I’m still working on the
descendants of Richard Tapscott, son of William the Preacher, instead of what I
should be doing — researching the descendants of Richard’s brother Henry. But
Richard’s descendants are fascinating, and I’m not quite ready to call it
quits.
Mary Elizabeth Tapscott. (Ancestry.com) |
Of Kasiah Tapscott’s two
children, only Mary Elizabeth lived long enough to make interesting reading.
Born 20 May 1865 to Kasiah and possibly Garrett Vandike, Mary’s Kentucky birthplace
is given in various records both as Casey County and Danville, Boyle County.
The latter is unlikely. No Followells, Weathermans, or Tapscotts (or Vandikes)—family
members who might help an unwed mother—were living in Boyle County at the time,
and friends and relatives
were abundant in Casey County.
In 1880, presumably following the
death of her mother, Kasiah, Mary was working as a domestic servant for the
Robert L. King family in Casey County, and that may be how she met her
husband-to-be, Samuel Franklin King, probably a relative. (Samuel had a brother
Robert, but he was not Robert L.) On 16 Mar 1882, in Liberty, Kentucky, seat of
Casey County, Mary married Samuel Franklin King, a Casey County farmer, born in
Aug 1863 to James and Charlotta. Mary and Samuel (who went solely by “Frank”) had
seven children—William L. (Jan 1883 - by Jul 1907), Martha E. (3 Nov 1884 - 2
Oct 1971), Bessie Charity (1 Nov 1886 - 9 Feb 1975), James Robert (6 Jun 1892 -
15 Apr 1968), George Leslie (13 Feb 1898 - 21 Apr 1959), John Ottle (25 May
1900 - 22 Mar 1974), and Lillian Myrtle (8 Mar 1903 - 4 Oct 1964)—all born in
Kentucky.
In 1904, following the birth of Myrtle,
the last child, the family (possibly minus William, who died young, and Martha,
who had married and could have traveled separately) journeyed to DeWitt County,
Illinois. Samuel lived in Illinois only three years, most of the time as
an invalid, before passing away on their farm, the Lewis Clark Riggs place near
Farmville, in Santa Anna Twp, on 11 Jul 1907 at the young age of 44. Mary was
left in a new state with four kids (and two married daughters), with no other nearby
relatives, and with no means of support. Moreover, the family was in terrible financial condition, one son, Robert, having provided most of the income when his
father was ill. Things were so bad that a collection was taken up among the
South Prairie neighbors to help pay for Samuel’s funeral expenses, which may
have been high since Samuel’s body was transported back to Kentucky for burial
in Minor Cemetery, Boyle County, home of the Kings.
It was in Kentucky that Mary could have met her second husband, Squire Jasper Phillips. She may have decided to reside,
at least temporarily, in Kentucky, where she had family (mostly distant cousins
and in-laws) and friends. After all, Squire Phillips was born in Washington
County, the next county over from Boyle, where Samuel was buried.
The story of Squire Jasper and
Mary is interesting, but tragic, and deserving of a posting by itself,
which it will have. See you next time.
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