Sunday, July 28, 2019

What'd You Do in the Revolution, Ever-So-Great-Grand Uncle, Peter Rainey?

Our 6th great-uncle, Peter Rainey (13 April 1756 Albemarle Parish, Sussex County, VA - died about Oct.1826), brother of our 5th great-grandfather Rainey, received a Revolutionary War veteran's pension, beginning in 1820 and ending at his death in 1826. He must have applied for a pension under the Act of Congress on March 18, 1818, which provided that every officer, soldier, sailor, and marine who served nine months in the Revolution, and who was or should become in need of assistance from his country for support, should be pensioned for life, officers at $20 per month, and enlisted men at $8. Based on my calculation, if he had been an enlisted soldier, he should have received $96.00 per annum. Perhaps the $60.00 was for that partial last year of his life. Maybe he died in August, not October, 1826, although the accounting for probate began 14 October 1826 with "Cash paid to the Sheriff of Sussex County."
 

Two years later, the Act of Congress of May 1, 1820 required that certified inventories of a pensioner’s estate and income were required to establish need of assistance for all pensioners placed on the rolls under the Act of of Congress on March 18, 1818. Any pensioners unable to prove need were removed from the rolls, but were allowed to reapply. It was the Act of Congress in 1832 that granted a pension to any veteran who served, whether in need or not. So, here's my quandary. The 1820 census for Peter shows him in possession of two enslaved women and one enslaved boy under 14. They were considered personal property and had values. Besides his wife, Elsie, he also had a grown son, his wife, and two small grandsons living with him. Elsie must have died before his own death. His goods were sold on 25 December 1826, amounting to only $58.77. The estate was finally settled in 1829, which in an earlier blog I thought left an amount of $11.12, but I failed to see that there were two notes his estate partially repaid at $5.57 each [other notes earlier paid off were for amounts borrowed of about $5.00 each], bringing his estate's value to $0. I assume he'd borrow money from friends and would then pay them when he or someone with his power of attorney collected his pension up in Richmond. It was against the law to secret away or give away items of value in order to qualify for a pension. Peter lived in Sussex County all his life and was related to a good many people in positions of authority, who might have looked the other way when he settled his slaves and his land on his son. That aside, what did Peter Rainey do in the American Revolutionary War?
Sussex County, Virginia
I believe that Peter served in the Sussex County militia, called out when needed - three weeks here, six weeks there - and that it added up to nine months or more. I've looked at the pension requests of other Sussex militiamen, and have assembled a chronology of the militia's service. 

When the militiamen were drafted and enrolled, each was given a number 1 through 10, which attached him to a particular company, captain and ensign, and would determine when each man would be called into active service. After serving three to six weeks, each man was discharged, only to be called back into service, sometimes even a few days later. As the war moved from the north into Virginia in 1780, rather than waiting to be drafted, the Sussex County men volunteered for militia duty. After each outing, they were verbally discharged, none receiving any document other than a chit, which they turned in for their pay.

When Thomas Holloway applied for a pension in 1832, he recounted his service in the Sussex militia. In 1776, under the command of Cpt. Willis Wilson, he marched to Smithfield and remained there about six weeks. In 1777, under the command of Cpt. Wilson, he patrolled the James River at Edmunds Point for six weeks. In 1778, under the command of Lt. Berryman, he marched to Swans Point and served six weeks. In 1779, under the command of Jacob Faulcon, he marched to Burnt Mills and served six weeks.

Joseph Prince joined the Sussex militia in 1780, serving under Col. James Gee. He marched from Sussex County to Cabin Point on the James River and from thence to various parts of the county between that point and Norfolk, where the British army then lay. His service lasted 6 weeks. He stated that the Sussex militia was divided, with one-half almost constantly in service from the time the British first invaded the state and took possession of Norfolk and Portsmouth. The militia was posted and employed to cut off British foraging parties and keep them confined within their lines. Virginia was a source of provisions for the southern armies in North and South Carolina.

Of the militiamen of Sussex County, who survived long enough to apply for a pension in 1832, every one had participated in the Battle of Petersburg in April 1781. I conclude that nearly the entire Sussex militia was called out, marched north out of the county and up the James River to join other Virginia militias commanded by generals  Muhlenberg and Von Steuben.
At the Battle of Petersburg hand-to-hand fighting occurred, despite the Virginia militia having no bayonets and little ammunition left.
I cribbed bits and pieces from three articles found on the Internet to help you understand what Peter Rainey experienced if, indeed, he marched with the Sussex militia. Some appear in a different font, depite my machinations, so bear with me.
Virginia in 1782. At bottom between Nottoway River and Black Riveri s Sussex County, where our Rainey family lived.

Background

By December 1780, the American Revolutionary War's North American main theaters had reached a critical point. The Continental Army had suffered major defeats earlier in the year, with its southern armies either captured or dispersed in the loss of Charleston and the Battle of Camden (SC) in the south, while the armies of George Washington and the British commander-in-chief for North America, Sir Henry Clinton, watched each other around New York City in the north. 
General Sir Henry Clinton (1730-1795), British Commander-in-Chief in North America

The national currency was virtually worthless, public support for the war, about to enter its sixth year, was waning, and army troops were becoming mutinous over pay and conditions. In the Americans' favor, Loyalist recruiting had been checked with a severe blow at King's Mountain in October.
Major-General Nathanael Greene 1782 by Charles Willson Peale

To counter the British threat in the south, Washington sent Major General Nathanael Greene, one of his best strategists, to rebuild the American army in North Carolina after its defeat at Camden. Lord Charles Cornwallis, leading the British troops in the south, wanted to deal with Greene and gain control over the state of Virginia. He wouldn't follow Clinton's orders from New York to stay where he was and subdue North Carolina first. No, Cornwallis, who was facing stiffening resistance from the Carolinians, wanted to subdue Virginia and expand control from there. So much easier, he must have thought. Virginia had been relatively untouched by the war up to this point. It provided men for the Continental Army and provisions. Its tobacco was shipped to the French West Indies for French munitions and stores in order to keep the Continental Army alive.
Benedict Arnold in American uniform before turning
At Cornwallis's request for a diversion in Virginia to draw attention and resources from Greene, General Clinton in December 1780 dispatched Brigadier General Benedict Arnold (who had changed sides the previous September) with 1,600 men to Virginia. Arnold's instructions were to destroy Continental Army supplies and storage depots in that state, which had largely avoided military conflict before 1780, and then to establish a base for future operations at Portsmouth. On the afternoon of 4 January, Arnold sailed up the James River and landed his force at Westover, Virginia. Moving rapidly with an overnight forced march, he raided and burned Richmond, the state capital, the next day. After another day of raiding, he returned to his boats and sailed to Portsmouth, which he then proceeded to fortify.The land approaches to this base were guarded by Virginia militia under the command of Brigadier General Peter Muhlenberg, but these men were inexperienced as well as relatively small in number, and could not prevent the movement of British troops by ship on the readily navigable rivers in the area.
The young Major-General Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834) in American uniform by Charles Willson Peale
Arnold's arrival prompted General Washington to mobilize land and naval forces to challenge him.
George Washington (1732-1799), Commander-in-chief of the Continental Army by Charles Willson Peale, 1776
Washington sent the Marquis de Lafayette with a Continental Army detachment to Virginia in February, and asked the French admiral at Newport, Rhode Island, Charles
René Dominique Sochet, Chevalier Destouches, to send a naval force with additional troops to support Lafayette. When a storm in late January caused damage to the Royal Navy fleet watching Newport, Destouches slipped a ship of the line and two frigates out of Newport while Lafayette marched south. When these arrived near Portsmouth, Arnold withdrew his ships, which were lighter vessels with shallow drafts, up the Elizabeth River, and the French fleet, with its deeper drafts, was unable to follow. The French returned to Newport, but the effort, and further urging by Washington, prompted Destouches to sally out of Newport on 8 March with his entire fleet, seven ships of the line and a recently captured frigate, with 1,200 French troops aboard. When Clinton and Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot learned of this two days later, they immediately mobilized supporting resources. Arbuthnot sailed with eight ships of the line that very day, and, in naval action on 16 March, successfully prevented Destouches from entering Chesapeake Bay. Arbuthnot's fleet was followed by transports carrying 2,000 British Army troops under the command of General William Phillips. When Phillips and his troops were landed at Portsmouth on 26 March, Phillips, with seniority over Arnold, took command of the forces there.
British Major-General William Phillips (1731 – 13 May 1781)
Phillips then advanced again against the largely undefended countryside. A Virginia militia force under Major General Baron von Steuben tried to check their progress and protect Richmond and Petersburg. Von Steuben could discern that, although the British might attack Richmond as before, they definitely considered Petersburg a prime objective, since it served as a military depot for both state and Continental forces, was a water and land communications hub, and a major tobacco trading center and, most importantly, it was a supply point for Greene’s army in the South. It may also have been the largest settlement in Virginia; in 1782, Petersburg’s population was 2828, which was almost three times that of Richmond’s 1031.
Major-General Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben (1730-1794) by Charles Willson Peale

By 23 April, the British force had sailed up the James River to Westover at the confluence of the James and Appomattox rivers, landing there just before sunset on the 24th, driving off about 500 of the Virginia militia, under the command of General Peter Muhlenberg, which had been paralleling them on foot from Portsmouth.  Reports to von Steuben claimed the British force numbered between 2,500 and 3,000 British Regulars. One again, Phillips’s military objectives were to capture American supplies, cut the American armies’ communications with General Greene’s Southern Army, and link up with General Cornwallis’s troops marching north from Wilmington.
Major-General Peter Muhlenberg (1746-1807)

Steuben ordered Muhlenberg's troops to move immediately into the city, thus bringing them under his direct command. In the meantime, more Southside county militias had been alerted, had met at courthouses, collected guns and ammunition, and marched toward Petersburg. The Sussex militia marched north. [The boats moved slowly upriver from Portsmouth; men on fast horses could spread the word to von Steuben, Muhlenberg and the county militias.]


On 24 April, as the afternoon progressed, about 1,000 of General Muhlenberg's Virginia militia marched into Petersburg. Other militia units were also gathering. During the night of the 24th, Von Steuben held a council of war and decided to gamble on the questionable "staying-power" of the militia. Governor Thomas Jefferson had already issued a call-up of militia reinforcements, yet von Steuben could barely muster five regiments of militia infantry, three small companies of horse, and two six-pound artillery pieces. He had no illusions about winning the coming battle with a total force of slightly over one thousand men.  Lafayette's force was still several days away, and another Continental Army force under General Anthony Wayne was even farther off.  Von Steuben and Muhlenberg, who had been avoiding conflict with the British due to their weak numbers and inexperienced troops, decided it was time to make some sort of stand. Their objective was to stand, fight, and get out with the minimum of losses. Von Steuben decided on a show-of-force, not only as a deterrent to the British, but as a morale factor for the local citizenry of Virginia. As the victory at King's Mountain in North Carolina had swayed citizens to stick with the fledgling new America, so von Steuben hoped to sway Virginians from aligning themselves with the British now that their state was finally invaded. That evening General von Steuben ordered Muhlenberg's corps to the north side of the Appomattox onto the peninsula known as Pocahontas Island and onto the elevated ground overlooking the river. Then, during the moonless night, von Steuben and Muhlenberg moved their forces south of the river into Blandford, just east of Petersburg.

Battle

Around mid-morning of the 25th, Phillips began his 12-mile advance from City Point [present-day Hopewell], where they'd off-loaded on the James River, toward Petersburg, following the river road of the Appomattox River. Phillips' command consisted of the 78th and 80th Regiments of Foot, John Graves Simcoe's Loyalist Queen's Rangers, Benedict Arnold's American Legion, a force of Hessian jägers, and two battalions of light infantry. Eleven of Phillips' gunboats (small oar craft carrying either eighty armed troops or supplies and field baggage) paralleled the British march. The boats encountered the first Americans about 2-3 miles from Blandford. It was not until shortly after noon that the British column came in sight of the American line.

Early in the morning, General Muhlenberg, exercising actual ground command of the defending force, had placed four militia regiments as his first line of battle on the eastern edge of Blandford. Here stood the regiments of colonels John Dick and Thomas Merriweather (commanding the Sussex County militia), drawn up on higher ground overlooking Poor's Creek and the plain over which the British were advancing.  Merriweather anchored the left of the line at the river, and Dick's the right, extending into the hills south of Blandford. The second line, which was to form the main line of defense after the first one fell back, consisted of Ralph Faulkner's regiment on the left, and John Slaughter's on the right. The line extended along what is today Madison Street in Petersburg, from a causeway and bridge across the Lieutenant Run, a creek separating Petersburg and Blandford. The line was positioned to maximize the exposure of British troops to gunfire as they approached. Von Steuben also placed one regiment on the north shore of the Appomattox River to guard against the possibility of the British landing on that side of the river. He also positioned a small reserve force at the southern end of the Pocahontas Bridge, and Muhlenberg sent a company of Slaughter's men down the north bank to provide advance warning as the British approached.
 The battle was preceded by an exchange of fire between the British gunboats and the American advance reconnaissance. Around 2:00 pm Phillips halted his column, then about one mile from the American lines, and organized his forces for battle. On his right, Colonel Robert Abercrombie was to lead a battalion of light infantry and the company of 50 jägers along the river to drive the American left back to the Pocahontas Bridge. Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Dundas was to lead the 78th and 80th Foot to attempt a flanking maneuver against the American right, and Phillips held the second light infantry battalion and the Loyalist units of Simcoe and Arnold in reserve. He also held in reserve the four small guns the expedition had brought.

As the British forces advanced on the American line, Phillips and Abercrombie noticed that one enterprising company of Virginia militia had established a position on a hill that provided them with an excellent opportunity to enfilade the British line. Abercrombie sent the jägers to flush them out. The lines then closed, and the action became general.The first line of militia put up stiffer resistance than the British anticipated as one militia company, possibly our Sussex militia, forward of Muhlenberg's line, fired two volleys at the advancing British and then repaired back on to Dick's line.
British Colonel John Graves Simcoe (1752-1806)
Phillips quickly deployed his columns, placing a battalion of British Light Infantry on his right flank and the 80th and 76th Regiments on his left. Seeing the Americans had no flanking units to the south, Phillips ordered the Queen's Rangers, under Colonel Simcoe [if you watched the TV series, Turn, Washington's Spies, you'll well-remember Simcoe], and the 2d Battalion of Light Infantry on a wide sweeping movement around the American right. Their objective was to get behind Muhlenberg's' forces, into the city of Petersburg and hopefully trap the Americans or thwart any attempt by them to retreat north across the Pocahontas Bridge and the Appomattox River.
By two o'clock the battle had begun in earnest and the British Light Infantry was pressing the initial attack from the British right, along the River Road. There was heavy firing from both sides, but Muhlenberg had chosen his ground well. The British had to cross a marshy low ground around Poor's Creek, then advance up a steep grade to get to the Americans. The attack of the 76th and 80th Regiments from the British left bore down on the American right in an effort to turn Muhlenberg's flank. The entire British advance was slow and cautious due to heavy firing from the American side. The British were no doubt suspicious of an American Militia line holding longer than a few volleys. Were these trained Continental soldiers? 
The British artillery, and the strength of numbers that threatened to flank their position convinced the first militia line to retreat to the second after half an hour of resistance.The second American line consisted of two regiments that had not seen action, and now the two regiments that had retired from the first line of defense. As Phillips’s army attacked the four regiments, it was repelled several times. This second American line held the British back for about an hour.
Battle of Petersburg, 1782
While Simcoe moved, Phillips made two assaults on the second militia line, both of which were repulsed. After about one-half hour of fighting, Phillips ordered his artillery placed on a plateau in the British center. It was not until the British artillery was in position to rake the American line more than an hour later that von Steuben finally ordered the retreat. Once the two six-pound and two three-pound guns were brought into action, Muhlenberg ordered his 1st line to fall back through Blandford onto his main line in Petersburg. (Geographically, Petersburg and Blandford are separated only by a wide valley and Lieutenant Run Creek.) The American withdrawal was so well timed it prevented the 76th and 80th from possibly turning Muhlenberg's right.
The withdrawal of the Virginia Militia was expeditious and orderly through the village of Blandford, across the valley and creek of Lieutenant Run, and onto the higher ground of the eastern edge of Petersburg. Muhlenberg's main line consisted of two more regiments of Infantry under Colonels Faulkner and Slaughter. As Phillips troops advanced through Blandford in pursuit, they came in range of Steuben's artillery, safely placed north of the Appomattox on the heights overlooking Petersburg. Steuben had earlier decided that when retreat became necessary, the narrow Pocahontas Bridge would be more of a trap than an exit if he had to retreat with Infantry, cavalry and artillery.  This bridge was the only one over the Appomattox River for about 20 miles. It was only 12 to 15 feet wide and 35 feet long.
He therefore placed his two six-pound guns on the heights to cover his operations south of the river. He also used his three companies of horse and Goode's Regiment of Infantry to cover his rear, north of the river. As an additional piece of insurance, he also placed one battalion of infantry on the south end of the bridge to secure that avenue. Von Steuben was an expert in military tactics.
When the Light Infantry, the 76th and 80th Regiments, of British and Hessian troops, arrived on the western edge of Blandford they found themselves confronted by a wide and somewhat deep valley surmounted on it's opposite summit by the four regiments of Virginia Militia. Though Phillips had the superior force, he was under the guns of the American artillery, at about three-quarters of a mile distant. He also faced the prospect of having to traverse a wide piece of marshy low ground to close with his enemy. Both lines of battle were out of musket range. However, heavy firing was maintained over another hour. The British launched at least two assaults across Lieutenant Run, however were driven back by the militia line of musketry.

During this time Simcoe and the Queen's Rangers had made their wide sweep around the American lines and were proceeding north toward the American rear. Simultaneously, the British artillery opened fire from a new position. Phillips had found an excellent piece of high ground on the American right front from which he could exact enfilading fire all along Muhlenberg's front. Concurrently, the American militia was running low on their "allocated" ammunition. It was here that Steuben determined his show-of-force had reached its limits. He called for a general withdrawal of his army over the Pocohontas Bridge to the north of the Appomattox. Again the militia executed an orderly retreat, this time through Petersburg, towards the narrow wooden bridge.
Colonel Simcoe and his Rangers were not close enough to cut off the retreat, so Simcoe decided to proceed farther to the north and west.  His intent was to locate a known ford over the river, cross over onto the heights and possibly get on the American rear in that sector. Barring this, if nothing else, he could possibly draw off part of the American artillery fire being directed at Phillips' main advancing line. In the latter he succeeded.

Up to this point Muhlenberg had expertly utilized time and terrain to keep the British at a sufficient distance where they could not close with bayonets on the "bayonetless" American lines. Between Lieutenant Run and the Pocahontas Bridge there was little obstacle to delay Phillips' pursuit, other than the village streets and buildings. The narrowness of the bridge slowed the retiring American units as anticipated. Here the militia again showed surprising mettle. As British lines pressed on the American retreat; units of both cavalry and infantry stationed north of the bridge laid down covering fire. Retreating units also stood their ground, providing covering fire for militiamen crossing the bridge.
Inside several city blocks near Pocahontas Bridge, the heaviest fighting and losses of the battle occurred. Fighting became close and hand-to-hand. The American casualties of wounded and captured were highest near the bridge and from British artillery firing as the troops, who had successfully crossed the bridge, and ascended the heights to the north. In a final American act of determination, while under fire, militiamen took up the planks of Pocahontas Bridge to prevent further British pursuit (an act which later earned them the praise of contemporaries such as Thomas Jefferson and General Nathanael Greene). They had held off the British for nearly three hours before yielding Petersburg.
Once they got onto the heights, Steuben's army paused near Violet Bank (in present-day Colonial Heights), and engaged the British force on the opposite river banks in an artillery duel, with further losses on both sides. After being replenished with a supply of rum, the weary militia then continued its northward retreat, reaching Chesterfield Courthouse the following day—just as the British force was crossing the Appomattox, destroying three more bridges behind them.
Chesterfield County, Virginia
Total battle losses, in killed, wounded and captured, were estimated at about 100 for the Americans and about 60 for the British.
Though the town was thoroughly searched for military and public stores, there was no wanton damage inflicted on public or private property. Phillips found no military supplies left in the town, however a large quantity of tobacco, important to international trade, was found.  Four thousand hogsheads of tobacco were moved into the streets and burned rather than being destroyed in private warehouses where it had been stored. There was one warehouse set fire by a British soldier, subsequently punished for his inattention to Phillips' orders. They burned one ship and a number of small vessels on stocks and in the river. 
Two days following the battle, Phillips marched his army north on the final leg of his campaign, burning the log, military training barracks at Chesterfield Court House, destroying several war and cargo ships at Osborne's Landing, and burning the foundry and numerous warehouses at Westham.

Aftermath

Lord Charles Cornwallis (1738-1805) by John Singleton Copley
British General Phillips' and Benedict Arnold's pursuit of the retreating American militia continued to Manchester, across the river from Richmond, which they reached on 29 April. [Today the distance traveled by car from Petersburg to Richmond is 25 minutes.] However, they were unable to enter Richmond, as Lafayette had marched rapidly and occupied the city first. After destroying tobacco warehouses throughout Chesterfield County, the British sailed back down the James to Westover, while Lafayette advanced as far as Pocahontas Island. At Westover on 7 May, Phillips received orders to return to Petersburg and await Lord Cornwallis, who was moving north from Wilmington, North Carolina.  Upon reaching Petersburg on 9 May, Phillips was greeted by a bombardment from two pieces of Major-General Marquis de Lafayette's artillery sent to be positioned north of the river in what is now Colonial Heights. The pounding continued while Phillips lay dying of typhoid fever at the Bolling residence at East Hill. He died on May 13. Temporarily in charge, Benedict Arnold ordered that his body be buried at Blandford Church that night in an unmarked grave.
Blandford Church, still here after over 280 years

Cornwallis marched north out of North Carolina, crossing Sussex County, and reached Petersburg on 20 May, bringing the British force up to 5,300 men. Shortly after, additional British reinforcements arrived from New York, raising his force to over 7,000 men. Cornwallis ordered Benedict Arnold back to New York, and then fruitlessly chased Lafayette through central Virginia for a time before making his way back to Williamsburg, with Lafayette's forces shadowing him. Cornwallis was eventually ordered to fortify Yorktown, where Lafayette, joined early in September by a French force from the West Indies, blockaded the land routes while the French fleet prevented the arrival of British relief fleets. With the arrival of George Washington and the Franco-American army from the north, Cornwallis was besieged, and surrendered his army on 17 October 1781.
John Trumbull's Surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown 17 Oct. 1782
Absolom Flowers, a private in the Sussex militia, recounted his part in the battle when he applied for a  pension in 1833. ". . . [W]e were ordered out as a relief to some militia near Petersburg, remained under arms at Petersburg all night, and in the ensuing morning was attacked by the enemy, who compelled us to retreat -- this fight is usually called in Virginia the Battle of Petersburg. Muhlenberg and Steuben commanded this battle. Captain Massenberg, who commanded my company, was wounded in the hip and carried off. Four of my comrades were also wounded. The command of my company devolved on Lieut.[Edward] Powell who drew us off from the action and carried us to the coalpits [in Chesterfield County] and remained 8 or 10 days. The enemy having moved toward Richmond for the purpose of burning that city, we marched there and joined a strong body under the command of Lafayette. Arnold having discovered him [Lafayette] made a sudden retreat back to Petersburg, and we lay at Richmond some time, then marched down on the north side of the James River some 7 or 8 miles below Richmond, then back to Richmond where 11 of us were discharged. This tour I served 8 weeks." But he hadn't finished the war. "In October of the same year was again called into service . . . marched to Surry Court House . . . and the command of our company devolved to Lieut. Thomas Newsom. Col. Blunt and Major Mabry were our field officers. We were marched to the James River, crossed it from Swans Point to James Town . . . and thence to Williamsburg and Little York, where we joined General Washington's Besieging Army. We were placed with that part of the army under the immediate command of Steuben. I served there during the latter part of the siege -- the battles and the final surrender of the British Army. When the prisoners were about to be removed to Fredericksburg, my brother came and relieved me, and I was regularly discharged and returned home. I served eight weeks in this tour -- making in all seven months of faithful service. . . ."

 Many Virginia militiamen witnessed the surrender at Yorktown. If Peter Rainey did serve in the Sussex militia to the end of the war, he most probably witnessed it, too.
Most history books list the action at Petersburg as a minor battle or skirmish. However, the stand of the Americans against such an overwhelming force was a full-scale battle by any Revolutionary War standards. The actions of the Virginia militias bought gave Lafayette a full day to entrench his army on the heights of Richmond, and ultimately prevented a second "sacking" of Richmond - as was seen in the previous January, when British Brigadier Benedict Arnold assaulted and burned much of that city and kept open communications and supplies to the American forces.


Major-General Peter Muhlenberg
You may be curious to read about the lives of Major-General Peter Muhlenberg HERE 
Von Steuben

Major-General Freidrich von Steuben HERE 
Lafayette
Major-General Marquis de Lafayette HERE


I was looking for a Revolutionary War song to play for you, but ran across the surrender of Cornwallis on YouTube from the TV series "Turn: Washington's Spies," and since it is an accurate depiction: Cornwallis wouldn't appear, feigning illness; French General Rochambeau refused to accept the sword; Washington nodded for his 2nd-in-command Major-General Benjamin Lincoln, who had been personally humiliated in his earlier surrender of Charleston, SC, (he was subsequently exchanged for General William Phillips), to accept it. Rather stirring. HERE

Monday, July 15, 2019

Grace Bernhardt Raney Family Tree

 
Wedding party of Grace Elizabeth Bernhardt & Paul Whitman Raney 2 July 1934, Spokane. Celeste McKenna maid of honor, Freddie Shelton best man. Next to Freddie is Denny Raney, Josephine "Grandma" McKenna in glasses, then our grandfather Frank Raney. Behind Freddie is Butch, two of his brothers to the right.

This blog is addressed to Pat, Sandra, Michele and Paula Raney. As with other family blogs, if you are a child of the above-mentioned persons or of Larry Raney (1942-2008), you add a great- to the individuals described below; if you are a grandchild, you add two greats- .
Miss Grace Bernhardt, Daughter of J.F. Bernhardt of Colfax, will be married Monday morning to Paul Raney, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Raney of Parkwater. The ceremony will take place at St. Paschal's church in the valley.
Her children recall that Grace Bernhardt Raney didn't talk about her childhood. They believe she'd been an unhappy child. As an adult, she avoided driving past her childhood homes in Spokane. Here are two anecdotes my mother, Jean (Raney) Charbonneau, told me.  At Grace and Paul’s wedding reception in 1934, my mother, then nine, burst into tears and clung to her brother Paul and he hugged her back, tears running down his face. Grace approached, not a little displeased. “Why are you two crying? Everyone’s supposed to be happy here.” She had a point, of course.
Grace and her father "Butch" on her wedding day
Perhaps it was a few months later when Grandma and Grandpa Raney and Mom (maybe Mary Agnes, too) were invited to dinner at Paul and Grace’s apartment. It was the first time Mom ate canned fruit salad tossed with whipped cream, which meant Grace used an egg beater to whip that cream, which took at least 20 minutes of frenzied handle-turning. As an adult, my mother served canned fruit salad with whipped cream on Sundays and special occasions, the electric mixer having become de rigor.
2011 photo of 420 E. Euclid, Spokane, where Paul & Grace reared their family 1945-1950
When parents died young or were not storytellers, their children lacked family stories to pass on. This is an attempt to place Grace (Bernhardt) Raney’s ancestors in the context of our family’s American story.
Melva, Grace, George and George Martin Hyatt c1919
Your mother, Grace Elizabeth Bernhardt, was born 13 April 1914 in Hibbing, Minnesota. She died in Seattle, April 5, 1989.  A relative in Minnesota put Grace in her Ancestry family tree, writing that she was known as “Kissy” as a child. 

1907 postcard of Holy Names Academy, Spokane. The only change when Grace attended was that the trees had grown taller.

Grace attended Holy Names Academy in Spokane, where she met Celeste McKenna, eventually moving in with the McKenna family, who lived on Nora near Hamilton. This was before Frank and Mary Raney bought the house at 513 Nora in 1935. The McKennas became her "adopted" family. Pat Raney and his children called the mother Josephine McKenna "Grandma McKenna." She remained close to Grace and her family the rest of her life.
The McKenna house at E.712 Nora, where Grace lived while attending Holy Names Academy.

During my freshman year at Holy Names Academy, Spokane, everyday I passed Grace's graduation photograph on the wall of the 3rd floor hallway. She was a lovely graduate.
Butch, Paul Raney and son Pat, Felts Field, Spokane. Pat appears to be about a year old.
After Grace and Paul Raney had son Pat in April 1935, they lived at 322 E. Augusta, a couple of blocks away from where our grandparents lived on Nora. 
Grace, Pat and Butch Bernhardt 1936.

Patrick Raney was born in 1935 in Spokane

Sandra Raney was born in 1939 in Spokane.


Larry Raney was born in 1942 in Spokane and died in 2008 in Chelan, WA

 Paula Raney was born in 1949 in Spokane.
 



Michele Raney was born in Seattle in 1952
Grace's mother, Melva Lenore (Hyatt) Bernhardt c.1920

Your grandmother, Melva “Mellie” Lenore Hyatt (27 May1893, Duluth, MN–15 April 1926, Spokane, WA), was listed as a telephone operator in the 1910 census when she was 17. She continued working at the exchange after her marriage to your grandfather, John Frederick Bernhardt, on 7 September 1910.  

According to the 1910 census, John Bernhardt (2 Dec.1888, Duluth, MN-1 Nov. 1954, Pasco, WA) was working as a wagon driver for  "Wholesale Meats" at the time they married. The family lore is that John possibly met Melva when he  worked as a chemist, selecting samples of iron ore from cars waiting to be loaded on ore ships in Duluth harbor, and then taking them to a laboratory for testing. The manager of the lab was Melva's father, George Hyatt. We don't know exactly when Melva and John met. In the 1910 census her father is listed as a laborer in the building trade - not much help. John Frederick Bernhardt's parents immigrated from Austria to Minnesota in 1886.

Melva and John had George in 1912 (d.1975) and Grace two years later.  The 1920 census, enumerated 10 January, lists Melva, age 28, and John F. Bernhardt, age 32, living in Duluth with children George (8) and Grace (5).  John was a fireman for the city, later telling grandson Pat Raney he drove the steam engine and would have to jump down from the driver's seat and block the fire engine's wheels on those steep streets.  They lived in a mortgaged house. The marriage must have been unhappy, because Melva and John divorced two months later, 5 March 1920.
Grace, George and their father John F. Bernhardt. Taken in Duluth, c.1921
Melva married Eliezer A
ndreas Landre, a recent Norwegian immigrant, on September 16, 1920 in Duluth.
Eliezer Landre

His wife had died in the 1918 influenza pandemic, leaving him with four small children. He, Melva and their combined families were living in Duluth in 1921, but sometime in 1922 moved to Spokane.


After the divorce, John Bernhardt was listed in the Duluth city directory as a meat cutter for CZ Thoreson, boarding with his brother, Leo Bernhardt.
Bernhardt brothers. Tom, not shown, died in 1929 of head injury in auto accident and speculation is the photo was taken after his death, but John looks rather young, so probably between 1918 when Tony returned from the Marine Corps and an arbitrary date of 1921.
John moved to Montana, and worked for the Great Northern Railroad as a news agent, commonly called a "news butch" or just a "butch," vending cigars, playing cards, sandwiches, and other snacks, a job that allowed him free passage to Spokane to occasionally visit his children. His nickname "Butch" resulted from this occupation, not from his abilities as a meat butcher.
Melva died in Spokane on 15 April 1926, age 32, of encephalitis lethargica, an epidemic of which had been ongoing from 1916 through 1926. Wikipedia article HERE


Aliezer Lande died the following January,1927, back in Duluth. Either before Melva's death or just after, John Bernhardt moved to Spokane. He appears in the 1926 Spokane Directory as "news agent, GNRy" and was living at E730 Boone Ave. Now with  Grace and George living with him, John again took up his butcher’s cleaver. By the publication of the 1928 Spokane Directory, he was a seller of retail meats at 828 Sharp Ave.

John Bernhardt, 2nd from right, at Golden Rule Market, corner of Sharp and Hamilton, Spokane. The tall boy on the left became a Jesuit and in the 1950s taught Pat Raney English at Seattle University.

John Bernhardt's business card
In the 1930 census, John Bernhardt described himself as widowed, a butcher in a meat market, and living at 828 1/2 Baldwin with daughter Grace (14) and son George (18). His rent was $15.00 per month.
Grace and brother George c. 1930 Spokane
By 1934, the year Grace married Paul Raney, John was living in Colfax. He went back to Minnesota in 1938 and married Lillian Cecelia Golcz. In 1940 he was a butcher and living in Spokane with Lil, but in 1942 they were living in Pomeroy, WA, where they operated a grocery for about six years.  In 1950 John was divorced again and living in Pasco, WA. At the time of his death on 1 November 1954, his obituary described him as “retired” and employed by Ace Tavern in Pasco. He was only 65. 
In a different sweater. George Bernhardt, Gonzaga High School class photo,1930

Grace's brother, George John Bernhardt (1912-1975), graduated from Gonzaga High School (becoming Gonzaga Prep after its move to the North Hill). He married Mary Weitz (1914-1999) in 1936 in Colfax, Whitman County, WA.  They had sons Richard (b1938), Thomas George (1943-1994), and Jerry. George remained in Whitman County the rest of his life.
Whitman County, Washington
 Pat Raney writes of his grandfather, John Frederick "Butch" Bernhardt:

My first memory of Grandpa was from when I was three.  We were at the Sportsman Fair, held under the elevated railroad tracks near Trent and Howard in Spokane.  I think it was about the time that Sandra was born, so 1938. Dad was also with us that day.  I remember an automated sign above our heads, flashing on and off.


I'd been told Butch had operated a meat market in Sprague, Washington - it must have been between 1935 and 1938 - so Barb and I stopped in town on one of our trips east, but couldn’t find anyone who remembered that far back.  We drove up to the county seat, but the library was closed and I haven’t pursued the search. Butch and Lil married in 1938. It was not a random meeting; they knew each other back in Duluth.  Lil was Melva’s floor supervisor at the telephone exchange, so they were all acquainted.  She was a tiny lady, about the size of Grandma Raney, but a couple of dress sizes smaller. 
The house at 2017 N. Hamilton, Spokane, for which John paid rent of $17.00 for the 2nd floor, according to 1940 census (photo vertically distorted )
I remember their living at 2017 N. Hamilton on the second floor. The stairs to their apartment were exterior on the alley side.  The house was painted green and white and the last time we were in Spokane, it was the same.  The landlord was a foreigner with an accent.  His daughter's name sounded like "Bobidah" and was the nosiest kid.  She was younger than I was, but would barge in uninvited.  I remember Butch taking ill one time. Bedridden on my visit, he pulled his quilt up to his chin and exclaimed that the only way to beat the illness was to bake it out.
Garfield County, Pomeroy its only city.

They moved to Pomeroy about 1940. Mom, Sandy and I took the Greyhound to nearby Dusty, where Butch picked us up in his puddle jumper, a 1932 Model A with a rumble seal. 
I came down with strep while we were there.
Grace, Sandra, Pat Raney and Lil Bernhardt, Pomeroy c.1942

I remember lying in the back seat of the bus on the way home as I was quite sick.  Had my tonsils out shortly after.
Pomeroy, Washington c1960
I spent a couple of weeks down there when I was older.  Butch and Lil lived in the back of the store, located on the East-West highway through town. 
Old Pomeroy Train Depot
Behind it was the train station, an exciting place for me.  The unit came to town every couple of days, so it was fun to sit on the back stairs and watch.  One day Butch sent me to the station to bring back in a wagon a quarter-side of beef that was offloaded from a refrigerator car. He took out the rumble seat of his Model A and put in a box for deliveries to his customers. 
Imagine this 1932 Model "A" with a hard top and a box of groceries in place of the rumble seat

 He always sang “Asleep in the Deep” when we two drove around in that puddle jumper. 
During my stay, Butch taught me to bone beef and make hamburger.  We also made mock chicken legs, grinding up chicken meat, rolling in on a stick and then in breadcrumbs.


Lil wasn’t happy in that tiny dwelling, so she eventually bought a house on the south-side of town.  I think Butch had a drinking problem, although I never saw him intoxicated. They finally divorced. She remained in Pomeroy [where she died at age 79 in 1969 from complications from a broken hip] when Butch found employment in Pasco. He ran a male-only tavern in downtown that was owned by a rancher from Pendleton, Oregon. 
Pasco, Franklin County, Washington
He loved to fish, play cards (Pinochle and Cribbage) and tell yarns. When I was small, Butch told me stories about giants and trolls and goblins and all sorts of nasty things.  (I would have nightmares.)  In my sophomore year of college I studied German.  We purchased six small softbound books with stories in German.  After I could understand the language, I began reading the stories.  Lo and behold, here in German were the yarns my Austrian grandfather had told me several years earlier.  I was excited and looking forward to writing to him in Pasco “auf Deutch.” Alas, he died in late autumn that year 1954, I think from colon cancer, so I never had the opportunity to do that. I think about him often. 
Great-grandfather Josef Bernhardt c. 1890 Duluth, MN
John Frederick Bernhardt’s father was your great-grandfather, Josef Bernhardt (Bernhard), born 1850 in Kaltenbach, Zwettl, Niederösterreich (Lower Austria, near the Czech border). 
The town, located in the Tyrol, is now a ski resort. Josef first married Anna Rinlander (d.1873) and they had baby Theresa Bernhardt Vilsmeyer. A descendant stated on Ancestry: "It's in my family lore that Joseph's first young wife visited him with baby Teresa to drop off his lunch while he was at work at the log mill. And that she wasn't careful and part of her apron caught on the log cutting machine and started pulling her in. She was able to throw baby Teresa to Joseph who caught her and then she got sucked in and killed by the machine..."   
Theresa Merry Bernhardt Vilsmyere (1873-1929)

However, Ancestry.com indicates Theresa's descendants have DNA connecting them to both Josef and Anna (Steiner) Bernhardt, so she would be your full great-aunt, not a half-great aunt. It's a puzzlement. O, what tangled roots we weave . . .

Kaltenbach, Austria, at foot of mountain, showing ski slopes above.
So, when did Josef marry Anna Steiner (b.1850 Vienna, Austria –d.1910 Duluth, MN)? We know only that they married some years before they immigrated to America in 1884. Anna had earlier borne a son, Ignatius Max Steiner, in 1874. Was he Josef's son or another man's? A descendant discovered that Anna herself had been born in a foundling hospital, but its significance – whether her mother was destitute or unmarried or both, is unknown. 
Your Great-grandmother Anna Steiner Bernhardt
Josef's and Anna's daughter, Mary (Bernhardt) Lockhart, was born in Austria in 1876.
Mary (Bernhardt) Lockhart (1876-1943)
Five more children would be born to them. Frank, Leopold, Thomas, John and Anton "Tony" Bernhardt.
c1895 Joseph and Anna (Steiner) Bernhardt and children. Sitting children: Thomas, Anton (in dress) and John. Standing children: Leopold, Max Steiner, Mary and Frank. Theresa is not pictured.

Anton "Tony" Bernhardt (1891-1932). Photo taken c1909, when in the state guard (we assume). He enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps in 1914 and served 4 years, most of it at Pearl Harbor; discharged May 1918 at Mare Island, CA
Because the 1890 Federal Census was destroyed in a fire, and Duluth city directories say only that Joseph (Josef) Bernhardt was a “laborer,” his place of employment is unknown. He and Anna had a quarrelsome marriage. Josef may have been physically abusive. He was arrested at Anna’s request in April, 1898, and placed on bonds to keep the peace.  On 2 May 1898, a Monday, he and Anna quarreled early in the afternoon. She threatened to pack up and leave and, as in the past, he retorted that if she did, he'd kill himself. According to Anna, she stepped out on the front porch and Josef, still in the kitchen, grabbed the loaded shotgun standing in the corner, placed the barrel against his throat and touched the trigger with his foot. Entering below the left side of his jaw, the load embedded in his brain and killed him instantly. Hearing the shot, Anna rushed in to find him bleeding all over her kitchen floor.  She ran from the house, her cries alerting neighbors, who came to her aide and called the police. When the coroner inspected the body at about 5 p.m. and heard the story of the family’s troubles from Anna and the neighbors, he decided it was a clear case of suicide and waived an inquest.
Anna's home. Note image of photographer in window and that the attic appears in use.

In 1888 Josef had purchased for $250.00 a vacant lot, on which the house at 604 E. 10th Street, Duluth, would be built for this large family. Anna (Steiner) Bernhardt wasted away with cancer and died at age 59 in 1910. The visible tumor was on her genitals, so possibly it was secondary to bladder and urethra cancer, which often shows features of transitional cell carcinomas with lymph node metastasis. She left the house to youngest sons John and Anton. There are no gravestones on Anna's and Josef's graves at Calvary Cemetery in Duluth, but the lot numbers are registered.

610 10th Street, Duluth, today. Note the upstairs windows have been rearranged.


The Hyatt Line: 
Your great-grandfather, George Martin Hyatt, c.1918

Your great-grandfather, George Martin Hyatt, was born in 1867 in Minnesota and died in 1945, at Bruno, Pine County, MN; at least that’s where he’s buried.
Melva (Hyatt) Bernhardt and father George Martin Hyatt in MN, photo taken 1910-1916
Goodhue County, MN
In the 1870 census in Burnside, Goodhue County, MN, George Martin Hyatt was three. His father John C. Hyatt (sometimes spelled Hiatt) stated his age as 59 (actually, he was 43), a stone mason, born in Pennsylvania. His mother Amelia was 37, born in Michigan. He had siblings John E. (13, born in MO), Mary Ann (12, born in IL), Thomas J. (9, born in MO), Herbert (1, born in MN).
Big Stone County, MN
In the 1880 census in Brown’s Valley, Big Stone County, MN, George Hyatt was 14; his father John C. Hyatt (stated age as 59, actually 53) was still a stone mason; his mother Amelia (47) kept house, but the head of household was the 23-year-old son, John Hyatt, a farmer. Nearly everyone in the family was suffering from typhoid fever at the time of the census. Living with them were George's sister Mary Hyatt Wright (21), husband James Wright, and 1-year-old son, Edgar. George had other siblings Herbert (12), Minnie (10), Jane (8) and Francis (4).

In the 1895 Minnesota state census, George was married to Bertha Hammer (1872 Norway-bef. 1900 MN) and listed himself as a mason.
Duluth is on Lake Superior in Saint Louis County, Minnesota
By 1900, Bertha had died, and in the 1900 census George Hyatt and daughter Melva, listed as Mellie, were living with his sister Mary (Hyatt) Wright (b.1851 MO) and husband James in Duluth. Son Ernest George, age 3, was absent from this census, his whereabouts described farther down. George stated his father was born “at sea” and his mother was born in Michigan, to which his sister agreed, giving the census taker the same information (or one of them supplied these details). In 1902, George was working as a boilermaker for the Zenith Furnace Co. In 1905 he was listed in the city directory as a laborer for Ramstad & Todd. In 1906 he was a hod carrier, and had purchased the house on 3221 Vernon in Duluth.
Present-day photo of George Hyatt's home at 3221 Vernon, Duluth, where Melva lived from 1906 until her marriage in 1910.
In the 1910 census in Duluth, George Martin Hyatt (42), a laborer in the building trade, owned his own home with no mortgage. The census taker listed George's his father as having been born in Denmark [he was mistaken] and his mother in New York. He had married in 1901 2nd wife Celia F. Hyatt, age 39, born in Norway. Children [Melva] Lenore was 18, and Ernest George was 12 (he'd probably been returned to his father after the 1901 marriage). After 1910, George doesn't show up in a Duluth city directory, so perhaps he'd moved away after Melva's marriage. There is no 1920 census found for him. 

A word about Melva's brother Ernest George Hyatt (1897-1977). He finished 8th grade; married his first wife Marie Goberstein in 1915, a month after their daughter Jeannette Bertha was born. They had son Clarence the following year. These children were Grace Bernhardt's first cousins and your 2nd cousins. George enlisted in the army in October 1918, but was discharged in December, the war having ended November 11. The marriage failed and by 1920 Marie had taken her children to live with her parents on a Minnesota farm. Ernest, who became an auto mechanic, eventually remarried. He is buried at Ft. Snelling National Cemetery in Minnesota.

In the 1930 census George Martin Hyatt owned a dairy farm at Norman, Pine County, MN. He stated his father was born in Denmark and his mother in New York.
Pine County, Minnesota
In the 1940 census in Norman, Pine County, MN, George Martin Hyatt (73) and his 3rd wife Mary Catherine (Shoemaker) Hyatt (59) and their son George Marion (age 14 - b.1925) (not to be confused with first son Ernest George Hyatt)  lived with his stepson Arthur Tietz (from Mary Catherine’s first marriage) and his family. George Martin Hyatt died in April 1945 and is buried in Bruno, Pine County, MN.

Your great-grandmother, Alberta Lenora “Bertha” Hammer (born 1872, Hedmark, Norway–died before 1900, Duluth, MN), immigrated to America in 1881 with her parents, your 2nd great-grandparents Johan Fridrik Welhelm Hammer and Anna (Stori) Hammer, her brothers Ludwig (1863-1944), Johan “John” (b.1867), Olaf (1880-1968), Inga (1870-1968), Oline/Olena (1865–bef 1900) and Karen (b.1874). 
Not a relative, but shows that Norwegian immigrants often debarked in America in their best clothes. Photo taken at Ellis Island.

It’s probable the Hammer family took passage from Norway to Great Britain and then to Canada. The Cunard and White Star lines had a monopoly on transporting Scandinavian immigrants.  After arriving in Montreal, either they  took a steamship up the St. Lawrence and through the Great Lakes to cross the border into Minnesota, or they traveled via the Canadian Pacific part of the way. Most Scandinavians arrived in Midwest America in this manner and I find no arrival information for them at an American port. 
Otter Tail County, Minnesota
The family was in Fergus Falls, Otter Tail County, Minnesota, by 1884 and appear in the 1885 Minnesota state census.
 
1890 View of Fergus Falls, MN
The father Fridrik is not listed in the 1885 state census – a  census taker's error because Anna is listed as head of the family, but identified as a male. Fridrik’s name does appear on some Evangelical Lutheran Church records in Minnesota: In 1884 daughter Inga was confirmed in Fergus Falls and their place of origin is “Norge.” In 1887 in Fergus Falls Alberta Hammer (your great-grandmother), age 15, was confirmed (giving Fridrik’s full name, mother Anna, and that they came from Romedal, Norge. When daughter Karen was confirmed in 1890 in Duluth, their place of origin is listed as Hedemarken, Norge. Romedal is a municipality in Hedemarken (now Hedmark) When Oline married Theodor Berg in Fergus Falls in 1886, both Oline and Theodor’s places of origin were listed as Romedal, Norge.  
Hedmark, Norway
The modern Hedmark is a land-bound county in eastern Norway near the Swedish border containing the municipalities of Hamer and Romedal, among others. These are the ethnicities probably inherited from the Hammer side: Michele (Raney) Betts' DNA indicates 12% Swedish, 7% Norwegian and 1% Finnish; Sandra (Raney) Reynolds' DNA indicates 20% Swedish, 8% Norwegian and 1% Finnish. Pat Raney's DNA indicates 10% Norwegian and 1% Finnish (oddly  no Swedish, but that might change as Ancestry refines its DNA testing). As you can see, siblings do not inherit equal portions of their parents' DNA. NOTE: 21 Oct 2019: Since my writing this blog, Ancestry has fine-tuned the DNA again. Now Pat Raney has 16% Swedish; 4% Norwegian, no Finnish. Sandra now has 12% Sweden, 9% Norwegian, 1% Finnish. Michele now has 13% Swedish, 9% Norwegian, 1% Finnish and 1% Baltic. I'm not including what I consider ethnicity from the Raney side or the Bernhadts - just the Hammers.
Modern-day Hedmark, Norway
In 1865 a Norwegian census was conducted, now accessible through the Norwegian government site, and since Ludwig, the oldest child was born in 1863, Johan Fridrik Wilhelm Hammer was a family head and should show up. Remember that in Norway they were still using the son-of and daughter-of instead of fixed surnames. 
Here’s another bit of trivia – Grace (Bernhardt) Raney’s descendants share at least one Norwegian ancestral line with the descendants of Junice (Moe) Raney, who also had Norwegian forebears; Junice's great-grandfather was born in Hedmark, too. Grace's and Junice's descendants are double cousins, although the Norwegian connection isn't close.

In 1890, daughter Inga Hammer married Lars Bernt “Louie” Ramstad (immigrated from Norway 1884), and afterward Bertha Hammer boarded with them, appearing in the 1890 Duluth city directory. The 1892 Duluth directory lists Bertha Hammer as “bds G. M. Hyatt W.D. [West Duluth]”  George and Bertha had married 18 July 1891. Melva Lenore (Lenora) was born in 1892. Bertha had son Ernest George Hyatt (1897-1977) and lived long enough to attend his christening at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church in Duluth in October 1897, but died before 1900 (I can find no death information on her). I’ve found no christening record for Melva. It is sad that both Melva and Grace lost their mothers early.
Roberts County, South Dakota
After Bertha’s death, George kept Melva with him in Duluth, but his son George appeared in the 1900 census with George’s brother Thomas Hyatt out in Lockwood, Roberts County, South Dakota. George remarried in 1901 to Celia F. [surname unknown], also born in Norway, who immigrated in 1878. On the 1910 census, she and George stated they’d been married 9 years. Melva was using the name Leanore, age 18, a telephone operator in Duluth. Ernest George was 12.  
Grundy County, Illinois
George Martin Hyatt’s father was your 2nd great-grandfather, John C. Hyatt, born c1827/8 in Pennsylvania (not Denmark). He died in June 1885 in Big Stone County, MN [see map near beginning of Hyatt family section of blog],  across the line from Roberts County, South Dakota. On the 1850 Morris, Grundy County, IL census John C. Hyatt, age 22, was married to Amelia, age 17, born in 1833 in New York (in later censuses she consistently claimed Michigan as her birthplace, so possibly one or both her parents were New Yorkers, and she was born duirng a short stay in Michigan). Married within the year, they had no children. Although still in Morris, Grundy County in 1855, before 1856 was done, they'd floated down the Illinois River from Grundy County to relocate in St. Louis, Missouri.
St. Louis, Missouri is now an independent city surrounded by St. Louis County.
It was a time of economic expansion with a high influx of immigrants and St. Louis' population grew from 77,860 in 1850 to more than 160,000 by 1860. In the 1860 census, John C. Hyatt, age 32, was a plasterer in St. Louis. Amelia, age 27, had given birth to John, age four, born in St. Louis, and Mary, age two, born across the Mississippi River in Illinois. The river wouldn't be bridged until 1872. A 42 year-old river-man boarded with them. 
We don't know how they fared during the American Civil War. St. Louis remained pro-Union because of its immigrant German and Irish population, but there were Confederate sympathizers, also.
Federal Army bivouacked in St. Louis during Civil War
Before 1867, when George was born in Minnesota, the family had steamed north on the Mississippi River to Goodhue Co., MN., settling in the town of Burnside. In the 1870 census John was still a stone mason, but stated his age as 51 (instead of 41 or 42). Had he earlier changed his age to avoid being drafted into the Union Army? Amelia’s and his children now numbered five. John (13), Mary Ann (12), Thomas J. (9), George M. (3), Herbert M. (1).  Unlike his neighbors, a colony of Swedish immigrant farmers, John’s real and personal property values were left blank. Had they lost everything in a fire or flood, or did he feel it was no one’s business but his own?
 
Steamboat in Goodhue County on the Mississippi
They were still living in Goodhue County for the 1875 Minnesota state census. John claimed to be 51 (but was 47), born in Pennsylvania, his mother born in Virginia (?) and his father born in Denmark (another inaccuracy). Amelia stated she was 40, born in Michigan, with both parents born in New York. 
Big Stone County, Minnesota
They crossed the state and in the 1880 census for Brown’s Valley, Big Stone County, MN. John and Amelia were living with oldest son John on his farm, along with daughter Mary Ann Hyatt Wright, her husband and year-old son, and children George (14), Herbert (12), Minnie (10), Amelia Jane (8) and Francis (4). Everyone in the household was suffering from typhoid fever. Amelia stated her place of birth as Michigan; her father’s place of birth was left blank; her mother’s place of birth was New York. John C. Hyatt, still a stonemason, had been out of work for 8 months. He stated he was born in Ohio; his parents’ places of birth were left blank.  He died five years later. 

Widow Amelia Hyatt was listed in the Duluth City Directory for 1900 and 1904. In the 1910 census, she was living in Girard Township, Otter Tail County, MN, with her son, John Edward Hyatt (1857-1943), a widower with four sons. Her daughter Minnie Hyatt Comstock appeared on that census, but claimed to be married, so may have been visiting. Amelia was 74, stated she had borne 13 children, of which 7 were living. She said she was born in New York, her mother born in New York, and her father born in Germany. Was this correct or a mistake of failing memory? We shall see. She died the following year, August 1911, in South Dakota, while visiting or living with a different child.

I've been unable to find the marriage of John C. Hyatt and wife Amelia, so am unable verify her maiden name. Other descendants of John C. Hyatt with trees on Ancestry.com have decided she was Amelia Paddock, living in Lake County, IL, but they haven’t produced a marriage license either. Amelia Paddock married Jurgen Peterson in 1851. Because Amelia’s and John’s first surviving child John was born in 1856, the descendants have decided she was widowed and they place her marriage to John in 1855. However, the 1850 census I found for Grundy County, IL, fits John and Amelia Hyatt as to names, ages, recently married, his occupation, place of birth and no children. When Amelia answered the invasive census question of 1900 with the fact that she had borne 13 living children of which only 7 survived, one can imagine the heartache she and John experienced as infant after infant succumbed until John, born 1857 in Missouri, survived and thrived.  I don't accept that her maiden name was Paddock.

On the 1850 Grundy County, Illinois, census, a few miles from where John C. Hyatt and Amelia lived, a couple resided in the town of Morris, consisting of Frederic Lawden [Lowdon, Lowden or London] age 70, a tailor, born in Germany, and his wife Margaret, age 55, born in New York. Were they Amelia’s parents? Also, on the 1850 census in Grundy County, but in the adjoining township of Mazon, lived Frederick Hyatt (54), a carpenter, born in Delaware (not Denmark), his wife Elizabeth (50) born in Pennsylvania, and his large family, all born in Pennsylvania. 
Northumberland county, Pennsylvania, possibly where John C. Hyatt was born in 1828

My research leads me to believe that Frederick Hyatt is John C. Hyatt’s father. John fits into the 1840 census and would have been the oldest male child in a large family. Although I find no DNA matches as yet with descendants of Frederick Hyatt, I do find DNA matches with earlier ancestors in that line.
Probable ancestor, Frederick Witzell Hyatt 1799 New Castle DE - 1895 Pierce Co., WI
Because of these DNA matches, here is the lineage I think belongs to your Hyatt line: 

2nd great-grandparents: Frederick Witzell Hyatt (1797, New Castle Co., DE-1895, Prescott, Pierce Co., WI), who married in 1821 in Philadelphia, Elizabeth "Betsy" Wummer Phillips (1800, Hempfield, Lancaster Co., PA-1853, Pierce Co., WI). 

3rd great-grandparents: Thomas D. Hyatt (1770, Wilmington, New Castle Co., DE-1838, New Castle Co., DE), who married in 1797 Sarah Witzell (1773, Wilmington, New Castle Co., DE-1850 Wilmington, DE)

Your 4th great-grandmother, Sarah Witzell's father was George Witzell (abt 1745-1825 Wilmington, New Castle Co., DE), who married Mary Stedham (1747 DE-1824 Wilmington, New Castle, DE). Your 5th great-grandmother, Mary Stedham's father was Hendrick Stedham (1686, New Castle Co., DE-1759, New Castle Co., DE). He married Margary Owens (1715, Wilmington, New Castle Co., DE-1790/2 Brandywine, New Castle Co., DE).

4th great-grandparents: John Hyatt (1725, Delaware-bef. 1795, New Castle Co., DE), married Catherine King (1730, New Castle Co., DE - about 1797, New Castle Co, DE)

5th great-grandparents: Thomas Hyatt (1707, Tarrytown, Westchester Co., NY-1742, New Castle Co., DE), married Catherine Monfoort (1710- c.1760, New Castle, DE)

6th great-grandfather: Thomas Hyatt (1675 NY-1742, New Castle Co., DE); wife unknown.

7th great-grandparents: John Hyatt (1651, Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT-1724, Rye, Westchester Co., NY) married Mary Jones (1647 Stamford, CT-1697 Rye, NY).

Going back to 2nd great-grandmother Elizabeth "Betsy" Wummer Phillips (1800, Hempfield, Lancaster Co., PA-1853, Pierce Co., WI), who married in 1821 in Philadelphia, Frederick Witzell Hyatt, her father was James B. Phillips (1766, Mount Joy, Lancaster Co., PA-1844 Wattsburg, Erie Co., PA), who married 1798 Catherine Funk/Funck (1776, Lancaster Co., PA-1863, Aurora, DuPage Co., IL). 

Catherine Funk's father was Henry Funk/Funck (1734, Lancaster Co., PA - 1800, Lancaster Co., PA). He married Martha Killhoover (1736-1782 Lancaster Co., PA). Grace's children have DNA matches with descendants of Funk and Killhoover, through Catherine's sister Barbara Funk (1763-1848) and brother John Funk (1760-1823).

2nd great-grandfather, James B. Phillips' parents were Thomas Phillips (1739 maybe Ulster, Scotland, or Wales-1806 Wattsburg, Erie Co., PA). Thomas served in the 2nd Co., 7th Bn., Lancaster Co. Militia 1781-83 during the American Revolutionary War. He married in an Anglican ceremony in 1765, Lancaster Co., Mary Elizabeth Carson (1744, Wrightsboro, Berkshire Co. PA-1800, Turbot, Northumberland Co., PA). Pat Raney matches DNA with a descendant of their daughter Mary "Polly" Phillips (1774-1856) and Sandra (Raney) Reynolds matches DNA with a descendant of daughter Hannah Phillips (1772-1837), these being your 2nd great-grandfather James B. Phillips' sisters.

As for your 2nd great-grandmother Amelia (Louden?) Hyatt's parents, if her father was Frederic Louden, he was born in Hamburg, Germany in 1786 and died in Grundy Co., IL between 1865 and 1870. Amelia's mother Margaret, whose maiden name we don't know, was born in New York State in 1795 or '97, based on her statements to the census takers. She died sometime after the 1870 census in Grundy Co., IL.

Here are the lyrics to the song "Asleep in the Deep" that Butch Bernhardt sang to Pat Raney as they drove about in the "puddle jumper." At the bottom of this Wikipedia article you'll find the audio for the song, sung by Thurl Ravencroft. Worth a listen. HERE
Paul & Grace (Bernhardt) Raney's 50th anniversary family photograph 1984. You know who you are.