approximate location and size of Millican property in upper right corner. |
Friday, December 27, 2013
Elijah and Lucinda Crisp Millican Land Patents, Oregon
Below is a record of the land patent for Elijah and Lucinda Millican, and below that is an approximate area of the land patent, done by hand due to difficulties copying from the Bureau of Land Management website.(Click to enlarge objects)
The original land patent document (signed by Abraham Lincoln) can be found HERE:
Monday, December 9, 2013
Millicans In Oregon, 1843
This was copied and pasted from the following webpage: http://www.oregonpioneers.com/1843.htm
Andrew Jackson MILLICAN (1834-1907): s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; shown in 1850 Yamhill Co census living with parents
Edmund MILLICAN (c1812-c1895): brother of Elijah Millican; father of 12 children
Elijah MILLICAN (1804-c1887): m'd 1827 Lucinda Wilson CRISP. Elijah settled Linnton in 1843 but moved to Lafayette, Yamhill Co in 1844. He emigrated with 2 wagons he built himself and 5 yoke of oxen. Elijah went to CA temporarily in 1849. The father of 12 children, he died at age 83yrs.
Elizabeth Hannah MILLICAN (1840-1917): m1. 1861 Robert HORTON; m2. 1867 (Unknown) MCCULLOUGH; m3. Dorsey Sydney BAKER; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
James K. MILLICAN (1843- ): m'd Sarah (Unknown); s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
Lettice Jane MILLICAN (1830-1911 ): m1. 1845 Ransom CLARK; m2. Amos Reynolds; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; Lettice met Ranson Clark during the 1843 emigration and was married to him in 1845. They settled in Yamhill Co where they took up a successful farming operation. In 1856 Ransom Clark traveled to Walla Walla in present day Washington to secure a land claim. Mr Clark returned to Portland. but was taken sick on the way home and lived only a couple of weeks. Sixteen years before, Lettice Millican, as a girl of thirteen years, had passed through the Walla Walla valley; now she returned, the widow of Ransom Clark. At Celilo, she boarded the steamer Col. Wright, which was loaded with supplies for Lieutenant Mullah, who was in charge of the construction of the Mullen road between Fort Benton, Montana., and Walla Walla. Upon arrival at the claim she found the log house finished and farm work progressing, Mrs. Clark returned to Portland, settled her affairs and later, with her two youngest children, one a baby girl six weeks old, left for her donation claim on the Yellowhawk to make final proof. The town of Walla Walla was just starting. The camping place for teamsters packers and immigrants was along Mill Creek, on one side of which the cantonment was built in 1856, so the town was started there by merchants, butchers and saloon-keepers. Split logs were driven into the ground, poles were laid across the top, and canvas or clapboards laid for a roof.
There were only five donation claims in Walla Walla county. Three of these were taken by Hudson's Bay Company men, one by the American Foreign Missionary Society which included the Whitman site. The Ransom Clark claim was the fifth and was destined to become the scene of splendid endeavor and triumph by a brave young pioneer mother. Her deeds have since been commemorated in a bronze marker embedded m the fireplace of the local Y. M. C. A., also in a marker affixed to a large block of native granite brought from the hills and placed near the northwestern corner of the claim The marker bears this inscription : "To mark the site of the Ransom Clark Donation Claim and to honor the memory of LETTICE J. REYNOLDS 1830-1911 A pioneer of 1843 with Whitman's Train As widow of Ransom Clark this brave woman completed in 1859 under conditions calling.for the greatest courage the claim to this land, initiated by him in1800. She married Almos H. Reynolds in 1861 and survived him 22 years. She was the ideal pioneer wife, mother, and generous Christian citizen. [This marker was placed by the Narcissa Prentiss Chapter, Daughters Of the American Revolution, June, 1935].
Louisa Allen MILLICAN (1837-c1902): m'd c1858 DIXON, Jesse Downs; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; settled in Yamhill Co where she is enumerated in the 1850 census with her parents and the1860, 1870 and 1880 census with her husband and children. In 1900 she is living in Tillamook with her daughter, Jane, and her son-in-law S.M. Hayes. She is shown as a widow at that time.
Mary Adlin MILLICAN (1832 - ): twin of Melvina
Melvina MILLICAN (1832-1916): m'd 1845 James L. HEMBREE; twin of Mary; "Before the emigration of 1843, there were so few white women in the Oregon country that most of the white men took Indian wives. White girls were so much in demand that many of the girls married at the age of 12 or 13 years.... One of my chums was married when she was 12 years old. Mother made me promise not to get married so young, so I waited till two days after my thirteenth birthday before I was married.";
"Melvina celebrated her eleventh birthday on the Oregon Trail. She was born September 22, 1832, in Arkansas, the daughter of Elijah Milligan and Lucinda [Crisp] Milligan. Just two years after celebrating her birthday on the trail, Melvina was married to James N. T. Hembree, on September 29, 1845, in Yamhill County, the week after her thirteenth birthday.
In 1914 Melvina recalled, "Two days after I turned thirteen I married. My husband was nineteen years old. When we exchanged vows, I was wearing a new calico dress that Mama made me, regular store-bought shoes, and even stockings. We took a donation land claim of 640 acres and built a cabin which we moved into at once. Within the next few days my husband made a bedstead out of fir poles, which he peeled and fastened to the wall. He pegged them together for we had no nails. On this bed we laid dried ferns for our mattress. Our table was a tree split down the middle, and we had two stools. Pegs were driven into the walls for hats, coats, and clothes. My only dishes were a big iron kettle, a small iron pot, and an iron skillet. I had to stoop over the mud fireplace in order to cook. I baked bread in the iron skillet, pot-roasted our meat in the iron pot, baked potatoes in the ashes, and browned wheat or oats for our coffee. My husband was a great hand to hunt. He usually turned out about daybreak and would be gone only an hour or two, returning with deer, grouse, rabbit, or the like. We always had game hanging in the tree near the kitchen door. The first baby came along. Others followed. I took care of the babies, cooked, washed clothes, made soap and candles, knitted and darned and seved and did all the other things that had to be done. For entertainment we used to go to preachings at the neighboring houses or to barn-raisings or house-warmings. The kids are grown and we have grandchildren, great grandchildren, and even a few great great. Next year Pa and me will celebrate seven decades of being together, and that's mighty good."
The Hembrees lived for many years in Lafayette, Oregon. They were married seventy years when Melvina died at the age of eighty-three on March 17, 1916, in Lafayette, a longer marriage than any other pioneer of 1843. In 1910 Melvina and James, his brother Waymon and Waymon's wife Nancy Beagle Hembee, and Charlotte Matheny Kirkwood posed for a photograph and news article as the last five survivors of the 1843 migration. There were several others alive then, but it made a good story anyway." [Information provided by Don Rivara; his sources include: [1] Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, on-line Family Search; [2] "Newlyweds," p.8, Pioneers Vol. 11, by Rick Steber, Bonanza Publishing, Prineville, OR, 1993.]
William Mansil MILLICAN (1836- ): s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
Andrew Jackson MILLICAN (1834-1907): s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; shown in 1850 Yamhill Co census living with parents
Edmund MILLICAN (c1812-c1895): brother of Elijah Millican; father of 12 children
Elijah MILLICAN (1804-c1887): m'd 1827 Lucinda Wilson CRISP. Elijah settled Linnton in 1843 but moved to Lafayette, Yamhill Co in 1844. He emigrated with 2 wagons he built himself and 5 yoke of oxen. Elijah went to CA temporarily in 1849. The father of 12 children, he died at age 83yrs.
Elizabeth Hannah MILLICAN (1840-1917): m1. 1861 Robert HORTON; m2. 1867 (Unknown) MCCULLOUGH; m3. Dorsey Sydney BAKER; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
James K. MILLICAN (1843- ): m'd Sarah (Unknown); s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
Lettice Jane MILLICAN (1830-1911 ): m1. 1845 Ransom CLARK; m2. Amos Reynolds; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; Lettice met Ranson Clark during the 1843 emigration and was married to him in 1845. They settled in Yamhill Co where they took up a successful farming operation. In 1856 Ransom Clark traveled to Walla Walla in present day Washington to secure a land claim. Mr Clark returned to Portland. but was taken sick on the way home and lived only a couple of weeks. Sixteen years before, Lettice Millican, as a girl of thirteen years, had passed through the Walla Walla valley; now she returned, the widow of Ransom Clark. At Celilo, she boarded the steamer Col. Wright, which was loaded with supplies for Lieutenant Mullah, who was in charge of the construction of the Mullen road between Fort Benton, Montana., and Walla Walla. Upon arrival at the claim she found the log house finished and farm work progressing, Mrs. Clark returned to Portland, settled her affairs and later, with her two youngest children, one a baby girl six weeks old, left for her donation claim on the Yellowhawk to make final proof. The town of Walla Walla was just starting. The camping place for teamsters packers and immigrants was along Mill Creek, on one side of which the cantonment was built in 1856, so the town was started there by merchants, butchers and saloon-keepers. Split logs were driven into the ground, poles were laid across the top, and canvas or clapboards laid for a roof.
There were only five donation claims in Walla Walla county. Three of these were taken by Hudson's Bay Company men, one by the American Foreign Missionary Society which included the Whitman site. The Ransom Clark claim was the fifth and was destined to become the scene of splendid endeavor and triumph by a brave young pioneer mother. Her deeds have since been commemorated in a bronze marker embedded m the fireplace of the local Y. M. C. A., also in a marker affixed to a large block of native granite brought from the hills and placed near the northwestern corner of the claim The marker bears this inscription : "To mark the site of the Ransom Clark Donation Claim and to honor the memory of LETTICE J. REYNOLDS 1830-1911 A pioneer of 1843 with Whitman's Train As widow of Ransom Clark this brave woman completed in 1859 under conditions calling.for the greatest courage the claim to this land, initiated by him in1800. She married Almos H. Reynolds in 1861 and survived him 22 years. She was the ideal pioneer wife, mother, and generous Christian citizen. [This marker was placed by the Narcissa Prentiss Chapter, Daughters Of the American Revolution, June, 1935].
Louisa Allen MILLICAN (1837-c1902): m'd c1858 DIXON, Jesse Downs; d/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican; settled in Yamhill Co where she is enumerated in the 1850 census with her parents and the1860, 1870 and 1880 census with her husband and children. In 1900 she is living in Tillamook with her daughter, Jane, and her son-in-law S.M. Hayes. She is shown as a widow at that time.
Mary Adlin MILLICAN (1832 - ): twin of Melvina
Melvina MILLICAN (1832-1916): m'd 1845 James L. HEMBREE; twin of Mary; "Before the emigration of 1843, there were so few white women in the Oregon country that most of the white men took Indian wives. White girls were so much in demand that many of the girls married at the age of 12 or 13 years.... One of my chums was married when she was 12 years old. Mother made me promise not to get married so young, so I waited till two days after my thirteenth birthday before I was married.";
"Melvina celebrated her eleventh birthday on the Oregon Trail. She was born September 22, 1832, in Arkansas, the daughter of Elijah Milligan and Lucinda [Crisp] Milligan. Just two years after celebrating her birthday on the trail, Melvina was married to James N. T. Hembree, on September 29, 1845, in Yamhill County, the week after her thirteenth birthday.
In 1914 Melvina recalled, "Two days after I turned thirteen I married. My husband was nineteen years old. When we exchanged vows, I was wearing a new calico dress that Mama made me, regular store-bought shoes, and even stockings. We took a donation land claim of 640 acres and built a cabin which we moved into at once. Within the next few days my husband made a bedstead out of fir poles, which he peeled and fastened to the wall. He pegged them together for we had no nails. On this bed we laid dried ferns for our mattress. Our table was a tree split down the middle, and we had two stools. Pegs were driven into the walls for hats, coats, and clothes. My only dishes were a big iron kettle, a small iron pot, and an iron skillet. I had to stoop over the mud fireplace in order to cook. I baked bread in the iron skillet, pot-roasted our meat in the iron pot, baked potatoes in the ashes, and browned wheat or oats for our coffee. My husband was a great hand to hunt. He usually turned out about daybreak and would be gone only an hour or two, returning with deer, grouse, rabbit, or the like. We always had game hanging in the tree near the kitchen door. The first baby came along. Others followed. I took care of the babies, cooked, washed clothes, made soap and candles, knitted and darned and seved and did all the other things that had to be done. For entertainment we used to go to preachings at the neighboring houses or to barn-raisings or house-warmings. The kids are grown and we have grandchildren, great grandchildren, and even a few great great. Next year Pa and me will celebrate seven decades of being together, and that's mighty good."
The Hembrees lived for many years in Lafayette, Oregon. They were married seventy years when Melvina died at the age of eighty-three on March 17, 1916, in Lafayette, a longer marriage than any other pioneer of 1843. In 1910 Melvina and James, his brother Waymon and Waymon's wife Nancy Beagle Hembee, and Charlotte Matheny Kirkwood posed for a photograph and news article as the last five survivors of the 1843 migration. There were several others alive then, but it made a good story anyway." [Information provided by Don Rivara; his sources include: [1] Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, on-line Family Search; [2] "Newlyweds," p.8, Pioneers Vol. 11, by Rick Steber, Bonanza Publishing, Prineville, OR, 1993.]
William Mansil MILLICAN (1836- ): s/o Elijah and Lucinda (Crisp) Millican
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Lippert Weddings
Below are some marriage certificates and wedding photos of members of the Lippert Family.
Myrtle Lippert (1890-1978) daughter of John Lippert and Elizabeth Lippert (Whose maiden name I know not) at their wedding around 1910 in (I believe) Banks, Washington County, Oregon
Another photo of their wedding day
I have not yet ascertained Alfred and Lydia's relationship to John and Elizabeth Lippert yet if there is one, there is a George and Emma Lippert who lived in Roy, Washington County, Oregon around the same time as John and Elizabeth and I'm suspecting that John and George may have been brothers and emmigrated to the USA simultaneously but here is the marriage certificate for these two at any rate.
Julia S. Pierce was Charles' (Charley's) (1883-1962) Second wife, his first wife, Bessie Taylor - whose maiden name was Robinson (as far as I can ascertain) and her first husband G.B. Taylor apparently died, leaving her a widow when she married Charles. Bessie died in 1940 and is buried at Union Point Cemetery, Banks, Washington County, Oregon, and Charles married Julia in 1947, both wives are buried with him at Union Point Cemetery.
Lastly, Randolph Bland (1900-1974) and Ella M Long Lippert's marriage certificate. They both moved down to California after the 1930's and managed to not show up on the censuses for a while though they were in Scott's Mills, Marion County, Oregon in the 1930 US Federal Census, and they both passed away according to the Social Security Death Index in Marina, Monterey County, California two years apart from each other. I haven't as of this posting yet ascertained their burial locations.
Labels:
Banks Oregon,
cemeteries,
Lippert,
Long,
Oregon,
Pierce,
Rieben,
Taylor
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Albert Gregory Millican Silver Star Citation - United States Navy - USS Helena (CL-50)
Silver Star Citation for Albert Gregory Millican for action on the USS Helena (CL-50) off Guadalcanal in 1942. His name was misspelled "Milligan" instead of "Millican" in the citation, but this is a scan of a photocopy of the original.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Carrara Family Tree
Below is the Carara Family Tree I received via my Italian relatives in Italy via my Aunt Irene, my mother's sister. I know Giorgio Alberto Carrara's birth date was actually May 13th, 1889 according to the documents here in the US such as his draft registration and the likes. You can click on the image to embiggen it so you can see it more clearly. If you have more information on anyone in here, please leave me a comment with it. Thank you!
Thursday, June 13, 2013
James Thomas and Malvina Ann Millican Hembree Photograph
Headline: Coming to Oregon by Ox Teams in 1843, Five of 600 Pioneers of That Year Are in Yamhill County; Article Type: News/Opinion
Paper: Oregonian, published as Morning Oregonian;
Date: 11-02-1913;
Volume: XXXII;
Issue: 44;
Page: 8;
Location: Portland, Oregon
Here's their headstone from the Masonic Cemetery, Lafayette, Yamhill, Oregon.
Interestingly he not only outlived his wife, he was considerably older than her too, by a stretch on either side!
Labels:
cemeteries,
hembree,
millican,
Oregon,
Photos,
Yamhill County
Michael David Millican's Funeral
SK2-USN (RET) Michael David Millican, 14 May 1947 - 20 March 2013.
Dad's funeral at Willamette National Cemetery, 10 May 2010.
Friday, April 26, 2013
George Albert Carrara (Georgio Alberto Carrara) & Juliette Bernardon circa 1919.
This is a photo of my grandparents, right after World War I in France circa 1919 (according to my mother), George Albert & Juliette Berenardon Carrara. In this photo she is about 18 and he is about 31 years old.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Millican's, Lipperts, Carrara's (Oh My!) Christmas 1968
These are some photos I found in my father's photo albums of his family when he was home on leave for Christmas, 1968, from Viet Nam.
L-R, Irene Carrara Thompson, Arlene Francis Carrara and mother, Juliet Bernardon Carrara |
Arlene Carrara (not sure if this is a self-shot but sure looks like it!) |
Arlene Carrara at her Sister Irene's |
Myrtle Evelyn Lippert |
Albert Gregory & his wife Arlene Hazel Lippert Millican prepping Christmas Dinner |
Albert Gregory & Arlene Hazel Lippert Millican |
Tom Millican playing with a train-set (Always seemed to be those in our family at Christmas Time) |
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