Born around 1814 in County Cork, Ireland, John
Desmond O’Sullivan was the third son of Mary Desmond O’Sullivan. His
father’s name has been lost to history and he
may have died in Ireland before the family came to America. John was
just one year older than his brother Michael and they would work
together from time to time after they arrived in Dubuque. Likewise
their two older brothers, Timothy and Dennis would farm together for
almost a half century near Bankston, Iowa.
John D. was a bricklayer and three years after
the Sullivan family arrived in Dubuque, the city fathers decided to
build a brick courthouse. James L. Langworthy supplied almost
250,000 bricks and John D. Sullivan laid them. A newspaper article
said that John “was one of the most competent and energetic master
bricklayers and plasterers Dubuque ever had. In 1840 he built the
Court House and the following years the Waples House, the Peosta
House (then called Democratic Row), and from that time up to 1849
was concerned in the erection of most of the prominent buildings
which now adorn Dubuque.”
John was twenty-nine when he married twenty one
year old Elizabeth Ann Newman on Oct. 5, 1843 in Dubuque. Again
Bishop Loras performed the ceremony. She was born in 1822 in county
Cavan, Ireland, the daughter of Capt. James Newman who became a
well-known riverboat pilot. Her brother, William, first settled in
New York in 1837 and then moved to Dubuque three years later where
Elizabeth joined him. The log cabin she lived in at the time of her
marriage was located on the northwest corner of 2nd and
Locust. In later years it was moved to Eagle Point Park and now sits
near the Ham House. Newman later said that the log cabin had been in
existence for years before he arrived, having been built and
occupied by French hunters and miners and could possibly date back
to Julien Dubuque himself.
After their marriage, the couple resided at 26
W. 5th St where Elizabeth would live for the rest of her
life. A year after their marriage their first child a daughter,
Margaret, was born but she died three years later on Sept. 6, 1847.
Two sons were born to John D. and Elizabeth in the decade of the
forties, one the year before and one the year after Margaret’s
untimely death. They would have a total of eight children:
Margaret |
1844-1847 |
Daniel |
1846-1860 |
William J. |
1848-1882 |
Mary (Langdon) |
1851-1931 |
Dinnes |
1855-1858 |
Lizzie A. (Ryder) |
1856-1899 |
James M. |
1857-1938 |
Frances Ellen (Fannie) |
1859-1895 |
|
|
A terrible
tragedy occurred on April 1, 1865 when John D. Sullivan
was accidentally killed by a shotgun blast. The newspaper
described it: “On Saturday last, in company with Mr. Edward Smith, a
relative, we believe, (Smith was the nephew of John’s wife,
Elizabeth) he started on a business tour for Ozark, in Jackson
County. Supposing he might have an opportunity of shooting some game
on the way, he carried with him his double-barreled shotgun. Arrived
at their destination, and after having
enjoyed themselves for some time in shooting,
the party ate a hearty dinner preparatory to starting homeward.
After dinner Mr. Smith proceeded to the stable to harness the
horses, while Mr. Sullivan went to the wagon, which was standing
some yards from the stable, for the purpose of rendering more
comfortable for the ride. He had placed the gun on the bottom of the
wagon, and it is supposed while in the act of driving a nail or
removing the gun, the hammer accidentally caught in a splinter and
discharged its entire contents into his right breast.
“Mr. Smith heard the discharge while harnessing
the horses, but supposed that he had shot at a bird, while a Mr.
Brown, who also was in company, started for the wagon, where he
found Mr. Sullivan lying in front and between the wheels. At first
Mr. Brown did not observe that he was shot, and jocosely remarked
that he was taking it easy, but in a moment after discovered his
mistake and ran to give the alarm to Smith. Mr. Smith then hastened
to the spot and found him lying as above described. He caught him up
and endeavored to stop the flow of blood, and called upon him to
answer or recognize him by word or sign, but all in vain. Although
he was breathing, he died 25 minutes later.
“Word was given to the neighbors and in the
course of and hour or so a number of them had collected, a Justice
of the Peace and jury summoned and an inquest held. This over, the
corpse was placed in another wagon, and accompanied by several of
the neighbors was brought home to his afflicted and
disconsolate family.”
An article in the local newspaper noted:
“Obituary-The funeral of John D. Sullivan was
very largely attended yesterday, showing that the deceased was held
in the highest regard by his numerous acquaintances. Some 85
carriages and a score of horsemen formed the procession. The remains
were taken to Key West for internment”
He left his forty-year-old widow and five
surviving children Fannie, age 5, James, 7, Lizzie, 9, Mary, 15, and
William, 17. Like his brother almost a decade earlier, John died in
testate and also like his brother, left a considerable estate (for
that time) valued at $40,000 or around one million in today’s
dollars. However since John left no will the money was split up
equally between Elizabeth and all the children, meaning she only got
1/5, and she struggled to make ends meet. Her income the first year
after John’s death was around $1400 from the various rental
properties and mineral rights he owned. He also owned 120 acres of
farmland near his two brothers, Timothy and Dennis, in Iowa Township
and 20 acres near Center Grove just west of Dubuque.
At the end of the summer of the following year, a neighbor, Laura
Knowlton wrote a letter to a family member in western New York in
which she complained “the weather keeps so unpleasant it rains every
other day (and) one of the widow John Sullivan’s children had an
attack of Cholera. She was very sick (and) I took care of her a
week. Now she is well.” Mrs. Knowlton, also a widow, who’s husband
had been a carriage dealer and probably well acquainted with William
Newman, went on to say that Elizabeth’s brother-in-law “Mr. J. P.
Quigley has been very sick with typhoid fever (but) is now much
better.”
John D. Sullivan had owned some rental property on the
southwest corner of Sixth and Main for many years. A little before
midnight on the first of November 1870 a fire was discovered running
up the rear of the frame building John had left to his wife,
Elizabeth. It was across the street from the Herald and
someone working there noticed the fire and aroused all the occupants
of the building. A westerly wind pushed the flames and the building
was soon engulfed and the fire spread to the adjoining structure.
Her loss was estimated at $3000 of which only $2000 was covered by
insurance. Her tenants, a clothing store, a saloon, an upholstery
shop, millinery and a shoe store were mostly covered by insurance.
The fire reportedly started in an ash barrel at the rear of the
saloon.
Less than six months after the fire Elizabeth
borrowed $4,000 at 10% interest from a woman named Sally Howes of
Philadelphia to rebuild the structure she had lost. The next month
she also sold some farmland for almost $1500 to help finance the
construction project. Some of the money may have been targeted for
another “project” that Elizabeth was presumably involved in. She was
not only busy with rebuilding and financing she also had a wedding
to plan for. Seven months after the fire her twenty year old
daughter, Mary Margaret, married Edgar C. Langdon on June 2, 1871. A
little over a year later the couple welcomed their only child a son,
John, born on Aug. 4th.
The income Elizabeth received from her
husband’s estate was reported in detail to the court along with all
her expenses. From November 6, 1866 until February 10, 1873 she
reported a total income of around $14,000 or about $190 a month.
Tragedy struck the family again on Valentine’s
Day, 1882 when Elizabeth’s oldest surviving son, William was killed
in a railroad accident.
William had attended public school and also
what was known as “the Bishop’s School” at St. Raphael’s. He then
went on to graduate with honors from Notre Dame. Afterwards he was
the deputy clerk of the U. S. Court in Dubuque and studied law with
Griffith and Knight. He also clerked for his uncle, J. P. Quigley
who was city recorder and treasurer.
That fateful day William was decked out in a
new suit of clothes in preparation for a business trip to Milwaukee
and Chicago. He decided to hop the northbound C. M. & St. Paul train
for a short ride to the car shops where he hoped to obtain letters
of recommendation to the parties he was meeting on his trip. The
train was an hour late and when it got to the car shops it did not
slow down as William expected but continued on at around fifteen
miles an hour. One account said that William attempted to jump off
but there was another man standing on the step below him who was
also intending to jump off. The man, whose name was Peter Weitz, a
painter for the A. A. Cooper Wagon Company, apparently made a motion
to jump off but did not jump. William, attempting to follow Weitz
did jump and he struck Weitz pushing him onto his hands and knees on
the platform. Unfortunately William was thrown back onto the step of
the car and he fell under the wheel of the rail car which passed
diagonally over his left lung and shoulder pretty much severing his
arm. As is usually the case in horrific accidents of this kind eye
witness accounts vary widely and are often conflicting. Weitz said
“he was unaware of having come in contact with the deceased in any
manner, although he is not positive that he did not do so.” He also
claimed he did not see any car wheels pass over William and “is
inclined to believe that he was crushed between the projecting oil
boxes of the trucks and the platform.” Other witnesses said that
Weitz was on the rear platform of one car and William was on the
front platform of the next car when both jumped off at almost the
same time. They claim William came in “violent” contact with Weitz
causing him to fall off the platform and under the wheels of the
train.
Sullivan fell face down alongside the tracks
and his left arm fell over the rail. It was run over and “smashed by
the fore wheel with a cracking sound which was distinctly heard by
the terrorized bystanders. In an effort to escape, he raised himself
on his right arm, thereby inclining his body toward the rail. He was
in this position when his left shoulder came in contact with the
hind wheels of the ladies coach which ran over the left side of his
body as did six wheels of the sleeping car.”
The Herald described his injuries in
grisly detail. “Several bystanders hastened to convey Mr. Sullivan
from the track to the interior of the supply shop. He was bleeding
profusely from a wound in his left side above the heart, evidently
made by some sharp instrument which had pierced his left lung. He
was unconscious and uttered no sound save an occasional moan.” A
priest and a doctor were summoned and upon examining the wounds
found “an opening the breadth of a hand between the left arm and
shoulder. The latter was crushed as were also the left ribs and the
entire framework of the left side. The entrails were forced through
the flesh of the abdomen and were bursted. There was a large opening
in the left hip joint. The left leg was broke in several places and
the right one at the ankle. There were two slight bruises on the
face, one on the forehead and the other on the nose, and a bruise
under the chin. He breathed for about thirty minutes after being
removed from the rail.”
It would be hard to imagine his mother’s grief
when William’s body was brought to her house. His sister, Mary
Langdon was the only sibling in town at the time of the accident.
His brother, James, who traveled for A. W. Sears was in Cascade and
his sister, Lizzie was visiting in St. Louis. His other sister was
in Chicago. One of the pallbearers at William’s funeral was his
cousin, Dan Sullivan from Bankston.
Not surprisingly, when a coroner’s jury was
convened the railroad was exonerated from all blame.
A happy occasion for the Sullivan family in
Dubuque occurred on October 12, 1887 when Elizabeth’s middle child
thirty-one year old Lizzie Sullivan married Phillip Ryder. The
wedding took place at seven in the morning at the Cathedral,
preceded by a breakfast at her mother’s home on Fifth and Bluff.
Bishop Hennessy attended the breakfast, along with many other
prominent people and Father Burke performed the ceremony. Ryder, who
along with his brother ran a wholesale grocery business, had been a
member of the city council. He presented his new bride with a set of
diamonds valued at $500 or about $10,000 in today’s value. They took
the noon train for New York and “other Eastern points, and on their
return will occupy their residence on Thirteenth Street, between
Main and Iowa.”
Elizabeth’s last surviving son thirty-seven
year old James, married twenty-seven year old Hope Drepperd Lagen on
June 2, 1894 at five o’clock in St. Raphael’s Cathedral. It was the
second time the Lagen and Sullivan families were united in marriage.
A little over a quarter century earlier Hope’s uncle John Lagen had
married James’ cousin, Johanna Sullivan of Bankston. The Times
reported “the largest and prettiest marriage ceremony in Catholic
circles that has been celebrated in this city for some years was
solemnized yesterday in a manner so impressive that the happy event
will long linger in the memories of those who witnessed the uniting
for life of two of Dubuque’s most well known and worthy young people
who have lived and grown up from childhood in this community.” In
almost two full columns the paper described the ceremony and the
participants including all the flowers and the dresses that they
wore. Afterward a reception was held for the relatives only at the
Lagen home at 390 Bluff. Hope’s father was a “well known liveryman.”
Her husband was “one of Dubuque’s energetic and prosperous young
business men, being engaged in the retail boot and shoe trade.”
The newlyweds “were the recipients of a
magnificent array of beautiful and costly gifts.” The groom’s gift
to his bride were “diamond ornaments” that were worn on her wedding
gown. The bride’s mother, mother-in-law, and two married
sister-in-laws all wore black silk dresses, and James’s unmarried
sister, Fannie wore “a pretty gown of white Swiss with trimmings of
white satin ribbons.”
After the reception the couple “departed on the
(Illinois) Central…on a bridal trip east and will take in the
Thousand Islands, Montreal, Saratoga, Lake Champaign, the Hudson,
New York City, Philadelphia and Washington.
Among the guests mentioned in the article was
“Miss Maggie Sullivan of Bankston.”
Six months later, Elizabeth’s thirty-six year
old daughter Fannie died on January 25, 1895 at the home of her
mother after a one-week illness. And almost eighteen months after
that on July 12, 1896, the matriarch of the family Elizabeth Newman
Sullivan passed away. She had been in ill health for several years
but continued to see her friends until she became bedridden. A few
months before her death the old house she had lived in for over
fifty years at 32 W 5th was demolished and a new
structure was in the process of being built when she died. She had
buried her husband thirty years earlier and had also buried five of
her eight children.
The paper referred to her financial struggle
after her husband’s death “Mrs. Sullivan was a woman of remarkable
business ability. Left with a large family on her hands she managed
her affairs in a way that excited the admiration of a number of
Dubuque’s well known financiers who knew the trying position she was
in and, coupled with her ability as a woman of rare business
qualifications, was executive ability of a high order. She bravely
mounted all obstacles in her path.”
Only twelve years after her marriage to Phillip
Ryder, Lizzie (Sullivan) died at age 43 on March 20, 1899. She left
two daughters: Isabelle and Marion aged 8 and 10. She died at the
new house her mother built house on 5th St.after a year
of suffering from some unspecified disease. Neither of her daughters
ever married. Isabelle graduated from Clarke College obtained her
masters from the University of Wisconsin and a Phd from the
University of Chicago. She and her sister owned and operated Ryder
Realtor Co. for many years. She died in New York City two days after
Christmas in 1956 and her sister, Marion died in Dubuque at age 89.
James M. Sullivan
1857 - 1838 |
|
|
|
The last surviving child of the John D. and
Elizabeth Sullivan family, James M. died on August 3, 1939 at the
home of his daughter in Madison, Wisconsin
|
|
|
Parents Came Here in 1836
Mr. Sullivan was born in Dubuque Sept. 6,
1857, a son of John D. and Elizabeth Newman Sullivan. His
parents had come to Dubuque in 1836, four years after the
first permanent settlement. His father was and architect and
designed many of Dubuque's earliest building, among them the
first Courthouse which stood on the site of the present county
building. This was built in 1839.
One of Mr. James M. Sullivan's uncles was
William Newman, another of the more prominent of Dubuque's
earliest settlers, whose log cabin home now stands in Eagle
Point Park, having been moved there many years ago from its
original location at the northwest corner of Second and Locust
streets.
Baptized by Bishop Loras
Mr. Sullivan was a graduate and one of
the first pupils of the present Loras College, then known as
St. Joseph's College. His earlier education was received at
the Cathedral parish school. He was a lifelong member of the
Cathedral Parish and was baptized by the Right Rev. Mathias
Loras, DD, first Bishop of Dubuque. |
|
|
At the end of the summer of the following year,
a neighbor, Laura Knowlton wrote a letter to a family member in
western New York in which she complained “the weather keeps so
unpleasant it rains every other day (and) one of the widow John
Sullivan’s children had an attack of Cholera. She was very sick
(and) I took care of her a week. Now she is well.” Mrs. Knowlton,
also a widow, who’s husband had been a carriage dealer and probably
well acquainted with William Newman, went on to say that Elizabeth’s
brother-in-law “Mr. J. P. Quigley has been very sick with typhoid
fever (but) is now much better.”
John D. Sullivan had owned some
rental property on the southwest corner of Sixth and Main for many
years. A little before midnight on the first of November 1870 a fire
was discovered running up the rear of the frame building John had
left to his wife, Elizabeth. It was across the street from the
Herald and someone working there noticed the fire and aroused
all the occupants of the building. A westerly wind pushed the flames
and the building was soon engulfed and the fire spread to the
adjoining structure.
Her loss was estimated at $3000 of which only
$2000 was covered by insurance. Her tenants, a clothing store, a
saloon, an upholstery shop, millinery and a shoe store were mostly
covered by insurance. The fire reportedly started in an ash barrel
at the rear of the saloon.
|