I last reported that Kentucky relative Matilda McClintock Scott lived in northern Ohio and was buried in Cleveland's Lake View Cemetery. Today I visited a different section of the cemetery to locate the graves of Matilda's daughter Anna Elizabeth (Scott) Bivin and Anna's daughter and son-in-law Edwin Marvin and Carrie (Bivin) Vorce. I am learning about the life of Carrie, or Caroline as the gravestone reads, because she was also an artist. I'll report on her when I have more details.
Anna Elizabeth was born in Kentucky, but lived in East Cleveland by 1900 when her mother lived with her and also daughter Carrie and her husband. Anna's husband, James B. Bivin, apparently still lived in Kentucky until his death in 1918, so they may have been estranged.1 Her gravestone is just right of the combined stone for Carrie and Edwin in Section 1, lot 300, which is near the Wade Chapel.
Carrie, also born in Kentucky, and her husband, Edwin, were married in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in 1893.2 They did not have children, so there is no more of her line to follow, but she is interesting enough by herself. She would be my second cousin, twice removed, but that is true in both the McClintock and Scott families.
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1. "Deaths, Bivin," The Bourbon News, Paris, Kentucky, 5 November 1918, p. 4, col. 3.
2. "Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2013," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1614804 : viewed 6 October 2018) > Cuyahoga > Marriage records 1892-1893 vol 39 > image 227, Cuyahoga County Marriage Records, vol. 39: 348, Edwin M. Vorce and Carrie M. Bivin, 1893.
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Tuesday, October 2, 2018
Tombstone Tuesday: Matilda McClintock Scott, a Kentuckian in Cleveland, Ohio
Matilda McClintock was born in July 1809, most likely in Bourbon County, Kentucky. She was a sister of my 2nd great grandfather, Samuel McClintock (1794-1827). She was the second wife of Francis Scott, a brother of another 2nd great grandfather, Thomas Scott (1810-1844). Matilda and Francis lived for a time in Fayette County, Kentucky,1 but by 1870 she was an apparent widow living in a neighboring county in the Buena Vista District of Harrison County, Kentucky.2 The post office there was called Shady Nook, formerly Scott's Station.3 In 1880 she lived there alone but with nearby Scott families.4
I believe all of her McClintock siblings are buried in Bourbon County, mostly in the county seat of Paris. It was therefore a big surprise to learn she lived in East Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in 1900. A widow, she lived with her widowed daughter, Anna Elizabeth (Scott) Bivin.5 Matilda died two years later on 14 April 1902 at age 92, cause listed as "old age."6 She was buried in Lake View Cemetery at the corners of Cleveland, East Cleveland, and Cleveland Heights. The cemetery index lists her as Matilda M. Scott,7 but when I finally saw her gravestone, I was delighted to see it reads "Matilda McClintock Scott."
My McClintock grandfather was born in 1867 and lived near Matilda's home. She was still there when he was thirteen, so I'm sure he knew her. She was his father's aunt and his mother's aunt by marriage. I hope to learn more about her daughter and when and why they came from Kentucky to northern Ohio.
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I believe all of her McClintock siblings are buried in Bourbon County, mostly in the county seat of Paris. It was therefore a big surprise to learn she lived in East Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in 1900. A widow, she lived with her widowed daughter, Anna Elizabeth (Scott) Bivin.5 Matilda died two years later on 14 April 1902 at age 92, cause listed as "old age."6 She was buried in Lake View Cemetery at the corners of Cleveland, East Cleveland, and Cleveland Heights. The cemetery index lists her as Matilda M. Scott,7 but when I finally saw her gravestone, I was delighted to see it reads "Matilda McClintock Scott."
My McClintock grandfather was born in 1867 and lived near Matilda's home. She was still there when he was thirteen, so I'm sure he knew her. She was his father's aunt and his mother's aunt by marriage. I hope to learn more about her daughter and when and why they came from Kentucky to northern Ohio.
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1.1850
U.S. census, Fayette County, Kentucky, population schedule, District
1, page 188A, dwelling 1105, family 1110, Francis Scott household;
digital image, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : viewed 4
September 2018); from NARA M432, roll 199.
2.1870
U.S. census, Harrison County, Kentucky, population schedule, Buena
Vista District, post office Cynthiana, page 96B, dwelling/family 10,
Matilda Scott household; digital image, Ancestry.com
(www.ancestry.com : viewed 6 September 2018); from NARA M593, roll
468, imaged from FHL microfilm 545,967.
3. William Henry Perrin, History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas Counties, Kentucky (Original edition published in 1882 by O.L. Baskin & Co., Chicago; reprint Easley, S.C.: Southern Historical Press, 1979), 311-12.
4. 1880
U.S. Census, Harrison County, Kentucky, population schedule, Buena
Vista District, ED 101, page 54B, dwelling/family 16, Matilda Scott
household; digital image, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com :
viewed 6 September 2018); from NARA T9, roll 418.
5. 1900
U.S. census, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, population schedule, East
Cleveland Village, ED 215, sheet 25B, dwelling 564, family 579, Annie
E. "Bibin" household; digital image, Ancestry.com
(www.ancestry.com : viewed 6 September 2018); from NARA T623; imaged
from FHL microfilm 1,241,260.
6. "Died,
Scott," Plain Dealer, Cleveland, Ohio, 16 April 1902, p.
6. Also, "Ohio, County Death Records, 1840-2001," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/2128172 : viewed 6 September 2018) > Cuyahoga > Death records, 1898-1902 > image 787, Cuyahoga County Record of Deaths, p.494 , Matilda Scott entry, 1902.
7. "Auto
Graver," contributor, Lake View Cemetery gravestone (Matilda M.
Scott), database, Find A Grave (www.findagrave.com : viewed 6
September 2018), Memorial# 78155489.
Labels:
Cleveland,
Kentucky,
Lake View Cemetery,
McClintock,
Scott,
tombstone
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