Sunday, December 28, 2008

Ric Crosby (1950-2008)

We were saddened to learn that Richard “Ric” Crosby – husband of Dorothea (Dee Dee) Maiden Crosby – has died in Woodbridge, Virginia, after a long illness.

Richard D. Crosby III was a retired Colonel in the U.S. Army, Infantry. He died July 10, 2008 at the age of 57 after a long illness. His funeral was at the Fort Myer (VA) Old Post Chapel; he was buried July 28th with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington, D.C. In addition to his wife Dee Dee, Colonel Crosby is survived by a daughter, Andrea Young, and son, Richard D. Crosby IV; his parents, Colonel (R) Richard and Ann Crosby; a sister, Jennifer McCormick, and brothers Dr. Michael Crosby and LTC Jonathan Crosby.

A touching collection of Crosby photographs – showing Ric from his childhood to becoming an adult – can be found at a special website entitled Warhog07. It is replete with tributes, anecdotes, and other memorabilia commemorating Ric's life. Richard Crosby and Dorothea Maiden were married August 4, 1979 at Fort Lewis, Washington. Ric’s father, too, was a career Army officer. Dee Dee Maiden is the daughter of the late Hank and Harriet (Linklater) Maiden, who also traveled the globe during Hank’s career in the Army.

The only time it was my good fortune to meet Ric was when my son Brad and I journeyed to Europe for a couple of weeks in 1984 and were able to visit Ric, Dee Dee, and their young family when they were stationed in Germany. They were kind enough to allow us to stay with them for a day or two during our travels. They were a delightful family, and we have fond memories of our visit.

While our thoughts and prayers have been with cousin Dee Dee and her family, all of us can appreciate the warmth, humor and love contained in the eulogy delivered by Ric’s brother, Michael.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Homesteading in Wyoming

(NOTE:  As of October 2023, I believe the information in the original caption that follows is incorrect.   I'll soon be reviewing and updating this caption.) This photograph was probably taken in about 1912 or 1913 on the Crook County Wyoming homestead of Leota Weston. In 1915 she married William J. Maiden and moved to the Maiden homestead northeast of Chadron, Nebraska. In this photo are: William Weston, Leota Weston, and Minnie Weston. Leota (Durham) Weston Maiden's homestead is believed to have been not far from the almost forgotten village of Terhune, Wyoming.

Monday, September 8, 2008

A conversation with Betty (Maiden) Love Jolovich

We had some great fun at the end of August, visiting with aunt Betty Love Jolovich and family. She's the sole remaining child of William J. and Leota Maiden, who raised their family on land his father had homesteaded in northern Dawes County Nebraska in the late 1880s.

Some months back, Betty's youngest daughter Jan contacted us about doing a video interview with her mother. Of course, I thought it was a terrific idea, and I was delighted that she called me to help put it together. We spent several hours with aunt Betty and her husband Paul Jolovich. In addition to Janice, her older sisters Sandy and Beverly were on hand for the tapings.

We conducted the interviews in three segments of about 45 minutes each. There's a lot of anecdotal side conversation during the video, and we'll edit out most of that and probably end up with a final interview of about 45 minutes to an hour.

Betty talks about growing up on the farm northwest of Chadron, Nebraska, the trials and tribulations of a farm kid going to school in town, meeting her "pen pal" Marlin Love, whom she then married. There's lots of fun information in this discussion, including a description of one of the most hilarious honeymoons anyone could imagine!

Lots of projects going on these days, but this is near the top of the list, and we hope to have a final video completed by the end of the year.


A soldier and his family

This is one of my favorite Maiden family photographs -- probably taken in late 1952 in Germany, where Hank Maiden was serving a hitch in the U.S. Army. On Hank's lap is younger son, Jim, while the oldest child, Bill, is behind mother Harriet, who is holding baby Dorothea.

Hank was the only surviving son of William J. and Leota (Durham) Maiden, who raised their family -- comprised mostly of girls -- near the banks of White River about 13 miles northeast of Chadron, Nebraska. Harriet was the daughter of Henry and Claudia (Johnson) Linklater and grew up near Hulett, Wyoming. Both Hank and Harriet are deceased; last we knew, Bill was living in Vancouver, Washington; Jim was in Idaho; and Dorothea (DeDe) and family were in Viriginia.


Sunday, May 18, 2008

So Long, Shad!

With three years under his belt as a member of a National Guard medical evacuation unit in Rapid City, South Dakota, Shad Tenold is about to “ship out” for an overseas tour of duty in Kosovo. It was only fitting that many family and a few friends would gather to help send him off. That gathering took place today (May 18, 2008) at the Perkins Restaurant in Spearfish, South Dakota.

Here’s Shad with his grandmother, Betty Jolovich. His parents are Gene and Jan (Love) Tenold, who ranch near Reva in northwestern South Dakota.

We’ve posted a few other photos from the gathering at So Long, Shad!

It's all John C. Derrick's fault

In shaking the family tree for information, relationships sometimes get a bit bewildering. A classic case is the relationship between the Derrick, Maiden and Miller families of western Nebraska, and it all seemed to start with this old guy.

John C. Derrick was probably born in Holland, although we’ve not been able to document it. We do know he married three times and that his second bride was Adelia Pamelia Kellogg. They had two children together – Walter Earnest in 1860 and Dora Ellen in 1862. While the family was living in Carroll County Iowa in 1880, Dora married William H. Maiden, whose family came from Tama County Iowa. They moved to Dawes County Nebraska, where their only child, William Joseph Maiden, was born in 1886.

Pretty easy, so far, huh? Continue to the next level: William J. “Bill” Maiden married Leota Irene Durham in 1915; they had seven children together – one of whom was Lettie, born in 1920. In 1938, Lettie married John Miller, whose sister, Marie, was already married to William Derrick, son of Walter Earnest and a grandson to John C. Derrick. So Lettie and Bill were cousins – as well as brother/sister-in-law.

Oh, did we forget about another son of John C. Derrick -- Albert? He was the son of John C. and his first wife, Martha Hulbert. Born in 1857, Al was just a few years older than his half-brother, Walter Earnest, and his half-sister, Dora Ellen. When he was 21 years old – living in Tama, Iowa – Albert took a bride, Martha Maiden. Martha was a daughter to Joseph Maiden – a half-brother to William H. Maiden.

Not yet confused? Visit the Maiden Genealogy web site and you’re bound to become even more disoriented. Happy hunting!

Warren Beamish and the Warren girls

Members of the Maiden family likely became acquainted with a Michagander named Warren Beamish when he took a job working on the Maiden place northeast during the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was probably around the same time that they came to know the Warren girls -- Maude, Gladys, and Ellen.

Maude married a Pace, Ellen a Crowe, and Gladys married Warren Beamish. Some of the family may be just as surprised as we were, when we learned about the wartime heroics of the guy known simply as "Slim." That was a subject of this Tribute to Slim story that we wrote in 2007.