Followers

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

James Vance Evans

Source:

Our Evans Genealogy 1779-1980 by Muckenthaler, Theresa Ann Evans.
Self published September 1980 and presented to her father, Wallace J (ean) Evans of Emporia, KS on the occasion of this birthday, September 29
 

Bazaar Methodist Church


Marker stone in front of the Bazaar United Methodist Church, Bazaar, KS. Photo taken in 2005 during a visit to Bazaar and the Bazaar Cemetery to photograph landmarks and the family headstones. The Evans and Chesney families lived in Chase County in the vicinity of Bazaar. They were staunch Methodists, and while they did not attend church in this particular building (it was built in 1908), they probably did attend and even began the Methodist church in town. That site is now a vacant lot, but there is a marker where the original church attended by the Chesneys and Evans once stood.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Ed and Wilda

 
 

Edward Kent Chesney and Alwilda "Wilda" Mize were both born September 19, 1869.  They met while they were attending Baker University in Baldwin, Kansas.  They reportedly called each other their "Valentine", undoubtedly because of choosing Valentine's Day in 1893 as their wedding date. 

This is their wedding picture from family memorabilia, 14 February 1893.


Edward Kent and Alwilda Mize CHESNEY, probably in the late 1920's. My mother and Evelyn Mae Chesney Baumer often said that when they looked at this photo they see that "Papa was already showing signs of his illness." They were referring to the mental illness which incapacitated Edward in the last years of his life, the result of a horse kicking him in the head several years prior. In the days of no treatment for such severe head trauma, the family had few options other than to institutionalize him as his condition worsened, leaving 'Wilda" as a virtual widow. He died at Larned, KS, the location of the state's "insane asylum". This piece of history was a constant source of shame, embarrassment and pain for the family all of their lives and they did not often speak of it except among themselves.





The front and back of the headstone for Edward Kent Chesney and Alwilda "Wilda" Mize Chesney.  They are buried in the Natoma Cemetery.