Thursday, November 10, 2016

A Different Insight into the American Story



The previous story of Moses Jackson gave me a great insight into the dilemma of immigrants, no matter where in Europe they came from. Many, who were skilled, or semiskilled workers found it difficult to adapt them into American culture well enough to make a living, and felt  forced to work in mines that had worse health conditions than mines in the "old country" Just to feed their families. They found themselves sinking in what had become a much more competitive environment that they had envisioned. I don't think in coming to America, the Jacksons ever saw themselves caught up in the illness and lowest social status that the coal mines of America provided.

People come to America with dreams, some are modest, some are overwhelmingly over the top, but America was still the land of dreams for many in Europe, and Great Britain.
Nobody expected to come here to be a second rate citizen. Everybody thought prosperity was a given, in the spirit of support and cooperation. But the truth was, every culture, whether they be European, British or other, met with great loss of personal dignity, and mistrust of any other incoming culture but their own, and were entered into a viciously competitive game of "King/Queen of the Hill"

This seems to be a flaw American legacy that is passed down from one generation to another, and somehow this needs to be resolved in order for us to move on as a country.





Join me @ WikiTree

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Back to the Jackson's

Cora Kellogg married Moses Jackson in Salineville, Ohio, in circa  1892.

Moses was the father of David Jackson Sr, and  the son of James and Hannah (Porteus) Jackson. He and his siblings were born in county Durham, England. His siblings were Amelia, James, Rose Hanna, Mary Jane, Louise, Elizabeth Anne, and John T. Having set sail on the Lord Gough from Liverpool, they arrived in Philadelphia on August first, 1879. 

They settled in Salineville (named for it's large amounts of salt deposits) by 1890, and I am not sure what guided their choice to  live and raise their children there. Perhaps they had relatives already living there. That is still something for me to discover.  

Moses and Cora had 3 children... Lottie (Orr), Edith, and David (Sr). Lottie and her spouse Thomas would settle in Westmoreland Penn. David (Sr) married Virginia Beatrice Duncan and settled in Highlandtown, Columbiana, Ohio. 

Moses is listed as being in a mining accident in 1897, in Columbiana County. Family stories say his lungs were severely infected from the mines, and he died at 48 from a chronic stomach infection associated with the chronic lung infection, and heart failure was listed as a contributory cause.

Sometime after Moses passed away, Cora moved in with both her daughters in Westmoreland, Pennsylvania, she passed away in the Westmoreland Hospital, and was buried in Salineville Ohio. cause of death was stomach Carcinoma.

Moses would pass down the Jackson surname to 3 more generations, and after the third generation, the surname would end in the tree of Moses father, James.






Join me @ WikiTree