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Transcribed by Aryl Ann Bashline and published
in the Western PA Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 14, No.
4 (Spring 1988), pg. 29. No copyright infringement intended.
From our family Bible, which originally belonged to my
great-great-grandparents, Philip and Maria Catherine (Altman) Bashline,
I learned their birth and death dates, and those of their children, plus
similar information on their descendants. Although Philip and Maria
Catherine were married on 13 Sept 1849 in Callensburg, Clarion County, PA,
by Rev. John Core, this was not originally recorded. I am, therefore
including below only the material from this Bible which was entered by Maria
Catherine Bashline herself, and not records added later by other family
members.
Births
Philip Bashline was born April 10th year of our Lord
1827
Maria C. Bashline was born Dec 26th year of our Lord
1828
Son born named John H. Bashline July 11th year 1850
Daughter born named Sarah J. Bashline March 12th year
1852
Mary C. Bashline was born Apr 5th year of our Lord
1854
Cyntha Bashline was born Mar 4th year of our Lord
1856
Susannah Bashline was born Mar 22nd year of our Lord
1858
Sophia Bashline was born Nov 28th year of our Lord
1859
Lizzia Bashline was born June 5th year of our Lord
1862
Hannah Bashline was born Aug 29th year of our Lord
1864
William born May 24th 1867
George S. born May 12th 1869
Charles born April 6th 1871
Deaths
Sophiah Bashline died March 12th 1864
Susannah Bashline died March 27, 1864
William Bashline died April 4th 1868
Philip Bashline died November 4th 1880
Seven of Philip and Maria Catherine Bashline's children
lived to adulthood: John who md. Elmina Grant; Sarah who md. James
Johnson; Mary who md. John Taylor; Cynthia who md. John Mortland; Lizzia
who md. Henry Pierce and Harry Hall; Hannah who md. Chas. Linamen; George
who md. Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Fye; and Charles who md. Harriet
J. Bell.
Philip and Maria Catherine began their married life
in Clarion County; they appeared in Piney Twp. in the 1850 census with
their son, John. By 1860 they had moved to Salem Twp. and, with
the advent of the Civil War, Philip enlisted in Company A, 103rd Regiment
of the Pennsylvania Volunteers. After his discharge, the family
moved to Nickleville in Richland Twp., Venango County, PA.
Philip's health steadily declined after his Civil
War service, and he died in 1880, leaving his wife to manage the farm
as best she could. Their eldest son, John, died about 1884 after
a fall from a wagon. Their daughters, Susannah and Sophia, supposedly
died of diptheria. The cause of William's death is unknown.
Maria Catherine eventually sold the farm to her daughter,
Hanna (Bashline) Linamen and lived with each of her surviving children
for a short while.
After the marriages of the children, they eventually
settled in the Borough of Butler, the county seat of Butler County, PA.
The exception was Sarah (Bashline) Johnson, who, with her husband
James and family, moved to Oklahoma.
[A] photograph was taken in Butler ca. 1909 when the
Johnsons came back to Butler from Oklahoma for a visit. Their tales
of life out West must have impressed George and Lizzie (Fye) Bashline,
for they later moved with their family to Oklahoma.
Pictured are Cynthia Alzina (Bashline) Mortland; Hannah
Luquetia (Bashline) Linamen: Charles Leonadis Bashline; George Simeon
Bashline; Lizzia Alwilda (Bashline) Pierce, who later md. Hall; Mary Catherine
(Bashline) Taylor; Sarah Jane (Bashline) Johnson; and the mother, Maria
Catherine (Altman) Bashline, who is holding the Bible from which this
[above] record is taken.
Maria Catherine Bashline finally settled with her
daughter, Hannah (Bashline) Linamen and lived with her until her death
at the age of 92 in Butler, PA.
Charles L. Bashline, her youngest son and my great-grandfather,
came into possession of the Bible. He and his wife Harriet (Bell)
Bashline were the parents of two sons: J. Cecil (my grandfather)
and Wade Bashline. Upon Wade's death at age 77 in Butler, his nephew,
James W. Bashline (my father), received the Bible.
From our Bible, and with the aid of various family
members, I have progressively gathered more and more family material,
not only on Philip Bashline and his descendants but on other branches
of our family.
Regardless of the personal information, which the
Bible provided, I learned something much more valuable -- the importance
of preserving records for future generations and helping others do the
same. |