Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 1
1.

Daniel DUSKEY-1 [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. He was born Abt. 1809 in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, USA [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. He died on 20 Jun 1871 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6, 2].

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Daniel Duskey led the raid against the federal arsenal and post office at Ripley and against the oil depots at Burning Springs during the Civil War. Captured and tried by a federal tribunal, he avoided execution by being pardoned by President Lincoln. He escaped from jail and returned to the war. He was killed when federal troops poisoned the water he and his men had been using. He was born in Pennsylvania in what is now Allegheny County.

 

We have some conflicting information about where Daniel Duskey was born, was it Allegheny Co. Pa, Lancaster Co. Va., or Ohio? Some information state that Daniel and Martha, Nickname Patsy, children are George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This information was came from the following web site http://www.rootsweb.com/~hcpd/norman/Duskey. I suspect his information came from the 1850 Census of Gilmer County Virginia shows a Patsy Duskey age 30 with Daniel, George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This census says Daniel was from Ohio. The 1860 Census of Calhoun Co., Shows Daniel, Andrew, Nancy, John, Mary E., William, James, George. This also list Daniels birthplace as Allegheny Co., Pa. The 1870 Census of Calhoun list's no Duskey's.

 

 

Population schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, Roll 1340. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M653.

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

Duskey, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Population schedules of the Ninth Census of the United States, 1870, Roll 1685. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M593.

 

 

DISKY/Duskey, See RISER, 413

 

RISER, 413

Henry...26...Farm Laborer...VA

Precilla...26...Keeping House...VA

George...3...WV

Asbury...1...WV

Daniel DISKY (Duskey?)...56...Farm Laborer...PA

 

 

 

The Below infomation was downloaded from the Calhoun Co. Web Site.

 

West Virginia In The Civil War

 

 

 

THE MOCCASIN RANGER RAID ON RIPLEY

 

When active hostilities broke between the sections in the spring of 1861 the central counties of West Virginia were overrun by loosely organized and wholly irresponsible bands of Southern partisans, who made war largely on their own account and spread terror throughout the area. In no section were these irregulars more active than in Calhoun County, where the Moccasin Rangers operated under a half dozen or more self-appointed captains.

 

Marauding groups such as the Moccasin Rangers, with an interchangeable membership, had a certain nuisance value to the Confederacy in that they terrorized the Union element and kept the fighting men at home to protect their families and property, but generally were not a credit to the Confederate cause. It was a great time to pay off old scores, quarrels about line fences and neighborhood disagreements, and many of the acts of the rangers were more personal than political. They left a wake of looted and burned homes, and rode horses "appropriated" from their loyal Union neighbors.

 

 

Daniel Duskey

 

One section of the Calhoun County Moccasin Rangers was led by Daniel Duskey, a fifty-two-year-old farmer and justice of the peace, who derived his military authority from the fact that in 1857 he had been elected captain of the Third Company, 186th Regiment, Virginia Enrolled Militia, a paper organization that included all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five in his magisterial district. And in the early days of the war the band led by Duskey achieved widespread notoriety for raids and forays--but were not as murderous as that section of the Moccasins led by Perry Conley, whose fame has been preserved as an outstanding partisan guerrilla leader. Duskey's most spectacular foray was his raid upon the town of Ripley, county seat of Jackson County, on the night of December 19, 1861. This raid led to his downfall and before settlement was reached had reverberations in the seats of Virginia government at Wheeling and Richmond, and in the White House itself. The incident, too, had its effect in causing the Virginia Confederate Government to enact a partisan ranger act giving a legal status to the guerrilla band in order to claim treatment as prisoners of war when captured by Federal troops.

 

Early in December 1861, Dr. O. G. Chase opened an office at Ripley for the purpose of enlisting a company for Federal service, and had brought in some fifty stands of arms, ammunition, and stores of clothing. Chase had recruited fifteen or twenty men and, for some reason not yet explained, had collected the arms owned by private citizens, rendering them defenseless in the face of rumored raids by partisan rangers. On the afternoon of December 19 he locked the arms and stores in cells in the county jails and marched his men out to Cottageville, announcing on his departure that he would hold the citizens of Ripley responsible if the goods were in any way molested.

 

At nine o'clock that night Captain Duskey and twelve of his men swooped down upon the defenseless town in true guerrilla style, shooting and yelling. Complete capture of the town was effected, however, without bloodshed--no one was killed and there is no report of any one wounded. The party was composed of Captain Duskey, George Duskey, Alex Groff, Marcelles J. Kester, Thomas Goff, Jacob Varner, Ben Wright, Ephraim B. Carter, George W. Tanner, George Gibson, and three others not named. Part of the company was recruited from neighboring Roane County.

 

Guards were posted and the main body, trained by months of experience, began to loot the town, and this they did efficiently. The guns and military stores in the jail were taken; they robbed J. L. Armstrong's store (asked that the goods taken be charged to the Confederacy), and lifted some personal possessions from citizens. The raiders found the post office locked and Postmaster John H. Wetzel refused to open it. Captain Duskey announced that he had a key that would open any door--bracing himself, he kicked the door down. Everything of value in the post office, even the letter mail awaiting dispatch or delivery, was taken and Postmaster Wetzel was relieved of all his clothing except that which he was wearing. After securing a good, square meal requisitioned from householders, the party retired, carrying their loot with them.

 

A few weeks later, Duskey and several of his men were surprised and captured by Federal troops which had been sent into Calhoun County to break up the bushwhacker outfits--the Moccasin Rangers in particular. When the prisoners arrived at Wheeling, Duskey and his son, George, and Jacob Varner were separated from the group, they being the only ones captured who were engaged in the Ripley raid.

 

The others were sent on to Camp Chase, Ohio, for internment, where, after a short time, some of them took the oath of allegiance, were paroled and returned to their native haunts--only to enlist in cavalry companies then being recruited for Confederate service. Indictments were returned in the United States District Court against the two Duskeys and Varner for the criminal offense of robbing the post office at Ripley.

 

The laws of war as embodied in the Lieber Code promulgated to the Union forces were observed in this case. That is to say, for the obvious avoidance of unjustifiable cruelty, the rights and customs belonging to those regularly engaging in recognized war were conceded to Confederate prisoners. Thus as a matter of practical wartime policy Confederate officers and soldiers were relieved from individual responsibility for acts which, if performed outside the pattern of war, would have been criminal. The Duskeys and Varner were not regularly enrolled Confederate soldiers and were not recognized as such. Their acts, as members of a marauding band, were individual and therefore amenable to the criminal law.

 

George Duskey, together with Josiah Parsons, made his escape from the Sprigg House Hospital on the night of April 1 while being treated for some slight illness. Dan Duskey and Jacob Varner were called up for trial before Judge John J. Jackson in the United States District Court at Wheeling on April 14, 1862. The prisoners had counsel; Judge Jackson assigned Major Brown of Wirt County to the defense. He declined on the ground that Duskey was indicted for murder in his county, and that he intended to prosecute him. Two other distinguished attorneys declined. and finally the judge settled on A. B. Caldwell and G. L. Cranmer, both of Wheeling, for the defense.

 

On entering a plea of not guilty, no denial was made of the facts of the raid on the town or of entering the post office. Attorney Caldwell argued that the affair was an act of war; that Duskey and his men were operating under the authority of Governor John Letcher of the Virginia Confederate Government; that the letters and papers taken from the post office were for the purpose of obtaining information about the movements of Federal troops, and that the offense was political and not criminal in the common acceptance of the law.

 

The jury evidently was not impressed by the eloquent plea--both Duskey and Varner were found guilty as charged and Judge Jackson sentenced Duskey to four years in the penitentiary and Varner to three years. The penitentiary in Washington, D.C., was designated as the place of confinement, but after a few months in that crowded institution the two prisoners were sent to a prison at Albany, New York. The storm broke a while later, when the War Department and President Lincoln were having some anxious moments about the whole affair, and the prisoners could not be readily found--though they were still in the Albany prison.

 

In the meantime, on November 25, 1862, Captain William Gramm and Lieutenant Isaac A. Wade, of the Eighth (West) Virginia Infantry, then stationed at Saint Albans, were captured by General John B. Floyd's force while on a scout in the Guyan Valley in Logan County. The eleven enlisted men captured at the same time were treated as prisoners of war; Gramm and Wade were sent to Richmond and turned over to the Virginia State authorities to be held as hostages for the release of Duskey and Varner. The two officers were confined in the state penitentiary at hard labor, and were treated as common felons.

 

Governor John Letcher dispatched a letter to President Lincoln on January 2, 1863, apprizing him of the action, and threatening further reprisals in event the partisan rangers were not recognized as prisoners of war and accorded treatment as such. The letter aroused the ire of Governor Francis H. Pierpont, of the Restored

Government at Wheeling, who threatened to inaugurate a treat-'em-rough program. "I have made arrangements," he wrote, "to place double the number of rebel Virginia officers of superior and equal rank in a chain gang in Ohio County and set them to breaking stone on the National road until those Virginia officers (Gramm and Wade) are released or exchanged." The case became something of a cause celebre and the correspondence covers many pages of the Records of the Rebellion.

 

There was a stumbling block in the way of the usual exchange of prisoners. Duskey and Varner were being held in confinement for a criminal act, and not a military offense, and thus it was necessary that a presidential pardon be issued before their release. In the home area, relatives of the men in confinement were circulating petitions praying for their release and it may be said that the loyalty of some of the signers could be considered suspect. The case in Washington batted around from Secretary of War Stanton, to Attorney General Bates, to Secretary of State Seward, to military authorities, and thence to the White House, without much result.

 

"It was not until recently that the rebel authorities would recognize guerrillas, bushwhackers, and other irregular bands as fit subjects for exchange, and within a few weeks past they have rejected some of this class," wrote Colonel W. Hoffman in reviewing the case. But finally all obstacles were overcome when letters recommending pardon, signed by the twelve jurors, Judge Jackson, E. M. Norton, U.S. marshal, and Benjamin H. Smith, district attorney, were laid on the desk of the president. These recommendations were agreed to by Postmaster General Montgomery Blair. Then the president acted. Picking up one of the petitions on June 1, 1863, he wrote:

 

"As the Judge, Jury, Marshal, District Attorney & Post Master General join in asking a pardon in this case, I

have concluded to grant it. The Attorney General will please make it out & send it to me. A. Lincoln. "

 

But still there was confusion. The petition endorsed by Lincoln referred only to Varner who was duly released from the Albany prison June 4, leaving Duskey still in close confinement. The error was corrected on June 13, when the president signed a pardon for both Daniel Duskey and Jacob Varner. Duskey was taken to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for formal exchange, but Varner had vanished.

 

It was not until July 1 that Captain Gramm and Lieutenant Wade were given their freedom under parole. They were later exchanged, rejoined their regiment and served until demobilized at the end of the war.

 

Source: Reprinted from Boyd B. Stutter's West Virginia in the Civil War, Education Foundation, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia 25324.

 

Note: I believe in fairness to a fine family of Calhoun County. We point out that what Dan Duskey did was no more criminal than any other act of war. He was a loyal Virginian and held a captain's commission in the Virginia State Militia. He and the men under him were invaluable to the Confederacy. They knew of all movement of troops and reported them. They also kept the Union Home Guards from harassing the

Confederate people. His action at Ripley was no different from Governor Pierpont of the Restored Government of Virginia taking money from the Exchange Bank of Weston to pay the officers of his government. He used the Seventh Ohio Regiment to arrest the cashier and take the money that was deposited to the account of the State of Virginia for building an insane hospital. The sum was twenty-seven thousand dollars.-R. J. Knotts, Jr.

 

 

 

 

Page 1 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:46 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 1 (con't)

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Daniel Duskey led the raid against the federal arsenal and post office at Ripley and against the oil depots at Burning Springs during the Civil War. Captured and tried by a federal tribunal, he avoided execution by being pardoned by President Lincoln. He escaped from jail and returned to the war. He was killed when federal troops poisoned the water he and his men had been using. He was born in Pennsylvania in what is now Allegheny County.

 

We have some conflicting information about where Daniel Duskey was born, was it Allegheny Co. Pa, Lancaster Co. Va., or Ohio? Some information state that Daniel and Martha, Nickname Patsy, children are George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This information was came from the following web site http://www.rootsweb.com/~hcpd/norman/Duskey. I suspect his information came from the 1850 Census of Gilmer County Virginia shows a Patsy Duskey age 30 with Daniel, George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This census says Daniel was from Ohio. The 1860 Census of Calhoun Co., Shows Daniel, Andrew, Nancy, John, Mary E., William, James, George. This also list Daniels birthplace as Allegheny Co., Pa. The 1870 Census of Calhoun list's no Duskey's.

 

 

Population schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, Roll 1340. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M653.

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

Duskey, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Population schedules of the Ninth Census of the United States, 1870, Roll 1685. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M593.

 

 

DISKY/Duskey, See RISER, 413

 

RISER, 413

Henry...26...Farm Laborer...VA

Precilla...26...Keeping House...VA

George...3...WV

Asbury...1...WV

Daniel DISKY (Duskey?)...56...Farm Laborer...PA

 

 

 

The Below infomation was downloaded from the Calhoun Co. Web Site.

 

West Virginia In The Civil War

 

 

 

THE MOCCASIN RANGER RAID ON RIPLEY

 

When active hostilities broke between the sections in the spring of 1861 the central counties of West Virginia were overrun by loosely organized and wholly irresponsible bands of Southern partisans, who made war largely on their own account and spread terror throughout the area. In no section were these irregulars more active than in Calhoun County, where the Moccasin Rangers operated under a half dozen or more self-appointed captains.

 

Marauding groups such as the Moccasin Rangers, with an interchangeable membership, had a certain nuisance value to the Confederacy in that they terrorized the Union element and kept the fighting men at home to protect their families and property, but generally were not a credit to the Confederate cause. It was a great time to pay off old scores, quarrels about line fences and neighborhood disagreements, and many of the acts of the rangers were more personal than political. They left a wake of looted and burned homes, and rode horses "appropriated" from their loyal Union neighbors.

 

 

Daniel Duskey

 

One section of the Calhoun County Moccasin Rangers was led by Daniel Duskey, a fifty-two-year-old farmer and justice of the peace, who derived his military authority from the fact that in 1857 he had been elected captain of the Third Company, 186th Regiment, Virginia Enrolled Militia, a paper organization that included all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five in his magisterial district. And in the early days of the war the band led by Duskey achieved widespread notoriety for raids and forays--but were not as murderous as that section of the Moccasins led by Perry Conley, whose fame has been preserved as an outstanding partisan guerrilla leader. Duskey's most spectacular foray was his raid upon the town of Ripley, county seat of Jackson County, on the night of December 19, 1861. This raid led to his downfall and before settlement was reached had reverberations in the seats of Virginia government at Wheeling and Richmond, and in the White House itself. The incident, too, had its effect in causing the Virginia Confederate Government to enact a partisan ranger act giving a legal status to the guerrilla band in order to claim treatment as prisoners of war when captured by Federal troops.

 

Early in December 1861, Dr. O. G. Chase opened an office at Ripley for the purpose of enlisting a company for Federal service, and had brought in some fifty stands of arms, ammunition, and stores of clothing. Chase had recruited fifteen or twenty men and, for some reason not yet explained, had collected the arms owned by private citizens, rendering them defenseless in the face of rumored raids by partisan rangers. On the afternoon of December 19 he locked the arms and stores in cells in the county jails and marched his men out to Cottageville, announcing on his departure that he would hold the citizens of Ripley responsible if the goods were in any way molested.

 

At nine o'clock that night Captain Duskey and twelve of his men swooped down upon the defenseless town in true guerrilla style, shooting and yelling. Complete capture of the town was effected, however, without bloodshed--no one was killed and there is no report of any one wounded. The party was composed of Captain Duskey, George Duskey, Alex Groff, Marcelles J. Kester, Thomas Goff, Jacob Varner, Ben Wright, Ephraim B. Carter, George W. Tanner, George Gibson, and three others not named. Part of the company was recruited from neighboring Roane County.

 

Guards were posted and the main body, trained by months of experience, began to loot the town, and this they did efficiently. The guns and military stores in the jail were taken; they robbed J. L. Armstrong's store (asked that the goods taken be charged to the Confederacy), and lifted some personal possessions from citizens. The raiders found the post office locked and Postmaster John H. Wetzel refused to open it. Captain Duskey announced that he had a key that would open any door--bracing himself, he kicked the door down. Everything of value in the post office, even the letter mail awaiting dispatch or delivery, was taken and Postmaster Wetzel was relieved of all his clothing except that which he was wearing. After securing a good, square meal requisitioned from householders, the party retired, carrying their loot with them.

 

A few weeks later, Duskey and several of his men were surprised and captured by Federal troops which had been sent into Calhoun County to break up the bushwhacker outfits--the Moccasin Rangers in particular. When the prisoners arrived at Wheeling, Duskey and his son, George, and Jacob Varner were separated from the group, they being the only ones captured who were engaged in the Ripley raid.

 

The others were sent on to Camp Chase, Ohio, for internment, where, after a short time, some of them took the oath of allegiance, were paroled and returned to their native haunts--only to enlist in cavalry companies then being recruited for Confederate service. Indictments were returned in the United States District Court against the two Duskeys and Varner for the criminal offense of robbing the post office at Ripley.

 

The laws of war as embodied in the Lieber Code promulgated to the Union forces were observed in this case. That is to say, for the obvious avoidance of unjustifiable cruelty, the rights and customs belonging to those regularly engaging in recognized war were conceded to Confederate prisoners. Thus as a matter of practical wartime policy Confederate officers and soldiers were relieved from individual responsibility for acts which, if performed outside the pattern of war, would have been criminal. The Duskeys and Varner were not regularly enrolled Confederate soldiers and were not recognized as such. Their acts, as members of a marauding band, were individual and therefore amenable to the criminal law.

 

George Duskey, together with Josiah Parsons, made his escape from the Sprigg House Hospital on the night of April 1 while being treated for some slight illness. Dan Duskey and Jacob Varner were called up for trial before Judge John J. Jackson in the United States District Court at Wheeling on April 14, 1862. The prisoners had counsel; Judge Jackson assigned Major Brown of Wirt County to the defense. He declined on the ground that Duskey was indicted for murder in his county, and that he intended to prosecute him. Two other distinguished attorneys declined. and finally the judge settled on A. B. Caldwell and G. L. Cranmer, both of Wheeling, for the defense.

 

On entering a plea of not guilty, no denial was made of the facts of the raid on the town or of entering the post office. Attorney Caldwell argued that the affair was an act of war; that Duskey and his men were operating under the authority of Governor John Letcher of the Virginia Confederate Government; that the letters and papers taken from the post office were for the purpose of obtaining information about the movements of Federal troops, and that the offense was political and not criminal in the common acceptance of the law.

 

The jury evidently was not impressed by the eloquent plea--both Duskey and Varner were found guilty as charged and Judge Jackson sentenced Duskey to four years in the penitentiary and Varner to three years. The penitentiary in Washington, D.C., was designated as the place of confinement, but after a few months in that crowded institution the two prisoners were sent to a prison at Albany, New York. The storm broke a while later, when the War Department and President Lincoln were having some anxious moments about the whole affair, and the prisoners could not be readily found--though they were still in the Albany prison.

 

In the meantime, on November 25, 1862, Captain William Gramm and Lieutenant Isaac A. Wade, of the Eighth (West) Virginia Infantry, then stationed at Saint Albans, were captured by General John B. Floyd's force while on a scout in the Guyan Valley in Logan County. The eleven enlisted men captured at the same time were treated as prisoners of war; Gramm and Wade were sent to Richmond and turned over to the Virginia State authorities to be held as hostages for the release of Duskey and Varner. The two officers were confined in the state penitentiary at hard labor, and were treated as common felons.

 

Governor John Letcher dispatched a letter to President Lincoln on January 2, 1863, apprizing him of the action, and threatening further reprisals in event the partisan rangers were not recognized as prisoners of war and accorded treatment as such. The letter aroused the ire of Governor Francis H. Pierpont, of the Restored

Government at Wheeling, who threatened to inaugurate a treat-'em-rough program. "I have made arrangements," he wrote, "to place double the number of rebel Virginia officers of superior and equal rank in a chain gang in Ohio County and set them to breaking stone on the National road until those Virginia officers (Gramm and Wade) are released or exchanged." The case became something of a cause celebre and the correspondence covers many pages of the Records of the Rebellion.

 

There was a stumbling block in the way of the usual exchange of prisoners. Duskey and Varner were being held in confinement for a criminal act, and not a military offense, and thus it was necessary that a presidential pardon be issued before their release. In the home area, relatives of the men in confinement were circulating petitions praying for their release and it may be said that the loyalty of some of the signers could be considered suspect. The case in Washington batted around from Secretary of War Stanton, to Attorney General Bates, to Secretary of State Seward, to military authorities, and thence to the White House, without much result.

 

"It was not until recently that the rebel authorities would recognize guerrillas, bushwhackers, and other irregular bands as fit subjects for exchange, and within a few weeks past they have rejected some of this class," wrote Colonel W. Hoffman in reviewing the case. But finally all obstacles were overcome when letters recommending pardon, signed by the twelve jurors, Judge Jackson, E. M. Norton, U.S. marshal, and Benjamin H. Smith, district attorney, were laid on the desk of the president. These recommendations were agreed to by Postmaster General Montgomery Blair. Then the president acted. Picking up one of the petitions on June 1, 1863, he wrote:

 

"As the Judge, Jury, Marshal, District Attorney & Post Master General join in asking a pardon in this case, I

have concluded to grant it. The Attorney General will please make it out & send it to me. A. Lincoln. "

 

But still there was confusion. The petition endorsed by Lincoln referred only to Varner who was duly released from the Albany prison June 4, leaving Duskey still in close confinement. The error was corrected on June 13, when the president signed a pardon for both Daniel Duskey and Jacob Varner. Duskey was taken to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for formal exchange, but Varner had vanished.

 

It was not until July 1 that Captain Gramm and Lieutenant Wade were given their freedom under parole. They were later exchanged, rejoined their regiment and served until demobilized at the end of the war.

 

Source: Reprinted from Boyd B. Stutter's West Virginia in the Civil War, Education Foundation, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia 25324.

 

Note: I believe in fairness to a fine family of Calhoun County. We point out that what Dan Duskey did was no more criminal than any other act of war. He was a loyal Virginian and held a captain's commission in the Virginia State Militia. He and the men under him were invaluable to the Confederacy. They knew of all movement of troops and reported them. They also kept the Union Home Guards from harassing the

Confederate people. His action at Ripley was no different from Governor Pierpont of the Restored Government of Virginia taking money from the Exchange Bank of Weston to pay the officers of his government. He used the Seventh Ohio Regiment to arrest the cashier and take the money that was deposited to the account of the State of Virginia for building an insane hospital. The sum was twenty-seven thousand dollars.-R. J. Knotts, Jr.

 

 

 

 

Page 2 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:46 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 1 (con't)

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Daniel Duskey led the raid against the federal arsenal and post office at Ripley and against the oil depots at Burning Springs during the Civil War. Captured and tried by a federal tribunal, he avoided execution by being pardoned by President Lincoln. He escaped from jail and returned to the war. He was killed when federal troops poisoned the water he and his men had been using. He was born in Pennsylvania in what is now Allegheny County.

 

We have some conflicting information about where Daniel Duskey was born, was it Allegheny Co. Pa, Lancaster Co. Va., or Ohio? Some information state that Daniel and Martha, Nickname Patsy, children are George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This information was came from the following web site http://www.rootsweb.com/~hcpd/norman/Duskey. I suspect his information came from the 1850 Census of Gilmer County Virginia shows a Patsy Duskey age 30 with Daniel, George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This census says Daniel was from Ohio. The 1860 Census of Calhoun Co., Shows Daniel, Andrew, Nancy, John, Mary E., William, James, George. This also list Daniels birthplace as Allegheny Co., Pa. The 1870 Census of Calhoun list's no Duskey's.

 

 

Population schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, Roll 1340. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M653.

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

Duskey, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Population schedules of the Ninth Census of the United States, 1870, Roll 1685. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M593.

 

 

DISKY/Duskey, See RISER, 413

 

RISER, 413

Henry...26...Farm Laborer...VA

Precilla...26...Keeping House...VA

George...3...WV

Asbury...1...WV

Daniel DISKY (Duskey?)...56...Farm Laborer...PA

 

 

 

The Below infomation was downloaded from the Calhoun Co. Web Site.

 

West Virginia In The Civil War

 

 

 

THE MOCCASIN RANGER RAID ON RIPLEY

 

When active hostilities broke between the sections in the spring of 1861 the central counties of West Virginia were overrun by loosely organized and wholly irresponsible bands of Southern partisans, who made war largely on their own account and spread terror throughout the area. In no section were these irregulars more active than in Calhoun County, where the Moccasin Rangers operated under a half dozen or more self-appointed captains.

 

Marauding groups such as the Moccasin Rangers, with an interchangeable membership, had a certain nuisance value to the Confederacy in that they terrorized the Union element and kept the fighting men at home to protect their families and property, but generally were not a credit to the Confederate cause. It was a great time to pay off old scores, quarrels about line fences and neighborhood disagreements, and many of the acts of the rangers were more personal than political. They left a wake of looted and burned homes, and rode horses "appropriated" from their loyal Union neighbors.

 

 

Daniel Duskey

 

One section of the Calhoun County Moccasin Rangers was led by Daniel Duskey, a fifty-two-year-old farmer and justice of the peace, who derived his military authority from the fact that in 1857 he had been elected captain of the Third Company, 186th Regiment, Virginia Enrolled Militia, a paper organization that included all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five in his magisterial district. And in the early days of the war the band led by Duskey achieved widespread notoriety for raids and forays--but were not as murderous as that section of the Moccasins led by Perry Conley, whose fame has been preserved as an outstanding partisan guerrilla leader. Duskey's most spectacular foray was his raid upon the town of Ripley, county seat of Jackson County, on the night of December 19, 1861. This raid led to his downfall and before settlement was reached had reverberations in the seats of Virginia government at Wheeling and Richmond, and in the White House itself. The incident, too, had its effect in causing the Virginia Confederate Government to enact a partisan ranger act giving a legal status to the guerrilla band in order to claim treatment as prisoners of war when captured by Federal troops.

 

Early in December 1861, Dr. O. G. Chase opened an office at Ripley for the purpose of enlisting a company for Federal service, and had brought in some fifty stands of arms, ammunition, and stores of clothing. Chase had recruited fifteen or twenty men and, for some reason not yet explained, had collected the arms owned by private citizens, rendering them defenseless in the face of rumored raids by partisan rangers. On the afternoon of December 19 he locked the arms and stores in cells in the county jails and marched his men out to Cottageville, announcing on his departure that he would hold the citizens of Ripley responsible if the goods were in any way molested.

 

At nine o'clock that night Captain Duskey and twelve of his men swooped down upon the defenseless town in true guerrilla style, shooting and yelling. Complete capture of the town was effected, however, without bloodshed--no one was killed and there is no report of any one wounded. The party was composed of Captain Duskey, George Duskey, Alex Groff, Marcelles J. Kester, Thomas Goff, Jacob Varner, Ben Wright, Ephraim B. Carter, George W. Tanner, George Gibson, and three others not named. Part of the company was recruited from neighboring Roane County.

 

Guards were posted and the main body, trained by months of experience, began to loot the town, and this they did efficiently. The guns and military stores in the jail were taken; they robbed J. L. Armstrong's store (asked that the goods taken be charged to the Confederacy), and lifted some personal possessions from citizens. The raiders found the post office locked and Postmaster John H. Wetzel refused to open it. Captain Duskey announced that he had a key that would open any door--bracing himself, he kicked the door down. Everything of value in the post office, even the letter mail awaiting dispatch or delivery, was taken and Postmaster Wetzel was relieved of all his clothing except that which he was wearing. After securing a good, square meal requisitioned from householders, the party retired, carrying their loot with them.

 

A few weeks later, Duskey and several of his men were surprised and captured by Federal troops which had been sent into Calhoun County to break up the bushwhacker outfits--the Moccasin Rangers in particular. When the prisoners arrived at Wheeling, Duskey and his son, George, and Jacob Varner were separated from the group, they being the only ones captured who were engaged in the Ripley raid.

 

The others were sent on to Camp Chase, Ohio, for internment, where, after a short time, some of them took the oath of allegiance, were paroled and returned to their native haunts--only to enlist in cavalry companies then being recruited for Confederate service. Indictments were returned in the United States District Court against the two Duskeys and Varner for the criminal offense of robbing the post office at Ripley.

 

The laws of war as embodied in the Lieber Code promulgated to the Union forces were observed in this case. That is to say, for the obvious avoidance of unjustifiable cruelty, the rights and customs belonging to those regularly engaging in recognized war were conceded to Confederate prisoners. Thus as a matter of practical wartime policy Confederate officers and soldiers were relieved from individual responsibility for acts which, if performed outside the pattern of war, would have been criminal. The Duskeys and Varner were not regularly enrolled Confederate soldiers and were not recognized as such. Their acts, as members of a marauding band, were individual and therefore amenable to the criminal law.

 

George Duskey, together with Josiah Parsons, made his escape from the Sprigg House Hospital on the night of April 1 while being treated for some slight illness. Dan Duskey and Jacob Varner were called up for trial before Judge John J. Jackson in the United States District Court at Wheeling on April 14, 1862. The prisoners had counsel; Judge Jackson assigned Major Brown of Wirt County to the defense. He declined on the ground that Duskey was indicted for murder in his county, and that he intended to prosecute him. Two other distinguished attorneys declined. and finally the judge settled on A. B. Caldwell and G. L. Cranmer, both of Wheeling, for the defense.

 

On entering a plea of not guilty, no denial was made of the facts of the raid on the town or of entering the post office. Attorney Caldwell argued that the affair was an act of war; that Duskey and his men were operating under the authority of Governor John Letcher of the Virginia Confederate Government; that the letters and papers taken from the post office were for the purpose of obtaining information about the movements of Federal troops, and that the offense was political and not criminal in the common acceptance of the law.

 

The jury evidently was not impressed by the eloquent plea--both Duskey and Varner were found guilty as charged and Judge Jackson sentenced Duskey to four years in the penitentiary and Varner to three years. The penitentiary in Washington, D.C., was designated as the place of confinement, but after a few months in that crowded institution the two prisoners were sent to a prison at Albany, New York. The storm broke a while later, when the War Department and President Lincoln were having some anxious moments about the whole affair, and the prisoners could not be readily found--though they were still in the Albany prison.

 

In the meantime, on November 25, 1862, Captain William Gramm and Lieutenant Isaac A. Wade, of the Eighth (West) Virginia Infantry, then stationed at Saint Albans, were captured by General John B. Floyd's force while on a scout in the Guyan Valley in Logan County. The eleven enlisted men captured at the same time were treated as prisoners of war; Gramm and Wade were sent to Richmond and turned over to the Virginia State authorities to be held as hostages for the release of Duskey and Varner. The two officers were confined in the state penitentiary at hard labor, and were treated as common felons.

 

Governor John Letcher dispatched a letter to President Lincoln on January 2, 1863, apprizing him of the action, and threatening further reprisals in event the partisan rangers were not recognized as prisoners of war and accorded treatment as such. The letter aroused the ire of Governor Francis H. Pierpont, of the Restored

Government at Wheeling, who threatened to inaugurate a treat-'em-rough program. "I have made arrangements," he wrote, "to place double the number of rebel Virginia officers of superior and equal rank in a chain gang in Ohio County and set them to breaking stone on the National road until those Virginia officers (Gramm and Wade) are released or exchanged." The case became something of a cause celebre and the correspondence covers many pages of the Records of the Rebellion.

 

There was a stumbling block in the way of the usual exchange of prisoners. Duskey and Varner were being held in confinement for a criminal act, and not a military offense, and thus it was necessary that a presidential pardon be issued before their release. In the home area, relatives of the men in confinement were circulating petitions praying for their release and it may be said that the loyalty of some of the signers could be considered suspect. The case in Washington batted around from Secretary of War Stanton, to Attorney General Bates, to Secretary of State Seward, to military authorities, and thence to the White House, without much result.

 

"It was not until recently that the rebel authorities would recognize guerrillas, bushwhackers, and other irregular bands as fit subjects for exchange, and within a few weeks past they have rejected some of this class," wrote Colonel W. Hoffman in reviewing the case. But finally all obstacles were overcome when letters recommending pardon, signed by the twelve jurors, Judge Jackson, E. M. Norton, U.S. marshal, and Benjamin H. Smith, district attorney, were laid on the desk of the president. These recommendations were agreed to by Postmaster General Montgomery Blair. Then the president acted. Picking up one of the petitions on June 1, 1863, he wrote:

 

"As the Judge, Jury, Marshal, District Attorney & Post Master General join in asking a pardon in this case, I

have concluded to grant it. The Attorney General will please make it out & send it to me. A. Lincoln. "

 

But still there was confusion. The petition endorsed by Lincoln referred only to Varner who was duly released from the Albany prison June 4, leaving Duskey still in close confinement. The error was corrected on June 13, when the president signed a pardon for both Daniel Duskey and Jacob Varner. Duskey was taken to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for formal exchange, but Varner had vanished.

 

It was not until July 1 that Captain Gramm and Lieutenant Wade were given their freedom under parole. They were later exchanged, rejoined their regiment and served until demobilized at the end of the war.

 

Source: Reprinted from Boyd B. Stutter's West Virginia in the Civil War, Education Foundation, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia 25324.

 

Note: I believe in fairness to a fine family of Calhoun County. We point out that what Dan Duskey did was no more criminal than any other act of war. He was a loyal Virginian and held a captain's commission in the Virginia State Militia. He and the men under him were invaluable to the Confederacy. They knew of all movement of troops and reported them. They also kept the Union Home Guards from harassing the

Confederate people. His action at Ripley was no different from Governor Pierpont of the Restored Government of Virginia taking money from the Exchange Bank of Weston to pay the officers of his government. He used the Seventh Ohio Regiment to arrest the cashier and take the money that was deposited to the account of the State of Virginia for building an insane hospital. The sum was twenty-seven thousand dollars.-R. J. Knotts, Jr.

 

 

 

 

Page 3 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:46 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 1 (con't)

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Daniel Duskey led the raid against the federal arsenal and post office at Ripley and against the oil depots at Burning Springs during the Civil War. Captured and tried by a federal tribunal, he avoided execution by being pardoned by President Lincoln. He escaped from jail and returned to the war. He was killed when federal troops poisoned the water he and his men had been using. He was born in Pennsylvania in what is now Allegheny County.

 

We have some conflicting information about where Daniel Duskey was born, was it Allegheny Co. Pa, Lancaster Co. Va., or Ohio? Some information state that Daniel and Martha, Nickname Patsy, children are George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This information was came from the following web site http://www.rootsweb.com/~hcpd/norman/Duskey. I suspect his information came from the 1850 Census of Gilmer County Virginia shows a Patsy Duskey age 30 with Daniel, George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This census says Daniel was from Ohio. The 1860 Census of Calhoun Co., Shows Daniel, Andrew, Nancy, John, Mary E., William, James, George. This also list Daniels birthplace as Allegheny Co., Pa. The 1870 Census of Calhoun list's no Duskey's.

 

 

Population schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, Roll 1340. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M653.

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

Duskey, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Population schedules of the Ninth Census of the United States, 1870, Roll 1685. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M593.

 

 

DISKY/Duskey, See RISER, 413

 

RISER, 413

Henry...26...Farm Laborer...VA

Precilla...26...Keeping House...VA

George...3...WV

Asbury...1...WV

Daniel DISKY (Duskey?)...56...Farm Laborer...PA

 

 

 

The Below infomation was downloaded from the Calhoun Co. Web Site.

 

West Virginia In The Civil War

 

 

 

THE MOCCASIN RANGER RAID ON RIPLEY

 

When active hostilities broke between the sections in the spring of 1861 the central counties of West Virginia were overrun by loosely organized and wholly irresponsible bands of Southern partisans, who made war largely on their own account and spread terror throughout the area. In no section were these irregulars more active than in Calhoun County, where the Moccasin Rangers operated under a half dozen or more self-appointed captains.

 

Marauding groups such as the Moccasin Rangers, with an interchangeable membership, had a certain nuisance value to the Confederacy in that they terrorized the Union element and kept the fighting men at home to protect their families and property, but generally were not a credit to the Confederate cause. It was a great time to pay off old scores, quarrels about line fences and neighborhood disagreements, and many of the acts of the rangers were more personal than political. They left a wake of looted and burned homes, and rode horses "appropriated" from their loyal Union neighbors.

 

 

Daniel Duskey

 

One section of the Calhoun County Moccasin Rangers was led by Daniel Duskey, a fifty-two-year-old farmer and justice of the peace, who derived his military authority from the fact that in 1857 he had been elected captain of the Third Company, 186th Regiment, Virginia Enrolled Militia, a paper organization that included all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five in his magisterial district. And in the early days of the war the band led by Duskey achieved widespread notoriety for raids and forays--but were not as murderous as that section of the Moccasins led by Perry Conley, whose fame has been preserved as an outstanding partisan guerrilla leader. Duskey's most spectacular foray was his raid upon the town of Ripley, county seat of Jackson County, on the night of December 19, 1861. This raid led to his downfall and before settlement was reached had reverberations in the seats of Virginia government at Wheeling and Richmond, and in the White House itself. The incident, too, had its effect in causing the Virginia Confederate Government to enact a partisan ranger act giving a legal status to the guerrilla band in order to claim treatment as prisoners of war when captured by Federal troops.

 

Early in December 1861, Dr. O. G. Chase opened an office at Ripley for the purpose of enlisting a company for Federal service, and had brought in some fifty stands of arms, ammunition, and stores of clothing. Chase had recruited fifteen or twenty men and, for some reason not yet explained, had collected the arms owned by private citizens, rendering them defenseless in the face of rumored raids by partisan rangers. On the afternoon of December 19 he locked the arms and stores in cells in the county jails and marched his men out to Cottageville, announcing on his departure that he would hold the citizens of Ripley responsible if the goods were in any way molested.

 

At nine o'clock that night Captain Duskey and twelve of his men swooped down upon the defenseless town in true guerrilla style, shooting and yelling. Complete capture of the town was effected, however, without bloodshed--no one was killed and there is no report of any one wounded. The party was composed of Captain Duskey, George Duskey, Alex Groff, Marcelles J. Kester, Thomas Goff, Jacob Varner, Ben Wright, Ephraim B. Carter, George W. Tanner, George Gibson, and three others not named. Part of the company was recruited from neighboring Roane County.

 

Guards were posted and the main body, trained by months of experience, began to loot the town, and this they did efficiently. The guns and military stores in the jail were taken; they robbed J. L. Armstrong's store (asked that the goods taken be charged to the Confederacy), and lifted some personal possessions from citizens. The raiders found the post office locked and Postmaster John H. Wetzel refused to open it. Captain Duskey announced that he had a key that would open any door--bracing himself, he kicked the door down. Everything of value in the post office, even the letter mail awaiting dispatch or delivery, was taken and Postmaster Wetzel was relieved of all his clothing except that which he was wearing. After securing a good, square meal requisitioned from householders, the party retired, carrying their loot with them.

 

A few weeks later, Duskey and several of his men were surprised and captured by Federal troops which had been sent into Calhoun County to break up the bushwhacker outfits--the Moccasin Rangers in particular. When the prisoners arrived at Wheeling, Duskey and his son, George, and Jacob Varner were separated from the group, they being the only ones captured who were engaged in the Ripley raid.

 

The others were sent on to Camp Chase, Ohio, for internment, where, after a short time, some of them took the oath of allegiance, were paroled and returned to their native haunts--only to enlist in cavalry companies then being recruited for Confederate service. Indictments were returned in the United States District Court against the two Duskeys and Varner for the criminal offense of robbing the post office at Ripley.

 

The laws of war as embodied in the Lieber Code promulgated to the Union forces were observed in this case. That is to say, for the obvious avoidance of unjustifiable cruelty, the rights and customs belonging to those regularly engaging in recognized war were conceded to Confederate prisoners. Thus as a matter of practical wartime policy Confederate officers and soldiers were relieved from individual responsibility for acts which, if performed outside the pattern of war, would have been criminal. The Duskeys and Varner were not regularly enrolled Confederate soldiers and were not recognized as such. Their acts, as members of a marauding band, were individual and therefore amenable to the criminal law.

 

George Duskey, together with Josiah Parsons, made his escape from the Sprigg House Hospital on the night of April 1 while being treated for some slight illness. Dan Duskey and Jacob Varner were called up for trial before Judge John J. Jackson in the United States District Court at Wheeling on April 14, 1862. The prisoners had counsel; Judge Jackson assigned Major Brown of Wirt County to the defense. He declined on the ground that Duskey was indicted for murder in his county, and that he intended to prosecute him. Two other distinguished attorneys declined. and finally the judge settled on A. B. Caldwell and G. L. Cranmer, both of Wheeling, for the defense.

 

On entering a plea of not guilty, no denial was made of the facts of the raid on the town or of entering the post office. Attorney Caldwell argued that the affair was an act of war; that Duskey and his men were operating under the authority of Governor John Letcher of the Virginia Confederate Government; that the letters and papers taken from the post office were for the purpose of obtaining information about the movements of Federal troops, and that the offense was political and not criminal in the common acceptance of the law.

 

The jury evidently was not impressed by the eloquent plea--both Duskey and Varner were found guilty as charged and Judge Jackson sentenced Duskey to four years in the penitentiary and Varner to three years. The penitentiary in Washington, D.C., was designated as the place of confinement, but after a few months in that crowded institution the two prisoners were sent to a prison at Albany, New York. The storm broke a while later, when the War Department and President Lincoln were having some anxious moments about the whole affair, and the prisoners could not be readily found--though they were still in the Albany prison.

 

In the meantime, on November 25, 1862, Captain William Gramm and Lieutenant Isaac A. Wade, of the Eighth (West) Virginia Infantry, then stationed at Saint Albans, were captured by General John B. Floyd's force while on a scout in the Guyan Valley in Logan County. The eleven enlisted men captured at the same time were treated as prisoners of war; Gramm and Wade were sent to Richmond and turned over to the Virginia State authorities to be held as hostages for the release of Duskey and Varner. The two officers were confined in the state penitentiary at hard labor, and were treated as common felons.

 

Governor John Letcher dispatched a letter to President Lincoln on January 2, 1863, apprizing him of the action, and threatening further reprisals in event the partisan rangers were not recognized as prisoners of war and accorded treatment as such. The letter aroused the ire of Governor Francis H. Pierpont, of the Restored

Government at Wheeling, who threatened to inaugurate a treat-'em-rough program. "I have made arrangements," he wrote, "to place double the number of rebel Virginia officers of superior and equal rank in a chain gang in Ohio County and set them to breaking stone on the National road until those Virginia officers (Gramm and Wade) are released or exchanged." The case became something of a cause celebre and the correspondence covers many pages of the Records of the Rebellion.

 

There was a stumbling block in the way of the usual exchange of prisoners. Duskey and Varner were being held in confinement for a criminal act, and not a military offense, and thus it was necessary that a presidential pardon be issued before their release. In the home area, relatives of the men in confinement were circulating petitions praying for their release and it may be said that the loyalty of some of the signers could be considered suspect. The case in Washington batted around from Secretary of War Stanton, to Attorney General Bates, to Secretary of State Seward, to military authorities, and thence to the White House, without much result.

 

"It was not until recently that the rebel authorities would recognize guerrillas, bushwhackers, and other irregular bands as fit subjects for exchange, and within a few weeks past they have rejected some of this class," wrote Colonel W. Hoffman in reviewing the case. But finally all obstacles were overcome when letters recommending pardon, signed by the twelve jurors, Judge Jackson, E. M. Norton, U.S. marshal, and Benjamin H. Smith, district attorney, were laid on the desk of the president. These recommendations were agreed to by Postmaster General Montgomery Blair. Then the president acted. Picking up one of the petitions on June 1, 1863, he wrote:

 

"As the Judge, Jury, Marshal, District Attorney & Post Master General join in asking a pardon in this case, I

have concluded to grant it. The Attorney General will please make it out & send it to me. A. Lincoln. "

 

But still there was confusion. The petition endorsed by Lincoln referred only to Varner who was duly released from the Albany prison June 4, leaving Duskey still in close confinement. The error was corrected on June 13, when the president signed a pardon for both Daniel Duskey and Jacob Varner. Duskey was taken to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for formal exchange, but Varner had vanished.

 

It was not until July 1 that Captain Gramm and Lieutenant Wade were given their freedom under parole. They were later exchanged, rejoined their regiment and served until demobilized at the end of the war.

 

Source: Reprinted from Boyd B. Stutter's West Virginia in the Civil War, Education Foundation, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia 25324.

 

Note: I believe in fairness to a fine family of Calhoun County. We point out that what Dan Duskey did was no more criminal than any other act of war. He was a loyal Virginian and held a captain's commission in the Virginia State Militia. He and the men under him were invaluable to the Confederacy. They knew of all movement of troops and reported them. They also kept the Union Home Guards from harassing the

Confederate people. His action at Ripley was no different from Governor Pierpont of the Restored Government of Virginia taking money from the Exchange Bank of Weston to pay the officers of his government. He used the Seventh Ohio Regiment to arrest the cashier and take the money that was deposited to the account of the State of Virginia for building an insane hospital. The sum was twenty-seven thousand dollars.-R. J. Knotts, Jr.

 

 

 

 

Page 4 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:46 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 1 (con't)

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Daniel Duskey led the raid against the federal arsenal and post office at Ripley and against the oil depots at Burning Springs during the Civil War. Captured and tried by a federal tribunal, he avoided execution by being pardoned by President Lincoln. He escaped from jail and returned to the war. He was killed when federal troops poisoned the water he and his men had been using. He was born in Pennsylvania in what is now Allegheny County.

 

We have some conflicting information about where Daniel Duskey was born, was it Allegheny Co. Pa, Lancaster Co. Va., or Ohio? Some information state that Daniel and Martha, Nickname Patsy, children are George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This information was came from the following web site http://www.rootsweb.com/~hcpd/norman/Duskey. I suspect his information came from the 1850 Census of Gilmer County Virginia shows a Patsy Duskey age 30 with Daniel, George, Andrew, Nancy, John, and Mary. This census says Daniel was from Ohio. The 1860 Census of Calhoun Co., Shows Daniel, Andrew, Nancy, John, Mary E., William, James, George. This also list Daniels birthplace as Allegheny Co., Pa. The 1870 Census of Calhoun list's no Duskey's.

 

 

Population schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, Roll 1340. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M653.

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

Duskey, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Population schedules of the Ninth Census of the United States, 1870, Roll 1685. Transcribed by LINDA CUNNINGHAM FLUHARTY from

photocopy of National Archives Microfilm Publications, Microcopy No. M593.

 

 

DISKY/Duskey, See RISER, 413

 

RISER, 413

Henry...26...Farm Laborer...VA

Precilla...26...Keeping House...VA

George...3...WV

Asbury...1...WV

Daniel DISKY (Duskey?)...56...Farm Laborer...PA

 

 

 

The Below infomation was downloaded from the Calhoun Co. Web Site.

 

West Virginia In The Civil War

 

 

 

THE MOCCASIN RANGER RAID ON RIPLEY

 

When active hostilities broke between the sections in the spring of 1861 the central counties of West Virginia were overrun by loosely organized and wholly irresponsible bands of Southern partisans, who made war largely on their own account and spread terror throughout the area. In no section were these irregulars more active than in Calhoun County, where the Moccasin Rangers operated under a half dozen or more self-appointed captains.

 

Marauding groups such as the Moccasin Rangers, with an interchangeable membership, had a certain nuisance value to the Confederacy in that they terrorized the Union element and kept the fighting men at home to protect their families and property, but generally were not a credit to the Confederate cause. It was a great time to pay off old scores, quarrels about line fences and neighborhood disagreements, and many of the acts of the rangers were more personal than political. They left a wake of looted and burned homes, and rode horses "appropriated" from their loyal Union neighbors.

 

 

Daniel Duskey

 

One section of the Calhoun County Moccasin Rangers was led by Daniel Duskey, a fifty-two-year-old farmer and justice of the peace, who derived his military authority from the fact that in 1857 he had been elected captain of the Third Company, 186th Regiment, Virginia Enrolled Militia, a paper organization that included all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five in his magisterial district. And in the early days of the war the band led by Duskey achieved widespread notoriety for raids and forays--but were not as murderous as that section of the Moccasins led by Perry Conley, whose fame has been preserved as an outstanding partisan guerrilla leader. Duskey's most spectacular foray was his raid upon the town of Ripley, county seat of Jackson County, on the night of December 19, 1861. This raid led to his downfall and before settlement was reached had reverberations in the seats of Virginia government at Wheeling and Richmond, and in the White House itself. The incident, too, had its effect in causing the Virginia Confederate Government to enact a partisan ranger act giving a legal status to the guerrilla band in order to claim treatment as prisoners of war when captured by Federal troops.

 

Early in December 1861, Dr. O. G. Chase opened an office at Ripley for the purpose of enlisting a company for Federal service, and had brought in some fifty stands of arms, ammunition, and stores of clothing. Chase had recruited fifteen or twenty men and, for some reason not yet explained, had collected the arms owned by private citizens, rendering them defenseless in the face of rumored raids by partisan rangers. On the afternoon of December 19 he locked the arms and stores in cells in the county jails and marched his men out to Cottageville, announcing on his departure that he would hold the citizens of Ripley responsible if the goods were in any way molested.

 

At nine o'clock that night Captain Duskey and twelve of his men swooped down upon the defenseless town in true guerrilla style, shooting and yelling. Complete capture of the town was effected, however, without bloodshed--no one was killed and there is no report of any one wounded. The party was composed of Captain Duskey, George Duskey, Alex Groff, Marcelles J. Kester, Thomas Goff, Jacob Varner, Ben Wright, Ephraim B. Carter, George W. Tanner, George Gibson, and three others not named. Part of the company was recruited from neighboring Roane County.

 

Guards were posted and the main body, trained by months of experience, began to loot the town, and this they did efficiently. The guns and military stores in the jail were taken; they robbed J. L. Armstrong's store (asked that the goods taken be charged to the Confederacy), and lifted some personal possessions from citizens. The raiders found the post office locked and Postmaster John H. Wetzel refused to open it. Captain Duskey announced that he had a key that would open any door--bracing himself, he kicked the door down. Everything of value in the post office, even the letter mail awaiting dispatch or delivery, was taken and Postmaster Wetzel was relieved of all his clothing except that which he was wearing. After securing a good, square meal requisitioned from householders, the party retired, carrying their loot with them.

 

A few weeks later, Duskey and several of his men were surprised and captured by Federal troops which had been sent into Calhoun County to break up the bushwhacker outfits--the Moccasin Rangers in particular. When the prisoners arrived at Wheeling, Duskey and his son, George, and Jacob Varner were separated from the group, they being the only ones captured who were engaged in the Ripley raid.

 

The others were sent on to Camp Chase, Ohio, for internment, where, after a short time, some of them took the oath of allegiance, were paroled and returned to their native haunts--only to enlist in cavalry companies then being recruited for Confederate service. Indictments were returned in the United States District Court against the two Duskeys and Varner for the criminal offense of robbing the post office at Ripley.

 

The laws of war as embodied in the Lieber Code promulgated to the Union forces were observed in this case. That is to say, for the obvious avoidance of unjustifiable cruelty, the rights and customs belonging to those regularly engaging in recognized war were conceded to Confederate prisoners. Thus as a matter of practical wartime policy Confederate officers and soldiers were relieved from individual responsibility for acts which, if performed outside the pattern of war, would have been criminal. The Duskeys and Varner were not regularly enrolled Confederate soldiers and were not recognized as such. Their acts, as members of a marauding band, were individual and therefore amenable to the criminal law.

 

George Duskey, together with Josiah Parsons, made his escape from the Sprigg House Hospital on the night of April 1 while being treated for some slight illness. Dan Duskey and Jacob Varner were called up for trial before Judge John J. Jackson in the United States District Court at Wheeling on April 14, 1862. The prisoners had counsel; Judge Jackson assigned Major Brown of Wirt County to the defense. He declined on the ground that Duskey was indicted for murder in his county, and that he intended to prosecute him. Two other distinguished attorneys declined. and finally the judge settled on A. B. Caldwell and G. L. Cranmer, both of Wheeling, for the defense.

 

On entering a plea of not guilty, no denial was made of the facts of the raid on the town or of entering the post office. Attorney Caldwell argued that the affair was an act of war; that Duskey and his men were operating under the authority of Governor John Letcher of the Virginia Confederate Government; that the letters and papers taken from the post office were for the purpose of obtaining information about the movements of Federal troops, and that the offense was political and not criminal in the common acceptance of the law.

 

The jury evidently was not impressed by the eloquent plea--both Duskey and Varner were found guilty as charged and Judge Jackson sentenced Duskey to four years in the penitentiary and Varner to three years. The penitentiary in Washington, D.C., was designated as the place of confinement, but after a few months in that crowded institution the two prisoners were sent to a prison at Albany, New York. The storm broke a while later, when the War Department and President Lincoln were having some anxious moments about the whole affair, and the prisoners could not be readily found--though they were still in the Albany prison.

 

In the meantime, on November 25, 1862, Captain William Gramm and Lieutenant Isaac A. Wade, of the Eighth (West) Virginia Infantry, then stationed at Saint Albans, were captured by General John B. Floyd's force while on a scout in the Guyan Valley in Logan County. The eleven enlisted men captured at the same time were treated as prisoners of war; Gramm and Wade were sent to Richmond and turned over to the Virginia State authorities to be held as hostages for the release of Duskey and Varner. The two officers were confined in the state penitentiary at hard labor, and were treated as common felons.

 

Governor John Letcher dispatched a letter to President Lincoln on January 2, 1863, apprizing him of the action, and threatening further reprisals in event the partisan rangers were not recognized as prisoners of war and accorded treatment as such. The letter aroused the ire of Governor Francis H. Pierpont, of the Restored

Government at Wheeling, who threatened to inaugurate a treat-'em-rough program. "I have made arrangements," he wrote, "to place double the number of rebel Virginia officers of superior and equal rank in a chain gang in Ohio County and set them to breaking stone on the National road until those Virginia officers (Gramm and Wade) are released or exchanged." The case became something of a cause celebre and the correspondence covers many pages of the Records of the Rebellion.

 

There was a stumbling block in the way of the usual exchange of prisoners. Duskey and Varner were being held in confinement for a criminal act, and not a military offense, and thus it was necessary that a presidential pardon be issued before their release. In the home area, relatives of the men in confinement were circulating petitions praying for their release and it may be said that the loyalty of some of the signers could be considered suspect. The case in Washington batted around from Secretary of War Stanton, to Attorney General Bates, to Secretary of State Seward, to military authorities, and thence to the White House, without much result.

 

"It was not until recently that the rebel authorities would recognize guerrillas, bushwhackers, and other irregular bands as fit subjects for exchange, and within a few weeks past they have rejected some of this class," wrote Colonel W. Hoffman in reviewing the case. But finally all obstacles were overcome when letters recommending pardon, signed by the twelve jurors, Judge Jackson, E. M. Norton, U.S. marshal, and Benjamin H. Smith, district attorney, were laid on the desk of the president. These recommendations were agreed to by Postmaster General Montgomery Blair. Then the president acted. Picking up one of the petitions on June 1, 1863, he wrote:

 

"As the Judge, Jury, Marshal, District Attorney & Post Master General join in asking a pardon in this case, I

have concluded to grant it. The Attorney General will please make it out & send it to me. A. Lincoln. "

 

But still there was confusion. The petition endorsed by Lincoln referred only to Varner who was duly released from the Albany prison June 4, leaving Duskey still in close confinement. The error was corrected on June 13, when the president signed a pardon for both Daniel Duskey and Jacob Varner. Duskey was taken to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for formal exchange, but Varner had vanished.

 

It was not until July 1 that Captain Gramm and Lieutenant Wade were given their freedom under parole. They were later exchanged, rejoined their regiment and served until demobilized at the end of the war.

 

Source: Reprinted from Boyd B. Stutter's West Virginia in the Civil War, Education Foundation, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia 25324.

 

Note: I believe in fairness to a fine family of Calhoun County. We point out that what Dan Duskey did was no more criminal than any other act of war. He was a loyal Virginian and held a captain's commission in the Virginia State Militia. He and the men under him were invaluable to the Confederacy. They knew of all movement of troops and reported them. They also kept the Union Home Guards from harassing the

Confederate people. His action at Ripley was no different from Governor Pierpont of the Restored Government of Virginia taking money from the Exchange Bank of Weston to pay the officers of his government. He used the Seventh Ohio Regiment to arrest the cashier and take the money that was deposited to the account of the State of Virginia for building an insane hospital. The sum was twenty-seven thousand dollars.-R. J. Knotts, Jr.

 

 

 

 

Martha SHARP is the daughter of Andrew SHARP and Nancy DRENNEN [2, 3, 4, 5]. She was born Abt. 1819 in Ireland [2, 3, 4, 5]. She died Nov 1856 [7].

Daniel DUSKEY and Martha SHARP. He married Martha SHARP. They were married on 28 Mar 1840 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [2]. They had 7 children.

2. i.

Nancy DUSKEY [2]. Her birth on 06 Mar 1836 in Lewis, Virginia, USA (Now West Virginia) [2]. She married Hiram RISSER. They were married on 27 Dec 1867 in Wood, West Virginia, USA. Her death on 16 Dec 1938 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA (At home of D. J. Petty) [2].

3. ii.

George W. DUSKEY [8, 4, 9]. He was born Abt. 1840 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [8, 4, 9]. He married Susan ?. They were married on 31 Mar 1867 in Lafayette, Missouri, USA.

iii.

Andrew DUSKEY [10, 2, 5]. He was born Abt. 1842 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [10]. His death on 17 Jan 1863 in Jackson, Virginia, USA (Now Roane County 53811-0450).

Notes for Andrew DUSKEY:

General Notes:

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

From "Calhoun Co. in the Civil War,"

 

DUSKEY, ANDREW, Co. A, Virginia State Line (Moccasin Rangers). Enlisted on 15 July 1861 in Calhoun Co., W.Va. Killed in action in Jackson Co., W.Va. on 17 Jan. 1863. Born in Lewis Co., W.Va. about 1842. Age 18, Calhoun Co., W.Va. 1860 Census. Brother of George W. Duskey, son of Daniel Duskey. C.S.A.

 

 

 

4. iv.

John DUSKEY [11, 2, 12, 3, 13]. He was born on 11 Feb 1846 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [11]. He married Martha NUTTER. They were married on 26 Apr 1864 [14, 3]. His death on 30 Nov 1926 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA (Lee District) [7].

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5. v.

Mary E. DUSKEY [2]. She was born on 20 Aug 1848 in Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [6]. She married Solomon W. LOCKHART. They were married on 16 Feb 1867 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6]. She died on 18 May 1921 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 2].

6. vi.

William DUSKEY [15, 16, 17, 18]. He was born on 22 Jul 1851 in Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [15, 16, 17, 18, 2, 19]. He married Floreed SMITH. They were married on 15 Jun 1879 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [14, 19]. He died on 04 Mar 1934 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [7, 2, 19].

7. vii.

James S. DUSKEY [2, 20]. He was born on 26 Dec 1854 in West Fork, Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [21, 2, 20]. He married Joanna SHAFFER. They were married on 29 Oct 1885 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. He died on 16 Oct 1946 in Spencer, Roane, West Virginia, USA [7].

Generation 2
2.

Nancy DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [2]. Her birth on 06 Mar 1836 in Lewis, Virginia, USA (Now West Virginia) [2]. Her death on 16 Dec 1938 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA (At home of D. J. Petty) [2].

Notes for Nancy DUSKEY:

General Notes:

HI:I am a friend of EDNA JEAN KINGSBURY and am trying to coordinate her

records. she has given me much of your info to enter in this computer

record.I have visited in West Virginia

this year and went through Guthrie, Oklahoma

..where I looked for family of nancy anna DUSKEY. do you have additional info

these people? WILLIAM RITZHAUPT married a RISSER dau. of HIRAM AND ANNA

DUSKEY RISSER IN 1888 AT KANSAS CITY.

HIRAM RISSER DIED WHEN ETTA WAS 2 YEARS OLD . ANNA REMARRIED LEWIS

WICKMAN, A BLACKSMITH AND CARRIAGEMAKER. LOUIS HENRY RITZHAUPT WAS BORN

KANSAS CITY 18 JAN 1891.HE BECAME A DOCTOR IN GUTHRIE OK.THE FAILY CAME TO

GUTHRIE IN 1894. EDNA WOULD LIKE TO COFIRM DATE & PLACE OF DEATH OF ANNA

WICKMAN?SHE IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE REACHED 101 YEARS! WOULD APPRECIAT ANY HELP.

THANK YOU. MARV AND EDNA

 

 

 

 

Hiram RISSER. He died Abt. 1875 in Kansas, USA. He was born in Washington, Pennsylvania, USA.

Hiram RISSER and Nancy DUSKEY. She married Hiram RISSER. They were married on 27 Dec 1867 in Wood, West Virginia, USA. They had 1 child.

8. i.

Ettie RISSER [22]. She was born Feb 1873 in West Virginia, USA [23, 22, 24]. She married William RITZHAUPT. They were married on 23 Jun 1888 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USA [25]. She died on 23 Jan 1958 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23, 24].

Lewis WICKMAN. He was born Mar 1853 in Tennessee, USA [6]. He died on 25 Aug 1915 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA.

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Notes for Lewis WICKMAN:

General Notes:

1910 GUTHRIE, OK.CARRIAGE REPAIR PARTNER WITH

LOUIS A. SCHICKRAM.322 S. DIVISION.1910 DIRECTORY

 

 

Lewis WICKMAN and Nancy DUSKEY. They had no children.

3.

George W. DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [8, 4, 9]. He was born Abt. 1840 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [8, 4, 9].

Notes for George W. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Captain George Duskey's Company of Rangers was specifically mentioned in the Virginia legislation transferring state troops to Confederate control. Duskey had served as a private in the Moccasin Rangers. He was paid for service in that unit through July 15, 1862. Duskey then sought and received permission to raise a ranger company, which became Company E, 3rd Virginia State Line. On February 28, 1863, this company was stationed near Lewisburg in Greenbrier County, where its last muster roll as a member of Virginia's irregular forces was made.

 

1880 Census E. D. 55, Middleton, Lafayette Co., MO. Family History Library Film 1254698, NA Film Number T9-0698, Page Number 359A:

 

Geo. DUSKY Self M Male W 40 WV Farmer PA ---

Susan DUSKY Wife M Female W 36 MO Housekeeper VA VA

Ernest DUSKY Son S Male W 11 MO Works On Farm WV MO

Claricil DUSKY Son S Male W 8 MO WV MO

Maude DUSKY Dau S Female W 6 MO WV MO

Edwin DUSKY Son S Male W 4 MO WV MO

DUSKY Son S Male W 2 MO WV MO

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

DUSKEY (DUSKY), George W., Co. A, 3rd Virginia State Line (Moccasin Rangers). Commissioned Captain of Infantry on 18 Sep. 1862. On August's list of Virginia State Line Officers prepared on 27 Jan. 1863. On T. E. Davis' list of Virginia State Line Officers dated 28 Feb. 1863. Private, Co. C, 19th Virginia Cavalry. Born Lewis Co., W.Va. about 1840. Age 20, Calhoun Co. 1860 Census. Captured Wirt Co., W.Va. 15 Dec. 1861. Confined at the Atheneum Prison under heavy guard. Pretended to be ill and was sent to the Sprigg Hill Hospital, Wheeling, W.Va. While there he escaped with a few of his men, including Josiah Parsons, and returned to Calhoun Co., W.Va. and there reorganized the Moccasin Rangers. Enlisted Pocahontas Co., W.Va. 1 Apr. 1863. Absent 31 Dec. 1863 to 31 Aug. 1864. Has one horse; captured Roane Co., W.Va., 20 June 1863. Absent 1 Sep. 1864-31 Oct. 1864,$100 enlistment bounty due. Was reported on 29 Nov. 1864 that Duskey and Lieutenant William A. Gandy were being held in solitary confinement , and to be sentto Ft. Monroe for exchange, 21 Jan. 1865. Reported as being held in the Wheeling City Jail which served as a State prison, 25 Jan. 1865. Duskey being held bycivil authorities, under indictment for treason and robbing the mail (Ripley, W.Va. Post Office). Captured 2 Feb. 1865, no place stated. (This is probably their release date from prison and the time that the military took control of them again.) Confined at Baltimore, Md., then sent to Camp Hamilton. Transportation to Ft. Monroe for Duskey and William Gandy ordered 4 Feb. 1865. Confined at Camp Hamilton, Va. military prison awaiting exchange 6 Feb. 1865. Released 11 Feb. 1865. Post war rosters show service in Co. A. Duskey, apparently an officer at some point during the war was not considered as such by the U.S. Son of Daniel Duskey and brother of Andrew Duskey. C.S.A.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Notes for George W. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Captain George Duskey's Company of Rangers was specifically mentioned in the Virginia legislation transferring state troops to Confederate control. Duskey had served as a private in the Moccasin Rangers. He was paid for service in that unit through July 15, 1862. Duskey then sought and received permission to raise a ranger company, which became Company E, 3rd Virginia State Line. On February 28, 1863, this company was stationed near Lewisburg in Greenbrier County, where its last muster roll as a member of Virginia's irregular forces was made.

 

1880 Census E. D. 55, Middleton, Lafayette Co., MO. Family History Library Film 1254698, NA Film Number T9-0698, Page Number 359A:

 

Geo. DUSKY Self M Male W 40 WV Farmer PA ---

Susan DUSKY Wife M Female W 36 MO Housekeeper VA VA

Ernest DUSKY Son S Male W 11 MO Works On Farm WV MO

Claricil DUSKY Son S Male W 8 MO WV MO

Maude DUSKY Dau S Female W 6 MO WV MO

Edwin DUSKY Son S Male W 4 MO WV MO

DUSKY Son S Male W 2 MO WV MO

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

DUSKEY (DUSKY), George W., Co. A, 3rd Virginia State Line (Moccasin Rangers). Commissioned Captain of Infantry on 18 Sep. 1862. On August's list of Virginia State Line Officers prepared on 27 Jan. 1863. On T. E. Davis' list of Virginia State Line Officers dated 28 Feb. 1863. Private, Co. C, 19th Virginia Cavalry. Born Lewis Co., W.Va. about 1840. Age 20, Calhoun Co. 1860 Census. Captured Wirt Co., W.Va. 15 Dec. 1861. Confined at the Atheneum Prison under heavy guard. Pretended to be ill and was sent to the Sprigg Hill Hospital, Wheeling, W.Va. While there he escaped with a few of his men, including Josiah Parsons, and returned to Calhoun Co., W.Va. and there reorganized the Moccasin Rangers. Enlisted Pocahontas Co., W.Va. 1 Apr. 1863. Absent 31 Dec. 1863 to 31 Aug. 1864. Has one horse; captured Roane Co., W.Va., 20 June 1863. Absent 1 Sep. 1864-31 Oct. 1864,$100 enlistment bounty due. Was reported on 29 Nov. 1864 that Duskey and Lieutenant William A. Gandy were being held in solitary confinement , and to be sentto Ft. Monroe for exchange, 21 Jan. 1865. Reported as being held in the Wheeling City Jail which served as a State prison, 25 Jan. 1865. Duskey being held bycivil authorities, under indictment for treason and robbing the mail (Ripley, W.Va. Post Office). Captured 2 Feb. 1865, no place stated. (This is probably their release date from prison and the time that the military took control of them again.) Confined at Baltimore, Md., then sent to Camp Hamilton. Transportation to Ft. Monroe for Duskey and William Gandy ordered 4 Feb. 1865. Confined at Camp Hamilton, Va. military prison awaiting exchange 6 Feb. 1865. Released 11 Feb. 1865. Post war rosters show service in Co. A. Duskey, apparently an officer at some point during the war was not considered as such by the U.S. Son of Daniel Duskey and brother of Andrew Duskey. C.S.A.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Susan ? [4, 9]. She was born Abt. 1844 in Missouri, USA [4, 9].

George W. DUSKEY and Susan ?. He married Susan ?. They were married on 31 Mar 1867 in Lafayette, Missouri, USA. They had 5 children.

Relationship Notes:

Suspect this is George W. Duskey

Name: GEORGE DUSKY

Spouse: SUE [Mrs] FLOWERS

Marriage Date: 31 Mar 1867

County: Lafayette

State: MO

 

 

 

i.

Ernest DUSKEY [26, 27, 4]. He was born Abt. 1870 in Missouri, USA [26].

ii.

Claricil DUSKEY [28, 4]. He was born Abt. 1872 in Missouri, USA [28, 4].

iii.

Maude DUSKEY [29, 4]. She was born Abt. 1874 in Missouri, USA [30, 29, 4].

iv.

Edwin DUSKEY [31, 4]. He was born Abt. 1876 in Missouri, USA [31, 4].

v.

? DUSKEY [9]. He was born Abt. 1878 in Missouri, USA [9].

4.

John DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [11, 2, 12, 3, 13]. He was born on 11 Feb 1846 in Lewis, West Virginia, USA [11]. His death on 30 Nov 1926 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA (Lee District) [7].

Notes for John DUSKEY:

General Notes:

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

 

Duskey, 175-175

John...Head...WM...Feb 1846...54...md 36 yrs...Farm Laborer...WV OH VA

Martha...Wife...WF...Jun 1846...53...6/6...WV WV WV

Addie...Dau...WF...Apr 1869...31...WV WV WV

Luemma...Dau...WF...Jul 1867...32...WV WV WV

Charley...Son...WM...Aug 1872...27...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

 

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Notes for John DUSKEY:

General Notes:

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

 

Duskey, 175-175

John...Head...WM...Feb 1846...54...md 36 yrs...Farm Laborer...WV OH VA

Martha...Wife...WF...Jun 1846...53...6/6...WV WV WV

Addie...Dau...WF...Apr 1869...31...WV WV WV

Luemma...Dau...WF...Jul 1867...32...WV WV WV

Charley...Son...WM...Aug 1872...27...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

 

Martha NUTTER [32, 12, 3, 13]. Her birth on 30 Jun 1845 in Virginia, USA (Now West Virginia) [32, 3]. She died on 16 Sep 1903.

John DUSKEY and Martha NUTTER. He married Martha NUTTER. They were married on 26 Apr 1864 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [14, 3]. They had 9 children.

i.

Addie DUSKEY [33, 34]. She was born Abt. 1871 in West Virginia, USA [33]. She married G G ADAMS. They were married on 12 Oct 1911 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [12].

9. ii.

Charley DUSKEY [3]. His birth Aug 1872 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA (Lee District) [6, 35, 3]. He married Lydia E. NELSON. They were married on 29 Apr 1923 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 29 Dec 1949 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [7, 3].

iii.

Mollie E. DUSKEY. She was born Abt. 1877 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. She married General L. WRIGHT. They were married on 02 Jan 1895 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36].

10. iv.

Sylvester DUSKEY [37, 38, 39]. He was born on 14 Mar 1865 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [40, 37, 41, 38, 39]. He married Olivia GREATHOUSE. They were married on 01 Jan 1888 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 14 Mar 1947 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [7].

v.

Emmie DUSKEY. She was born on 07 Jul 1867 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. She married R. M. WELLS. They were married on 24 Aug 1902 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died 1948.

11. vi.

William C. DUSKEY [21, 42, 43, 44, 3, 45]. He was born on 30 Mar 1874 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [3, 45]. He married Maggie WRIGHT. They were married on 24 Dec 1899 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 16 Mar 1951 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7, 44, 3].

vii.

Daniel DUSKEY [13]. He was born 1878 [13].

Notes for Daniel DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Not in Family Bible

 

 

 

viii.

James DUSKEY [3]. He was born 1882.

ix.

Mary DUSKEY [21]. She was born on 03 Aug 1878 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21].

Almaria NUTTER. She was born 1850. She died 1918.

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John DUSKEY and Almaria NUTTER. They had no children.

5.

Mary E. DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [2]. She was born on 20 Aug 1848 in Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [6]. She died on 18 May 1921 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 2].

Notes for Mary E. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

 

 

Solomon W. LOCKHART is the son of Enoch Steed LOCKHART and Margaret OWENS [46]. His birth on 20 Jul 1848 in Wirt, Virginia, USA (Now West Virginia) [6, 46]. He died on 12 Mar 1905 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6].

Notes for Solomon W. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Wirt Co., WV Marriages - Lockhart Family

Transcribed from Court House Records 3/26/1992

By: Bonita Woolard-Lock

02/16/1867 S. W. Lockhart (18) born Wirt Co., son of E. S. and Margaret Lockhart to Mary E. Duskey (18)

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated August 2,1870

Post Office: Reedy Ripple

Other than N J born in Ohio, all were born in Virginia and West Virginia

1/1

C W Lockhart MW 40 Farmer RE $1400 PE $275

C E FW 34

M L MW 15

E V FW 10

M E FW 6

Temessee FW 1

2/2

Caleb Lockhart MW 20 Laborer

N J FW 19 Born in Ohio

3/3

S W Lockhart MW 21 Farmer RE $300 PE $250

M E FW 21

R R MW 2

Enoch Lockhart MW 45 Farming RE $1200 PE $350

Margaret FW 46

G W MW 24

M F FW 16

J R MW 11

A J MW 9

S M FW 4

 

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

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Notes for Solomon W. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Wirt Co., WV Marriages - Lockhart Family

Transcribed from Court House Records 3/26/1992

By: Bonita Woolard-Lock

02/16/1867 S. W. Lockhart (18) born Wirt Co., son of E. S. and Margaret Lockhart to Mary E. Duskey (18)

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated August 2,1870

Post Office: Reedy Ripple

Other than N J born in Ohio, all were born in Virginia and West Virginia

1/1

C W Lockhart MW 40 Farmer RE $1400 PE $275

C E FW 34

M L MW 15

E V FW 10

M E FW 6

Temessee FW 1

2/2

Caleb Lockhart MW 20 Laborer

N J FW 19 Born in Ohio

3/3

S W Lockhart MW 21 Farmer RE $300 PE $250

M E FW 21

R R MW 2

Enoch Lockhart MW 45 Farming RE $1200 PE $350

Margaret FW 46

G W MW 24

M F FW 16

J R MW 11

A J MW 9

S M FW 4

 

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

Page 11 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:48 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for Solomon W. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

1860 Calhoun, VA

DUSKEY, 834

Daniel Duskey...51...Allegheny Co., PA...Farmer

Andrew...18...Lewis...Farmer

Nancy...16...Lewis

John...14...Lewis

Mary E...12...Gilmer

William...9...Gilmer

James...5...Gilmer

George...20...Lewis

 

Wirt Co., WV Marriages - Lockhart Family

Transcribed from Court House Records 3/26/1992

By: Bonita Woolard-Lock

02/16/1867 S. W. Lockhart (18) born Wirt Co., son of E. S. and Margaret Lockhart to Mary E. Duskey (18)

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated August 2,1870

Post Office: Reedy Ripple

Other than N J born in Ohio, all were born in Virginia and West Virginia

1/1

C W Lockhart MW 40 Farmer RE $1400 PE $275

C E FW 34

M L MW 15

E V FW 10

M E FW 6

Temessee FW 1

2/2

Caleb Lockhart MW 20 Laborer

N J FW 19 Born in Ohio

3/3

S W Lockhart MW 21 Farmer RE $300 PE $250

M E FW 21

R R MW 2

Enoch Lockhart MW 45 Farming RE $1200 PE $350

Margaret FW 46

G W MW 24

M F FW 16

J R MW 11

A J MW 9

S M FW 4

 

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

Solomon W. LOCKHART and Mary E. DUSKEY. She married Solomon W. LOCKHART. They were married on 16 Feb 1867 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6]. They had 4 children.

Relationship Notes:

Wirt County Marriages

02/16/1867 S. W. Lockhart (18) born Wirt Co., son of E. S. and Margaret Lockhart to Mary E. Duskey (18)

 

 

 

 

12. i.

Robert R. LOCKHART [6, 47, 48]. He was born on 23 Jan 1868 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 47, 48]. He died on 18 Nov 1927 [48].

ii.

William G. LOCKHART [6]. He was born Dec 1872 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6]. He died Aft. 1930.

Notes for William G. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated April 15, 1910

5/5

Mayberry Subdistrict

All born and parents born in West Virginia

W G Lockhart Head MW 39 M once 7 yrs Farmer

Mrs Eva A Wife FW 27 M once 2/2

Edward L Son MW 6

Bessie F Dau FW 2

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated January 5, 1920

20/20

W G Lockhart Head MW 49 M Farmer, General Farm

Eva Wife FW 36 M

Bessie Dau FW 12 S

Edward Son MW 16 S Laborer, Home Farm

 

Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia

Enumerated April 7, 1930

237/253

Edward L Lockhart Head MW 27 M at 23

Ethel E Wife FW 28 M at 23

238/254

William G Lockhart Head MW 59 M at 35

Eva Wife FW 48 M at 24

Bessie Dau FW 22 S

 

 

 

Page 12 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:48 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for William G. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated April 15, 1910

5/5

Mayberry Subdistrict

All born and parents born in West Virginia

W G Lockhart Head MW 39 M once 7 yrs Farmer

Mrs Eva A Wife FW 27 M once 2/2

Edward L Son MW 6

Bessie F Dau FW 2

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated January 5, 1920

20/20

W G Lockhart Head MW 49 M Farmer, General Farm

Eva Wife FW 36 M

Bessie Dau FW 12 S

Edward Son MW 16 S Laborer, Home Farm

 

Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia

Enumerated April 7, 1930

237/253

Edward L Lockhart Head MW 27 M at 23

Ethel E Wife FW 28 M at 23

238/254

William G Lockhart Head MW 59 M at 35

Eva Wife FW 48 M at 24

Bessie Dau FW 22 S

 

 

 

iii.

Oma Ellen LOCKHART [6]. She was born Mar 1876 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6].

Notes for Oma Ellen LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

Page 13 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for Oma Ellen LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

13. iv.

Charles W. LOCKHART [6]. He was born on 23 Feb 1882 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6].

6.

William DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [15, 16, 17, 18]. He was born on 22 Jul 1851 in Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [15, 16, 17, 18, 2, 19]. He died on 04 Mar 1934 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [7, 2, 19].

Floreed SMITH is the daughter of Christian SMITH and Elizabeth WELSH [18]. She was born 1861 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [18]. She died 1941 [19].

William DUSKEY and Floreed SMITH. He married Floreed SMITH. They were married on 15 Jun 1879 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [14, 19]. They had 7 children.

i.

Anna DUSKEY [19]. She was born Apr 1885 [19].

ii.

Nettie DUSKEY [19]. She was born on 27 Mar 1890 in Leroy, Jackson, West Virginia, USA [19].

iii.

Scott DUSKEY [49, 50, 51, 19]. He was born on 18 Dec 1881 [49, 50, 52, 19]. He died Aug 1964 [49, 19].

Notes for Scott DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married

 

 

 

Page 14 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for Scott DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married

 

 

 

14. iv.

Mary Blanche DUSKEY [53, 54, 55, 19]. She was born on 07 May 1892 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [53, 54, 19]. She married Aaron Moses GRADY. They were married on 15 Oct 1912 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [53]. She died on 24 Aug 1974 in Pomeroy, Meigs, Ohio, USA [53, 54, 19].

v.

Fred DUSKEY [18, 19]. He was born on 09 May 1892 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [18, 19]. He died on 24 Oct 1965 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [19].

Notes for Fred DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married

 

 

 

vi.

Ruth Gay DUSKEY [56, 57, 58, 19]. She was born on 26 Sep 1895 [57, 19]. She died on 22 Mar 1973 in Sandyville, Jackson, West Virginia, USA [19].

Notes for Ruth Gay DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married

 

 

 

vii.

Nova Zeal DUSKEY [19]. She was born on 13 Jul 1901 [19]. She died on 29 Sep 1982 in Sandyville, Jackson, West Virginia, USA [19].

Notes for Nova Zeal DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married

 

 

 

7.

James S. DUSKEY-2 (Daniel DUSKEY-1) [2, 20]. He was born on 26 Dec 1854 in West Fork, Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [21, 2, 20]. He died on 16 Oct 1946 in Spencer, Roane, West Virginia, USA [7].

Notes for James S. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

The Daniel Duskey home and mill were burned during the Civil War and friends of the family raised James and educated him at Wheeling, W.Va. to be a teacher. He taught school for 48 Years James and Joanna lived at Richardson, Calhoun Co. Both are buried at Mt.Zion Church Cemetery, Calhoun Co. W.VA.

 

 

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

Duskey, 122-122

James...Head...WM...Dec 1858...41...md 15 yrs...Farmer...WV OH WV

Joanna...Wife...WF...Sep 1861...38...8/8...WV WV WV

Mont...Son...WM...May 1885...15...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

French...Son...WM...Apr 1887...13...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Brooke C...Son...WM...Dec 1887...12...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

George...Son...WM...Jun 1891...8...WV WV WV

Charles...Son...WM...Feb 1893...7...WV WV WV

Amy...Dau...WF...Feb 1895...5...WV WV WV

Daniel...Son...WM...Dec 1896...3...WV WV WV

Mary E...Dau...WF...Nov 1898...1...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

Page 15 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for James S. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

The Daniel Duskey home and mill were burned during the Civil War and friends of the family raised James and educated him at Wheeling, W.Va. to be a teacher. He taught school for 48 Years James and Joanna lived at Richardson, Calhoun Co. Both are buried at Mt.Zion Church Cemetery, Calhoun Co. W.VA.

 

 

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

Duskey, 122-122

James...Head...WM...Dec 1858...41...md 15 yrs...Farmer...WV OH WV

Joanna...Wife...WF...Sep 1861...38...8/8...WV WV WV

Mont...Son...WM...May 1885...15...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

French...Son...WM...Apr 1887...13...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Brooke C...Son...WM...Dec 1887...12...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

George...Son...WM...Jun 1891...8...WV WV WV

Charles...Son...WM...Feb 1893...7...WV WV WV

Amy...Dau...WF...Feb 1895...5...WV WV WV

Daniel...Son...WM...Dec 1896...3...WV WV WV

Mary E...Dau...WF...Nov 1898...1...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

Joanna SHAFFER is the daughter of George Washington SHAFFER and Mary L SPRINGSTON [20]. She was born on 21 Sep 1862 in Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [20]. She died on 30 Apr 1947 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA.

Notes for Joanna SHAFFER:

General Notes:

Obituary

Joanna Duskey

 

Mrs. Joanna Duskey, 85, of Cremo, Calhoun County, died April 30, 1947.

 

She was born in Gilmer County daughter of G. W. Shaffer and Mary Springston Shaffer.

 

She was a Member of the Baptist Church.

 

Her husband, James Duskey preceded her in death.

 

Surviving are seven Sons and three daughters. Mont Duskey of Fairmont; Frank, George, and Dan of Cremo; Brooks of Grafton; Charles of Mt, Zion; James. E. Duskey and Myrtle Ritchie of Parkersburg; Mrs. Tinsey Kerby of Clarksburg; Elvie Wilson of Davisville.

 

Two brothers Carr Shaffer of Mt. Zion and Jacob Shaffer.

 

Funeral and burial at Mt. Zion. The body in charge of Vandale Funeral directors of Spencer.

 

 

 

 

James S. DUSKEY and Joanna SHAFFER. He married Joanna SHAFFER. They were married on 29 Oct 1885 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. They had 12 children.

15. i.

Mont DUSKEY [59, 60, 61, 62, 20]. He was born on 16 May 1885 in Mount Zion, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [63, 59, 61, 62, 20]. He married Effie VILLERS. They were married on 23 Feb 1913 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 30 Nov 1981 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [59, 20].

ii.

French DUSKEY [64, 65, 66, 20, 67]. He was born on 05 Apr 1887 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [64, 66, 20, 67]. He died on 02 Aug 1966 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7].

Notes for French DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married.

1900 Lee, Calhoun, WV

DUSKEY, 122-122

James...Head...WM...Dec 1858...41...md 15 yrs...Farmer...WV OH WV

Joanna...Wife...WF...Sep 1861...38...8/8...WV WV WV

Mont...Son...WM...May 1885...15...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

French...Son...WM...Apr 1887...13...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Brooke C...Son...WM...Dec 1887...12...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

George...Son...WM...Jun 1891...8...WV WV WV

Charles...Son...WM...Feb 1893...7...WV WV WV

Amy...Dau...WF...Feb 1895...5...WV WV WV

Daniel...Son...WM...Dec 1896...3...WV WV WV

Mary E...Dau...WF...Nov 1898...1...WV WV WV

 

French DUSKEY

Birth Date: 5 Apr 1887

Death Date: 15 Oct 1966

Social Security Number: 232-54-1477

State or Territory Where Number Was Issued: West Virginia

North Carolina

Death Residence Localities

ZIP Code: 26140

Localities:

 

Mt. Zion Cemetery

Amy D. Stutler - 1896 - 1941

Joanna Duskey - 1862 - 1947

James S. Duskey - 1854 - 1946

French Duskey - 1887 - 1966

Bernadine Harden - 1928

 

Charleston Daily Mail

Thursday, August 4, 1966

 

French Duskey

 

SPENCER - Service for French Duskey of Richardson, Calhoun County, will be held Friday at 2 p. m. in Mount Zion Methodist Church, with burial in Mount Zion Cemetery. The Rev. Glendon McKee will officiate.

 

Mr. Duskey, 79, was a farmer.

 

Surviving: sisters, Mrs. Tensey Kirby of Clarksburg, Mrs. Myrtle Ritchie and Mrs. Elva Wilson of Parkersburg; brothers, J. E. of Parkersburg, George of Arnoldsburg, Charles of Mount Zion, Mont of Fairmont.

 

The body is at Vandale Funeral Home.

 

 

 

Page 16 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)

Notes for French DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Never Married.

1900 Lee, Calhoun, WV

DUSKEY, 122-122

James...Head...WM...Dec 1858...41...md 15 yrs...Farmer...WV OH WV

Joanna...Wife...WF...Sep 1861...38...8/8...WV WV WV

Mont...Son...WM...May 1885...15...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

French...Son...WM...Apr 1887...13...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Brooke C...Son...WM...Dec 1887...12...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

George...Son...WM...Jun 1891...8...WV WV WV

Charles...Son...WM...Feb 1893...7...WV WV WV

Amy...Dau...WF...Feb 1895...5...WV WV WV

Daniel...Son...WM...Dec 1896...3...WV WV WV

Mary E...Dau...WF...Nov 1898...1...WV WV WV

 

French DUSKEY

Birth Date: 5 Apr 1887

Death Date: 15 Oct 1966

Social Security Number: 232-54-1477

State or Territory Where Number Was Issued: West Virginia

North Carolina

Death Residence Localities

ZIP Code: 26140

Localities:

 

Mt. Zion Cemetery

Amy D. Stutler - 1896 - 1941

Joanna Duskey - 1862 - 1947

James S. Duskey - 1854 - 1946

French Duskey - 1887 - 1966

Bernadine Harden - 1928

 

Charleston Daily Mail

Thursday, August 4, 1966

 

French Duskey

 

SPENCER - Service for French Duskey of Richardson, Calhoun County, will be held Friday at 2 p. m. in Mount Zion Methodist Church, with burial in Mount Zion Cemetery. The Rev. Glendon McKee will officiate.

 

Mr. Duskey, 79, was a farmer.

 

Surviving: sisters, Mrs. Tensey Kirby of Clarksburg, Mrs. Myrtle Ritchie and Mrs. Elva Wilson of Parkersburg; brothers, J. E. of Parkersburg, George of Arnoldsburg, Charles of Mount Zion, Mont of Fairmont.

 

The body is at Vandale Funeral Home.

 

 

 

16. iii.

Brooke Carr DUSKEY [68, 69, 70, 20]. He was born on 08 Dec 1888 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7, 68, 69, 70]. He married Mary Pauline ZINN. They were married on 10 May 1912 [6]. He died on 08 Aug 1954 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [7, 70, 20].

Page 17 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 2 (con't)
17. iv.

George DUSKEY [71, 72, 73, 20]. He was born on 15 Jun 1890 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. He married Minnie Opal STURM. They were married on 30 Apr 1916 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 05 Apr 1975 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [71].

18. v.

Charles DUSKEY Sr. [74, 75, 76, 20]. He was born on 11 Feb 1893 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [77, 74, 76, 20]. He married Elva CONNOLLY. They were married on 21 Dec 1919. He died on 12 Feb 1976 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [77, 20].

19. vi.

Amy D. DUSKEY [21, 20]. She was born on 27 Feb 1895 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21]. She married Benson Guy STUTLER. They were married on 20 Feb 1920 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died on 14 Jan 1941 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6, 20].

20. vii.

Daniel D DUSKEY [21, 78, 79, 20]. He was born on 08 Dec 1896 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 78, 79, 20]. He married Lena CARPENTER. They were married on 15 Apr 1923 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 06 Feb 1966 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7].

21. viii.

Edith D DUSKEY [20]. She was born on 09 Nov 1898 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [20, 80]. She died on 09 Nov 1943 in Morgantown, Monongalia, West Virginia, USA [20, 80].

22. ix.

Tensie D. DUSKEY [21, 20]. She was born on 04 Nov 1900 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 20]. She died on 10 Jun 1989 in Clarksburg, Harrison, West Virginia, USA [20].

23. x.

Myrtle DUSKEY [81, 20]. She was born on 03 Jan 1903 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 81, 20]. She married Odis J. RITCHEA. They were married on 08 Jun 1924 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died on 16 Jun 1981 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [81, 20].

24. xi.

Elva D DUSKEY [21, 82, 20]. She was born on 13 Oct 1905 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 82, 20]. She married Clarence Charles WILSON. They were married on 06 Feb 1932 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died on 14 Dec 2001 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [82, 20].

25. xii.

James Everett DUSKEY [21, 83, 20]. He was born on 13 Oct 1905 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 83, 20]. He married Virginia NIDA. They were married on 14 Nov 1926 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 11 Jan 1985 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [83, 20].

Generation 3
8.

Ettie RISSER-3 (Nancy DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [22]. She was born Feb 1873 in West Virginia, USA [23, 22, 24]. She died on 23 Jan 1958 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23, 24].

William RITZHAUPT is the son of Henry RITZHAUPT [23]. He was born on 08 Jul 1863 in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany [23]. He died on 25 Aug 1915 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23, 24].

Notes for William RITZHAUPT:

General Notes:

WILLIAM RITZHAUPT Visitors from eastern cities never fail in expressing astonishment at the wonderful growth and prosperity of Guthrie and Oklahoma in general. They are genuinely surprised at the enterprise of our merchants and at the beauty of our stores and public buildings. When in their wanderings through the busy streets of the business section, they come to the Vienna Bakery and Cafe, they are impressed with this fine establishment, of which any metropolis in the land might well be proud. The proprietor, who is a man of wide experience as a caterer, is employed by the leading citizens of this place, and within a few years has won an enviable position in the commercial world.

 

William Ritzhaupt is the son of Henry and grandson of Ferdinand Ritzhaupt, of Heidelberg, Germany, and, like them, he has followed the trade of a baker since he arrived at maturity His grandfather served under the great Napoleon in the famous march to Moscow, and Henry Ritzhaupt took part in the revolution of 1848. Then, like many others of his fellow-patriots, he fled to England, where he remained until the intense feeling had subsided in his native land. He lived in Southampton during his stay in England and when he went back to Heidelberg he resumed his old occupation and made a success of the business. He served as one of the city councilmen and was looked up to as one of influence and profound judgment. He departed this life when in his fiftieth year, and within a twelvemonth he was followed to the grave by his devoted wife, then forty-five years of age. She was Miss Margareta Klare prior to their marriage, and of their three sons and three daughters two are deceased, two daughters reside in Chicago, Ill., and George in Wisconsin.

 

William Ritzhaupt is a native of Heidelberg, born July 9, 1863. He was eight years old when he was left an orphan, and then he became a ward of his maternal uncle, who also was a skilled baker and caterer. Before he was sixteen years of age the youth had not only mastered the trades of the relatives mentioned but also had spent about two years in learning that of making confectionery. In the spring of 1880 he sailed for New York City, on the steamship " Meine," and at once went to Gallion, Ohio, where he Worked at his trade for about one year. He then went to Chicago and for three years was employed as a fine pastry cook in the Palmer House and for two years was the head pastry cook at the Tremont House.

 

In 1885 Mr. Ritzhaupt embarked in business on his own account, and for eight months conducted a large and remunerative trade at his location, on Milwaukee avenue, Chicago. Then, selling the bakery to his brother-in-law, he took a position as head, pastry cook at the Transit House, same city, and was connected with that hotel for two and a half years. He then resigned his place in order to take charge of the Centropolis Hotel, in Kansas City, Mo. After two years' experience in that venture in which he was quite successful, he disposed of the business and for the next eighteen months was the head pastry cook at the Coates House, in the same city Then again he embarked in the bakery business, and was located on East Twelfth street, Kansas City, for a period. In April, 1894, he came to Guthrie and started. the Vienna Bakery, which now is so justly popular. Until the spring of 1900 this place of business was at No. 111 Harrison avenue but recently he opened his new complete bakery and cafe at the corner of Oklahoma avenue and Broad street. Personally he attended to the building of this substantial store, which is 25x140 feet in dimensions and two stories in height. It is well appointed in every respect and the great ovens, which have a capacity of three hundred loaves of bread at a time, bake from two to three thousand loaves each day in order.to meet the demand. The proprietor has made a great reputation as a manufacturer of ice cream, and his attractive cafe parlors are well equipped with comforts, including fans run by electricity. He makes a specialty of catering for socials, parties and banquets, and invariably gives entire satisfaction to the public.

 

In 1888 Mr. Ritzhaupt married, in Chicago, Miss Ettie Risser, daughter of Hiram and Anna (Dusky) Risser, natives of West Virginia. She, too, was born in that state, and was left father-less when two years of age. He was financially interested in the oil wells of that region, but Daniel Dusky, grandfather of Mrs. Ritzhaupt, was one of the old planters of the state, and con-tinued to reside on his fine estate until his death, at three score and ten. During the Civil war he and two of his sons were commissioned offi-cers in the Federal army, and one of the sons was killed while fighting for his country. The Dusky family is descended from a Polish gentleman who was exiled during political revolutions, and, coming to this land of the free, took up his abode in West Virginia. After the death of her husband Mrs. Anna Risser married Lewis Wickman who was a leading blacksmith and carriage of Kansas City for some years and in. 1803 came to Guthrie and established a shop here.

 

The union of Mr. and Mrs. Ritzhaupt has been blessed with three children, namely: Lewis H., George and William, Jr. The wife and mother is a lady of excellent education and attainments, for she completed her higher studies in the St. Joseph Academy at Kansas City and received good school advantages. She is a member of the Christian Church and moves. in the best social circles of this city.

 

Our subject was influential in organizing the local lodge of the Sons of Herman, and was its president. The society is now known as the Germania Society. He also belongs to the Odd Fellows order and the Ancient Order of United Workmen. Religiously, he adheres to the creed in which he was reared, that of the Evangelical Lutherans. Politically, he casts his bailot and influence on the side of the Democratic party.

 

 

 

 

Page 18 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 3 (con't)

Notes for William RITZHAUPT:

General Notes:

WILLIAM RITZHAUPT Visitors from eastern cities never fail in expressing astonishment at the wonderful growth and prosperity of Guthrie and Oklahoma in general. They are genuinely surprised at the enterprise of our merchants and at the beauty of our stores and public buildings. When in their wanderings through the busy streets of the business section, they come to the Vienna Bakery and Cafe, they are impressed with this fine establishment, of which any metropolis in the land might well be proud. The proprietor, who is a man of wide experience as a caterer, is employed by the leading citizens of this place, and within a few years has won an enviable position in the commercial world.

 

William Ritzhaupt is the son of Henry and grandson of Ferdinand Ritzhaupt, of Heidelberg, Germany, and, like them, he has followed the trade of a baker since he arrived at maturity His grandfather served under the great Napoleon in the famous march to Moscow, and Henry Ritzhaupt took part in the revolution of 1848. Then, like many others of his fellow-patriots, he fled to England, where he remained until the intense feeling had subsided in his native land. He lived in Southampton during his stay in England and when he went back to Heidelberg he resumed his old occupation and made a success of the business. He served as one of the city councilmen and was looked up to as one of influence and profound judgment. He departed this life when in his fiftieth year, and within a twelvemonth he was followed to the grave by his devoted wife, then forty-five years of age. She was Miss Margareta Klare prior to their marriage, and of their three sons and three daughters two are deceased, two daughters reside in Chicago, Ill., and George in Wisconsin.

 

William Ritzhaupt is a native of Heidelberg, born July 9, 1863. He was eight years old when he was left an orphan, and then he became a ward of his maternal uncle, who also was a skilled baker and caterer. Before he was sixteen years of age the youth had not only mastered the trades of the relatives mentioned but also had spent about two years in learning that of making confectionery. In the spring of 1880 he sailed for New York City, on the steamship " Meine," and at once went to Gallion, Ohio, where he Worked at his trade for about one year. He then went to Chicago and for three years was employed as a fine pastry cook in the Palmer House and for two years was the head pastry cook at the Tremont House.

 

In 1885 Mr. Ritzhaupt embarked in business on his own account, and for eight months conducted a large and remunerative trade at his location, on Milwaukee avenue, Chicago. Then, selling the bakery to his brother-in-law, he took a position as head, pastry cook at the Transit House, same city, and was connected with that hotel for two and a half years. He then resigned his place in order to take charge of the Centropolis Hotel, in Kansas City, Mo. After two years' experience in that venture in which he was quite successful, he disposed of the business and for the next eighteen months was the head pastry cook at the Coates House, in the same city Then again he embarked in the bakery business, and was located on East Twelfth street, Kansas City, for a period. In April, 1894, he came to Guthrie and started. the Vienna Bakery, which now is so justly popular. Until the spring of 1900 this place of business was at No. 111 Harrison avenue but recently he opened his new complete bakery and cafe at the corner of Oklahoma avenue and Broad street. Personally he attended to the building of this substantial store, which is 25x140 feet in dimensions and two stories in height. It is well appointed in every respect and the great ovens, which have a capacity of three hundred loaves of bread at a time, bake from two to three thousand loaves each day in order.to meet the demand. The proprietor has made a great reputation as a manufacturer of ice cream, and his attractive cafe parlors are well equipped with comforts, including fans run by electricity. He makes a specialty of catering for socials, parties and banquets, and invariably gives entire satisfaction to the public.

 

In 1888 Mr. Ritzhaupt married, in Chicago, Miss Ettie Risser, daughter of Hiram and Anna (Dusky) Risser, natives of West Virginia. She, too, was born in that state, and was left father-less when two years of age. He was financially interested in the oil wells of that region, but Daniel Dusky, grandfather of Mrs. Ritzhaupt, was one of the old planters of the state, and con-tinued to reside on his fine estate until his death, at three score and ten. During the Civil war he and two of his sons were commissioned offi-cers in the Federal army, and one of the sons was killed while fighting for his country. The Dusky family is descended from a Polish gentleman who was exiled during political revolutions, and, coming to this land of the free, took up his abode in West Virginia. After the death of her husband Mrs. Anna Risser married Lewis Wickman who was a leading blacksmith and carriage of Kansas City for some years and in. 1803 came to Guthrie and established a shop here.

 

The union of Mr. and Mrs. Ritzhaupt has been blessed with three children, namely: Lewis H., George and William, Jr. The wife and mother is a lady of excellent education and attainments, for she completed her higher studies in the St. Joseph Academy at Kansas City and received good school advantages. She is a member of the Christian Church and moves. in the best social circles of this city.

 

Our subject was influential in organizing the local lodge of the Sons of Herman, and was its president. The society is now known as the Germania Society. He also belongs to the Odd Fellows order and the Ancient Order of United Workmen. Religiously, he adheres to the creed in which he was reared, that of the Evangelical Lutherans. Politically, he casts his bailot and influence on the side of the Democratic party.

 

 

 

 

Page 19 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:49 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 3 (con't)

Notes for William RITZHAUPT:

General Notes:

WILLIAM RITZHAUPT Visitors from eastern cities never fail in expressing astonishment at the wonderful growth and prosperity of Guthrie and Oklahoma in general. They are genuinely surprised at the enterprise of our merchants and at the beauty of our stores and public buildings. When in their wanderings through the busy streets of the business section, they come to the Vienna Bakery and Cafe, they are impressed with this fine establishment, of which any metropolis in the land might well be proud. The proprietor, who is a man of wide experience as a caterer, is employed by the leading citizens of this place, and within a few years has won an enviable position in the commercial world.

 

William Ritzhaupt is the son of Henry and grandson of Ferdinand Ritzhaupt, of Heidelberg, Germany, and, like them, he has followed the trade of a baker since he arrived at maturity His grandfather served under the great Napoleon in the famous march to Moscow, and Henry Ritzhaupt took part in the revolution of 1848. Then, like many others of his fellow-patriots, he fled to England, where he remained until the intense feeling had subsided in his native land. He lived in Southampton during his stay in England and when he went back to Heidelberg he resumed his old occupation and made a success of the business. He served as one of the city councilmen and was looked up to as one of influence and profound judgment. He departed this life when in his fiftieth year, and within a twelvemonth he was followed to the grave by his devoted wife, then forty-five years of age. She was Miss Margareta Klare prior to their marriage, and of their three sons and three daughters two are deceased, two daughters reside in Chicago, Ill., and George in Wisconsin.

 

William Ritzhaupt is a native of Heidelberg, born July 9, 1863. He was eight years old when he was left an orphan, and then he became a ward of his maternal uncle, who also was a skilled baker and caterer. Before he was sixteen years of age the youth had not only mastered the trades of the relatives mentioned but also had spent about two years in learning that of making confectionery. In the spring of 1880 he sailed for New York City, on the steamship " Meine," and at once went to Gallion, Ohio, where he Worked at his trade for about one year. He then went to Chicago and for three years was employed as a fine pastry cook in the Palmer House and for two years was the head pastry cook at the Tremont House.

 

In 1885 Mr. Ritzhaupt embarked in business on his own account, and for eight months conducted a large and remunerative trade at his location, on Milwaukee avenue, Chicago. Then, selling the bakery to his brother-in-law, he took a position as head, pastry cook at the Transit House, same city, and was connected with that hotel for two and a half years. He then resigned his place in order to take charge of the Centropolis Hotel, in Kansas City, Mo. After two years' experience in that venture in which he was quite successful, he disposed of the business and for the next eighteen months was the head pastry cook at the Coates House, in the same city Then again he embarked in the bakery business, and was located on East Twelfth street, Kansas City, for a period. In April, 1894, he came to Guthrie and started. the Vienna Bakery, which now is so justly popular. Until the spring of 1900 this place of business was at No. 111 Harrison avenue but recently he opened his new complete bakery and cafe at the corner of Oklahoma avenue and Broad street. Personally he attended to the building of this substantial store, which is 25x140 feet in dimensions and two stories in height. It is well appointed in every respect and the great ovens, which have a capacity of three hundred loaves of bread at a time, bake from two to three thousand loaves each day in order.to meet the demand. The proprietor has made a great reputation as a manufacturer of ice cream, and his attractive cafe parlors are well equipped with comforts, including fans run by electricity. He makes a specialty of catering for socials, parties and banquets, and invariably gives entire satisfaction to the public.

 

In 1888 Mr. Ritzhaupt married, in Chicago, Miss Ettie Risser, daughter of Hiram and Anna (Dusky) Risser, natives of West Virginia. She, too, was born in that state, and was left father-less when two years of age. He was financially interested in the oil wells of that region, but Daniel Dusky, grandfather of Mrs. Ritzhaupt, was one of the old planters of the state, and con-tinued to reside on his fine estate until his death, at three score and ten. During the Civil war he and two of his sons were commissioned offi-cers in the Federal army, and one of the sons was killed while fighting for his country. The Dusky family is descended from a Polish gentleman who was exiled during political revolutions, and, coming to this land of the free, took up his abode in West Virginia. After the death of her husband Mrs. Anna Risser married Lewis Wickman who was a leading blacksmith and carriage of Kansas City for some years and in. 1803 came to Guthrie and established a shop here.

 

The union of Mr. and Mrs. Ritzhaupt has been blessed with three children, namely: Lewis H., George and William, Jr. The wife and mother is a lady of excellent education and attainments, for she completed her higher studies in the St. Joseph Academy at Kansas City and received good school advantages. She is a member of the Christian Church and moves. in the best social circles of this city.

 

Our subject was influential in organizing the local lodge of the Sons of Herman, and was its president. The society is now known as the Germania Society. He also belongs to the Odd Fellows order and the Ancient Order of United Workmen. Religiously, he adheres to the creed in which he was reared, that of the Evangelical Lutherans. Politically, he casts his bailot and influence on the side of the Democratic party.

 

 

 

 

William RITZHAUPT and Ettie RISSER. She married William RITZHAUPT. They were married on 23 Jun 1888 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USA [25]. They had 4 children.

26. i.

Louis Henry RITZHAUPT [23, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 24]. He was born on 18 Jan 1891 in Kansas City, Missouri, USA [23, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 24]. He died on 18 Sep 1964 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23, 88, 24].

ii.

George Leonard RITZHAUPT [23]. He was born on 16 Mar 1893 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23]. He married Dorothy HOMAN. They were married 1919 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23]. He died on 25 Apr 1932 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23].

iii.

William H. RITZHAUPT Jr. [23]. He was born on 30 Dec 1897 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA. He died on 24 Sep 1977 [23].

iv.

Charlotte J. RITZHAUPT [23]. She was born on 28 Mar 1914 in Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, USA [23].

9.

Charley DUSKEY-3 (John DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [3]. His birth Aug 1872 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA (Lee District) [6, 35, 3]. He died on 29 Dec 1949 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [7, 3].

Lydia E. NELSON is the daughter of George NELSON [89, 90, 91]. She was born on 31 Mar 1899 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6]. She died on 14 May 1979 in Barberton, Summit, Ohio, USA [89].

Charley DUSKEY and Lydia E. NELSON. He married Lydia E. NELSON. They were married on 29 Apr 1923 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had 6 children.

i.

Mary Jane DUSKEY. She was born on 19 Sep 1924 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. She died on 05 Oct 1930 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7].

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27. ii.

Robert Boyd DUSKEY [92]. He was born on 17 Dec 1926 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA [92]. He married Juanita Mae TUTTLE. They were married on 24 Dec 1948 in Wood, West Virginia, USA.

28. iii.

George G. DUSKEY. He was born on 21 Mar 1929 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA. He married Betty Ruth BELL. They were married on 09 Sep 1950 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 24 Jan 2009 in Rittman, Wayne, Ohio, USA.

iv.

Ira Francis DUSKEY. He was born on 07 Oct 1931 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA [36]. He married Martha Elizabeth TUTTLE. They were married on 29 Jan 1953 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36].

29. v.

Martha Jane DUSKEY. She was born on 17 Jan 1933 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA [36]. She married Thomas E. BELL. They were married on 20 Oct 1951 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36].

vi.

Jeannetta DUSKEY. She was born on 31 Dec 1935 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA [36]. She married Verlin P. RIGGS. They were married on 14 Aug 1954 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36].

Emma VILLERS is the daughter of Abriham Dixon VILLERS and Arthelia TUCKER [93, 94, 95]. She was born Mar 1883 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [93, 94, 95]. She died on 23 May 1914 in Creston, Wirt, West Virginia, USA [7].

Charley DUSKEY and Emma VILLERS. He married Emma VILLERS. They were married on 08 Sep 1901 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had 2 children.

30. i.

Albert DUSKEY Sr. [6, 96, 97]. He was born on 22 Sep 1904 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6, 96, 97]. He married Floda L. RICHARDS. They were married on 24 Oct 1931 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 17 Jan 1977 in Morgan, Morgan, Ohio, USA [96].

ii.

Orpha DUSKEY [98, 99]. She was born on 14 Aug 1906 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [98, 99]. She married W. M. NICHOLS. They were married on 25 Dec 1923 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died on 19 Oct 1997 in Muskingum, Ohio, USA [100].

Bettie COOPER is the daughter of Andrew WRIGHT. She was born Abt. 1871 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6].

Charley DUSKEY and Bettie COOPER. He married Bettie COOPER. They were married on 08 Jul 1918 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had no children.

10.

Sylvester DUSKEY-3 (John DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [37, 38, 39]. He was born on 14 Mar 1865 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [40, 37, 41, 38, 39]. He died on 14 Mar 1947 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [7].

Notes for Sylvester DUSKEY:

General Notes:

The following children are from the family Bible of Bessie Duskey Sturm

 

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

 

Duskey, 181-181

Sylvester...Head...WM...Mar 1865...35...md 12 yrs...Farmer...WV WV WV

Oliva...Wife...WF...Jan 1870...30...6/5...WV WV WV

John W...Son...WM...Jan 1890...10...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Ruthie...Dau...WF...Jan 1892...8...WV WV WV

Lucy...Dau...WF...Jul 1895...4...WV WV WV

Rosie...Dau...WF...Aug 1897...2...WV WV WV

Nellie...Dau...WF...Feb 1900...3/12...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

 

Page 21 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:50 AM
Register Report for Daniel DUSKEY
Generation 3 (con't)

Notes for Sylvester DUSKEY:

General Notes:

The following children are from the family Bible of Bessie Duskey Sturm

 

1900 CENSUS OF CALHOUN COUNTY, WV

Lee District

Enumeration District #21

Enumerated June 1900

 

 

 

Duskey, 181-181

Sylvester...Head...WM...Mar 1865...35...md 12 yrs...Farmer...WV WV WV

Oliva...Wife...WF...Jan 1870...30...6/5...WV WV WV

John W...Son...WM...Jan 1890...10...Farm Laborer...WV WV WV

Ruthie...Dau...WF...Jan 1892...8...WV WV WV

Lucy...Dau...WF...Jul 1895...4...WV WV WV

Rosie...Dau...WF...Aug 1897...2...WV WV WV

Nellie...Dau...WF...Feb 1900...3/12...WV WV WV

 

 

 

 

 

Olivia GREATHOUSE is the daughter of William M. GREATHOUSE and Melissa Jane WRIGHT [101]. She was born on 21 Jan 1870 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. She died on 31 Dec 1916.

Sylvester DUSKEY and Olivia GREATHOUSE. He married Olivia GREATHOUSE. They were married on 01 Jan 1888 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had 9 children.

31. i.

John W DUSKEY [102, 103, 104, 105]. He was born on 20 Jan 1890 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6, 102, 103, 104]. He married Mable Eva ARTHUR. They were married on 13 Oct 1915 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 04 Jan 1970 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [6, 102].

32. ii.

Rutha DUSKEY [106]. She was born Jan 1892 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA. She married Harley STARCHER. They were married on 07 Nov 1915 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died 1935.

iii.

Lucy DUSKEY [107, 108, 109]. She was born on 04 Jul 1894 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [107, 108, 109]. She married James NICHOLSON. They were married on 14 Nov 1915 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. She died on 14 Sep 1989 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [107].

Notes for Lucy DUSKEY:

General Notes:

According to Geneva Hunter, Lucy lived with her brother, John and raised his sons.

 

 

 

33. iv.

Rosa DUSKEY [110, 111]. She was born Aug 1897. She died 1931.

34. v.

Nellie DUSKEY [112, 113]. She was born Feb 1900 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [113]. She died 1986 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [112].

vi.

Susie DUSKEY [114, 115, 116]. She was born on 13 Dec 1902 in Cedar Grove, Kanawha, West Virginia, USA [114, 115, 116]. She died on 22 May 1992 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [116].

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Notes for Susie DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Obituary Susie Freeland

 

Susie Freeland 88. of Freeland St. Fairmont, died Friday (May 22, 1992) The Arbors at Fairmont. She was born Dec. 13, 1903 at Cedar Grove, A daughter of the late, Sylvester and Oliva Greathouse Duskey.

 

She was preceded in death by, her first husband Devey Higginbotham; and her second husband Oscar Freeland, who died July 14, 1968; and also by four brothers, John. Alfred, Guy And Robert Duskey: and four sisters, Nellie Carpenter, Lucy Duskey, Rosie Stemple and Geneva Duskey.

 

She is survived by one half-brother. Raymond Duskey of Kingmont.

 

She was a homemaker and was a former waitress at the Coffee Shop in Fairmont. She attended the Christian Missionary Alliance Church.

 

Friends may call at the Carpenter and Ford Funeral Home Saturday from 7-9 p.m. Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. and Monday from 9-11 a.m. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Monday in the funeral home with the Rev. Daniel L. Ashcraft officiating. Burial will follow at Maple Grove Cemetery in Fairmont

 

 

 

 

35. vii.

Guy Robert DUSKEY Sr. [117, 118, 119, 120, 121]. He was born on 16 Feb 1906 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 117, 118, 119, 121]. He died on 01 Feb 1972 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA.

viii.

Alfred DUSKEY [21]. He was born on 02 Apr 1909 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21, 122]. He died on 10 Dec 1921 in Marion, West Virginia, USA [7].

ix.

Geneva DUSKEY [21]. She was born on 20 Jan 1915 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [21]. She died on 20 Oct 1920 in Marion, West Virginia, USA [7].

Notes for Geneva DUSKEY:

General Notes:

http://www.wvculture.org/vrr/va_bcsearch.aspx on register of births shows as

Name as Juneva June or Jane.

There is also a record of Lovie Duskey Born 6 feb 1915. This may be the same person

or maybe not. May be problem of the year by looking at the records Lovie may have been born

in 1915 and Geneva born in the 1914????

 

 

 

 

Elizabeth NIXON. She was born on 17 Jun 1879 in Marion, West Virginia, USA. She died on 05 May 1968 in Rivesville, Marion, West Virginia, USA.

Notes for Elizabeth NIXON:

General Notes:

Look at 1920 census of sylvester shows elizabeth nixon dauther of john nixon, age looks correct

 

 

 

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Notes for Elizabeth NIXON:

General Notes:

Look at 1920 census of sylvester shows elizabeth nixon dauther of john nixon, age looks correct

 

 

 

Sylvester DUSKEY and Elizabeth NIXON. They had 2 children.

36. i.

Robert E. DUSKEY. He was born on 02 Apr 1921 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA. He died on 29 Aug 1968 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA.

37. ii.

Raymond A. DUSKEY. He was born on 20 Apr 1923 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA. He died on 13 Oct 1998.

11.

William C. DUSKEY-3 (John DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [21, 42, 43, 44, 3, 45]. He was born on 30 Mar 1874 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [3, 45]. He died on 16 Mar 1951 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7, 44, 3].

Notes for William C. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Family Bible of Bessie Duskey Sturm gives birth date as March 30 1875

 

William "Nick" Duskey earned his living cutting timber, working in the oil fields and farming. for a period of time from 1911 to 1916 he moved his family to Greenbrier County, West Virginia to work on timber cutting operations in that area. He returned to his birthplace at the mouth of Panther Run, Calhoun County because his children had no School to attend and other hardships the remote area imposed upon his family. He continued to farm. cut timber, and work in the oil fields until 1924. On October 20, 1924 he moved his family to the Southside of Grantsville. He moved to Grantsville to be near his employment with Hope Natural Gas company. He resided in Grantsville until his death.

 

 

Maggie WRIGHT [45]. She was born on 02 Jun 1872 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [44, 45]. She died on 28 Mar 1901 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [44].

Notes for Maggie WRIGHT:

General Notes:

Cause of Death: Complications incurred during childbirth

 

 

 

William C. DUSKEY and Maggie WRIGHT. He married Maggie WRIGHT. They were married on 24 Dec 1899 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had 1 child.

i.

Alfred DUSKEY [44]. He was born on 15 Oct 1900 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [44]. He died on 27 Nov 1900 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [44].

Francy Ellen LUKENS is the daughter of Fred LUKENS and Elizabeth BENNETT. She was born on 08 Aug 1885 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [7]. She died on 13 Apr 1948 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [7].

William C. DUSKEY and Francy Ellen LUKENS. He married Francy Ellen LUKENS. They were married on 24 Aug 1902. They had 5 children.

38. i.

Floyd R. DUSKEY [123, 124, 125]. He was born on 04 Jun 1903 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [123, 124, 125]. He married Carrie V. RITCHEA. They were married on 08 Jan 1922 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died Nov 1968 in Normantown, Gilmer, West Virginia, USA [125].

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39. ii.

Ella May DUSKEY. She was born on 08 Oct 1905.

40. iii.

Bessie Otie DUSKEY [126, 127]. She was born on 20 Oct 1908 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [126, 127]. She married Lenna Russell STURM. They were married on 20 Dec 1926 [36]. She died on 12 Jan 1994 in Grantsville, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA.

41. iv.

Ray Ottmer DUSKEY [128, 129, 130]. He was born on 05 Aug 1910 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [128, 129, 130]. He married Madge MCENDREE. They were married on 30 Mar 1929 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. He died on 24 Jul 1977 in Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA [128].

42. v.

Willie Lonnie DUSKEY [131, 132, 133]. He was born on 13 Feb 1919 [132, 133]. He died on 11 Oct 1980 in Barberton, Summit, Ohio, USA [131, 132].

12.

Robert R. LOCKHART-3 (Mary E. DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [6, 47, 48]. He was born on 23 Jan 1868 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 47, 48]. He died on 18 Nov 1927 [48].

Notes for Robert R. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated August 2,1870

Post Office: Reedy Ripple

Other than N J born in Ohio, all were born in Virginia and West Virginia

1/1

C W Lockhart MW 40 Farmer RE $1400 PE $275

C E FW 34

M L MW 15

E V FW 10

M E FW 6

Temessee FW 1

2/2

Caleb Lockhart MW 20 Laborer

N J FW 19 Born in Ohio

3/3

S W Lockhart MW 21 Farmer RE $300 PE $250

M E FW 21

R R MW 2

Enoch Lockhart MW 45 Farming RE $1200 PE $350

Margaret FW 46

G W MW 24

M F FW 16

J R MW 11

A J MW 9

S M FW 4

 

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

West Virginia Marriages 1863-1900

Name: ROBERT R. LOCKHART

Spouse: NANCY C. LYNCH

Marriage Date: 29 Sep 1889

County: Wirt

State: WV

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

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Notes for Robert R. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated August 2,1870

Post Office: Reedy Ripple

Other than N J born in Ohio, all were born in Virginia and West Virginia

1/1

C W Lockhart MW 40 Farmer RE $1400 PE $275

C E FW 34

M L MW 15

E V FW 10

M E FW 6

Temessee FW 1

2/2

Caleb Lockhart MW 20 Laborer

N J FW 19 Born in Ohio

3/3

S W Lockhart MW 21 Farmer RE $300 PE $250

M E FW 21

R R MW 2

Enoch Lockhart MW 45 Farming RE $1200 PE $350

Margaret FW 46

G W MW 24

M F FW 16

J R MW 11

A J MW 9

S M FW 4

 

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace

S. W. LOCKHART Self M Male W 33 VA Farmer VA VA

Mary E. LOCKHART Wife M Female W 33 VA Keeps House OH VA

Robt. R. LOCKHART Son S Male W 11 WV OH VA

Willie LOCKHART Son S Male W 8 WV OH VA

Oma LOCKHART Dau S Female W 4 WV OH VA

Source Information:

1880 Census Place Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Family History Library Film 1255415

NA Film Number T9-1415

Page Number 184A

 

West Virginia Marriages 1863-1900

Name: ROBERT R. LOCKHART

Spouse: NANCY C. LYNCH

Marriage Date: 29 Sep 1889

County: Wirt

State: WV

 

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

Nancy C. LYNCH [6, 134]. She was born on 03 Feb 1868 in Tyler, West Virginia, USA [6, 134, 48]. She died 1948 [48].

Robert R. LOCKHART and Nancy C. LYNCH. They had 2 children.

43. i.

Nettie May LOCKHART [6, 135, 136, 137]. She was born on 01 May 1893 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 136].

44. ii.

Ettie May LOCKHART [6, 138, 48, 139]. She was born on 01 May 1893 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6, 138].

13.

Charles W. LOCKHART-3 (Mary E. DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [6]. He was born on 23 Feb 1882 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6].

Notes for Charles W. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

Page 26 of 145 Saturday, May 09, 2009 10:47:50 AM
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Generation 3 (con't)

Notes for Charles W. LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Reedy, Wirt, West Virginia

Enumerated June 20, 1900

158/158

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Nancy's father born in Pennsylvania

Robert R Lockhart Head MW Jan 1868 32 M 11 yrs Farmer

Nancy C Wife FW Feb 1868 32 M 2/2

Nettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

Ettie May Dau FW May 1893 7

159/159

All born and parents born in West Virginia except Mary's father born in Ohio

Solomon Lockhart Head MW Jul 1848 51 M 33 yrs Farmer

Mary E Wife FW Aug 1848 51 M 8/4

Willis G Son MW Dec 1872

Oma E Dau FW Mar 1876

Charles W Son MW Sep 1882

160/160

All born and parents born in West Virginia

Alfred Lockhart Head MW Sep 1861 38 M 19 yrs Farmer

Sarah C Wife FW Jul 1858 41 M 5/4

Pearl Son MW Feb 1883

Herldie Son MW Dec 1886 18

Nellie Dau FW Jun 1890 10

Della Dau FW Jul 1894 5

 

 

 

13.

Charles W. LOCKHART and unknown spouse. They had 1 child.

i.

Ivan Everett LOCKHART [6]. He was born on 22 Jan 1906 in Wirt, West Virginia, USA [6]. He died on 19 Jun 1967.

Notes for Ivan Everett LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Shiloh Cemetery

Location: Enterprise Road

Date Read: Not Given

Submitter: Freda Liz Daugherty

 

 

** Partial Listing **

LOCKHART, FLOYD E 1899-1925

, ORA L 1902-

 

, WILLIS 1871-1936

, ALICE 1876-1936

 

, MARQUIS L 10-23-1855/9-30-1936

, IDA L 4-7-1858/9-5-1938

 

, IVAN E 1-22-1906/6-19-1967

, ICA M 10-11-1904/7-17-1982

 

, CHARLES LEE 1958-1959

, PATRICIA JEAN 4-30-1962

 

, MARY B 1883-1951

, FRANK L 1879-1949

 

OWENS, BENJAMIN F 1894-

, LAURA MAE 1897-1971

 

LOTT,MARSHALL R 5-8-1896/5-14-1972

, JAMES EARL 1925-1926

, WALKER "BUCK" 1867-1927

, JESSIE LENA 1888-1965

 

, LARRY D 1955-1955

, OLIVER D 1912-1956

 

, DULCY CONNOLLY 1897-

, RALPH E 1909-

 

BLAIR, SAMUEL S 1889-1958

, GEORGIA 1891-1980

 

SHEPPARD, PAUL 1-9-1936/7-9-1936

, CONNIE 10-11-1949/10-14-1949

 

 

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Notes for Ivan Everett LOCKHART:

General Notes:

Shiloh Cemetery

Location: Enterprise Road

Date Read: Not Given

Submitter: Freda Liz Daugherty

 

 

** Partial Listing **

LOCKHART, FLOYD E 1899-1925

, ORA L 1902-

 

, WILLIS 1871-1936

, ALICE 1876-1936

 

, MARQUIS L 10-23-1855/9-30-1936

, IDA L 4-7-1858/9-5-1938

 

, IVAN E 1-22-1906/6-19-1967

, ICA M 10-11-1904/7-17-1982

 

, CHARLES LEE 1958-1959

, PATRICIA JEAN 4-30-1962

 

, MARY B 1883-1951

, FRANK L 1879-1949

 

OWENS, BENJAMIN F 1894-

, LAURA MAE 1897-1971

 

LOTT,MARSHALL R 5-8-1896/5-14-1972

, JAMES EARL 1925-1926

, WALKER "BUCK" 1867-1927

, JESSIE LENA 1888-1965

 

, LARRY D 1955-1955

, OLIVER D 1912-1956

 

, DULCY CONNOLLY 1897-

, RALPH E 1909-

 

BLAIR, SAMUEL S 1889-1958

, GEORGIA 1891-1980

 

SHEPPARD, PAUL 1-9-1936/7-9-1936

, CONNIE 10-11-1949/10-14-1949

 

 

14.

Mary Blanche DUSKEY-3 (William DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [53, 54, 55, 19]. She was born on 07 May 1892 in Roane, West Virginia, USA [53, 54, 19]. She died on 24 Aug 1974 in Pomeroy, Meigs, Ohio, USA [53, 54, 19].

Notes for Mary Blanche DUSKEY:

General Notes:

 

 

 

 

Aaron Moses GRADY is the son of Elias GRADY and Susan Martha BOWEN [53, 140, 141, 142]. He was born on 04 Jul 1881 in Wood, West Virginia, USA [53, 140, 141, 142]. He died on 28 May 1968 in Wood, West Virginia, USA [53].

Notes for Aaron Moses GRADY:

General Notes:

From Jackson Co. WV Web site Marriage Records

15 Oct 1913

GRADY, A. M. 32 born Wood Co./residing Jackson Co.

Duskey, Blanche 20 born Roane Co./residing Jackson Co

 

 

Aaron Moses GRADY and Mary Blanche DUSKEY. She married Aaron Moses GRADY. They were married on 15 Oct 1912 in Jackson, West Virginia, USA [53]. They had 12 children.

Relationship Notes:

marriage jackson county records

15 Oct 1913 GRADY, A. M. 32 born Wood Co./residing Jackson Co. Duskey, Blanche 20 born Roane Co./residing Jackson Co.

 

 

 

 

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Generation 3 (con't)
i.

Dwight GRADY. He was born 01 Jan.

ii.

Blaine GRADY [53]. He was born 03 Mar.

iii.

Racheal Elizabeth GRADY [53]. She was born on 30 Oct 1914. She married Roscoe KNIGHT. They were married on 16 Sep 1933. She died on 19 Feb 2004 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [53].

iv.

Ruth N. GRADY [53]. She was born on 29 Dec 1915. She married Benjamen Harrison SMITH. They were married on 16 Sep 1933 [53].

v.

Emma GRADY [53]. She was born on 02 Apr 1917. She died 1997 [53].

45. vi.

Luda Gladys GRADY [53]. She was born on 09 Jan 1919 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [53]. She married Clark Chester ARNOTT. They were married on 16 Aug 1935 in Racine, Meigs, Ohio, USA [143].

vii.

Wanda GRADY [53]. She was born on 25 Jul 1921.

viii.

Wanetta GRADY [53]. She was born on 16 Aug 1923.

Notes for Wanetta GRADY:

General Notes:

Died as a Child

 

 

 

ix.

Dewayne GRADY [53]. He was born on 24 Oct 1924.

x.

Betty GRADY [53]. She was born 25 Sep.

xi.

Harold GRADY [53]. He was born 06 Apr.

xii.

Mary Jane GRADY [53]. She was born 26 May.

15.

Mont DUSKEY-3 (James S. DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [59, 60, 61, 62, 20]. He was born on 16 May 1885 in Mount Zion, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [63, 59, 61, 62, 20]. He died on 30 Nov 1981 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [59, 20].

Notes for Mont DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Occupation: Accountant

Lived: Fairmont, West Virginia.

 

Mont at one time owned a house on Popular Island and his son also owned one on the same island.

 

 

Effie VILLERS is the daughter of Abriham Dixon VILLERS and Arthelia TUCKER [144, 145, 95]. She was born on 19 Feb 1891 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [144, 145, 95]. She died Nov 1982 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [144, 95].

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Mont DUSKEY and Effie VILLERS. He married Effie VILLERS. They were married on 23 Feb 1913 in Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [36]. They had 1 child.

i.

Jennings P. DUSKEY [146]. He was born on 13 Sep 1918 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [146]. He married Ruth Eileen CUNNINGHAM. They were married on 21 Aug 1942 in Oakland, Carroll, Maryland, USA. He died Mar 1984.

Notes for Jennings P. DUSKEY:

General Notes:

Lived: Fairmont, West Virginia.

 

At one time Dick owned a house on Popular Island and his father also owned a house on the same island.

 

 

16.

Brooke Carr DUSKEY-3 (James S. DUSKEY-2, Daniel DUSKEY-1) [68, 69, 70, 20]. He was born on 08 Dec 1888 in Richardson, Calhoun, West Virginia, USA [7, 68, 69, 70]. He died on 08 Aug 1954 in Fairmont, Marion, West Virginia, USA [7, 70, 20].

Notes for Brooke Carr DUSKEY:

General Notes:

He was a Railroad Engineer. He lived at Grafton, Taylor Co.

 

 

 

Mary Pauline ZINN is the daughter of Benjamin Franklin ZINN and Jenny BEE [70]. She was born on 09 Mar 1891 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [147, 70]. She died on 28 Mar 1957 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [6, 70].

Brooke Carr DUSKEY and Mary Pauline ZINN. He married Mary Pauline ZINN. They were married on 10 May 1912 in Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA [6]. They had 6 children.

46. i.

Helen Virginia DUSKEY [70]. She was born on 19 Jul 1914 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [6, 70]. She married Kelso Carter BALL. They were married on 06 Aug 1939 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [6]. She died in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USA [6].

ii.

Joanna Genevieve DUSKEY [148, 70]. She was born on 20 Mar 1916 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [148, 70]. She died Apr 1975 in Elkins, Randolph, West Virginia, USA [148, 70].

47. iii.

Ruby Clarice DUSKEY [70]. She was born on 18 Nov 1917 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [70]. She married Harry Otho PARRISH. They were married on 07 Apr 1937 in Oakland, Carroll, Maryland, USA.

48. iv.

Harry Lyle DUSKEY [149, 150, 70, 151]. He was born on 19 Jan 1919 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [149, 150, 70]. He married Harian DRAKOVICH. They were married on 03 Aug 1941 in Gary, Lake, Indiana, USA. He died on 15 Feb 1996 in Solano, California, USA [149, 70].

49. v.

James Paul DUSKEY [152, 153, 70]. He was born on 19 Jan 1926 in Grafton, Taylor, West Virginia, USA [154, 152, 153, 70]. He married Irene