Making the Case for Peter Horr's Parents
This page is about documenting the discovery process to find Peter Horr's ancestry, which we knew nothing about when we started. To see a better description of his story after marrying Elizabeth ))McKee((, see the Horr McKee page. It can especially be useful to use the Page History feature on any page to see how our knowledge came about incrementally. |
Quickly after finding Jesse with his parents in a census, we also found Jesse's grandparents as the families all spent the majority of the 1800's in the same area in Illinois. We spent many years blindly searching for the paternal grandparents ancestry with no real progress. Like with Jesse, Roz Edson has had the best intuition and ideas of whom to search for. But, in general, we have still been at a roadblock of finding real documents to refine our ideas for a long time.
Early effort
Early, general background information used to start the search is captured on the
Hoar Surname page. It represents casting out a wide net into the open sea with the hope of sifting through and finding something of possible interest. From there, possible clues specific to Peter are brought into refinement and clarity on this page.
What we know about Peter going in is from records since his marriage and family.
- Born in Ohio before June 1820 (Population census 1850, 1860).
- Father was born in Massachusetts and mother in Connecticut (Population census xxx).
- Married Elizabeth ))McKeeon 2 Feb 1842 inMcLean(( County, IL (note: ))McLean(( was carved out of Tazewell and Champaign counties in December, 1830)
- Surname written as Harr in some documents (Illinois Pop Census 1865, .
- 1850 Farm census in Vermilion County that lists him with 180 acre farm, horses, cows, cattle, pigs, and 120 acres farmed; in addition to the 1850 population census from Tazewell with Family.
- Peter is appointed a postmaster of Little Valley, McPherson, Kansas in 1874. Appears in 1875 McPherson County Kansas State census with family.
- Family lore from grandson Jesse and other of his cousins state some in the family were Stage Coach and Pony Express riders in the mid-late-1800's.
- Elizabeth dies in Aug 1879 after they had relocated to Kansas sometime ~1872 (1880 Fed Census Mortality Sched)
- June 1880 pop census is with new wife Sarah, sons Owen (25) and Jasper (20).
- June 1880 farm schedule shows Peter and Owen with 50 and 40 acres; respectively
- Peter dies in Butler, Bates, Missouri while visiting his youngest son Jasper in 19 Apr 1894 and is buried there (cemetery report)
Y-DNA (surname line) Testing
The first big break came after performing a Y-DNA test and almost immediately getting a strong match with Gordon Hoard. Gordon has done extensive work and linked himself into the Hezekiah Hoar (puritan) line from Taunton, MA. The same one Norton Horr had published about in his treatise of 1907. This greatly helped refine the search into possible family lines that seemed well researched as well as possible different surnames as maybe Peter, like Jesse, changed the name.
Roz's refinement
At this point we still only had basic information from Population Census declarations by Peter and later his children. That he was born in Ohio around 1819. That his father was likely born in New York and mother likely in Connecticut. And that he married in ))McLean(( County, Illinois in 1842. Based on this alone, Roz and I researched her database and felt there was one of two brothers that could likely be Peter's father. Jacob or Robert Horr, both sons of Robert Hoar. Roz thinking Jacob and I Robert. Here is our analysis from Summer 2011.
Jacob Horr and Hannah Pierce
- Peter could be a yet undocumented youngest child
- Most kids were born in New York though (not Ohio); two oldest in Massachusetts
- One of their sons (Josiah) was bouncing between Champaign County, Ohio and McLean County, Illinois while Peter would have been a pre-teen
- The mother (Hannah) died in McLean County Illinois while visiting from Ohio (Cheney's)
- Josiah's siblings moved to Ohio around 1820+ with Jacob remarrying there in 1843. But his son Josiah's story indicates Jacob did not move to Ohio until 1828 and on his own; then going on to Illinois in 1836.
- Josiah's story from 1875 says Jacob had eleven children (only 9 are shown in Roz's database) of whom ten lived to be grown. So Peter could be this missing tenth surviving kid. (Also says only 3 still surviving around 1875; all boys, and lists their names — Peter is not one of them-- some of Josiah's kids are in Kansas though, where Peter was in 1876.)
Robert Horr and Lavina Hamm
- Most kids born in Ohio (they moved there around 1808 it appears)
- Like with Jacob, Peter could be youngest, not yet documented, child
- Robert died in Vermilion County, Illinois in 1834; two years before Jacob would come there. At that time, Vermilion included what is now Champaigne and even ))McLean(( county
- Kids moved out to Missouri and then Kansas; similar to Peter and his family later
Refuting Norton Horr's Book
The next big break comes from finding a few online genealogical database, much like Roz's, by a Donna Jaster and Joyce Selix, that list Robert Hoar dying in Illinois in 1834. In their database, they break from the traditional knowledge that Robert Hoar died in Ohio in 1828 and instead, at that time, moved with his family and father Robert to the new Illinois territory. Specifically the Vermillion County area just across the boarder from Indiana. There is much about this that just makes sense. So if this break from tradition can be proved with documentary evidence, then more than likely Peter is the last son of Robert that has never been documented yet.
- History of Vermilion County has 4 pages on Alvon Gilbert and wives Matilda and Nancy Horr. Gives description of how father Robert Horr was in Ohio and then moved to Illinois in 1828. He bought a large plot of land after selling his Ohio plot off to the State of Ohio to build the Ohio Penitentiary (what is now Columbus, Ohio). (pages 670-674)
- In 1850, Peter appears in two census. The Population Census in Tazewell County with wife Elizabeth and three young kids. And Production of Agriculture Non-Population Census in Vermilion County with 180 acres of a farm with horses, milk cows, cattle, pigs and many acres of produce. Could Peter be the listed owner of his father Robert's old farm and managing it from afar?
- History of McLean County, where Peter was married, lists Josiah Horr and his siblings activities there since coming from Ohio (pages 750-751)
To understand further, one must understand the dynamic nature of county lines at the time. The Illinois territory was being carved up and quickly populated from 1810 onwards with counties being formed every few months. See the
Illinois County Boundary Changes and how Vermilion was carved out in 1826. And then Champaign from Vermilion in 1833. It is said
Champaign County, Illinois was named after Champaign County, Ohio and the county seat of Urbana after Urbana, Ohio. Josiah, one of Jacob's sons, is seen bouncing back and forth from this area in Illinois and Ohio.