Joseph McKinney
M, (25 March 1876 - 1947)
| Father* | William McKinney (bt 1838 - 1840 - bt 1885 - 1886) | |
| Mother* | Serena Catherine Breeden (10 Feb 1846 - 1928) | |
Joseph McKinney|b. 25 Mar 1876\nd. 1947|p2530.htm|William McKinney|b. bt 1838 - 1840\nd. bt 1885 - 1886|p2729.htm|Serena Catherine Breeden|b. 10 Feb 1846\nd. 1928|p2730.htm|||||||Russell Breeden|b. 10 Jul 1807\nd. 20 Sep 1876|p2743.htm|Delaney Brooks|b. 15 Jan 1812\nd. 2 May 1890|p2744.htm| | ||
| Charts | Pedigree for Stanley Russell McKinney |
| Relationship | Great-grandfather of James Jay McKinney. |
| Last Edited | 26 Oct 2008 |
| Reference | MMMMC |
| Researcher | 0 |
| Unrelated | 0 |
| Jim Ancestry Verified | Y |
| Note* | Recollections of Gene McKinney their grandson: Joseph was baptized as a Catholic. Eva was a pretty strong Quaker. When he went down there she was a Methodist. We would go to the Methodist church. Gene said Cherokee Co. was one of the biggest spots for Quakerism in Kansas. Remembers when Grandfather Joe took him to town, Neutral, in his old Model T. When he got a newer Chevrolet pickup truck he took me into Columbus. Dad would take us down there and they would take care of us for a week at a time. Grandma didn't smile a lot but was always nice. Show us cows and sheep. He was real hard working guy. Found out later on that he was a truck farmer. In 30's he had a lot of cows, sheep, and pigs, strawberries. Grandmother was a good cook. Knew grandparents on Dad's side better than Mom. Thought it was natural since Dad had a car. Only way to Jones if they took a train., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley1 | |
| Note | Memories of Joe and Eva McKinney: One of my earliest memories, is that my dad left to go to work in the mines in Colorado, Jailboat [or Jelbo?], Colorado. I remember him coming home with a pack on his back when he came back from the mines. I remember him walking into the gate up at the house. At the time, in Pueblo, Colorado, the miners went on a strike. They were advertising for people to go to work. Strikebreakers, actually. And he was one of those, that went out to work in the mines during the strike. [For how long.] It was only for a few months. Not very long. This had to be about 1905 or 6. I was just a small child. That's the first thing I actually remember. That's all I remember about it, other than he went and he came back. I remember when he came back, we were looking for him. He came home on a train, he come walking up the lane with a pack on back. I remember that. That's all I remember. [Is that the only thing your father did outside of farming?] Yeah. The Lowell Academy was similar to a High School in those days. That's where my mother and dad went to school, and my uncles and aunts, some of them. The old Lowell Academy. I don't know whether the old building is still there or not. But it was similar to a High School. Other than that Lowell had nothing much to do with the history of the family. So Colombus was the county seat. That's where we did most of our business deals. Even though we were just as close to Baxter. We moved to the family home in 1910, I was eight years old. That's where I went to grade school in a little town called Neutral. I will have to think a little bit on that. Probably the most significant thing that had a bearing on my life was the fact that Mother took we kids to Sunday School and church, every Sunday, where we learned the difference between right and wrong. She scrubbed our necks and ears, cleaned us all up. We'd go to Sunday School, and if we had to stay for church, we didn't like it. We had an old preacher, he was a donkard[?] big long beard, he'd get up there and rattle on and rattle on and we'd got bored listening to him. But that is the only things that I think attributed to my success was my teaching in the old church house when I was a kid. The other thing is my dad and I didn't get along, but he had a great bearing on my thinking of life due to fact they called him "Honest Joe." He was very honest, he never swore, he never drank, he loved the almighty dollar, he squeezed to legal whatever you might want to call it. But the fact that he was an honest man, in his business, when he was peddling out potatoes, tomatoes and stuff like that. Door[?] to Stores, when they weighed it up, he'd add a couple of pounds [added extra produce]. Where some of the other hucksters would short them. And he got the name of being the honest huckster, if you want to call him that, or peddler. And that had great influence on my life the fact that I had a great deal of respect for his honesty. Which I think I inherited. They lived together. Farmed together. She went to town twice a year is all. Something like that. They didn't run to grocery store to get a loaf of bread every time you run out. She seldom went to town. She visited her parents. I mean every two or three times a year. Or they would come out to visit her. She knew where they were. That's all. [What are your memories of her, your mother?] She was . . . in doing, she never complained. I don't think I ever heard her complain about anything. She liked her flowers. She liked her ol' pump organ. She was tickled to death when she got a piano. I never heard Dad, scold her, even though I thought, still think he was very selfish, but she never complained. That's about . . . she was always good to we kids. She never whooped us. Dad did, he beat the hell out of us. We knew it. We were scared of him. But I never knew of him mistreating her physically or by sort of word. I always thought that he could have been a lot better to her and taken her a few places she'd like to go. My Dad didn't like company. He resented people coming visiting very long at a time. Mother loved company. Her sisters and her relatives would come and see us. Dad [?] go to the barn and sulk or something. But up until the last couple of years I didn't enjoy much out of him. I never knew any other way. We had plenty to eat [?]. [After you left home, what was your relationship with your parents?] Well I wrote to Mother regularly. She wrote us [splendid?] in hand. As a kid, I always tried to write like her. I've succeeded to a certain extent. I write a better hand than any of my kids. Better than my Dad did. She was the organist down out the church. [At the Methodist church, right?] Yeah. She sang alto in the choir. In the quartet. And enjoyed it. She worked a lot in the garden. She did a lot of canning. She did a lot of cooking. They did a lot of butchery in the Fall. [Canning?] wheat and berries and whatever. Apples. Peaches. Cherries. Whatever. She was always busy working. Always had a big bunch of chickens. Somebody would come, she go out and catch that ol' [?] , her chicken. Go over to the chopping block with the axe and chop its head off. Watch it flop click click flopping. [What was the effect of the Quaker religion on your family?] The effect. There wasn't any. [She was born a Quaker and your father was what?] He was born a Catholic. Or supposedly. His father was Catholic. Dad never did practice it that I know of. Mother's people were staunch Quakers. I don't know of any Religion having any bearing on the way we lived. [Joseph Stanley] lived there for a while in Lowell after he left the farm. After that he rented the farm to my dad. My dad was a gardener, he raised [?] his special crop was sweet potatoes. But he raised tomatoes and he raised radishes, raised strawberries, raised turnips, and ordinary garden stuff. He raised watermelons. Orange[?] potatoes. But his principal crop was sweet potatoes. [So you did the planting in the Spring and then harvest during the Summer?] Yes. Other than that he didn't raise any wheat. He didn't raise any corn, except sweet corn. For feed for the livestock, he sowed oats. He didn't harvest them with a harvester, he cut them with a bowling[?] machine, and go out and rake them up. We haul them and put them in the barn for hay during the Winter. [How many acres was the farm?]50.[How much livestock was there?] Most the time, he only had three horses and about two to three cows. Maybe four or five pigs. And a bunch of chickens. [So it wasn't a very prosperous farm then?] Oh no, not as things go. But he made more money off that fifty acres from this gardening business than most guys did from a 160 raising corn and wheat. And it wasn't until later after I left home that he accumulated a couple more farms and started raising wheat and corn. [The farm that Ern has now. That's what he rents it out as, right?] He bought that, while I was away. [Whose farm was that? The Stanley farm?] No, Ern has both of them. The Stanley farm and the other one, both. [The McKinney farm?] Yes. [That your dad had?] Yeah. [But he rents both of those out? He doesn't farm anything himself does he?] Who Ern, no. He hadn't farmed for himself since he left Las Vegas. He's always rented his farms out. He accumulated both those farms, shortly after he left Las Vegas. [Did he save money to buy them?] He bought the rest of the heirs out. He had part of it before that., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley2 | |
| Birth* | 25 March 1876 | Ash Grove, Greene Co., MO, Extracted by Jim McKinney on 1/27/95 from a book found in the National DAR library under MO/County Greene/Spring which included extracts from the register of baptisms, Immaculate Conception Church, Springfield MO., 1866-1876 page 39 1-McKinney, Joseph Born 25 March 1876 Parents - William McKinney and Catharine Breedon Baptised: 29 July 1876 Sponsers - William Magee and ----- Minister - Theo. Kussman3,4,5,6 |
| Baptism | 29 July 1876 | Immaculate Conception, Springfield, Greene Co., MO, Joseph McKinney son of William McKinney and Catherine Breedan born on March 25, 1876 was baptized on July 29, 1876 in the Church of Immaculate Conception in Springfield, MO according to the Rite of the Roman Catholic Church by Reverend Theo. Kussman. Sponsored by William Magee. MH Mar. 22, 1991: I also checked out the sponsor for Joseph's baptism (that would be my Uncle Joe, your great grandfather) in Springfield. One was Delany Breeden, the other, William Magee. I HAVE NOT LOOKED HIM UP IN THE CENSUS. I did find in the IGI that a man of that name had married a Mily Johnson 14 Feb. 1855 in Lawrence Cty. MO, I couldn't find any reason to believe he was anything but someone they knew. It is possible that he was an Uncle, but I doubt it. IT MIGHT BE WORTH TAKING A LOOK ST A CENSUS TO SEE WHAT YOU CAN FIND ABOUT HIM. The only other baptism I found was for Aunt Nell and there were no sponsors shown., Witness=William McKinney7,3 |
| (Witness) Census | 11 June 1880 | Garden Township, Cherokee Co., KS, McKinney, Wm., white, male,Age: 40, married, Farmer, apparently can read and write, born in Ireland, Parents born in Ireland; Serina, white, female, Age:34, wife, married, Keeping house, apparently can read and write, born in MO, Father born in VA, Mother born in TN; Mary, Age: 12, Daughter, at home, attended school, born in MO, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO; Nellie, Age: 7, Daughter, attended school, born in MO, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO; Joseph, Age: 4, Son, born in MO, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO; Francis, Age: 1, Son, born in KS, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO., Principal=William McKinney, Principal=Serena Catherine Breeden5 |
| (Witness) Census | 19 June 1900 | Garden Township, Cherokee Co., KS, McKinney Sarinna, Head, white, female, Born Feb. 1846, Age:54, widow, Mother of 8 children, states 1 living (I believe it meant that 1 died), born in MO, Father born in VA, Mother born in TN, Farmer, can read, can write, can speak English,Owned farm free of mortgage, farm 85; Joseph, Son, Born Mar 1876, Age: 24, Single, born in MO, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO, Farm laborer, can read, can write; Willie, Son, Born Jan 1881, Age: 19, Single, born in KS, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO, Attended school, can read, can write;Grace, Daughter, Born Feb 1883, Age: 17, Single, born in KS, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO, Attended school, can read, can write; Robert, Son, Born Aug 1885, Age: 14, Single, born in KS, Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO, Attended school, can read, can write., Principal=Serena Catherine Breeden6 |
| Marriage* | 3 July 1901 | Lowell, Cherokee Co., KS, Recollections of S.R., their son: [Did they meet at school?] Presumedly. I don't know a thing about it. It was never talked about so far as I know. I never did hear any talk about it at all., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley2 |
| Census* | 15 April 1910 | Spring Valley Township, Cherokee Co., KS, Joseph McKinney, Head, Age 34,Married 9 years,born in MO,Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO,General farmer, Looks like he was renting farm but unsure, can read and write Truck farmer working on own account; Eva S.,wife, Age 32, Married 9 years, mother of 3 children all living, born in KS, Father born in IA, Mother born in NC;can read and write;Russell S., son, Age 8,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS, did not attend school during past school year;Ernest M., son, Age 6,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS, did not attend school during past school year;Herald R., son, Age 5,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS, did not attend school during past school year., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley, Witness=Stanley Russell McKinney8 |
| Census | 27 March 1920 | Spring Valley, Cherokee Co., KS, Joseph McKinney, Head,Owned Farm free of mortgage, Age 43,Married, can read and write,born in MO,Father born in Ireland, Mother born in MO, Truck farmer working on own account; Eva S.,wife, Age 42, can read and write,born in KS, Father born in IA, Mother born in NC; Ernest M., son, Age 16,did not attend school during past school year, can read and write,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS, Farm laborer; Robert H., son, Age 15,DID attend school during past school year, can read and write,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS, Farm laborer; Joseph M. , son, Age 4 4/12,did not attend school during past school year, cannot read or write,born in KS, Father born in MO, Mother born in KS., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley9 |
| Death* | 1947 | near farm, Lowell, Cherokee Co., KS, Recollections of S.R., their son: [When did he die?] 1947. [So after you had already moved to Las Vegas, right?] Yeah. [I remember it being said that he had cancer, right? And that he killed himself?] Yeah. Were not sure. Uncle Will, whose one of the McKinney kids we were talking about, was his doctor. But he had been through Joplin for another doctor and had a prostate operation. I [part?] back and asked Uncle Will if he had cancer. Well, he wasn't quite sure. He wouldn't give me a no and he wouldn't give me a yes. But anyway. Dad could never tend any pain. If he got a little bit of pain, he just . . . he couldn't stand pain. Anyway, took the wrong way out. Something I've always said I'd never do. You hurt too many people. Not that I'm too good to do it, but you're very selfish when you do something like that. [What was your Mother like after he . . .?] Well I mean, there wasn't any change much. She accepted it. She was not all broke up I mean anything of that kind. Went along and sold the farm. Moved to town. [Did Ern buy the farm back later on?] Not that farm. No. At the time he died. He had this 50 acre farm, where they lived. He had the Stanley farm, dad did, and Mother. And the McKinney farm in Baxter. He had three. [When he died, your mother sold which one?] She sold the farm we grew up. [But kept the William McKinney and Stanley farm?] Yeah. Of course he died In Testament . I mean, she inherited half of it. The rest of us inherited the other half. (Larry remembers being in HS hitchiking home when heard of death)2 |
| Burial* | after 1947 | Lowell Cemetery SW/4 NW/4 S32 T34 R25, Lowell, Cherokee Co., KS, Lowell Cemetery where Joseph and Eva are buried near William and Serena Breeden McKinney.10 |
Family | Eva Mary Stanley | |
| Marriage* | 3 July 1901 | Lowell, Cherokee Co., KS, Recollections of S.R., their son: [Did they meet at school?] Presumedly. I don't know a thing about it. It was never talked about so far as I know. I never did hear any talk about it at all., Principal=Eva Mary Stanley2 |
| Children |
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Citations
- [S42] Interview with unknown informant (unknown informant address). Unknown repository (unknown repository address).
- [S46] Interview with unknown informant (unknown informant address). Unknown repository (unknown repository address).
- [S71] Unknown name of person unknown record type, unknown repository, unknown repository address; unknown reader, Certificate of baptism prepared by Rev. Msgr. Philip A. Bucher on September 6, 1988.
- [S73] Paul McGowen, Breeden/Hurst Family (n.p.: n.pub., 1983), Probably from Margaret Hunt.
- [S118] 1880 US Federal Census: Garden Township,Cherokee Co. KS Supervisor Dist. 1,Enum. Dist. 41, Page 11, Lines1-6. Family 18. Page 466.
- [S4] 1900 US Federal Census: Garden Township,Cherokee Co. KS Supervisor Dist. 3,Enum. Dist. 23, Sheet 7, Lines 98-100, Sheet 8, Lines 1-2. Family 154. Page 70.
- [S61] Book: Register of Baptisms, Immaculate Conception Church, Springfield, MO 1866-76. pg. 127. National Daughters of the American Revolution Library, Green Co., MO.
- [S5] 1910 US Federal Census: Spring Valley,Cherokee Co. KS Supervisor Dist. 3,Enum. Dist. 42, Sheet No. 1A, Lines14-18. Family 4. Page 151.
- [S155] 1920 US Federal Census: Spring Valley,Cherokee Co. KS Enum. Dist. 40 Ward 4164. Line 72-76. Family 16..
- [S74] Unknown compiler, compiler, "Correspondence"; Margaret Hunt, April 3, 1993., Ancestral File unknown repository, unknown repository address.
- [S32] Unknown compiler, compiler, "Doris Frichtel Group Sheet"; Prepared 17 April 1997 by Doris McKinney Frichtel., Ancestral File (17 April 1997), unknown repository, unknown repository address.