, an idea coined by Stephen Covey. I like to get my writing and all the parts that go with it organized to start a fresh new week.

Monday, October 15, 2012
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Cincinnati Deans, The Roaring Twenties
That change necessitated including my grandparents' marriage in this present chapter, where it's much more appropriate. I didn't want anyone to think I was going nuts, rewriting stories already posted.
The Rhine Goes Dry
When my Grandfather Frank came home with his honorable discharge from the war in March 1919, alcohol was still going strong, and returning military men celebrated in style. As the story goes, my grandfather liked to drink. That would soon end, unless of course he was among those who had an undercover bootlegger friend or had access to one of the city’s many speakeasies.
The ‘20s decade was both menace and miracle.
Organized crime was rampant, with gangsters like Al Capone making their fortunes when they cashed in on Prohibition by selling bootleg alcohol.
Bad batches of homemade liquor by others caused widespread death, making Prohibition a failure.
After years of dedicated work by brave suffragettes, women won the vote.
And the last year of the ‘20s ended with an enormous crash.
But a
month after Frank Dean came home from serving his country, on May 7, 1919, he celebrated
getting married to my grandmother, Clara Wehrle. And alcohol was still legal.
Frank’s
address at the time of his marriage was 314 Main Avenue, Elmwood Place. He was 21 years of age and his occupation was
woodworker.
Clara,
age 23, lived at home, at 1216 Poplar Street, approximately on the corner of
Freeman Avenue. Her father, Joseph,
worked as a laborer, and her mother Mary kept house. Clara was employed as a “box maker,” or “marker.” (The handwriting is hard to decipher). Earlier, at age 15, she was listed as a maid in
a box factory.
![]() |
Clara Wehrle, Probably as a Bride in 1919 |
The above
photo, from my Aunt Dot’s collection, was likely taken for a special
occasion. The white dress shoes/boots and white embellished dress tell me
this was probably a photo of my Grandma the day of her wedding to Frank.
I imagine, knowing my grandmother like I did, that any pictures which included
my grandfather would have been either destroyed or given to him at some point after
he left.
Cincinnati was a beer drinking town, a brewery metropolis. Bars and saloons were plentiful in almost all neighborhoods.
…it is difficult to imagine a neighborhood more impacted by
prohibition than Over-the-Rhine. ~ Michael D. Morgan, Over-the-Rhine:
When Beer was King
On January 8th, 1920, a census taker, going door-to-door on Hensaw Avenue, in Camp Washington, recorded information for the young married couple, Frank and Clara Dean. Frank was then a sheet-metal worker, Clara did not work, and they were renting.
Their first child, my father, Raymond Clarence Dean, was born February 21,
1920, after that census was taken.
The cold winter of 1920 in Cincinnati witnessed hundreds of closing saloons
due to prohibition, breweries shutting down, and numerous “Speakeasies” popping
up all over the city.
The following summer, the same year
alcohol became illegal, the suffrage battle was won. On
August 26, 1920, women won the right to vote.
…long-standing
social barriers began to crumble. Women
now drank alongside the men, and “flappers” entered the social scene. They cut their long hair into “bob cuts” like
their favorite movie stars, smoked cigarettes in public, rolled down their
hose, and wore galoshes which “flapped” as they strode defiantly down Vine
Street… Flappers and people of all ages and income levels shared a similar
goal: to get their hands on good
prohibited liquor and not get arrested…over 3,000 speakeasies flourished in
Cincinnati until Prohibition’s repeal.~ “Brother, Can You Spare a Drink?”
Moving Back Home
By 1921, when
the city directory was published, Frank and Clara had moved in with her
parents, Joseph and Mary Wehrle, still living at 1216 Poplar Avenue. Also residing in the home was Clara’s sister,
Eleanor age 17. Frank and Clara brought their second child into the world. Uncle Norb was born
December 18, 1921, most likely there on Poplar Avenue. Grandfather Frank was employed as an iron worker that
year. His father-in-law Joseph was a
laborer.
Times
were tough then for middle- to low-income families. The country was heading toward a monstrous
financial depression by the 1930s, and it was common for families to live
together to share the financial burden.
The
1922-23 directories list neither Joseph and Mary Wehrle nor Frank and Clara
Dean, and for that matter, none of the Dean or Wehrle families. I’ve wondered if they all went back to Indiana,
but I've had no luck proving one way or the other. It’s difficult to offer a guess as to where
people are when they go missing on public records
Frank
and Clara’s third child, my Aunt Dorothy, was born on October 15, 1923.
.
Then,
in 1924, Clara and Frank appear again, living at 1100 Oehler Street, located at
Freeman Avenue west of Harriet, in the West End. Frank is now employed as a metalworker.
There
are no further directory entries until 1927-28, where Frank is a “packer,”
living at 1033 West 9th Street, still in the West End. My Aunt Clara, their fourth child, had been
born in the interim, on October 4, 1926.
The Crash of ‘29
The Wall Street Crash of 1929 began in late October 1929 and was the most devastating stock market crash in the history of the United States when taking into consideration the full extent and duration of its fallout. The crash signaled the beginning of the 10-year Great Depression that affected all Western industrialized countries and did not end in the United States until the onset of American mobilization for World War II at the end of 1941.
Anyone who bought stocks in mid-1929 and held onto them saw most of his or her adult life pass by before getting back to even. --Richard M. Salsman, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/wall_street_crash_of_1929
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Crowd at New York's American Union Bank during a bank run early in the Great Depression ~ wikipedia.com |
My Grandfather Frank moved around with jobs and housing, but maybe he was always on the lookout for more money coming in. My Grandma stayed home during those years of the children growing up, so supporting a large family in the late '20s wasn't an easy thing.
Things were not good for my grandparents. In spite of prohibition, Frank managed to get hold of alcohol--most people who drank did, a fact which added to the overall declaration that Prohibition was unsuccessful in what it hoped to attain.
As the financial status of the country plummeted in 1929, Frank and Clara found an apartment on Pendleton Street, part of Over-the-Rhine, which rented for $20 a month. The building was across the street from St. Paul Catholic Church and School. Frank tried his hand at being a "paperhanger," according to the 1929 Cincinnati Directory.
My family would greet the next decade, the ‘30s, which held disasters of its own and would test
the souls of many.
Monday, October 8, 2012
The Wehrles of Cincinnati, Late 1800s-1920
Back in Cincinnati
The first census record for the Wehrles was the 1870 Ohio census, after Valentine and Maria returned to Cincinnati. Valentine, age 41, and Mary A. 39, together with their seven children, are living in Cincinnati's 18th ward. Valentine's occupation is Dealer in
Charcoal, probably selling the charcoal used in the irons at that time for
pressing clothes. These early irons had
hinged openings to a hollow space that could be filled with hot charcoal briquettes.
Mary is "keeping house." No street address is given for the
1870 census.
1870 United States Federal Census Valentin Wehrle
1870 United States Federal Census Valentin Wehrle
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In the next census, 1880, Valentine at age 54 is a “huckster.” Maria is age 50 and has changed her place of birth from “Bavaria” to Baden. Her occupation is listed as “keeps house.” They are living on Westwood Avenue, but the street addresses are not noted, only the number of the houses in order visited.
In the Williams Cincinnati Directory for 1872, Valentine is also
listed as a Huckster and living on Harrison Pike in Fairmont.
Children still at home are:
Barbara, age 18, “at home”
Annie, instead of "Appolina," age 15, “at home”
Joseph, age 14, also a "huckster"
Lizzie, age 10, “at home”
The occupation “huckster” has a bad connotation, thought of as
maybe a shyster, one of those “snake-oil” tricksters. Actually, there
were several types of work that fell under the category of huckster in 1880 and
later.
A “peddler” is another term for huckster, someone who sold goods
of different types, either door to door or in a stall, perhaps in the city
open-air market. Additionally, hucksters who lived outside the city, and
owned a mule or horse and a cart, traveled a route where they bought
goods—usually eggs, chickens, vegetables, fruits, and assorted household
items—and then sold these items at a profit. They might buy products from
stores or shops, or from average people who sold goods so they could buy other
items they needed.
![]() |
Street Vendors, or Peddlers and Hucksters, Google Photos |
It’s safe to say Valentine was not rich. Cincinnati was full
of poor German immigrants, most who were farmers in the old country. Now
they lived in crowded cities of cement and brick with not even a yard to tend. Their days were spent trying to make enough money to feed
their families.
Information on the “Cincinnati-City of Immigrants”
website explains further the difficulty that German Catholics, in particular,
faced in trying to get jobs.
Many German immigrants arrived in Cincinnati searching for new opportunities and some came with funds to buy land. They often had technical skills or could work as tradesmen, such as butchers, bakers, or tailors; however, German Catholic immigrants were often denied work at publicly financed construction jobs, and were excluded from joining clubs established by native-born Cincinnatians. German customs clashed with the lifestyle of American-born Protestants who frowned upon the way that German families spent Sundays in theaters, saloons, and various singing societies. Catholic loyalty to the pope in Rome seemed to prohibit the notion that these foreigners could ever become proper American citizens. ~ HTTP://WWW.CINCINNATI-CITYOFIMMIGRANTS.COM/CCI/GERMAN.HTM
This was the climate
that birthed the Know-Nothing party, the native citizens who became so frightened of their city
being overrun with a lower class of immigrant population that they resorted to
all-out war against them.
According
to David Blackbourne in The Long
Nineteenth Century: A History of Germany 1780-1900, the majority of German immigrants who came to America in the early
part of the 1800s (pre-1880) were lower-class peasants, craftsmen, and farmers,
who left because of crop failure and economic depression.
As stated earlier, these facts could have contributed to Valentine moving his family to Indiana for better employment opportunities.
As stated earlier, these facts could have contributed to Valentine moving his family to Indiana for better employment opportunities.
In 1873,
a severe international economic depression broke out in both Europe and the
United States and lasted until 1879. This was known as the Great
Depression until the 1930s when another depression took place, so the earlier
one became the “Long Depression,”or the Panic of 1873.
In 1879, Thomas Edison invented a long lasting incandescent light bulb which
originally lasted for about 40 hours. and by 1880, lasted for about 1200
hours. Shortly after, in the early 1880s, the new electric lighting was
introduced in Cincinnati, and by 1883 small electric generating companies were
sprouting up throughout the city.
In the 1890 city directory, Valentine’s occupation is now renamed to “peddler,” and the address is 103 Westwood Avenue. Son Joseph, my great grandfather, is also listed in the same directory as a peddler, living at 261 Forbus, in the 30th Ward.
Valentine died on November 8, 1899, buried in Old St. Joseph's Cemetery
Wehrles in the 1900s
In the 1900 census, Maria, now a widow, has moved and is listed as "head" of house, at 1693 Westwood Avenue, which she rents. Living with her is son Peter, whose occupation, according to the 1900 census, was “hair spinner.”
Cincinnati's huge pork industry meant lots of pigs slaughtered. These animals' hair was sold to factories for spinning into goods, such as low-priced toothbrushes. Peter was obviously one of these hair spinners.
![]() | |
Valentine, Jr.'s home at 1776 Queen City Avenue. (Author Photo June 2012)
|
Joseph, now age 34, also appears in the 1900 census, showing his marriage in 1888 to Mary Wehrle, whose maiden name was Wagner. They have five children: Mary , age 11, Joseph age 9, Edward 6, Clara (my grandmother) 4, and Loretta 2.
Joseph’s occupation in 1900 is listed as “agt. Peddler,” They are living at 1769 Westwood Avenue, so Joseph lives just a few doors down from his brother Peter and his mother Maria.
![]() |
1769 Westwood Avenue, the home owned and mortgaged by Joseph and Mary Weber Wehrle, my great grandparents in 1900, when my Grandma Clara was age 4. (Author photo June 2012) |
The "agt" peddler, meaning agent, could very well have been operating a stall in Findlay Market, where he sold produce either bought from a grower or supplier or selling on a commission basis for a supplier. At any rate, the house at 1769 Westwood Avenue would have been a modest but fine home in 1900, and Joseph's peddler's salary must have been sufficient to purchase the property.
Financial Panics Then as Now
Ten years later, in the 1910 census, Joseph is working as a laborer in a lumber yard. Joseph, Jr., age 19, is also a laborer, but the place of employment is unclear. "Eddie," who appears as "Edna" on several records, age 16, works in a box factory as a “machine hand.” Clara, my grandmother, age 14, is also employed at the box factory as some type of “maid,” the handwriting there also hard to decipher.. Clarence is 9, Eleanora 7, and William 2.
Joseph and his family are now living in the rear of 1012 York Street, according to the 1910 Williams Directory, and they are now renting. What happened to their large brick home on Westwood Avenue?
A financial recession occurred between 1900, which led to the "Bank Panic of 1907," beginning in New York and spreading out to other U.S. cities. Cincinnati was not exempt.
"Crash, Crash, Crash," a Boston Post article, October 18, 1907, describes the panic:
Whether the panic had any bearing on the financial condition of the Wehrle family would only be speculation, but it doesn't take too much of a change in the financial atmosphere to cause unemployment and prices too high on necessities, especially for lower- to middle-class citizens. The "Blue-Collar Workers."
Now there were four blue-collar workers in Joseph and Mary's family. Joseph, Sr., Joseph, Jr., and daughter Clara, age 14, and her brother Edward, age 16.
For whatever reason or circumstance, people do not just move to a much smaller home in a lesser neighborhood, giving up a nice, large home, just for the excitement of the move.
My grandmother, Clara Wehrle Dean, was a financially cautious person--a frugal lady. She always managed to live well on a sparse income from hard work. She, no doubt, learned this growing up watching her parents, adopting their morals and values.
On my shopping trips with Grandma after she retired, when I saw something I wanted, she always had a way of showing me a less expensive option, explaining to me she was on social security and had to be careful how much she spent on things. She was the queen of sales shopping, always able to snatch an unbelievable deal in Shillito's bargain basement, which explains the pretty cotton house dresses she wore every day.
One trip downtown on the Clifton bus, we spied thick, juicy hamburgers in one of the restaurant windows. Grandma said, "Bettyann, you and I are going to stop at the grocery and go home and make us some hamburgers better than those."
True to her word, we got off the bus at the little store across the street from her McMillan Avenue apartment, picked up ground beef, an onion, a tomato, and some buns. After climbing the three flights of steps to her little apartment, she showed me how to make the best burger I think I've ever eaten. And she reminded me how much money we saved.
Valentine, Jr., appears in the 1910 city directory, still living at 1776 Queen City Avenue, so his mother and brother Peter are now neighbors. Valentine works as a laborer.
1917 House of Wehrles:
The 1917 Williams Cincinnati Directory shows Maria (Mary A.) still together with Peter, but they now live at 1852 Westwood Avenue (house has been demolished). Other Wehrle residents in the home include Leo D. Wehrle, who is a jeweler, and Louis C. Wehrle, a "trimmer."
I'm not sure if these two Wehrles are relatives or boarders who just happen to be Wehrles.
My great grandfather Joseph now resides at 1216 Poplar, the home my Grandma Clara lived in when she married one year later, in 1919. Also living at that address is Joseph, Jr., a woodworker, and Edward Wehrle, a "sander." This is probably "Eddie," my Grandma's older brother who worked in the box factory with her previously.
In the 1919 city directory, we see (Maria) Mary A., "wid of Valentine," living at 1912 Montrose in South Fairmont. No other Wehrle is listed living at that address with Maria. Peter is listed as still at the Westwood Avenue address.
A year later, Maria is living with daughter Barbara Emlich and her family, at 1912 Montrose Street, South Fairmont.
It is here that Maria, or Mary A., passes away on May 2, 1920, at age 89. She is buried in Old St. Joseph's Cemetery.
Clara and Frank's Story next.
![]() |
1012 York Street (photo by me in June 2012) where Joseph, Mary, and their children lived in the "rear" in 1910. |
"Crash, Crash, Crash," a Boston Post article, October 18, 1907, describes the panic:
By most measures, it was not the worst panic in U.S. history. But in retrospect, it was a watershed event that had a lasting impact on the financial system. ~ http://www.bos.frb.org/about/pubs/panicof1.pdfThe Post's article goes on to explain how financial panics develop. The same today as they took place back then...
The misfortunes of a prominent speculator would undermine public confidence in the financial system. Panic-stricken investors would then scramble to cut their losses. And because it wasn't uncommon for speculators to double as bank officials, worried depositors would rush to withdraw their money from any bank associated with a troubled speculator.
Whether the panic had any bearing on the financial condition of the Wehrle family would only be speculation, but it doesn't take too much of a change in the financial atmosphere to cause unemployment and prices too high on necessities, especially for lower- to middle-class citizens. The "Blue-Collar Workers."
Now there were four blue-collar workers in Joseph and Mary's family. Joseph, Sr., Joseph, Jr., and daughter Clara, age 14, and her brother Edward, age 16.
For whatever reason or circumstance, people do not just move to a much smaller home in a lesser neighborhood, giving up a nice, large home, just for the excitement of the move.
My grandmother, Clara Wehrle Dean, was a financially cautious person--a frugal lady. She always managed to live well on a sparse income from hard work. She, no doubt, learned this growing up watching her parents, adopting their morals and values.
On my shopping trips with Grandma after she retired, when I saw something I wanted, she always had a way of showing me a less expensive option, explaining to me she was on social security and had to be careful how much she spent on things. She was the queen of sales shopping, always able to snatch an unbelievable deal in Shillito's bargain basement, which explains the pretty cotton house dresses she wore every day.
One trip downtown on the Clifton bus, we spied thick, juicy hamburgers in one of the restaurant windows. Grandma said, "Bettyann, you and I are going to stop at the grocery and go home and make us some hamburgers better than those."
True to her word, we got off the bus at the little store across the street from her McMillan Avenue apartment, picked up ground beef, an onion, a tomato, and some buns. After climbing the three flights of steps to her little apartment, she showed me how to make the best burger I think I've ever eaten. And she reminded me how much money we saved.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Great Uncles and 2nd Great Grandmother Maria
The 1910 census lists "Mary A. Wehrle," now age 80, widow of Valentine, still living with my Great Uncle Peter, her son, though I should say Peter lives with her, because she is listed as "head" of household. She now rents a home at 1799 Queen City Avenue. Peter is still a "hair spinner," and his family now includes wife Catherine and children, John, age 16, Leo 12, Louis 11.
![]() |
Original home in rundown condition and now boarded up--1799 Queen City Avenue, home of Maria Wehrle, widow of Valentine, and her son Valentine, Jr., and his family. (Photo by me in June 2012) |
1917 House of Wehrles:
The 1917 Williams Cincinnati Directory shows Maria (Mary A.) still together with Peter, but they now live at 1852 Westwood Avenue (house has been demolished). Other Wehrle residents in the home include Leo D. Wehrle, who is a jeweler, and Louis C. Wehrle, a "trimmer."
I'm not sure if these two Wehrles are relatives or boarders who just happen to be Wehrles.
My great grandfather Joseph now resides at 1216 Poplar, the home my Grandma Clara lived in when she married one year later, in 1919. Also living at that address is Joseph, Jr., a woodworker, and Edward Wehrle, a "sander." This is probably "Eddie," my Grandma's older brother who worked in the box factory with her previously.
Valentine, Jr.'s wife Frances is now a widow, living with their son William, a shoe pattern-maker, on Lahmann Road South of Dremen Avenue. Valentine, Jr. died June 4, 1914, at age 54.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the 1919 city directory, we see (Maria) Mary A., "wid of Valentine," living at 1912 Montrose in South Fairmont. No other Wehrle is listed living at that address with Maria. Peter is listed as still at the Westwood Avenue address.
![]() |
1912 Montrose in South Fairmont, home of Maria (Mary A.) Wehrle, widow of Valentine |
It is here that Maria, or Mary A., passes away on May 2, 1920, at age 89. She is buried in Old St. Joseph's Cemetery.
![]() |
The above photo was posted on Ancestry by the Emlich family, originally taken by the Hamilton County Auditor. |
Clara and Frank's Story next.
Monday, October 1, 2012
Valentine and Maria. Indiana, The 1960s
New Albany, Floyd County, Indiana
Aside from the citizenship record in 1852, Valentine and Maria
first appear in the 1870 U.S. census for Hamilton County, Cincinnati, but three
of their children’s birthplaces are listed as Indiana, from 1862 to 1866.
Later records prove the location in Indiana as New Albany.
Neither the prior 1850
or 1860 census lists Valentine and Maria living either in Ohio or Indiana,
though it's evident they were living in Ohio, up until
the birth of Barbara in 1862 in Indiana.
It’s uncertain why
Valentine and Maria moved to Indiana and remained there until sometime before
1870, when they returned to Cincinnati. The Civil War began on April
12, 1861, and was declared finished on April 9, 1865, so basically Valentine
and his family stayed in Indiana throughout the war. If he fought in
the war, I cannot find records of this. In 1862, Abraham Lincoln
established one of the first seven National Cemeteries in New Albany for
burying the many slain bodies in the Civil War.
New Albany was nicknamed
“River Town,” for its location on the banks of the Ohio River, and “The Sunny
Side of Louisville,” because it was across the river from Louisville.
The steamboat industry
in New Albany was thriving during this time, and possibly jobs were
available. Without a census to refer to, or a city directory, it’s
impossible to know if Valentine got work there that caused him to
relocate.
Shipbuilding was accompanied by a wide range of
ancillary business including machine shops, foundries, cabinet and furniture
factories, and silversmith shops… By 1850, New Albany was the largest city in
Indiana due to its river contacts with the South. New Albany's size and
economic influence overshadowed all of its neighboring cities, including
Louisville.~ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Albany,_Indiana#Early_history
The most obvious reason
for Valentine moving to Indiana during its “boom” period of extensive
shipbuilding was the work it provided, and at the end of this boom business, in
1870, when the last ship was built, the work opportunities also
ended.
The Battle of Corydon
I’ve wondered about the Wehrles during the Civil War, what that must have been like.
The Battle of Corydon
was a minor engagement that took place July 9, 1863, just south of Corydon,
which had been the original capital of Indiana until 1825, and was the county
seat of Harrison County. The attack occurred during Morgan's Raid …as a force
of 2,500 cavalry invaded the North in support of the Tullahoma Campaign. It was
the only pitched battle of the Civil War that occurred in Indiana, and no
battle has occurred within Indiana since.
...News of an impending raid spread across the state, Governor Oliver P. Morton called out the state's militia force, the Indiana Legion, to defend against the threat. Unaware of the size of the invading army, four companies of the 6th and 8th Regiments of the Legion, totaling about one hundred men, attempted to prevent the Confederates from crossing the Ohio River into Indiana, but were overcome by superior artillery fire, killing two of the defenders. The units retreated northward where they met with the main body of the 6th Regiment under the command of Col. Lewis Jordan. Along with the townspeople, they constructed breastworks that formed a defensive line south of Corydon. Despite promises of reinforcements from regional Legion commanders in New Albany, only about 450 men (consisting almost entirely of locals) were defending the town.
... A large part of the Legion were captured as they attempted to escape from the town, while Col. Jordon and others regrouped downtown. Confederates then seized the Legion's commissary supplies on the edge of town, and fired two warning shots into the downtown from their artillery, convincing Jordan that continued resistance was futile and leading him to surrender his force and Corydon. ~ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_CorydonIn July 1863, Valentine and Maria’s youngest child, Barbara, was one year old. The Battle of Corydon was being fought approximately 20 miles away from their home.
Indiana and Ohio’s
Underground Railroad
![]() |
File:Brooklyn Museum - A Ride for Liberty -- The Fugitive Slaves - Eastman Johnson ~Source: http://www.cyberindiana.com/imag |
Source: http://www.undergroundrailroadi
In spite of our
country’s civil war, and the battle fought close to my ancestors’ home in
Indiana, slavery had continued, and Ohio and Indiana being free states (and
across the river in Kentucky it was not), what’s come to be known as the
Underground Railroad was in operation.
Thousands of brave
people helped the slaves flee North, some to Canada, to
freedom. There was such precision and cooperative focus by these
heroes that it was likened to a railroad, with “stations” along the way, hence
Underground Railroad.
While Valentine and
Maria and their children were living in New Albany, their city was a stop on
the Underground Railroad. The “station” there was The New Albany
Town Clock Church, now the Second Baptist Church.
Town Clock Church dates from 1849-1852. The street address is 300 East Main.. Stories of this church during the Civil War are legend; it was an open secret that this was a station in the Underground Railroad. The small openings and rooms in the dirt floor basement remain just as they were when fugitive slaves hid safely during their journey North.~ Source: http://www.cyberindiana.com/imag
There were many places that runaway negroes crossed the Ohio river from Kentucky into Indiana, and the anti-slavery league put skiffs and boats along the river to aid the fugitives. The most used routes were above the mouth of the Wabash River on the Ohio and on up to the neighborhood of Cincinnati.~ http://www.undergroundrailroadindiana.com.
Politics and the Know
Nothings
Another possible reason
for the Wehrles moving from Ohio to Indiana could have been the Cincinnati 1855
Riot caused by the “Know Nothings” (established in 1854 as the Supreme Order of
the Star-spangled Banner), a group of Cincinnati Nativists formed to oppose
immigrants and Catholics.
This group was also the
opposing political party against Democrats (this was before the Republican
party was formed), and in 1855 tried to fix an election by means of stealing
ballot boxes in German voting wards and using physical violence to keep the
Germans from voting.
The riots went on three
days and nights. The Know-Nothing mobs attempted to invade the
Over-the-Rhine neighborhood, but the Germans created a barricade across Vine
Street and organized themselves into a fighting unit, successfully pushing the
Know-Nothings back and causing them to lose the election in spite of their evil
schemes to win.
Times were dangerous
then for Germans and Catholics in Cincinnati, who were thought of as low-class
threats to the city’s wholesome atmosphere.
However, Valentine and Maria would return to Cincinnati, Hamilton County, before the 1870 Census, and the second generation Wehrles married and began families of their own close to their parents and grandparents: Somewhere Over-the-Rhine.
Next: The Wehrles of Cincinnati.
However, Valentine and Maria would return to Cincinnati, Hamilton County, before the 1870 Census, and the second generation Wehrles married and began families of their own close to their parents and grandparents: Somewhere Over-the-Rhine.
Next: The Wehrles of Cincinnati.
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