- January 1836: The commissioners ordered that Anthony Torbert be paid 50 cents "for hauling the corpse of Solomon Pates, Deceased Pauper, to the grave."1
- 4 January 1838: The commissioners ordered that May and Jewell be paid $20.25 “for coffin and sundries furnished for George S. Small a Pauper who died in Michigan City.”
- 4 January 1838: The commissioners ordered that Haynes Denton be paid $86.50 “for keeping and attending Arthur M. Cauley [McCauley?] procuring coffin and c. for same a pauper in Michigan Township.”2
- September 1838: The commissioners ordered that various individuals each be paid $2 “for Guarding the Jail on the night of the 14th June before David Scott was executed.”3 More information on the murder Scott committed in Jasper Packard's history of La Porte County.4
- 5 September 1838: The commissioners ordered that Rodney B. Field be paid “six dollars for coffin for John Scott pauper in Michigan Township.”5
- November 1838: The commissioners ordered that several people be paid for professional services “furnished John Wells and family, paupers in New Durham Township,” including $3.75 to Benjamin Underwood for “three coffins.”6
- 6 November 1838: The commissioners ordered that Church and Dodge be paid $2 for “horses and waggon to convey the corpse of John Forley to the Grave a pauper of Michigan Township.”7
- 7 March 1839: The commissioners ordered that Geo. W. Allen be paid $90 for keeping Jacob Deerduff for ten weeks, plus doctor bills and funeral expenses in Scipio Township.8
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Genealogy of the Rich and Famous -- Not
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: county commissioners, La Porte County Indiana, paupers, poor farms
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Fall/Winter 2010 Hoosier Genealogist: Connections
There's a lot to like in the new issue of The Hoosier Genealogist: Connections from the state historical society.
There's history in Richard M. Lytle's timely "Desperate Times: Hammond, Indiana, Endures the Great Depression."
There's hard-core genealogy data in another installment of Timothy Mohon's "Hoosier Baptists" and their records.
There's a repository review on the state library's History Reference Room.
There's a reflection on the personal meaning of the classic Midwestern matchup between border Southerners on one hand and Yankees and New Englanders on the other -- Randy K. Mills's "'Not Like Your Father's People.'"
There's an institutional and records context for finding the hardest-to-find people in Rachel Popma's study of the Blackford County Asylum for the Poor, "Finding Destitute Ancestors."
And, of course, there are three classic family chronicles:
"Along the Wabash: Dora Family History Leads Back to Indiana's Earliest Recorded European Settlers," in which Rob Dora works the French records from the 1700s.
"Pioneer Politician: John Kennedy Graham, Clark and Floyd Counties 1805-1841," by Geneil Breeze.
"Maria's Journey: From the Mexican Revolution to Indiana's Steel Mills," by Ramon Arredondo and Trisha (Hull) Arredondo.
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Labels: Arredondo Family, Baptist records, Blackford County, Clark County Indiana, Dora Family, Floyd County Indiana, Graham Family, Hammond Indiana, Indiana, poor farms



















