It is difficult to discover for certain who lived in my house through the 1870s and 1880s. House numbers had not yet been assigned in Wyoming, so I can only make educated guesses (by process of elimination) about who likely lived in the house, when looking at U.S. Census records and City/County directories. I know its owner, Joseph Jewett was living on Springfield Pike and rented out this home.
The earliest residents I can document living in my house on East Mills Ave. (originally Wiley Ave.), are the family of William Franklin Golden (1853-1882), his wife Anna Herbert Hickman Golden (1852-1889), and sons Clifford Clark Golden (1879-1915) and William Franklin Golden, Jr. (1882-1918), based on the 1880 Census. (I found record of the Fay family living across the street later in the decade, and am assuming they didn't move).
1880 U.S. Census Form |
William was the son of Isaac Golden a grocer/baker who lived and had a shop on Elm Street in Cincinnati as early as the 1840s. However, he died when William was only nine, so William spent his youth living with relatives, including with his older, married sister’s family in Green Township.
Anna’s father was a Cincinnati-based wholesale tobacco merchant, Henry "H.J." Hickman, who moved from Kentucky to Cincinnati and then to Avondale. Anna demonstrated a lot a bravery as a young woman, when a burglar invaded her father's home (see article below).
Source: Cincinnati Enquirer February 27, 1877. |
Anna Hickman Golden, William Franklin Golden, Jr., and Clifford Clark Golden. Source: Bruce Black |
Source: Cincinnati Enquirer March 30, 1889. |
As of the 1900 Census, the two boys, now young men (21 and 18), lived with Anna’s sister, Grace Hickman, in College Hill. They both served in Company C, First Infantry, Ohio National Guard in the first decade of the 20th century. Census and death records indicate that later Clifford was a teamster and William was a driver for a rag collector.
Ultimately, like their father, both Clifford and William died of tuberculosis, both at age 35. Each spent the last weeks of their lives in the Cincinnati Tuberculosis Sanatorium in Price Hill, which is now the Dunham Recreation Center.
A video about the Tuberculosis Sanatorium:
Clifford was buried with his mother in his maternal grandfather’s plot in Spring Grove Cemetery in 1915. However, at his death in 1918 William, Jr., was buried in Cincinnati’s Potters’ Field in Price Hill—the cemetery for the poor and indigent, located near the Tuberculosis Sanatorium. Which makes me wonder why? Did he have no family around to facilitate his burial in Spring Grove? Or had he in some way alienated them? Or did he not want to be buried there? Or did no one from the Sanatorium even bother ask?
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