Please note: this blog is a sequential narrative. To start at the beginning, click on "Blog Archive" on the right and select the entry at the very bottom "Jennie Louise Van Buren...or was she?" or click here.
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| Kansas State Map, 1873. Cherokee County is in the southeast corner Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/gmdtitlecolmaps.ks-002-21-gct00583 |
I took another long break from blogging about my family history. I think about this blog almost every day. What has kept me from writing more posts? So many things. Aside from crazy things like global pandemics, and more typical things like personal struggles and professional stress, the real reason I stopped blogging is that I was overwhelmed with how to write this next part. There is an unbelievable story headed your way, one with many twists and turns and, quite frankly, things that will make your head spin. It is a story that should be told - must be told! I just didn't know how to tell it. I still don't. I finally realized that I just had to jump in. And so I will. But before we dive into that story, we need to turn our attention to Jennie's mother, Mary L. Avery Sly. We know that Jennie ended up with her Aunt Sarah in Buffalo. Sarah was Mary's sister. And we know that Jennie's father, Benjamin Sly, died alone in a poor house in Cayuga County, New York. But we do not know what happened to Jennie's mother, Mary. Family lore is that she died when Jennie was young. Is that true?
Let's recap what we know so far about Mary L. Avery and her immediate family:
Mary was born in 1836 in Mentz, Cayuga County, New York.
Mother: Polly, born 1807.
Siblings: Thomas, Sarah J, Edward, Henrietta, Enos, and George W.
Mary married Benjamin Sly sometime before 1855.
Benjamin and Mary were living in Mentz in 1855.
Daughter Jennie Louise (or: Lucy/Lucia J) was born in 1857, either in New York or Illinois.
Benjamin, Mary, and Jennie (Lucy) were living together in Mentz in 1860.
Benjamin and Mary separated sometime between 1860 and 1865.
The last census we have of Mary so far is in 1865, living with mother Polly and daughter Jennie. Benjamin is living elsewhere. Was this because Mary was already ill?
By 1870, Jennie was living with Aunt Sarah and her husband, James Van Buren in Buffalo, New York
1850 Mentz, Cayuga Co., New York Polly Avery, 43
Thomas Avery, 20
Mary Avery, 14
Edward Avery, 10
Henrietta, 8
Enos Avery, 6
George Avery, 4
Marietta Avery, 83
Lewis Newman, 21
Jane Newman, 16
Mary Sly, 19
1860 Mentz, Cayuga Co., New York Benjamin Sly, 40
Mary L. Sly, 23
Lucy J Sly, 3
Samuel B Lent, 6
1865 Auburn, Cayuga Co., New York Polly Avery, 59
Mary Sly, 28 (listed as married)
Thomas Avery, 37
Edward F Avery, 24
Lucia J Sly, 8
(Benjamin living elsewhere, listed as married)
1870 Buffalo, Erie Co., New York James Van Buren, 59
Sarah J Van Buren, 38
Henrietta Seaman, 27
Jenny Sly, 13
George Avery, 23
Here is the Avery family tree as I understood it:
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| Avery Family Tree with the new addition of Sarah J. Avery |
So what happened to Mary after 1865? Did she really die young? I searched on www.ancestry.com for Mary L Sly, born in 1836 in NY.
The first 3 results were census records I already had. The next 2 were seemingly random results from Kansas:
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| Search results on www.ancestry.com for Mary L. Sly |
I skipped those results in Kansas. They had nothing to do with my Mary as far as I knew.
There were many other results for Mary L. Sly, but I ruled most of them out after a quick look. Then I came across this result:
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| Search results on www.ancestry.com for Mary L. Sly |
A quick look revealed:
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| 1870 census result for Mary L. Sly |
Thomas Avery? This was Mary's oldest brother! I had found Mary, living with her brother in Trumansburg, Tompkins County, NY in 1870, at a time when Jennie was already living in Buffalo with Aunt Sarah. So Jennie had NOT moved to Buffalo because her mother had died. I needed to take a closer look at the census record.
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| 1870 Federal Census for Trumansburg, Tompkins County, NY retrieved from www.ancestry.com |
| 1875 Kansas State census |
By then, I was so bleary-eyed and tired that I almost scrolled right past it. I didn't even know what collection I was looking at. All I knew was that I saw an M Sly born in New York close to 1836. I clicked on it.
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| 1875 Kansas State census record for M Sly |
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| Search results for Mary L. Sly |
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| Sly/Nuell marriage record, 1876 |
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| Sly/Nuell marriage record retrieved from www.ancestry.com |
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| Sly/Newell marriage record |
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| George Newton Avery, ca. 1877 in author's personal collection |
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| George Newton Avery, ca. 1877 in author's personal collection |
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| George Newton Avery, ca. 1890 in author's personal collection |
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| George Newton Avery, ca. 1890 in author's personal collection |
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| Baxter Springs, Kansas between 1870 and 1900 Image courtesy of the Kansas Historical Society |
















I would be interested in talking with you. George Newton Avery was my great grandfather. Some of your information was news to me.
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