The Hard-To-Find William Bowerman

I’ve recently posted about members of the Schott family. I began researching the family because one of my AncestryDNA matches traced their family back to William Bowerman and Maria Elizabeth Schott.

Since then I’ve traced two of our Shared Matches back to Peter and Catharina Magdalena (Fritz) Schott. These matches descend from Peter and Magdalena’s son Peter. They both share about 21 cMs of DNA with me. Assuming Catharine (Bowerman) Parsons, my fourth great grandmother, is a daughter of William and Elizabeth, one of these matches is estimated to be a fifth cousin twice removed, the other a sixth cousin once removed.

But what do I really know about William and Maria Elizabeth (Schott) Bowerman? Truthfully, not much.

William was allegedly born about 1786 in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania and likely died about 1810-11 in Dauphin County. Elizabeth (Shott) Bowerman was born 30 June 1792.1 I do not know when or where she died. Nor do I know when the couple married.

William warranted 110 acres 2 perches in what is now Jackson Township on 19 September 1809.2 It adjoined land of John Enders, John Hoffman, Michael Herman, Ludwig Shellman, Godlove Kline, and Peter Sweigert. It was surveyed for William on 19 December 1809.3 He was taxed in Halifax Township (Jackson’s precursor) that year.4

He was listed in the 1810 census just before Peter & Adam Sweigert and Christian Shutt with 1 male (<10), 1 male (16-26), 2 females (<10), and one female (16-26).5 William and Elizabeth had three children—Catharine (28 January 1808), John (23 March 1809), and Elizabeth (10 August 1810), all baptized at Fetterhoff’s Reformed and Lutheran Church in Halifax Township.6

And that’s it!

William does not show up in earlier or later tax records in Halifax, nor can I locate him in census records or deeds. He either died or moved away by 1811. If he died in Dauphin County in 1810/11, then there should have been Orphans Court records for his children who would have all been minors at the time, requiring the appointment of guardians. I did not find any reference to them. He was a land owner, so there should have been a settlement of his estate. Nothing.

His land was patented to Hugh Moore in 1811, but I found no record of a sale in Dauphin County Deeds. The last year Moore is included in Halifax tax records was 1814 (Jackson wasn’t created until 1828).

I did a quick check in the Cumberland County7 Orphans Court indices in case William and Elizabeth moved across the Susquehanna. No joy.

What happened to the family after 1810?

Did Elizabeth remarry? With three young children to support, I would expect she did. But who? What happened to the children?

John Bowerman, son of William and Elizabeth, appears in the 1830 census for Upper Paxton Township.8 John married Anna Maria Woland.9 Her family was from Upper Paxton Township, so it seems likely that William’s wife and children remained in upper Dauphin County or, at least, came back.

Presumably his eldest daughter Catharine married Anthony Parsons and raised five children in Buffalo Township, Perry County (across the river from Halifax Township), between 1826 and 1834. She, too, remains a bit of a mystery. How did she meet Anthony? What happened to her after Anthony died in 1834?

I know nothing about William and Elizabeth’s youngest daughter Elizabeth beyond her birth date.

It’s so frustrating. I paged through the Dauphin Orphans Court books looking for entries from 1810 through the early 1830s when William and Elizabeth’s children had all come of age. I found nothing. I guess I’ll need to widen my search area. The lack of records in Dauphin County may indicate they moved out of the county.

So, I’m left with a dearth of information for a potential five times great grandfather, who presumably died in his early 20s, leaving a very young wife with three children under the age of four. Without my AncestryDNA matches, I wouldn’t even have that.

Footnotes

  1. John T. Humphrey, Pennsylvania Births, Dauphin County, 1757-1825 (Washington, D.C.: PA Genealogy Books, 2005), page 252.
  2. Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Warrantee Township Maps, “Jackson Township warrantee map”; online PDF, Pennsylvania Museum and Historical Commission, Pennsylvania State Archives (http://www.phmc.state.pa.us : accessed 21 May 2018); citing Records of the Land Office, Records Group 17, Series #17.522, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
  3. Pennsylvania, Copied Survey Book C10:201, William Bowerman, 19 Dec 1809; online PDF, Pennsylvania Museum and Historical Commission, Pennsylvania State Archives, “Copied Surveys, 1681-1912” (http://www.phmc.state.pa.us : accessed 8 Jun 2018); Records of the Land Office, Records Group 17, Copied Surveys, Series #17.114, Harrisburg.
  4. Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Halifax Township, William Bowerman entry, 1809; online, FamilySearch, “Tax Lists, 1785-1850” (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 8 Jun 2018), film #21289, Tax Rates, Halifax Township; citing Board of County Commissioners, Harrisburg.
  5. 1810 United States Federal Census, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, township unknown, page 559, line 12, William Bowerman entry; online, FamilySearch, “United States Census, 1810” (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 8 Jun 2018); citing NARA micropublication M252, roll 54; Peter and Adam Sweigert may have been son’s of Anna Maria (Schott) Sweigert, Maria Elizabeth (Schott) Bowerman’s aunt, and her husband Peter. Christian Schott was Maria Elizabeth (Shott) Bowerman’s uncle.
  6. John T. Humphrey, Pennsylvania Births, Dauphin County, 1757-1825 (Washington, D.C.: PA Genealogy Books, 2005), page 12.
  7. Perry County was created from Cumberland County in 1820.
  8. 1830 United States Federal Census, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Upper Paxton Township, page 23, line 22, John Bowerman entry; online, FamilySearch, “United States Census, 1830” (https://wwww.familysearch.org : accessed 8 Jun 2018); citing NARA micropublication M19, roll 151.
  9. Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, Death Certificate no. 47880 (1910), William C. Bowerman; online, Ancestry, “Pennsylvania Death Certificates” (https://www.ancestry.com : accessed 9 Jun 2018); citing Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission, Harrisburg.

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, "The Hard-To-Find William Bowerman," A Pennsylvania Dutch Genealogy, the genealogy & family research site of Kris Hocker, modified 10 Jun 2018 (https://www.krishocker.com/the-hard-to-find-william-bowerman/ : accessed 29 Apr 2024).

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One Reply to “The Hard-To-Find William Bowerman”

  1. I have problems like this too. If he died, she likely remarried someone close by. Is there newspaper coverage of the area at that time? Or obituaries of the children? Those might give some clues.

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