Patrick Joseph Bradshaw 1881-1959

Unlike most of the subjects on this blog, I’ve had the benefit of knowing people who knew Pat Bradshaw well, although the information is getting bit fuzzy. Some of these tales and facts are the recollections of a 60 year old man (me) struggling to remember what his older relatives told him 30 or 40 years ago. I also have a couple of precious and all-too-brief documents written by my dad and my Aunt Marie. And last but definitely not least, I have the recollections of some of my older cousins.

Patrick Joseph Bradshaw (my grandfather) was born in Chateaugay, NY on June 15th, 1881. He was the eighth of Patrick and Johanna Bradshaw’s 11 children. At the time of his birth, there would have been eight children under 12 in the Bradshaw household.

In 1890, Pat Sr deeded the farm to Johanna and went west to seek his fortune in the mines, probably at the same time as his eldest son Billy. This left Johanna home on the farm with most of the children. Pat would have been around 9 at the time. Pat Sr was back by 1900 according to the US census.

In 1905, Johanna deeded the farm to Pat. He was 23 or 24 and unmarried, but he was the only one of his generation left at home. The 1905 New York State Census lists Patrick(60) and Johanna (60), Pat(23), and “Adopted Son” Fred Parmer(12). Fred Parmer doesn’t appear in any other records I’ve found, so he’s a mystery.

It’s an enduring mystery of the Chateaugay Bradshaws that out of 11 brothers and sisters, only Pat stayed in the area. Everyone else left for New York city, New England and California.

Johanna died in 1908, leaving just Pat and his father on the farm.

Pat had a difficult relationship with his father. Both my father and my uncle John told me that Pat the elder had a life-long problem with alcohol. When Pat Jr was young, there were Sunday get-togethers with Pat Sr’s Brother Richard and his family, who lived close by. The two brothers would go up to the hay loft and finish off an imperial pint of whiskey (which I imagine would have made the evening milking tough). Later, when Pat Jr. was running the farm his father’s drinking companions would congregate in the barn, making a nuisance of themselves. There was also a family rumor (possibly apocryphal) that Pat Jr had to smuggle liquor for this father across the Canadian border (two miles north of the farm) during prohibition. On at least one occasion, his father disappeared and was later found passed out in a ditch near the Sheehan farm (later the Pat Dwyer farm).

The 1910 census shows Patrick Sr, Pat Jr, and Pat’s sister Katherine, who had moved home from NH after divorcing her husband. Katherine died in 1912.

He married Rosetta Cassidy on February 15th, 1915.

Pat and Rosetta had three children. John Francis (1916-2006), Richard Gerald (1917-1982), and Mary Patricia (1919-1921).

For most of Pat’s life, work on the farm was done without benefit of any power equipment. The farm had electricity, running water and flush toilets as early as late 1920’s, but the first tractor didn’t appear until George bought a used Ferguson in 1954 (side note – I learned to drive on that tractor). Before that they used horses for everything. Marie: “He had the most  primitive tools to work with no electric saws, drills or sanders.  He made a wooden sled with steel runners to put milk cans on to draw from the milk house to the end of our driveway so the milk driver could pick up our milk in the winter in the morning. “

Pat was close with neighbor Will Dwyer. Will was best man at both of Pat’s weddings.

Mary died of spinal meningitis in 1921. Rosetta died the next year in 1922. After her death, it was just Pat, John, Gerald, and Pat’s father (also named Patrick) living on the farm.

Pat married Henrietta Cassidy (Rosetta’s cousin) September 1st, 1926. You can read more about their wedding day here. Henrietta was a local girl, born in Canada but raised at the south end of town on the Number 5 road. Pat was 45. Henrietta was 31.

Pat and Henrietta had four children: Marie Theresa (1927-1995), George Joseph (1928-2013), Irene Ann (1931-1992), and Rose Annette (1935-2004).

In 1935, after daughter Rose was born, Henrietta was stricken with serious mental illness. The family has always assumed that it was related to Rose’s birth. After a suicide attempt in which she tried to drown herself in the brook on the farm, she was committed to the Ogdensburg Psychiatric Hospital for about six months. This was a hard time for the family. Henrietta’s mother took Rose in for those months. The kids missed their mother terribly. Pat, who was normally stoic about most things, was visibly affected by Henrietta’s illness. My dad said that was the first time he realized his dad loved his mother. Dad recalled Pat traveling to Ogdensburg and coming back alone, saying that she wasn’t ready. She finally came home in time for Christmas. She was better, but Henrietta would struggle with mental health issues for the rest of her life.

Pat Deeded the farm to his son George (my dad) for $5000 and on the condition that he would support Pat and Henrietta, and put his sisters through college.

Pat passed away on October 19, 1959. He had purchased the one-room school house that sat adjacent to his property when the school system was centralized. He was remodeling the school turning it into a dwelling, possibly a retirement home. The state planned to widen the road so the building had to be torn down or moved. According to my dad, Pat was “tearing around doing a lot of things that a 78 year old man shouldn’t be doing.” That night, he had chest pains. The doctor attributed them to torn muscles. Henrietta found him dead in bed the following morning. The wake was held at home. He’s buried in Saint Patrick’s Cemetery in Chateaugay, along with Rosetta, Henrietta and Daughter Mary.

I once asked my dad, “What was he like?”. There was a pause, and dad replied, “He was a hard man”. In a brief autobiography (which will show up on this site some day) dad said the following of Pat: ” Tough old guy. Thoroughly honest. Strict. Violent temper. ” Marie recalled that both Pat and Henrietta were strict parents who seldom showed any affection.

But dad also described Pat as a thoughtful man who enjoyed solitary walks in the woods. Marie said that “Dad read lot even though he may not have received much formal education.  He was intelligent, respected and well liked in Chateaugay.”

Over the years, I have asked my older cousins about their memories of Pat. Some found him stern and a bit scary. Others recall sitting on his lap and feeling secure and loved. I have a lovely account from my cousin Patty of Pat telling her how much he loved the blossoms on the apple trees in the yard, and bringing her to get the cows for milking.

I never met Pat. He died in 1959, three years before I was born. I get the impression of a smart, hard-working, complicated man who lived through hardship and tragedy, and was able to hold his family together through a terrible crisis.

Here’s a timeline of Pat’s life.

Thanks for reading. Please leave comments if so inclined. I’d love to hear from you.

Bradshaw Siblings Sometime in the 1890s L-R Matthew, John, Patrick, Agnes
Pat and Rosetta CA 1915
Pat and Rosetta’s children, John, Gerald and Mary CA 1919
John, Pat, Gerald – mid 1920’s
Pat and Henrietta Bradshaw’s Wedding Day, 1926
Pat Bradshaw and Family Visiting the Cassidy Farm in 1928.
Seated Left to Right Herman(?) Cassidy, Pat Bradshaw, Marie Bradshaw (on lap), ?, Catherine Cassidy.
Left to Right, Rufus Cassidy, Clarinda Patenaude Cassidy, George Bradshaw, Henrietta Cassidy Bradshaw, Gerald Bradshaw (on car), John Bradshaw (on car), Georgina Cassidy, ?, ?, Leona Cassidy.
Bradshaws 1936
L-R (Rear) Gerald, Henrietta, Rose, Pat(holding Rose), John. (Front) Marie, George, Irene

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Pat and Henrietta’s children – early 40’s L-R George, Marie, Rose, Irene. George seems to have a puppy in his coat.
Pat and Henrietta’s 25th Anniversary, 1951
Pat with Granddaughter Meg in 1953
Pat and family at daughter Irene’s graduation. Front Row L-R Kay McCormick, Henrietta, Irene, Georgina Murnane, Patty Bradshaw Gerald Bradshaw (holding Patty. Back Row L-R Meg Bradshaw, Pat (holding Meg), George Bradshaw, Dick Bradshaw, Marge Bradshaw (Holding Dick)

Earlville

Quaker Settlement and Earlville – Detail From Map of Chateaugay, NY /D.G. Beers’ Atlas of Franklin County, NY 1876

 

Google Maps Screenshot of Earlville and Quaker Settlement 09/10/2018

 

It has been far too long between since I put anything up here.  I got overwhelmed by all the research required to do the next few posts about the great aunts, uncles,  and grandparents.  So, while I do a deep dive into aunt Mayme’s probate records, here’s a brief observation.

If you waded through my post about the data from the US census, then you know that I love digging into obscure data to see what it can say about people’s lives and stories.  (You did read it, right?  Here’s a link if your eyes glazed over the first time.)  And if there’s one thing that I love more than annual crop yield statistics, it’s maps.  My God do I love maps.  Old maps.  New maps.  Google Earth, Middle Earth, the AAA TripTik from my 1984 drive from Florida to New Hampshire.  Maps are it, man.

As I spent time poring over the map of Chateaugay from 1876, I was struck by all the houses in Earlville  (or Slab City as we locals call it).  Its a spot on a map with a handful  houses now but,  my dad talked about how the little hamlet (that’s what Wikipedia calls it) at the intersection of the McCormick Road and the Earlville Road had once been it’s own community.  But holy cow – the map below shows more than 20 residences, (most packed tightly together), a starch factory, a cheese factory, a butter factory, and a school. It was a hopping place!

Since families were pretty large back then, I would guess that the population  of Earlville must have approached 100.   With all the people, and three businesses right there,  this neighborhood must have it’s own sense of place. It was a little village tucked into the Northeast corner of town.

A few more observations

  • The old church on the Earlville Road doesn’t appear on the map.   It’s still there today.  It must have been built after 1876.

  • I don’t see any mention of the Gibson family.  Orville Gibson the founder of Gibson Guitars was born in Earlville in the 1850’s.

  • In 1876, the Graham road extended North all the way up to the Shee Wood’s road.   Now it’s a dead end.

There are lots of people who know a lot more about the history of Earlville than I do.  I just thought I’d make a few observations based on what this jaw-droppingly detailed old map shows.

As the screen shot from Google maps shows, many of those houses are gone.   It’s a pleasant drive in the country, but you’d never be able to tell that there was a village here with its own businesses,  school and church.

If this sounds like I’m bemoaning the decline of Chateaugay and Earlville, that’s not my intent.  I’m more interested in remembering and celebrating our history.   It’s just a reminder that our history is all around us – some places grow,  and some shrink. Our collective memory is short.  A lot gets lost in a generation.  Sometimes it takes a quick look at a moldy old map to help us remember.

Love, Affection and Other Good and Valuable Considerations

On July 26th, 1889, Patrick Bradshaw sold the family farm in Chateaugay, NY to his wife Johanna for the sum of “Four hundred dollars, love and affection, and other good and valuable consideration.” That’s about the same time that their son William (Billy) left home to travel west. Family oral history says that when Billy Went west, his father Patrick went with him. Billy found work in the mines of Nevada and Colorado and stayed for the rest his life. Patrick ultimately returned. The US census shows him back by 1900.

Johanna retained ownership of the farm until 1905 when she sold it to their son Patrick Joseph.

So did Pat transfer the farm to Jo because he knew he would be out of the picture for an extended time? Was the $400 his seed money for making his fortune out west? Why on Earth would he embark on such an endeavor at the age of 45, leaving behind his wife and 11 children, ages 3 months through 20 years? Was the farm failing?

Of course we will never know the answer to most of these questions. I got the story of Patrick leaving to go west from my Uncle John, and it’s an interesting coincidence that he sold Johanna the farm about the same time.

Whatever the reason for the sale, something fishy was going on at the Bradshaw farm.

P.S. The terms from the deed (“Love and affection and other good and valuable consideration”) appear at first to be a touching addition to an otherwise dry legal document. However, they’re real legal terms that are still in use today. So much for my initial impression that my whiskey-loving great-grandfather Patrick had a bit of a soft spot.

Rank Speculation and Wild Guesses

 

This is one of a few pictures that I have with infuriatingly little information to go along with it.  “Bradshaws” is written on the back in pencil.  No date.  No first names.

There are four people in this posed photograph, taken at the studio of A.E. Holmes, in Chateaugay, NY.  Three boys and a girl.  The boy on the left is wearing a lacy shirt and is holding a straw hat. The others are older, the boys wearing suits, and the girl wearing a dress with a lace collar.  At first, the dress clothes,  the stiff poses and unsmiling expressions make the older three appear to be almost young adults.  On closer inspection they appear to be much younger – probably in their early teens at the oldest.

My dad looked at this picture a number of years ago, and was reasonably certain that this photo depicts his father and some siblings.

So here’s my guess:

Left to right:  Matthew Bradshaw (1889-1996),   Richard Bradshaw (1882-1957), Patrick Bradshaw (1881-1959), Agnes Bradshaw (Boss) (1884-1966).

Here’s my reasoning.

  • These four were the youngest of Patrick and Johanna Bradshaw’s children.
  •  The 1900 federal census shows them as the only children living with Patrick and Johanna.
  • The picture was taken by A.E. Holmes, who was in business in Chateaugay, NY from 1886 until 1899.
  • The youngest boy (who appears to be none too thrilled about his attire) is about 7 – so if that’s Matt then this was taken about 1896.  In that case Richard would be about 14,  Pat 15 and Agnes 12.
  • Based on pictures I have seen from a 1938 family reunion, the three boys look like Matt, Richard and Pat.  I don’t have a picture of Agnes,  but she was the youngest daughter.

I could be wrong about who’s who, and it’s even possible that they’re not Patrick and Johanna Bradshaw’s children.  Patrick’s brother Richard lived nearby also, and had plenty of kids of his own. In any case, I’m confident that they’re family.

I have a couple of requests for the blog’s dedicated readers:

1)  If there are any Bradshaw cousins out there who recognize an ancestor, let me know.

2) If anyone can help identify the year more closely (through clothing, the logo at the bottom or some other feature), I would be very grateful.

Thanks in advance.

The Bradshaw Farm in 1870 – OR – Where Have All The Sheep Gone?

One Horse
One Milch Cow (yes that’s the correct spelling)
Eleven Sheep
Three Pigs

That’s it. That’s all the livestock the Bradshaws of Chateaugay, NY owned in 1870.

The 1870 Federal census includes a “Non-Population Schedule” that describes the property, crops and animal products sold by farmers. It’s a fascinating read… Well actually it’s fascinating if you are an engineer and a bit of a nerd, who likes to stare at spreadsheets full of data (guilty). But before you give up on this post and go back to Facebook or Twitter, or Netflix…

Almost everything about these people is a mystery. All that we have are a few stories, a couple of photographs, and some headstones at Saint Patrick’s Cemetery in Chateaugay, NY. Any concrete piece of data, even mundane enumerations of livestock and crop production is worth wringing for any conclusion we can draw. We don’t know how my great-grandparents met, or whether my great-grandmother Johanna retained an Irish brogue. But we do know that in 1870, they had 50 acres of land, 1 horse, 1 milk cow, 11 sheep, and 3 pigs. They produced 40 bushels of wheat, 75 bushels of oats, 20 pounds of wool, 100 bushels of potatoes, 300 pounds of butter, and 6 tons of hay.

So what does that mean?

First of all they were probably living a fairly meagre existence, even by the standards of the day, if they only had 1 horse, and 1 milk cow. Also, their potato crop was a mere 100 bushels. By comparison, next-door neighbors, and perennial friends of the Bradshaws, the Dwyer family had 3 horses and 9 cows and produced 500 bushels of potatoes. Maybe that was enough for a small family. At the time there were only four adults and 1 small child living on the farm. But still, it sure seems like they were one horse and one cow away from disaster.

Unlike their 20th century descendants, they weren’t dairy farmers. Based on the entries for other farms in the area,there was probably no such thing as a dairy farm, i.e. a farm that made its income solely on what came out of a cow’s udder. Granted, some people sold a lot of butter, but they also sold oats, wheat, corn, and potatoes (lots of potatoes – James Dwyer produced 500 bushels that year).

Wool production seemed common in the 19th century. In the second half of the twentieth century, when I lived there, sheep were a novelty in Chateaugay, and I suspect most of Franklin County. I came across a set of sheep shears when I was a kid, and had no idea what they were for, until my dad told me. I’m curious about when that changed.

So that’s all I’ve got for now. A few meagre observations on some dry facts, but it seems like that’s how it works. You dredge up some facts here, and some third hand family stories there, and hope that a story emerges.

So what I missing? Are there any other revelations or observations that I failed to notice?

As always, comments are most welcome.