Asylum

Bradford County, PA

Gabrielle Clark

Gabrielle Clark

Female 1820 - 1923  (103 years)

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  • Name Gabrielle Clark 
    Born 25 Feb 1820  Burlington, Bradford County, PA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Moved 1837  Ohio Find all individuals with events at this location 
    1837 - Moved to Ohio, as per daughter Gabrielle Havens 
    Died 11 May 1923  Fairmount Twp, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried 14 May 1923  Bethel Cemetery, Jonesboro, Grant County, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I4274  Clark-Hart
    Last Modified 22 Apr 2022 

    Father James H. Clark,   b. 10 Feb 1794, Burlington, Bradford County, PA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 23 May 1878, Fairmount Twp, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 84 years) 
    Relationship putative 
    Mother Sarah Simons,   b. 16 Mar 1796, Burlington, Bradford County, PA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 27 Oct 1885, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 89 years) 
    Relationship putative 
    Married 1818  Burlington, PA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F1332  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Jonathan Havens,   b. 17 Nov 1819, Grant County, IN Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 30 Jun 1863, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 43 years) 
    Married 1842  Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. James Clark Havens,   b. 1859, Grant County, Indian Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1943, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 84 years)
    +2. Sarah Elizabeth Havens,   b. 24 Nov 1843, Fairmount, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 17 Apr 1888, Fairmount, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 44 years)
     3. Mary Delcena Havens,   b. 1846, Fairmount, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 29 Jan 1936, Fairmount, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 90 years)
     4. Tabitha A Havens
    +5. Cynthia M Havens,   b. 1853, Grant County, IN Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1934, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 81 years)
     6. Martha Havens,   b. 1856, Grant County, IN Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1944, Oklahoma Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 88 years)
     7. Emma E Havens,   b. 1858, Grant County, IN Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1928, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 70 years)
     8. Clark J Havens
     9. John Andrew Havens,   b. 25 Nov 1850, Grant County, IN Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 16 Jun 1919, Grant County, Indiana Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 68 years)
    Last Modified 13 Feb 2020 
    Family ID F1333  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 25 Feb 1820 - Burlington, Bradford County, PA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMoved - 1837 - Moved to Ohio, as per daughter Gabrielle Havens - 1837 - Ohio Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarried - 1842 - Grant County, Indiana Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 11 May 1923 - Fairmount Twp, Grant County, Indiana Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    Biography of Gabrielle Clark Havens
    Biography of Gabrielle Clark Havens
    From Book "The Making of a Township" Fairmount Township, Grant County, Indiana ( https://archive.org/stream/makingoftownship00bald_0#page/n5/mode/2up/search/Clark )
    Gabrielle Havens
    Gabrielle Havens
    About 1900
    Headstone
    Headstone
    Bethel Cemetery, Jonesboro, Grant County, Indiana

    Headstones
    Find A Grave
    Find A Grave

    Bethel Cemetery Jonesboro, Grant County, Indiana

    Histories At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
    At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
    Descendants of Betiah Billings
    Descendants of Betiah Billings
    Through John T Clark, her grandson
    Bio of Havens family in Grant County, Indiana (focus on Gabrielle)
    Bio of Havens family in Grant County, Indiana (focus on Gabrielle)
    From Centennial History of Grant County, Indiana, 1812 to 1912 ..., Volume 2
    Collection of letters to Mortimer Knapp, brother-in-law of James Clark
    Collection of letters to Mortimer Knapp, brother-in-law of James Clark
    From wikitree page for Cynthia Campbell (wife of John Theophilus Clark)
    https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Campbell-3511
    Centennial History of Grant County, Indiana
    Centennial History of Grant County, Indiana
    1812 - 1912 --- biographical sketch of families who settled Grant County, Indiana (Internet Archive)

  • Notes 

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      ** Gravesite Details aged 103years,2m.16d.,s/s with Johnathan. *
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      *** From "Centennial History of Grant County, Indiana (1912)
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      Mrs. Jonathan Havens. Of Grant county octogenarians the most interesting, both for age and for remarkable clarity of mind and faculties, is, properly speaking, not now eligible to that association of venerable men and women, since she is no longer an octogenarian but a nonagenarian. Mrs. Jonathan Havens is now past ninety-three years of age, is in perfect health, with mind as clear as a bell. She is one of the best known women in the county, and recalls with perfect ease her seventy years of experience. She is known and loved by everybody in the southern half of the county and the following brief record will be read and appreciated as a distinctive chapter in this history.

      The Havens family comes down through a Pennsylvania stock, which during the eighteenth century was established in the southwestern part of Pennsylvania, in what was known as the Redstone section. The grandfather of Jonathan Havens was also Jonathan, and was of Welsh ancestry. The name was established in America during the Colonial days, and its first home was in New Jersey. It is thought that the name of the American settler was Abram Havens. He had twelve sons and most of them saw service in the Revolutionary war on the American side. One of them located in Connecticut, two in Virginia, and one in western Pennsylvania. The latter was Jonathan, grandfather of the Grant county citizen named at the introduction of this sketch. Another son located in Kentucky, while the other lived in New Jersey. As to religious affiliations they were all Presbyterians. Grandfather Jonathan Havens was a deacon in the church. His life was spent in farming in western Pennsylvania, and he died in 1802 when quite an old man. He married a Miss Lippencot, of Pennsylvania, and she outlived him a good many years. Among their children were James, Elisha, and Benjamin, besides some daughters, all of whom lived to be quite old, and had families of their own.

      Benjamin Havens, the father, was born in Pennsylvania in 1785, was in early life apprenticed to learn the trade of harness maker, and by the death of his father was left an orphan at the age of seventeen. He later left his employer, and learned the trade of shoemaker and also of brick mason. He was a man of many trades, but was an expert in all of them, and performed a useful service in every community where he lived. He was married in 1816 in Fayette county, Ohio, to Miss Judith Davis, who belonged to the faith known as the Seven-Day Baptists. She was born in Ohio, and died in Clinton county of that state at the birth of her sixth child, being then in the prime of life. Her husband later married Mary Ann Carver, and in June, 1841, they came to Indiana and settled in Jefferson township of Grant county. Some years later they moved out to Iowa and while there his second wife died also in childbirth. Benjamin Havens then returned to Indiana with his children and died in Huntington county, February 6, 1848. His last child, a daughter, was adopted by a family in Iowa.

      Jonathan Havens, the first son and second child of Benjamin and his first wife, was born in Fayette county, Ohio, November 17, 1819. He grew up in Ohio, and in November, 1841, came to Indiana, locating in Jefferson township. There his career was that of farming, and after some years he bought one hundred and twenty acres, on which he remained until his death, June 30, 1863. In religion he was a Methodist, and a strong Republican in politics.

      Jonathan Havens was married in Fairmount, Jefferson township of Grant county, April 7, 1842, to Miss Gabrielle Clark. She was born in Bradford county, Pennsylvania, February 25, 1820. In 1837, when she was seventeen years of age, her family moved to Darke county, Ohio, and in 1838 to Fairmount township, Grant county. Her parents were James H. and Sarah (Simons) Clark, her father born in Bradford county, Pennsylvania, February 10, 1794, and died May 23, 1878, in Fairmount township, four miles up the creek from Jonesboro. Her mother was born March 16, 1796, and died in Grant county, October 27, 1885. They were married July 3, 1816, on the banks of the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. The Clark family were farmers, Methodists in religion, and the father first voted the Whig ticket and later the Republican. James H. Clark was a son of John T. and Cynthia (Caswell) Clark, both natives of Bradford county, Pennsylvania, where they lived and died as farmers and Methodists. When John T. Clark was seven years of age, his father, Benjamin Clark, went away to serve as an American soldier in the Revolutionary war. Some time during that war the son John at one time was lost in the woods in Bradford county, near Wilkesbarre, and was for ten years away from his family. He was finally located when seventeen years of age, having been taken up and cared for after straying about three weeks in a large woods 70 miles through, and spent the next ten years in the home of a man living 60 miles away from the Clark place. Benjamin Clark died in Bradford county, Pennsylvania, when in old age. He came of English parentage, and his first wife was a Miss Hojet who died in the prime of life. His second marriage was to a Mrs. Shaw, whose first husband had been killed in the massacre of Wyoming Valley during the Revolution.

      Mrs. Jonathan Havens was educated much more liberally than was the custom for young women in her time. Since the death of her husband she has lived on the farm of eighty acres near Fowlerton, up to 1893 when she bought a home in the village of Fowlerton. Mrs. Havens is the mother of the following children: 1. Sarah E. died after her marriage to William Leach and the four living children are Scott, Kerr, Hancock and Leach. 2. Mary D. is the wife of Alonzo Roly of Grant county in Jefferson township, and their children are Bailley, Cappy, Winnie, Jesse, Jennie, and Arlee. 3. Tabitha A. died after her marriage to Samuel Carmichael, and had two children, Eva and Edward. 4. John M. married Flora Baird, and lives on a farm in Jefferson township. The children are Jesse, Glen, Charles, Benjamin, Clyde, Ethel, and Edith. 5. Cynthia M. is the wife of William H. Mann, and has children, Roy, Charles, and one other; by a former marriage to Mark Norton she has one son, Benoni. 6. Martha is the wife of John Brewer, now living on a farm in Oklahoma, and their children are Ora O., Ernest O., Arnetta G., and James T. 7. Emma E. is the wife of Davis Peck, living at Eaton in Delaware county, and their children are Arlington, Barnett, Eva and Susan. 8. Clark J., who is now connected with the State Hospital, has the following children: William, Emma, Blanche, Hazel, Russell, and Cynthia E.

      The descendants of Mrs. Havens are numerous, comprising thirtyseven grandchildren, fifty-nine great-grandchildren, and of her thirtyseven grandchildren, twenty-seven are married, and all are living and have children.

      Mrs. Havens has been a worker in the Methodist Episcopal church since she was twenty-one years of age, and has been devoted to the cause of religion and morality. Though born February 25, 1820, while James Monroe was still president of the United States, she still possesses "a green and smiling age," and there is hardly a tremor in her hand to indicate any break in her physical faculties. There is no woman in the state who can so accurately call up dates and facts from the early half *of the nineteenth century as Mrs. Havens. To indicate her remarkable powers of old age, in December, 1911, she made a trip alone to Oklahoma, where she celebrated her ninety-first birthday with a daughter, and on May 30, 1912, returned to Indiana, also alone.
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      ** From http://wikimarion.org/Gabriella_Havens **
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      Gabriella Havens

      (101 YEARS OLD)

      “I was born in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, February 25, 1820. In 1837 my father, mother and father and their nine children came to Ohio where we remained long enough to raise a crop (or about a year) then we came on to Grant County, Indiana. Father did not like the country and did not want to stay but we children started to clearing the land and so we remained.

      “When I grew older I taught four terms of school, receiving two dollars per week. By and by a man came along who had a farm and he persuaded me to come and live with him. I would have been happier if I had not gone with him. Girls, never marry; just stay in Marion and teach until you are gray-headed; Lord, you ought to be happy!

      “I was twenty-two years old when I married. I have done a lot of hard work. My husband and I cleared twenty acres of land. He would get discouraged with the farm work, then. I would go out into the fields and help him. We had eight children, so I had to work hard.

      “My husband died June 30, 1863, and I was left with the care of the children, the youngest one being but three years of age; but we managed to get along. I would go out into the fields and work like a man. I raised those children with my own two hands.

      “I had many chances to re-marry but I did not want a man. I never ran after the men; if I had, I’d a got one. One day I was out in the orchard with my children when a neighbor man came and asked me to marry him. ‘I guess not,’ I said, and turning to my children—’I will not leave them for any man.’

      “What church do I belong to? I was a Methodist all my life until 1879 when I became an Adventist. Oh, I believe in it.

      “You ask if my father had slaves? No-o-o-o, I guess not. Why, I would have burned my shirt to make a light for a run-away slave. My uncle sheltered Fred Douglas for four days in an ‘underground station,’ that being his cellar. He hid behind potato barrels, and they covered him with comforts to hide him from the slave owner.

      “My great grandfather was in the Revolutionary War. My grandfather was seven years old when his father was called to war. The mother soon died and left grandfather with the care of four little sisters, two of them being twins but six wec’1-s old. Some neighbors took the little girls and grand father was sent down the river seventy miles with a flock of sheep. He took a saddle horse and food enough to do him a week. He was only seven years old and got lost in the woods. At night he tied himself to his horse so he could sleep and not lose it. For three weeks he wandered about and when his food was gone he ate with the horse—roots, grass, etc. At last he came to a ‘clearing’ and begged food. They took him in, but~he never got back to his family for seventeen years.

      “Yes, those were heart-rending times.

      “Oh, must you go? I wish you could stay longer. Well, girls, remember what I said—DON’T marry, and may the dear Lord bless you. Tell your friends that an old woman one hundred and one years old blessed you. Good-bye.”

      This dear aged old lady was interviewed by Miss Gladys Cole (Senior, 1921) and Miss Straughan. She was sitting quietly in her old chair when they entered her room, apparently asleep, but when told there were two ladies who wished to talk with her she was instantly alert and delighted to talk with them about her “early days.”

      It was an inspiration to see, the “light that fades not” in her countenance-and feel the benediction of her last words.

      “Of such is the Kingdom.”