A
"Kingmaker's" home. Morton Albaugh's residence, which is within a
block of the black church---Lane's Chapel, This was on the edge of the
3rd ward and a couple blocks from "Mudtown"--the city's SE section(
according to Needham's Pocket Map of Topeka 1882) This house was built
for Albaugh , a newspaper owner, clerk of the US District court, head of
the KS Republican party from about 1898 through the teens. (1331 Harrison)
Albaugh was a cohort of William Allen White and Cy Leland (the "boss" of the Kansas Republican party from Doniphan County).
Kansas: a cyclopedia of state history, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent person, pg. 514-515 , v. III
Morton Albaugh, clerk of the United States district court, at Topeka, was
reared a farmer boy in Martin county, Indiana, where he was born, Feb. 10, 1862,
and is a namesake of Indiana's great war governor, Oliver P. Morton. He is a son
of Samuel Albaugh and wife, Leah Slates, both of whom were natives of Carroll
county, Ohio, and were married there in 1852, removing from there to Martin
county, Indiana, in 1853, where the father is still living and has resided for
nearly sixty years; the mother having died in February, 1910, aged seventy-nine
years. They were the parents of eight children, four sons
and four daughters, all of whom are living and reside in Martin county, Indiana,
except Morton, and a sister, Emma, who resides in Colorado. Named in order of
birth they are: John Perry, a general merchant at Shoals; Jane, who is Mrs.
Jacob Ruggless of Shoals; William C.; Oscar; Morton; Martha, who is Mrs. Charles
Dowell; Emma, who is Mrs. George Truax of Breckenridge, Col.; and Mary, who is
Mrs. James Williams.
Morton Albaugh was educated in the district schools of Martin county and in the
Southwestern Normal College, at Mitchell, Ind. In early manhood he taught five
terms of school, beginning that vocation at the age of sixteen. When nineteen
years of age he became principal of the schools at Amo, Ind., and served as such
two years, after which, in 1883, when twenty-one years of age, he came to Kansas
and for one year was principal of the public schools at Kingman, Kan. He then
turned his attention to newspaper work, having purchased the "Saratoga Sun," and
continued to publish that paper at Saratoga, Kan., for nearly three years, or
until the town had practically ceased to be. He then returned to Kingman and
purchased the "Kingman Leader." A year later he purchased the "Courier," of the
same place, and consolidated the two papers into the "Leader-Courier," of which
paper he was the owner and editor until January, 1909, and of which he still
retains an interest. Mr. Albaugh took a lively interest in politics as a
Republican from the time he came to Kansas and is recognized as one of the most
able and astute politicians in the state. He became a member of the Republican
state central committee in 1890, and continued to be a member of it continuously
until 1908, being its chairman six years. In 1904 he was one of the active
supporters of E. N. Morrill for governor, and after the latter's election Mr.
Albaugh was made president of the State Board of Charities, serving as such two
years. In 1898 he had charge of W. E. Stanley's race for governor and was made
the chairman of the state Republican committee that year; he was reƫlected
chairman of that committee in 1900 and had charge of W. J. Bailey's canvass for
governor in 1902, which resulted in the election of the latter. Later Mr.
Albaugh for the third time was made chairman of the state Republican committee,
the only time that any man has thus been honored in this state. In 1900 he was
appointed bank examiner by Governor Stanley and served in that capacity nearly
four years, resigning in 1904 to accept his present position, which is that of
clerk of the United States district court, having been appointed to that office
by Judge John C. Pollard.
On Sept. 28, 1890, occurred the marriage of Mr. Albaugh and Miss Eula L.
Houghton of Loogootee, Ind. Mr. Albaugh and his wife have two children:
Houghton, aged eighteen, and Kathryn, aged sixteen. Mr. Albaugh is a
Thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason and a Knight Templar. He is also a
member of the Knights of Pythias, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks,
and the Ancient Order of United Workmen.
Sunday, March 31, 2019
Saturday, March 23, 2019
Good stuff to know
Any number of reasons —- in Shawnee County pre-1964 the courthouse was not air-conditioned, so the practice was to not try cases in the summer months and consequently many lawyers took off on vacation during that time —- other reasons could be the unavailability of witnesses; some judges move faster than others; not enough judges; fugitive defendants; complex issues take pre-trial time to resolve; defense counsel prolonging to generate larger fees (they will never admit that); illness; when the economy was primarily agriculture cases were slowed many times due to planting/harvest times (big problem that created was the unavailability of jurors);etc
This has nothing to do with your study, but something which disgusts me is that the Topeka/County population has basically remained the same, since 1964, yet then we had four district judges whereas we now have twenty and we have more than doubled TPD and the Sheriff’s office while maintaining that crime has not increased!!! Oh, also we have more than doubled our lawyer population which supports my old professor’s statement that a community which can support one lawyer can support two as someone needs to defend as well.
South Carolina didn't keep Vital records prior to 1915, 1911 for marriages.(deaths, births).
The State of Kansas started keeping official records of births and deaths on July 1, 1911. Marriage licenses were required beginning in 1867, but they were not filed at the state level until May 1, 1913.
South Carolina didn't keep Vital records prior to 1915, 1911 for marriages.(deaths, births).
The State of Kansas started keeping official records of births and deaths on July 1, 1911. Marriage licenses were required beginning in 1867, but they were not filed at the state level until May 1, 1913.
Sunday, March 17, 2019
909-911 Kansas (currently Field of Greens,)
was built in in 1909 for Josephine Norton. Her father, Willis Norton
died in 1895, she survived him until the the 1960s, they are buried in
Topeka Cemetery.
I found a passport of hers, which indicates that she went to
Switzerland in 1924. (This is the passport photos, they are continuing
the tradition, I would definitely like to find a better picture of her, I
am sure that she would not want to be memorialized with this one.) I
wonder the story behind this, if anyone knows please comment, it is on
my list of interesting stuff.
Once again, I cannot seem to resize this photo.
Once again, I cannot seem to resize this photo.
The Aetna Building/US Prohibition offices in Topeka
Aetna Building, 112 W 7th. U.S.Prohibition Agency occupied a suite of
offices here in the 1920s--they were responsible for the enforcement of
the Volstead Act. (I have no idea why one picture copies so large and cannot seem to change it, so enjoy the details!)
Sunday, March 3, 2019
Brown's Chappel
What I believe to be Brown's Chapel at 1235 SE Washington. This was the
site of much activity at the turn of the century, including it was were
the 5th ward Republican Party Colored Men met. I don't know the status
of the church today and the weather is not such that I am going to drive over and find out. But, soon.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/1235+SE+Washington+St,+Topeka,+KS+66607/@39.0405893,-95.6651483,3a,75y,264.96h,90t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1sauFD6d5K4g9YxfW4MO9cRA!2e0!6s%2F%2Fgeo3.ggpht.com%2Fcbk%3Fpanoid%3DauFD6d5K4g9YxfW4MO9cRA%26output%3Dthumbnail%26cb_client%3Dsearch.TACTILE.gps%26thumb%3D2%26w%3D360%26h%3D120%26yaw%3D264.95523%26pitch%3D0%26thumbfov%3D100!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x87bf036b1fba2c31:0xd71d87d3202aaee4!8m2!3d39.0405702!4d-95.6654746#
https://www.google.com/maps/place/1235+SE+Washington+St,+Topeka,+KS+66607/@39.0405893,-95.6651483,3a,75y,264.96h,90t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1sauFD6d5K4g9YxfW4MO9cRA!2e0!6s%2F%2Fgeo3.ggpht.com%2Fcbk%3Fpanoid%3DauFD6d5K4g9YxfW4MO9cRA%26output%3Dthumbnail%26cb_client%3Dsearch.TACTILE.gps%26thumb%3D2%26w%3D360%26h%3D120%26yaw%3D264.95523%26pitch%3D0%26thumbfov%3D100!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x87bf036b1fba2c31:0xd71d87d3202aaee4!8m2!3d39.0405702!4d-95.6654746#
Saturday, March 2, 2019
Dafts and beginnings
According to his obituary in the Plaindealer Nick Chiles was
born in 1867 at Cross Roads (in other sources this is sometimes referred to as
Chiles Cross Roads) in South Carolina to Winnie and Moses Chiles in an area
filled with family. He moved to
Abbeville, then Greenville, then onto Chicago for a short while before settling
in Topeka in 1886 where he would live until his death in 1929. This seems consistent
with what I have found, and Chiles had been ill for several months before he
died, therefore I have every reason to believe that he wrote his own obituary
or was involved in the writing. Chiles understood the power of the press and of
words, marketing and branding. He would have wanted control of the final image
of himself.
Thelma Chiles, his daughter, in a
tribute to him (Plaindealer, Feb. 7, 1936 pg 3) wrote that he “was educated in public
and private schools of South Carolina….where he studied under Rev. White and
later studied law under a prominent southern judge.” A June 11th, 1926 article in the
Greenwood Index Journal (pg 8) states that Chiles. Nick Chiles was born near
Bradley SC and with his mother went to Abbeville where the boy worked in the
hotel operated by JA Wier shining shoes and doing odd jobs. When Mr. Wier moved to Greenville where he
ran a board house Nick and his mother went along too. In Greenville Nick added
selling of newspapers to his sideline and was said to save every penny. Chiles
then left South Carolina in 1878 when he was 12. Mr.
Wier recalls that Nick had very few educational advantages but was not
surprised that he succeeded as a businessman because he was "a sharp boy
and very industrious."
Ms. Chiles says that he felt limited
by his native state and moved to “Free Kansas”.
Chiles does not show up in the city directory or in the census information
for Topeka until the 1910 census.
Chiles’ involvement and activism in
Topeka started early in his tenure. The
first entry I find of Chiles is in the Topeka State Journal on February 10th
of 1887, with a published a copy of a letter that Chiles wrote to President
Cleveland regarding freedmen settling in Oklahoma. Chiles wrote that freed
slaves were under the impression that they would be receiving special
privileges in Oklahoma Territory but through correspondence with the
commissioner of Indian affairs, Chiles has determined that they will not, that
the treaty is only referring to slaves that were freed and formerly owned by
Indians, not to any freed slave. At the beginning of the Civil War in 1861 the
tribes in Oklahoma owned approximately 10,000 slaves. I believe that this letter was written in
reference to the Dawes (General Allotment Act) Act which was passed on February
8th of 1887, the Dawes Act authorized the President to survey Native
American tribal lands and to divide it into allotments for individual Native
Americans and talk of it had been in the newspapers for months preceding
Chiles’ letter. (https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=FR016).
This is also in response to the Exoduster movement (1879) in which many blacks
moved from the south thinking that through the Freedman’s Bureau they would be
given 40 acres of land, horses and a start and often found that there was
nothing.
In April of 1888, is the first
recording of Chiles’ property dealings when he 3 lots on Lake Street in the
Grand Place subdivision of Topeka. This
early purchase of property leads me to believe that he brought money with him
when he came to Topeka, and lends credulity to his daughters’ statement that he
owned property in the south.
By this time he has become active in 5th
ward(Mudtown) politics. Chiles was on a committee to nominate
delegates to Wichita and Emporia Republican conventions, a committee that
petitioned the city for street paving in the district, was a delegate to the
Republican Senatorial Convention and by the end of the year he has been elected
Secretary of the Republican party of the 5th ward at Brown’s Chapel by Colored
Men.
Evidence of Chiles climb in the
city’s political circles continues in 1889, when he becomes the chairman of the
5th ward, is given a notarial commission and is appointed one of
three appraisers for the city on damage done to property owners by the opening
of 14th street.
1889 is marked by Chiles’ real estate
speculation. He buys 7 lots on Golden,
and on Lake Streets he sells lots in the Brady Subdivision (which I cannot find
when he bought these, an aside, I long time Topeka resident told me that when
the courthouse on Jackson was torn down boxes and boxes of records were thrown
out because they were not in good condition.) At this time he and Winnie are
operating a lunch counter at 314 Kansas in Smoky Row.
In 1890, Chiles runs for constable,
the Topeka Daily Capital (March 22) says that he is “an active young Republican…a
worthy young man” and the Topeka Daily Press (29 March 1890) says that he is “making
a great race. He is a very popular with all classes”. He does not end up winning but comes in 6th
in a field of ten. Chiles is the representative for the 5th ward for
the county’s Republican convention. He became
delinquent on taxes on properties on the Sac and Fox road (by Wakarusa, I can
find no record of him buying this) In October, Topeka Daily Press reported that
Chiles became involved in a dispute with a restaurant man yesterday which
became so loud that the peace of the neighborhood was disturbed, a fine of $10
was assessed against him. This is the first in arrest for Chiles. Chiles opens the grocery at 10th
and Washington.
1891 is
a hard year for Chiles. He has property
foreclosed on by FA Sampson(yet another property transaction that I cannot
find); there are delinquent taxes due on the property on Sac and Fox Road (I know
that Sac and Fox Road, also called Ottawa Road ran near Berryton and Wakarusa
but I wonder if it did not also go by Tecumseh and if this is not the property
that will become Chiles’ farm and if it is not near his Uncle John Chiles’
property, working on this. If Chiles’
owned property and a farm this far out this early he definitely brought a fair
amount of cash from SC and he was prominent from the get go.) A fire on October 19th, at Chiles’
property at 1218 Washington, destroys a barn , 2 horses, some hay (Topeka Daily
Press) but luckily he is insured by the Groll and McKitrick Agency and is
compensated before the end of the year. In November, Chiles’ brother John was
driving a delivery wagon for the grocery, when a bolt came loose and caused the
horses to run and the wagon crashed to the ground, there was property damage
but not loss. This year Chiles is arrested
along with four others for rioting when BF McCain, a black man who was accused
of murdering his nine month old step-son, was arrested and held in the city
jail. The first night of which a white mob descended on the jail and courthouse,
searching both, when they found nothing they left only to return a second
night, Chief Gardiner brought in the military to disperse them, on this night
Chiles and four others were arrested for rioting and charges were later
dismissed for all, as for the white mob, officials filed charges against eight
mob members, accusing them of inciting a riot and attempted murder. (TSJ
11/27/1891 and “EVER SINCE THE HANGING OF OLIPHANT” LYNCHING AND THE SUPPRESSION OF MOB VIOLENCE IN TOPEKA, KANSAS by Brent
Champney, note I have not found the sentencing of the white mob).
In
1892, Chiles expands his business interests to include operating a skating rink
at 621 S Jackson (this would have been the white business district) and presiding
over a tin shop on 2nd street. His involvement in the Republican
party continues and he is a alternative Republican delegate at Emporia
Republican Convention.
“Nick Chiles wears a knowing smile on his usually serene face. Lookout for Nick! He says that he will raise the dickens if allowed.” (State Ledger, 10/7/1892 p. 1)
“Nick Chiles wears a knowing smile on his usually serene face. Lookout for Nick! He says that he will raise the dickens if allowed.” (State Ledger, 10/7/1892 p. 1)
1893
opens with charges against Chiles for selling intoxicating liquor and running
gambling tables on 7th street (TDP 3 May 1893), which are continued and then
he fined $150, which he appeals. This is the first charges of this that I have
found and this will be an ongoing theme.
Chiles’ choice to appeal and to represent himself in the appeal
indicates an understanding of the legal system but not the politics of
prohibition, in which police and local governments were often funded by these
fines. Chiles has property on Sac and
Fox Road and in the Beale Addition sold at sheriff’s sale.
City Jail Contract
In 1894,
Chiles opens (Sept. 9, 1894, Leavenworth Herald, pg. 2) a first class drug store
and proposes making pills and powders according to their directions. This is the first colored druggist in
Kansas. He lost more property to sheriff
sale and he had a missing mare.
In
1895, Chiles is awarded the contract for providing meals for the city jail
(January 7th, TSJ). This
quickly goes awry and by June, Matron Thorpe is complaining that the food is
indigestible and cold and she is sending it back and Frank Long becomes the
provider for prisoners’ food. The Topeka
Mail and Breeze (Capper’s paper) calls Chiles the colored Cy Leland, and says
that he is at war with the Sherriff but that Chiles is the only one who regards
this war as important. (Cy Leland was a
dominant force in Dopihan county politics, sometimes called a political boss
and was involved in the default of railroad bonds) Chiles is selected as the alternate for the
Republican convention from the 2nd district.
In (check on whether is 1896/5) Chiles does not
take losing the prisoner’s meals contract lightly and takes a group of men
(black) with him to see the Governor Morrill to have his former job restored.
I finally found a map which shows Mudtown, it is in the appendix' of
Cox's Blacks in Topeka. South Topeka "Mudtown", became part of the 5th
ward after 1881. This is a very small map but roughly Mudtown appears
to be from Adams to VanBuren streets, and from Huntoon to parts
unknown/undeveloped to the south, this area included the fair grounds
and possibly Camp Leedy. It was primarily a black area and the site of
Lane's Chapel (14th and Harrison). The 5th ward was predominantly
Republican at the turn of the century and very politically active.This is where Chiles got his start in politics in 1888.
I have attached a link from KSHS with more information....https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/mudtown-doll/15851?fbclid=IwAR1X5UW2fQLFUV5oelRghlm3IAcrOpETNXfvjimU4kSRd6s38cEpVHo9IOs
I also recently found an article with Black Settlements in KS in the late 1800's...most of this is consistent with other research I have done. So, I am closing up the holes. I need to draw a map, a map with transparencies for the different years would be great.
https://www.cjonline.com/life/2010-04-17/blacks_found_hope_in_post_war_ks
I have attached a link from KSHS with more information....https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/mudtown-doll/15851?fbclid=IwAR1X5UW2fQLFUV5oelRghlm3IAcrOpETNXfvjimU4kSRd6s38cEpVHo9IOs
I also recently found an article with Black Settlements in KS in the late 1800's...most of this is consistent with other research I have done. So, I am closing up the holes. I need to draw a map, a map with transparencies for the different years would be great.
https://www.cjonline.com/life/2010-04-17/blacks_found_hope_in_post_war_ks
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