Ancestry US
Showing posts with label World War I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World War I. Show all posts

24 April 2025

Ode Grover Lincicome and Neola Grace Jameson Dawson (Virtual Graves)

 
Image by Juanita Brock Galindo (2008) via FindAGrave.

Ode Grover Lincicome was born 2 April 1888 in Bellwood, Butler County, Nebraska.
He died 4 April 1967.
Burial was at Resthaven Memorial Park in Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma.

Neola Grace Jameson Dawson Lincicome was born 27 September 1896 in Hornick, Woodbury County, Iowa.
She died in 1965.
Burial was at Resthaven Memorial Park in Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma.


Ode was a son of Aluria Scrogham (1861-1938) and Silas L. Lincicome (1855-1945). Silas and his family lived in several different places in his "younger years" -- Ohio, Indiana, Nebraska, and Arkansas. At about age 50, however, Silas finally seemed to reach a territory he liked: Oklahoma. Ode was a teenager when they arrived, but it seems he remained loyal to the state the rest of his days.


Ode served as a mechanic with the 358th Infantry, 90th Division of the US Army during the waning months of World War I. He and his regiment also remained on occupation duty after the war and returned home in June 1919. In November the following year, Ode married Neola Grace Jameson, widow of Hal George Dawson, Sr. (1893-1918).

Neola was the daughter of Maude Natalie Phelps (1876-1961) and John Jameson of New York. She married Hal at the age of 19, on 22 March 1916 in McAlester, Pittsburg County, Oklahoma. This young couple would have two children -- Bettie Sue and Hal, Jr. -- before tragedy struck in the form of the 1918 flu pandemic. Both Hal Sr. and Jr. battled the virus. Hal Sr. lost the battle, but Jr. survived. Following from a burial notice regarding Hal Sr:
"The young man's death occurred Friday from influenza, but a delay was occasioned by the fact that the seven-weeks' old child of the family was also in a critical condition from the same malady."


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I have no evidence of any biological children born to Neola and Ode, but it seems the latter stepped in and accepted the two from Neola's previous marriage as his own. In fact, a decision was made to change Hal George Dawson, Jr.'s name to Grover Ode Lincicome, Jr. My assumption is that this was done officially and legally, since Grover Jr. also served in the United States military.


When I initially discovered Hal, Jr.'s name change, I felt a bit sad for Hal, Sr. It seemed a shame that his part of the Dawson surname lineage would be truncated. Another casualty of the 1918 flu pandemic, perhaps. But, really, who am I to say? The only reason I have an opinion at all, perhaps, is that something similar happened in my direct line, although more generations have passed, and I am far more removed from it. A direct ancestor of mine took his mother's surname, instead of his father's. So, following the normal course of things, my surname should not be what it is. Furthermore, I don't even know what my surname "should" be. Hopefully, that is not the fate of future Jameson-Dawson-Lincicome researchers.

In a way, though, it's fitting that Hal, Jr. became Grover, Jr. since Ode Grover Lincicome (Sr.) is the only father he really knew.

Ancestry US

19 July 2024

Individual Report for Addison Lysander Lincecum (1874-1965)

This is a long one, folks. Settle in when you can.

He was my 3rd cousin, 5x removed.

Addison Lysander Lincecum was born 8 April 1874 in Long Point, Washington County, Texas to Dr. Lucullus Garland Lincecum (d. 1900) and Louisa Frances "Fannie" Rainwater (1843-1878). While only two children were born to Lucullus and Fannie, Addison's father was married at least three times and fathered at least ten children.

Biographical / Genealogical Notes

When Addison was but four years old, his mother Fannie "died of heart disease while sitting at the supper table."

For the taking of the 1880 US Federal census, Addison was listed with his father and third wife, Marie/Mary Oliphant.

Addison was educated at the University of Texas, Dallas Medical School, and Baylor University Medical School. His father died in 1900, a few years before Addison graduated with the first class of medical students from Baylor. The younger Dr. Lincecum would practice medicine for the next fifty years, much of that time being in El Campo, Wharton County, Texas. Addison was actually a third-generation medical practitioner. His grandfather was Dr. Gideon Lincecum, the famed naturalist*, who died the year Addison was born.

According to Lois Burkhalter's biography of Gideon Lincecum*, Addison worked his way through medical school as an engineer on trains transporting granite blocks for Galveston jetties.

On 24 October 1897, Addison Lincecum married Letha Elizabeth Gandy in Lavaca County, Texas. Letha, a fellow Texan born 25 September 1873 at Gandy Bend, was a daughter of Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (d. 1914) and Mary Elizabeth Allen.

Addison and Letha would be the parents of at least three children: Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (1900-1999), Ruth Elizabeth (1903-1982), and Addison Turney (1913-1989).

Clarence Wharton, author of Texas Under Many Flags, published the following in 1930: "Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, who has done a great deal of public health work, is practicing medicine and conducting a high class private hospital at El Campo...He is a Republican, member of the Christian Church, and is a Lodge and Royal Arch Chapter Mason."

Following from the "Addison L. Lincecum Papers, 1908-1965" housed at the Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin (information extracted by Kathy Herzik, Jean Difloe, and Julia Payne about 1981):

During the Spanish-American War, [Addison] served with Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, and he fought Pancho Villa’s encroachments on the Texas border as a Texas Ranger in the 1910s. In World War I, Lincecum served as a combat surgeon in France, participating in the Meuse-Argonne and Saint-Mihiel campaigns. Upon returning to the states, he founded and served as first commander for an American Legion Post at El Campo. In 1920, at the outbreak of bubonic plague, Governor James E. Ferguson sent Lincecum to Galveston, later appointing him to the State Board of Health. Lincecum also served one term as mayor of El Campo (1932), acted as the town’s postmaster (1935-1949), and established (1939) and superintended the Nightingale Hospital for 10 years.

Per Texas Ranger Biographies*, Addison was a Special Ranger from 1 August 1917 to 17 June 1918 "(attached to Co. C)."

Dr. Lincecum Day

24 March 1960 Edna Herald (Texas)
El Campo Pays Tribute to Dr. A. L. Lincecum

...EL CAMPO -- Riding with Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders and hunting Pancho Villa are minor events in the life of a local doctor compared with the celebration staged in his honor here Friday.

El Campo citizens honored Dr. A. L. Lincecum, 86, with "Dr. Lincecum Day."

It was right after he had married a young teacher named Letha Gandy in 1897 that "Doc" Lincecum interrupted his medical studies to join the Rough Riders in the Spanish-American War.

...He became enraged in 1917 when Pancho Villa killed a doctor friend of his, and he came out fighting. He asked for and received a commission in the Texas Rangers and joined the hunt for the famed Mexican bad man.

...World War I found him fighting in the trenches of France as a captain with Texas' rugged 36th Infantry Division.

...His friends drafted him as mayor and elected him on a write-in ticket...

Death and Obituaries

Dr. Addison Lysander Lincecum died of "generalized arteriosclerosis" on 6 December 1965 in Lavaca County, Texas. He was buried two days later in Gandy Cemetery at Gandy Bend (Lavaca County).

- 7 December 1965 Dallas Morning News (Texas)

Widely Known Physician, Dr. A. L. Lincecum, Dies
EL CAMPO, Texas (AP) - Dr. A. L. Lincecum, last surviving member of the Baylor Medical School's first graduating class and widely known country doctor for 5o years, died Monday. He was 91.

Moments after his daughter, Mrs. Ruth Crosby, a want ads employee for the Houston Post, learned of his death at his isolated ranch near El Campo, her husband, certified public accountant T. A. Crosby, 64, suffered a fatal heart attack.

...He retired in 1953 and devoted himself to his role of "roving reporter" for KULP radio station in El Campo until he was paralyzed by a stroke in 1958.

...He is credited with making the first report that the malaria-bearing anopheles mosquito from Mexico was in this country in 1905. He later won recognition for research on bubonic plague.

Funeral services for Dr. Lincecum will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Wheeler Funeral Chapel in El Campo.

In addition to his daughter, he is survived by two sons, Bill Lincecum and Barney Lincecum. Dr. Lincecum's wife, Letha, died in 1959.

- 7 December 1965 Amarillo Globe-Times (Texas)

Baylor Medical Original Grad Dies at Age 91

EL CAMPO (AP) -- The last surviving member of Baylor Medical School's first graduating class, Dr. A. L. Lincecum, 91, is dead.

Lincecum was at his ranch home near El Campo when death came Monday.  He had been paralyzed since a stroke in 1958...

- 9 December 1965 The Cuero Record (Texas)

Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, Pioneer Texan, is Dead
Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, 91-year-old retired physician, died early Monday at his son's home in Gandy's Bend above Morales in Jackson Co, according to the Yoakum Herald-Times.

Dr. Lincecum, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and the St. Michiel and Argonne-Meuse offensives of World War I, was a former administrator of the Nightingale Hospital at El Campo.  He moved to Louise in 1910 and established his practice in El Campo in 1911.

Dr. Lincecum was a member of a pioneer Texas family and the son and grandson of physicians.

Four hours after his daughter, Mrs. T. A. Crosby, of Houston learned of her father's death, her husband died of a heart attack at his home.

In addition to being a physician, Dr. Lincecum was a railroad engineer, Texas Ranger and postmaster and mayor in El Campo...

Dr. Lincecum was paralyzed by a stroke in 1958.

...He was in Brownsville when raiders of the Mexican bandit, Pancho Villa, killed a fellow doctor who was a good friend of Dr. Lincecum.  He asked for a special Ranger commission and accompanied U. S. forces into Mexico to track down the raiders.

...Military burial was at 3 p.m. in the family plot at Gandy's Bend.

In addition to his daughter, Dr. Lincecum is survived by two sons, Bill of Gretna, La., and Barney with whom he had lived since 1960.  His wife, Mrs. Letha Gandy Lincecum died in 1959.

Funeral services for his son-in-law, T. A. Crosby, were held Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Houston.

Links to Explore

21 January 2019

Individual Report for Ira Preston Lincicome (1892-1967)

This is my first post regarding an individual who is of no relation to me. Ira is part of a sizeable group of LINCICOMEs found in the area of Jackson County, West Virginia, a good number of which descend from Levi Lincicome and wife Jeraldine / Geraldine McKee. Levi moved into West Virginia from across the river in the area of Washington County, Ohio. (Full disclosure: I am new to Ohio River Valley history and research.)

Michael Poe wrote the following in the Introduction for his book titled Images of America: Jackson County (affiliate link; pub. 2008).
The mighty Ohio River was the lifeblood of the early settlers and, for many years, it was the only way to reach the western edge of Virginia...

Communities flourished along the Ohio River in the early 1800s due to trade and commerce from keelboats and stern-wheelers...Sawmills in Ravenswood and Murraysville supplied wood for furnaces and food supplies for crews.

...By 1885, the Ohio River Railroad entered Jackson County, leading to trade extending the entire length of the Ohio River on the western edge of the state. The railroad established depots in Murraysville, Ravenswood, and Millwood along the river...By 1892, the Ravenswood, Spencer, and Glenville Railroad (RS&G) extended through Crow Summit, Sandyville, Duncan, and Liverpool into Roane County.

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Ira Preston Lincicome was born 10 November 1892 in Jackson County, West Virginia. He was one of at least eight children born to James Swazy "Sweezy" Lincicome (1862-1925) and Amanda A. "Manda" Kennan (1869-1938).

Ira married Birdie A. "Bird" McBride – who was about 17 years of age at the time – on 7 January 1914 in Jackson County. She was a daughter of Nathan F. and Effie G. McBride.

The young couple had a daughter, Garnet Aileen, before they were parted by Birdie's death due to Tuberculosis on 13 December 1916.

Nine months later, the widower Ira was serving his country in World War I, and it appears he spent at least some time overseas. Following from U.S. Army Transport Service Passenger Lists, 1910-1939 database at Ancestry®:
Lincicome, Ira P.
Pvt. 1st Class / Battery D, 314th Field Artillery
Ship = U.S.S. Zeppelin; departed Brest, France 17 May 1919.  "Camp  Stuart / Newport News, Virginia" stamped.
Emergency Contact: James S. Lincicome / father / R.F.D. #1, Sherman, West Virginia
Ira completed his service in June 1919. The following year, on 25 November 1920, Ira married Daisy Kidder in Wood County, West Virginia. She was born 22 February 1903 at Elizabeth, Wirt County, West Virginia to Greenberry Kidder and Sarah Ella Bishop. By April 1940, Ira and Daisy were settled at Ravenswood in Jackson County, where he worked as a car salesman. Some twenty years later, the couple was residing at 2508 Fairview Avenue in Parkersburg, Wood County.


Daisy died 30 March 1965 at Parkersburg, making Ira a widower once again. Her cause of death was Peribronchial Pneumonia, with contributing factors of Hypertensive Cardiovascular Disease, Diabetes Mellitus, and Obesity.

Ira died two years later on 25 June 1967 at the Veterans Administration Center in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia. Cause of death was Acute Cardiac Failure; Arteriosclerotic Heart Disease; Emphysema and Pulmonary Tuberculosis. Both he and Daisy rest in Arlington Memorial Gardens at Parkersburg.

10 April 2017

H is for Henry Howcott Lincecum, Born on the 4th of July (A–Z)

My 4th cousin Henry was born 4 July 1893 in Lincecum – just outside of Selma – Grant Parish, Louisiana.  He was one of six sons born to Dixie G. Lincecum (d. 1952) and Mary Ida Brister (d. 1950).

Henry married Zilla, daughter of Jonathan and Margarette Sketoe, about 1918, and the couple had three children.  A son was Max Henry (d. 1981), and a daughter was Wytona (d. 2008).

While I wouldn't call Henry a "career" military man, he certainly stepped up at wartime.  He entered into service with the United States Navy mid-December 1917.  His initial training was at the Naval station in Great Lakes, Illinois.  After surviving that, Henry went on to spend five months at the Harvard Radio School at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Per Wikipedia:

Training focused on raising the student’s Morse Code operating ability, measured at the rate of words per minute. Students were drawn from Naval Reserve stations around the country. A recruit was sent to Harvard upon reaching an aptitude of 10 words per minute; when he improved to 22 words per minute he was graduated and immediately transferred to the fleet.

Henry was transferred to the USS Missouri, and served until the 11 November 1918 armistice.  The image below contains Henry's draft registration cards for both World Wars, as well as a Louisiana WWI service record.

Genealogy-004

When it came time to serve during World War II, Henry found a way.  It is documented, in the early 1940s, that the blue-eyed and blonde-headed Henry served his country and fellow veteran soldiers by working at the U. S. Veterans Hospital in Alexandria, Louisiana.

Henry H. Lincecum died 15 October 1968.  His remains rest at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Pineville, Louisiana.  Zilla joined him 18 years later.


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Are you wondering what's up with all the "letter" posts? I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge (links to official page). This challenge lasts through the month of April, with Sundays off.  Each day follows a different letter prompt, in order, from A to Z.  Click here to see all my letter posts on one page (in reverse order).  Though this is my second year in the challenge, it's my first with two blogs.  My theme here is "kinfolk direct." Versus any name from the one name study, these genealogy and history posts all involve someone to which I am related.  You may follow along with me by RSS feed and other social media platforms listed at the top of the sidebar.  I and other bloggers in the challenge on Twitter will also be using #atozchallenge.

I'm also participating with Southern Graves.  This blog as a whole is one of my themes – telling the tales of tombstones, primarily from those found in the Southern United States and usually the State of Georgia.

Are you participating in the challenge, too? Please leave a link to your blog in the comments, I'd love to pay you a visit.  Good luck to all involved!

09 November 2016

Individual Report for Parula Russell Lincecum (1896-1971)

Individual Report - PRLincecumParula Russell Lincecum was born 26 March 1896 in Gonzales County, Texas to George Durham Lincecum and Frances Amanda Stubblefield.  Parula was a veteran of World War I, and did marry a woman named Minnie.  He died 13 May 1971 at Arlington, Tarrant County, Texas.  Parula's remains were placed in the Hillcrest Mausoleum at Dallas, Texas.

Individual Facts:

  • Census:  April 1910 / Gonzales, Texas
  • Residence:  June 1917 / Gonzales, Texas
  • Occupation:  June 1917 / Clerk, employed by has father at Gonzales, Texas
  • Occupation:  January 1920 / Salesman of general retail merchandise at Gonzales, Texas
  • Census:  January 1920 / Gonzales, Texas
  • Residence:  1932 / Dallas, Texas
  • Residence:  abt April 1935 / Gonzales, Texas
  • Occupation:  Apr 1940 / Grocery Store Proprietor at Williamson County, Texas
  • Census:  April 1940 / Schwertner, Williamson County, Texas
  • Residence:  1942 / Shwertner, Williamson County, Texas
  • Residence:  1965-1971 / Arlington, Tarrant County, Texas
  • Address:  abt May 1971 / 2609A W. Randol Mill Rd, Arlington, Texas
  • Occupation:  abt May 1971 / Health Inspector for the State of Texas

Sources available upon request.

Notes:

- According to his 1917 World War I draft registration, Parula claimed exemption because his father was crippled.  Parula was described as tall, with blue eyes and light hair.

- World War I; Private; Camp Travis, Texas; Base Hospital; Medical Department Detachment  [Graden, Debra, comp. Camp Travis, Texas World War I Records [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry, 2000. Original data: Major E. B. Johns, U. S. A, compiler. Camp Travis and Its Part in the World War Texas:Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., New York, 1919]

Parula's death certificate confirms he was a veteran of World War I.

- Also per his death certificate, Parula was D.O.A. at Arlington Memorial Hospital (Tarrant County, Texas).  Cause of death:  Congestive Heart Failure, Arterioslerotic Cardiovascular Disease.  Also noted:  "History of previous myocardial disorders; carcinoma of prostate."

Take all mistakes as good wishes.


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