Lt. Stephen Justephonicus K Smith

This week, I am taking you back to the 1700’s!  Our prompt this week is “favorite name.”  While I was researching another person, the name of Lt. Stephen Justephonicus K Smith came up and immediately attracted my attention!  Wow, what a name!  It really spiked my curiosity so I started researching.  I mean, who would name their child Justephonicus?  Sure, it is attention grabbing and it does have a nice ring to it.  Reminds me of a name that would go nicely in a silly children’s song.  When I looked into Lt. Stephen J K Smith, I found a lot more than just an unusual name and…a photo of him!

Stephen Justephonicus Smith photo 001 (2)

Lt. Stephen Justephonicus K Smith is actually my 6th Great-grandfather and was born about 1703 in Abingdon Parish, Gloucester County, Virginia Colony.  His parents were William Smith (1678-1739) and Elizabeth Downing.  Both parents were born in the Virginia Colony.  William’s father, Richard Smith was born in Yorkshire, England but immigrated to Virginia.  Elizabeth was at least a 3rd generation in the new Colony and both parents and grandparents were born in Virginia.  So Elizabeth and William Smith named Stephen Justephonicus K Smith, or did they?  Here is what I found out.

Stephen’s mother, Elizabeth Downing, was born 30 Dec 1670 in St. Stephen’s Parish, Northumberland, Virginia Colony.  I am thinking that she named her first son Stephen after the parish where she came from.    I found out that Stephen, as he grew up, used the name “Just Stephen” to distinguish himself from others with the very common surname of Smith.  This “Just Stephen” morphed into “Justephan-icus”  and must have become part of his name!  The new adopted version became Justephonicus.  After he served in the local militia, where he presumably became a lieutenant, he used the name Lt. Stephen Justephonicus K Smith.  Before this, he was “just”  Stephen Smith.  It is unknown what the “K” stands for in his name – another mystery for another time.

Stephen married Mary Polly Hawkins who was born in Spotsylvania Co., Virginia Colony, in 1708.  She was possibly the daughter of John Hawkins and Elizabeth Moseley but more research is needed on her parentage.  Stephen and Mary Polly were married in Orange Co., Virginia Colony in 1729 when Stephen was 25 years old and Mary was about 21.  They had six children between 1730 and 1750 including Charles, William, Grace (married a Mallory), James, Sarah and Stephen J K Smith, Jr.  Now I wonder if the photo above is Lt. Stephen or his son, named after him – you decide.  Either way, it is a photo of an ancestor I never had before!

I found a few records of Stephen in Orange County, the most notable of which were about his contributions to the War effort – the Revolutionary War.  Stephen was too old for fighting during the Revolutionary War but he did support the war with large amounts of beef and pork!  The procurement of adequate provisions and supplies was a continuing necessity for the Continental Army and militia forces alike.  It was necessary to impress or take property as needed for the war effort.  For items taken or impressed, local officials furnished owners with receipts or certificates as evidence to later file a claim at court for reimbursement or adjustment.  Stephen’s claims were found noted and found “just and reasonable”.  His claims included 225 lbs. of beef in Oct of 1781, 1925 lbs. of beef in Nov. of 1780, 116 lbs. of bacon in July of 1781 and, also, a gun, impressed for the Orange Militia and never returned.   Stephen must have been somewhat prosperous to be able to supply such large quantities of meat!

Stephen J K Smith made his will on 24 Feb 1781.  He was 80 years old when he died in Orange County, Virginia.  He had lived in the Parish of St. Thomas and  after 1770, he attended the Old Blue Run Baptist Church in Tibbstown, Virginia. (Pictured below)

Stephen had a son (or grandson, son of his son, Charles) also named after him.  This Stephen I K Smith, was listed on the Orange County Militia list of the 1777 in the Revolutionary War.  This Stephen Smith served under Col. James Madison, father of our third president, James Madison!  This Stephen was listed as a Corporal in the 4th Regiment of Virginia in June 1779.

Lt. Stephen and Mary Polly Smith’s son, Charles Smith, also served in the 6th Regiment of South Carolina in 1779-1780.  Charles Smith was a resident of Albemarle County in 1780 and the census at that time listed his possessions for tax levies.   His household had: 1 free male above 21, 10 slaves, 17 cattle, 6 horses, colts & mules, and no wheels for riding carriages.

Charles moved his family about 1786 to Surry County, North Carolina where he purchased land and built his family with his wife, Ann King Mallory.   In 1790 Charles is listed on the First Census of the United States.   Ann Smith died in 1803 and was buried in the Smith Family Cemetery.  By 1820, Charles owned 18 slaves (1820 U. S. Census, Surry NC).   Charles passed away 14 August of 1829 at the age of 99 years, a great age to attain in those times, and was buried in the Smith Family Cemetery, Mount Airy, Surry, North Carolina.  He had set aside land for the family cemetery in his will.

The Charles Smith Family Bible is still in existence and owned by Ms. Vernie Yankee, Lone Jack, MO.  The Bible lists family records of births and marriages of all the 10 children of Charles and Ann.  Charles Smith and one of his daughters, Dianah, are our ancestors.   Dianah married William Lyon in 1795.

Dianah and William’s daughter, Jane Mallory Lyon, married James Ransom Dudley and they were the parents of Mary Lavalett Dudley.

Mary Lavalett Dudley married Joseph Cloud Lyons and they were parents of George Edward Lyons who married Susanna Virginia Ashlin.

George Lyons and Susanna Ashlin were parents of Clarence Lyons.

Clarence Lyons married Cammie Swanson who were parents of LaFon Lyons, my father.

Following this lineage, makes my favorite name person, Lt. Stephen Justephonicus Smith, my 6th great-grandfather!  As an added bonus, I found some hints that Ann Mallory, wife of Charles Smith, may be a cousin to none other than George Washington.  It looks promising but records need to be verified!

Below is a picture of the Old Blue Run Baptist Church attended by Lt. Justphonicus K Smith after 1770.  Also a map of part of Surry County, North Carolina from the late 1700s or early 1800s showing properties held by various owners including Charles Smith.  Sources listed below also.

Blue Run Church today 001

Surry Co NC map Smith 001

Sources:

Abingdon Parish Register, 1678-1761, Library of Virginia.

Headley, Robert K., Married Well and Often: Marriages of the Northern Neck of Virginia, 1649-1800, Baltimore MD, Genealogical Publishing Co., 2003, pp. 114,  325.

Patriots of the Upcountry: Orange Co., Virginia in the Revolution, by William H B Thomas; Orange County Bicentennial Commission, Orange, Virginia, 1976, pp. 91,104-5, 123-4.

http://www.jmu.edu/madison/center, James Madison Center site.

U. S. Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, database on-line, Provo UT, USA Ancestry.com Operations, 2007.

Charles Smith Bible Records, The Kansas City Genealogist, 1962, p. 9.

Orange County Wills and Administrations (1735-1800), pp. 82-3, 89.

Personal Property Tax Lists, 1782 (Virginia State Library), FHL 2024443, p. 10.

NARA microfilm pub. M637, 12 rolls, National Archives, Washington D.C.

 

 

 

The Lyons in Michigan

LaFon, brothers and sisters and mother 001
William (Bill), Cammie, LaFon, Eddie, Coralie (left) and Dreama June

This is a picture of my dad, LaFon Lyons, with his family.  I was extremely lucky to know all of them!  Judging by the ages, I think this picture was taken in the late 1940s in Mount Clemens, Michigan.   This is one of my favorite pictures because it is so rare in our family!  You see, my grandmother (above) had stored all her photos and other things in a friend’s garage when she had to move probably after her husband died in 1939.  When she went to retrieve her possessions a few years later because her friends were moving, alas!  all the photos were ruined, nothing was salvageable!  I have never yet seen a picture of my grandfather, Clarence Lyons, but I was so happy to know my uncles and aunts.  By the way, I do have the original photo of this one and just a few others.

Clarence Edward Lyons, my grandfather, was born in Sugar Grove, Virginia 06 Nov 1891.  He was the third and last child of George Edward Lyons and Susan Virginia Ashlin.  Remember Columbus Ashlin and Mary Ann James from last week’s blog?  Well, they were Susan Virginia’s parents!  Clarence had an older brother named James Columbus Lyon and an older sister Mary Ann Lyon, both born in Sugar Grove.  You will notice that some relatives use Lyon and some use Lyons.  I have found both spellings throughout my research!   Clarence’s parents were married about 8-10 years separating somewhere in the early 1890’s and records were found on George living in Letcher County, Kentucky married to Susan Holcomb.  George was a deputy sheriff and died in Upper Poorfork, Harlan, KY in 1920.  But let’s get back to Clarence.  He and his siblings and mother moved in with grampa Columbus Ashlin and lived on the big farm.  Some where around 1905 or so, Susan Virginia and Clarence move to Lynchburg, Virginia as Columbus had died and his siblings moved out.

In 1913, Clarence married Cammie Lyster Swanson in Lynchburg, Virginia – my grandmother in the picture! Clarence was 21 and Cammie was 20.  She was the daughter of William Domman Swanson and Cora Virginia Phillips and was one of 11 children. Future blogs will delve into her interesting family story!  Clarence and Cammie had 6 children and 5 are in the photo.  (They lost a daughter, Rosemary, to a late miscarriage in 1928.)  In 1913, they lived  at 100 Withers, Lynchburg City and Clarence was a carpenter. At sometime, they moved to Sugar Grove VA because their first 2 children were born there- William Lilburn Lyons in 1914 and Edward (or Edwin) McWayne Lyons in 1915.  By 1917, they were back in Lynchburg and my father, LaFon Camlyn Lyons was born that year.  That year, Clarence had to register for the WWI draft and the draft card described him as tall and slender with gray eyes and brown hair.  He was working as a carpenter at Jno P Pettyjohn & Co, Lynchburg.

I always wondered where my dad’s name came from – I mean LaFon is not an ordinary name!  Actually he was named Camlyn LaFon but always used LaFon as his first name.  I do think I solved the mystery. The name LaFon probably came from a relative named Randolph Lafon Huff.  A family story handed down claims the name LaFon was taken from the name of a neighbor and good friend.  This can be true as Randolph Lafon Huff was born in 1916, the year before my dad and they lived in Sugar Grove near the Lyons family and were actually cousins through marriage!

Everyone in the family was working on a large tobacco and sugar cane plantation – possibly the large farm owned by Columbus Ashlin.  At least this was a family story I heard growing up.

On Valentine’s Day, 1922, Dreama June Lyons was born in Lynchburg.  When Dreama was about 1 year old, Clarence and Cammie packed up their whole family and moved to Detroit Michigan to find work in the auto industry.  Along with them came Clarence’s brother James and his wife Lillie and daughter  Savannah AND Clarence’s sister Mary Ann and her husband, Edward Bruehl.  Later came their Uncle Sammy and his family. (Sammy was Columbus’s son) and finally, Clarence’s mother, Susan Virginia.  It must have been like a mass migration!  Clarence got a job with the Packard Motor Company in Detroit.  In 1930, the family lived at357 St. Aubins Street in the 9th ward of Detroit and Clarence worked as a mechanic in  Aeroplane Manufacturing, he owned his own home and a radio but did not work full time because of ill health.

In 1931, Aug. 22, their last child, Coralie Jean Lyons was born in Detroit.  Dreama June contracted mastoiditis as a child and lost part of her hearing and needed surgeries.  My aunt June (we always called her June) wore hearing aids all her life.  On May 24th, 1939, Clarence passed away from pulmonary tuberculosis and heart failure.  He is buried in the Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens Cemetery in Novi, Michigan.  Cammie was widowed at age 46.  LaFon and Eddie both had to quit high school to work and support the family. LaFon was a truck driver and Eddie worked as a paint sprayer in an auto factory. Bill was already married.   Cammie worked taking care of an elderly couple.  Coralie was only 7 when her father died.   Coralie told me stories about her dad.  He was very intelligent and was a mechanic, carpenter and worked on the railroad for a time.  He and his sons helped build a house for his sister and husband Ed Bruehl.  He and Ed started building an airplane at Ed’s house.  They finished the fuselage and started on the wings when Clarence became ill with TB.  The plane was never finished and sat next to Ed’s garage for years.

I did not get to see my grandmother a lot as she eventually lived with Coralie and her family in Mount Clemens, lower MI, and we lived way on the western end of Upper MI in Bessemer.  When I was young, we had to take the ferry across the Mackinaw Straits to get to lower Michigan (before the Mackinaw Bridge was built) and we couldn’t visit that often.  However, on some summers, my grandmother Cammie would come to live with us for awhile and she made sure we all went to the Baptist church in Ironwood with her!  I remember her as having long hair she would brush out at night and wear in a net during the day.  She was always so kind and loving to us but always  had an air of sadness about her.

My Uncle Bill, I knew the best because he moved with his family up by us when I was about 9 or 10.  He lived on a farm in south Bessemer and I spent a few summers living with them and taking care of his 4 youngest children while he and my Aunt Marion worked.  He has a long story that I have discovered and will save it for another blog.  My Uncle Eddie was always my favorite and he has a story that I would like to share also in another blog!

Now you have an introduction to the Clarence and Cammie Lyons family.  They are all dear to me because I knew them as I was growing up.  Of course, my dad had the most special place in my heart and I miss him greatly.  More on his story will be coming, too!