Lelon E. WARD

Lelon E. WARD

Male 1914 - 2002  (88 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Lelon E. WARDLelon E. WARD was born in 1914 in Washington (son of Reginald John WARD and Audie Mable SLAWSON); died in 2002; was buried in Loon Lake Community Cemetery, Loon Lake, Stevens Co., Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1920, Living with mother and grandparents in Seattle, King Co., Washington
    • Census: 1930, Living with mother and step-father in Gridley, Butte Co., California


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Reginald John WARDReginald John WARD was born on 29 Sep 1888; died in May 1969 in Spokane, Spokane Co., Washington; was buried in Loon Lake Community Cemetery, Loon Lake, Stevens Co., Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1910, Living in Malaga, Chelan Co., Washington

    Reginald married Audie Mable SLAWSON. Audie (daughter of Frank Deloss SLAWSON and Delilah Ann MOORE) was born on 22 Jan 1887 in Lead City, South Dakota; died on 4 Aug 1963 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington; was buried in Cashmere Cemetery, Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Audie Mable SLAWSONAudie Mable SLAWSON was born on 22 Jan 1887 in Lead City, South Dakota (daughter of Frank Deloss SLAWSON and Delilah Ann MOORE); died on 4 Aug 1963 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington; was buried in Cashmere Cemetery, Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1900, Living with parents in Mission, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1910, Living with husband in Malaga, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1920, Living with parents in Seattle, King Co., Washington
    • Census: 1930, Living with husband in Gridley, Butte Co., California
    • Census: 1940, Living with husband in Seattle, King Co., Washington

    Children:
    1. Leta A. WARD was born about 1911 in Washington.
    2. 1. Lelon E. WARD was born in 1914 in Washington; died in 2002; was buried in Loon Lake Community Cemetery, Loon Lake, Stevens Co., Washington.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Frank Deloss SLAWSON was born on 29 Oct 1857 in Delaware County, New York (son of Pvt Ebenezer SLAWSON and Louisa Polly GREEN); died on 18 Aug 1939 in Cashmere, Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1860, Living with parents in Tompkins, Delaware Co., New York
    • Census: 1870, Living with parents in Gordon, Todd Co., Minnesota
    • Census: 1880, Living with Uncle Charles Slawson, in Washington, Taylor Co., Iowa
    • Census: 1900, Living in Mission, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1910, Living in Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1920, Living in Seattle, King Co., Washington

    Notes:

    Name:
    FRANK D. SLAWSON, of Chelan county, a prosperous Mission creek farmer, was born in Delaware County, New York. His father Eben Slawson, now residing with our subject at Mission, is a native of new York, born September 21, 1824. During the Civil war he was a member of Company G, Colonel Whistler's heavy artillery, enlisting in 1864. He was wounded in the thigh and otherwise disabled, and is now totally blind. His father, the paternal grandfather of our subject, participated in the war of 1812. The paternal great-grandfather of Frank D. was a captain in the Revolution. The mother, Louisa P. (Green) Slawson, also a native of the Empire state, now lives with her husband in a home adjoining her son's, near Mission. Her grandfather was born in the United States; her grandmother in Germany. Two of her brothers, Lewis and Willard Green, served in the Civil War.

    When our subject was eight years old his parents removed to Minnesota, remaining there nine years thence going to Iowa, and thence to Montana. Frank D., however, remained in Iowa thee years, and then followed his parents to Montana. Two and a half years subsequently he made a trip to the Black Hills, but sold out his interest in that locality and in march, 1890, came to his present location at Mission. His parents had preceded him. They had purchased three-fourths of a section of land, extending a mile along Mission creek. They have since disposed of all but one hundred and sixty acres, which they own jointly with their son.

    HISTORY OF NORTH WASHINGTON
    p. 783
    Submitted by Joe Chester

    Frank married Delilah Ann MOORE on 5 Jul 1880 in Missouri. Delilah was born on 30 Dec 1861; died on 28 Oct 1937 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Delilah Ann MOORE was born on 30 Dec 1861; died on 28 Oct 1937 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Fact: Daughter of J.D. and Delilah Ann Moore
    • Census: 1900, Living with husband in Mission, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1910, Living with husband in Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington
    • Census: 1920, Living with husband in Seattle, King Co., Washington

    Children:
    1. Cleo SLAWSON was born on 19 Apr 1882 in Iowa; died on 27 Sep 1885.
    2. 3. Audie Mable SLAWSON was born on 22 Jan 1887 in Lead City, South Dakota; died on 4 Aug 1963 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington; was buried in Cashmere Cemetery, Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington.
    3. Alleta SLAWSON was born on 6 Jul 1892 in Cashmere, Washington; died on 6 Jan 1893 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington.
    4. Earl Francis SLAWSON was born on 3 Jul 1899 in Cashmere, Washington; died in Oct 1966 in Bremerton, Kitsap Co., Washington.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Pvt Ebenezer SLAWSONPvt Ebenezer SLAWSON was born on 24 Sep 1824 in Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York (son of Samuel SLAWSON and Sarah PETIT); died on 20 Jul 1905 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington; was buried in Cashmere Cemetery, Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living in Franklin, Delaware County, New York
    • Occupation: 1850; Farmer
    • Census: 1860, Living in Tompkins, Delaware Co., New York
    • Military Service: 15 Sep 1862-27 Jul 1865, Private Co G, 2nd New York Heavy Artillery
    • Census: 1870, Living in Gordon, Todd Co., Minnesota
    • Census: 1875, Living in Gordon, Todd Co., Minnesota
    • Census: 1880, Living in Dawson County, Montana

    Notes:

    Name:
    Excerpt from "An Uncommon Journey":pg. 197-300
    Following the end of the school term in June of 1885, after Mary had turned thirteen, a deal was worked out that she would live down at Slawson's road ranch, working at housekeeping and kitchen chores in exchange for her room and board. The ranch was about eighteen miles north of Glendive, located on the west side of the Yellowstone at what was Slawson Creek. Like the burns Ranch, it was a stage stop on the Glendive-Fort Buford road, and the Slawsons frequently fed and sometimes overnighted travelers. Stagecoach horses were kept at the road ranch, and Eben and his son, Willard, would provide fresh horses while the stage's passengers ate a meal. Teddy Roosevelt was known to have stayed there on occasion, and it was reported that he especially like Mrs. Slawson's dried apple pie.

    My father and my grandparents had known Eben and Louisa Slawson for some three years. The Slawsons were about my father's age. Eben was a Union Army veteran from a Ne York artillery regiment, I believe, and, the few times I was around him, he always presented himself well and was quite cordial. He had been appointed one of Dawson County's first three county commissioners. Louisa was a pleasant lady with a reputation as an excellent cook. thee of their four children were married with families of their own, and they were located on different ranches right there on the lower Yellowstone. All of these people were substantial and well regarded by their neighbors. All things considered, it looked like a good situation for Mary.

    There doesn't have to be a black sheep in every family, but Willard Slawson, the son still at home, was the bane of his parents. When our greater family left Glendive in April of 1887, he was about twenty-one, six or seven years older than Mary. At that time she had opted to stay on with the Slawsons. In late September of that year we found out why. She showed up one day at my father's place. both my father and David were there. She said tat she was five or six months pregnant, that Willard Slawson was the father, and that he was now telling her he wanted nothing to do with her except for her to get out of his life. thee conditions obviously made it impossible for her to continue to live at the road ranch.

    Mary was only fifteen when she came walking those eighteen miles into town. Whether she had been enamored with Willard when the family left--and hence her decision to stay behind--or whether her circumstance related to Willard Slawson was more sinister, only Mary and Willard will ever know. In any case, my father and Mary and brother David headed for the sheriffs office. Henri Haskell, then Dawson County's prosecuting attorney, was not a man to trifle with. John Trumbull, Slawson's attorney, soon explained to him the two choices he had for being responsible for his actions: marry the girl or get sent to the Montana Territorial Prison in Deer Lodge for his ruthless exploitation of a minor child. He quickly accepted the marriage option, and then, within days, he abandoned her. He was never seen in that country again.

    During the winter of 1887-1888, Mary became the mother of a beautiful baby girl. The marriage of Willard Slawson, however, cost her dearly. In the spring of 1888, she and her baby, Emma, and our father followed the rest of the family to the Bitter Root. A few years later, she met a gentleman there and fell in love. The laws of Montana, however, would not let her claim abandonment without finding and serving papers on Slawson. The court reasoned that this blackguard might re-appear sometime in the future and do her courtesy of taking her back as his wife. He was finally found living in the vicinity of his parents in the small settlement of Old Mission, Washington, and he was served there by the sheriff of Kittitas County. Even then the court in the Bitter Root was not prepared to grant her divorce request on the strength of her own testimony or on the strength-of-character witnesses stating that she was a good and industrious woman. The only thing that finally worked in her favor was Willard Slawson's repeated failures to obey the Montana court's orders to appear at the hearings. Fully seven years after his abandonment of her and their child in Glendive, the Ravalli County Court finally granted her divorce.

    In addition to the crimes perpetrated against this girl at the Slawson Ranch when she was only fourteen, Willard Slawson's careless inactivity forced her into seven years of legal bondage while she tried to divorce him. Having successfully used the marriage as a ploy to avoid prison, he fled into a shameful hiding hundreds of miles away. Once found, he then refused for years to even respond to the divorce action that would have allowed her to return to normal life. In a further demonstration of his squalid demeanor, he cared not one whit about his own in his entire life, did he ever see or even attempt to communicate with his own child.

    Fortunately, this story has a happy ending. Mary met a young, industrious fellow in Victor who, by coincidence, had also been raised in Glendive. They hit it off immediately and were wed in Vitor in 1895. forty-five years later, Mary is still happily married to Herbert Eddy and the have enjoyed a wonderful relationship throughout their years together. Young Emma grew into a beautiful woman. She has long been married, has her own family, and is leading a satisfying and productive life. The Eddys and their four children and Emma have lived north of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada, since about 1915.

    Ebenezer married Louisa Polly GREEN on 14 Oct 1849 in Probably in Delaware County, New York. Louisa was born on 02 Aug 1831 in Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York; died on 07 Sep 1906 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Louisa Polly GREEN was born on 02 Aug 1831 in Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York; died on 07 Sep 1906 in Cashmere, Chelan County, Washington.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living with husband in Franklin, Delaware County, New York
    • Census: 1860, Living with husband in Tompkins, Delaware Co., New York
    • Census: 1870, Living with husband in Gordon, Todd Co., Minnesota
    • Census: 1875, Living with husband in Gordon, Todd Co., Minnesota
    • Census: 1880, Living with husband in Dawson County, Montana

    Children:
    1. Imogene J. SLAWSON was born on 17 May 1853 in Delaware County, New York; died on 18 Jul 1898 in Cashmere, Washington; was buried in Cashmere Cemetery, Cashmere, Chelan Co., Washington.
    2. 6. Frank Deloss SLAWSON was born on 29 Oct 1857 in Delaware County, New York; died on 18 Aug 1939 in Cashmere, Washington.
    3. Elsie SLAWSON was born on 26 Nov 1863 in Delaware County, New York; died on 7 Jun 1927; was buried in Newlon Cemetery, Sidney, Richland Co., Montana.
    4. Willard G. SLAWSON was born on 18 May 1866 in Franklin, Delaware Co.,New York; died in 1895.