What does the Erie Canal and the Clement Family have in common?
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Their first child, Annie M. was born June 1,1845 in Scruple, Oswego Co., New York. In 1869 she married John V. Harris. Not many records have been found to this point that identify what happened to the Harris family, that is still a work in progress. As is the youngest son Ira Franklin, born November 28, 1848 in Lysander, Onondaga Co., NY; almost nothing is available on him other than I know he was alive and six years old in 1855. At present that is the last mention of him in the official record that I’ve found.
Charles and Sarah’s second child Daniel was born May 8, 1847 in Philadelphia, Jefferson Co., New York, and more about him can be found in the previous post.
By 1850, Charles, Sarah and all of the children had settled in Lysander, Onondaga Co., NY and he was identified in the census of that year as a boatman. Because earlier census reports only identify the head of house by name, there is no way to tell based on those documents, what Charles may have been doing before that. However, it would not be too much of a stretch or surprise to find that he may have followed in his father’s foot steps.
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In 1880 Charles and Sarah left Onondaga County and settled in Brownville, Jefferson Co., New York; their neighbor was William B. Clement, son of Ira. They stayed in this area until Sarah died on April 3, 1890, at the age of 69.
On July 3, 1897 Charles entered into the Jefferson County Poorhouse at the age of 79 years old. These places treated the residents as inmates, they lived in dorms with sometimes 15 or more people to a room. If your wife came with you, they separated you at night. The Keeper of the Poorhouse decided everything for the "inmates" from meals to when people could receive medical treatment, there were no bathing facilities and while it was heated in the winter, there was nothing to cool or circulate the air in the summer. Not a great situation to end up in after a full life of working and with no social safety net; if you had no money, the choice was the poorhouse or freezing to death. He probably did not survive long in this place, and he is not listed in the census of 1900.
I believe that Charles B. Clement died between 1897 and 1900, but he had no known grave marker, nor do I know where he is buried. I have to assume somewhere on the grounds.
Grandfather Charles may be lost to us, but he is not forgotten!
“The people who have left us are never truly gone until there is no one left to remember them.”