When I started
researching I wanted to take my Cornwell line back as far as I could. I soon
hit a roadblock. John Burl Cornwell my Great-Great-Great-Grandpa is shrouded in
mystery. John was married five times, had five children and raised a hand full
of step-children. He also fought in the Civil War. I have had a lot of leads
but little luck!
John Burl Cornwell |
I knew my
Great-Great-Grandpa William Hayden Cornwell was born to John and Rebecca
Cornwell in 1878 in Clay County, TN. I soon found the family in the 1880 census
still living in Clay County. The family is listed as John B. Cornwell, a
cabinet maker, age fifty. His wife Rebecca age thirty-seven, sons Thomas age
five and William age two. Also step-son Robert PeDigo age fourteen. I knew John
had to have had something note worthy in his life before he was 50. Also I now
knew that Rebecca was married before to have had a son.
The Cornwell/York/PeDigo Family abt 1880 |
I found the marriage
record for John B. Cornwell and Rebecca M. PeDigo they married in Clay
Co, TN on the 28th of November in 1874.
John had one more son with Rebecca named Benjamin in 1880. Rebecca died young
(the date is still unknown).
Rebecca and Wm. Hayden Cornwell |
As I look farther into
John’s past I find a wife named Delaney Henderson. Now Delaney and John’s story
is one from a story book. (As a writer, I love this part) They married in Clay
Co., on the 14th of May 1871, John was
forty-one and Delaney was about thirty-eight. I wondered what I could find on
Delaney that would help lead me to understand John’s story. I was rather shocked
at what I found. In 1870’s census I found Delaney Henderson in Jackson County,
TN. She was an indentured servant for Dr. Parrish Sims, Dr. Sims sold Delaney
to John for $1250.00. I wonder how John met Delaney? An answer I may never
know.
Sadly Delaney’s death
date is unknown, I believe she must have died before November of 1874. Making
her time with John short.
I still needed to know
what happened before Delaney, ten years before the country was torn apart by
the Civil War. John would be in his thirties, surely he fought.
Yes the Civil War would
be a big part of John’s story. John enlisted in Columbia, KY on the 23rd of November 1861 serving with the 9th KY, company B. John was discharged do to
his heart in November of 1864 in Nashville, TN. Only to reenlist a few days
later, this time with the 23rd KY, company D. He severed until the end of the war. I
need to know what happened before the war? I look to the census before, 1860
and I find him! In Jackson county TN John age twenty-nine a laborer listed with
a Nancy Cornwell age thirty-three, I assume this to be wife number one. Also in
the home a Selina Dunchan, maybe Nancy’s sister? That census record is the only
record of John and his life with Nancy.
What of John’s
childhood? I know from pension files he was born in Nashville, or around
Nashville. He lived in Jackson co. TN where there is a 1850 census listing for
a widow Lucinda Cornwell with two young sons, in the age bracket that would
match John B. Cornwell, sadly as all genealogist know the 1850 census only
lists the name of the tax payer and then everyone else is just a number.
Life after Rebecca.
Between 1880 and 1890 John moved to Missouri. After the death of Rebecca
Melvina(York)PeDigo-Cornwell. John married a widow Martha E. “Belle”
Rollins (nee Haney) I find Belle’s widow pension. Also receiving a pension was
John Cornwell in the County of Laclede, MO. John married Belle on the 3rd of July 1890, he raised her two daughters
Elizabeth and Cynthia. Belle Cornwell died around 1893.
On the 22nd of May 1895 John married yet again to Wealtha
Ann “Bessie” Farquer-Sparks, a divorced mother with two young children Maude
and William Harrison “Harry”. Bessie’s children were given the Cornwell name.
Together John and Bessie had one son Samuel in 1896 and one daughter that
died in infancy named Maggie.
John and Bessie in the Middle, her brothers and sisters in-laws. |
John died at the age of
75 on the 14th of January 1906 while
living in Richland, Missouri. Finding a photo taken in the 1920’s of John’s
resting place, helps locate Rebecca and zones in on her place of death. I
called the Pulaski county historical society and the lady I talked with went to
the cemetery and found John. She looked in the books and found the grave
next to him was not opened, but there is no record of who is buried there other
than a Cornwell. Having photographic evidence helps put that to rest.