Showing posts with label Hannah Lloyd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hannah Lloyd. Show all posts

Friday, September 8, 2017

John L Cooper's Kids


AMOS COOPER > JOHN L COOPER m Asenath Maples

You ever get the feeling that a family  might be just a little odd? All the fragments and pieces I've put together on the John L Cooper family kind of leaves me with that impression -  just don't ask me what I'm basing it on.

Amos and Hannah Lloyd Cooper, Quakers, moved from Pennsylvania to Crawford, then Clark County, Illinois and later, their children settle primarily in the Stephenson and Winnebago County area. Many then moved on to other parts, including Iowa and Oklahoma.

Their son John L. Cooper, born 28 Feb 1803 in Pennsylvania, married Asenath Maples on 06 Oct 1832 in Clark County, Illinois. She was the daughter of William and Mary Field Maples, born in North Carolina.

The couple had nine known children. One I know nothing about: Clarinda, born 1833 in Clark County.

Alfred James Cooper was born about 1836 and married Marian Angeline "Angie" Williard on 04 Sep 1857 in Will County, Illinois. You can read about the meandering life of Alfred here. Alfred and Angie were the grandparents of noted Oklahoma historian Angie Debo. He was a pioneering spirit and ended up settling at last in Oklahoma. You can learn a little about the dramatic daughter, Bird Cooper, whose fiance was killed in a feud as well. He died in 1928.

Amos J Cooper was born in 1838 in Clark County and died 31 Aug 1867 in Pecatonica, Winnebago County, Illinois. He served in Co B, 46th Illinois Infantry during the Civil War. I'm not sure if he ever married or not, but he had no issue I could find. A farmer, he died of Tabes Mesenterica (TB) after being ill for six months.

George Washington Cooper, born 27 Jan 1842 in Stephenson County, married Hannah Phelps in 1893. She hailed from Ohio originally. George served as a private in Company B, Illinois 46th Infantry Regiment and was mustered out in 1866 at Baton Rouge. This regiment was involved in many battles and was well regarded for its bravery and gallantry in the field of battle. George and his wife had two children and also settled in Oklahoma. George died in Pawnee 18 Jan 1931 and Hannah died about 1907 in Blackburn, Oklahoma.

Hannah H. Cooper was born about 1845 in Stephenson County. She resided with her parents well into middle age. When they died, she most likely resided in the same home with her single brothers, though the 1890 Census would have been able to confirm that surmise. In 1891, this article was found in the local paper:

Hannah was "crazy as a hawk"
Hannah lived only two more weeks, dying at the Elgin Asylum on 16 May 1891.

John L. Cooper, Jr., was born 17 Oct 1845, Stephenson County. He died a single man on 16 May 1918 in Rock Run.
DIED SUDDENLY
John Cooper, an elderly resident of Rock Grove township, living with a brother, Morton Cooper, four miles south of Rock City, was found dead in bed this morning. A coroner's jury said it was due to heart disease. He had been in feeble health for several years.
Mr Cooper was 74 years old, never married, and had always lived in Stephenson County. His brother, 72 years old, is also a bachelor.
Morning Star, Rockford, Illinois
Wednesday, May 15, 1918
His brother Morton, born 04 Mar 1849 in Freeport, Stephenson County, also remained single. He moved after brother John's death to yet another brother's home (Aaron) near Geneva, Iowa. I wonder if he had some type of mental disability that had him moving at 70 years old so far from his home to another relative?  After a year with Aaron, he moved to Shell Rock and lived with single brother Abraham. Morton died 16 Mar 1934 in Shell Rock.

Abraham was born in Nov 1851 in Freeport. He moved to Shell Rock, Butler County and in 1919, his brother Morton moved to his home from brother Aaron's home.  Abraham was ill for several years, but did outlive his brother. Though he was too ill to go to brother Morton's funeral, he managed to be the last surviving Cooper child and died at age 87 on 17 May 1939 of complications of age. Nephew Noah Burlin Cooper (son of Aaron and living in Rock Island, Illinois) was in charge of his burial.

Aaron W Cooper was born 08 May 1856 in Illinois and died 17 Sep 1920 in Geneva, Franklin County, Iowa. He married Anna Blasier on 13 Jan 1881 in Waverly, Bremer County, Iowa. They had two children one of whom died in infancy. They divorced about 1904 and he did not remarry. Aaron died in 1920.  She remarried to a gent named Robert A Dennis in 1905. He was a widower with a number of children. He died in 1922. She died in 1955.



Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Mystery Muddle: The Family Legend of James Fenimore Cooper


Since earliest days, I remember my dad telling me we were related to James Fenimore Cooper, the noted author. As I started this project, my Uncle Harold Ripley also reminded me that this was so. He added that his grandmother had letters from Cooper, and he was quite adamant about them having existed in the ownership of his grandmother,  Mary Jane Cooper Smull (daughter of William Lloyd Cooper).

I've poked around some, but don't see a direct connection. Both William Cooper, James' father and William Cooper, Amos Cooper's father, were Quaker and both lived in Quaker communities in Pennsylvania, but they are not the same William Cooper. James Fenimore Cooper's father William, was quite well-known and removed to the town he founded, Cooperstown, in Otsego County, New York. He was a US Congressman as well. Our William Cooper seems to have been a modest farmer. Records get dicey going back earlier, but this is what I've come up with. I'd say if there is a connection, it's very distant, at best. Though, I will keep poking at it.

The second point I want to mention is that if you had letters from a famous author in your family treasures, where are they? No one in the Cooper/Smith/Smull family has them. Would they have tossed them out? I doubt it. Especially as I learned recently that a third cousin also grew up hearing this legend.
Click to enlarge
Click to enlarge

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Meet the Coopers: Amos & Hannah Lloyd Cooper

The Cooper side of the family is large and complex. I've had an opportunity to speak with a few of the descendants over the past few years and through them I learned that Amos, who I consider our family head, had a father named William according to his marriage record. I have not delved into this information to any degree because it would require a trip East to Montgomery and Bucks Counties, Pennsylvania and that is not in the cards right now.

Amos was born in about 1772 in Montgomery County,  Pennsylvania. The Coopers were Quakers and attended the Horsham Monthly Meeting in Bucks County. In 1794, Amos and his intended bride, Hannah Lloyd appeared with their parents in front of several monthly meetings to state their intention to marry. On 12 Dec 1794, they married at the Haddonfield Monthly Meeting. The Coopers farmed in Northampton, Bucks County for several years quite successfully. In 1801, he was farming 73 acres with a value of about $1,000. His brothers also farmed near him. The couple had at least nine children, not all of them surviving to adulthood. In about 1806, the couple moved to Delaware for unknown reasons, but remained there only about two years before returning to Bucks County. Son William Lloyd Cooper was the only child born in Delaware.

1794 Wedding and its Witnesses

In July of 1825, the Cooper's appeared before the Quaker Monthly Meeting and requested they be allowed to remove themselves from their congregation so they could be the first pioneers in the family and head West. This was granted to the couple and their children.

Quaker Request for Removal
So, with that, the family made up of Amos, Hannah, George, John, Sarah, William LLoyd (my 3rd GG), Amos, Chalkley, and  Franklin departed for Illinois.

There was a large Quaker settlement near York, near the Crawford County, Illinois line. The family settled in first in Crawford, then in Clark County, Illinois according to the 1830 census. I found one little reference to Amos possibly being a justice of the peace in 1830. Beyond that, I don't know much about the couple once they got to Clark County. Amos and Hannah seemed both to have died about 1835.

The children thrived in the area and many went on to other parts of Illinois and my 3rd GG William Lloyd Cooper and his wife  Elizabeth Beams moved on to Stephenson County. After William's death, his wife Elizabeth would live with her daughter's family in Bremer County, Iowa. She would be buried in Stephenson County.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Cooper Family Stories

This page features the stories related to the descendants of Amos Cooper and Hannah Lloyd.

AMOS COOPER & HANNAH LLOYD

Meet the Coopers: Amos & Hannah Lloyd Cooper
Mystery Muddle: The Legend of James Fennimore Cooper  

   JOHN L COOPER

        John L Cooper's Kids
        Civil War in Stephenson County

        ALFRED JAMES COOPER
        Alfred James Cooper, A Restless Guy
        LINA COOPER
        Trailblazing Women: Angie Debo, Historian Pt 1
        Trailblazing Women: Angie Debo, Historian Pt 2
        ALFRED D COOPER
        Together Forever: Alta & Elva Cooper  

     AARON WASHINGTON COOPER
     Aaron W Cooper & His Neighbors

       HANNAH H COOPER
       Hannah H Cooper, Crazy as a Hawk 

   WILLIAM LLOYD COOPER

    On the Road....Stephenson County, Illinois and Grant County, Wisconsin
    William Lloyd Cooper & Elizabeth Beams
    Mystery Muddle: Truth, Legend, or Something In Between  

            ANN COOPER
            Susanna Gourley Thompson: Rock Grove's Oldest Resident
            LORENA THOMPSON
            Peter Smull: Samuel Smull of South Dakota
            The USC Trojans: Willis Smull's Children
            OMAR HAZZARD THOMPSON
            Scandal Sheet: The End of the Frank & Grace Noble Marriage
            ALMEDA HANNAH THOMPSON
            Trailblazing Women: The First Woman Methodist Minister in Oregon

            HANNAH COOPER
            Hannah Cooper of Spring Grove 
            Levi Bolender and Sarah Haas
            Jacob Marean and Mary Bolender

            JAMES COOPER
            James Cooper, Livery Man

            MARY JANE COOPER
            Peter Smull Family: Sgt Johnathan Smull

            ELIZA COOPER
            The Hennich Family & the Burwell Tornado of 1905

            ELIZABETH BEAMS COOPER
            The Boyds of Plainfield
            Roy Boyd, Plainfield Merchant
            Miss Hazel Boyd, Woman of Substance
            Frank Ross Boyd, Merchant of Horton
            Civil War in Stephenson County

    CHALKELY JARED COOPER

      Susanna Gourley Thompson, Rock Grove's Oldest Resident
        
        ROBERT T COOPER
        Capt Robert T Cooper
        Civil War in Stephenson County
        The Neverending Job: Robert Thompson Cooper, Again

        MARY ELLEN COOPER
        Walton Ward Fisher, DVM, Seward, Nebraska

        BARTON GOURLEY COOPER
        Civil War in Stephenson County 
        CLAUDIUS MILTON COOPER
        Ma, The Rawleigh Man is at the Door: Claudius Cooper 
        THEODORE LLOYD COOPER

        Willow Creek, Montana - Part 1 Theodore Lloyd Cooper
        FRANK OSCAR COOPER

        Willow Creek, Montana - Part 2 Frank Oscar Cooper
     
        JOSEPH L COOPER
        Joseph L Cooper: Spanish War Soldier
        JESSIE COOPER
        The Miracle Braves of 1914: Leslie Mann
        JENNIE COOPER
        Jennie Cooper Conklin

        MARGARET ANN COOPER     
        More Coopery: George Emrick and Family

        ALICE EMRICK
        Alice Emrick, Grocer

        SUSAN LOVICA COOPER
        Case Solved: Susan L Cooper  

        CHALKLEY JARED "JAY" COOPER
        Civil War in Stephenson County

   FRANKLIN COOPER

       WILLIAM CLAYTON COOPER
       William Clayton Cooper of South Dakota