Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Following Up on John Coleman's Children -- Aileen Gertrude Coleman

John and Sadie Coleman had five children who survived into adulthood. The second of their four daughters was named Aileen Gertrude Coleman and she was born in about 1904. Aileen has been an interesting relative to track down, and only in part due to having to separate her records from that of my grandmother's older sister Eileen Dolores Coleman who was born in 1907. I still haven't found a common Coleman ancestor to attribute the two cousins being so similarly named. The closest would be their grandmother Ellen Ross Coleman.

As with all of John and Sadie's children, there has been some challenge in finding out what happened to them over the course of their lives, a matter made more complicated by multiple name changes due to marriage and divorce. Aileen is no different. When I first found Aileen in the 1930 Census, she was listed as Aileen Myers and divorced. She and her son, Raymond (then 3 years old) had moved back home with her mother and siblings. In the 1940 Census, she is again living with her mother and son, but this time her name is Aileen Stiles. She is listed as married, but there is no husband living with her.

So now I had to set out to find two husbands for Aileen. Based on the information I had, I put an approximate timeline on her first marriage to be about 1925 and her divorce must have taken place between about 1927 and 1930. I dug around and eventually found a marriage record for Aileen's first marriage. She married Leslie Louis Myers on October 31, 1925 at St. Andrews Church in Oakland. Their son, Raymond Lester Myers, was born about six months later on May 2, 1926. Since it would appear Aileen was pregnant when she and Leslie Myers married, perhaps things fell apart because of the "shotgun wedding" aspect.

I started looking to see if I could find any record of their divorce and while I've yet to find a confirmed documentation for the date of their divorce, I did find the reason why. While searching through the Oakland Tribune for divorce notices, I found a couple of articles in January 1929 that indicated Leslie had been arrested for embezzlement. According to the January 7, 1929 edition of the Oakland Tribune, Leslie Myers had forged and sold $2000 worth of stock certificates while working as an assistant bookkeeper at the Montgomery and California Street branch of the Bank of Italy (which would later become the Bank of America) due to "destitute circumstances and illness of his wife and baby." He surrendered himself to the San Francisco police on January 5 and "told police he was a 'two-time embezzler,' having taken $1500 from an Oakland Loan company two years ago." Leslie was apparently on probation for the earlier embezzlement which was nearing it's completion as he had repaid most of the money he had stolen. (While the article doesn't state as much, I would imagine the repayments from his first embezzlement came from money he obtained from the second one.) A follow up article in the January 23, 1929 edition of the Oakland Tribune reported that Leslie Myers was sentenced to five years in federal prison. Sure enough, the next time I found Leslie Myers was in the 1930 Census in the federal prison at McNeil Island in Washington. His record shows him as married, so I'm guessing the divorce was in progress around the time of the census or the prison official who completed the census form did not have a current file on Leslie Myers marital status. Leslie Myers died in July 1977.

Now it was time to find Aileen's second husband, Mr. Stiles and determine what happened to him. Why isn't he living with Aileen in the 1940 Census? It's a little too early for him to have gone off to fight in World War II, though that could have been a possibility if he'd gone to Canada or the UK which were already involved in the fighting by then. I needed to back track then and see if I could find any record of an Aileen Stiles between 1930 and 1940. That's where the city directories and voter registries came in handy, and I eventually found Aileen Stiles in a 1932 voter register in Oakland. Mr. Stiles wasn't listed on that record, but there was another register for 1934 and this time I found her with her husband Nelson H. Stiles, a truck driver. The latest record I was able to find of them living together was a 1938 voter register. I went off to the newspapers then to see what I could find and I eventually turned up a notice of a divorce granted to Aileen Stiles from Nelson H. Stiles in the July 4, 1941 edition of the Oakland Tribune.

After her second divorce, Aileen went back to using the name Aileen Myers, presumably because that was the same last name as her son's. I'm still looking into Aileen to find out what happened to her after she divorced for the second time. Right now, I've been able to track her until about 1956 through city directories. I have yet to find a death record for her and I have found very little information on her son Raymond. So there a couple more puzzles to work out.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Reviewing Daniel P. Coleman's Service Record

I've been looking over the service record I found for my great grandfather Daniel Patrick Coleman in the Royal Naval Registers of Seamen's Services. It's been a bit slow going as there are a lot of pieces that are difficult to read and I still need to research what some of the abbreviations mean. I have been able to decipher the names of most of the ships he served on and when he served on them. I've also found a little bit of information on the ships (mostly from Wikipedia, so I know I need to do more in depth research, but there is useful information for starting points.)

According to the records, Daniel joined the Royal Navy in September 1875. He spent about a week on the HMS Revenge, which was a training ship. From October 1, 1875 to October 23, 1875 he was on another ship, but I can't make out the name on the record. He was then assigned to the HMS Ganges for three consecutive terms of service between October 24, 1875 and August 1, 1877. The Ganges was also a training ship.

On August 2, 1877 Daniel, now 17 years old, joined the crew of the HMS Shannon. According to Wikipedia, the Shannon was the first armored cruiser in the Royal Navy, but was a somewhat unsuccessful ship. In April 1878, the Shannon was sent to the China Station, but recalled in July 1878. According to Daniel's service record, he left the Shannon on August 31, 1878. He was then sent to the HMS Victor Emmanuel from September 1, 1878 through April 9, 1879. The Victor Emmanuel was a receiving and hospital ship stationed in Hong Kong at that time, which leads to some questions. If the Shannon was recalled to England in July 1878 and Daniel doesn't leave that assignment until August 31, 1878, how does he wind up on the Victor Emmanuel in Hong Kong on September 1, 1878? If the Victor Emmanuel is a receiving and hospital ship, why is Daniel there? Is he ill or is he waiting for his new assignment (receiving ships were a place for new recruits who were awaiting their assignments)? There is the family story that Daniel nearly died from malaria while in the Royal Navy, so spending seven months on a hospital ship would match up with that story. Of course, the story is that he contracted malaria while fighting in the first Boer War, but as of yet I can't prove he was in that war and he has a medal from the Third Burmese War, so it's possible that the stories got mixed and confused.

My best guess right now for the discrepancy between the Shannon departing the China Station in July 1878 and Daniel's service record is the Shannon was recalled in July, but didn't depart until the end of August. Either that or Daniel was left behind, but not removed from the list of names on board until August/September. This is definitely one period in the record where further research is needed.

After Daniel left the Victor Emmanuel, he was assigned to the HMS Iron Duke for about a month before joining the crew of the HMS Egeria from May 8, 1879 through October 11, 1881. There were a couple of disruptions in Daniel's time on the Egeria. He was sent back to the Victor Emmanuel for about a week in December 1879, so I'm guessing he needed medical services on the hospital ship. He also spent two stints "in the cells" first for 10 days in January 1881 and then for 14 days in April/May 1881. There is nothing in the record that indicates why Daniel was sent to the hospital ship nor "the cells" so I'll have to see if I can learn more about those incidents. Daniel's character is described as "good" for the most part on the Egeria, though there are a couple of notations of "fair" both appearing around the time he was sent to "the cells."

From October 12, 1881 through December 1881, Daniel was stationed at the Portsmouth Naval Station (listed as the N Barracks on his service record.) Daniel spent a couple of weeks of January 1882 on the HMS Duncan before transferring to the HMS Repulse on January 24. The Repulse was the guard ship at the naval base in Hull. Daniel served on the Repulse until August 31, 1883 before returning to the Duncan for a few months.

On January 10, 1884, Daniel joined the crew of the HMS Serapis which was a troop ship between England in India. According to the notes on Wikipedia, the travel time between the two countries took about 70 days. Allowing for time spent in port Daniel probably made two round trips.

On November 12, 1884, Daniel joined the crew of the HMS Ranger. The Ranger is the ship he served on during the Third Burmese War and was awarded the Burmah Medal. Daniel spent nearly three years on the Ranger until October 31, 1887. This is the second longest single assignment in Daniel's record and since the Ranger was involved in a war, that probably makes sense. This is another period of Daniel's service record that I need to spend more time researching.

Daniel left the Ranger and joined the HMS Cambridge on November 1, 1887. Again this was a short service time before he moved on to the HMS Excellent on Februrary 4, 1888. The HMS Excellent was a gunnery school training ship. Daniel spent most of 1888 on the Excellent before moving on to the HMS Amphion on December 10, 1888.

The Amphion is where the record gets curious. Daniel is listed as a member of the Amphion's crew from December 10, 1888 until February 4, 1890. It is from here that Daniel was "sent to Portsmouth to be dealt with summarily." There is no indication what or why Daniel was sent away, but there is a year gap between his last date on the Amphion and his next assignment on the HMS Duke of Wellington on February 10, 1891. That is followed by another gap in his record between March 4, 1891 and April 14, 1891. From Daniel's service time on the Egeria, I can guess that the gaps in service time are due to time spent in confinement for some kind of misbehavior. Whatever happened at the end of Daniel's time on the Amphion had him imprisoned for a little over a year. The notation for his character on the Duke of Wellington is listed as "fair", which after a year in prison is probably understandable, but there is no explanation why there is another six week gap after he leaves the Duke of Wellington.

On April 15, 1891, Daniel is serving on the HMS Victory I, which was the Naval School of Telegraphy, so whatever caused the gap in service time did not prevent Daniel from moving on to an assignment that would give him more skills to be used during his military service time.

Daniel then moved on to the HMS Sans Pariel on August 1, 1891, which was part of the Mediterranean fleet. This was Daniel's longest assignment, lasting until April 17, 1895. During his time on the Sans Pariel, Daniel had another two brief stints "in the cells" -- one for 7 days in August 1894 and another for 5 days in October 1894. Despite these two incidents, his character is listed as "good" or "very good."

Daniel returned to the HMS Victory I on April 18, 1895, and that is the last fully legible entry on his record. There are two more listings after the Victory one, but the ships names are completely blacked out in the image and it would probably require seeing the original record to figure out what they were. Those two listings cover the dates September 1, 1895 to September 11, 1896 and September 12, 1896 to January 4, 1898. The last entry includes that he was discharged at his own request which was granted on December 17, 1897.

The next record I have in Daniel's chronology is his departure from Southampton, England on January 29, 1898 bound for New York on the ship Paris. I need to figure out what happened between Daniel's arrival in New York to when he first appears in San Francisco in the 1900 census, but that's a task for another day. There is also much more to figure out about Daniel's time in the Royal Navy. I want to know more about the ships he served on and where they were sent. I know from what I've found so far that Daniel spent time in Hong Kong, India, and Burma (now Myanmar) as well as being stationed in England. I definitely want to learn more about what got him sent to Portsmouth and I need to learn more about the Burmese Wars.