Puffer Genealogy

WYTHE, Frank Austin

WYTHE, Frank Austin

Male 1859 - 1947  (88 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  WYTHE, Frank AustinWYTHE, Frank Austin was born on 4 Jul 1859 in Fulton, IL (son of WYTHE, Monroe O. and KNIGHT, Emma Elvira); died on 21 Aug 1947 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  WYTHE, Monroe O.WYTHE, Monroe O. was born on 27 Jul 1832 in MA (son of WYETH, Joseph Sawin and HOAR\HORR, Sarah); died on 23 Mar 1892 in Fulton, IL.

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    • _COLOR: 2
    • Residence: 1860, Fulton, IL
    • Residence: 1880, Fulton, IL

    Monroe married KNIGHT, Emma Elvira on 20 Oct 1856 in Whiteside County, IL, and was divorced in 1866. Emma (daughter of KNIGHT, Wesley and COWLES, Louisa Wilbur) was born on 24 Jan 1839 in Charleston, IL; died on 2 Jan 1895 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  KNIGHT, Emma ElviraKNIGHT, Emma Elvira was born on 24 Jan 1839 in Charleston, IL (daughter of KNIGHT, Wesley and COWLES, Louisa Wilbur); died on 2 Jan 1895 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FULTON, Ill. - An interesting phenomenon in Fulton´s history is told here. Is it macabre, eerie or incredible? You decide.

    Warren P. Hall, co-owner of the Langford & Hall Sawmill located on Fulton´s riverfront, was fatally injured on July 7, 1881, by a falling log. He was supervising the raising of a tall smoke stack that had been blown down in a storm. His death, however, was not the first tragedy for the Hall family.

    On January 16, 1876, five years earlier, George Hall, age 16, the only son of Warren and Catherine Hall, went to the river to ice skate and never returned. The Halls' residence was on the northeast corner of Third Street and Eighth Avenue (current site of the Fulton Corporation office). The Fulton citizens, gripped with great concern and anxiety, aided in the search for the missing boy. Most of the concentration was at the site of the C & NW railroad elevator located on the west end of 11th Avenue.

    At the time, Mrs. L. F. (Emma) Puffer, a quiet woman who had demonstrated clairvoyant powers in the past, offered her advice as to the location of the body of George. She was hesitant about getting involved as she had experienced public animosity in a previous town, but her desire to be helpful gave her courage to use her "one talent, clairvoyance, toward directing others where to search." In the presence of four others, she laid her hand on a coat that George Hall had worn and `"from a clue given by the magnetism in the coat as it appeared to her, she saw the boy leave his home, go to the river, put on his skates and skate to the north above the sawmill," according to an article written by Wayne Bastian. She could clearly see the boy's body under the ice in that location. This would have been the Smith & Culbertson Sawmill at the mouth of the Cattail Slough (current site of Rick Brown's property).

    Later that day, William Stuart, who resided in the neighborhood, stopped by the Puffer home and said that people no longer thought that George had drowned and that he had run away from home. Mrs. Puffer refused to accept this theory and reiterated her belief as to the body's location. "Billy, George Hall is dead and is under the ice'85." That evening George's body was located exactly at the site that Mrs. Puffer had envisioned.

    Many people doubted Mrs. Puffer and claimed that someone had told her, but she rose in righteous wrath and defended her clairvoyant talent. In a lengthy letter to the Fulton Journal on April 7, 1876, three months after the drowning, she defended herself and expressed resentment for being accused as an imposter. The letter is well written and reflects an intelligent and educated woman with a caring nature. In closing, she wrote, "and although I am a woman, I claim the rights of citizenship enough to defend myself when there have been false accusations made, and for the use of your columns through which to do so, you have my thanks." Signed: Emma E. Puffer.

    There was an affidavit that accompanied her letter signed by the people that were present when she first described the location of George Hall's body.

    Emma was not the only clairvoyant noted in Fulton's history. Dr. A. W. Benton, a medical physician, arrived in Fulton in 1853. His advertisements offered both medical and clairvoyant services. He owned the first drug store. Dr. Benton is best remembered, however, because the house he built in 1855 is now the Fulton (Martin House) Museum located at 707 10th Ave.

    Writer's note: The reference to another community in which Emma Knight Puffer experienced public animosity was in Nauvoo. She and her family moved to Fulton in 1847 when the mass exodus of Mormans departed for Salt Lake City.

    Emma practiced Spiritualism while she lived in Fulton. She is buried in the Fulton Township Cemetery. Emma Knight Wythe Puffer was Helen Wythe´s grandmother; Wythe was a well-known Fulton resident who died March 17, 1993.

    Sources: Wayne Bastian; Fulton Journal articles

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=87804543

    Children:
    1. 1. WYTHE, Frank Austin was born on 4 Jul 1859 in Fulton, IL; died on 21 Aug 1947 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  WYETH, Joseph SawinWYETH, Joseph Sawin was born on 8 Nov 1796 in Wendell, MA; died on 2 Apr 1872 in Denmark, NY; was buried in Denmark, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=157739456

    Joseph married HOAR\HORR, Sarah in Nov 1819 in Jefferson County, NY. Sarah was born on 7 Aug 1793 in MA; died on 5 May 1845 in Lewis County, NY; was buried in Martinsburg, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  HOAR\HORR, Sarah was born on 7 Aug 1793 in MA; died on 5 May 1845 in Lewis County, NY; was buried in Martinsburg, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=176031048

    Children:
    1. 2. WYTHE, Monroe O. was born on 27 Jul 1832 in MA; died on 23 Mar 1892 in Fulton, IL.

  3. 6.  KNIGHT, Wesley was born in 1815 in Otsego County, NY; died in 1850 in OH.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 2

    Wesley married COWLES, Louisa Wilbur on 24 Apr 1838 in Kirtland, OH. Louisa (daughter of COWLES, Austin and WILBUR, Phebe) was born on 19 Mar 1817 in Otsego County, NY; died on 13 Jul 1897 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  COWLES, Louisa WilburCOWLES, Louisa Wilbur was born on 19 Mar 1817 in Otsego County, NY (daughter of COWLES, Austin and WILBUR, Phebe); died on 13 Jul 1897 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=87869780

    Children:
    1. 3. KNIGHT, Emma Elvira was born on 24 Jan 1839 in Charleston, IL; died on 2 Jan 1895 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  COWLES, AustinCOWLES, Austin was born on 3 May 1792 in Brookfield, VT; died on 15 Dec 1872 in Pleasanton, IA; was buried in Pleasanton, IA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=74938067

    Austin married WILBUR, Phebe on 14 Jan 1813 in Unadilla, NY. Phebe was born on 6 Oct 1785 in Scituate, RI; died on 1 May 1826 in Amity, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  WILBUR, PhebeWILBUR, Phebe was born on 6 Oct 1785 in Scituate, RI; died on 1 May 1826 in Amity, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 2

    Children:
    1. 7. COWLES, Louisa Wilbur was born on 19 Mar 1817 in Otsego County, NY; died on 13 Jul 1897 in Fulton, IL; was buried in Fulton, IL.