The following is from the wife of Solomon McCrary - given by Mararet Shields McCrary:
"Daniel Adams and Susan McCrary were married 28 Jan 1840 and went to house keeping in a brand new log house, March 1, 1840. Daniel and Susan went from Grandpa Adam's on Saturday, February 27th, to Grandpa McCrary's and stayed over Sunday. Sunday they went to church at Shilod. She was wearing a bottle green dress and dress bonnet and he was wearing a dark blue broad cloth suit. Rev. Sam King preached that Sunday. Then they rode back seven miles to Father Elijah McCrary. Then the next morning, her youngest brother, Solomon McCrary, harnessed up to our horse wagon to bring her to her new home. The household goods of the young bride, the furnishings of new house very simple, but ample for those times. She brought to the new home 1 chair, 2 feather beds, 2 home made quilts, and 6 quilts. He brought one feather bed, and 2 bed steads were purchased by the groom. And the purchase price being a cow and a calf.
The young couple followed the household goods on horseback, riding double. She wearing a homespun cotton dress, a blue and yellow medium check. They milked seven cows and by October had a barrel of butter to send to Lexington, Missouri, where the annual trip in wagons across the county was made to exchange the products for annual supply of groceries."
Daniel was elected Justice of the Peace in 1852 and served 4 years. He was re-elected and served 2 years.
During the Civil War, Daniel kept a barrel of whiskey for the many soldiers that were passing through. Daniel had two boys fight for the North (John and William). The Confederates were always looking for the Union boys who might be around, but the family was never bothered (they fed both sides). (1)
In 1866 he was elected county judge, serving 2 terms (3 years), and the end of which time he resigned. He was township clerk several years and has held the office of school director subsequent to the free school systems establishment in this Missouri. Daniel and Susan were members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. "Mr. Adams is one of those sterling pioneers whose force of character coupled with his industry has wielded a powerful influence in his neighborhood for good; hospitable and generous in nature, he has secured a large circle of friends." (2)
In the 1870 U.S. Census, Daniel is listed as Head of Household, residing in Johnson Country, Washington Township, age 50, occupation farmer, with $8,400 (?) in Real Estate and $2,500 in Personal Property. He had Susan (age 48), Anna E. (age 27), William (age 25), Jane A. (age 24), Elijah (age 22), Susan E. (age 20), Clara (age 18), Robert (age 15), Thomas (age 15), and James (age 11) residing with him.
In the 1880 U.S. Census, Daniel and Susan are residing in Washington Township, Johnson County, Missouri (Census Place Washington, Johnson, Missouri Family History Library Film 1254696 NA Film Number T9-0696 Page Number 481C).
His granddaughter, Effie, remembered him walking over his farm with his two dogs, Sanka and Moody, always at his heels. After Daniel and Susan died, Abbie and Bob lived on the place until they died in 1917 and 1921, respectively, when the farm was sold to a distant relative. While they were in Warrensburg one day, the house burned to the ground (1)
(1) Effie Adams Fitzgerald's journal
(2) The History of Johnson County, Missouri, 1881
The following is from the wife of Solomon McCrary - given by Mararet Shields McCrary:
"Daniel Adams and Susan McCrary were married 28 Jan 1840 and went to house keeping in a brand new log house, March 1, 1840. Daniel and Susan went from Grandpa Adam's on Saturday, February 27th, to Grandpa McCrary's and stayed over Sunday. Sunday they went to church at Shilod. She was wearing a bottle green dress and dress bonnet and he was wearing a dark blue broad cloth suit. Rev. Sam King preached that Sunday. Then they rode back seven miles to Father Elijah McCrary. Then the next morning, her youngest brother, Solomon McCrary, harnessed up to our horse wagon to bring her to her new home. The household goods of the young bride, the furnishings of new house very simple, but ample for those times. She brought to the new home 1 chair, 2 feather beds, 2 home made quilts, and 6 quilts. He brought one feather bed, and 2 bed steads were purchased by the groom. And the purchase price being a cow and a calf.
The young couple followed the household goods on horseback, riding double. She wearing a homespun cotton dress, a blue and yellow medium check. They milked seven cows and by October had a barrel of butter to send to Lexington, Missouri, where the annual trip in wagons across the county was made to exchange the products for annual supply of groceries."
Daniel was elected Justice of the Peace in 1852 and served 4 years. He was re-elected and served 2 years.
During the Civil War, Daniel kept a barrel of whiskey for the many soldiers that were passing through. Daniel had two boys fight for the North (John and William). The Confederates were always looking for the Union boys who might be around, but the family was never bothered (they fed both sides). (1)
In 1866 he was elected county judge, serving 2 terms (3 years), and the end of which time he resigned. He was township clerk several years and has held the office of school director subsequent to the free school systems establishment in this Missouri. Daniel and Susan were members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. "Mr. Adams is one of those sterling pioneers whose force of character coupled with his industry has wielded a powerful influence in his neighborhood for good; hospitable and generous in nature, he has secured a large circle of friends." (2)
In the 1870 U.S. Census, Daniel is listed as Head of Household, residing in Johnson Country, Washington Township, age 50, occupation farmer, with $8,400 (?) in Real Estate and $2,500 in Personal Property. He had Susan (age 48), Anna E. (age 27), William (age 25), Jane A. (age 24), Elijah (age 22), Susan E. (age 20), Clara (age 18), Robert (age 15), Thomas (age 15), and James (age 11) residing with him.
In the 1880 U.S. Census, Daniel and Susan are residing in Washington Township, Johnson County, Missouri (Census Place Washington, Johnson, Missouri Family History Library Film 1254696 NA Film Number T9-0696 Page Number 481C).
His granddaughter, Effie, remembered him walking over his farm with his two dogs, Sanka and Moody, always at his heels. After Daniel and Susan died, Abbie and Bob lived on the place until they died in 1917 and 1921, respectively, when the farm was sold to a distant relative. While they were in Warrensburg one day, the house burned to the ground (1)
(1) Effie Adams Fitzgerald's journal
(2) The History of Johnson County, Missouri, 1881
Family Members
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Lieut John Albert Adams
1841–1921
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Ann Elizabeth Adams Denton
1843–1922
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William Preston Adams
1844–1925
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Jane Abigail "Abby" Adams
1846–1917
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Christina Caroline Adams McCoy
1847–1922
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Susan Ellen Adams
1849–1920
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Susan Elizabeth Adams Carroll
1849–1942
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Clara Emeline Adams Thornton
1851–1929
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Mary Frances Adams
1854–1865
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Robert Henry "Bob" Adams
1856–1921
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James Linn Adams
1859–1947
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