↑ Wilkinson-3288 was created by Scotty Welland through the import of A Welland Ancestry_2014-04-24_01.ged on Apr 24, 2014. This comment and citation can be deleted after the biography has been edited and primary sources are included.
↑ Source: #S164 Page: Year: 1860; Census Place: , Allen, Kansas Territory; Roll: M653_346; Page: 0; Image: 34. Data: Text: Name: James Wilkinson CONT Birth: abt 1838 in New York CONT Residence: 1860 in Allen, Kansas Territory Object: @M2393@
↑ Source: #S128 Page: Year: 1850; Census Place: Pittsfield, Warren, Pennsylvania; Roll: M432_832; Page: 322; Image: 636. Data: Text: Name: James Wilkinson CONT Birth: abt 1838 in Pennsylvania CONT Residence: 1850 in Pittsfield, Warren, Pennsylvania Object: @M1327@
↑ Source: #S127 Page: Year: 1870; Census Place: , , ; Roll: M593 Data: Text: Name: James D Wilkinson CONT Birth: abt 1838 in Pennsylvania CONT Residence: 1870 in Agency, Osage, Kansas Object: @M1119@
↑ Source: #S126 Page: Year: 1880; Census Place: Oxford, Sumner, Kansas; Roll: T9_398; Family History Film: 1254398; Page: 88.2000; Enumeration District: 191; Image: 0181. Data: Text: Name: James D. Wilkinson CONT Birth: abt 1834 in Pennsylvania CONT Residence: 1880 in Oxford, Sumner, Kansas, United States Object: @M1120@
↑ Source: #S125 Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: Oklahoma, Oklahoma, Oklahoma; Roll: T624_1265; Page: 6B; Enumeration District: 198; Image: 1093. Data: Text: Name: James Wilkinson CONT Birth: abt 1839 in Pennsylvania CONT Residence: 1910 in Oklahoma, Oklahoma, Oklahoma Object: @M2394@
Source: S125 Title: 1910 United States Federal Census Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2006. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: NARA.Original data - Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1910, T624, 1,178 rolls.; Repository: #R1
Repository: R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: 360 West 4800 North, Provo, UT 84604 E-Mail Address: Phone Number:
Source: S127 Title: 1870 United States Federal Census Publication: Name: Original data - Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1870.Original data: Ninth Census of the United States, 1870. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1870.; Repository: #R1
Source: S128 Title: 1850 United States Federal Census Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2005.Original data - Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1850, M432, 1,009 rolls.Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Seventh Census of the Unite; Repository: #R1
Source: S164 Title: 1860 United States Federal Census Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2004.Original data - Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1860. M653, 1,438 rolls.Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Eighth Census of the United; Repository: #R1
Source: S189 Author: Ancestry.com Title: Public Member Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.Original data: Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.; Repository: #R1 NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
Source: S208 Author: Ancestry.com. Title: Kansas State Census Collection, 1855-1915 Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - 1855 Kansas Territory Census. Microfilm reel K-1. Kansas State Historical Society.1856, 1857, and 1858 Kansas Territory Censuses. Microfilm reel K-1. Kansas State Hist; Repository: #R1
Notes
Note N1831880 KS, Osage, Sumner Co., census - Shows new wife Mary E. Thomas, who he married 35 days after the death of his first wife, Sarah Stout.The Cherry. With measured cadence's soft vibration, Silently and one by one; In deepened sighs to awe relation: And a cherry's mission is done. Still more silently, the breathing Of a peaceful zephyr calmed to sleep, Tranquilly hushes; the boughs cease wreathing, And a cherry its vigils keep. A bird in a neighboring thicket Is flinging a paean sincere; Filled with praises of quality in cricket, And a cherry blushes to hear. In silence his notes seek an echo, Hoping that accepted they might be; Still silence is the price of his gusto, And a cherry's thanks are free. Now a sunbeam warm is tendered, By the grateful aid of a leaf; Hope to a fainting heart is rendered, And a cherry is robbed of grief. A cool but effeminate moment, A passion with hasty words spoken, Rends a tie by purity lent; And a cherry's heart is broken. A single experience has each little cherry, Of sunshine and joy, of tempest and pain; Yet as we, tho' all things bury, The germ of our nature liveth again. __James Wilkinson. Hours in Dreamland James Wilkinson (Buffalo: The Peter Paul Book Company. 1896) Pages 98-99 The Cow-Boy. Ho, for the cow-boy, Brimming o'er with glee, As merry as the larks With their glad tut-i-lee; Upon his little pony, Swift as any deer; Everything within is peace, He has no cause of fear. Ho, for the cow-boy, Gliding to and fro, Skimming o'er the prairie Swifter than the crow., After the rabbit, After the quail; Running, chasing, driving, Through sunshine, rain or hail. Ho, for the cow-boy, Sailing through the air, Keeping watch o' er all Entrusted to his care. No millionaire so light, No musician half so gay; For he, when in the saddle, Can ride all care away. Ho, for the cow-boy, When for home he goes; His cot's of freshest hay, Yet slumbers sound, he knows. What a life of healthy pleasure, Of enjoyment full and free; So I, a cow-boy henceforth, Would fain forever be. 98-99 __James Wilkinson. Hours in Dreamland James Wilkinson (Buffalo: The Peter Paul Book Company. 1896) Pages 98-99 June. O June, beautiful June, The diamond bright of the year; Why fade you thus, so soon Without trace of sorrow here? Thy life, O June, is a dream, Yet the source of great inspiration; Thine is the time to redeem The mistakes of a year's dissipation. Far down in the heart of thy treasures, A pearl there is richly pure; Enrapturing the sight of its pleasures__ Lasting its joys, and sure. Here know the bliss of a day__ Bliss which from June is given; Drink glad notes of aerial lay, While they echo from earth to heaven. Yet June, my long-loved friend, Shall this suffice thy eulogy; Can it be, we only comprehend, A picture so vague to thee. I would with all my heart A more worthy tribute bring; But charm is thine and when we start Dame Fancy leaves no offering. For where are laurels, or wreath, Or the jewels of glittering bright; That would add to thy perfumed breath, Or shed brilliancy above thy light. O June, I clutch at thy daylight's last beam, As mementoes for thy diadem; Promise me, please, another gleam, For thou art the rarest gem. __James Wilkinson. Poets and Poetry of Kansas Edited by Thomas W. Herringshaw (Chicago: American Publishers' Association. 1894) Page 312 Soldier's Reveries. The stars and the stripes I so cherish That flag of the brave and the free; That though for its safety I must perish, My life I would sacrifice for thee: Spake a soldier, his heart o'erflowing With admiration, and love for its pride; The flush of manhood brightly glowing, While his idol he proudly eyed. Oh, the glory of that waving parcel, The sunlight of heaven's reflected array; The zephyrs of ocean your folds kindly fondle, Bright phatus of aerial beauty your colors portray. Yes, I glory in its chivalric beauty, Chivalry that never will lag, And in submission to chivalric duty Permit me, O God, to carry our flag. When with war's dark clouds o'ershadowed, Our spirits though destined to wag, In reflection of honor yet remembered, Permit me, O God, to mention our flag. When peace its broad wings of prosperity Shall from ocean to ocean its hosts entag; Then, as in the days of our minority, Permit me, O God, to reverence our flag. __James Wilkinson, Seneca. Poets and Poetry of Kansas Edited by Thomas W. Herringshaw (Chicago: American Publishers' Association. 1894) Page 311
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