Robert Leroy "Lee" CAMPBELL
1MARRIAGE,BIRTH AND DEATH REC. IN POSS. OF JOYCE ATKIN 1480 MT. VIEW AVE CHICO,CA. 95926. Lee died of" black lung" or TB. They were living in Washington State and Lee had loaded the wagon with hay and was on his way home when a wagon wheel broke. He had to unload the wagon, fix the wheel and reload the wagon. Grandma said from that day on he was ill and she took him back home to Mo. to die. He is buried in a cemetary in Mc.Donald Co.Missouri. There is also a difference of 1 year in Lees birthdate. In 1900 census it gives 1870 and Grandma tells me the date is 1869.
My grandmother Maggie was about 13 when her mother died. I have an old green dish she bought at an auction when her parents died. It is cracked and not worth anything but sentimental value to me, just knowing it was precious to her. When her husband "Lee" died,( She had brought him home to Mo. to die from their homestead in Washington) She owned two or three homes in Mcdonald Co. Mo. She later married Gil.Cochran who traded the homes for a store in Butterfield. He traded that for an old farm in Ark. They later moved to Idaho. and he later abandonded the family. He took the Family Bible,all of the money except .29 cents and the rotor to the car. He left to chop wood and never came back. Aunt Ola said grandma got a job in a hotel in Ellensburg Washington washing dishes,so her kids would have a place to live. Aunt Ola remembers the lady in the hotel always having a piece of pie for them to eat when they got home from school. They later let her cook which paid a little better .Grandma later worked as a cook on ranches where her boys worked. At that time she had the children of Vashtie and her husband, Wiley. Aunt Ola Manford,Clifford ,grandma and Dad,with Wiley and his two kids, Velda and Noble, decided to come to Ca. , The family took two old fords and started off . Dad remembers him and Clifford being in one car and running out of gas and waiting along side the road till Grandma caught up with them as she had the money. They settled in Palermo and lived in several houses in Palermo.One of the houses was on Palermo road on the north East side of a small bridge. The house is still there(2004) and has a large pine tree in the yard grandma planted after Xmas when she had the boys go to Rocky Honcut and find a tree and they dug up the roots and planted it in a bucket. The last house they lived in in Palermo was on upper Palermo rd. where I (Joyce) was born. She later moved to Central House on Cox lane, and then when the boys had to go in the 2nd World War they moved her to Gridley. She lived in at least 4 houses in the Gridley area, that I remember..I loved visiting her. I remember her giving us lumps of brown sugar for treats.seeing her "wring a chickens neck" for dinner,milk her "old cow Bossy" , go with us to the Sat. Matinees, feed us oatmeal with real cream on it, stand at the door wiping her hands on her apron so she could hug me and pretending that I hugged her really hard,having Xmas eve at her house waiting for Uncle Ed and Aunt Ola., seeing my dad fuss with the presents because he couldn't wait,looking at her old family pictures,taking my kids to see her,eating the hard tack candy she always had around.going to dances at a church where Wiley played his violin and old and young danced, smelling the mentholatum she rubbed on her every night. She was a good grandma. When bad things happen I think of her and what she went through. She lostt her parents,two brothers ,1 sister, a husband and 2 children to tuberculosis, one daughter to typhoid fever a small child to measles or chicken pox and was abandoned by her 2nd husband, She just kept working and keeping her family together. She came to Calif. during the depression and worked plucking turkeys, and in the fruit cutting sheds until her boys were all big enough to work. One of the biggest insults she had was a letter to her from the husband that left calling her a hussy for "bobbing her hair. This happened when she was living in Gridley. She had a great attitude and always seemed happy in spite of the things that came her way. I hope I can be remembered with love ,the way I remember her. In the 1900 census,Elkhorn,McDonald,Mo. Maggie gave her birthday as May 1874. and age 26, I tend to believe this may be correct, although I have her birthday as 1877. This census gives Robert as age 30 b. May 1870,and Joseph L.( Lionel ) son Sep.1896 age 5,Margaret V.(Vastie),Apr.1898 age 2.
Died of tuberculosis and never married. Info. from my dad. Is in the World War 1 civilian draft registration database. Joseph Lionel Campbell,b.10 Sept.1895 Purdy,Mo. Lives in Neeley ,Power Co.,Idaho
died of tuberculosis as a young mother. Children were raised by her husband and her mother.
died at age 9 of typhoid fever. Her mother said she was a very happy kind girl, did not remember her ever doing anything mean. The only time she remembered her being angry was when she had a n argument about a rubber dolly and she bit the doll on the bottom.
He was 1 yr.old when his father died and knew none of his Campbell family/ His parents had gone with the other Campbells on their trek to Washington from Mo. When his father became very ill with "Black Lung"his wife Maggie took him back home to die. They went to Mcdonald Co. and Barry Co.Mo. After his death she stayed in McDonald Co. She owned two homes in that area. After living there for several years she married her 2nd husband" Gillie" Cochran. Gillie sold her two homes and purchased a store in Butterfield Mo. That was later sold and he bought a farm in Ark. In about 1911 they left Mo. and went to Idaho where they homesteaded. In a short time they went on to Washington and lived around Enumclaw. When dad was about 15 yrs old his stepdad abandoned the family. He took the rotor from the car,what money there was, the family bible, and left with an axe to supposedly chop wood. the axe was left by the woodpile and he left never to be seen again by the family. Maggie took her children and worked as a cook for farmhands on large farms. The boys worked there also when they could. Dads transportation at that time was the trains and he can tell many entertaining stories about the railroad Bulls and his near escapes. In his late twenties he with his family settled in Palermo where he met his wife Birdie. His mother lived in Palermo ,then went on to Central House and then to Gridley where she lived out her life. In the 40's she received a letter from Gillie calling her a hussy for cutting her hair. He had obviously kept an eye on her but never once made an attempt to see or help with his 3 children. Dad grew up with the automobile and dates every event with the car he had at the time. As a girl I remember when visiting with Aunts and Uncles always trading the car we had for a different one. He only went to the 5th grade in school but learned to read write and spell well enough to get along. The first few years he worked the Robblee Mine out of Stirling City. He also worked for the W.P.A. In 1940 he worked for the Western Pacific and took his family to Portola and Beckworth. He had a job at Walker mine (Copper Mine) the summer of 41. He with 4 other men were hired to be caretakers as the town had been abandoned the winter before to heavy snow. When the war started he moved his family to Sacto. where he and mom both worked at defense plants. In 1943 he moved to Gridley and worked in a creamery. In 1944 he moved his family to Stirling City where he worked for Diamond Match until the early 50's when D.M. moved up to RedBluff. After that he bought a home in Chico, then later rented it and lived and worked in Roseville and then came back to Chico. Even after retiring he worked in olive orchards outside of Oroville until he was 65+. They sold their home and bought a Mobile home and lived in Thermalito where he resides now at age 92+. He moved to a trailer near his only son shere he stayed until he broke his hip in in early Dec. 2001. He had surgery which he seemed to handle quite well. He was put in the rehab section of Oroville hospital. and was progressing and then just started failing and was dead in three days.
He married Margaret Frances "Maggie" Smith 21 Aug 1895 at Cassville, Barry, Missouri . Margaret Frances "Maggie" Smith was born at Barry, Missouri 17 May 1877 daughter of William Jasper Smith and Margaret Jane Steele .
They were the parents of 5
children:
Joseph Lionel "Onel" Campbell
born 10 Sep 1896.
Margaret Vastie Campbell
born 13 Apr 1898.
Caris Lee Campbell
born 3 Dec 1900.
Blocked
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Robert Leroy "Lee" Campbell died 30 Dec 1905 at Cassville, Barry, Missouri .
Margaret Frances "Maggie" Smith died 12 Mar 1962 at Oroville, Butte, California .