• Home
  • About
  • Family Surnames and Places
  • Contact

Generations of Nomads

~ On the Trail of Family Faces, Places, and Stories Around the World

Generations of Nomads

Tag Archives: Marshfield

Remembering Clemmie Bodenhamer 100 Years Later

17 Friday Jan 2025

Posted by Generations of Nomads in Family history, Genealogy, Slavery, Women's History

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

ancestry, Bodenhamer, Coffeyville, family, Family history, Genealogy, Goldsberry, Goss, Greene County, history, Kansas, Marshfield, Missouri, North Carolina, Owen, Rowan County, Slavery, Webster County

Clementine Esther (Bodenhamer) Owen, date unknown, family collection

I was about 15 when I began piecing together my family history and gathering names of my ancestors. I learned that I had a great great grandmother named Clementine Bodenhamer and I was smitten. Who could resist such a fine name?

Clementine “Clemmie” Esther Bodenhamer was born in Marshfield, Webster County, Missouri on January 30, 1854 and probably died in Coffeyville, Kansas on January 13, 1925, 100 years ago this week. She was the only child of Elizabeth Jane Goldsberry (1833-1888) and (probably) John Bodenhamer (1836-1862).

In 1860 Clementine (6) and Elizabeth Bodenhamer (26) were living in Greene County on the 1,000 acre farm of John’s newly deceased father, Jacob (1790-1860) with his widowed mother, Fernita “Neaty” (Goss) Bodenhamer (1795-1863) and three of his brothers. I have not found a record of Elizabeth’s marriage, but John is the most likely Bodenhamer son to have been Clemmie’s father. He is said to have fought in the Civil War for the Confederacy and died in 1862, although I am not aware of a record of his service or death (yes, there’s lots of conjecture and research to be done!)

Jacob Bodenhamer’s death was followed by Neaty’s in 1863. Clemmie’s childhood circumstances on the large Bodenhamer farm must have changed significantly during those years. Jacob and Neaty had somewhere between 17 and 20 children. They were slaveholders, with eight individuals enslaved by Jacob at the time of his death. (More on this in a post yet to come). Seven of their sons served during the Civil War—five for the Union and two for the Confederacy.

As the farm property was broken up and John died or disappeared, it is unclear where Clemmie and Elizabeth went until about 1868 when Elizabeth married Joshua Hamilton (1810-1889), a farmer 23 years her senior from Marshfield, Missouri. Joshua was twice widowed with ten children.

Elizabeth Jane (Goldsberry) Bodenhamer Hamilton, date unknown. Image courtesy of Nancy Hamilton Wright.

On Christmas Eve, 1871, Clemmie (17) and James Washington Owen (23) were married in Marshfield. Like many of Clemmie’s relatives, James was born in Rowan County, North Carolina, and moved west to Greene County, Missouri with his family as a child. At the time of their marriage James and five younger siblings were living on the family farm, where he was a farm hand.

Missouri Marriage Records, 1805-2002

Between the 1873 and 1875 births of their first two children, Clemmie and James moved from Greene County to Webster County. The 1880 Census lists James as “keeping a wagon yard.” By the time Clemmie was 32 in 1886 she had given birth to four sons and three daughters. Clyde, Daisy, John, Maud, and Stella (my great grandmother), all lived to adulthood, but Clemmie and James lost their last two sons very young.

The late 1880s must have been particularly difficult for the Owen family. Babies Oscar and Bertie died in 1885 and 1887; Clemmie’s mother, Elizabeth, died in 1888; and then James died in 1889 at age 41. James’ death seems to have been expected. His will, written three months before his death, states that he is “weak in body but strong and vigorous in mind.” He authorizes Clemmie to dispose of personal property and real estate in order to reinvest the proceeds for the care of herself and the children. He stipulates that their 320 acre farm on Derrick Prairie be retained until their youngest child comes of age “so that my family can be sure of a house…or can get the proceeds of the rents.” James also asks that Clemmie sell his interest in a lumber company.

James Washington Owen, date unknown, family collection

Clemmie remained on the farm until at least 1900, when the census lists her as a farmer, sons Clyde (27) and John (23) as farm laborers, and daughter Maud (20) also in residence. Daughters Daisy and Stella had married and moved away. In 1901 Maud married Alvin Jackson, an order clerk at a wholesale house. Clemmie was living with them and their two young sons in Springfield, Missouri in 1910.

Clemmie, location and date unknown, family collection

Sadly, by 1920 Maud was a patient at Missouri State Hospital No. 3, a psychiatric hospital in Nevada, Missouri, where she remained for many years. Perhaps for this reason, Clemmie moved by 1920 to the Coffeyville, Kansas home of her daughter, Stella (Owen) Miller and her husband Frank. Three granddaughters, Marjorie, Thelma, and Esther Jane (my grandmother), must have made a lively household. I don’t know the details of Clemmie’s last years, whether she stayed in Coffeyville until her death in January 1925 at age 70. She is buried in Marshfield, Missouri with her husband and two of their children.

112 W. 2nd Street, Coffeyville, Kansas home of Stella and Frank Miller in 1920

In The Marshfield Mail on February 9, 1933, a chatty society columnist wrote nearly ten years after Clemmie’s death, “At her death she left a fine memorial behind. That of a kind, good mother and a loyal Christian woman. Today we heard a friend of hers remark, ‘I believe Clemmie Owen was one among the best women I ever knew.’” She is remembered.

Marshfield Cemetery, Marshfield, Missouri

Relationships

Jacob and Fernita “Neaty” (Goss) Bodenhamer, 4th great grandparents

John (probably) and Elizabeth (Goldsberry) Bodenhamer, 3rd great grandparents

James Washington and Clementine Esther (Bodenhamer) Owen, 2nd great grandparents

Stella (Owen) Miller, great grandmother

William Edward Stephenson, Jr., father

Me

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Discovered While Hunkered Down at Home: Nellie Miller

13 Monday Apr 2020

Posted by Generations of Nomads in Genealogy, Uncategorized

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Coffeyville, Kansas, Keith, Marshfield, Miller, Missouri, Owen, Willbern

Nellie M. Miller (1908-1916), about age 6.

Isn’t she precious?

Like many of us this housebound spring, I’ve been finding it hard to concentrate well enough to blog or even read much. But rummaging through old pictures is a perfect distraction.

My pictures are horribly unorganized (I know! A perfect quarantine project…) but I thought I knew what I had. To my delight, yesterday’s finds included three envelopes of pictures (1915-1980s) given to me years ago by my Aunt Marjorie (Miller) Willbern, my grandmother’s sister and my godmother. And out popped this picture of their sister Nellie M. Miller, which I don’t remember having seen before.

I don’t know much about Aunt Nell. She was the third child of Frank and Stella (Owen) Miller, born in 1908 after her family moved from Marshfield, Missouri to Coffeyville, Kansas and she died in Shawnee, Oklahoma in 1916.

Stella (Owen) Miller with daughters (l-r) Marjorie, Nell, and Thelma. Taken about 1908.

I’ve always loved this picture of Stella with her first three daughters, and the one below, taken when Nellie was two and looking very solemn. Nellie was six when my grandmother, Esther Jane Miller was born in 1914, and sadly, she died at age eight a week before Grandma turned two. Finding the sweet image of her in hat, coat, and boots pleases me so much–she is not forgotten.

Nellie at age 2 at a large gathering of Miller cousins in 1910.

According to Nellie’s obituary in The Marshfield (Missouri ) Mail, she died of diphtheria on January 2, 1916. The article is effusive about Nell’s talents as a violinist who was “much sought after,” her charm, and her beauty.

Postscript: My great grandmother Stella gave birth to five daughters between 1901 and 1923. Martha Lee Miller, her fifth daughter, was born on August 11, 1923, but sadly died two days later.

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 85 other subscribers

Archives

  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • March 2025
  • January 2025
  • September 2023
  • June 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • December 2022
  • August 2022
  • April 2022
  • September 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • August 2020
  • June 2020
  • April 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • May 2019
  • November 2018
  • September 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • September 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016

Top Posts & Pages

  • This Charming Kansas Bride
    This Charming Kansas Bride
  • Rainbow of Places--My New Favorite Thing!
    Rainbow of Places--My New Favorite Thing!
  • A Magpie During Family History Month--So Much to Do!
    A Magpie During Family History Month--So Much to Do!
  • Dogs and More Dogs
    Dogs and More Dogs
  • Armistice Day Family Remembrance
    Armistice Day Family Remembrance

Tags

#mycolorfulancestry 1920s fashion 1930s Ackworth Ackworth School Alaska Architectural history Architecture Art Art Deco Augusta Baby Head Baltimore Baltimore Cathedral Baltimore history Beirut Benjamin Henry Latrobe Benjamin Latrobe birthplace chart Bodenhamer Bower Brummana Caithness Cardinal James Gibbons Coffeyville Dad Daniel Oliver Davidson County Deane Dover Dunkirk Engagement portrait Family dogs Family heirloom Family history Family photos Friends' Ambulance Unit geneabloggers Genealogy geographical genealogy Germany Gloucester Goldsberry Goss Grandfather grandparents Great Dane Hahn Hare Haverford College Hill Johns Hopkins Kansas Lebanon Leon Kroll Llano London Marshfield Maryland Maryland history Merchants' Club Miller Mills Milnes Missionary Missouri Munson Museums North Carolina Ohio Oliphant Oliver Owen Philadelphia Quaker Ras el Met'n Rowan County Scotland Sheeley Sheely Slavery Stephenson Stoke Newington Texas Thurso Travel University of Kansas Webster County wedding Wedding anniversary wedding ring Westtown School Wichita Willbern Women's History Month World War I Wright WWII yearbooks Yorkshire

© Kim Brengle and Generations of Nomads, 2016-2021

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Generations of Nomads
    • Join 85 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Generations of Nomads
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d