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Chauncey W. Payne

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Chauncey W. Payne

Birth
Mayfield, Graves County, Kentucky, USA
Death
13 Feb 1920 (aged 57)
Wagoner, Wagoner County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Wagoner, Wagoner County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Chauncey W. Payne
Chauncey W. Payne was born on December 6, 1862 in Mayfield, Graves County, Kentucky, the son of Chauncey Smith Payne and Cynthia Florilla Chipman Payne. In the 1870 U. S. Census, it shows the family was living in Union City, Obion, Tennessee. By 1880, the family had moved to Jackson Township, Texas County, Missouri.
On December 22, 1886, Chauncey W. Payne and Sarah Louise Brackett were married in Houston, Texas County, Missouri. They had four sons, Cassius Melvin, Arthur W., Earnest Joseph, and Chauncey Smith Payne II. In 1900, they were living in Jackson Township, Texas County, Missouri.
In about 1908, they moved to Creek Township, Wagoner County, Oklahoma. They came by wagon, and started farming in Wagoner County. The youngest son, Chauncey Smith Payne II, rode his horse all the way from Missouri behind the covered wagon. "Old Bill" was an Appaloosa, black with an iron gray rump, and he was a really great horse.
Along with farming, Chauncey W. and his boys worked hauling water for the City of Wagoner from the Grand River using wagons and teams of horses.
During the Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918, known as the Spanish Flu that lasted until June of 1920, Chauncey W. Payne contracted the flu. His death certificate shows that he died within seven days. His son, Earnest Joseph died thirteen days later, also of the Spanish Flu.
They are buried in a plot along with Earnest Joseph's wife and little son in Elmwood Cemetery, Wagoner, Wagoner County, Oklahoma.
Chauncey W. Payne is the 6th great-grandson of Pilgrim John Howland that came to America on the Mayflower in 1620.
Written by Charlotte Stevens Schneider with excerpts from Granddaughter, Jeani. Great Granddaughters of Chauncey W. Payne

Chauncey W. Payne
Chauncey W. Payne was born on December 6, 1862 in Mayfield, Graves County, Kentucky, the son of Chauncey Smith Payne and Cynthia Florilla Chipman Payne. In the 1870 U. S. Census, it shows the family was living in Union City, Obion, Tennessee. By 1880, the family had moved to Jackson Township, Texas County, Missouri.
On December 22, 1886, Chauncey W. Payne and Sarah Louise Brackett were married in Houston, Texas County, Missouri. They had four sons, Cassius Melvin, Arthur W., Earnest Joseph, and Chauncey Smith Payne II. In 1900, they were living in Jackson Township, Texas County, Missouri.
In about 1908, they moved to Creek Township, Wagoner County, Oklahoma. They came by wagon, and started farming in Wagoner County. The youngest son, Chauncey Smith Payne II, rode his horse all the way from Missouri behind the covered wagon. "Old Bill" was an Appaloosa, black with an iron gray rump, and he was a really great horse.
Along with farming, Chauncey W. and his boys worked hauling water for the City of Wagoner from the Grand River using wagons and teams of horses.
During the Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918, known as the Spanish Flu that lasted until June of 1920, Chauncey W. Payne contracted the flu. His death certificate shows that he died within seven days. His son, Earnest Joseph died thirteen days later, also of the Spanish Flu.
They are buried in a plot along with Earnest Joseph's wife and little son in Elmwood Cemetery, Wagoner, Wagoner County, Oklahoma.
Chauncey W. Payne is the 6th great-grandson of Pilgrim John Howland that came to America on the Mayflower in 1620.
Written by Charlotte Stevens Schneider with excerpts from Granddaughter, Jeani. Great Granddaughters of Chauncey W. Payne


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