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Messages - Dlorah Hunt

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US Completed Requests / Re: Looking For Joseph Owram in USA - Again
« on: Sunday 16 January 11 22:01 GMT (UK)  »
When I wrote to the author via the website about a year ago, the email got bounced back.  There may be some problem with the website.  I will be traveling to Oregon this coming week for my uncle's funeral and I will attempt to obtain another copy of the book to send you, or better contact information for the author.  I just realized that I misspoke when I said that I was Joseph's g-g-grandaughter.  That should have been 3 gs.

Joseph, Jennie and Minnie visited Joseph's mother in England 1870, and were there for her 81st birthday.

I will be glad to send photos.

2
US Completed Requests / Re: Owram Family
« on: Sunday 16 January 11 21:14 GMT (UK)  »
I noted with surprise the "woolley" mention of a photograph in reference to the website for "Murray Loop".  I double checked and none of the photos on the website are of Joseph Owram....both are of the Murray side of the family (David and Hugh)....Hugh Murray married Joseph's daughter Minnie.

There is a great photo of Joseph in the book, and several more chapters detailing his life.  From Berlin Heights they moved to Liberal, Missouri where Joseph died suddenly at 60 years of age.  Another excerpt from Chapter 4 provides detail regarding Joseph's role in support of the abolitionist movement.

"Tall grass, bushes and shrubs grew wild in one corner of the Owram farm, an area that remained basically ill kept while all other areas of the property and fences were kept clean and immaculate.  The Owrams secreted runaway slaves in a small cave hidden within this uncultured corner field.  The entrance to the cave lay hidden behind some brush near a fence corner, and was kept stocked with food, water, bedding, and necessities.

The night after the runaways arrived, a "conductor," or guide, would arrive at the farm to take the escaping souls across the border into Canada.

One day, Southern slave catchers came to the Owram farm looking for fugitive runaways.  One of the bounty hunters happened to notice the ill-kept corner property and asked...why this area lay undeveloped.  The Owrams explained that they liked to nurture birds and wildlife, so that one area lay fallow as a concession to nature.  This seemed to satisfy the bounty hunters' question, and the men did not investigate."

Also, regarding the reference to "free love", the author provides this explanation:

"The phrase free love in the 21st century is often associated with sexual experimentation and the counterculture of the 1960s, but the free love movement of the 1860s did not advocate short-term sexual relationships or multiple sexual partners.  The nineteenth-century term referred to relationships that were freely entered into and not regulated by law or religion; free love participants usually entered long-term monogamous relationships without the legal bonds of marriage." p 53 "The Murray Loop"

Other than that, there are passages in the book that describe Joseph's thinking as having been influenced by Emerson and the transcendentalist movement.  Essentially he was a philosopher/farmer/accountant.  His daughter Minnie is even more astounding....there ought to be a movie!

3
US Completed Requests / Re: Owram Family
« on: Sunday 16 January 11 20:36 GMT (UK)  »
Ah ha!.  I stumbled across the original thread "Looking for Joseph Owram in USA, Again" and posted my reply there even though the thread was closed because I didn't know how to find the new thread.  Now I find that others have discovered the wonderful book that details Joseph's history.  I've read the entire book and there is much, much more information on Joseph, (not to mention his descendants!).  The book is an excellent read.  In any case, this was my post to the closed thread, I found that much of the information is already posted to this thread, so I apologize in advance for the repetition.
***
Hello all.  I am one of the great-great-grand-daughters of Joseph Owram.  (*)

I could provide clarity on the questions raised in this discussion courtesy of an excellent family history, published about 2 years ago, called "Murray Loop: The Journey of an Oregon Family", by Ted Cox.  There are photographs of Joseph Owram and wonderful richly detailed stories of family history going all of the way back to Scotland and England (by way of Canada).  I will provide a link to the website for the book and I will try to get around to scanning some of the photos.  I have other photos in my personal collection of Minnie and her husband Hugh, my grandfather Dave Murray, and others if anyone is interested.  My mother is (Barbara) June Hunt (ne Wilken, ne Murray), Dave Murray's daughter, Minnie's grand-daughter, Joseph Owram's g-g-grand-daughter.  I haven't reexamined the photos after reading the book - there may be additional photos of Joseph that I didn't recognize at first.

http://www.oldworldpublications.com/murrayloop/

Here is an excerpt from Chapter 4 of "Murray Loop":

Joseph Owram grew up in Barnsley, England. A relatively small and somewhat frail child, he had three brothers and a sister. Joseph’s parents wanted to ensure their sons learned a trade, so in 1840 when Joseph was fourteen, his parents apprenticed him to a tailor. For seven years Joseph spent long hours sitting cross-legged on a bench, learning to sew instead of working in the out-of-doors he loved. In 1847 he turned twenty-one and finished his apprenticeship.

Free to earn his own living, Joseph decided to immigrate to the United States. As he prepared to leave England, he packed the scissors and tools vital to his trade, including a heavy black iron.13 The iron had a swinging door at the back so the hollow base could be filled with hot coals and emptied when the ashes cooled.

Since Joseph’s father had already visited the United States at least once looking for work, Joseph had some idea of what to expect when he arrived. Little is known about Joseph’s early years in the United States, since family records yield little information about how or where he lived. He married an Englishwoman named Harriet (Hattie) about 1854, and the two settled in Burlington Flats, New York, where they had two children, George and Alice.

Burlington Flats was roughly eight miles north of Plainfield, home to Nancy and Lester Starr. Both were small communities so it seems reasonable that the Starrs and Owrams knew each other. In describing Joseph and Jennie’s relationship, granddaughter Alice writes that the two had met while Joseph was still married to Hattie.

Joseph Owram’s history is a bit obscure between 1860 and 1866. At some point during these years he and Hattie separated, although they remained good friends. Both of them were living in Berlin Heights, Ohio, when Jennie Starr was living there, too. There aren’t any records tying Joseph directly to the free love movement, but his lifestyle fits well with their beliefs. His separation and continued friendship with Hattie, his vegetarian diet, and his devotion to the abolition of slavery set him apart from many men of his time. So did his choice of residence. Joseph’s idealism fit well with the goals and aims of free love. So he would have been drawn to Berlin Heights for many reasons.
****


(*) Moderator Comment:
Information about recent death removed.  Please use the Personal Message (PM) system for exchanging personal data.


4
US Completed Requests / Re: Looking For Joseph Owram in USA - Again
« on: Sunday 16 January 11 20:16 GMT (UK)  »
Hello all.  I am one of the great-great-grand-daughters of Joseph Owram. (*)

I could provide clarity on the questions raised in this discussion courtesy of an excellent family history, published about 2 years ago, called "Murray Loop: The Journey of an Oregon Family", by Ted Cox.  There are photographs of Joseph Owram and wonderful richly detailed stories of family history going all of the way back to Scotland and England (by way of Canada).  I will provide a link to the website for the book and I will try to get around to scanning some of the photos.  I have other photos in my personal collection of Minnie and her husband Hugh, my grandfather Dave Murray, and others if anyone is interested.  My mother is (Barbara) June Hunt (ne Wilken, ne Murray), Dave Murray's daughter, Minnie's grand-daughter, Joseph Owram's g-g-grand-daughter.

http://www.oldworldpublications.com/murrayloop/

Here is an excerpt from Chapter 4 of "Murray Loop":

Joseph Owram grew up in Barnsley, England. A relatively small and somewhat frail child, he had three brothers and a sister. Joseph’s parents wanted to ensure their sons learned a trade, so in 1840 when Joseph was fourteen, his parents apprenticed him to a tailor. For seven years Joseph spent long hours sitting cross-legged on a bench, learning to sew instead of working in the out-of-doors he loved. In 1847 he turned twenty-one and finished his apprenticeship.

Free to earn his own living, Joseph decided to immigrate to the United States. As he prepared to leave England, he packed the scissors and tools vital to his trade, including a heavy black iron.13 The iron had a swinging door at the back so the hollow base could be filled with hot coals and emptied when the ashes cooled.

Since Joseph’s father had already visited the United States at least once looking for work, Joseph had some idea of what to expect when he arrived. Little is known about Joseph’s early years in the United States, since family records yield little information about how or where he lived. He married an Englishwoman named Harriet (Hattie) about 1854, and the two settled in Burlington Flats, New York, where they had two children, George and Alice.

Burlington Flats was roughly eight miles north of Plainfield, home to Nancy and Lester Starr. Both were small communities so it seems reasonable that the Starrs and Owrams knew each other. In describing Joseph and Jennie’s relationship, granddaughter Alice writes that the two had met while Joseph was still married to Hattie.

Joseph Owram’s history is a bit obscure between 1860 and 1866. At some point during these years he and Hattie separated, although they remained good friends. Both of them were living in Berlin Heights, Ohio, when Jennie Starr was living there, too. There aren’t any records tying Joseph directly to the free love movement, but his lifestyle fits well with their beliefs. His separation and continued friendship with Hattie, his vegetarian diet, and his devotion to the abolition of slavery set him apart from many men of his time. So did his choice of residence. Joseph’s idealism fit well with the goals and aims of free love. So he would have been drawn to Berlin Heights for many reasons.

(*) Moderator Comment:
Information about recent death removed.  Please use the Personal Message (PM) system for exchanging personal data.


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