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Descendants of Owen Eugene Hogan and Ellen Golden




Generation No. 1


1. OWEN EUGENE2 HOGAN (JOHN1) was born June 1835 in Burgesbeg, Youghlarra Parish, No. Tipperary CO, Ireland, and died September 24, 1920 in Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery. He married (1) HONORA BURKE October 12, 1859 in Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Jackson CO, MO. She was born Abt. 1834 in Ireland, and died August 27, 1870 in Jackson CO, MO. He married (2) ELLEN GOLDEN February 06, 1871 in St. Patrick's, Jackson CO, MO (806 Cherry, KC, MO,64106), daughter of PATRICK GOLDEN and BRIDGET MOFFETT. She was born August 31, 1853 in Burlington, Vermont, and died May 20, 1935 in Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.

Notes for O
WEN EUGENE HOGAN:
In June, 2002, Barbara Burge, a great-grandaughter, received over 100 copies of documents from Owen Hogan's Federal Pension file from his brief service in the Civil War. He initially received a pension of $12/month, which was gradually increased to $50/month by the time he died. In 1905, Owen filed the following General Affidavit:
State of Kansas, County of Dickinson
      In the matter of Increase Pension Claim Ctf. No. 590855
Owen Hogan B Van Horns Battn. Mo Cav.
      On this 13 day of June A.D. 1905, personally appeared before me
A Notary Public in and for the aforesaid County, duly authorized to administer oath-
Owen Hogan aged 70 years, a resident of Abilene in the County of Dickinson and State of Kansas
whose Post-office address is Abilene Kansas,
well known to be reputable and entitled to credit, and who, being duly sworn, declared in relation to
aforesaid case as follows:
      That he is the claimant herein that the certificate hereto attached is his Church record in
Ireland That the name Eugene Hogan as appears in the Certificate represents none other than
himself That he has always gone by the name of Owen Hogan ever since he was able to understand
anything That he is not able to find any other record of his birth.
            Owen Hogan
            Signature of Affiant

The Certificate attached reads:
Burgess & Youghal
      Nenagh
      Ireland
      June 1, 1905
I certify that Eugene
Hogan was baptized
in the Catholic Church,
Burgess CO., Tipperary
on the 29th June 183(looks like a 5)
This extract is from the
Register. His mother's
name was Mary Collins.
??Halloran
Illegible
1 June 1905

Barbara has contacted the Tipperary North Family History Research
Center and found that you have to have only certain people do research for
you. She and Joan and I are going to Ireland in June, but discovered we
would not be able to get into the records. So she hired a woman to look us
up.

Here are the results.

The only address for Owen is Younghal and Younghal is made up of
many smaller parishes in Younghalarra and Burgess. The only records date
from 1828. Before that no records were kept. The Hogans were probably
married before 1828 or may have moved there after marriage so there is no
record.

Date of Baptism & name of child Parents name & address Godparents

30/10/1830 John Hogan
Patrick Coffy
Thomas Mary Collins
Bridget Hogan
Youghal

14/3/1833 John Hogan
James Leonard
Honora Mary Collins
Mary Tuohy
Youghal

29/6/1835 John Hogan
Denis Murry
Owen Mary Collins
Anne Leonard
Youghal

The researcher Nancy Murphy writes:
"I looked up Eugene and it is Owen. The priest often entered the child's
Christian name in Latin in the register and obviously this is so in Owen's
case.
Because there are so many John Hogans in the parish I cannot identify which
is which in the Primary Valuation lists of 1850.
The name Eugene is still used by at least two Hogan families in Youghalarra
parish and I will try and check out if they use it rather than Owen and will
come back to you if I find out anything."

So that is where we are. You were right to guess that the father would be
John.

I hope you and your family have a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Pat


In a second General Affidavit, dated 16 March, 1907, Owen states:
That he is the claimant herein that he was born June 29, 1835 in DePraire Burgess County Tipperary Ireland and about 1849 emigrated to America and located in Boston Mass and about 1851 removed (?) to Canada returned to the United States afterwars (?) locating in Jackson County Mo. but can't recall the date when located in Dickinson County Kansas about 1874 where he has lived ever since.
            Owen Hogan
            Signature of Affiant

In various medical records in his pension file, Owen is described as being 5'5", once as 5'4", with light complexion, auburn hair, and brown or hazel eyes. His weight varied between 120 and 127 pounds. Briefly, his physical disabilities allowing the pension and various increases were:
varicose veins with tendency to ulcers and eczema inj to both legs...cause hard labor & lifting
injury to great left toe caused by an on the job accident
disease of eyes



Patricia Hogan Conwell, daughter of John Leo Hogan, states that Owen was about 18 when he came, by himself, to the U.S. He made his way to Kansas City, MO, where he had a brother, Thomas H. He may have had a sister living in Iowa, but that is uncertain. How long it took him to work his way to Kansas City is not known.

Source for birth, place of birth,death: Death Certif, 21-2313, City of Abilene, County of Dickinson, State of Kansas. Age: 88 years, 2 months and 27 days. Cause of death: cancer on neck) & infirmities due to old age. Informant was son, R .L. Hogan
Address was 112 S. 2 Street , 1st ward #85.

Kansas City, MO Public Library Special Collections Web site:
Fr. Bernard Donnelly
Pioneer Priest
ca.1800-1880

Kansas City’s first historian was Father Bernard Donnelly. In the mid-1850s, he was assigned as pastor to the riverfront Town of Kanza, later to become Kansas City. The happenings of the day were written in his records of marriages, baptisms and funerals.
These records give a first-hand account of daily life in the early town and aided his friend,Reverend William J. Dalton, in writing The Life of Father Bernard Donnelley.

Bernard Donnelly was born in Kilnacreva, Ireland. His poor parents could neither read nor write. He excelled in mathematics in school, pursuing studies in algebra, geometry and trigonometry. He became a civil engineer and worked on the construction of the Liverpool docks in England. Donnelly sailed to the United States in the early 1830s on a journey that took eighty days. He took a teaching job in Philadelphia and in 1840, at over 40 years of age, he entered a seminary in St. Louis. Ordained in 1845, his first parish encompassed the area from Independence,Missouri to Indian Territory, now the state of Kansas. He traveled throughout the area until the middle of the 1850s,when he was assigned to the Town of Kanza.

After the Civil War the Town of Kanza expanded south. Donnelly opened a brickyard and a stone quarry on land owned by the Catholic Church in Quality Hill. He brought hundreds of Irish laborers to pave streets and build many of the city’s earliest structures. In 1857 these laborers built a brick church at today’s 11th and Broadway Streets, replacing the log church built there in 1835. This church was the center of the town’s Catholic Diocese until the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, still standing, was completed in 1882. Donnelley sold some of the church’s property on Quality Hill to build St. Teresa’s Academy, the St. Joseph’s Orphan Home, and to purchase the land for St. Mary’s Cemetery.

Father Donnelly had an unwavering faith in Kansas City that prompted him to write in 1880, "Kansas City is likely to become one of the larger cities of the United States."

Kansas City Public Library web site:
The Catholic cathedral, Eleventh street and Broadway, occupies land purchased April 5, 1834, by a Frenchman, Father Benedict Roux, one of five missionaries sent to the province of St. Louis, by the Society for the Propagation of Faith, Lyons, France. A month before, the land had been patented by the government to Peter Laliberte and, for $6, Father Roux purchased the 40 acres, bounded by what is now Broadway, west to a line 100 feet west of Jefferson, and between Ninth and Twelfth streets.

A log church was built on the bluff to serve a few dozen French families, most of whom were engaged in commercial relations with the Indians. The church was often referred to as "Chouteau’s church," as Francis Chouteau, pioneer trader, largely provided the money for it.

Father Bernard Donnelly took up residence at the log church in November 1845 and exercised the ministry uninterruptedly for 34 years, forming the link between pioneer and modern eras of Catholic development in Kansas City. He found his parishoners a simple, hardy race--faithful, affectionate and fond of dancing and other social entertainments which the father attended and found “were conducted with every regard to the proprieties. Side-by-side with helpers, Father Donnelly burned brick on the church property to help finance other Catholic institutions of the day--schools, cemetery, hospital. From the property on the bluff at Twelfth Street, he sold rock which was used to riprap the Missouri river.

In 1856, he built a brick church called the Immaculate Conception, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets facing Broadway. The church was used until after his death in 1880 and was then replaced by the imposing cathedral pictured in this 1908 scene. The new cathedral was completed in 1883.

http://kcriverweb.net/diversity/iris.html
Areas of Settlement and Migration in Kansas City

Donnelly's pre-war labor recruits settled on Market Street near the river. The area was already a slum containing a few smithies, saloons and small stores.

The post-war group settled in two sections. Those working on the railroads and in packing houses settled in the West Bottoms. There were 500 Irish families there by 1880. Through the 1880's large implement houses, wholesale houses and commercial building forced the more prosperous Irish out of the Bottoms. Those who could afford it, "moved up on the hill" to the Quality Hill area around 9th and Pennsylvania. Others less prosperous, moved east to the area of Brooklyn Street.

Another group settled in the old Town area near the river on Cherry, Holmes, Charlotte and Campbell. By 1873 there were 200 Irish families in this area and 400 families by 1880. The more successful of this group were also forced out by commercial building, leaving the less prosperous Irish families, incoming Italians and a high concentration of transients, in the Old Town section. It appears that a portion of the Irish population, particularly single men, worked in Kansas City a few years, then moved to another city.

The early Irish settlers were primarily semi-skilled workers. They included masons, carpenters, wagon-drivers, brick makers, blacksmiths, bar tenders and construction laborers. Later, the Irish supplied most of the personnel for the police force and much of the fire department, street department and municipal agencies. Today, Irish-Americans pursue a wide variety of occupations.

1859/60 Kansas City MO Directory
Hogan, Owen (laborer) Boards Walnut between Fourth and Fifth

Jackson CO, Kansas City, MO 1860 Census, V.1, p. 45, dwelling #390:
Head of Household: Owen Hogan, age 28, laborer, value of real estate $300, personal estate $30, born in Ireland.
Honorah Hogan, age 26, housekeeper, born in Ireland.
George Smith, age 26, laborer, born in Ireland.

Pat Conwell states that the census records for 1870 in Kansas City list Owen as a teamster, but it is not known exactly what his job was. This record lists Honora as his wife and show they lived on Cherry St. between Fifth and Sixth. Also living in the same block was the Golden family, Patrick and Bridget with their children, John, Ellen and Patrick.

1870 Jackson CO, Kansas City, MO Census, taken between the 4th and 7th of June
40 Owen Hogan Teamster $3000 (Value of Real Estate) $300 Value of Personals Citizen
Honoria Keeps House Born Ireland
11 Johnny Attending school Born Missouri
? Mary " " " "

The Kansas City Directory in 1874 lists Owen as a laborer, living on the south side of 5th Street between Cherry and Locust. The family does not appear in the 1875 records as they moved to Abilene that year.

1880 SOUNDEX KANSAS
Vol 5 ED 66
Sheet 27 Line 17
Dickinson CO
Abilene 3 St. South
Dwelling #133

Hogan, Owen      35
" Ellen            25
" Mary            11
" Thomas      8
" Bridget            6
" Maggie            4 Born in KS


1885 Census, Abilene, KS, p. 47:
88-5
Hogan, Owen      41      rr hand
" Ellen 31
" John 21
" Mary 19
" Thomas 13
" Bridget 10
" Maggie 8
" Patrick 4      Born: Kansas     
" Richard 2      Born: Kansas

1900 Census, Abilene, KS
Hogan, Owen      75
" Ellen            50
" Bridget            28
" Maggie            23
" Richard      17
" Anna            13      Born: KS
" Michael      12      Born: KS
" John            5      Born: KS

Year of Owen's immigration to US: 1837, # of yrs in US, 63, Naturalized Citizen.
(Inaccurate as to date of immigration or years in US) Bridget is listed as a Saleswoman, Maggie, Housekeeper, Richard Salesman.

Pat Conwell states that Owen was severely injured at work in 1908, and spent the last twelve years of his life as an invalid.

Partial Obituary of Owen Hogan received from Joan Burge, no date or source - I presume it was from the Abilene newspaper.

      Friday, September 24, 1920, there passed away from among his associates of the last 45 years, at the ripe old age of 88 years at his home on East South Second Street, Owen Hogan.
      Mr. Hogan was born in the historic county of Tipperary Ireland on the 29th of June 1832. He left his native land when 18 years of age and like millions of his countrymen immigrated to his ideal land of liberty. While a young man he settled in Kansas City, Mo., where he resided until the breaking out of the Civil War. He was one of the very first to volunteer in the service of his adopted country. He was a member of the famous Mulligan's Brigade and served until captured. Upon his release he returned to Kansas City where he remained until 1875, when he moved to Abilene where he resided till his death.
      Mr. Hogan was one of the best known citizens of Abilene until he suffered a severe injury about twelve years ago. Since then he has been confined to his home, and as a consequence met only those who passed his home or called to visit him.

The rest is just about his family and my eyes are too bad to copy any more. (I do not know who made the copy.)

The Roster of Union Soldiers for the state of Illinois listed no Owen Hogan. Thinking that Owen may have enlisted in a Missouri regiment first, I checked the same source for the state of Missouri and found on p. 372:
Hogan, Owen 1st Light Artillery Battery F
Hogan, Owen 25th Infantry Company G
Hogan, Owen Infantry U. S. Res. Corps Von Horn's Batallion (Attach.) Company B
Hogan, Owen 1st Lt

Further checking found that Van Horn's Batallion fought in the Battle of Lexington, MO on 28 August, 1861, along with Mulligan's 23rd Illinois. 3500 prisoners were taken by the Missouri State Guard under Price. Below are the troops who fought in this engagement:

Federal Missouri State Guard
Col. James A. Mulligan, Commanding Gen. Sterling Price, Commanding
23rd Illinois Infantry, "Irish Brigade" Parsons Division
Peabody's 13th MO Infantry Rains Division
VanHorn's Reserve Corp Inf. Batln. Slacks Division (Rives)
Lafayette Co. Home Guard McBrides Division
14th Home Guard Infantry Harris' Division
Marshall's 1st Ill Cavalry Col. Henry Routt's State Guard
Grover's 27th MO Mounted Infantry Guibor's Battery
Becker's Home Guard Bledsoe's Battery
Federal Artillery Clark's Battery
Kneisley's Battery
Kelly's Battery

VAN HORN'S BATTALION RESERVE CORPS INFANTRY.

Organized at St. Louis, Mo., by authority of Gen. Lyon May 1, 1861, and mustered into service at Kansas City, Mo.,
May 24. Ezpedition from Kansas City to relief of Col. Nugent at Austin, Cass County, Mo., July 18-25. Action at Harrisonvilie July 19. Capture of Harrisonville July 20. March to relief of Lexington, Mo., September 6. Siege of Lexington September 11-21. Surrendered to Price September 21. Mostly mustered out October 29, 1861. Balance transferred to 25th Missouri Infantry December 1861.
Battalion lost 4 Enlisted men killed and 2 Enlisted men by disease. Total 6.
Source of Data: "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, V.III" by Frederick H. Dyer, c1908, p.1340

The Star: The Millenium Web site http://www.kcstar.com/millennium/part3/stories/civ14.htm
A city divided By SHIRL KASPER Staff Writer
To outsiders, Kansas City may have seemed a Southern stronghold, but that was not entirely so. The emigration years brought many Northerners to town, including the Pennsylvanian Kersey Coates and his wife, Sarah, who was strongly opposed to slavery. Kersey Coates built the Coates Opera House and led Kansas City's Home Guard during the war. It was such men, as well as Kansas City's anti-slavery German and Irish immigrants, who helped elect a Union candidate for mayor in April 1861. He was newspaperman Robert Van Horn, who told later how, as mayor, "the Union people looked to me to act for them." Van Horn did just that. He went to St. Louis and explained the city's perilous balance to Union Gen. Nathaniel Lyon and the powerful Missouri Republican Frank Blair, who had contacts in the
Lincoln administration. Van Horn came home with a major's commission in the improvised Enlisted Missouri Militia -- and a plan to keep Kansas City out of Confederate hands.

With authority on his side, Van Horn went to nearby Fort Leavenworth and met with Capt. W.E. Prince of the U.S. Army. Not long after -- with the huge Confederate flag still flying atop a pole on Walnut Street -- 200 Union infantrymen, with guns at their shoulders and bayonets fixed, marched off a steamboat at the city wharf. "In an hour not a flag save Old Glory was visible anywhere," Van Horn said.

That was in June 1861, only two months after Confederate troops attacked Fort Sumter. That summer, the U.S. Army built Camp Union at Tenth and Central streets. It had walls, a guard house and a 12-pound howitzer. For the rest of the war, Kansas City was an occupied town.

25th REGIMENT MO INFANTRY.

Organized as 13th Missouri Infantry June, 1861. Designation changed to 25th Missouri September, 1861. Attached to Dept. of Missouri to March, 1862. 1st Brigade. 6th Division, Army of the Tennessee, to July, 1862. 1st Brigade. 6th Division. District of Corinth, Miss., to September, 1862. 1st Brigade, 2n(l Division, District of Southeast Missouri, Dept. of Missouri, to March, 1863. District of Northwest Missouri to Jttne, 1863. New Madrid, Mo., District or Columbus, Ky., 6th Division, 16th Army Corps, Dept. of the Tennessee, to February, 1864.

SERVICE,-Duty in Missouri till March, 1862. Ordered to Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. Battle of Shiloh, Tenn., April 6-7.
Advance on and siege of Corinth, Miss., April 29-May 30. Duty at Corinth, Miss., building fortifications till September.
Ordered to St. Louis, Mo., thence to Pilot Knob and Patterson, Mo. Duty in Southeast Missouri till March, 1863.
Moved to Iron Mountain, thence to St. Joseph. Mo., and operating against guerrillas in Northwest Missouri till June.
Ordered to New Madrid, Mo., and garrison duty there and reconstructing fortifications till February, 1864.
Consolidated with Bissell's Engineer Regiment of the West to form 1st Missottri Engineers February 17, 1864. (See 1st Engineers.)

Regiment lost during service 6 Officers and 51 Enlisted men killed and mortally wounded and 3 Officers and 112 EnlIsted men by disease. Total 172.

Source of Data: "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, V.III" by Frederick H. Dyer, c1908, p.1332



Pat Conwell Research:
National Archives Microfilm Publication Microcopy No. 390 Index to compiled service records of Volunteer Union Soldiers Who served in organizations from the State of Missouri Roll 22 Hh-Hoo

The National Archives National Archives and Record Service General Services Administration Washington 1962

1st entry Hogan, Owen Co B VanHorn's Batt'n USRC MO Inf (attached to Col. Peabody's 13 MO Inf.) Private

Also

Hogan, Thomas Co B VanHorn's Batt'n USRC MO Inf (attached to Col. Peabody's 13 MO Inf.) Private

2nd entry Hogan, Owen Co G. 25 Missouri Infantry

Also

Hogan, Thomas Co G 25 Missouri Infantry Private

VanHorn's Battalion U. S. Reserve Corps, Infantry (attached to Colonel Peabody's 13th Infantry) Roll No. 704A

1st entry Owen Hogan Co B - VanHorn's Battalion Notation War Department Adjutant General's Office Washington Sep. 12, 1872 Application for certificate in lieu of lost discharge One certificate furnished S.F. Brooks, Copyist

2nd entry Owen Hogan Pvt. Co B VanHorn's Batt'n 13 MO Vols. Appears on Co. Muster Out Roll dated St. Joseph, MO Oct. 29, 1961 Muster Out Date Oct. 29, 1861 Last paid to Pay due from date of enrollment Clothing account Am't for clothing in kind or money adv'd $6.08 Due U.S. for arms, equipment &C. $15.83

Remarks Prisoner of War Parolled Sep. 22nd

* corrected March 27, 1894 (stamped March 31, 1891) Discharge certificate issued this day ??ide 3990 B-ago E B17th 4843-@-1872 Added by Ginault, E-

3rd entry VanHorn's Batt'n 13 MO Vols. Owen Hogan Pvt. Capt. Miller's Co. MO Reserve Corps Age 22 Appears on Company Muster - in Roll of the organization named above Roll dated Camp Mission(?could be Union), Kansas City, MO Aug. 5, 1861 Joined for duty and enrolled When June 12 Where Kansas City, MO Period 3 years U.S. Reserve Corps MO Inf. Thomas Hogan appears with exactly the same information - even the same money amounts but his states "Wounded by (Jay or Gay) shot through thigh in action Sep. 12, 61 Prisoner of War Paroled Sep. 22. This is also marked "inserted by Girault, E. 1872." Another Thomas entry shows him as 26, joined June24 for 3 years and mustered in on Aug. 5th Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Union Soldiers Who Served . . Missouri 25 Infantry H-K M-405 Roll No. 580

Muster Roll March and April 1862 There is a note dated Feb. 6, 1862 which I can't read and then it says "Name not found on sub. Rolls of Co."

Company muster for Oct. 29 to Feb. 28, 1862 Listed as absent

The exact same information appears on Thomas's records.


Burgesbeg (Civil Parish) Roman Catholic Parish Starting date: Youghalarra-Burgess (or Burgess and Youghal) 1828

YOUGHAL-ARRA

a parish, in the barony of Owney and Arra, county of Tipperary, and province of Munster, 4 1/2 miles W. from Nenagh, on the river Shannon; containing 4247 inhabitants. This parish is situated at the junction of the counties of Clare and Galway, where the Shannon expands and forms Lough Derg; it comprises 4515 plantation acres, as applotted under the tithe act. The land is of inferior quality. much of it being moist and unprofitable, and there is a considerable quantity of mountain, but capable of being reclaimed. There are three extensive slate quarries of the Mining Company of Ireland at work, situated at Curraghbally, Corbally, and Clonebrien, where large quantities of slate are raised, for the exportation of which the steam navigation of the river affords every facility. the small rivers Newtown and Youghal run through the parish and afford sites for mills. On the north and east boundaries of the parish, between it and that of Dromineer,is the Bay of Youghal, said to be one of the safest in the river. The seats are Kilcoleman, the residence of Mrs. Finch, in a handsome and well-planted demesne containing some very fine oak timber; Munroe, the neat cottage residence of R. Power, Esq.; and a similar seat surrounded by thriving plantations, the residence of W. Smithwick, Esq. Fairs are held on March 6th, June 27th, Sept. 30th, and Dec. 13th. It is a rectory and vicarage, in the diocese of Killaloe, and is part of the union of Castletown-Arra: the tithes amount to 416.6.2. In the R.C. divisions it is the head of a union or district, comprising the parishes of Youghal-Arra and Burgess or Burgesbeg, in each of which is a chapel; that of Youghal-Arra is a remarkably neat building of modern erection in the Gothic style, pleasantly situated on an eminence. On the lands of Munroe are the remains of a square tower, much dilapidated. Here are also the ruins of an oratory, supposed to have been a place of worship of the O'Brien family; and on a part of the wall of the old church is the figure of a head, with the inscription "St. Coonna, 434." A well near it is called St. Coulan's.





More About O
WEN EUGENE HOGAN:
Fact 1: 1850, Obit states this was year of immigration at age 18
Fact 2: 1860, On Jackson CO, Kansas City, MO Fed. Census
Fact 3: 1871, Married Ellen Golden
Fact 4: 1875, Family moved to Abilene, KS
Fact 5: Section Foreman, Union Pacific Railroad

Notes for H
ONORA BURKE:
Honora's family said to be from Terre Haute, IN. Her date of death sworn to in a General Affidavit dated October 28, 1920 by Mary Hogan, aged 80, a resident of Kansas City. (Probably Mary Fitzgerald Hogan who was married to Owen's brother Tom) Her statement:
My name is Mary Hogan I was personally acquainted with Owen Hogan and Honora Burk, his first wife, and know that she died on or about August 27, 1870, and that said Owen Hogan was subsequently married to Ellen Golden early in the year 1871. I also know that said Ellen Golden had not been previously married.

The same statment on the same date is also sworn to by Mary Duffy, age 65, 1400 Drury Ave, Kansas City, MO.

More About O
WEN HOGAN and HONORA BURKE:
Marriage: October 12, 1859, Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Jackson CO, MO
Marriage Fact: Jackson CO Marriages, V.1 1827-1860
Officiator: Rev. Bernard Donnelly
Remarks: Both of Kansas City

Notes for E
LLEN GOLDEN:
Ellen Golden was baptized at St. Mary's Church in Burlington, VT on Sept. 5, 1853. Sponsors were Ellen Moffitt and Richard Gouldin.

Obit:
Mrs. Owen Hogan     
      Ellen Golden was born at Burlington, Vermont, August 31, 1853, and died at Abilene, Kan., May 20, 1935 at the age of 81 years, 8 months and 25 days.
      At an early age she moved with her parents to Kansas City, MO., where in February, 1869, she was married in St. Patrick's church, to Owen Hogan. In 1875 Mrs. Hogan came with her husband to Abilene where she remained until the time of her death.

      Mrs. Hogan was known and loved by the entire community and her passing is keenly felt by her many friends and associates. Although many sorrows had been visited upon her in the loss of her husband and five grown children, she bore her cross with Christian fortitude, never complaining but always resigned to the will of God.
      Mrs. Hogan had been in failing health for several years but her last illness was of only a week's duration and as her life went out like a flicker of a candle late Sunday night, she was surrounded by her five children, several grandchildren and friends.
      She is survived by five children: Mrs. R. H. Kane of Denver, Colo., Thomas and Richard of Newton, Kan., John and Anna of Abilene, Kan., by nineteen grandchildren and eleven great-grandchildren.
      Mrs. Hogan was buried from St. Andrew's church, Abilene, Kan., Wednesday, May 29, 1935 at 9 A.M. High Mass of Requiem was sung by the choir of St. Andrew's church with the pastor, Rev. C.J. Roche, as celebrant. Rt. Rev. Monsignor Pompeney, pastor of St. Mary's church, Newton, KS., was present in the sanctuary.
      Six grandsons, Morris, Robert, Patrick, Francis, Owen and Michael Hogan acted as pallbearers. Burial was made in the family plot in St. Joseph's cemetery at Abilene, Kans.


More About O
WEN HOGAN and ELLEN GOLDEN:
Marriage: February 06, 1871, St. Patrick's, Jackson CO, MO (806 Cherry, KC, MO,64106)
Marriage Fact: St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Kansas City, Jackson,CO, MO
Officiator: Rev. J. Halpin
Witnesses: Elizabeth Dohoney and Ellen Hart
     
Children of O
WEN HOGAN and HONORA BURKE are:
  i.   JOHN3 HOGAN, b. November 23, 1861, Kansas City, Jackson CO, Missouri; d. July 30, 1893, St. Joseph Cemetery, Abilene, KS.
  Notes for JOHN HOGAN:
The baptismal record at Immaculate Conception Cathedral states that John was born 11/24/1860 and baptized on the same date. Rev. D. A. Deparcq performed the baptism. Sponsors were Patrick Maroney and Mary Cummings. The father is listed as EUGENE Hogan, mother Honora Burke.

LDS IGI
Johannem HOGAN

Sex: M


Event(s):

Christening: 26 Nov 1860 Immaculate Conception Cathedral Parish, Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri


Parents:

Father: Euginii HOGAN Mother: Honorae BURKE

John only appears on one KS Census, 1885, Abilene, KS as living with Owen & family. In this census he is listed as being 21, born in MO.

  More About JOHN HOGAN:
Fact 1: Buried St. Joseph Cemetery,Abilene-source of birth/death dates
Fact 2: Apparantly never married
Fact 3: Cause of death unknown

2. ii.   MARY HOGAN, b. November 1862, Kansas City, Jackson CO, Missouri; d. July 04, 1948, Denver, CO.
     
Children of OWEN HOGAN and ELLEN GOLDEN are:
3. iii.   THOMAS3 HOGAN, b. October 15, 1871, Baptismal date, St. Patrick's, Kansas City, Jackson CO, MO; d. April 07, 1943, St. Mary Cemetery, Newton, Harvey CO, KS.
4. iv.   BRIDGET T. HOGAN, b. April 11, 1874, Kansas City, MO; d. 1924, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.
  v.   MAGGIE HOGAN, b. 1876, Abilene, KS; d. 1906, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery; m. HALLIS A. "HALLY" WAYTS, January 14, 1903, Abilene, KS; b. March 1876, Macon CO, IL; d. Unknown.
  More About MAGGIE HOGAN:
Fact 1: St. Joseph Cemetery,Abilene-tombstone dates: 1876-1906

  Notes for HALLIS A. "HALLY" WAYTS:
This is the only family in the state of Kansas with the surname Wayts.

Household:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
James WAYTS Self M Male W 31 VA Farmer VA VA
Laura WAYTS Wife M Female W 26 IL Keeping House IL IL
George WAYTS Son S Male W 10 IL VA IL
Hally WAYTS Son S Male W 5 IL VA IL
Oscar WAYTS Son S Male W 2 IL VA IL
Mary FALCONER Other W Female W 56 IL TN TN

Source Information:
Census Place Buckeye, Dickinson, Kansas
Family History Library Film 1254379
NA Film Number T9-0379
Page Number 408A


  More About HALLIS WAYTS and MAGGIE HOGAN:
Marriage: January 14, 1903, Abilene, KS
Officiator: Dan Hogan

  vi.   PATRIC HOGAN, b. 1880, Abilene, KS; d. 1894, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.
  More About PATRIC HOGAN:
Fact 1: St. Joseph Cemetery,Abilene-tombstone dates: 1880-1934

5. vii.   RICHARD LOUIS HOGAN, b. September 23, 1883, Abilene, Dickinson CO, KS; d. February 17, 1955, Newton, Harvey CO, KS.
  viii.   ANNA HOGAN, b. October 08, 1885, Abilene, KS; d. April 14, 1969, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.
  Notes for ANNA HOGAN:
Obit: Miss Anna Hogan
      Miss Anna Hogan, 83, died Monday night in the Memorial Hospital Annex following a long illness. She was born Oct. 8, 1885 in Abilene, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Hogan and had lived her entire life in Abilene. For many years she worked in the Elste Priem Shirk Millinery Shop. Later she spent 25 years as housekeeper at the St. Andrew's Catholic Rectory. She was a member of St. Andrew's Catholic Church, the Altar Society and the Daughters of Isabella. Surviving are a number of nieces and nephews among whom are Owen Hogan of Topeka, Morris Hogan of Newton, Mrs. Joan Burge of Grand Rapids, Mich., Miss Cecelia Hogan of Los Angeles, Calif., and Mrs. Patricia Conwell of Kansas City, MO.
      Funeral services will be held Thursday at 10:00 A.M. at St. Andrew's Catholic Church with Msgr. Alfred Wasinger and Rev. Robert Reif officiating. Burial will be in the St. Joseph Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at the Martin Funeral Home Wednesday evening at 7:30 P.M.

  More About ANNA HOGAN:
Fact 1: buried St. Joseph Cemetery,Abilene

6. ix.   MICHAEL F. HOGAN, b. February 11, 1889, Abilene, KS; d. December 06, 1917, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.
7. x.   JOHN LEO HOGAN, b. July 29, 1893, Abilene, KS; d. November 13, 1962, Abilene, KS, Buried St. Joseph Cemetery.


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