Where did the early settlers of the Sutton area come from?
We’ve
had this conversation a number of times. We’ve talked about the Germans from
Russia. I’ve made sure the Swedes are recognized. And we’ve mentioned the
Iowans, the Pennsylvanians, the Ohioans and others from Back East. Let’s dive
into the topic a little deeper this month.
The
first settlers in our area were Luther French and Peter O. Norman who lived in
dugouts along School Creek. French was the first settler in Sutton Township,
Norman was a short distance down the creek, the first settler in School Creek
Township.
The
main wave of settlers from the east began arriving in the Spring of 1871
establishing a community named School Creek, soon renamed Sutton. The Swedish
wave came a year later in 1872 with the establishment of a Lutheran Church in
the short-lived village of Huxley in the middle of Section 6 in Sutton
Township. That upstart moved a half mile west along the Burlington tracks to
become Saronville.
Our
main source will be the 1880 census for School Creek and Sutton Precincts. Census
day for the tenth census was June 1, 1880. Jacob Steinmetz was the enumerator
for School Creek Precinct; James E. Marsh covered Sutton Precinct. Steinmetz
found 772 people in 141 households in School Creek Precinct. Marsh had 1627
individuals in 307 households.
Census data
contains a treasure trove of information and the raw material for stories about
people of the past. We used the 1880 census for School Creek and Sutton Townships.
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The
household count is squishy. There was a count of dwellings and families those
were handled ambiguously. A household included borders, servants, brothers and
sisters, widowed mothers and in-laws. (Sutton households displayed a particular
fondness for a teenage svenska flicka as
a servant in large families – Swedish girls.)
Some
“households” were unusual and can skew our analysis. P. T. Walton’s household included
his wife, 2 sons, 2 daughters, 4 servants, a clerk and 46 borders – he ran a
hotel. Some of the borders were likely “transients” caught in Sutton on census
day, but many were certainly residents of the hotel with local jobs (painter,
blacksmith, shop keeper, etc.).
A
disclaimer is needed. The arbitrary nature of defining house households and the
likelihood that my counting was not flawless preclude any guarantee that these
figures are perfect. Anyone is welcome to check my work and get back to me.
Each
decennial census collected a unique set of information about the population.
Our objective here is to identify the birthplace of the residents. We’ll count
the number of people born in each state or foreign country and also track the
heads of households as an approximate family count.
Census
data gives a rough history of a family. We know the birthplaces of the father
and mother of a typical family, the birthplaces of each of their parents and
the birthplaces of each child. So we can see where the earlier generation was
born and learn where the family lived over time as we see where the kids were
born.
For
instance, my great grandparents were both born in Indiana. The 1880 census
found them in Sherman Township just south of Edgar in Nuckolls County. Beginning
in 1880, people were asked for the birthplace of their parents. James
Rowlison’s parents were both born in Virginia; Rhoda’s father was born in
Maine, her mother in Indiana. For those following the string of these articles,
Rhoda’s father Isaiah Walton was the subject of a recent article; he is buried
in Marshall Union Cemetery here in Clay County completing the
Maine-Indiana-Nebraska path his eventful life took.
James
and Rhoda Rowlison’s 1880 census entry shows their first son born in Indiana, four
kids born in Missouri, a daughter in Iowa, and another daughter in Nebraska.
It’s not apparent in the census but the Nebraska daughter was born near Peru in
Nemaha County.
Later
census data show that the Rowlison family added a son while in Nuckolls County,
another son and a daughter while on farms near Edgar in Clay County and the
eleventh child born in on a wheat farm near Hoxie, Kansas. Some may remember
the baby of that family as Ethel Oakley, wife of long-time (1922-1955) Clay
County Clerk Roy Oakley.
Just
by reading census date it is possible to reconstruct a rough history of the
traveling of that family.
But
back to northeast Clay County and School Creek Township.
Foreign-born
residents outnumbered U.S. born folks 462-310, and 106-35 in heads of
households. The influence of foreign households was even greater as 150 of
those 310 U.S. born were Nebraska-born children, most in those immigrant
households, but we’re counting them as domestic residents. Not at all
surprising, Russian born immigrants were the most populous with 283 people in
49 households plus kids born since immigration.
People identified their place of birth and that of their parents for the census taker. The Sutton area Germans from Russia are listed as Russian born. Without any additional information, anyone examining the School Creek census of 1880 concludes that there were lots of Russians around here. Newspaper items of that time and well into the 19th century also referred to these people as Russians. They self-identified as Germans from Russia, but that took a while to catch on.
Swedes
were the second most populous group with 33 households with 122 people born in
the old country. Again, there were Nebraska born youngsters in those families
as well as kids born in other states, i.e., Illinois.
The
center of this Swedish settlement was around Saronville and Verona and north to
Eldorado. School Creek Township catches the northeast quadrant of that area;
we’ll find more Swedes in Sutton Township but likely a near equal number
settled in Eldorado and Lewis.
Similarly,
while the early Germans from Russia settlement centered in School Creek, their
settlement area included the town of Sutton, Sutton Township and into Fillmore,
Hamilton and York Counties. Several families including Yost and Pauley families
landed around Harvard.
The
north end of Sutton, that part north of Ash Street is in School Creek. There
were native born residents in town and on farms. Twenty-one residents came from
New York, 29 from Ohio, 31 from Iowa, 17 from Pennsylvania, 20 from Wisconsin,
17 from Illinois and 13 from Indiana. The rest were scattered.
A
common Swedish immigration route was through Illinois. City dwellers
congregated in North Chicago and Swedish farmers initially came to Henry, Knox
and Mercer counties in western Illinois, just southeast of Davenport, Iowa. Typically,
they stayed for a short time before heading further west for open country and
cheaper land. Though a few stayed longer. Andrew and Charlotte Israelson
immigrated from Sweden to Illinois in 1852, had 12 kids and then moved on to
Saronville in 1878.
Other
foreign born settlers in School Creek came from Germany (21), Ireland (14),
Switzerland (9), England (6) plus a few from Canada, France, Scotland and
Denmark.
Sutton
Township had a little more than twice the population of School Creek with 596
foreign born and 1031 born in the U.S. including many in households of the
foreign born.
Again,
the Russian born dominated the foreign born with 222 followed by 126 Swedes.
Six heads of households and a total of 21 listed Germany as their birthplace.
At least I counted them as from Germany. Birthplaces of Prussia, Baden,
Bavaria, Hessen, Wittenberg and other city-states appear on the census forms.
The unification of Germany did not occur until 1871 so immigrants on the 1880
census often identified with their original homeland rather than a thing called
Germany.
There
were 48 English born in Sutton Township in 1880, 46 from Ireland, Canada was
listed by 41, Scotland (19), Holland (15) and others from Norway, Denmark,
Austria, Turkey, France and one Hungarian.
Any
questions? Or didn’t you notice the Turkey thing? John Grosshans, a Sutton
grain dealer and his wife Christina were born in Russia. Three of their
children, Christiana, age 30; William, age 28 and John age 27 listed Turkey as
their place of birth. Five younger children were born in Russia.
About
a dozen families made a different stop between Russia and Sutton much like the
Swedes in Illinois. Jim Griess told this story in his book, “The German
Russians: Those Who Came to Sutton.” Mr. Johann Bette had immigrated to the
United States in 1849, twenty-four years earlier than the migration we’re
more familiar with. He was from the village of Johannestal near Worms and Rohrbach
where Sutton’s Black Sea immigrants came from. Bette settled on an island in
Lake Erie near Sandusky, Ohio becoming wealthy with his vineyard.
Johann
Bette returned to Russia on a visit in 1872 and told of the wonders of the
United States. His visit was noticed by the Russia authorities who did not want
the German population riled up about leaving. His hosts learned that the
authorities wanted to question Bette. They thought it better if he could avoid
that. His spiffy American suit made him much too conspicuous so they gave him
some more appropriate attire and helped him across the Austrian border.
The
privileges granted by the Czarina Catherine and Czar Alexander to the German
colonists were abrogated about this time and Bette’s story was fresh in the
minds of those seeking to leave. About a dozen families in the Sutton area in
1880 had parents and perhaps a kid or two born in Russia then one kid born in
Ohio and younger kids born in Nebraska. That’s just families who had a child
born in Ohio. We should suspect that many more made that temporary stop.
Surnames associated this story include Urbach, Popp, Schnell, Deines, Brehm,
Geilman, Seeter, Orie and Schaffer.
As
for the U.S. born in Sutton Township, 216 were Nebraska born. These are all the
younger children of families. There was no Nebraska born head of household in
the area in 1880. Why? A bit early for that. Nebraska had been a state for only
13 years though a territory since 1854 and no Nebraska born had started a
family here.
There
were 165 Illinois natives in the township and 123 from Ohio. Other common
birthplaces were Wisconsin (117), Pennsylvania (109), New York (91), and Iowa
(76). There were fewer from each of 23 additional states, even California,
District of Columbia and almost all states in the northeast.
What’s
missing can be almost as interesting as what is found. There were two people
from Mississippi and two from Louisiana plus some Texas-born in a few farm
families. But that’s about it from the states of the Confederacy. There were no
Sutton residents in 1880 from the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama or Florida.
Nathan
Tyler and Leonard Jarrett (Sybil’s father) were Confederate soldiers who
arrived later but all in all, rural Nebraska was Union country.
Before
the Civil War, Nebraska and Kansas marked a kind of dividing line – remember
the Kansas-Nebraska Act? A quick check of a couple of townships in Jewell
County across the Kansas line, in Sedgwick (Wichita) and in Neosho County near
the southeast corner of Kansas also did not turn up southerners in 1880. Was a
little surprising.
For
this article we’ve relied almost exclusively on the 1880 census which is
readily available. I access it via my ancestry.com account but there are other
means. With a bit of research time collecting and sorting data and then with a
minimum of inferences, we can learn quite a lot about the make-up of the
population of the Sutton area 136 years ago. And while plowing through that
information it is amazing how many additional tidbits appear that entertain and
distract.
I
may have mentioned this before, but we are always looking for more people to
join us at the Sutton Museum and help us collect and preserve Sutton’s story.
If the prospect of digging into stories like those in this article, or other
aspects of Sutton’s past interests you, please let us know. There is much more
to learn than we have the time or the skills to uncover. Your help would be
greatly appreciated.
This article first appeared in Sutton Life Magazine in October, 2016. For further information about the publication contact mustangmediasales@gmail.com or call 402-984-4203.
I'm searching for the birthplace and information about the biological family of my great-grandmother, and most information brings me to this: She was born 11 Apr 1880 in Sutton, Clay County, NE. She would have been born to Thomas Coen(spelling ?) and Sarah Hughes, (both Irish). They named her Patience Jane, but she was adopted soon after birth by Charles and Samantha Bride who changed her name to Nellie Alby. There was also a three year old sister Mary. Any information would be appreciated.
ReplyDeleteMy email address is: cathyleeclark@gmail.com