Showing posts with label 1850. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1850. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2024

#7 Elizabeth “Libbie” H. Taylor (abt 1850-1897) - Immigrant from Canada

 

PCA Archives

Libbie (maiden name unknown) was born in Canada about 1850.   At some point, she came to the United States and married Arthur W. Taylor, born around 1845 in New York state.  There is no evidence that the two ever had any children.

In 1880, Libbie and her husband were living in Denver, Arapaho County, Colorado, where Arthur was a molder at the  Colorado Iron Works. 

The Taylors were in Phoenix by 1894, but thereafter it appears that Libbie and her husband separated, with Arthur moving to Los Angeles.  Though estranged, they nevertheless did not divorce.  Apparently Libbie had enough money to be self-sufficient, as she bought several lots in the Churchill addition for $3000, intending to use them as rental properties.

Libbie developed a case of pneumonia and died December 22, 1897, at her home at 27 South Fourth Avenue in Phoenix.  Her funeral was postponed until after Christmas as friends sought to reach her husband in California by telegraph.  She was buried in Loosley Cemetery, Block 5, Lot 11.  One obituary gave her full name as Libbie H. Y. Taylor, possibly indicating she had been previously married. 

Shortly after Libbie’s funeral, her husband returned to Phoenix to take over her affairs.  Mr. Taylor had his late wife’s remains moved to Porter Cemetery and a large marble monument erected.  The plot Libbie is buried in has plenty of room for other burials, so perhaps he was planning to be buried next to her. 

Since Libbie had died intestate, a special administrator was appointed to handle her estate.  Notice was given and several creditors came forward:  James M. Creighton was one of them.  Keystone Pharmacy submitted an unpaid bill for quinine tablets and laudanum, and there were also bills for nursing and final expenses.  After all of Libbie’s debts had been settled, her husband A. W. Taylor inherited $4666 in cash and real estate.

Arthur was last known to be residing in Los Angeles, California, with a family named Riley and working as a teamster in 1900.

-by Patricia G.

 



Monday, April 29, 2024

Tobias Seelig (1850 - 1892) - Dry Goods Merchant



Microsoft Clip Art

According to his various voter registrations, Tobias Seelig was born in Germany around 1850.  The passenger list of the ship Humboldt shows that  he arrived at New York’s Castle Garden on August 18, 1865.  Except for that, his entire life prior to 1878 is a blank.

Late in 1878, he appears to have opened a dry goods store in Modesto, California.  The Mechanics Cash Store carried clothing, boots and other fancy goods on a cash-only basis.  The local newspaper listed some of the items available.

By 1880, Tobias’s younger brother Gabriel joined him in the Modesto dry goods store.  Perhaps Gabriel took over the management of the Modesto store, for Tobias was in Phoenix by June 1882.  He must have been naturalized, because he registered to vote in that year .  After a stint as a clerk for the dry goods firm of Rosenthal & Kutner, he opened a cigar store in or near the Capitol Saloon.  The cigar store burned down in 1886.

The Seeligs were Jewish.  Jewish stores were essential to life in early Phoenix, and most were subsidiaries of stores founded in California during the Gold Rush days.  Their proprietors could therefore count on financial backing from bankers in San Francisco as well as established sources of supply from the West Coast.  Phoenix’s merchants were usually ‘Reform’ Jews with German surnames who kept their religious affiliations low-key and practiced them behind closed doors.

A Freemason, Seelig also participated in the Fire Brigade and joined the Knights of Pythias.  He was generally well-liked and is said to have dressed stylishly.  By 1891, he was even investing in local mining operations.

Misfortune caught up with him early in 1892, when the Knights of Pythias charged him with defalcation in his use of their funds.  Deeply affected by the charge, Seelig took to drinking and apparently made plans to commit suicide.  He told a friend that, when he died, he wanted to be laid out in his Prince Albert suit.  On March 8, 1892, he carried out his plan in his rooming house, where he donned his suit and shot himself in the temple.

Compounding the tragedy was that his fellow Pythians had already taken up a collection of $600 to cover his debts and restore his good name.

Seelig was buried in a Phoenix cemetery.  Since he owned some property, it is likely that he was interred somewhere in the Pioneer & Military Memorial Park.  There is no marker.


-By Donna Carr