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THE DESCENDANTS OF [WILLEM?] KLINCKENBERG


125. OSCAR J.8 CLINKENBEARD (GEORGE W.7, JONATHAN6, JOHN5, WILLIAM4, JOHN3, WILLEM2 KLINCKENBERG, [WILLEM?]1) was born 14 May 1849 in Mercer Co., Missouri, and died 1937. He married SARAH A. HAMILTON 12 March 1871 in Mercer Co., Missouri, daughter of H. HAMILTON and CATHERINE HICKMAN. She was born 1852 in Missouri, and died 1934.

Notes for O
SCAR J. CLINKENBEARD:
!BIRTH:------------------------------------------------------------------------
[23.35] Geo: Wanamaker, HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY [Mo] (s.n.: 1921);
photocopies of pp. 459-460 in poss of J.E. Stockman.
BURIAL:------------------------------------------------------------------------
[23.46] HISTORY OF MERCER & HARRISON COUNTIES, MISSOURI (no pub. data given);
quoted in letter of EvaLena Frey, St Ann, Mo., to J.E.Stockman dtd 5 Jun
1996.
MARRIAGE:----------------------------------------------------------------------
[23.35] Supra.
===============================================================================
< < < N O T E S > > >
[23.35] Supra:
This account states that "Oscar J. Clinkinbeard, an interesting and
prominent pioneer of Harrison County, was born in Mercer County, Missouri,
May 14, 1849, the son of George W. and Susan C. (Rhea) Clinkinbeard. . . He
was reared in Fox Creek Township and attended the Brown school, now the New
Hope school. His first teacher was Cyrus Tiffany, who belonged to a pioneer
family of this county.
"Oscar J. Clinkinbeard has followed farming here all of his life. He
owns 240 acres of land in section four, eleven miles east of Bethany, and
all of the improvements were put on by him. Mr. Clinkinbeard does general
farming and stock raising and has been very successful. He also has filed
[for] membership on the township board, and has many friends in this
community.
"March 12, 1871, Oscar J. Clinkinbeard was married to Sarah A. Hamilton,
a daughter of H.C. and Catherine (Hickman) Hamilton. H.C. Hamilton ran a
ferry boat across the Grand River in pioneer days. He died in 1890 and his
wife died a few years later and they are buried in Hamilton Cemetery in
Mercer County, Missouri.
"Mr. and Mrs. Clinkinbeard are the parents of two children: Oren L.,
born December 22, 1871; and Bertie Leola, deceased [now in 1821]. She was
born in 1873 and was the wife of Bert Leggitt.
"Oscar J. Clinkinbeard is a substantial citizen and member[s] of the
Clinkinbeard family are well known and highly respected in the community."
[20.10] 1880 Fed. Census (Missouri), Nat'l Archives Pub. No. T9, Roll 689,
p. 6:
Family living in Fox Creek, Harrison Co., Missouri, on 5 Jun 1880:
OSCAR J. CLINKENBEARD: 30 (b.1850), Farmer, b. in Missouri; father born
in Kentucky; mother born in Tennessee.
SARAH A. CLINKENBEARD: 28 (b.1852), Wife Keeping house, b. in Missouri;
father born in Virginia; mother born in Indiana.
ORIN L. CLINKENBEARD: 8 (b.1872), Son, b. in Missouri.
BERTA L. CLINKENBEARD: 6 (b.1874), Dau, b. in Missouri.
OLIVER B. CLINKINBEARD: 25 (b.1855), Bro., Single, Farmer, b. in Missouri.


Notes for S
ARAH A. HAMILTON:
!BURIAL:-----------------------------------------------------------------------
[23.46] HISTORY OF MERCER & HARRISON COUNTIES, MISSOURI (no pub. data given);
quoted in letter of EvaLena Frey, St Ann, Mo., to J.E. Stockman dtd 5 Jun
1996.
===============================================================================
< < < N O T E S > > >
[23.35] Geo: Wanamaker, HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY [Mo] (s.n., 1921);
photocopies of pp. 459-460 in poss of J.E. Stockman:
This account states:
"In pioneer days, the nearest neighbor of George Clinkinbeard [SARAH's
father-in-law] on the . . . east was H.C. Hamilton, three and one-half
miles away . . " H.C. HAMILTON & his wife CATHERINE HICKMAN were SARAH's
parents. The account goes on to say that "H.C. Hamilton ran a ferry
boat across the Grand River in pioneer days. He died in 1890 and his
wife died a few years later and they are buried in Hamilton Cemetery in
Mercer County, Missouri."

     
Children of O
SCAR CLINKENBEARD and SARAH HAMILTON are:
202. i.   ORIN L.9 CLINKENBEARD, b. 22 December 1871, Mercer Co., Missouri; d. 14 December 1910.
203. ii.   BERTIE [BERLE?] LEOLA CLINKENBEARD, b. 1873, Mercer Co., Missouri; d. 1918.


126. OLOWAY (PLOWAY?)8 CLINKENBEARD (GEORGE W.7, JONATHAN6, JOHN5, WILLIAM4, JOHN3, WILLEM2 KLINCKENBERG, [WILLEM?]1) was born July 1852 in Missouri, and died Unknown. He married ELIZABETH [----?----]. She was born April 1855 in Indiana, and died Unknown.

Notes for O
LOWAY (PLOWAY?) CLINKENBEARD:
!BIRTH:------------------------------------------------------------------------
[20.12] 1900 Fed. Census, Nat'l Archives Pub. No. T623, Roll 477, E.D. 11,
Sheet 2, page (line?) 205:
Soundex card shows Christian name as "Ploway;" exact spelling not clear
on Schedule. Living in Custer, Dresden, or Prairie Dog Township, Decatur Co.,
Kansas, on 4th June 1900. Father born in Kentucky, mother in Tennessee.
Brother SPARTIN R. CLINKENBEARD living with family at time of Census.

     
Children of O
LOWAY CLINKENBEARD and ELIZABETH [----?----] are:
  i.   OLIVER G.9 CLINKENBEARD, b. December 1875, Missouri; d. Unknown.
  ii.   THOMAS E. CLINKENBEARD, b. March 1884, Kansas; d. Unknown.


127. OLIVER B.8 CLINKENBEARD (GEORGE W.7, JONATHAN6, JOHN5, WILLIAM4, JOHN3, WILLEM2 KLINCKENBERG, [WILLEM?]1) was born May 1855 in Mercer Co., Missouri, and died Bef. 1854. He married MARY A. [----?----]. She was born April 1859 in Missouri, and died Unknown.
     
Children of O
LIVER CLINKENBEARD and MARY [----?----] are:
  i.   ETTA B.9 CLINKENBEARD, b. October 1884, Missouri; d. Unknown.
  ii.   EDNA L. CLINKENBEARD, b. May 1896, Missouri; d. Unknown.


128. OSBURN N./H.8 CLINKENBEARD (GEORGE W.7, JONATHAN6, JOHN5, WILLIAM4, JOHN3, WILLEM2 KLINCKENBERG, [WILLEM?]1) was born June 1859 in Missouri, and died Bef. 1921. He married MARY [----?----]. She was born February 1863 in Indiana, and died Unknown.
     
Children of O
SBURN CLINKENBEARD and MARY [----?----] are:
  i.   ROBERT R. V.9 CLINKENBEARD, b. January 1883, Missouri; d. Unknown.
  ii.   RAYMOND H. CLINKENBEARD, b. October 1895, Missouri; d. Unknown.
  iii.   EULALIA CLINKENBEARD, b. September 1897, Missouri; d. Unknown.


129. JOHN JAY8 CLINKINBEARD (JAMES LYBURN7, JONATHAN6 CLINKENBEARD, JOHN5, WILLIAM4, JOHN3, WILLEM2 KLINCKENBERG, [WILLEM?]1) was born 1852 in Oregon679, and died Unknown. He married PHILURA V. VANDERBURGH 29 August 1875 in Coos County, Oregon680, daughter of JOHN VANDERBURGH and EMILY COLLIER. She was born 19 November 1850 in Iowa, and died Unknown.

Notes for J
OHN JAY CLINKINBEARD:
According to their marriage certificates, John married Philura Vanderburgh on 29 August 1875 in Coos County, Oregon, in a double-wedding ceremony. The second couple were John's sister, Viola Eugenia Clinkinbeard and Winfield Scott Vanderburgh, who were the second great-grandparents of David Warren Robison, Concord, Contra Costa County, California. The marriage, which took place at the house of John's father, James Clinkinbeard, was solemnized by The Reverend James Matthews, Minister of the Gospel, and was witnessed by Horace and Hansel Colver. [E-mail message of David Robison, Concord, Calif., to J.E. Stockman, 27 Feb 1998.]
     
Child of J
OHN CLINKINBEARD and PHILURA VANDERBURGH is:
  i.   ANNA DELL9 CLINKINBEARD, b. May 1885, Marshfield (now Coos Bay), Coos County, Oregon681; d. Unknown.
  Notes for ANNA DELL CLINKINBEARD:
      Anna, the first cousin thrice removed of David Warren Robison, was the author of ACROSS THE PLAINS IN '64, a fascinating book describing her pioneer family's migration by covered wagon to the west coast of the United States in the mid-1800s. The book jacket describes the story:
      "This book is an adventure from cover to cover, but the dramatic events in it are real history. ACROSS THE PLAINS IN '64 is the story of how thirteen-year-old Philura Vanderburgh and her family crossed the continent in a covered wagon as part of the Great Daily Train. Many years later, when she had children of her own, Philura told them of her experiences on the journey, and her daughter Anna wrote them down especially for young people who will never again have the chance to hear the pioneers tell their own stories.
      "ACROSS THE PLAINS IN '64 tells all about the hazardous journey - the preparations, the daily excitements, labors, and fun, and the people who were going West. The wagon train forded treacherous rivers, crossed bleak and hot deserts, and climbed impossibly high mountains. Travelers on the trail ahead and behind were massacred. The Vanderburghs met unfriendly Indians, bushwackers, snakes, and quicksand, but they had their good times too; there was a thrilling hunt for fresh food, a stop at exciting Fort Laramie, and a meeting with an Indian who liked dogs.
      "Reading of the trials and triumphs of the Oregon Trail will help us to appreciate our own twentieth-century lives, because in order to understand America as it is today, we need to know how it grew. A great part of our heritage is bound up in our expansion westward, and this book is an authentic part of the saga of the great wagon trains which crossed the deserts and the mountains to California and Oregon in the middle 1800's. The prairie schooners carried families who were going to make homes in the West, to build, to develop, to grow - not prospectors who wanted to make a quick fortune and return to the luxuries of the East, not hunters or trappers who explored and exploited but never built solidly. It is well to remember these pioneers in these days when there is so much talk about the 'American character'.
      "The Author, Anna Dell Clinkinbeard, daughter of the heroine and teller of ACROSS THE PLAINS IN '64, was born in Coos Bay (then Marshfield), Oregon. A graduate of San Jose State Normal School in California, she was a teacher for thirty-five years, including twenty years as principal of the Central School Coos Bay. She retired in 1948. --Exposition Press Inc., 389 Fourth Avenue, New York 16."
[Anna Dell Clinkenbeard, comp., ACROSS THE PLAINS IN '64: BY PRAIRIE SCHOONER TO OREGON (New York: Exposition Press, Inc., 1953); copy of book presented in full at Internet Web site of David Warren Robison (http://flag.blackened.net/daver/1sthand/atp/atp.html).]



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