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History & Genealogy

Source:
The Pioneer Families of Cleveland
1796 - 1840

By
Gertrude Van Rensselaer Wickham
Vol. I.
Publ. Evangelical Publishing House
1914

[Page 318]

1826

PRIME

 

 

 

[Page 319]

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1826

KELLY-KNEAN-TEARE

     Early in the year 1826, two sisters and a brother with their families bid a final farewell to the Isle of Man and set sail for America.  In May of this year, these people, thirteen in number, weary from weeks of travel and anxious for some place they could once more call home, settled in Newburgh in a locality now known as Broadway and Stafford Place.  Had a roll been called of the little colony, the following would have responded:
     William Kelly and wife Ellen Kneen Kelly, and their son John Kelly.
     Patrick Teare
and wife Ann Kneen Teare, and their daughter Mary Ann Teare.
     William Kneen, brother of Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. Teare, his wife Mary Kenyon Kneen, and their children William, Mary, John and Jane Kneen.
     Patrick Teare died soon after his arrival here, and in time his widow married again, a Mr. Kelly, and removed to Warrensville, Ohio.  Nothing has been furnished the writer concerning the above pioneers save a brief sketch of Mrs. Teare-Kelly.  She is depicted as a remarkably active and ambitious woman, the life of any gathering with her quick wit and jokes.  When past 60 years of age, she visited friends in a neighboring town and upon going to the depot to return to her home, found her train already pulling out.  She ran, and with a squirrel’s leap, landed upon the plat form of the last car, and was borne away amid the loud applause of bystanders.
     It is said that she would carry her butter and eggs from Warrensville to Cleveland, a distance of nine miles, walking both ways, and returning the same day.  She endured many hardships, but through them all was noted for her gentleness and patience.
     Her daughter Mary Ann Teare married John Radcliffe.  He died leaving her with three small children.  She was a woman of rare excellence, industrious, economical, generous, and kind-hearted.  She lived in Cleveland on Cedar Ave., and was a member of the Euclid Ave. Baptist Church.  She died in 1890. Her surviving children are William and Eliza Radcliffe.
     William Kneen and his wife grew tired of their “huckleberry patch,” as they called it, in Newburgh, and removed to Carroll County, O., where Mrs. Kneen died at the age of 91.  Their daughter Mary Kneen married Rev. Hugh Gibson, and died in Los Angeles, Cal.
     Jane Kneen, youngest daughter of William and Mary Kenyon Kneen, became the only survivor of the party of thirteen from the Isle of Man in 1826.  She was proud to relate that her mother frequently entertained John Wesley at her home.  She, Mary Kenyon, was one of the first, if not the first woman convert to Methodism on the Isle of Man.  She had a remarkable voice and led the singing at all the Wesley religious meetings.
     Jane Kneen married Elijah Shepherd, and after his death she left Carroll County, and returned to Cleveland, where she resided on Eglen dale Avenue with her daughter Mary Shepherd, and her son Frank Shepherd of the HOLMES, SHEPHERD LUMBER CO.

[Page 320]

1826

CANNELL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Page 321]

 

 

 

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1827

 

 

 

 

 

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1827

THE FIRST METHODIST CHURCH ORGANIZED.

 

 

 

 

 

[Page 322]

 

 

 

 

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1827

McLANE

 

 

 

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1827

BAIRD-McLANE

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Page 323]

 

 

 

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1827

SHORT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Page 324]

 

 

[Page 325]

 

 

[Page 326]

 

 

 

 

 

 

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1827

STARKWEATHER

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Page 327]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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