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CHIEF: Alastair Ivor Gilbert Boyd 7th Baron Kilmarnock |
Richard G. and Jerri Lynn Boyd 568 W. Friedrich Street Rogers City, Mich. 49779
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Orsemus Bronson Boyd / Frances Mullen New York by Mrs. Orsemus Bronson Boyd (Frances Anne Mullen Boyd) New York, J. Selwin Tait and Sons, 1894
Photo courtesy Charles R. Novak ![]()
Orsemus B. and Frances (Mullen) Boyd (original chalk
drawing of Frances Boyd in possession of Jeffrey Howard Boyd of Boonton,
New Jersey)
Orsemus Boyd was unjustly accused of theft while at West Point and ostracized by fellow cadets for years until he was exonerated by the admission of guilt of a fellow cadet named JOHN JOSEPH CASEY who committed the deed. On his sick-bed, in a delirium, Casey confessed to the crime of planting the evidence which convicted Boyd. Casey died less than a year later by a bullet from a gun of one of his own men. His confession was made to a fellow Cadet named Hamilton and Hamilton didn't tell anyone about it for several years. Orsemus graduated in 1867 and was appointed a second lieutenant in the Eighth Cavalry. He was promoted to 1st Lieutenant in 1868 and remained in that rank for fourteen years, receiving appointment as Captain in 1882. After a brief illness while on campaign against Geromino, he died at a military camp near Grafton, New Mexico on July 23, 1885, at the age of forty-one. "Immediately after graduation from West Point in 1867, Orsemus B. BOYD married Frances Anne MULLEN, a woman who would prove his equal in stamina and courage for eighteen years of army life in the West. She accompanied him on bruising and treacherous journeys across the Sierra Nevada and Mojave Desert to live in some of the most remote outposts the army saw fit to garrison: Camp Halleck in Nevada, Camp Date Creek in Arizona, Fort Stanton, Fort Union and Fort Bayard in New Mexico and Fort Clark in Texas. Her home in Nevada was a two-room tent with a barley sack carpet. The better part of social life in Fort Clark was the exchange of grievances. They eventually had three children: Mabel, James, and Henry Boyd. "Intensely proud of her husband, Mrs. Boyd endured much for his sake: severe heat and cold, drudgery, a poor and monotonous diet, frustration, disappointment, malaria and filth. By the time she reached Texas she had become so accustom- ed to making much out of little that she could prepare custards and other dainties in a tent stove. "Her depictions of army life, of the landscapes of the Southwest, and of rough western travel are exceptional, but no less so is her portrait of herself as the steadfastly loyal wife of an unjustly dishonored officer. Her rage and bitterness at their treatment by the army were gradually tempered by her affection and respect for other army wives, her own sense of duty, and her deep love for the sky, land, and rivers of the Southwest." *He had served in the Civil war along with his father Henry Boyd and his older brother Amos Boyd, who was killed in action. There is a reprint available by University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1982. Bison Press reprint of original edition of 1894). 370 pages. BOYD, FRANCES ANNE MULLEN (1848-1926). Frances (Fannie) Boyd, writer, was born in New York City on February 14, 1848. Her father owned a bakery there, and the family was well-to-do. Her mother died when she was quite young, and her father remarried. Frances married Lt. Orsemus Bronson Boyd on October 9, 1867, in New York City. For the next eighteen years she followed her officer-husband, a graduate of West Point, from one duty station to another, making a home for themselves and, eventually, their three children, at frontier posts in Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Boyd's military career spanned the post- Civil War Indian wars, years when travel was dangerous and living conditions primitive. In December 1875 Mrs. Boyd and their daughter and son accompanied Lieutenant Boyd to a new assignment at Fort Clark, Texas. The post, located forty miles from the Rio Grande near the site of present-day Brackettville, guarded the San Antonio-El Paso road. For six months in 1879-80 the Boyds lived at Fort Duncan, a small garrison at Eagle Pass, where troops patrolled the international boundary. After two of the children were stricken with malaria in 1881, Frances Boyd took them all back to New York. The family remained separated while Boyd served at various stations. In 1885 Frances returned to Fort Clark, her husband's current post. Boyd was soon ordered to New Mexico, where he died, on July 23, 1885. Left a widow at age thirty-seven, Frances Boyd took up residence in Washington, D.C., where she had social connections, and later lived in New York City. Her descendants remember that she traveled extensively in Europe. Her Cavalry Life in Tent and Field, a tribute to her husband that describes her experiences in the West as an officer's wife, was published in 1894. It is considered one of the finest of the genre. Early in the new century, perhaps in 1908, she bought a house and land in Boonton, New Jersey, where she lived for the rest of her life. She died in Elizabeth, New Jersey, on May 2, 1926. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Orsemus B. Boyd File, United States Military Academy Library, West Point, New York. Veterans Administration, Pension Application File, National Archives, Washington. 1967 Newspaper article on Orsemus Boyd New data on this line.......... From: Charles Novak
CapPeleg at aol.com Hello, Just stumbled across your listing on Orsemus Boyd. I am the ggggrandson of Orsemus Boyd. I have some of his personal papers and other documents. Is this something that would interest you? Charles R. Novak Hello, I viewed some of your information; very impressive. I just recently ordered the Springfield, MA vital records. I ordered them for a different family line, but will look for Boyds in these records. Any request? I also have more detailed information about Orsemus Boyd's ancestors. I'm not sure if Amos Boyds wife was Celesta Steele. I have some records that state her as Celesta Adams. A few years ago I was in contact with an individual descendant from Reuben Boyd and Rebecca Bond. He sent me alot of information. Interested? Charles R. Novak File: Boyd.doc
(66048 bytes) Dr. Mr. Boyd, I am attaching to this note the file I have on the Boyds. Its what I have written up on them, but not everything I have. Years ago I was in contact with Arlo Thomas a descendant of Reuben Boyd. His address is the following: Arlo Thomas Here is a brief listing
of what he gave me. Reuben Maton Boyd Rebecca Bond Children: Electa 30 Sept
1814 m. Orson Bartlett I'll be back
shortly with more File: Obboyd1.tif
(101846 bytes) Mr. Boyd, There are other descendants in Boonton, New Jersey. One, Jeffrey Howard Boyd has the original chalk drawling of Frances Mullen Boyd. This is the one you have on your website. The other Boyd person I've been in contact with is Mary
Brewer MBrewer655
at Aol.com She is descendant from Lavelle Henry Boyd, Orsemus Boyds half brother. Unfortunately not much Boyd stuff survived in my family. I do have some of Orsemus Boyds personal papers including a letter written about the scandal and his promotion to Captain and the certificate. Charles Novak CapPeleg at aol.com Subj: Boyd's File:
WMBOYD.WRI (63872 bytes) Hi Richard, Mary Brewer MBrewer655at Aol.com NOTE: Use this data as a finding tool, just as you would any other secondary source. When you find the name of an ancestor listed, confirm the facts in original sources.
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