I found Terry Kay Kiser on the 1940 census in Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois at nine months old, with his parents Garth and Irene. While his Wikipedia entry (currently) claims he was born in Omaha, Nebraska, the family did not move there for several years. Garth Martin Kiser also appears on a 1940 World War II Draft card, listing his wife Irene Helen Kiser, living in Elmhurst. Garth M. Kiser is listed in a local paper as moving from Elmhurst to Sioux Falls, South Dakota in 1951.[1] Garth died in 1961 and is buried in Omaha. His widow remarried William Chambers, moved to Cincinnati, and died in 1988.[2]
Irene’s 1912 Chicago birth certificate identifies her parents as Kay and Margaret (Hearne) Jennings. In addition to Illinois vital records and federal census returns, I found Irene and her parents in the 1944 publication Jennings, Davidson and allied families. Irene’s father Kay Seward Jennings (1886–1968) was the son of George Alexander and Mary Frances (Seward) Jennings; grandson of Israel and Anne McClure (Davidson) Jennings; and great-grandson of Israel and Mary (Waters) Jennings. This last Israel Jennings (1776–1860) moved from Connecticut (via Kentucky) to Illinois in the early nineteenth century.
While now I had a connection back to New England, this last couple gave me a case of déjà vu. I had definitely worked on them before (as well as in this 1944 book), but I could not remember why. I looked in my own genealogy database for Israel Jennings and could not find anything. Searching my own e-mail, I found an article my colleague Gary Boyd Roberts had written eight years ago for Mayflower Descendant. This was the first issue published under my predecessor Caleb H. Johnson, where Gary and I began a series on “Notable Mayflower Descendants,” and I had published an article in this issue on the Mayflower ancestry of hatter John B. Stetson. While the Jennings article was authored by Gary, both he and I had aided each other on our respective articles. This series continues in Mayflower Descendant with many recent articles by Gary, Julie Helen Otto, and Richard Hall.
Will there be a sequel to this post? Weekend at Brewstie’s II? It could actually be a trilogy, as this article had also worked out two other Mayflower families behind Israel Jennings, back to Samuel Fuller and John Howland (which makes it four families, including John Tilley)!
[1] “New Residents in Sioux Falls,” The Daily Argus-Leader [Sioux Falls, S.D.], 5 September 1951, 22.
[2] “Chambers, Irene (nee Jennings),” The Cincinnati Inquirer, 5 December 1988, 38.
[3] Gary Boyd Roberts, “Notable Mayflower Descendants, William Jennings Bryan (1860–1925), Politician,” Mayflower Descendant 60 [2011]: 61-66.