Lovecraft's Grandfather: The Business
Career of Whipple van Buren Phillips
Appendix
"The
Phillips Orphans: November 1848 to August 1850."
Below is a listing from the 1850
census, asserted to have been taken 8 August 1850, but the question
asked was data as of 1 June 1850.
This writer draws from this document
{facsimile from Mormon Genealogy online source}, Faig. [See below
for reference], and cemetery references.
Jeremiah Phillips died in a grist mill
accident on 20 November 1848. James Wheaton Phillips was at that
time 18, and of age. However, due to debts, he did not inherit the
property which went into complicated receivership. The time between
the death of Jeremiah and the Census was 21 months. We have minimal
data on these months. WVP was attending school as was his sister
Abbey.
Faig did a review of the estate
proceedings in August 1990. This can be summarized below.
- Raymond G. Place, husband of Jeremiah Phillips' niece Eliza Lyon Fry and already in place as Cashier at the Mount Vernon Bank, was appointed administrator of the estate by Daniel Howard, Clerk. This was on 4 December 1848. (Note this was a very quick 14 days.)
- Inventory was taken by Albert Foster, Abraham Place (a relative listed on the 1850 census), and John Vaughn on 18 December 1848. (28 days after Jeremiah's death.) The inventory was extensive, but insufficient to pay debts. It was typical corn, animals or animal products of pig, goose, horse, ox, bees, cow, turkey. Wheat was rare and not listed. Total $637.75, a not insignificant sum.
- Inventory submitted 1 January 1849. Committee confirmed Raymond G. Place to liquidate inventory except for wearing apparel of the children.
- The preliminary report was submitted on 4 March 1849.
- 2 July 1849 Samuel Tillinghast and Jason T Place went before the probate court (Peleg Place had died in the interim).
- After a notice, the estate was sold at The Mount Vernon Bank on 30 June 1849. At that time it was seen that debt was $1252,21, of which Jeremiah's brother had $495.49 outstanding.
- 27 August Raymond G Place presented his report.
- 1 October 1849 the Committee met all real property was ordered sold. The farm first.
- 17 November 1849 it was reported that 73 acres were sold in Foster and 12.5 acres in Coventry.
- Final report was submitted on 4 December 1849.
In summary, the orphans became
penniless. Their uncle, Whipple Phillips, Raymond G. Place, Job W
Place, and others in the community met legal obligations and still
allowed James W Phillips a piece of land to set up farming. WVP went
to school and assisted.
"James W Phillips" is listed
twice on the Census with two different ages.
@@@ further research @@@@
Reviewing the data from the U.S. Census
of 1850 and starting with the entries at Job W Place, the assumed
clan patriarch, the Phillips orphans seem to have come quickly under
his umbrella. If dollars are a place keeper for wealth and
influence, Peleg Harrington and Jason G Place had the highest
business values, and every other land owner were on a relatively
equal landing.
If we conclude that the Phillips
orphans were under the Job W Place umbrella, we can make a decision
on what role "Mary E Stanton" played. She was not listed
as a landowner, and perhaps could not be a landowner in Foster. If
this were her property (i.e. she was a widow), it can't be determined
by any additional data at this time. Therefore, she must have been a
housekeeper and appointed guardian.
This brings up an additional piece of
data that might be relevant. There is a very early burial in the
Place-Battey (FR090) Foster cemetery: Sally Stanton (1790c - 12 APR
1815). This one single pieces of data, of only one "Stanton"
buried in Foster makes Mary E Stanton a very elusive individual. If
she married a Place, or other citizen, her name would have not been
Stanton. If she was a widow, no sign of ancient Stantons can be
found, other than one Joseph Stanton, rather famous at his time.
James W Phillips was the elder of the
family, and of age. He was a farmer, and he was the head of the
house both officially, by age, and by community designation. James
did not need a guardian, and certainly not by a female resident in
1850 Rhode Island. This writer will follow a thesis that Mary E
Stanton was an assistant to the family. It may later be found,
looking at the 1840 census data, that Jeremiah Phillips had her under
his household, but this, of course, is untenable speculation as of
now. What the census data seems to make clear, and will be the
thesis here, is that the Phillips orphans were not specifically
living under Mary E Stanton's roof. She shows no ownership of
property, and despite the reforms after the Dorr Rebellion, she may
not have been able to own property.
References:
The Rhode Island Historical Cemeteries
Transcription Project Index, p. 380.
Internet
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rigenweb/cemetery/cemetery340.html
accessed on 18 Januaryt 2012, and when this was recorded, the
following data was pertinent located 10 ft south of MOOSUP VALLEY RD
at TEL pole # 56; 2521 burials with 25 inscriptions from 1822 to
1944; 40 ft x 40 ft in fair condition enclosed with a
stone wall]. No other Stanton in the database is buried in a Foster
cemetery. Job W. Place was buried in Foster cemetery FR083, so we
cannot make a direct correlation between Mary E Stanton and the Place
family, but some vague connection is allowable as she appears to be
an isolated "Stanton" on Phillips and Place land in 1850.
There are four listings for burials of "Mary E Stanton" and
13 other "Mary Stanton". One comes close to to match her
officially noted birthday of 1812, indicated by her age of 38y in
1850. This is Mary Moore {Bell} Stanton
1814 - 20 APR 1887 NT001 which is in Newport. This is an
unlikely candidate. Sadly, this writer cannot
find any additional notes on Foster's Mary E Stanton in any online
databases.}
Kenneth W. Faig, Jr, Mahossauk Review,
Candlemass, 1992. "Lovecraft's Last Yeoman Farmer Ancestor, p.
7 ff. Provided by author.
In this publication, Faig stated, "The
household seems to be next south of the homesteads of Job W. Place
and Abraham Place of Johnson Road. Perhaps Mary E. Stanton was
keeping house for the children. One would normally expect that Susan
Esther Phillips, the elder surviving daughter, would undertake this
function, but she may by this time have already been ailing, since
she died on July 28, 1851, aged only twenty-four. James Wheaton
Phillips (1830-1901) married Job W. Place's daughter Jane Ann Place
(1829-1900) in 1853 and probably purchased the farm of Job's deceased
brother Abraham Place (1800-1852) at about this time."
Schedule I. - Free Inhabitants in The
Town of Foster in the County of Providence State of Rhode
Island enumerated by me, on the 6th day
of August 1850. Elisha Johnson Ass't Marshall
(The data above, itallics are
handwritten. There are 13 columns of data, and below are columns 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9. For item 1 and 2, I have placed a #, and
for item 4 I have placed a y afterwards. For item 9, all are "Rhode
Island" unless noted.}
{in the margin is a "1"}
#1 #1 Samuel Greene 67y M Farmer $1000
Polly 54y F
#2 #2 Peleg
Harrington 66y M Farmer $2300
Harriet 45y F
Betsey F 10y F
James W Phillips 17y M laborer
#3 #3 John Johnson 41y M Farmer $1000
Susan 36y F
Elizabeth 11y F
Wanton 69y M Farmer
#4 #4 Job W Place 54y M Farmer $900
Asenath 56y F Massachusetts
Lester 10y M
Jane A 21y F
#5 Aaron B Place 27y M Carpenter $900
Hannah 20y F
Manford 1y M
#5 #6 Abraham Place 49y M Farmer $1200
Nabby 54y F
Lydia 83y F $12
Fanny Card 10y F
#6 #7 James W
Phillips 20y M Farmer {no $ amount recorded}
Susan E 23y F {not in school}
Whipple VB 16y M Farmer {has
attended school}
Abby E 10y F {has attended
school}
Mary E Stanton 38y F
#7 #8 George Place 57y M Farmer
Giffey 58y F
#8 #9 Sally Place 63y F
Jason G 29y M Farmer $9000
Rhoby A 23y F
Leander T 11y M Connecticut
#9 #10 Albert
Foster 47y M Farmer $1000
Cynthia 47y F
John C 22y M laborer
Meelrum M 19y M laborer
#11 Otis Foster 42y M Farmer $1000
Rushee 50y F
Fanny 19y F
Angeline 18y F
Louise 14y F
Oliver 12y M
{Below is a portion for the next page
included to show the proximity of Casey B Tyler to the Phillips
orphans}
{in the margin is a "3"}
#19 #21 Casey B
Tyler 30y M merchant $0
Betsey 28y F
#20 #22 Dean Burgys 48y M Farmer $700
Dolly 45y F
Jared H 22y M black smith
Job G 24y M stone mason
#23 Esther Jenks 68y F
Julia 38y F
- Dwelling house numbered in the order of visitation.
- Families numbered in the order of visitation.
- The name of every Person whose usual place of abode on the first day of June, 1850, was in this family.
- Age
- Sex
- Color (all were white listed)
- Profession, Occupation, or Trade of each Male Person over 15 years of age.
- Value of Real Estate owned.
- Place of Birth, Maning the State, Territory, or Country.
- Married withing the year
- Attended School within the year
- Persons over 20 years of age who cannot read or write.
- Whether deaf and dumb, blind, pauper, or convict.
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