Anna Marie (Ann Mariah) Smith 1835-1917
I am having great difficulty finding definitive information about Ann Mariah or Annie Smith, my great-grandmother. (To make it even more fun, her mother was Mary Smith–yeah, you try to find the documents for Mary Smith!!) I have Annie’s picture when she was an older lady, and I know that she married my great-grandfather Henry Allen Butts, who wrote to her in these Civil War letters I will be sharing.
However, her name is in question (Anna in some census reports, apparently called Annie by her husband and family, Mary, Marie or Mariah middle name in various family trees. Although I have not discovered a birth record, everyone (including my father’s notes and the 1900 census) agree she was born on April 12 1835 and her maiden name was Smith. Census reports say she was born in Ohio and her parents were born in Maryland. When did she die? My father’s notes say 1915, but the Ohio Deaths index says April 23, 1917.
When were she and Henry married? My father’s notes and other family members and family trees say August 23, 1863. However, the 1900 census, taken in June of that year, says she and Henry had been married 35 years. Furthermore, Homer Blubaugh’s history of the family reports that the marriage license on file at the Knox County Probate Court, they were married on August 23,1864. If that year is correct, they would have been married only one month before the birth of their first son, Giles Allen. This could point to a scandal of sorts, and clarify their accepting attitude when daughter Mame later got pregnant out of wedlock.
At any rate, less than a month after baby Giles Allen (called Allen in his father’s letter) was born, Henry Allen joined the Union Army. (Enlistment date: October 16, 1864). Three months later, December 18, he writes the first of the surviving Civil War letters to his bride.
This Civil War letter is written during the Siege of Savannah. Henry Allen Butts was part of reinforcement troops joining General William Tecumsah Sherman and after training in Ohio, they had taken steamboats south and between mid-November and mid-December they marched across Georgia, in Sherman’s destructive March to the Sea. See more about his troop movements here, and details of the 43rd Ohio here.
Although Henry Allen is not strong on spelling and punctuation (I have added periods at the ends of sentences for clarity) he gives a vivid picture of his battle experience, and shows us a kind and thoughtful husband.
Two days after Henry Allen wrote this letter, the Southern General William Hardee fled Savannah. Meanwhile, the infantry private was glad to stay in one place for a time. We know from historic reports that Sherman’s army was running very low on supplies, and as either the Southerners or the Union army had destroyed most resources, could not live off the land they occupied. I was amused to see that Henry Allen agrees with Erasmus Anderson, whose letters I printed last year, about the Southern sweet potatoes. And obviously missing home, he nevertheless plays down the danger he faces.
Henry Allen does not frequently mention other people in his letters. But in this first surviving letter, he does mention “Henry.” A distant cousin, corresponding with my brother, identified “Henry” as the older brother of Annie Smith Butts. “I. Stull” [Stall] might be a relative of Henry Allen on his mother’s side. I have not identified “Landon,” nor traced Henry or I. Stull (who could be Jerimiah or William Stull, both listed with K Company.)
As was the case with Erasmus Anderson’s letters, Henry Allen closes with some instructions for his wife and a request for some tobacco so he could roll his own cigarettes.
Note: According to Wikipedia definition of “Navy Cut Tobacco“: Navy tobacco is a Burley leaf pipe tobacco. In colonial times sailors twisted tobacco into a roll and “tied it tightly, often moistening the leaves with rum, molasses, or spice solutions.” Stored in this way the flavors melded. To smoke it a slice was cut, known as a “twist” or “curly”. Eventually all twisted tobacco, and then pressed tobacco, became known as “Navy” “because of the convenience for sailors and outdoorsmen who favored its compact size “and long-lasting, slow-burning qualities.” Navy Flake tobacco is pressed into bricks and sliced into broad flakes.
From Henry Allen’s Letter, we know that his wife Annie is loved and cared for. The four letters that survive are spaced close together, so I suspect there may have been more. We also learn that she has offered to go to work in someone’s home so that he will not have to pay for her room and board, and that his pride prevents that possibility.
After Henry returned from the war in May 1865, he purchased 12 1/2 acres of land for $400 near Millwood, Ohio. Despite the fact he now had his own place, Henry continued to work as a laborer. According to family recollections compiled by Homer Blubagh, they had a large vegetable garden and she was well known for her beautiful flowers. She and Henry had five more children. The last child, Rebecca Jane (Jenny), was born in 1874 when Anne was 39. Jenny is the only person of that generation that I remember meeting. I was very young and she must have been in her late 70s when my family visited her in Mt. Vernon Ohio.
Later in their lives, Henry and Annie lived near the grain elevator in Danville Ohio. From later recollections of relatives, we know that Annie was very devout, frequently walking several miles to church down a country lane, carrying her youngest at the time.
- Their oldest, Giles Allen, known as “Uncle Golly,” (b. 1864), did not leave home to marry until he was 23.
- In 1891 their daughter Mary Isadore, “Mame”, “got in a family way” and she and Henry Allen took in Mame’s illegitimate daughter to raise.
- A year later, her next son, Monas Isaac, “Mon”, (b. 1867), was married, and Mame married Clifford Kaser (my grandparents).
- Son Francis Cerius, “Frank” (b. 1872) was married in 1894.
- Daughter Rebecca Jane, “Jenny” (b. 1874) was married in 1898.
- The next year, Annie and Henry’s daughter Ann Elizabeth, “Bessie”, who was engaged to be married, died of appendicitis (“inflammation of the bowels”) at the age of 26.
My great grandmother Annie Smith Butts died in April 1917 at the age of 82, and was survived by her husband, Henry Allen Butts.
How I Am Related
- Vera Marie Badertscher is the daughter of
- Paul Kaser, who is the son of
- Mary (Mame) Isadore Butts Kaser, who is the daughter of
- Ann Mariah Smith Butts.
Research Notes
- Letters home from Henry Allen Butts. I do not have the originals or copies of the originals. I only have transcripts which my brother obtained from a man named Colopy who had the originals and lived in San Diego. There was a Colopy who was a grand daughter of Ivan Henry Smith mentioned in the letter.
- Letter from Marie Smith to my brother, Paul William Kaser (1983). (copy in my possession).
- Hand written notes (circa 1970) by my father, Paul Kaser, made about birth,death and marriage dates .
- Transcripts of a Butts Family Bible provided to me by Jane Butts Kilgore in 2003, owned at the time by James E. Butts. Other carefully researched information on the Butts family was also sent to me by Jane Butts Kilgore.
- “A History of the Henry Allen Butts Family” by Rev. Homer Blubaugh, Saint Mary Church, Lancaster, Ohio. This is a combination of documented and anecdotal information about the Butts family from Ohio. Some was gathered at family reunions. Some is downright wrong, but some is quite interesting. My copy was sent by Butts descendent Helen Findon in 2003. The document says Revised May 11, ’92 – Rev. Homer Blubaugh. Copies in the authors’ possession.
- For information on the 43rd Ohio: http://www.ohiocivilwar.com/cw43.html (consulted 1/13/2015)
- For rosters of Ohio Civil War soldiers: http://www.ogs.org/research/results_ohcwss.php
- A Compendium of The War of the Rebellion, Vol III, Regimental Histories, page 1599 and page 1517. Relevant copies of pages provided by my brother from library copy.
- Letter from The War Department, Adjutant General’s Office to Mrs. Truman Bucklew, Killbuck Ohio, December 6, 1934. In the author’s possession.
- Application for veteran’s tombstone (from Ancestry.com) and personal visit to St. Luke’s cemetery in Danville, Ohio.
This is the 2nd in my 2015 stories in the 52 Ancestor’s Challenge.
Henry Butts saw so much dramatic American history of his time: the second day rescue of Grant and Sherman at Shiloh, the remarkable risks taken in the March to the Sea (don’t mention it to your Southern friends), and the victory march of the Grand Army of the Republic in Washington D.C. This last event was and remains a high watermark in the nation’s history. Sherman made sure his “boys” were all spit and polish as they marched on the second day after the Eastern troops. They had a reputation among Easterners of being a scruffy, ill-disciplined group, and “Uncle Billy” wanted to make a real show. As much as he must have wanted to get away from war’s carnage, how did Henry adjust to life in the quiet farm country after all this? What would you give to be able to ask him about it all?
Indeed, it would have been fascinating. But he strikes me as a humble guy who just wanted to get the job done and go home. I think dad said he did tell some tales about his service but they were not repeatable in mixed company. Is that right? Or am I dreaming? My biggest regret is that the four letters we have do not include his take on the grand march on Washington. Thanks again for your part in putting this all together. (I hope you saw the page that I dedicated to the outline of his movements. https://ancestorsinaprons.com/about-food-and-family/henry-allen-butts-civil-war/outline of his movements)
Yes, I do remember one story Dad told me he had heard from old Henry, but it’s not scandalous enough to publish.
I loved this post. I am looking forward to seeing more. I have three Union Civil War ancestors (known of so far), and the letter gave me a picture of what it could have been like for them, especially the Privates. Thank you.
Elizabeth,Glad you are enjoying this. If you want to read more Civil War letters from a private, follow the link to Erasmus Anderson.