Genealogy is a communal effort. Monday night, I returned a phone call to Elyse, genealogy friend (and cousin). During our conversation, I learned about her great-great grandmother, Greenella McNichols: she was born in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi; she died in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma, and, she was in buried in Centralia, Illinois—cemetery unknown.
Wait…What? I found it odd that her body would have been transported to Illinois—instead of Mississippi. I had seen too many historical social columns, in the Chicago Defender, stating that the body of—fill in the blank—”was being shipped home”. It was understood that s/he was NOT allowed to be buried where s/he currently resided—particularly in the Chicagoland area. Three hours later, I could no longer contain my curiosity and did some online sleuthing.
Hmph: not only did it exist it still exists. My cousin had also mentioned that Greenella had a son–in-law who was a lawyer. A quick search of the 1920 U. S. Federal Census, confirmed Greenella’s residence, in Oklahoma, with her daughter, Mary, and son-in-law, P. W. Watman, lawyer.
Don’t you love uncommon names? They make family research so much easier. I had been working on a Chicago Defender (CD) newspaper indexing project and did a quick Boolean search, Watman AND Oklahoma, which located the following results:
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.
Brown, Willie L. The Chicago Defender (Big Weekend Edition) (1905-1966); Chicago, Ill. [Chicago, Ill] 05 Dec 1914: 7.
By Willie L. Brown. Oklahoma City, Okla., Dec. 4—Mr. George Jones, one of Muskogee’s popular postmen, spent the Thanksgiving holiday in Oklahoma City. he came to pay Miss Natalie Jenkins, one of Oklahoma City’s teachers, a visit…Prof. P. W. Watman of Langston was here last Saturday and Sunday…
PROF. BRAZELTON WILL BE RETAINED AT DOUGLASS SCHOOL.
The Chicago Defender (Big Weekend Edition) (1905-1966); Chicago, Ill. [Chicago, Ill] 17 Apr 1915: 7.
… Oklahoma City, Okla., April 16.–Prof. John H. Hogan, professor of
Prof. P. W. Watman of Langston passed through last Saturday en route to Sapulpa…
Oklahoma City, Okla., April 16.__Prof. John H. Hogan, professor of history in Langston University, also mayor of Langston, was here last Saturday, registered at the Keystone hotel. In speaking of the school, he said that they had an unusually large enrollment and that the forthcoming commencement would undoubtedly eclipse all others…Not only was he a lawyer but he was also a professor at Langston University, an HBCU—Historically Black College and University—named for John Mercer Langston (1829 – 1897)—Ohio abolitionist , Howard Law School dean, Virginia congressman, and brother of—Charles Henry Langston—the grandfather of Langston Hughes (1902 – 1967), poet, playwright, social activist, and Chicago Defender columnist!
Now, I was ready for my next search at Ancestry.com: a wildcard search.
Interestingly enough, neither Bing nor Google turned up anything when I searched for Pleasant Watman. Not sure what this was about, I went back to the proverbial drawing board: Ancestry and the Chicago Defender.
After looking at the 1930 U. S. Federal Census, I dashed off an e-mail to Elyse “When did, Mary Watman, Greenella’s daughter die? By 1930, Pleasant Watman, widowed, is leaving with his sister and brother-in-law [Ethel and Ernest Shaw, in Sapulpa, Creek, Oklahoma]. Why is he listed as a laborer?” I told her about the two CD articles and another four, by Pleas. W. Watman, indicating that he had become a Defender correspondent in 1936—in Tampa, Florida.
A Google search had turned up a collection at Yale that included a photograph. “If you decided to get his picture, I’d like to see it.” He had been listed as White on the 1940 Tampa Census.” Lastly, I sent my cousin a Find A Grave (FAG) memorial link.
By now, I was on a mission and abandoned my project for the night. The first thing that I noticed was that Greenella’s daughter, Mary, was NOT linked to him. Nor, were his other two wives: Rosetta B[eulah] Holmes and Sallie Mae Curtis. That was easy enough to fix. I just had to locate their Find A Grave (FAG) memorial numbers and add them to his—via an edit request—once I had signed into my account.
First, I would take care of Mary—except that I couldn’t find one—at FAG or anywhere else. Fine, I’d create my own. I just had to find out when she died. There must be a website for Oklahoma Vital Records.
Once I had created Mary’s memorial, I clicked on the Family Links edit option to add Pleas’s FAG Memorial Number (37626007). It doesn’t hurt to add proof; so, I added his WW I Draft Registration, which showed that P. W. Watman, of Sand Springs, Tulsa, Okla., had a wife, named Mary Watman, of Langston, Logan, Okla.
I also added the June 7th, 1930, marriage license between Rosetta B. Holmes and Watman, in Tampa, Florida. Don’t bother looking at the 1930 U. S. Federal Census: he was enumerated, in Sapulpa City, [Okla.], on Apr 7th, 1930. Hey—no comments from the peanut gallery!
I could still hear Elyse’s voice: She died in Oklahoma and was buried in Centralia, Illinois. I had my doubts and went looking for her death certificate at Cyberdrive Illinois.
Below, are various searches.
After nine searches, I was finally convinced that Greenella McNichols did NOT die in Illinois but what about Grenella McNichols—as listed on the Ok2Explore website?
By now, I was absolutely convinced that neither Greenella McNichols nor Grenella McNichols died in Illinois.