[or-roots] or-roots Digest, Vol 35, Issue 11

JOHN LAURA MCKINNEY birdman_326 at msn.com
Fri Mar 12 15:43:58 PST 2010


Fields:  I forgot a line> (Grandparents) Anna Grace Fields b. 06 Mar. 1898 Holley d. 08 apr. 1973  married William Marion Pugh b. 21 Nov. 1890 Oakville, OR. d. 28 Dec. 1956 Lebanon, OR.  Oakville is another fun to learn abt. place also.  Thank you, for sending the links for the cem. cleaning, and the history. I'm the black sheep in our family, I'm hooked on genealogy and learning!!!  Thanks again,  Laura
 
From: or-roots-request at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Subject: or-roots Digest, Vol 35, Issue 11
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 14:39:19 -0800

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--Forwarded Message Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 14:33:02 -0800
Subject: [or-roots] Fw: Marcola Cem. Springfield, OR.













I got a bit confused.. got it right 
now.

Marcola Cem. is just a skip from actual town of 
Marcola, OR. but Cem. listed as in Springfield, Lane Co., OR.  sorry 
about that : ) 

Nancy

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Nancy Lee Adams 

To: or-roots mail list 

Sent: Friday, March 12, 2010 2:24 PM

Subject: Re: [or-roots] Marcola Cem. Springfield, OR.




This is interesting I found Marcola Cemetery on 
Google earth this one's not in Marcola OR.? but reads Springfield, 
Lane Co. OR. zip code - 97478.. Maybe this is why we couldn't find 
it?

 

more reading (Marcola, OR.)

Marcola .  (READ 
THIS) 

Sharon Jakeways scrubs a century of grime from a headstone at 
Marcola Cemetery. On the back of the stone, the cleaning 
revealed a poem about the death of ...
news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1310&dat=20010701&id...

 

 

Mohawk Valley History | Schools 

School was also held in the log building at the present 
Marcola Cemetery. Prior to 1876, a frame building was built on 
the Wendling road half way between ...
mohawk.historiceugene.com/schools.htm - Cached

 

Nancy



----- Original Message ----- 

From: 
JOHN LAURA 
MCKINNEY 

To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us 


Sent: Friday, March 12, 2010 1:38 
PM

Subject: Re: [or-roots] or-roots Digest, 
Vol 35, Issue 9


Fields:  Thank you so much.  I would appreciate any 
of the census you can help me w/.  I have:  William Fields b. 20 
Oct. 1829 Ray co., Missouri  d. 1880 Marcola, OR. (I can't verify this or 
find the cem. on line, Johnson Crk. Cem.  Marcola, OR) 
His parents> Thomas Fields and Rebecca Riggs.  He marries 
Elizabeth Carter 19 Dec. 1853 she was b. 1834 IA. and died 1880 or 1887.  
Their children that I have: Melissa Caroline Fields b. abt. 1856 Linn co., 
OR., Mary M. Fields b. 14 Dec. 1873 d. 29 Mar. 1924 WA.,  Matilda 
Ann b. 14 Dec. 1857 Crawdfordsville, OR. d. 29 Mar. 1924,  George b. 
abt. 1864, Thomas b. abt. 1868 Linn co., OR., John Fields b. 09 Mar. 1869 
d. 1936 Lane co., OR., Robert Henry (my ggrandfather) b. 25 Nov. 1873 d. 29 
Oct. 1951 Scio, Linn, OR.(haven't found obit to verify) He married Phoebey TN. 
Barnard 30 Jul. 1895 Scio, Linn co., OR.
The Thomas does look like a 
match.  I tried going in on the OR. death index, and couldn't find 
anything.  I tried the WA. digital index, and they state that you aren't 
allowed to see the death records.  Something abt. the site, almost froze 
my computer.  I had  nothing but errors from internet 
explorer.  Thank you again for your help,  Laura   birdman_326 at msn.com
 
From: 
or-roots-request at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Subject: or-roots Digest, Vol 
35, Issue 9
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 
2010 12:00:32 -0800

Send or-roots mailing list submissions to
	or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
 
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
	http://listsmart.osl.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/or-roots
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
	or-roots-request at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
 
You can reach the person managing the list at
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When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
than "Re: Contents of or-roots digest..."


--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: reedsportchapmans at verizon.net
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:43:11 
-0800
Subject: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et al

Laura;
 
Have you tried the death index?
 
I don't have access to it past 1030, but you can probably find it at a local
libray or Fam History center.
 
For your great grandfather is one of these him?
 
Name				Death Date		County	Certificate #
 
Fields, William Henry	14 January 1929	Union			7
Fields, William		26 June 1927	Portland		1756
Fields, William		08 March 1913	Union			1279
Fields, William		11 December 1906	Josephine		2444
 
There is a John Fields in Crook Co in 1900 who may be the one you have an
obit for; Wife Ida, son Fred? 4, dau Polly 2 and son Nelson 1.
 
TJ is a possible match;
 
Series: T623  Roll: 233  Page: 252
 
Surname	GivenName	Age	Sex	Race	Birthplace	State	County  Location		Year
FIELDS	T J		32	M	W	OR		ID	LATAH	  GOLD CRK PCT	1900
 
b. may 1862 OR, but parents bp not a match, both listed as Illinois I think.
he is single, a laborer and literate etc
 
1910 we find John still in Crook county, wife number 2 Marette of 7 years;
ch Freddie, Polly and Nelson 14, 12, 11
 
Wash vital rcrds index;
 
DA Reference Number:	{3BF2759C-4F26-4677-9348-96828FC0B181}
Image Number:	1037
Document Number:	28
Document Reference ID:	221
Name:	Thomas Fields
Date Of Death:	19 Feb 1922
Age:	55
Gender:	Male
Father Name:	William Fields
Batch ID:	            275980
Batch Locality:	      Washington, United States
Death Place:	      Spokane, Spokane, Washington
Mother Name GN:	      Ann
Mother Name Surname:	Carter
 
I would say this is a pretty good match for Thomas.
 
I will do a little more digging, if you want the census images off list I
can send them to you.
 
Les C
 
>
George Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas Fields born abt. 1868 in
Oregon
On abt. 1934, John Fields obit says he has brother, Robert H. Fields(my
ggrandfather) surviving. I can't track George or Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
OR. William Fields and Elizabeth Carter are the parents of these brothers.
Can anyone help me, please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  Laura
<
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: reedsportchapmans at verizon.net
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:04:35 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et al

Okay this just got more interesting; in 1920 a George Fields b OR age 50
shows up in Portland with wife Gertrude L age 38 b Nevada and niece Lois
Thayer age 20 b in Oregon.
 
Again he is a bit off, perhaps self concsious about being 16 years older
than wife instead of 12? Parents bp don't match either, lists MO and PA
instead of MO IA as listed in 1880, but assuming the Robert H in
Crawfordsville in 1900 is your guy wrong bp for parents is normal.
 
Interesting that Robt is such a stay at home and the rest of them are all
over th place?
 
Les C
 
>
George Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas Fields born abt. 1868 in
Oregon
On abt. 1934, John Fields obit says he has brother, Robert H. Fields(my
ggrandfather) surviving. I can't track George or Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
OR. William Fields and Elizabeth Carter are the parents of these brothers.
Can anyone help me, please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  Laura
<
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
_______________________________________________
or-roots mailing list
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
http://listsmart.osl.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/or-roots
 
 


--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:09:12 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Robert H Fields 1900 1930 
census



















Laura - This must be your ggrandfather in the 1930 
census 

Reads,                                  

Nancy


Robert born in OR.


both his parents born in MO.  BUT the 1900 census 

reads father born in OR & mother born in MO.?


Occupation, laborer in a saw mill 


 


 


 


Ancestry.com








1930 United States Federal 

Census 
about Robert H Fields 



























Name:


Robert H Fields





Home in 1930:




Crawfordsville, Linn, 
Oregon
View 
Map





Age:




57





Estimated birth year:


abt 1873





Birthplace:


Oregon





Relation to Head of 
House:


Head





Spouse's name:


Phebe T





Race:


White








Occupation:

Education:

Military 

service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first 

marriage:

Parents' birthplace:








View 

image





Neighbors:


View others on 
page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Robert H 
Fields


57





Phebe T 
Fields


55





Evy Violet 

Fields


16











 


1900 United States Federal 

Census 
about Robert H Fields 




























Name:


Robert H Fields





Home in 1900:


Crawfordsville, Linn, 

Oregon





Age:


27





Birth Date:


Dec 1872





Birthplace:


Oregon





Race:


White





Gender:


Male





Relationship 
to Head of House:


Head





Father's 
Birthplace:


Oregon





Mother's 
Birthplace:


Missouri





Spouse's name:


Phebe





Marriage Year:


1894





Marital Status:


Married





Years Married:


6





Residence :


Sweet Home City, Linn, 

Oregon





Occupation:


View on 

Image





Neighbors:


View others on 

page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Robert H 

Fields


27





Phebe 

Fields


22





James W 

Fields


4





Anna 

Fields


1














View
Original
Record
View original 

image









View
Original
Record
View original 
image

 
View 
blank form 




 


----- Original Message ----- 


From: "Leslie Chapman" <reedsportchapmans at verizon.net>


To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>


Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 1:43 PM


Subject: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et 

al



> Laura;
> 


> Have you tried the death index?
> 
> I don't have 
access to 
it past 1030, but you can probably find it at a local
> 
libray or Fam 
History center.
> 
> For your great grandfather 
is one of these 
him?
> 
> Name Death Date County Certificate 
#
> 
> 
Fields, William Henry 14 January 1929 Union 7
> 
Fields, William 26 June 
1927 Portland 1756
> Fields, William 08 
March 1913 Union 1279
> 
Fields, William 11 December 1906 Josephine 
2444
> 
> There is a John 
Fields in Crook Co in 1900 who may 
be the one you have an
> obit for; Wife 
Ida, son Fred? 4, dau Polly 
2 and son Nelson 1.
> 
> TJ is a 
possible match;
> 

> Series: T623  Roll: 233  Page: 
252
> 
> 
Surname GivenName Age Sex Race Birthplace State 
County  Location 
Year
> FIELDS T J 32 M W OR ID LATAH   GOLD CRK 
PCT 
1900
> 
> b. may 1862 OR, but parents bp not a match, both 

listed as Illinois I think.
> he is single, a laborer and literate 

etc
> 
> 1910 we find John still in Crook county, wife number 
2 
Marette of 7 years;
> ch Freddie, Polly and Nelson 14, 12, 
11
> 

> Wash vital rcrds index;
> 
> DA Reference 
Number: 
{3BF2759C-4F26-4677-9348-96828FC0B181}
> Image Number: 
1037
> 
Document Number: 28
> Document Reference ID: 
221
> Name: Thomas 
Fields
> Date Of Death: 19 Feb 1922
> 
Age: 55
> Gender: 
Male
> Father Name: William Fields
> 
Batch ID: 

            

275980
> Batch Locality:       Washington, 
United 
States
> Death Place:       Spokane, 
Spokane, 
Washington
> Mother Name GN:       
Ann
> 
Mother Name Surname: Carter
> 
> I would say this 
is a pretty good 
match for Thomas.
> 
> I will do a little 
more digging, if you want 
the census images off list I
> can send 
them to you.
> 
> Les 
C
> 
>>
> George 
Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas 
Fields born abt. 1868 in
> 
Oregon
> On abt. 1934, John Fields obit 
says he has brother, Robert 
H. Fields(my
> ggrandfather) surviving. I 
can't track George or 
Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
> OR. William Fields and 
Elizabeth 
Carter are the parents of these brothers.
> Can anyone help me, 

please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  

Laura


--Forwarded Message 
Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:19:05 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] [or-roots ]Thomas Fields 1920 census Spokane, 
WA.
















Is this your Thomas Fields? He is single and a farmer. 

Both parents born in MO.


 








1920 United States Federal 

Census 
about Thomas J Fields 



























Name:


Thomas J Fields





Home in 1920:


Greenacres, Spokane, 

Washington





Age:




53 years 





Estimated birth year:


abt 1867





Birthplace:


Oregon





Relation to Head of 
House:


Head





Father's Birth Place:


Missouri





Mother's Birth Place:


Missouri





Marital Status:


Single





Race:


White





Sex:


Male





Home owned:


Rent





Able to read:


Yes





Able to Write:


Yes





Image:


253





Neighbors:


View others on 
page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Thomas J 
Fields


53














View
Original
Record
View original image 
Nancy


--Forwarded Message 
Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:37:03 
-0800
Subject: [or-roots] Bio of Thomas Fields, Linn Co., 
OR.
















Laura,  Looks like 
your 
ancestors?   BONNIE BARTLETT who wrote this Bio has a 
family tree 
on line with Elizabeth A Carter in it, looks like 
she has pictures too 
if interested I can send you that 

site.?                     

Nancy


 


[DOC] 


BIOGRAPHY OF THOMAS FIELDS


File Format: 

Microsoft Word - View as HTML
>From there they headed for 

Brush Creek Valley in Linn County, 

Oregon where ... Their daughters Nancy Jane 
married 
George Fields, Mary Catherine married 
...
www.orgenweb.org/bios/Thomas_Fields.doc


 








This 

is the html version of the file http://www.orgenweb.org/bios/Thomas_Fields.doc.
Google 

automatically generates html versions of documents as we crawl the 

web.





THOMAS FIELDS 

      Thomas Fields, 
the elder son 
of Ebenezer and Sarah (Burden) Fields was born the 

4th of May 1809, Bourbon County, Kentucky. 
Thomas’s Oregon 
Donation Claim say’s 
he was born in Ohio, but other records indicate that 
he was born in Bourbon 
County, Kentucky. His siblings were Betsy, Dorcas, 
Peggy, James, Lizey, Ebenezer 
Jr., Stephen and Eldridge. All the children 
except Stephen and Eldridge were 
born in Kentucky and they were born in 
Ray County, 
Missouri.

      Ebenezer and family removed to Missouri about 
1815, which they may 
have came by the Tennessee River to the Ohio River, 
then the Mississippi River 
as that’s the route most of the pioneers from 
Kentucky came to 

Missouri.

      The family settled in Crooked River Township, 
Ray County, Missouri 
after a short stay in Howard County, Missouri where 
some of the Fields that 
had came to 
Missouri before they 
did.

      Thomas Fields 
married Rebecca 
Riggs, daughter of Thomas & Leah (Hunt) Riggs, January 

1st 1829 in Ray County, Missouri. They had eight 

children, William, Harvey, John, Eliza, Reuben, Nancy Jane, Preston and 
Thomas 
Newton while in Ray County, 
Missouri.

      When the Heatherly War of 1836 started, 
Thomas Fields joined 
Mathew T 
Long’s outfit that commanded a Militia Company from Ray County, 
Missouri 
formally called Longs Independent Company, Missouri Mounted 
Militia, War of 

1832.

      Shortly before or after Thomas Fields 
father, Ebenezer died in 
1847, Thomas had decided to go west to the wild 
frontier and the promise of 
free land. His wife Rebecca’s parents 

had left for Oregon in 1846 where Rebecca’s father Thomas Riggs died on 
the way 
on Oregon Trail near the Iowa 
Point. 

      According to records, each pioneer 
heading out west, loaded their 
wagon with a grub box with a lid, that each 
wagon had that sat in the front of 
the wagon. At the end of this box was a 
place for the Dutch oven, coffee pot and 
kettle that were packed in a 
sack. There was usually a outside box attached to 
the front of the wagon 
bed for halters, hobbles, rope, axe, shovel, hammer, 
chain, bell, a rack 
for the guns, a small keg with a lid in which was their 
drinking water. They put their frying 

pans, water bucket and a kettle at the rear of the wagon. They hung their 
tar 
buckets for greasing the wheels beneath the wagon. Their food they 
bought was 
flour, beans, sugar, coffee, lard, ham and bacon that had been 
cured, corn meal, 
dried fruit, molasses, butter, vegetables, homemade 
soap, salt and medicine. 
Each wagon. Each wagon team had at least four 
oxen’s, a couple horses and a 
couple milk 
cows.

      After getting their wagon ready for the trip 
out west, Thomas Fields 
and family joined the 
Nathaniel Bowman Company at Caples Landing, twelve 
miles above St. Joseph, 
Missouri May 2, 1847. They crossed the Big Blue on 
May 
8th and came into the Independence road the 
next day, 
arriving on the evening of May 16, at the head of the Little 
Blue River. Before 
reaching Fort Laramie, Wyoming, the company split up 
into three 

divisions.

      After crossing the Missouri River, they were 
in Indian Territory and 
the  




1 
 

Indians were very hostile. After many 
nights of trouble with the 
Indians, Thomas 

Fields and family decided 
to 
stay back behind the wagon 
train.

      They used buffalo chips for fuel when there 
was no wood. There was a 
lot of cholera and other sickness on the Oregon Trail. 



      In 
some places on the trail, there were 
herds of antelope and buffalo. The men or 
boys would kill them for meat. 
Crossing the rivers was quite a chore. They would 
have to raise their 
wagons several inches, attach ropes to the front so that the 
horseman 
riding along could help if it was needed to urge the teams into the 
water. 
Some places the roads were so sandy, that they would be knee deep in 

sand.

      In 
what few places there were to buy food 
along the trail, they’d stop and reload 
what they could get by with. 
They’d have to stop, feed and rest their cattle and 
horses. At this time 
they would do various other things, such as reset their 
wheels as they had 
to be taken off and soaked over night to keep them from 
falling off. They 
also had to grease the wheels and brake blocks had to be built 
and 
tighten

up.

      In 
the evening time they’d play their 
guitars, fiddles, singing, and dancing. 
They’d have a lit campfire that 
they’d gather around and 
visit.

      On 
Sundays, they had church services for 
the ones that wanted to attend. They 
gathered for the services in a group, 
by one of their 
wagons.

      After months crossing the Oregon Trail, the dust, 

heat, sometimes lack of water, food, just before the real hard snow hit 
the 
mountains, they came to a place four miles above Willow Creek on the Columbia 
River, 
some of the wagon train went by raft down the Columbia River. 
Thomas Fields and his 
family headed 
to Tygh Valley, to the Cascade’s and crossed over the Barlow 
Road. The cost to 
go over the Barlow Road was $5.00 a wagon, 10 cents a 
head for cattle. Some of 
the pioneers sold their rifles, quilts or 
anything they could use for payment. 
The ones that were flat broke were 
able to use IOU’s. This Barlow Road saved the 
pioneers from going down the 
Columbia River, on the make shift rafts as going 
down the river was a 
terrible experience that many drowned. There were some 
terrible places 


going over the 
Barlow Road. One of 
those places was called Laurel Hill. It was the worst 
part of this road. The way 
the pioneers got down this hill was by cutting 
a tree down and chaining a tree 
behind the way for it would slow the wagon 
down. Even then some lost their 
belongings. 


      Many women went out of their minds under the 
hardship of the Oregon 
Trail. 


      After arriving in the fall at the end of the 
Oregon Trail, Thomas Fields and family spent a 

short time in Oregon 
City, Oregon. >From there 

they headed for Brush Creek Valley in Linn County, Oregon where Thomas’s wife 

Rebecca’s mother and brothers were living. During the fall and winter of 
1847 
the Indians annoyed the Thomas Fields family so they 
moved 
down the Calapooia River and stayed with Rebecca’s mother and 
brothers, Leah, 
Timothy and Thomas Riggs till the spring of 1848. Then in 
the summer of 1848, 
Thomas applied for an Oregon 

 




      2 
 

      Donation land claim, near Chandler Mountain. 
He was granted 640 acres 
in 14 S Range East, located in Section 13 and 14. 
Their neighbors were, R. C. 
Finley family, James McHargue family, Robert 
Montgomery family and Rebecca Fields mother and 
brothers, 
Leah, Timothy and Thomas 
Riggs.

      After Thomas and Rebecca Fields moved to Oregon, they had four more 

children, Mary, Lucinda, Louise and 
Franklin.

      Thomas farmed the land and raised bees, hogs, 
and 
cattle.

      Thomas and Rebecca Fields joined the 

Reorganized Latter Day Saints Church. Thomas and Rebecca were baptized May 
25, 
1868. Thomas was an elder in the 
church.

      Before Thomas and Rebecca Fields passed away, they 
had 
lost two children, Eliza and John. John drowned in the Calapoola River 
July 18, 
1867.

      Rebecca (Riggs) Fields passed away January 

29, 1874 and Thomas Fields passed away July 1, 

1875. Where they are buried is unknown so far as I write this story.  



      Thomas and Rebecca’s sons William married 
Elizabeth Carter, Harvey 
married Nancy Jane Carsner, Franklin married 
Syrena Davis, Reuben married, 
Catherine Fields later 
married 
Mary Black, Thomas Newton Fields married Louisa 
Ellen 
Fields, 
Franklin married 
Syrena Davis. Their daughters Nancy Jane married George Fields, Mary Catherine 

married Jason Butler, Lucinda married Charles 
Aldrich. 


(This information came from Court, 
land, census records, Harvey 
Fields obit stories and 
what 
Harvey told his family. Some of the deceased Harvey Fields family claim that 
his 
grandfather, Ebenezer was a brother to the Joseph and Ruben Fields that was on the 
Lewis 
& Clark Expedition but so far I have not found any information 
to verify 
this. Some of this information came from records on what little 
that I could 
find out on the Nathaniel Bowman train.)



WRITTEN BY BONNIE BARTLETT @ MAY 
29, 
2005









_______________________________________________
or-roots mailing 
list
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
http://listsmart.osl.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/or-roots



--Forwarded Message Attachment--
From: valfollett at comcast.net
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 22:42:05 +0000
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Fw: Marcola Cem. Springfield, OR.







We are not far from this cemetery, if it is in Springfield

Val Follett



----- Original Message -----
From: "Nancy Lee Adams" <nancydean at columbia-center.org>
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Sent: Friday, March 12, 2010 2:33:02 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: [or-roots] Fw:  Marcola Cem. Springfield, OR.










I got a bit confused.. got it right 
now.

Marcola Cem. is just a skip from actual town of 
Marcola, OR. but Cem. listed as in Springfield, Lane Co., OR.  sorry 
about that : ) 

Nancy

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Nancy Lee Adams 

To: or-roots mail list 

Sent: Friday, March 12, 2010 2:24 PM

Subject: Re: [or-roots] Marcola Cem. Springfield, OR.




This is interesting I found Marcola Cemetery on 
Google earth this one's not in Marcola OR.? but reads Springfield, 
Lane Co. OR. zip code - 97478.. Maybe this is why we couldn't find 
it?

 

more reading (Marcola, OR.)

Marcola .  (READ 
THIS) 

Sharon Jakeways scrubs a century of grime from a headstone at 
Marcola Cemetery. On the back of the stone, the cleaning 
revealed a poem about the death of ...
news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1310&dat=20010701&id...

 

 

Mohawk Valley History | Schools 

School was also held in the log building at the present 
Marcola Cemetery. Prior to 1876, a frame building was built on 
the Wendling road half way between ...
mohawk.historiceugene.com/schools.htm - Cached

 

Nancy



----- Original Message ----- 

From: 
JOHN LAURA 
MCKINNEY 

To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us 


Sent: Friday, March 12, 2010 1:38 
PM

Subject: Re: [or-roots] or-roots Digest, 
Vol 35, Issue 9


Fields:  Thank you so much.  I would appreciate any 
of the census you can help me w/.  I have:  William Fields b. 20 
Oct. 1829 Ray co., Missouri  d. 1880 Marcola, OR. (I can't verify this or 
find the cem. on line, Johnson Crk. Cem.  Marcola, OR) 
His parents> Thomas Fields and Rebecca Riggs.  He marries 
Elizabeth Carter 19 Dec. 1853 she was b. 1834 IA. and died 1880 or 1887.  
Their children that I have: Melissa Caroline Fields b. abt. 1856 Linn co., 
OR., Mary M. Fields b. 14 Dec. 1873 d. 29 Mar. 1924 WA.,  Matilda 
Ann b. 14 Dec. 1857 Crawdfordsville, OR. d. 29 Mar. 1924,  George b. 
abt. 1864, Thomas b. abt. 1868 Linn co., OR., John Fields b. 09 Mar. 1869 
d. 1936 Lane co., OR., Robert Henry (my ggrandfather) b. 25 Nov. 1873 d. 29 
Oct. 1951 Scio, Linn, OR.(haven't found obit to verify) He married Phoebey TN. 
Barnard 30 Jul. 1895 Scio, Linn co., OR.
The Thomas does look like a 
match.  I tried going in on the OR. death index, and couldn't find 
anything.  I tried the WA. digital index, and they state that you aren't 
allowed to see the death records.  Something abt. the site, almost froze 
my computer.  I had  nothing but errors from internet 
explorer.  Thank you again for your help,  Laura   birdman_326 at msn.com
 
From: 
or-roots-request at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Subject: or-roots Digest, Vol 
35, Issue 9
To: or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 
2010 12:00:32 -0800

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--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: reedsportchapmans at verizon.net
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 13:43:11 
-0800
Subject: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et al

Laura;
 
Have you tried the death index?
 
I don't have access to it past 1030, but you can probably find it at a local
libray or Fam History center.
 
For your great grandfather is one of these him?
 
Name				Death Date		County	Certificate #
 
Fields, William Henry	14 January 1929	Union			7
Fields, William		26 June 1927	Portland		1756
Fields, William		08 March 1913	Union			1279
Fields, William		11 December 1906	Josephine		2444
 
There is a John Fields in Crook Co in 1900 who may be the one you have an
obit for; Wife Ida, son Fred? 4, dau Polly 2 and son Nelson 1.
 
TJ is a possible match;
 
Series: T623  Roll: 233  Page: 252
 
Surname	GivenName	Age	Sex	Race	Birthplace	State	County  Location		Year
FIELDS	T J		32	M	W	OR		ID	LATAH	  GOLD CRK PCT	1900
 
b. may 1862 OR, but parents bp not a match, both listed as Illinois I think.
he is single, a laborer and literate etc
 
1910 we find John still in Crook county, wife number 2 Marette of 7 years;
ch Freddie, Polly and Nelson 14, 12, 11
 
Wash vital rcrds index;
 
DA Reference Number:	{3BF2759C-4F26-4677-9348-96828FC0B181}
Image Number:	1037
Document Number:	28
Document Reference ID:	221
Name:	Thomas Fields
Date Of Death:	19 Feb 1922
Age:	55
Gender:	Male
Father Name:	William Fields
Batch ID:	            275980
Batch Locality:	      Washington, United States
Death Place:	      Spokane, Spokane, Washington
Mother Name GN:	      Ann
Mother Name Surname:	Carter
 
I would say this is a pretty good match for Thomas.
 
I will do a little more digging, if you want the census images off list I
can send them to you.
 
Les C
 
>
George Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas Fields born abt. 1868 in
Oregon
On abt. 1934, John Fields obit says he has brother, Robert H. Fields(my
ggrandfather) surviving. I can't track George or Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
OR. William Fields and Elizabeth Carter are the parents of these brothers.
Can anyone help me, please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  Laura
<
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: reedsportchapmans at verizon.net
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:04:35 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et al

Okay this just got more interesting; in 1920 a George Fields b OR age 50
shows up in Portland with wife Gertrude L age 38 b Nevada and niece Lois
Thayer age 20 b in Oregon.
 
Again he is a bit off, perhaps self concsious about being 16 years older
than wife instead of 12? Parents bp don't match either, lists MO and PA
instead of MO IA as listed in 1880, but assuming the Robert H in
Crawfordsville in 1900 is your guy wrong bp for parents is normal.
 
Interesting that Robt is such a stay at home and the rest of them are all
over th place?
 
Les C
 
>
George Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas Fields born abt. 1868 in
Oregon
On abt. 1934, John Fields obit says he has brother, Robert H. Fields(my
ggrandfather) surviving. I can't track George or Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
OR. William Fields and Elizabeth Carter are the parents of these brothers.
Can anyone help me, please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  Laura
<
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
_______________________________________________
or-roots mailing list
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
http://listsmart.osl.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/or-roots
 
 


--Forwarded 
Message Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:09:12 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Robert H Fields 1900 1930 
census



















Laura - This must be your ggrandfather in the 1930 
census 

Reads,                                  

Nancy


Robert born in OR.


both his parents born in MO.  BUT the 1900 census 

reads father born in OR & mother born in MO.?


Occupation, laborer in a saw mill 


 


 


 


Ancestry.com








1930 United States Federal 

Census 
about Robert H Fields 



























Name:


Robert H Fields





Home in 1930:




Crawfordsville, Linn, 
Oregon
View 
Map





Age:




57





Estimated birth year:


abt 1873





Birthplace:


Oregon





Relation to Head of 
House:


Head





Spouse's name:


Phebe T





Race:


White








Occupation:

Education:

Military 

service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first 

marriage:

Parents' birthplace:








View 

image





Neighbors:


View others on 
page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Robert H 
Fields


57





Phebe T 
Fields


55





Evy Violet 

Fields


16











 


1900 United States Federal 

Census 
about Robert H Fields 




























Name:


Robert H Fields





Home in 1900:


Crawfordsville, Linn, 

Oregon





Age:


27





Birth Date:


Dec 1872





Birthplace:


Oregon





Race:


White





Gender:


Male





Relationship 
to Head of House:


Head





Father's 
Birthplace:


Oregon





Mother's 
Birthplace:


Missouri





Spouse's name:


Phebe





Marriage Year:


1894





Marital Status:


Married





Years Married:


6





Residence :


Sweet Home City, Linn, 

Oregon





Occupation:


View on 

Image





Neighbors:


View others on 

page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Robert H 

Fields


27





Phebe 

Fields


22





James W 

Fields


4





Anna 

Fields


1














View
Original
Record
View original 

image









View
Original
Record
View original 
image

 
View 
blank form 




 


----- Original Message ----- 


From: "Leslie Chapman" <reedsportchapmans at verizon.net>


To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>


Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 1:43 PM


Subject: [or-roots] Fields; Tkhomas George et 

al



> Laura;
> 


> Have you tried the death index?
> 
> I don't have 
access to 
it past 1030, but you can probably find it at a local
> 
libray or Fam 
History center.
> 
> For your great grandfather 
is one of these 
him?
> 
> Name Death Date County Certificate 
#
> 
> 
Fields, William Henry 14 January 1929 Union 7
> 
Fields, William 26 June 
1927 Portland 1756
> Fields, William 08 
March 1913 Union 1279
> 
Fields, William 11 December 1906 Josephine 
2444
> 
> There is a John 
Fields in Crook Co in 1900 who may 
be the one you have an
> obit for; Wife 
Ida, son Fred? 4, dau Polly 
2 and son Nelson 1.
> 
> TJ is a 
possible match;
> 

> Series: T623  Roll: 233  Page: 
252
> 
> 
Surname GivenName Age Sex Race Birthplace State 
County  Location 
Year
> FIELDS T J 32 M W OR ID LATAH   GOLD CRK 
PCT 
1900
> 
> b. may 1862 OR, but parents bp not a match, both 

listed as Illinois I think.
> he is single, a laborer and literate 

etc
> 
> 1910 we find John still in Crook county, wife number 
2 
Marette of 7 years;
> ch Freddie, Polly and Nelson 14, 12, 
11
> 

> Wash vital rcrds index;
> 
> DA Reference 
Number: 
{3BF2759C-4F26-4677-9348-96828FC0B181}
> Image Number: 
1037
> 
Document Number: 28
> Document Reference ID: 
221
> Name: Thomas 
Fields
> Date Of Death: 19 Feb 1922
> 
Age: 55
> Gender: 
Male
> Father Name: William Fields
> 
Batch ID: 

            

275980
> Batch Locality:       Washington, 
United 
States
> Death Place:       Spokane, 
Spokane, 
Washington
> Mother Name GN:       
Ann
> 
Mother Name Surname: Carter
> 
> I would say this 
is a pretty good 
match for Thomas.
> 
> I will do a little 
more digging, if you want 
the census images off list I
> can send 
them to you.
> 
> Les 
C
> 
>>
> George 
Fields born abt. 1864 and brother Thomas 
Fields born abt. 1868 in
> 
Oregon
> On abt. 1934, John Fields obit 
says he has brother, Robert 
H. Fields(my
> ggrandfather) surviving. I 
can't track George or 
Thomas after 1880 Linn co.,
> OR. William Fields and 
Elizabeth 
Carter are the parents of these brothers.
> Can anyone help me, 

please.  I'd appreciate any advice.  Thank you,  

Laura


--Forwarded Message 
Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:19:05 
-0800
Subject: Re: [or-roots] [or-roots ]Thomas Fields 1920 census Spokane, 
WA.
















Is this your Thomas Fields? He is single and a farmer. 

Both parents born in MO.


 








1920 United States Federal 

Census 
about Thomas J Fields 



























Name:


Thomas J Fields





Home in 1920:


Greenacres, Spokane, 

Washington





Age:




53 years 





Estimated birth year:


abt 1867





Birthplace:


Oregon





Relation to Head of 
House:


Head





Father's Birth Place:


Missouri





Mother's Birth Place:


Missouri





Marital Status:


Single





Race:


White





Sex:


Male





Home owned:


Rent





Able to read:


Yes





Able to Write:


Yes





Image:


253





Neighbors:


View others on 
page 





Household Members:














Name


Age





Thomas J 
Fields


53














View
Original
Record
View original image 
Nancy


--Forwarded Message 
Attachment--
From: nancydean at columbia-center.org
To: 
or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:37:03 
-0800
Subject: [or-roots] Bio of Thomas Fields, Linn Co., 
OR.
















Laura,  Looks like 
your 
ancestors?   BONNIE BARTLETT who wrote this Bio has a 
family tree 
on line with Elizabeth A Carter in it, looks like 
she has pictures too 
if interested I can send you that 

site.?                     

Nancy


 


[DOC] 


BIOGRAPHY OF THOMAS FIELDS


File Format: 

Microsoft Word - View as HTML
>From there they headed for 

Brush Creek Valley in Linn County, 

Oregon where ... Their daughters Nancy Jane 
married 
George Fields, Mary Catherine married 
...
www.orgenweb.org/bios/Thomas_Fields.doc


 








This 

is the html version of the file http://www.orgenweb.org/bios/Thomas_Fields.doc.
Google 

automatically generates html versions of documents as we crawl the 

web.





THOMAS FIELDS 

      Thomas Fields, 
the elder son 
of Ebenezer and Sarah (Burden) Fields was born the 

4th of May 1809, Bourbon County, Kentucky. 
Thomas’s Oregon 
Donation Claim say’s 
he was born in Ohio, but other records indicate that 
he was born in Bourbon 
County, Kentucky. His siblings were Betsy, Dorcas, 
Peggy, James, Lizey, Ebenezer 
Jr., Stephen and Eldridge. All the children 
except Stephen and Eldridge were 
born in Kentucky and they were born in 
Ray County, 
Missouri.

      Ebenezer and family removed to Missouri about 
1815, which they may 
have came by the Tennessee River to the Ohio River, 
then the Mississippi River 
as that’s the route most of the pioneers from 
Kentucky came to 

Missouri.

      The family settled in Crooked River Township, 
Ray County, Missouri 
after a short stay in Howard County, Missouri where 
some of the Fields that 
had came to 
Missouri before they 
did.

      Thomas Fields 
married Rebecca 
Riggs, daughter of Thomas & Leah (Hunt) Riggs, January 

1st 1829 in Ray County, Missouri. They had eight 

children, William, Harvey, John, Eliza, Reuben, Nancy Jane, Preston and 
Thomas 
Newton while in Ray County, 
Missouri.

      When the Heatherly War of 1836 started, 
Thomas Fields joined 
Mathew T 
Long’s outfit that commanded a Militia Company from Ray County, 
Missouri 
formally called Longs Independent Company, Missouri Mounted 
Militia, War of 

1832.

      Shortly before or after Thomas Fields 
father, Ebenezer died in 
1847, Thomas had decided to go west to the wild 
frontier and the promise of 
free land. His wife Rebecca’s parents 

had left for Oregon in 1846 where Rebecca’s father Thomas Riggs died on 
the way 
on Oregon Trail near the Iowa 
Point. 

      According to records, each pioneer 
heading out west, loaded their 
wagon with a grub box with a lid, that each 
wagon had that sat in the front of 
the wagon. At the end of this box was a 
place for the Dutch oven, coffee pot and 
kettle that were packed in a 
sack. There was usually a outside box attached to 
the front of the wagon 
bed for halters, hobbles, rope, axe, shovel, hammer, 
chain, bell, a rack 
for the guns, a small keg with a lid in which was their 
drinking water. They put their frying 

pans, water bucket and a kettle at the rear of the wagon. They hung their 
tar 
buckets for greasing the wheels beneath the wagon. Their food they 
bought was 
flour, beans, sugar, coffee, lard, ham and bacon that had been 
cured, corn meal, 
dried fruit, molasses, butter, vegetables, homemade 
soap, salt and medicine. 
Each wagon. Each wagon team had at least four 
oxen’s, a couple horses and a 
couple milk 
cows.

      After getting their wagon ready for the trip 
out west, Thomas Fields 
and family joined the 
Nathaniel Bowman Company at Caples Landing, twelve 
miles above St. Joseph, 
Missouri May 2, 1847. They crossed the Big Blue on 
May 
8th and came into the Independence road the 
next day, 
arriving on the evening of May 16, at the head of the Little 
Blue River. Before 
reaching Fort Laramie, Wyoming, the company split up 
into three 

divisions.

      After crossing the Missouri River, they were 
in Indian Territory and 
the  




1 
 

Indians were very hostile. After many 
nights of trouble with the 
Indians, Thomas 

Fields and family decided 
to 
stay back behind the wagon 
train.

      They used buffalo chips for fuel when there 
was no wood. There was a 
lot of cholera and other sickness on the Oregon Trail. 



      In 
some places on the trail, there were 
herds of antelope and buffalo. The men or 
boys would kill them for meat. 
Crossing the rivers was quite a chore. They would 
have to raise their 
wagons several inches, attach ropes to the front so that the 
horseman 
riding along could help if it was needed to urge the teams into the 
water. 
Some places the roads were so sandy, that they would be knee deep in 

sand.

      In 
what few places there were to buy food 
along the trail, they’d stop and reload 
what they could get by with. 
They’d have to stop, feed and rest their cattle and 
horses. At this time 
they would do various other things, such as reset their 
wheels as they had 
to be taken off and soaked over night to keep them from 
falling off. They 
also had to grease the wheels and brake blocks had to be built 
and 
tighten

up.

      In 
the evening time they’d play their 
guitars, fiddles, singing, and dancing. 
They’d have a lit campfire that 
they’d gather around and 
visit.

      On 
Sundays, they had church services for 
the ones that wanted to attend. They 
gathered for the services in a group, 
by one of their 
wagons.

      After months crossing the Oregon Trail, the dust, 

heat, sometimes lack of water, food, just before the real hard snow hit 
the 
mountains, they came to a place four miles above Willow Creek on the Columbia 
River, 
some of the wagon train went by raft down the Columbia River. 
Thomas Fields and his 
family headed 
to Tygh Valley, to the Cascade’s and crossed over the Barlow 
Road. The cost to 
go over the Barlow Road was $5.00 a wagon, 10 cents a 
head for cattle. Some of 
the pioneers sold their rifles, quilts or 
anything they could use for payment. 
The ones that were flat broke were 
able to use IOU’s. This Barlow Road saved the 
pioneers from going down the 
Columbia River, on the make shift rafts as going 
down the river was a 
terrible experience that many drowned. There were some 
terrible places 


going over the 
Barlow Road. One of 
those places was called Laurel Hill. It was the worst 
part of this road. The way 
the pioneers got down this hill was by cutting 
a tree down and chaining a tree 
behind the way for it would slow the wagon 
down. Even then some lost their 
belongings. 


      Many women went out of their minds under the 
hardship of the Oregon 
Trail. 


      After arriving in the fall at the end of the 
Oregon Trail, Thomas Fields and family spent a 

short time in Oregon 
City, Oregon. >From there 

they headed for Brush Creek Valley in Linn County, Oregon where Thomas’s wife 

Rebecca’s mother and brothers were living. During the fall and winter of 
1847 
the Indians annoyed the Thomas Fields family so they 
moved 
down the Calapooia River and stayed with Rebecca’s mother and 
brothers, Leah, 
Timothy and Thomas Riggs till the spring of 1848. Then in 
the summer of 1848, 
Thomas applied for an Oregon 

 




      2 
 

      Donation land claim, near Chandler Mountain. 
He was granted 640 acres 
in 14 S Range East, located in Section 13 and 14. 
Their neighbors were, R. C. 
Finley family, James McHargue family, Robert 
Montgomery family and Rebecca Fields mother and 
brothers, 
Leah, Timothy and Thomas 
Riggs.

      After Thomas and Rebecca Fields moved to Oregon, they had four more 

children, Mary, Lucinda, Louise and 
Franklin.

      Thomas farmed the land and raised bees, hogs, 
and 
cattle.

      Thomas and Rebecca Fields joined the 

Reorganized Latter Day Saints Church. Thomas and Rebecca were baptized May 
25, 
1868. Thomas was an elder in the 
church.

      Before Thomas and Rebecca Fields passed away, they 
had 
lost two children, Eliza and John. John drowned in the Calapoola River 
July 18, 
1867.

      Rebecca (Riggs) Fields passed away January 

29, 1874 and Thomas Fields passed away July 1, 

1875. Where they are buried is unknown so far as I write this story.  



      Thomas and Rebecca’s sons William married 
Elizabeth Carter, Harvey 
married Nancy Jane Carsner, Franklin married 
Syrena Davis, Reuben married, 
Catherine Fields later 
married 
Mary Black, Thomas Newton Fields married Louisa 
Ellen 
Fields, 
Franklin married 
Syrena Davis. Their daughters Nancy Jane married George Fields, Mary Catherine 

married Jason Butler, Lucinda married Charles 
Aldrich. 


(This information came from Court, 
land, census records, Harvey 
Fields obit stories and 
what 
Harvey told his family. Some of the deceased Harvey Fields family claim that 
his 
grandfather, Ebenezer was a brother to the Joseph and Ruben Fields that was on the 
Lewis 
& Clark Expedition but so far I have not found any information 
to verify 
this. Some of this information came from records on what little 
that I could 
find out on the Nathaniel Bowman train.)



WRITTEN BY BONNIE BARTLETT @ MAY 
29, 
2005










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