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Snippets from newspapers (news or no news??) and sketches of earlier New Albany and its surroundings. Photos and vignettes.
A smorgasbord. Potpourri. And maybe more. Not academic nor scholarly. Just for fun!

Monday, July 23, 2012

SERENDIPITY and SIX DEGREES (Or More)??!!



 This is a post I had planned for later… there is a whole list of connections to Mary Ann in which a person can literally drop name after name that would be worth googling.  I planned to list them and touch on each of them briefly, and still plan to do so, but I can’t let this moment go without commenting. 

My intention in my writing this blog is to be brief and concise, but that’s probably not gonna happen too often, as it goes against the grain of every fiber in my being.  (See – there I go – grain?  fiber? being? – so totally unnecessary and non-academic  . . . and is non-academic even a word????)  Yep, I need an editor!  Or I need to take the time and go back and delete . . . but I just stumbled across some information that puts the serendipity in doing research.  And this will be one of those times where I go off . . . rambling.  And I probably won’t be able to explain myself, but I plan to try.

One of the headstones on the Elias Ayers plot in Fairview Cemetery reads “L. M. Hawley – Consort of F. Thurston, who departed this life July 6th, 1842, aged 29 years.”  I had done some (okay – a lot of) research on the Ayers and Day families and found no connection to Hawley nor Thurston. 

In a separate incident, a few years ago, an early daybook (book of accounts) was located and purchased for its possible and probable historical value, pertaining to the entries that list New Albany’s early merchants.  This was the Daybook of F. Thurston.  From the original brief research, the most interesting connection I found relating to Franklin Thurston was his marriage here to Laura Hawley.  (Although I need to locate my earlier notes, I could be foggy on the accurate details of the daybook, so am only briefly commenting on that, as the source of my initial interest.)  Thurston’s wife, Laura, had died in 1842 and at least by 1844 Franklin had relocated in Muscatine, Iowa, where he remained until his death in 1878.  Laura had been a published poet, of considerable literary ability, writing for newspapers and magazines, using the name “Viola.” Her poems have been included in collections of American poetry. 

But no indication as to why she was buried in Elias Ayers’ plot. 

Fast forward to the research currently being done on Mary Ann’s grandfather, Gold Selleck Silliman.  He had been captured and was being held prisoner by the Tories.  His wife, Mary Fish Silliman, fled to a nearby tavern as the British later set fire to much of Fairfield.  She was pregnant with their child, and gave birth to Benjamin Silliman, America’s first scientist and pioneer in energy [our Mary Ann’s uncle, half-brother of her father, William Silliman, and mentioned here for the "Six Degrees" aspectmore later ], in that tavern.  The tavern was originally the large Colonial home built in 1765 by Ebenezer HAWLEY

I know, I know.  I’m not jumping to conclusions.  But I am excited that this could be the connection I’ve been looking for. 

By this time, the building (tavern) was no longer in the possession of the Hawley family, and this Mary Silliman was the step-mother of Mary Ann’s father…. The connection is weak, but it COULD be that Laura Hawley Thurston, who came to New Albany as a single young woman, was taken in by Mrs. Ayers (at that time), as a fellow kinsman with a connection to her family back East. 

Worth pursuing!!!!  Mostly because all other trails leading to Laura Hawley Thurston have led nowhere, I can’t help but think (if only for a moment) how sweet it will be if a connection can be made. 

Just wanted to share.  And, hey, it’s MY blog!!



[ADDENDUM:  The Hawley family who had built the tavern in Connecticut has proved to be the same family that eventually gave us Laura Hawley Thurston, the poet.  However, information garnered since that discovery cannot support nor dispute the fact that Laura Hawley came to New Albany as a direct result of her connection to the Silliman (Mrs. Mary Ann Silliman Ayers specifically) family, from nearby Fairfield.  A short biography in "The Poets of Connecticut" states that Laura had studied at the Hartford Female Seminary and subsequently, "through the recommendation of Mr. Brace, she was invited to take charge of a female school at New Albany, in Indiana."  -- Mr. Brace having been John Pierce Brace, the principal of the seminary.  From this statement it appears that he may have been approached as to who might be a suitable candidate and it was just coincidental that the individual was Laura Hawley.  But very likely, Mary Ann was influential in this appointment.]