McCarty Family Notes

My 2nd great-grandmother, Margaret McCarty Light, was born 16 February 1866 to James S. McCarty (1825-1902) and Nancy Jane Hull McCarty (1832-1908).

James and Nancy are buried in Morris Chapel Cemetery in Iroquois County, Illinois.

I have heard and read a story that Margaret was born in a house that once stood where Morris Chapel Cemetery is now. For instance, I have a hand-written note by my grandmother which says the following:

Info from Morris Chapel Cemetery as of 10/6/1996

Church was located across the road to the east

Where cemetery is now -- there was a house where Margaret McCarty Light was born.

This note was written when my great-grandmother, Clara Light Schlotman (1905-2001) was still living. I suspect the location information came from her, and it could be that my memory of this information came from her directly. She was the youngest child of Margaret McCarty Light, and so would have gotten this information from her mother.

According to Find-a-Grave memorials, there are burials in Morris Chapel Cemetery that are from before 1866. This might be explained by the following information found on the Find-a-Grave memorial for Sarah Myers Murray (1805-1840):

...Sarah was originally buried at Courtright Cemetery in Iroquois County, Illinois. Around 1870 she was reburied in Morris Chapel Cemetery at Donovan, Illinois.

(From Find-a-Grave member M. Richards)

There are two possibilities…

  1. Grandma Schlotman was correct — her mother, Margaret McCarty Light was born in 1866 in a house which once stood at the current location of Morris Chapel Cemetery in Iroquois County, Illinois. The house was torn down at some point before 1870 and burials took place at the site from that point on. Some burials were of remains previously buried at other locations, and so their death date, which predates Margaret’s 1866 birth, doesn’t necessarily conflict with the house location story.
  2. Grandma Schlotman was incorrect — the house was near to but not at the current location of the Morris Chapel Cemetery. I know that the McCartys later lived across the state line and to the north of the cemetery, about one mile away. This was the location of a house that is no longer standing that James and Nancy McCarty lived in in their final years. But, we know that Margaret was not born there, as she was born in Illinois.

The solution to this, if there is one, is to look at land records, if they still exist. This would probably require on-site research in Iroquois County, as online searches have yielded no results.

The note included these names and dates of family members buried at Morris Chapel Cemetery. I have linked them to Find-A-Grave memorials:

John R. McCarty (1854-1919)

Christia A., his wife (1857-1882)

Melissa A., his wife (1858-1928)

Della Murray Anderson (8/22/1880-8/6/1974)

Justus E. Anderson (9/1/1877-7/11/1926)

William T. McCarty (12/13/1852-5/26/1919)

Eliza E. McCarty (1/9/1857-8/14/1942)

Jacob H. Murray (1848-1933)

Sarah C. Murray (Kate) (1857-1939)

Minnie Murray (1/13/1883-12/29-1955)

Blanche Murray (6/28/1887-3/17/1910)

James S. Murray (12/26/1878-3/25/1966) (Actually buried at Prairie Dell)

Luke McCarty (1867-1920)

James S. McCarty (1825-1902)

Nancy Jane Hull McCarty, his wife (1832-1908)

Elwood Priest (1866-1930)

Ella Priest (1871-1948)

F. Ivan McCarty (1891-1969)

Mildred McCarty (1894-1970)

John R. McCarty (4/12/1928-11/7/1990)

Patricia "Pat" McCarty (12/2/1934-)

Nancy Jane Hull McCarty, abt. 1905

A monotone portrait of a seated aged woman with white hair and a mourning gown
The full Nancy McCarty portrait including Meier Studio mount, abt. 1905
The photo

This matte collodion print shows my 3rd great-grandmother, Nancy Jane Hull McCarty (1832-1908) in about 1905. The photo was taken at Meier Studio in Sheldon, Illinois. I have been unable to find any information on this photographer.

She is seated in a wicker photographer’s chair (a.k.a. posing chair) which has been placed on a floral rug. The same chair appears in other family photos of the time. The backdrop is mostly plain, but a flowering plant is painted on it at one side.

The card mount has a base of the common grey board but has a textured overlay which transitions from grey to black. I suspect that the grey is due to sun fading, but I can’t be sure of it. If it was originally solid black, it might have been chosen for mourning reasons.

A grainy portrait of a mustached man of mature years is set in a plain round jewelry setting
Nancy’s mourning pin shows a portrait of her husband, James, who died in 1902

Nancy is wearing a piece of jewelry showing a portrait of her husband, James S. McCarty (1825-1902). I have compared it to the two known photos of James, and it doesn’t appear to be the same.

Nancy’s dress is very dark, possibly black, with a bit of white lace or light fabric trimming her collar. It was expected that a widow would wear mourning clothing and adhere to customs for at least a year after the death of her husband. While this might be considered a mourning gown, many elderly widows didn’t adhere to the standard mourning timeframes and just wore black for the remainders of their lives. So, this photo wasn’t necessarily taken within the year following her husband’s death.

Her life

Nancy Jane Hull was born on Christmas day in 1832 in Hampshire County, (now West) Virginia to William and Rebecca Hager Hull. She married James S. McCarty on the frozen Potomac River on 15 January 1852.

After having their firstborn, William Thomas McCarty (1852-1919) at home in Virginia, the couple moved to Greene County, Ohio where they had six more children. James worked as a farmhand.

At some point between 1833 and 1866, the family moved to Iroquois County, Illinois, settling in Concord Township near Bunkum, which later became the town of Iroquois (Nancy’s father and some siblings moved to a different area of Illinois at an unknown time). Three more children were born in Illinois to bring the final number to ten (known) children born to Nancy and James.

By 1880, the McCartys had moved just across the Indiana state line to Washington Township in Newton County. After James’ death in 1902, Nancy lived with her son Luke in Effner, back in Iroquois County, Illinois.

Late in life, Nancy suffered from several health problems, but was able to keep house until just before her death. Nancy died 16 August 1908 at age seventy-five. She was buried next to her husband at Morris Chapel Cemetery near Donovan, Illinois. She left ten children, thirty-eight grandchildren, and thirteen great-grandchildren to mourn her loss.

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