Thursday, January 30, 2020

THOMAS MASON


You may be asking by this time how many generations we are going to go back. We will go as far as the leads take us and even then a few years down the line we may find something else. When I first started collecting information 40 years ago it was ALL done by snail mail and going to libraries to search microfilm and books. You had no way of knowing if there were any other folks researching what you are. Things could not be more different now. Thanks to the computer there is information all over the place if you will search for it. Through Family Tree Maker, Ancestry and Family Search there are all kinds of leads and ways to connect with others researching the same names. Recently DNA has really opened things up. (I'm actually linked through 47 individuals to DNA with Thomas and I'm certain it would be a lot more if more folks utilized DNA results.) It gives you real satisfaction to be following names down the path and have the confirmation that others with your DNA are going in the same direction. Our forefathers with the same DNA are pointing the direction.

Soooo we started with Papa to many of us....Lemmie Sylvanis Mason, (do you remember where he got his names?), his father was Marion Francis Mason (where did Francis come?), Marion's father was Sylvanus (went by Vane) which he got from his father Sylvanus. Now DNA and leads are pointing us to................

THOMAS MASON

Thomas Mason was born in 1780 in Hyde County, North Carolina to James and Charity (Swindell) Mason. Sadly it appears he died the same year his son Sylvanus was born 1814. We have record of Thomas marrying Mary....outside of that fact was only Thomas birth year.

We see Thomas in the 1810 census. Remember the 1810 census primarily lists how many free white people are in the family and grouped by ages. They lived in Hyde County, North Carolina. We find 5 children under 16 with mother and father-7 in all.

Then there is a record in the War of 1812 Service Records with company: 2 Reg't (Tisdale's) North Carolina Mil. Thomas was a private. What was the war of 1812 you may ask. I had to look it up. In the War of 1812, the United States took on the greatest naval power in the world, Great Britain, in a conflict that would have an immense impact on the young country’s future. Causes of the war included British attempts to restrict U.S. trade, the Royal Navy’s impressment of American seamen and America’s desire to expand its territory. The United States suffered many costly defeats at the hands of British, Canadian and Native American troops over the course of the War of 1812, including the capture and burning of the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C., in August 1814. Nonetheless, American troops were able to repulse British invasions in New York, Baltimore and New Orleans, boosting national confidence and fostering a new spirit of patriotism. The ratification of the Treaty of Ghent on February 17, 1815, ended the war but left many of the most contentious questions unresolved. Nonetheless, many in the United States celebrated the War of 1812 as a “second war of independence,” beginning an era of partisan agreement and national pride. https://www.history.com/topics/war-of-1812/war-of-1812


Does that mean he died in the war while his wife was home with four other children and gave birth to Sylvanus? We don't know but he did die the year Sylvanus was born. He was only 34 years old.

I did find a probate for his will stating he died in 1814 and he had 50 acres in Hyde County, North Carolina that was divided among the children. Of course Sylvanus was a baby and it appears lived in another state as well as his sister Desea. Their portion of the land was to be set apart for them.

Saturday, January 25, 2020

SYLVANUS MASON


It gets really interesting from here on....so far we have studied
Lemmie Sylvanis Mason,
Marion Francis Mason,
Sylvanus “Vane” Mason and now on to ….


SYLVANUS MASON

Sylvanus Mason was born in 1814 in Hyde, North Carolina to Mary and Thomas. Wow 1814!!!

Keep in mind we are relying a lot on census to track families from now on. Also usually there were big families back then with no birth control so lots to track. Are you ready to follow the trail left? I hope this may even spur you on to look into it yourself because much of it is a puzzle to put together. If I don't have it put together perfectly excuse me (my disclaimer).

We pick up on Sylvanus when he marries Louisa McMun on August 11, 1839 in Franklin, Illinois. Louisa was born in 1815 but it looks like she passed away in 1848. They had two children Simeon in 1847 and Charity in 1848. You have to wonder if she passed away from childbirth.

Father did not wait six years to remarry (remember that is what his son did?). Sylvanus married Elizabeth Clemons in her father's living room July 31, 1849 in Washington, Missouri. She had been married before also. They went on to have many children, even a set of twins. This is the line we come through.

In the 1840 census Sylvanus was in Franklin, Illinois. Census taken at that time were only interested in how many free white people in the family and how many non white there were. Hard to believe in the world we live in. Thank goodness that is in the past!

1850 census finds the Mason family in Reynolds, Missouri. 1860 they are in Black River, Missouri. Sylvanus is 46 by now with many children. Real Estate value is at 900 and Personal Estate 300. Can you imagine how much money that was back then? His son Sylvanus that we also come from was only 3 then. 1870 Census the family is in Linn, Dent, Missouri. His occupation is listed as a Mill Right. Real Estate value 1600 and Personal Estate value 1000. So interesting the things they track. What do they track now? Finally the 1880 census the family is in Newton, Shannon, Missouri. This is only four years before he died. This year they tracked where his mother and father were born (North Carolina). His occupation is shown as a farmer. I guess there was no social security then. He is 70 when he passes away in Missouri.

I don't know how many of you do the DNA through Ancestry. I find it most interesting that from Sylvanus there are 33 DNA matches for me.....through Sylvanus (Vane)....Henry, Lucinda, Mary and Desea. Pretty cool. If any of you are on Ancestry it is a wonderful place to track everything. I have our family tree on it and you can see all the census yourself. Family Tree Maker is another great program I use to keep track of everything.

See we are so far away there are no family stories to pass on. Let's not let that happen with us! We can deduct that Sylvanus modeled this perseverance and determination to his son. As a farmer and a Mill Wright he was able to support many children. I'm sure all those children helped him on the farm. Children were helping in big families with so many things. There were many children to play with but also help in so many ways! We are so far away from children pitching in to make it.



Monday, January 20, 2020

SYLVANIS "VANE" MASON


SYLVANIS “VANE” MASON

So far we have gathered facts on Lemmie Sylvanis Mason and on to Lemmie's father, Marion Francis Mason. Now we will go one more generation to Sylvanis “Vane” Mason.

Sylvanis (called Vane) was born September 1, 1857 to Sylvanis and Elizabeth (Clemons) Mason in Missouri. Thanks to Lemmie's sister, Frances, we called Aunt Fran we have a priceless family picture that was taken in 1903. In the attached picture you will find front row Rena Mason and Cassie Mason Middle row, Sylvanus, Nona Mason and his wife Elizabeth, sitting on his mother's lap is William McKenley (I know he has what we would call a dress on but it was not uncommon to dress their babies as such). The back row has our Marion and his younger brother Edward Younger with two of Sylvanis nieces, Delie Cunningham and Susie Mason.

Sylvanis was married two time. He married Frances Ann Shuck August 11, 1883 in Joplin, Missouri. Francis and Sylvanis had two children, Marion and Edward. Frances passed away in 1885 when Marion was only two. Sylvanis went on to marry Betsy Lee six years later in 1891 and they had four children: Rena (1892), Cassie (1894), Nona (1897) and William (1901).

We find Sylvanis living with his parents in the 1860 Census (age 3) in Black River, Missouri then in the 1870 census (age 13) in Linn, Dent, Missouri. The 1880 Census (age 23) he is in Newton, Shannon, Missouri.

Again, according to Aunt Fran, Sylvanis was a farmer. Attached is a picture of his headstone. He passed away March 26, 1922 in Grady Oklahoma at the age of 64.






Friday, January 3, 2020

Mason, Marion Francis and Mason, Lemmie Sylvanus

Marion Francis Mason born November 11, 1883 in Salem, Missouri to Sylvanis and Frances Ann (Shuck) Mason. Marion was only two years old when his mother died. He married Lennie Gertrude Wolford July 7, 1906 in Carter, Oklahoma. Lennie was 18 years old and Marion 22.

They had four children... Elmer, Lennie, Francis and Enoch.

Records of the 1910 census show they lived in Cobb, Oklahoma and Marion was 26 years old. They had been married 4 years. Census shows farm labor and Marion could read and write. (Interesting the information they ask for on these census!) They lived with a family on a farm… The Ussery family.

The 1920 census shows that they lived in Rush Springs, Oklahoma and Marion is 35 years old living on their own but renting a place. By now Lemmie was 12, Elmer 10, Francis 7 and Enoch just born.

The 1930 census shows the family living on a farm they rented. It also says Marion did not attend school but could read and write… Would be interesting to know the story on that. At this point Lemmie is 22 and Herschel is 6. We know that Enoch had passed away by then and Francis must have been out on her own.

The 1940 census has been released but I could not locate our Marion in it....perhaps another time. Did you know there is a “72 year rule” for a census to be released? Can you imagine 72 years from now the 2020 census being released? What will our descendants learn about us?

We see that Marion had to sign off as a person to contact for his son, Lemmie, WW11 Draft Registration Card (Lemmie was 33). In the end he never served but all men had to register.

Marion passed away April 26, 1942 in El Campo, Texas but is buried in Vamoosa, Oklahoma. He was 58 years old. His death certificate shows he died from a cerebral hemorage and had had hypertention.


What memories do you have? What could be added to this?

I know through family stories that Pa (as he was referred to) was an Assembly of God pastor. His death certificate stated his profession as Minister of the Gospel. His wife, Gertrude, lived 34 years after him and she continued in his steps and preached. Oh how I would love to know how he went from farmer to preacher. What led to that moment? Sadly unless my relatives can relay that information it is out of reach. Surely someone will chime in!?!


Now my father, Benny Marion Mason, was born in 1935 and Pa passed on in 1942 so dad was only 7 when he died. The only memory my dad had of Pa was that one time my dad had done something wrong (he was rowdy boy) and Pa was after him so my dad climbed under the bed to get away from him. What a memory...right!?!




LEMMIE SYLVANIS MASON

Lemmie Sylvanis Mason was born September 11, 1907 in Rush Springs, Oklahoma to Lennie Gertrude Wolford (her older brother's name was Lemmie) and Marion Francis Mason (his father's name was Sylvanis). Lemmie had three brothers....Elmer, Enock and Marion Hershel and a sister Frances. Lemmie's father, Marion, was a pastor. When Lemmie was two his family moved to Pea Ridge, Oklahoma. It shows on the 1910 census the family is in Cobb, Oklahoma then in 1920 back in Rush Springs and 1930 again in Rush Springs, Oklahoma.
In 1928, at the age of 21, Lemmie began his oilfield career Roughnecking in the Cox Coly Fields. He spent the next 17 years in Seminole, Oklahoma, East Texas and the Permian Basin, pursuing the oil industry. According to a magazine article from the Reading and Bates
Drilling Lemmie went to work for Reading and Bates in 1938 at Penwell, Texas as a roughneck and from that time on there was a Mason working in the oil field for Reading and Bates. He started Drilling in 1944 and was a Toolpusher by 1949. He Pushed Tools in Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, and Mississippi, even going to Venezuela. Lemmie was a part of the biggest booms of the 1920s and knew by the time he joined Reading and Bates it was going to be “kinda my way of life”, he stated. So for 31 years, until he retired in 1969 he worked for Reading and Bates.
Lemmie married Clara Zadie McKay (we can track the McKays back to Clara's great grandfather from Ireland) on May 16, 1932 in Duncan, Oklahoma. He was 25 years old. They had four children.....Clifton (born 1934), Benny (born 1935), Barbara (born 1936) and Jodie (born 1941). The family was on the move with the oilfield life.
Upon retirement in 1969 (age 62) after a hurricane destroyed their home in South Louisiana Lemmie and Clara settled in Konawa, Oklahoma near their daughter Barbara Bowles. Lemmie spent his years raising a garden (5 gardens his grandson, Terry, said) and helping with cattle. Many wonderful memories are had by the grandchildren of domino and card
games around the table. The food and fun was plenty at Nanny and Papa's home. Wow, the Mason laugh is full and some of the best!!
Lemmie's father died in 1942 when Lemmie was only 34. His mother, Lennie, died in 1976 when Lemmie was 68. He lost his wife, Clara, of 48 years when he was 72 in 1980. Nearly 5 years later he eloped to Las Vegas and married someone he had dated in high school, Ethyl Dorman, of Rush Springs, Oklahoma. Unfortunately the marriage only lasted 5 months as
Lemmie Mason passed away October 8, 1985 in Rush Springs, Oklahoma. He was walking down the sidewalk to the house and fell over with a heart attack. He was 78. He was buried with Clara in the Vamoosa Cemetery. He left this earth leaving behind 4 children, 11 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren.

At Papa's funeral they read a poem he particularly loved:

SERMONS WE SEE
I'd rather see a sermon than hear one any day,
I'd rather one should walk with me than merely show the way.
The eye's a better pupil and more willing than the ear;
Fine counsel is confusing, but example's always clear;
And the best of all the preachers are the men who live their creeds,
For to see the good in action is what everybody needs.
I can soon learn how to do it if you'll let me see it done.
I can watch your hands in action, but your tongue too fast may run.
And the lectures you deliver may be very wise and true;
But I'd rather get my lesson by observing what you do.
For I may misunderstand you and the high advice you give.
But there's no misunderstanding how you act and how you live.
by Edgar A. Guest
Taken from an article in the Reading and Bates RB World Magazine in 1980:
When still a young man, Lemmie Sylvanus Mason was nicknamed "Pappy".Now, as the eldest member of a world-wide clan of oil patch people, he has earned the title. Since 1938, when Pappy began roughnecking for George Reading and Jack Bates Sr., there has always been a Mason on the RB payroll. Sometimes there have been as many as five at one time. Never, since 1946, have there been fewer than two. Before continuing, you will need a scorecard. It should read like this: Three brothers: Pappy, Elmer and Hershel, Pappy's sons: Benny M., Jody Don and Clifton. Elmer's son Ronnie. Hershel's sons: Bearl, Troy and David. And now, representing the third generation, Benny M's son, Benny W. Okay? And a few more things you need to know: All of them have, at one time or another, worked for Reading & Bates. Presently on the payroll are Hershel, Benny W., Bearl and David. This said, we can now get down to some details. Elmer, two years Pappy's junior, was the first Mason with RB but he remained only on a part-time basis, preferring the pulpit to petroleum. Pappy, who had already been a part of some of the biggest booms of the 1920's knew by the time he joined the company that the oil fields were "kinda my way of life". So he stayed and for the next 31 years, until he retired in 1969, he helped build both the present Reading & Bates and its predecessor. In doing so, he drilled holes and pushed tools through Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Mississippi and even Venezuela, on one of the earliest foreign land assignments of today's Reading & Bates. In 1946, Pappy was joined
in the company by the "baby" of the three brothers: Hershel. Just out of the Navy, Hershel began by working for Pappy and for a time the three brothers were all on the same rig near Levelland, Texas. While this was going on, another generation of Mason males were rowing up. They were being groomed, some in strange ways, to take their places one day in the oil patch. The Mason boys found working for a father - if his name was Mason - meant working for a tough, fair, boss. Pappy worked on land rigs throughout the U.S. and Venezuela. The preceding lists only the direct line of Mason men who have worked for Reading & Bates. It does not include M. F. Mason, the father of Pappy, Elmer and Hershel. Although a preacher and farmer, he also worked in the oil fields, as did three of his wife's six brothers. The list does not include the husbands of the Mason women. The three Mason brothers have a total of six daughters. Why so many of one family should go into the oil business is something the Masons have not thought much about. But when the question is put to them, they come up with some interesting theories: "Oil is all the Mason family knows." "The oil field is like the weather: It's always interesting. It's always changing. There's always a new challenge." And what does it mean to have the name "Mason"? "When you have relations in a company, I think people expect more of you than they do other people." "We have an unwritten law among the Mason family that if you work for another Mason, you do more work than the rest of the crew or you're fired." "You always have to prove yourself, no matter what your name is. Your name is only as good as you, as an individual, make it."
1997 finds the following Mason men still working in the oil business: Benny Marion (consultant), Benny Wayne (well control instructor for R&B), Clifton Michael (engineer), Troy (engineer), David (works on rig for R&B) Mason and Terry Lee Bowles-son of Barbara Mason (daughter of Pappy Mason) works on rigs. Pappy, Hershel, Clifton Wyndel, Jody Don, and Bearl have gone on to be with the Lord but are probably talking drilling in heaven right now.

Memories:

The Masons to me have always been larger than life. When I would visit them there was more often than not lots of hugs and laughter. They always made you feel loved and at home. I have wonderful memories of the adults laughing and often playing dominoes laughing and carrying on. From my perspective Lemmie Mason, my Papa, was the perfect
grandfather. I don't ever remember him correcting me but I remember lots of hugs and pounding on the back. He often pounded me on the back when my children were babies and would say over and over “that little bitty mama with those great big babies”. My mom told the story of when my brother and I were young Papa showed up at the house wanting to take us out. Mom said let me clean them up but he said we were fine. When we returned a couple of hours later he had taken us and bought us new clothes and had my brother's hair cut (his first haircut). Papa had each of us an ice cream cone and it was all over our new clothes ….oh and he had taken us for a boat ride. We had a picture and I guess that spurred her memory.
My dad told the story with lots of laughter that one time Papa had a cow he wanted to load and take to the butcher. Let's just say that cow gave him a lot of problems getting it loaded. By the time Papa got it loaded and to the butcher he told the guy “give that cow a slow
death” and he meant it. Ha!

I can't remember ever going to church with Nanny or Papa but I knew without a doubt they loved the Lord. Nanny loved to sing “One Day At A Time Sweet Jesus” as she worked around the house. She was such a great cook! My cousins Sandra and Terry Lee remember going to church with them. Sandra even sang a special “One Day At A Time Sweet Jesus” at their church because Nanny asked her to.

From BW Mason
Papa and I got into an argument one morning over his dad gum chewing tobacco all over the floor and Nanny ran us both out of the house. Papa told me that’s what he had put up with his whole life, but lunch that day was right on time and she made his favorite. Best
family ever!!
From Troy Mason:
Lemmie's mother was reading something and it had the name of someone else's new born in it, and she made a comment out loud about what a terrible name for a child. Her son, Lemmie, turned red, and said sternly, "Mother, anyone who would name a baby Lemuel Sylvanis does not have the right to criticize". (His actual name was Lemmie Sylvanus after her brother and his paternal grandfather.)

From Troy Mason:
(A story about Lemmie and his second wife). Not long before he died I saw him for the last time. I’ve forgotten the circumstances but I called him and got the OK to come by. Pappy and I were in the kitchen playing dominoes and Pat and Ethyl were in the other room. She told Pat that when I called she just knew I wanted to get something from Pappy. She said just listen to them in there! Pappy is screaming and hollering and Troy is laughing his head off. Now I know what he wanted to come get, and he’s getting it.

From Mike Mason
When Benny, Pappy and Cliff Mason went to Venezuela in 1959 (we all went with them) and they were some of the first - if not the first to develop Lake Maracaibo on the far western side of Venezuela - bordering Colombia.

From Mike Mason
Pappy Mason (Lemmie Sylvanus) was the 7th employee of Reading and Bates Drilling company out of Tulsa Oklahoma.