Eddie Daugherty (1892-19??): Difference between revisions

From Cibernética Americana
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 22: Line 22:
<p><blockquote><br><br><blockquote style="color: black;"><br>Ray, Edna, and Stella were known since childhood. 'Eddie Daugherty' is the shadowy 4th I learned of in '06.<br> &nbsp;  &nbsp; Possible common ancestor between him or Stella and Ray or Edna, there's some 23andMe info to support that. &nbsp;  &nbsp; <br>An image, the summary reasoning posted here once I've tracked him down.<br><br>The 1920 census shows an "Ed W Daugherty" <br>Actual name is 'William Edward Daugherty' (1879-1945), wife 'Sterling Stella Boyer' (1879-1961)<br>Daugherty is a very common name in the region so it's just a start since it's the right area, Morgan Co., IL.<br>
<p><blockquote><br><br><blockquote style="color: black;"><br>Ray, Edna, and Stella were known since childhood. 'Eddie Daugherty' is the shadowy 4th I learned of in '06.<br> &nbsp;  &nbsp; Possible common ancestor between him or Stella and Ray or Edna, there's some 23andMe info to support that. &nbsp;  &nbsp; <br>An image, the summary reasoning posted here once I've tracked him down.<br><br>The 1920 census shows an "Ed W Daugherty" <br>Actual name is 'William Edward Daugherty' (1879-1945), wife 'Sterling Stella Boyer' (1879-1961)<br>Daugherty is a very common name in the region so it's just a start since it's the right area, Morgan Co., IL.<br>
I had confabulated him being a light skinned black that decided to pass but being white <br>and married but not to Stella Burns better fits available current evidence.<br>By 1920 he would have had 3 or 4 children by Stella (Burns)<br> and my father, (paternity uncertain) could still have been the 5th.<br>In any case the combination of archival and genetic info will ultimately reveal the truth.<br> </blockquote><br><br></blockquote></p>
I had confabulated him being a light skinned black that decided to pass but being white <br>and married but not to Stella Burns better fits available current evidence.<br>By 1920 he would have had 3 or 4 children by Stella (Burns)<br> and my father, (paternity uncertain) could still have been the 5th.<br>In any case the combination of archival and genetic info will ultimately reveal the truth.<br> </blockquote><br><br></blockquote></p>
</center></div><div style="background-color: antiquewhite;">Skin color is a big part of this story. My father and one his brothers were fairly dark skinned but his siblings and mother were not. I once met the Burns in the East St. Louis area (1965)and they were quite dark, darker than my father or uncle, more like Jimmy and Erlene in pic. </div>
</center></div><div style="background-color: antiquewhite;color: black">Skin color is a big part of this story. My father and one his brothers were fairly dark skinned but his siblings and mother were not.<br> I once met the Burns in the East St. Louis area (1965) and they were quite dark, darker than my father or uncle, more like Jimmy and Erlene in pic. </div>
[[Daugherty]]
[[Daugherty]]

Revision as of 09:12, 21 May 2020

Cover Page








Ray, Edna, and Stella were known since childhood. 'Eddie Daugherty' is the shadowy 4th I learned of in '06.
    Possible common ancestor between him or Stella and Ray or Edna, there's some 23andMe info to support that.    
An image, the summary reasoning posted here once I've tracked him down.

The 1920 census shows an "Ed W Daugherty"
Actual name is 'William Edward Daugherty' (1879-1945), wife 'Sterling Stella Boyer' (1879-1961)
Daugherty is a very common name in the region so it's just a start since it's the right area, Morgan Co., IL.
I had confabulated him being a light skinned black that decided to pass but being white
and married but not to Stella Burns better fits available current evidence.
By 1920 he would have had 3 or 4 children by Stella (Burns)
and my father, (paternity uncertain) could still have been the 5th.
In any case the combination of archival and genetic info will ultimately reveal the truth.



Skin color is a big part of this story. My father and one his brothers were fairly dark skinned but his siblings and mother were not.
I once met the Burns in the East St. Louis area (1965) and they were quite dark, darker than my father or uncle, more like Jimmy and Erlene in pic.

Daugherty