#36 – Somebody’s got to do it! (The jobs we did.)
In our most recent posts, we’ve been looking at ways our
“Drum Tree Members” spent their days, or perhaps more likely, their evenings.
We looked at the books they read and the newspapers and journals they turned to
while keeping abreast of the events of their days. But what did they actually
do during the day? How did they get their hands dirty; how did they earn their
keep?
All we really know about Progenitor Philip is that he made
a trip by ship across the ocean in 1738. Anything more on him and his
work would be just speculation. However, when have I ever turned away from
speculation? We know that German immigration increased about the time Philip
crossed the ocean. Many of these German immigrants were gunsmiths coming to
find work within the community of German gunsmiths of southeastern Pennsylvania,
primarily centered in Easton.
Was Philip a gunsmith?
Did he come to Pennsylvania on the promise of employment as a gunsmith? Did he,
perchance, make the firearm, the Pennsylvania Long Rifle, that his grandson,
George, carried off to war; now in the possession of his Great7
Grandson, Philip?
In an attempt to learn more about Philip, at least the
year when Philip died, a search of eastern Pennsylvania newspapers of the 1730’s
to the 1780’s was performed searching for “Philip Drum”. A few “Philip Drum” death
notices were found, but none had any apparent relevance to “our” Philip.
However, “other” information of interest also turned up. One such piece of
information was a notice of land being for sale at the Forks. This notice was placed
in the German Newspaper by one Philip Drum in 1750. Forks Township surrounds
Easton, PA. Easton sits at the point where the Lehigh River meets the Delaware
River, thus acquiring the nickname “The Forks”. Easton was a center for
gunsmithing. It seems plausible that our Philip was able to acquire land
between 1738 and 1750, perhaps even as part of the agreement to come, and then,
twelve years after arrival, decided to sell this property.
There is some information that suggests that Philip’s
son, Jacob, married a woman named Catherine Strauss[1]
in 1749[2],
both appearing to be about 19 years of age. It seems likely that a young
couple, now both 20-years-old in 1750, would welcome the opportunity to have
their own farm closer to the German communities of the Allentown area. It would
then follow that such land was acquired in 1750 or 1751, using the proceeds
from the sale of Philip’s Forks land, maybe as a wedding present.
This new property, then, would be the farm that was
attacked when Jacob’s son George was, according to Helman, twelve-years-old[3],
in 1774 or 1775.
Jacob, therefore,
was at least, a farmer.
George, it appears,
was, like many of us, many things over his lifetime. Helman tells us he
enlisted as a Continental Soldier in
1782[4]
in Williams. Williams Township is just south of Easton. Pennsylvania Census
searches found a person who is likely “our” George, apparently living in, at
least paying taxes in, Williams during the 1780’s. In 1789, he had to pay for
four cattle. His occupation, however, was noted as “weaver.”
In 1796 he was commissioned as a Captain of the Militia. We believe that it was
late in 1796 that he made his way to the Drums Valley for the first time, his
family already having arrived perhaps a year earlier with his In-Laws, the
Woodrings. Once having arrived in the valley, George became an active community
member. He helped the Reformed Congregation in St. Johns establish a
constitution and build a building in 1808 and 1809. He is included on a list of
road workers, which he also audited, in 1810.[5]
The 1810 U.S. census notes his occupation as “farmer”.
The following year, 1811, he is appointed Justice
of the Peace[6].
When he was about age 57, in 1820, he became an “Inn-Keeper”
by building an Inn near the crossroads that became known as Drums. His Inn
became the Drums Hotel, a stop on the stagecoach route from Hazleton to
Wilkes-Barre. For more about this Inn, see the post: George
Builds a Tavern; a Place gets a Name. For more about the Stage
Coach, see the post: The
Stage Coach.
Now we turn to George’s five sons who lived to adulthood,
in order oldest to youngest: Philip, Jacob, George, Abraham, William.
In the 1810 census, George’s son, Philip, is listed as a carpenter.
That same year he built the first wool-processing mill in the valley. He placed
it near Fritzingertown on the Little Nescopeck Creek[7]
making him also, I guess, a Wool Carder.
We hope he put his carpentry skills to good use in 1820 to help his father
build his Inn. Philip was building again in 1835. That was the year he built
his second mill along the Little Nescopeck, a short distance away from the
first. Bradsby, in his History of Luzerne County, calls this “the
valley’s first woolen-mill”.[8] To
be honest, I’m not sure what the difference is between a “Carding Mill” and a
“Woolen Mill”, however.
It appears that brother-George
was helping father-George with the Inn in the early 1820’s but settled in
Sugarloaf Township in 1824[9]
where he worked as a “Carpenter and Cabinet
Maker, and also followed lumbering
and farming to some extent; he
was appointed Justice of the Peace of Sugarloaf in 1826, and held that office up to
his death which occurred November 21, 1831”[10],
just nine months after his father died from an accidental gunshot wound[11],
in February, 1831[12].
Father-George was 69. Son-George had just celebrated his 39th
birthday the month before he died. No word yet found on what caused son-George’s
young death.
Father-George’s son William
apparently moved to Conyngham (Sugarloaf Township) as well, perhaps at the same
time as his brother George. He would have been around 20 years old at the time.
A 1991 special edition of the Hazleton Standard-Speaker entitled Pages
From the Past reported that William became the first Postmaster of the
village of Conyngham in 1826.[13]
However, the Conyngham-Sugarloaf Bicentennial Commission reported in 1976 that
Samuel Harmon was the first postmaster of Conyngham, but they did not say when the
Post Office was established. They did, however, go on to say that “William Drum
kept the office in 1830.”[14]
The bottom line then for this discussion; something we could put our stamp of
approval on at least; would be that William certainly worked in the Conyngham
Post Office for a while and maybe even served there as Postmaster, maybe even established the joint.
Philip probably helped his brother, Abraham, when Abe decided to expand the Inn into a
hotel in 1840. Abe also established the Stage Coach Stop Inn out at Sand
Spring. One wonders where Abraham got the time to run
two hotels since he was also the Luzerne County Sheriff
for some period of time. For more information about Abraham (and a
photo!), see our earlier post There
Were a Lot of Drums in Drums.
When brothers Philip and Abe built the addition onto the
Inn in 1840, they also put up a new building across the street to serve as a
store. A 1954 newspaper article announcing the opening of the Kermit
Reisenweaver Department Store in this building in Drums, provided a list of this
building’s previous store owners that included the names George Drum and Elick
Drum[15].
There are a number of problems with the information given
by this article which I discuss in more depth in the post
Inn Across the Way. Relevant to this post, however, is
that none of the potential George Drums in the “tree” appear to be available to
run a store there in the 1840’s. Plus, there is no one named “Elick” in the
family. Most likely, given the over 110 years that had passed from when the
building was built and the reporter asked the question, the reporter’s
informant got confused over just who did do what when, saying the storekeeper
was George when it was actually his son Abraham. Apparently, I am not the only
one to get confused by all these Georges!
As for “Elick”, this probably refers to Josiah’s son, Abraham Alexander (Josiah,
Abraham, George, Jacob, Philip). Born on January 25, 1854, Abraham
Alexander appears to have gone through a number of variations of what others
called him, or he called himself, over the years. I count seven! His name seems
to change each decade. I guess we also need to add “Elick” to that list now, making
eight! I think Elick is a corruption of Alex, which is how Abraham Alexander is
listed by Helman[16]. He
probably answered to “Alex” as a teenager and into his 20’s. It does seem
possible to me that the informant said “Alex” and the reporter heard and wrote
down “Elick”. However, one has to wonder how good a reporter this one was, not
to check out an odd name such as “Elick”, at least the spelling!
Since I’m talking about him, I should add that according
to a Wikipedia page about Drums, PA,[17]
Alex became the Drums Postmaster in the 1880’s. The 1890 census does not exist anymore to
confirm what he was doing, or calling himself, in 1890. The 1880 U.S. Census
lists him as A.A., age 26, with the occupation “Clerk in Store”, most likely J & S Drum Dry Goods,
owned by his father Josiah and uncle Stephen. This aligns with the individual
referred to as “Elick” in the 1954 article. The 1870 Census, when he was 16,
lists him as Alexander (his middle name). The 1860 Census lists him as six-year-old
Abraham. He appears in the 1900 Census as Abram and gives the occupation as Salesman in a
General Store. His residence, however, has changed. He is now living in
Bloomsburg, PA. The 1910 census gives his name as Alexander A. (Yes. Reversed.
Why should we be surprised?) with his occupation as Salesman in a Grocery Store.
A.A. died on January 27, 1920 in Bloomsburg, PA, aged 66. On the stone that marks his grave his name
appears simply as A.A. Drum.
I “stole” this picture of his stone from findagrave.com. According to this website, AA rests in the New Rosemont Cemetery, Espy
(Columbia County), PA with his wife, Mary Alice Hess Drum, aged 62, and
one of their sons, Warren Nevin Drum, aged 43. They had another son named
Clyde. He died prior to 1927. Helman just indicates “Deceased” in her book[18].
No information about him is included in findagrave.com. They also had one daughter,
Lola, 1892-1971. She married Robert Rabb. She, too, rests in the New Rosemont
Cemetery.
This brings us to brother-Jacob.
There is little evidence to help us know how George’s son Jacob was employed. Born
on February 6, 1791, he also died young, only 38, on July 11, 1830. A Jacob Drum appears in the 1820 Census who
is probably “our” Jacob. If so, of the three persons that census counted in
that household, one was “engaged in agriculture”. It would make sense that Jacob
was a farmer. The other two household
members were his wife, Anna Margaret Balliett Drum Whitebread and his at
that time new-born son, Isaac. We do know that Isaac
opened a shoemaker’s shop
in the Drum’s Hotel in 1842 (one wonders why not in the building just built
across the street, but anyway). His shop was located in the part of the hotel building
that later became the hotel bar.[19]
Perhaps Jacob had also been a cobbler/shoemaker,
you know, the son was following in his father’s footsteps, so to speak. Ok,
sorry about that.
But it just seems like there should be a good pun in this
last bit of information. Maybe something like, the shop went from a place that
repaired soles to one that destroyed souls (from a temperance point of view, of
course). no? darn. Ok, I’ll stop.
At this point, I think it prudent to say that I’m not
even going to try to hit ALL of the Drums in the tree; just the ones closest to
the direct line between the first Philip and the present Philip. I’m actually a
bit surprised that you are still reading at THIS point, but I know that if I
tried to get all the tree members, you’d never make it to the end. It’d take a
while.
Besides we still have more to say about the original
George’s kids! Remember, there were two hotels that were established by this
crowd. As suggested above, after both of the George’s die in 1831, it appears
that George, Sr’s son, Abraham; Abraham’s son, George; and Abraham’s sister,
Margarett (also known as Ann Margaret, Peggy Ann, Peggy and later, as Aunt
Peggy[20];
I’m beginning to think this name thing might be genetic!), operated the hotel
through most of the 1840’s and into the 1850’s. In the late 1850’s it appears
that Philip’s son John took over the Drum’s
Hotel. The assumption is that it was then that Abraham, George, and
Margarett built a new inn approximately 3.5 miles northeast of Drums Corner at
Sand Spring and called it the Stage Coach Stop Inn.
In an earlier
post I suggested that after Abraham died in 1862, his son, George, took
over the operation of the Stage Coach Stop Inn at Sand Springs. This may be the
case, but upon further examination of the record, it appears George lived near
Drums Corner, close to (actually in or across the street from) the Drums Hotel,
not out in the Sand Spring area. That would mean he had a daily commute of 7 –
8 miles round trip! It seems more likely that he ran the hotel in Drums, not
the Stage Coach Stop out at Sand Spring. It may be that he did help with the
Stage Coach Stop but took over the Drums Hotel operation upon the death of his
cousin, John in 1881. Or perhaps it was John who ran the Stage Coach Stop but
that makes even less sense as George. Really, it’s all very confusing.
Speaking of confusing, Peggy is another case! It is
believed that she, too, was out at the Sand Spring operation for a while. However,
based on the very thin record that exists, it seems that Peggy moved in with her
niece, Abraham’s daughter, Ellinor (listed in the 1870 and 1880 Censuses as
Ellen) Drum Hedian, when Abraham died in 1862. It may have been at this
point that she began to be known as “Aunt Peggy”.
Aunt Peggy’s given name was Margarett. There may be as
many, if not more, Margaret’s in this line as there are George’s! I didn’t
count.
The 1870 Census includes Abraham’s son George, now 42, as
head of household, now that Abraham is gone. George’s occupations are listed as
“Farmer and Hotel Keeper.” Under him
is listed Ann Margrett, age 62, keeps house. under her we find Robert Hedian,
42, a potter from Maryland, followed
by Ellen Hedian, 38, “works in hotel”,
and George Hedian, 13. Ellen is Head-of-Household-George’s
sister and Robert is her husband. Thirteen-year-old George is their son. Who,
however, is 62-year-old Ann Margrett? Might this be Aunt Peggy?
George’s mother was called Molly[21].
She appears in the 1850 Census as (Ready?)
Margaret. However, the website Findagrave.com lists her as Magdalena. Molly is
usually a nickname for Margaret but it can be used for most female names that
starts with the letter “M”.[22]
Although I can’t find her in the 1860 Census, Findagrave.com says she died in
1861, aged 60. This then would rule her out as the Ann Margarett who was 62 in
1870. We believe Peggy was born in 1804 and died in 1879. To be 62 in 1870, one
would need to have been born in 1808. Still, I think our 62-year-old Ann
Margarett is Aunt Peggy, especially given the double “T” at the end of her name
as I’ve seen Margarett spelled in other places referring to Peggy. Peggy is
difficult to find in the Census records and when we do find her, there is usually
some discrepancy. I believe this is yet another.
This, however, leaves us with still another mystery. Who
is the “Mrs. Hedian” found on the 1873 map? Census searches for 1870 and 1880
for “Hedian” both turn up three “Hedians”: Robert, Ellen, and George. In that
grouping, Ellen (or Ellinor, as she is listed in Helman, page 25) is the only
“Mrs.” possible.In 1870, the Hedian's were in George's household. In 1880, they are in a household separate from George.
Did Ellinor own the house? The 1870 census lists her as having $3,000 of Real Estate; Ellen, not Robert. Did they separate or even divorce?
As mentioned above, the same family grouping is included in the 1880 Census, implying
the family is still living together at that time (or came back together). The
1880 Census lists Robert as a “U.S. Government
Clerk” which I think means he worked in the Post Office.
Comparing the 1873 map to the 1880 listing for this area,
assuming the census taker went house to house in order along each street, we
find George Roth, a blacksmith, listed first. There appears to be a blacksmith
at the crossroad on the map. Next we find Hanna Hess on the list and P. Hess on
the map. Philip, Hannah’s husband, died September 22, 1879.[23]
N.S. Drum is next on both. “S Andrews Store & P.O.” is next on the map and
Josiah Andrews or Andreas is next appearing on the list. The map seems to have
“houses” indicated without identification next and, if so, matches the list
(Sarah Bird and Benjamin Miller). Robert Hedian is next on the list, Mrs.
Hedian is on the map. The 1880 Census lists Ellen as “Keeping House”. There are
no buildings indicated on the inside of the triangle on the map but the words
“Hotel G Drum” are squeezed in there. Next name on the list is George Drum,
Hotel Keeper & Farmer. Beside Mrs. Hedian on the map is a “building” marked
J&S Drum Store, then S Drum. Stephen Drum is in the 1870 census but does
not appear in the 1880 census. After George on the list is Josiah Drum followed
by a tailor named Stephen Oberender. The map reveres this order showing
Oberender first and then J Drum.
So, it would seem that in 1870 Peggy was living with
Ellinor and all were living with George, in Drums, working the Drums Hotel. Ellinor owned her own house into which they moved sometime after 1870.
So,
who was watching the operation out at Sand Spring?
It is interesting to note that not only did Abraham’s son
George run the hotel, he was also the Drums Postmaster,
appointed in 1854. They say that “the mail must go through” and in Drums, it
seems that very often this meant “must go through a Drum! Remember, Alex was
the Postmaster in the 1880’s. Nathan S. Drum’s daughter, Carrie M., was
appointed Postmaster (See note 32 below concerning the title Postmaster vs. Postmistress) in the 1890’s and served in this role until she
died in 1941 at the age of 67. [24]
Her Assistant Postmaster was her sister, Lottie.[25]
Finally, Nathan A.’s son, Elmer Drum, became a Letter
Carrier in the 1920’s and
continued in this role until he died January 23, 1959, although it appears his
route was in Hazleton.[26]
The GWD Mom photocopied. |
(George, George, Jacob, Philip) died. Born in 1832, he had lived his entire life in Conyngham. He was a Saddler/Harness Maker through, at least, the 1850’s. He was elected as Justice of the Peace of Sugarloaf in 1860 and continued in that role for the next 53 years except for the four years when he served in the Pennsylvania Legislature. He was a member of the Pennsylvania State Legislature Lower House from 1879-1882. He was the only Democrat to have been elected from Luzerne County in 1878. [27]
As GWD appears on the PA Legislature's web page. |
Nathan did his civic duty as well. The Freeland Tribute published a report on July 24, 1890 saying the “Merchant Nathan Drum” had been selected for Jury Duty for September 5, 1890[31].
At age 75, on May 20, 1912, Justice
of the Peace Nathan S. Drum
witnessed the transfer of ¾ acre of land from Jacob Santee to Charles Embling. It
appears he held this office at least from 1912 to 1914.
Justice of the Peace, Merchant, Citizen, Nathan S. Drum
died May 3, 1915.
Nathan’s son, Philip's Grandson, Philip Leo Drum, was also involved in political leadership. Philip L. became a lawyer, living in Kingston, near Wilkes-Barre, and served in the Pennsylvania legislature Lower House 1901-1902.[30] as a Republican.
According to the Legislature's website, Philip L. was employed as follows:
Nathan’s son, Philip's Grandson, Philip Leo Drum, was also involved in political leadership. Philip L. became a lawyer, living in Kingston, near Wilkes-Barre, and served in the Pennsylvania legislature Lower House 1901-1902.[30] as a Republican.
According to the Legislature's website, Philip L. was employed as follows:
teacher, Upper Lehigh school district (2 years); teacher, Carlisle Indian School (1894); teacher, Bloomsburg State Normal School (1895-1896); lawyer; elected as a Republican to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for the 1901 term; not a candidate for reelection to the House (1902); appointed, oil inspector, Luzerne County (1905-1909); solicitor, Nescopeck borough (1905-1906); unsuccessful campaign, controller, Luzerne County (1911); member, board of viewers, Luzerne County (25 years); died, April 28, 1960 in Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.
Philip’s son, John, was born in 1825, the second of 12
children born to Philip and his second wife. In addition to running a hotel
(someplace), he was listed in the 1870 Census as being a Farmer. The 1880
census lists him as “Hotel Keeper” but also has a category for “status” and
offers a few options. For John, the option labeled “maimed, crippled,
bedridden, or other” is checked. On November 21, 1881, John Drum died. He was
56 years old.
John’s son, Nathan A. was a coal miner most of his life.
When not digging coal, he was a carpenter
and a blacksmith. For more on Nathan,
see the post: The
Miners.
I never learned why we have this toy, but I’m betting Elmer had something to do with it. |
According to the 1920 U.S. Census, Elmer was a “Blacksmith Helper in Mines” after he came home
from fighting the war to end all wars. It was sometime in the 1920’s that he began
carrying the mail. Although I’m guessing one can keep fairly busy delivering
the mail, Elmer also had his farm which, I’m sure helped him “make ends meet.”
Thanks to my mom, we get a glimpse of Ella and Elmer’s farm
as it was in 1949 through a memoir Mom wrote in 2010:
I guess
it was late November when Harry took me to meet his parents, Elmer and Ella
Drum. I knew his father because I’d seen him at Church but for some reason had
not connected him with Ella, Harry’s mother. When I did on that visit, I
realized she was the same woman who sat on the bus all the time talking about
this person and that person, seemed like she talked about just about everyone
in the valley, and all sorts of scandal and gossip. Well I didn’t like that but
I couldn’t tell that to Harry!
Then I
met Grandma Mary (Elmer’s mother) and had a very nice conversation with
her. Seems Ella had nasty things to say about her too a lot but that was
something else I wasn’t telling Harry! Then it was out to see the farm, 2 BIG
pigs, 2 cows, and a pen of chickens. I looked and “admired” and said things
like, “Oh yes,” and “Oh my” and “my goodness!”
Then I
saw the bee hives. I didn’t like them at all. To me they were murderous! Harry
just laughed.
For more on Elmer when he was fighting the war to end all
wars, see the post: WW1.
The War to end all Wars.
Elmer’s son, my dad, Harry
Nathan Drum, spent most of his life as a Shipping
Clerk in Wagner Brothers Hardware Store, Hazleton, PA. He spent the
last few years of his life driving city bus in the Hazleton area. Here is a photo of him,
hard at work at Wagner’s!
I’m next.
My career has been as an Extension/4-H Youth Development Educator. My
career has taken me to every state in the United States (except Colorado. I’ve
got to get to Colorado!) and a number of countries that don’t call themselves
The United States of America, the longest visit being 18 months in Botswana as
a National 4-B Advisor. I’ve served
in county, state, or national 4-H rolls in Massachusetts (once) Maine (twice), as
the National Coordinator of the USDA/USAF Youth
Collaboration Project, and as a member of the staff at National 4-H
Council (three times), most recently, 2002 – 2015, as the National Coordinator of 4-H Afterschool, of 4-H SET
(Science, Engineering, and Technology; known today as 4-H SCIENCE),
and as the 4-H Science Grants Manager.
Of all of us, however, I think perhaps that only one of
us actually got it right: Milton Drum(Jacob,
Philip+1stWife, George, Jacob, Philip). Milton was born 1841. He died
on July 4, 1908. He is listed as a Farm Laborer in the 1860 census. In both the 1870 and 1880
censuses he appears as a Carpenter.
There is no 1890 census information so we jump to 1900 where we find him as a Bottler.
A BOTTLER!?
And we have one of his bottles! The first time I saw it I
wondered if he made some kind of medicine and sold it in those bottles, his
name is on it, after all. The title “Bottler”, however, implies, for me at
least, that he bottled other peoples’ potions even if it DOES have his name on
it.
Either way, it seems to me that Milton got it right. Here
is his bottle with his name on it! As long as that bottle exists, so too will MILTON
DRUM!
I was talking to an antique‑dealer friend of mine who is especially
interested in glass bottles. I showed him our bottle. “Oh, you have a Milton Drum!,” he said
as if that was what one called the object I was holding. “A nice one, too! They
are fairly common locally, so not highly valuable, but still very collectible; very
nice to have. I’m guessing its worth isn’t why you have it, however. Probably
has more value for you than we could ever set, given the name.”
True.
Now why didn’t I think of putting my name on something
collectible? Wait. There’s still time…
Speaking of time, it's time for a new post! We've looked at what we read, and what we did to make ends meet, now we take a look at the clothes we wore, hairstyles, beards, etc. Join us again on January 14, 2020 for post #37: The Way We Wore.
[2]
Butler Township History, Butler Township website, http://www.butlertownship.org/about-us/history/Print.html
accessed 6/14/2016
[3]
Helman, Laura M., History and Genealogy of the Drum Family (Allentown,
PA: Berkemeyer, Keck & Co., 1927), p 3
[4]
Helman, p. 3
[5] Bradsby,
Chapter XXI (continued): Sugarloaf Township.
[6] Butler
Township History
[8] Bradsby,
H.C., ed, History of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania (Chicago: S.B. Nelson
& Co., 1893). Chapter XXI (continued): Butler Township. http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/luzerne/1893hist/
accessed 6/7/2016
[9] “Conyngham’s Grand Old Man Dead, Honorable George W.
Drum is no more – was the town’s oldest native citizen” Valley Vigilant,
November 14, 1913. P 23
[10] “Conyngham’s
Grand Old Man…”, p 23
[11] “Conyngham’s
Grand Old Man…”, p 23
[12]
Helman, p. 3
[13] “Red
Letter Days”, Pages From the Past Special Edition, Hazleton Standard-Speaker,
Friday, September 6, 1991, p A4 and “Conyngham Named after Revolutionary War
Hero”, p A10.
[14]
Bigelow, Mrs. John L. and Mrs. E. B. Mulligan, Jr., Eds., Let Freedom Ring
(Conyngham-Sugarloaf Bicentennial Commission, 1976, Limited Edition) p 14
[15]
“Valley to get Dept. Store”, The Plain Speaker, Hazleton, PA, October 7,
1954, p. 15
[16]
Helman, p. 26
[17]
Drums, PA, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drums,_Pennsylvania&oldid=726559076
accessed 9/20/2016.
[18]
Helman, p 26
[19]
Munsell on Butler Township, 1880, History of Freeland, PA, https://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/ct0u/munsell_butler.html
accessed 8/11/2016
[20] Helman,
p 3.
[21]
Helman, p 25
[23]
According to findagrave.com.
[24]
If you are a diligent reader of these posts, you may be asking what happened to
Postmaster Brighthaupt? We learn in the post Inn
Across the Way that Charles Brighthaupt, whose story begins in the
post in 1913, was a “former Drums Postmaster”. I do not know when he served in
this capacity. I assume it was in the late 1880’s and/or early 1890’s, after AA
relinquished the post and before Carrie picked up those reigns.
[25]
Drums, PA, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drums,_Pennsylvania&oldid=726559076
accessed 9/20/2016.
[27]
He is listed in the 1850 census as a “saddler” and it is noted in a tribute to
him published by the Valley Vigilant that he “learned the saddler’s
trade which he followed twenty years. In 1860 he was elected Justice of the
Peace of Sugarloaf…” See: “Conyngham’s Grand Old Man Dead, Honorable George W.
Drum is no more – was the town’s oldest native citizen” Valley Vigilant,
November 14, 1913. P 23
[28] Carbon
Advocate, Lehigh, PA, August 6, 1887
[30]
Helman, pp 12-13
[31]
Jury Duty, Freeland Tribute, Freeland, PA, July 24, 1890
[32] According to Nora Drum in Drum, Nora, Miss; Mrs. R. S. Small, and Mrs. Millard Shelhamer, Drums Methodist Church and Valley Notes (Drums, PA: St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 1953) ,Carrie and Lottie both used the title "Postmistress". However, according to the United States Postal Service, the title was always officially "Postmaster": “Over the course of its history, the United States Postal Service has employed women as postmasters – from a single woman at the birth of our country in 1775 until today, when more women than men head United States Post Offices. Although sometimes popularly referred to as “postmistresses,” their official title always has been ‘postmaster.’ ” https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/postal-history/women-postmasters.pdf
[32] According to Nora Drum in Drum, Nora, Miss; Mrs. R. S. Small, and Mrs. Millard Shelhamer, Drums Methodist Church and Valley Notes (Drums, PA: St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 1953) ,Carrie and Lottie both used the title "Postmistress". However, according to the United States Postal Service, the title was always officially "Postmaster": “Over the course of its history, the United States Postal Service has employed women as postmasters – from a single woman at the birth of our country in 1775 until today, when more women than men head United States Post Offices. Although sometimes popularly referred to as “postmistresses,” their official title always has been ‘postmaster.’ ” https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/postal-history/women-postmasters.pdf