Monday, May 26, 2025

Emil Zimbelman -- 1992 Church Memorial Service

 

Emil Michael Zimbelman (Nov. 1, 1905--June 3, 1992)

I've gathered a few photos and scanned Emil's memorial service, so that his descendants can get a glimpse of a quiet, private man I called "Grandpa."

At the viewing the night before Grandpa Emil's service, my family was sitting in folding chairs when my middle child, Danny, who was six then, leaned over and whispered, "Grandpa Emil is the luckiest person in the room."   

I asked, "Why do you say that?"  

He said, "Because he is the only one who can see Jesus." 

  -- CD Burr 


Emil Zimbelman Married Anna Carolina Lampe on June 16, 1927 


Emil Michael Zimbelman's June 5, 1992 Memorial Servicewritten by the Methodist pastor  (four typed pages)

Page 1


Page 2

Page 3

Page 4 



Photos of Family Members


Four children: Marvin, Valjean, Loretta, and Kenneth
Anna and Emil (taken about 1950)



Emil married Arrilla May Dally (O'Leary) on July 18, 1864


Feel free to post memories of Emil in the comment section.  

Be sure to check out our ZIMBELMANN German distant cousin's website:  https://www.uwe-zimbelmann.de/ 



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Saturday, May 24, 2025

Daniel Patriarchs (Tennessee/North Carolina) Research Notes from 1600s-1900s also known as Appendix A

 

Daniel Family Cemetery, North Carolina

Writing a nonfiction book requires hundreds of hours of research and recording findings before tackling sentences, paragraphs, sections, and chapters.  Bad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee took over five years to complete.  The back matter of the nonfiction book includes synopses of Appendices.


 While submitting my final manuscript for publication (summer of 2025), I will offer my notes to anyone interested in my research findings, reasoning, and conclusions. 



North Carolina and Tennessee Daniel patriarchs, their spouses, families, and names of enslaved people, as well as copies of legal documents and photographs. 

I have condensed the information into a manuscript titled Appendix A:  Daniel Patriarchs.   A patriarch's name heads each section.


  • My 8x great-grandfather, Joseph Daniell (b. abt. 1660), Nansemond, VA (2 pages of notes)
  • 7xgg Simon Daniell (b. abt 1685), Chowan County, NC (10 pages)
  • 6xgg Robert Daniel (d. 1786), Tyrell & Martin County, NC (13 pages)
  • 5xgg William Daniel (1747-1832), Martin County, NC (15 pages)
  • 4xgg David Daniel (abt. 1777-1857), Stewart County, TN (65 pages)
  • 3xgg Simon (not Thomas) Daniel (1823-1857), Stewart County, TN (46 pages). See the first page of this section below.
  • 2xgg Robert Henry Daniel (1852-1912), Stewart & Houston County, TN (25 pages)
  • gg Alonzo Daniel (1889-1960), Houston County, TN  (33 pages)
  • Grandfather JC Daniel and my mother Dora Daniel are mentioned under Alonzo Daniel

Except for Joseph Daniell, born in the 1600s, I am confident of the above-listed Daniel Patriarchs on my line.  (Note: Two men named "Robert Daniel" lived in and around Martin County.  There is much confusion, and I believe I discovered the one that belongs on my tree.  

A condensed version of Appendix A appears at the end of my bookBad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee.  (Simon Daniell of NC, David Daniel, Simon Daniel of TN, William Daniel, Britain Sexton, and Harrison Sexton are mentioned in the book.)  

If you would like to read the detailed notes in the complete version of Appendix A, see "Ordering Copies" at the end of this post. There is no charge for downloading.


NOTE:  I did not arrange the notes in Appendix A according to a genealogical style guide.  However, a family genealogist will find ample sources and reasoning.

My conclusions do not always agree with Ancestry.com posts or family stories. Early on, I learned to check the original court documents of everyone connected with my patriarchs, including spouses, neighbors, and in-laws. 

****If you find a mistake in my notes or have access to additional information, please contact me! I love to share information.


Appendix A includes a section on each patriarch below is an example of a page of the section on Simon Daniel and Rebecca (Sexton Daniel.

Located in Appendix A:  "SIMON DANIEL & REBECCA (SEXTON) DANIEL "  (first page of 46-page document)

Simon Daniel:  b. 11 Nov 1823  TN, d. 19 Aug 1857 TN

m. 15 Apr 1847

Rebecca Anne Sexton: b. 4 July 1828; d. 1882

My direct line, David-Simon-Robert-Alonzo-JC-Dora Daniel, was chronicled in a family Bible, family stories, and court documents.  Many of the family stories told by David’s grandson, Frank, were cherished by his daughter Frankie Sellas, who wrote them down in a bound copy (see title below) years after hearing them. She and her first cousin, Anne (Black) Scholes, wrote letters to my mother as early as 1962.  In addition, Anne owned the family Bible, which unfortunately has disappeared.  She had no heirs.  Another first cousin of Sellas was Leonard Daniel, whose son, Ray, wrote down as much as he could remember.   Simon and Becky Anne (Sexton) Daniel are our common antebellum ancestors, and I have combined family stories with records to produce the following notes.  

Several family trees on Ancestry.com have added “Thomas”  to Simon’s name; however, after reviewing dozens of records, I have never seen a document with “T” or “Thomas” in addition to his given name, “Simon.”  Although a contributor has determined that “Simon Thomas Daniel” is buried in the Daniel-Cole Cemetery (known only as Cole cemetery on Google), the tombstone only indicates “Simon Daniel.”  Sellas also does not acknowledge “Thomas” in her document, "The Home Folks: 200 Years in the Cumberland Settlement." Additionally, the family Bible in Anne Scholes possession does not add “Thomas” and  Simon’s original signatures appear on several Stewart Co. Court minutes with one initial “S,” as in Fig. 1.     Another sample of Simon’s signature and handwriting is displayed in Fig. 6. 

Fig. 1   Simon Daniel’s Signature as Justice of the Peace

(Tennessee. County Court (Stewart County) Minutes,  1854-1869, Feb. 1856.  FamilySearch.com)



Ordering Copies of Appendices A, B, C, D, E (descriptions below):

To place an order, please use the "Contact" form on the CD Burr home page.  I offer free downloads of the following appendices. If you only need parts of one, let me know the patriarch's name. 

If you desire printed copies, I charge $0.25 per page plus shipping.   I have noted the number of pages next to each name/ place of birth. 

  • Appendix A:  Daniel Patriarchs from North Carolina and Tennessee.  For a summary of content, see  Daniel Patriarch Research Notes

  • Appendix B: Families of Matriarchs--Sexton (73 pp.), Tayloe (48 pp.), Weston (22 pp.), and Wynns (29 pp.)  The matriarch lineage completes the stories of our Daniel patriarchs.  

  • Appendix C: Unrelated Daniel Families of North Carolina and Tennessee.  Several families with the last name “Daniel” arrived in Stewart County in the early 1800s, but I could find no relationship of the following men to my branch: Benjamin W. Daniel, Woodson Daniel, (a different David Daniel), Barton Daniel, and even a Rebecca Daniel, who lived at a different address than Simon's wife, Rebecca Sexton Daniel.  

  • Appendix D:   "The Home Folks: 200 Years in the Cumberland Settlement" by Frankie Daniel Sellas.   This unpublished 40-page document is a pleasure to read, featuring stories passed down to Frankie from her father, Frank Daniel. However, I have found data disputing some of her memories and subjective conclusions.  Contact me to download Sellas's entire document for free or pay $10.00 (25 cents/page) + shipping for printed copies. 

  • Appendix E: Standing Rock, Stewart County, TN Deed records for Daniel, Sexton, Tayloe, and Weston, include their neighbors  (44 pp.) 

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Saturday, May 17, 2025

"Bessie--A Foundational Salt of the Earth" A tribute to my mother-in-law

 

“Maybe there is no such thing as time; there are only moments, each with its own story.”  

---Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass



Robin Kimmerer inspires me to sit and listen to Nature. One morning in early June,  I reclined in my backyard, noting how each oxygen-filled inhalation is a gift from trees, grasses, shrubs, flowers, mushrooms, and mosses.   As I breathed in whiffs of a neighbor’s lilacs, I thought of my mother-in-law, Bessie, and the gentle cessation of her breath just a few weeks prior.   “Death lost its sting” for me during her sacred transition, and although I’ll always feel sad about her leaving us, I am comforted by HER words of comfort. She told us not to worry; she was ready to go.

              I offered to write Bessie’s obituary, meeting the challenge to collapse a life story into a couple of paragraphs—a story absent of awards, degrees, and distinguished honors on a list of who’s who, but a life that affected dozens of people over her 93 years.  

                A friend pulled me aside, after reading the obituary, and said, “There are people who are the salt of the earth, and then there are people who become a foundational salt of the earth.  Bessie is one of those people.”  He went on to explain that her goodness laid a foundation that will live on in her children, grandchildren, and other people who knew her.

I know what he means.  This tiny woman lived significant verses of the Christian Bible without asking individuals if they were “saved.”  She didn’t judge others, practiced kindness, remained humble, and cared for her ailing husband, Albert.  She respected her flesh and blood temple, taking excellent care of herself, and she was a good neighbor, visiting the lonely and the sick.  As the salt of the earth, she preserved loving kindness as Jesus taught.   

Bessie’s kind essence will expand beyond the grave through numerous descendants over decades.   And yet, when I consider a 1.5 billion-year-old Sioux quartzite tumbling into Kansas from the Ice Age and when I scan the midnight sky for stars millions of light-years away, I realize that Bessie’s life – all of our lives - are but tiny specks.  

 Even in our smallness, says Kimmerer, “Isn’t it miraculous that each life, stone, and star has its own story?”     I pray my brief moment on this earth--my tiny spark of a life--can be as foundational and fruitful as my mother-in-law Bessie’s.
                                                            
Blessed are the poor in spirit,
    for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are those who mourn,
   for they will be comforted.
Blessed are the meek,
   for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
   for they will be filled.
Blessed are the merciful,
   for they will be shown mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart,
   for they will see God. . . .


You are the salt of the earth.        Matthew 5:3–8 and verse 13.

 This short tribute was first posted by CD Burr on 10/1/2018 in the Elders Speaking Group blog. 

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Friday, May 16, 2025

"Lawn Ridge Homesteader--Margaret Sarepta (Kulow) Halley" by Unknown Writer on FamilySearch.org

 

Margaret Sarepta (nee Kulow) Halley
1855-1919

Margaret "Sarepta's" place in my husband's family tree: Wife of Joseph E. Halley, mother of Lorenzo E. Halley, grandmother of Bessie L. (Halley) Burr; great-grandmother of Steve Burr; great-great-grandmother of David, Daniel, and Christina.



Find this biography at https://www.familysearch.org/en/tree/person/memories/2S4K-3GL



In a previous post, I wrote more about Joseph Edward and M. Sarepta (Kulow) Halley. Arriving in Lawn Ridge Kansas in Covered Wagon by 1905


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Wednesday, May 7, 2025

"Loving the Unlovable," by CD Burr

  

Chopper hopped into my suitcase when he was a puppy (2012)


My 8-pound Yorkshire terrier, Chopper, turned 13 on March 2025 and is my constant companion. He is nearly blind now and can't hear me when I stand behind him and call his name. His personality, however, hasn't changed much since I wrote the following essay in 2017.

For over forty years, our family has raised loyal dogs that we have adored. One would bring us the newspaper early in the morning, and another dog played the piano, fetched balls and frisbees, and prayed. We've been companions with a Shetland Sheepdog, two mixed breeds, a Keeshond, an Irish Setter, and three Schnauzers. All of them were obedient and well-behaved. 

Our current dogs are two Yorkshire terrier littermates, . . . and one of them has broken our record of trainable dogs. 

At ten pounds, Clark W. Griswold "Grizzy" is obedient and cuddly. However, his eight-pound littermate brother, Chopper, detests cuddling and has won the title of "most untrainable and stubborn dog" we have ever loved.  He constantly tests our patience.   The jury is out on whether he is cute, with his enormous ears that spread out, turning him into a Yoda-looking creature with tufts of hair on the pointed ends.  

After five years of us tempting Chopper with doggy treats, chicken, and steak, he refuses to go outside through a perfectly lovely doggy door that swings open to a perfectly lovely grass yard.  He won’t do it.   He prefers a pad indoors or the carpet in the basement.  Grizzy has no problem with the doggy door, popping in and out all day.  

On a summer day, Chopper often sits down before we leave our driveway, creating tension on the leash. Like a furry, long-eared mule, this tiny critter with two-inch legs pulls on his harness, refusing to continue our walk.   He most likely heard a locust, and we wait patiently while he hunts through the grass for his favorite snack.  After clamping his teeth together and imprisoning his prey, Chopper proudly holds up his head and allows us to continue, the insect madly buzzing inside his mouth. At some point, he chomps down and finishes his snack.   Later, I find lacy, iridescent locust wings that he coughed up on the kitchen tile.  

Chopper’s independent, stubborn nature also creates a challenge with commands.  He ignores “stay” when I open a door to the basement and soars down the steps, yipping and running wildly around the pool table like a mad monkey and charging off into the downstairs bedroom—another preferred, adopted bathroom of choice.  He doesn’t cease barking on command and yips and yaps at squirrels, birds, joggers, bicyclists, my piano playing, the doorbell, the garbage trucks, and the neighbors when they are trying to enjoy their pool.

Chopper is also bipolar—sweet one moment, grooming his brother’s ears, and then later, without warning, he begins a deep-throated growl.  He dons a demonic, red-eyed glare and begins creeping toward his brother, snarling with vampire-bat fangs, and then attacks Grizzy, who was sleeping peacefully on the sofa.

And yet, on my most unlovable, ugly days, he greets me with a multitude of kisses on my toes and ankles when I walk into a room, teaching me the importance of loving the unlovable.  During his calm moments, I often look into the adoring brown eyes of my Yoda-mule-monkey-vampire-bat of a dog, pat him on the head, and say, “Good boy.”

CD Burr
First published on Elders Speaking Group blog   10/17/2017; edited on 05/07/2025 


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Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Child Labor--An Egregious Business Practice of the Past?

Library of Congress photo and description:   "Manuel, the young shrimp-picker, five years old, and a mountain of child-labor oyster shells behind him. He worked last year (1911). Understands not a word of English. Dunbar, Lopez, Dukate Company. Location: Biloxi, Mississippi." photographer Lewis Wickes Hine, 1874-1940.


Is child labor an egregious business practice of the past, where children work long hours without breaks or work in hazardous conditions?  

While much better than a hundred years ago, child labor continues in my grandchildren's lifetime. 

Consider the following quotes from the Department of Labor website

"Since 2019, the U.S. Department of Labor has seen an 88 percent increase nationwide in children employed illegally. In fiscal year 2023, federal investigators identified 955 child labor violations nationwide with 5,792 children at risk – including 502 working in hazardous occupations illegally – and assessed more than $8 million in penalties for employers found in violation." 

"In fiscal year 2024, we concluded 736 investigations that found child labor violations, a 23% decrease from the previous year. We found 4,030 children employed in violation of the law, a 31% increase since 2019, and assessed more than $15.1 million in penalties, an 89% increase from the previous year."

The violations include children under 18 working six days a week, running hazardous machinery such as meat-processing machines, 14-year-olds driving forklifts or vehicles, and breaks only if the child works an eight-hour shift. 

According to the EPI (Economic Policy Institute), six states have tried to weaken child labor laws, but advocates are fighting back.   The Guardian reported that in March 2025, the Trump administration abolished US funding for nearly 70 programs that fought to end trafficking and child labor in other countries.

The lure of cheap child labor is greater than ever.  

Find your cause and demand decency.

CD Burr

This essay also appears on Elder Speaking

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Monday, May 5, 2025

Grandma Burr warned “Never Trust Russia!” by C.D. Burr

 

 Grandma Marie Burr's brothers: Gottfried and Friedrich Bamesberger, 1896 

Until she died in 1967, my husband's Grandma Marie Burr occasionally shared old photos of her handsome brothers in their Russian uniforms. She described her anguish at their disappearance around 1913 and the hard times she experienced as a young mother in Russia (now Ukraine).  She recalled the tensions of the early 1900s -- how the Russians took their land, dissolved their German community of Klein Neudorf, and sent her brothers to the salt mines with life sentences. 

In the early 1800s, Russia promised hundreds of German immigrants free farmland, autonomy, and no compulsory military service.  However, several generations later, after the 1905 Russian revolution, updated policies displaced thousands of families like the Burrs and Bamesbergers. In a heavy accent, Grandma Burr ended her stories of life in southern Russia with a warning:  "Never trust Russia!"

Marie was pregnant when she immigrated to the United States in 1913, debarking on a ship from Hamburg, Germany.  Accompanying her were her husband, Michael, and six children--a seventh deceased child remained behind in a grave.  Six more children were born in Cheyenne County, Kansas, including my father-in-law, Albert, and her last child, a son who died in infancy.  Marie was a widow in February 1925 when she buried the infant on a windswept hill in a cemetery next to the Salem Lutheran Church. Michael had died four months earlier. 

Twenty years before the Burrs arrived, my Zimbelman ancestors, with four sons and three daughters, emigrated from Rohrbach, Russia/Ukraine. Michael and Katherina had buried seven children on Russian soil and moved before their oldest son turned 21, the age for conscription into the Russian army.   The Zimbelmans settled in Cheyenne County in 1893-- each son eventually cultivating substantial farmland with Russian wheat seeds.  

I am grateful for the sacrifices of our ancestors, immigrants from a hostile land that is once again filled with people suffering from Russian aggression.

I pray  . . .

            --for peace in Ukraine, home of our ancestors, Michael and Marie Bamesberger and Michael and Katherina Zimbelman,

            -- for all displaced persons who have emigrated from violent homelands,

            -- for compassionate government immigration policies because, through our ancestors, “we were once strangers in a strange land.”  (Leviticus 19:34)

--Gratefully submitted by CD Burr

This essay first appeared on Elders Speaking 8/27/2024   Grandma Burr Warned


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Friday, May 2, 2025

Foreword to Bad Boys on the Family Tree by CD Burr

A person with a long beard

AI-generated content may be incorrect.
 Buried three wives; the second one was killed by a shotgun wound to the chest  in 1833.  No one was arrested.

A person in a suit and bow tie

AI-generated content may be incorrect.
Known for a silver plate attached to his skull; arrived home unconscious and slumped over on the back of his horse in 1857.  He was 33 years old.

Robbed two banks in Stewart and Houston Counties of Tennessee in the 1930s; refused to blame or name others involved. Made skillets in prison and gave one to his mother. 

Bad Boys on the Family Tree

and the

1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee


Foreword

For decades, I was equally fascinated and repelled by family stories of antebellum gun-toting, slave-owning patriarchs. They were Tennessee bad boys—rough, tough, independent.  Then, during a Daniel family gathering, a cousin’s spouse, Dan Covington, recounted two tales of murder that involved my Daniel and Sexton ancestors, stories that were so violent and brutal, I wanted to erase the patriarchs’ names from my mother’s 1960s pedigree chart. 

The first murder was a horrendous account of a stepmother who was shot and killed in her rural home around 1833 in front of her toddler.  Imagine the scene in Dexter when he remembers his mother’s brutal slaying. Some descendants speculate that a stepson murdered her, possibly my great-great-great-grandfather, Simon Daniel, who was undoubtedly skilled with lethal weapons by age ten. I kept the stepmother’s murder in the back of my mind while rummaging through antebellum court records. I didn’t even know her name and court records regarding her killing seemed nonexistent. On the other hand, there were plenty of handwritten records on an 1861 courtroom murder.

 The second murder described by Dan Covington was just as bloody and even more audacious than the stepmother’s killing. Allegedly involving two of my kinsmen with the last names “Daniel” and “Sexton,” the assassination occurred during an 1861 hearing before a magistrate and dozens of spectators. After Daniel’s gun misfired, Sexton shot and killed a man on the witness stand. Their arrogance and flagrant disregard for the law appalled me. I wondered who were these people?  Who were these men who executed a woman in her home and a witness in a courtroom? As chilling as the prospect was, I wanted to know if I was truly related to the murderers with surnames that land on two branches of my family tree.  

Those questions compelled me to investigate the antebellum courtroom murder by gathering court documents and sorting through family stories that were sometimes flimsy and unreliable. I researched my Tennessee ancestors' court records, culture, and genealogy for five years, absorbing facts, dissecting stories, and discovering lives lost to history.  A true-crime narrative evolved during the investigation, with intriguing questions and details about my ancestors and their Southern backgrounds.  Bad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee, however, did not develop into just another book about murder and entertaining bad-boy stories.  It also expanded into personal discovery and reflection as I unraveled mysteries surrounding these ostensibly brutal backwoodsmen.

Bad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee

Because of its many facets, my nonfiction book about bad boys and an 1861 murder appeals to a diverse audience by blending true crime, genealogy, memoir, and historical investigation.  I occasionally use various fonts to help the reader navigate through personal reflections and citations of printed and handwritten documents.

Calibri italics designates creative storytelling in the chapter introductions and musings in the body of the work. Italicized passages are my words to help tell the story.

Times New Roman indicates nineteenth-century printed documents, such as newspapers.

Lucida Calligraphy conveys hand-written testimony, letters, and other documents.

To build excitement and intrigue, the book introduces most chapters with creative storytelling, borrowing details from 1861 court documents, including over sixty pages of witness testimony. Three chapter introductions display transcriptions of original, hand-written court documents, which often reveal the defendants' signatures and names of attorneys and judges.

The chapters following these introductions chronicle my mother’s family history, immersed in the Southern culture of bad boys.  By the third chapter, the narrative expands into facts surrounding the 1861 courtroom murder. Witness testimonies provide crime details, including the victims' and defendants' identities and personalities, and why their quarrels ignited a deadly “difficulty.” 

Knowing that Daniel family storytellers often sacrifice facts for entertainment value, I began digging for realities behind the courtroom murder story.  My initial questions involved the fates of Daniel and Sexton as described by family raconteurs.  Did Sexton shoot the witness in the head in front of a judge and gallery? Did the absconders—Daniel and Sexton--flee out the front door of the courthouse, run down the streets of Dover, jump into the Cumberland River, and escape to Mexico? Or were they conscripted by the Confederacy to fight and die in the Civil War? 

Among documented facts that answer those questions, Bad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Murder in Dover, Tennessee offers a Midwestern exploration of my contempt for antebellum ancestors who enslaved individuals and revered violence—a contempt often energized by embellished family stories that exacerbated my stereotypes of the aggressive, “redneck” Southern male.   

As the narrative progresses, I make note of my mother’s continued enthusiasm for the South and the Confederate Flag, which clashes with my championship of the North’s causes. I wrestle with biases and try to understand my Southern roots. Curiously, my exploration evolves into something unpredictable. As I gather data and transcribe witness testimony, I become acquainted with antebellum souls whom I had judged to be misogynistic, racist, ignorant, and cruel.  I discover voices of the past-- justices of the peace and murderers, jailers and gentleman farmers, and mothers, sisters, and daughters.

Bad Boys on the Family Tree and the 1861 Courtroom Murder in Dover, Tennessee thrives on those voices.



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Simon Daniel an Antebellum Tennessee Bad Boy on the Family Tree by CD Burr

  Simon Daniel of Stewart County, Tennessee (1823-1857) According to grandchildren who never met him, Simon Daniel of Stewart County, Tennes...