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Alberta HOBART

Female 1866 - 1876  (10 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Alberta HOBART was born 20 Aug 1866 (daughter of Sidney Little HOBART and Lizzie SUMNER); died 20 Nov 1876.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Sidney Little HOBART was born 23 Feb 1842, Carthage Township, Hancock, Illinois (son of Norman HOBART and Ura Eaton HOLLADAY); died 20 Nov 1889, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Moss Ridge Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.

    Notes:

    1850 US Census in Hancock, Illinois
    1860 US Census in Carthage, Hancock, Illinois (Sidny)
    1870 US Census in Carthage, Hancock, Illinois



    Sidney Hobart built a flour and grist mill on block 8 in the original town center of Carthage near the old Mormon Jail and the Presbyterian Church. (The 'Mormon Jail' refers to the jail in Carthage where LDS founder Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum Smith were killed by a mob while imprisioned there in 1844 -Ed) The mill operated for many years but was finally torn down and a residence now stands on the site. History of Hancock County, Illinois 1880



    Sidney's granddaughter, our mother May Hobart Zentmyer, told us that Sidney died from lung disease resulting from his exposure to flour dust, a hazard unrecognized at the time.

    Sidney married Lizzie SUMNER 8 Sep 1864, Hancock, Illinois. Lizzie died 02 Oct 1871. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Lizzie SUMNER died 02 Oct 1871.
    Children:
    1. 1. Alberta HOBART was born 20 Aug 1866; died 20 Nov 1876.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Norman HOBART was born 29 Dec 1810, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont (son of Amos HOBART and Keziah Marshall CHASE); died 13 Dec 1878, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.

    Notes:

    "Norman Hobart came to Illinois in 1833 locating in Rushville, where he lived until his marriage to Ura Eaton Holiday, (sic -Ed) after which he came to Hancock County, where he located in Fountain Green Township. Mr. Hobart purchased a farm in Carthage township on which he made his home part of the time, and partly in Carthage, where he owned a carding machine. Later he bought the old grist mill on Crooked Creek, which he rebuilt, making a steam flouring mill of it, also adding a saw mill which he operated for a number of years. He then moved the mill to Carthage, operating it as a grist mill, then purchased a farm of eighty acres, one mile from Carthage, which he farmed until his death, December 13, 1878. He was a devoted member of the Methodist Episcopal church for many years, being a local preacher in that church.
    He was a public-spirited man and gave his support to the Republican Party, though he was never an aspirant for office. Norman Hobart was a prosperous man of his day and was an important factor in building up the community in which he lived. He assisted in building the first wagon road from Fountain Green to Carthage. His remains were laid to rest in the Carthage Cemetery. His wife was a native of Kentucky and came to Illinois at an early day. This worthy couple were the parents of fourteen children, only two of which are now living." (Isaac and Mariah -Ed) --Biographical Review of Hancock County, Illinois, Hobart Publishing Company, Chicago, 1907



    During the afternoon of 27 Jun 1844 an armed mob in blackface overwhelmed the forces guarding the jail in Carthage, Illinois where LDS founder Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum were being held. The mobbers stormed the jail, shot and killed the Smith brothers, and severely wounded an associate, John Taylor. Until recently, we had no information as to whether any of the three Hobart brothers living near Carthage during that period had any connection to the murders.

    Joseph Johnstun is an historical analyst from Fort Madison, Iowa, which is about twenty-five miles from Carthage. He is one of the leading scholars on Nauvoo, Illinois, (Nauvoo was the nexus of the Latter Day Saints from 1839 until 1845 -Ed) and is widely considered to be the expert on the murders of Joseph and Hyrum Smith. According to Johnstun, writing to us in January of 2019:

    "Gary- I am pleased to tell you that your family were not participants in the murders of the Smith brothers; however, they were involved in the events surrounding them in a very important and meaningful way. When the shooting commenced at the jail, Norman and his brother Joshua heard it on their farm four miles south of Carthage. They immediately headed to town. Upon their arrival, they discovered their brother Jonas was one of the guards at the jail during the attack, and considering the scene, Joshua said that it wouldn't do to leave the bodies lying in the jail and yard. So the brothers fashioned stretchers and began carrying them to a hotel on the other side of town owned by Artois Hamilton. Thankfully, Hamilton's neighbor came by with a wagon, and they were able to take the bodies that way. Once at the hotel, Joshua and Norman cleaned and shaved the men, and otherwise prepared the bodies for their journey to Nauvoo the following morning."

    Norman married Ura Eaton HOLLADAY 16 Feb 1834, Rushville, Schuyler, Illinois. Ura (daughter of Moses HOLLADAY and Celia SKIRVIN) was born 02 Jul 1816, Gallatin Co., Kentucky; died 06 Apr 1883, Blandinsville, McDonough, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Ura Eaton HOLLADAY was born 02 Jul 1816, Gallatin Co., Kentucky (daughter of Moses HOLLADAY and Celia SKIRVIN); died 06 Apr 1883, Blandinsville, McDonough, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.

    Notes:

    1900 US Census in Wakeency, Trego, Kansas as widow

    Children:
    1. Isaac Newton HOBART was born 10 Jan 1835, Fountain Green, Hancock, Illinois; died 20 Apr 1911, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Moss Ridge Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.
    2. Charlotte HOBART died Infancy.
    3. Anson HOBART died Infancy.
    4. William HOBART died Infancy.
    5. 2. Sidney Little HOBART was born 23 Feb 1842, Carthage Township, Hancock, Illinois; died 20 Nov 1889, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Moss Ridge Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.
    6. Celia Sophia HOBART was born 23 Apr 1843, Hancock, Illinois; died 31 May 1870, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.
    7. John S. HOBART was born 1 Jul 1845, Hancock, Illinois; died 1 Mar 1866, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.
    8. Rachel HOBART was born 6 Jan 1849, Hancock, Illinois; died 28 Mar 1856, Hancock, Illinois.
    9. Sarah HOBART was born 10 Dec 1852, Hancock, Illinois; died 2 Mar 1856, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.
    10. Millard Fillmore HOBART was born 7 Jul 1853, Hancock, Illinois; died 22 Nov 1873, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Hancock, Illinois.
    11. George W. HOBART was born 1 Jul 1855, Hancock, Illinois; died 20 Oct 1855, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.
    12. Mariah Ellen HOBART was born 20 Dec 1856, Hancock, Illinois; died Mar 1945, Johnson, Kansas; was buried Hutchinson Eastside Cemetery, Hutchinson, Reno, Kansas.
    13. Jonas M. HOBART was born 7 Aug 1858, Hancock, Illinois; died 22 Nov 1882, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.
    14. Antainette HOBART was born 10 Oct 1859, Hancock, Illinois; died 13 Apr 1863, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Amos HOBART was born 30 Mar 1775, Groton, Grafton, New Hampshire (son of Jonas HOBART and Elizabeth KEMP); died May 1842, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.

    Notes:

    Some of the following background information is excerpted from Hobart History and Genealogy, 1632-1956, compiled by Ethel Hobart Carothers. Later facts are supported by My Ancestors, by Irene Hobart, published in the Carthage Republican, February 8, 1933. Jonas Hobart's parents were Amos Hobart (born in 1774 in Lyme, Grafton County, New Hampshire, died in 1842 in or near Carthage, Hancock County, Illinois) and Keziah Marshall, nee Chase (born in 1772 in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, died in 1843 in Hancock County, Illinois).
    Amos' parents were Jonas Hobart, born in what was then Massachusetts on November 15, 1744, and Betty Kemp. After Jonas' brother, Isaac, was killed at Bunker Hill, Jonas joined the Continental Army and served for three years. At the Battle of Ticonderoga he was severely wounded in the cheek, but survived and collected a yearly pension of $96.00 for the rest of his life. He moved west to Illinois in 1823, died ten years later and was buried near Rushville in Schuyler County, Illinois.
    Of Amos and Keziah's children, the eldest two, Jonas and Joshua C., were born in New Hampshire. The family moved to Essex, Chittenden County, Vermont, where four more children were born: Amasa, Anson, Norman, Mary Ann and Eliza Ann. They moved to Allegheny County, New York about 1816. Amasa and Mary Ann did not live to adulthood. The remaining four came to Illinois.
    In addition to Jonas' family, a number of Norman's children are also buried at Webster Cemetery.

    Amos married Keziah Marshall CHASE 28 Feb 1803, Nottingham West, (now Hudson) Hillsborough, New Hampshire. Keziah (daughter of Joshua CHASE and Mary HADLEY) was born 10 Jun 1772, Nottingham West, (now Hudson) Hillsborough, New Hampshire; died Nov 1842, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois . [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Keziah Marshall CHASE was born 10 Jun 1772, Nottingham West, (now Hudson) Hillsborough, New Hampshire (daughter of Joshua CHASE and Mary HADLEY); died Nov 1842, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois .
    Children:
    1. Jonas HOBART, II was born 10 Dec 1803, Grafton, New Hampshire; died 17 May 1874, Fountain Green, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Webster Cemetery, Webster, Hancock, Illinois.
    2. Joshua Chase HOBART was born 17 May 1805, Lyme, Grafton, New Hampshire; died 10 Nov 1883, Colchester, McDonough, Illinois; was buried Mount Auburn Cemetery, Colchester, McDonough, Illinois.
    3. Amasa HOBART was born 1807, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont; died Mar 1812, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont.
    4. Anson HOBART was born 19 Dec 1808, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont; died 7 Feb 1890, Silverton, Marion, Oregon; was buried Silverton Cemetery, Silverton, Marion, Oregon.
    5. 4. Norman HOBART was born 29 Dec 1810, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont; died 13 Dec 1878, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.
    6. Mary Ann HOBART was born 29 Dec 1812, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont; died 1823, Rushford, Allegany, New York.
    7. Elizabeth Ann HOBART was born 14 Aug 1815, Essex, Chittenden, Vermont; died 28 Apr 1886, Illinois.

  3. 10.  Moses HOLLADAY was born 14 Sep 1782, Allegheny, Pennsylvania (son of Moses HOLLIDAY and Elizabeth HIGGINS); died 16 Apr 1887.

    Moses married Celia SKIRVIN 1802, Hancock, Illinois. Celia (daughter of John SKIRVIN and Mary Ann KITCHEN) was born 27 Apr 1779, Virginia; died 28 Nov 1896, Schuyler, Illinois. [Group Sheet]


  4. 11.  Celia SKIRVIN was born 27 Apr 1779, Virginia (daughter of John SKIRVIN and Mary Ann KITCHEN); died 28 Nov 1896, Schuyler, Illinois.
    Children:
    1. 5. Ura Eaton HOLLADAY was born 02 Jul 1816, Gallatin Co., Kentucky; died 06 Apr 1883, Blandinsville, McDonough, Illinois; was buried Old Carthage Cemetery, Carthage, Hancock, Illinois.