Treadway, Allen Frank

Treadway, Allen Frank

Male 1931 - 2005  (73 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Treadway, Allen Frank was born on 30 Nov 1931 in White Plains, Westchester County, New York, USA (son of Treadway, Clay Augustus Calvin and Allen, Dorothea Teulon); died on 19 May 2005 in Xenia, Greene, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Nov 2003, Xenia, Greene, Ohio, USA

    Notes:



    This poem was written by Allen for his wife:

    To Carolyn

    It's been thirty-something years that we've
    Been walking two by two, as the good sage
    Of Grovers Corners says we're meant. Not always
    Hand in hand, but never back to back,
    And not two only. Five kids, five dogs, cats,
    Rats, and one green lizard stayed awhile.

    "Illegitimi non carbornundum"
    Not a bad motto when daily life grinds on
    The spirit. You kept our lives on course,
    Kept ideals in view -- what we were living for.

    Five children grown and gone, just visits now,
    Jut Pip, best of dogs, to share our days.
    Too quiet? Not likely here at East Wind!
    That same good Center that kept our home together
    Helps here, too.

    Today a youngish woman called you beautiful.
    She's right, of course, though I don't say it much.
    Her beauty, being young, is mostly genes
    And eathing right, a gift of those who raised her.
    Yours comes from within.

    Friend, lover, partner of my life,
    I am so very thankful for that bright
    June day we said our vows at Coal Creek,
    And thankful we both meant them.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Treadway, Clay Augustus Calvin was born on 14 Apr 1898 in Stark, Neosho County, Kansas (son of Treadway, Elijah Frank and Bodenhamer, Anna Myrtle); died on 19 Mar 1987 in Des Moines, Polk, Iowa, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Graduation: 1925, Friends University, Wichita, Kansas

    Notes:



    Before Clay was ten years old, his family moved to Custer County,
    Oklahoma, drawn by inexpensive land. It proved to be too dry, and they
    were not able to make it.
    In 1985, Clay wrote a letter to a reunion of the Wood family, which
    included descendants of his aunt Mary (Bodenhamer) and John Burton Wood:
    "I lived in Stafford County, Kansas for four years from 1913 to 1917, and
    attended Macksville School. I was a member of the Free Methodist Church
    and played football. I left Macksville in the fall of 1917 to go to
    college at Friends University in Wichita, KS. I have had very little
    contact with any of your relatives since that time. I graduated from
    F.U. in 1925, and have divided my time as a teacher and social worker
    since that until I retired in 1965."

    Clay married Allen, Dorothea Teulon on 10 Jun 1930 in White Plains, Westchester, New York, USA. Dorothea was born on 1 Mar 1901 in New York City (All Boroughs), New York, USA; died on 21 Jan 1994 in Des Moines, Polk, Iowa, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Allen, Dorothea Teulon was born on 1 Mar 1901 in New York City (All Boroughs), New York, USA; died on 21 Jan 1994 in Des Moines, Polk, Iowa, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Graduation: 1924, Radcliffe, Cambridge, Massachusetts

    Notes:



    Dorothea Teulon Allen was born March 1, 1901, in New York City, the
    oldest child of Joseph and Annie Winsor Allen. Most of her childhood was
    spent in White Plains, New York. Her parents ran a tutorial school at
    Seal Harbor, Maine, during the summers, and it was there that she most
    fully enjoyed her childhood. Seal Harbor was shere her deepest sense of
    home remained all her life.
    A 1924 graduate of Radcliffe Collere, Dorothea taught English for
    five years at Hampton Institute in Virginia, a private high school for
    Black students. There she met Clay Treadway, whom she married in 1930.
    She them became a full time housewife and mother to their four children.
    Raised a Unitarian, Dorothea joined the Society of Friends after her
    marriage, and was an active member as long as her health permitted. She
    and Clay were founding members of the Des Moines Valley Monthly Meeting.
    She was a lover of good music, good literature, and Nature in its
    tamer forms. In politics and religion she espoused traditional Liberal
    views. She did not change her opinions when they went out of fashion.
    She talked of her hopes for progress toward world peace and the need for
    world government in her last conversations with her family.
    Dorothea had four children, thirteen grandchildren, and six
    great-grandchildren. Her children are Allen of Tecumseh, Missouri, Ann
    of Wayland, Massachusetts, Roy of Normal, Illinois, and Ray of
    Greensboro, North Carolina.

    Children:
    1. 1. Treadway, Allen Frank was born on 30 Nov 1931 in White Plains, Westchester County, New York, USA; died on 19 May 2005 in Xenia, Greene, Ohio, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Treadway, Elijah Frank was born on 29 Jan 1873 in Neosho County, Kansas; died on 10 Jun 1937 in Grand Junction, Mesa County, Colorado, USA.

    Notes:



    Civil War pension papers of Calvin W Tredway

    Elijah married Bodenhamer, Anna Myrtle on 22 Apr 1896 in Erie, Neosho County, Kansas. Anna (daughter of Bodenhamer, Henry Clay and James, Priscilla Jane) was born on 14 Jan 1876 in Birmingham Township, Schuyler County, Illinois; died on 21 Mar 1951 in Hotchkiss, Colorado. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Bodenhamer, Anna Myrtle was born on 14 Jan 1876 in Birmingham Township, Schuyler County, Illinois (daughter of Bodenhamer, Henry Clay and James, Priscilla Jane); died on 21 Mar 1951 in Hotchkiss, Colorado.

    Notes:



    Letter from Mary Ann Wheeler, 9 Jun 1981

    Children:
    1. 2. Treadway, Clay Augustus Calvin was born on 14 Apr 1898 in Stark, Neosho County, Kansas; died on 19 Mar 1987 in Des Moines, Polk, Iowa, USA.
    2. Tredway, Bert Lemuel was born on 22 Dec 1899 in Stark, Neosho County, Kansas; died on 8 Sep 1971 in Parma, Canyon, Idaho, USA.
    3. Tredway, Lewis Cecil was born on 12 Sep 1909 in Alta Vista, Wabaunsee, Kansas, USA; died on 28 Feb 1979.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Bodenhamer, Henry Clay was born on 18 Nov 1843 in Birmingham, Schuyler County, Illinois (son of Bodenhamer, William G and Mendenhall, Linnea); died on 11 Mar 1888 in Osawatomie, Miami County, Kansas.

    Notes:



    In papers of the Illinois Adjutant General's Office, we find Henry
    Bodenhamer described as 6' 1" tall, with light hair, grey eyes, and a
    light complexion. He was enrolled on 11 Aug 1862 at Brooklyn, Illinois,
    by Captain Blackburn for a term of three years. He was mustered in 1 Sep
    1862 at Quincy, Illinois, by Capt Ewing.
    He was a member of Company A of the 78th Illinois Infantry. This
    regiment was first assigned on 19 Sep 1862, to guard prisoners in
    Louisville, Kentucky, and then on 5 Oct to protect the railroad from
    Elizabethtown to New Haven, Kentucky. On 26 Dec, John Morgan's guerillas
    captured Companies B and C, and they were to spend more than nine months
    under guard in St. Louis.
    In early Feb 1863, the regiment traveled to Nashville, Tennessee via
    the Cumberland River. On the 3rd, although they saw no action
    themselves, their arrival at Fort Donnelson caused the withdrawal of
    Confederate forces under Forrest and Wheeler, who otherwise seemed likely
    to defeat the Union forces there. On the 12th, the 78th marched to
    Franklin, Tennessee, where it remained four months, its first chance to
    drill.
    On 23 Jun, they marched to Murfreesboro, and on the 28th they
    continued south, reaching Shelbyville, Tennessee on 1 Jul. From 6 to 19
    Sep, they moved south past Lookout Mountain, through Rossville and
    Ringgold, Georgia, and then back to Rossville, skirmishing all the way.
    Their first major battle came at Chickamunga on the 20th and 21st,
    where they suffered heavy losses in a charge on Longstreet's corps.
    October, November, and December were spent tracking back and forth across
    southeastern Tennessee, maintaining supply lines and skirmishing. They
    wintered at Rossville. Their first action in 1864 came in May, with the
    beginning of the Atlanta campaign. They were at Buzzard's Roost, then
    Resaca, Rome, and New Hope Church. They suffered serious losses in a
    failed assault on earthworks at Kenesaw on 27 Jun. July 17 found them
    engaged at Peach Tree Creek, and by the 28th they were working their way
    around Atlanta.
    On 1 Sep, they accomplished the unusual by capturing trenches at
    Jonesboro, with men and equipment; Clay Bodenhamer was reported wounded
    on this day. Atlanta fell into Union hands on the 2nd. On the 29th, the
    regiment traveled by train to Athens, Alabama, and then marched to
    Florence, where they overtook Forrest. They were transported to
    Chattanooga, and from there they once again marched through Gaylesville,
    Rome, and Kingston, reaching Atlanta on 16 Nov. This time they continued
    south and east, through Covington, Milledgeville, Sandersville, and
    Louisville. They completed their march to the sea by taking Savannah on
    21 Dec. With this they had managed to divide the Confederacy into two
    unconnected parts. On 20 Jan 1865, they broke camp at Savannah and
    started north, through Barnwell, Lexington, and Winnsboro, South
    Carolina, destroying railways and other property as they went. By 11 Mar,
    they had reached Fayetteville, North Carolina.
    They encountered heavy fighting on the 19th at Bentonville, being for
    a while entirely encircled by the enemy. Following this fight they
    camped near Goldsboro. When the war ended on 26 Apr, they were encamped
    at Raleigh, where they had been since the 10th. They then marched
    through Richmond, Virginia, and reached Washington on 19 May. On the
    24th, they took part in the Grand Review. They were mustered out on 7
    Jun and transported to Chicago, where they received their pay on the
    12th.
    Of the original 862 recruits, only 396 reamained to make the trip
    from Washington to Chicago. Ninety six had died on the field, 24 in
    Confederate prisons, and 77 in hospitals. An additional two hundred or
    so were lost to injuries.
    After the war, Clay Bodenhamer returned to Schuyler County, until
    about 1878, when he moved to Kansas. They had not been in Kansas many
    years when the
    family of an uncle was murdered, and a son of the family sent to prison.
    The shock of this event undid Clay, and he was admitted to the insane
    assylum at Osawatomie, Kansas. He remained there until his death, and
    because the family was too poor to bring the body back home, he was
    buried at the assylum.
    When she applied for a pension based on his service, Jane Bodenhamer
    stated that he, "while in said service & line of duty contracted severe
    debility and heart disease. The same being super[?]nced & brought on
    from impure vacination which continued to affect his left side, that he
    died from these causes."

    Henry married James, Priscilla Jane on 7 Sep 1873 in Macomb, McDonough County, Illinois, USA. Priscilla was born on 16 Mar 1847 in Illinois, USA; died on 25 Aug 1915 in Macksville, Stafford County, Kansas, USA; was buried in Neosho County, Kansas, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  James, Priscilla Jane was born on 16 Mar 1847 in Illinois, USA; died on 25 Aug 1915 in Macksville, Stafford County, Kansas, USA; was buried in Neosho County, Kansas, USA.

    Notes:



    Priscilla James appears in the 1850 census in her father's household in
    Eden (now Birmingham) twp, Schuyler co, Illinois. In 1870, she is in the
    household of George [sic Charles T] Wheeler in Lamoin Townshipi,
    McDonough County, Illinois. In 1900, she is in Neosho County, Kansas.
    In 1890, when she applied for a pension based on her husband's
    service in the Civil War, neighbors testified "that she owns a small
    house of only 2 rooms worth not over $100. That see owns only one cow
    and 2 hogs and 6 pigs & no other personal property except household
    goods. We also know that she works at Weaving Carpets and other such
    work for the support of her self and family, and we further know that she
    has during the last two years had and received aid from Erie Post No 311
    GAR and also from the board of County Comissioners of Neosho
    County, Kansas."

    Letter from Mary Ann Wheeler, 2 May 1981
    Letter from Mary Ann Wheeler, 9 Jun 1981

    Buried:
    East Hill Cemetery

    Children:
    1. Bodenhamer, John Lemuel was born on 13 Oct 1874 in Schuyler County, Illinois; died in 1927 in Stafford County, Kansas.
    2. 5. Bodenhamer, Anna Myrtle was born on 14 Jan 1876 in Birmingham Township, Schuyler County, Illinois; died on 21 Mar 1951 in Hotchkiss, Colorado.
    3. Bodenhamer, Rosa Caroline was born on 19 Sep 1877 in Birmingham Township, Schuyler County, Illinois; died on 22 Mar 1958; was buried in Macksville, Stafford, Kansas, USA.
    4. Bodenhamer, Mary Frances was born on 18 Mar 1879 in Neosho County, Kansas; died on 14 Feb 1960 in Macksville, Stafford County, Kansas, USA.
    5. Bodenhamer, Sarah Linnea was born on 19 Aug 1881 in Neosho County, Kansas; died in 1933 in Erie, Neosho County, Kansas; was buried in Neosho, Kansas, USA.
    6. Bodenhamer, William Walter was born on 18 Mar 1883 in Neosho County, Kansas; died on 3 Aug 1906 in Walnut River, Winfield, Kansas; was buried in Neosho County, Kansas, USA.
    7. Bodenhamer, Nancy Jane was born on 21 Jan 1886; died on 18 Mar 1888; was buried in Neosho County, Kansas, USA.