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Elisha Chisolm Walden

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Elisha Chisolm Walden

Birth
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
Death
19 Oct 1909 (aged 37)
Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Plot
Garden LN, Section 113, Lot 236, Space 03.
Memorial ID
View Source
Bruce Morton Garver, the manager of this Memorial, is a great-great-great grandson of James Walden (1794-1853) who is a great uncle of Professor Elisha Chisolm Walden (1871-1909) who is a second cousin to Bruce's great-grandfather George Reynolds Morton (1846-1920). On August 9, 2022, Bruce composed the following first draft of a "bio" of his second cousin-three- times-removed, Prof. Elisha Chisolm Walden, and solicits suggestions for its improvement.
* * * * *
BIRTH & PARENTS: Elisha Chisolm Walden (1871–1909) was born on November 24, 1871, at Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. At the time of Leonard's birth, the Rev. John Morgan Walden was serving as the senior minister of a congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, in metropolitan Cincinnati, Ohio. John Morgen and Martha (Young) Walden named the fourth-born of their five children Elisha Chisolm Walden after his paternal uncle Elisha C. Walden (1800-1876).
* * * * *
ELISHA CHISOLM WALDEN's FOUR SIBLINGS are described in the order of their birth.
(1) Leonard Walden was born on November 24, 1871, at Columbiana County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. At the time of Leonard's birth, the Rev. John Morgan Walden was serving as the senior minister of a congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, at Lynchburg in Columbiana County, Ohio. Of John Morgen and Martha (Young) Walden's five children, Leonard was the first to be born. Durng June 1881, Leonard Walden graduated with an undergraduate liberal arts degree at Ohio Weseyan University in Delaware, Ohio. In 1883, he received an M.D. degree from the Ohio Medical College. For three decades thereafter, Dr. Leonard Walden, M. D., successfully practiced medicine n the suburban Bond Hill area of Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio. During the year 1899, Dr. Leonard Walden completed post-graduate medical studies at the University of Berlin in the German Empire. His November 26, 1898, Application for a U. S. Passport is depicted in the second photograph attached to this Memorial. That Application provides documentary evidence for many important events in his life including his post-graduate study of medicine as the University of Berllin in the German Empire. Others equally noteworthy are mentioned in Dr. Leonard Walden's obituary published by the Dayton, Ohio, "Daily News" on December 30, 1931, an obituary whose text may be viewed in the fourth photograph attached to this Memorial. According to this obituary, his collection of postal stamps was considered to be "one of finest" such "collections in Dayton, Ohio." Dr. Leonard Walden never wed. After he retired, circa 1913, from the practice of medicine in the Bond Hill neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio, he moved to nearby Dayton, seat of Montgomery County, Ohio, in order to reside close to his sister, Matilda (Walden) Royal (1864–1935), her husband, the Rev. Stanley Olin Royal, (1851-1914), who resided at 835 North Broadway in Dayton with two of their daughters., Mary and Marguerite. A third daughter, Martha E. Royal ( 1887–1891), had died in childhood.
* * * * *
(2) Mary Walden (Bowman, 1862-1926) was born on July 11, 1862, at Winterset, seat of Madison County, Iowa. During the year 1884, Mary Walden wed Pennsylvania-born Samuel Brittain Bowman (1856–1939), an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, and the eighth-born of the eleven children of Methodist Episcopal Bishop Thomas Bowman (1817-1914) and Matilda (Hartman) Bowman (1821-1879), both of whom had been born in Pennsylvania. Mary (Walden) Bowman and Samuel Brittain Bowman raised no children. Throughout forty-two years of marriage, the couple devoted their adult lives to the service of successive local congregations within the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, Samuel as a local church pastor and Mary as the unsalaried hard-working pastor's wife.
Mary and Samuel died respectively in 1926 and 1939 at Denver, capitol city of Colorado, and are interred on the Walden family plot at Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery beside the graves of Mary (Walden) Bowman's parents. her four siblings, her three nieces, her husband, and her brother-in-law, Stanley Olin Royal.
* * * * *
(3) Matilda Walden (Royal, 1864-1935) was born in Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio, and was named after her paternal grandmother, Matilda (Young) Walden (1805-1833). Circa 1884, Matilda wed the Reverend Stanley Olin Royal (1851-1914) , a Methodist Episcopal Church, North, pastor with.whom she raised three daughters: Mary Goode Royal (1885–1971), Martha E. Royal (1887–1891), and Elizabeth Bonar Walden (1876–1900), none of whom ever wed.
* * * * *
(5) Elizabeth Bonar "Bess" Walden (1876–1900) was born near Cincinnati at Madisonville in Hamilton County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. John Morgan Walden & Martha (Young) Walden named the youngest of their five children, Elizabeth "Bess" Bonar Walden, after her maternal grandmother, Sarah Elizabeth (Bonar) Young (1799–1847). Elizabeth enjoyed the priveleges of an upper-middle class upbringing that included a secondary education and travel to Europe, as is indicated on her 1898 U.S. Passport attached to this Memorial as its second captioned photograph. Elizabeth Bonar "Bessie" Walden died at the age of twenty-four in Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 17, 1900, without having ever wed.
* * * * *
ELISHA CHISOLM WALDEN's ACADEMIC CAREER ENDED IN HIS DEATH AT AGE 37: Elisha Chisolm Walden became a professor of science at the University of Chattanooga, seat if Hamilton County, Tennessee. Elisha's professorial career, so full of promise, ended there on October 19, 1909, at the age of thirty-seven without hia having ever been married. Several days later, Bishop John Morgan Walden delivered his son Elisha's funeral oration at Cincinnati's Central Union Station before a large audience of family members and friends who had assembled there to meet the "Southern Railway" train that brought Elisha's body home to Cincinnati. This assembly included many members of the Freedman's Aid Society, an organization that the Rev. John Morgan Walden had helped to establish in 1866 and on whose Board of Directors he would serve for the rest of his life. John Morgan & Martha (Young) Walden's sons Leonard & Elisha, daughters Elizabeth "Bess" Bonar Walden and Matilda (Walden) Royal, and Matilda's husband, the Reverend Stanley Olin Royal, had also become members and benefactors of the Freedman's Aid Society which helped support Black schools and churches in all American states subject to federal Reconstruction from 1867 to 1877 and thereafter during nine decades of harshly discriminatory "Jim Crow" laws enforced by individual states of the American South until the enactment of the national Civil Rights Act of 1965.
* * * * *
Atop the enormous grave monument to John Morgan & Martha (Young) Walden and all five of their children stands a sculpted granite Bible opened to two pages of which the first page cites FIRST CORINTHIANS, XV, 57: "But thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through Our Lord Jesus Christ" (over sin and death). The second page cites GALATIANS, VI, 14: "But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world." Presumably Bishop John Morgan Walden selected these citations from the King James Version of the New Testament. To the first citation, Bruce Garver has added (within parentheses) four words which summarize the preceding two verses -- 55 & 56 -- from FIRST CORINTHIANS, XV. All evidence suggests that Bishop John Morgan Walden selected these passages from Scripture and helped to design this Walden & Royal family grave monument.
* * * * *
Bruce Morton Garver thanks FAG member "Pam" for having on July 29, 2022, transferred to him the management of this Memorial created by "Auto-Graver".
* * * * *
The following obituary of Elisha Chisolm Walden was published on October 21, 1909, by the "Times Union" of Jacksonville, Florida This obituary is among those obtained from indexed cards at the East Stake Family History Center in Jacksonville, Florida, by- Regina Rigney Deters - [email protected]
"Surrounded by members of the Freedman's Aid Society, and a host of other sympathetic friends, Bishop John M. Walden, of the Methodist Episcopal church, held a brief funeral service over the body of his son, Prof. Elisha Walden, in the Central Union railroad station, on its arrival here from Chattanooga, Tenn., today.
"The bishop's son, who was professor of science in the University of Chattanooga, Tenn., died Tuesday morning immediately after an operation for intestinal trouble, and the body was brought North for burial. When it arrived today the members of the Freedman's Aid Society and friends met the train, and the body was taken to the waiting room, where the bishop conducted services, and told of the life work of his son.
"At the conclusion of the services the body was removed to a vault in Spring Grove cemetery. It was not intended to hold the services in the depot, but this was decided on when the bishop was met at the train by sympathetic friends on his return from the South with the body".
* * * * *
Bruce Morton Garver, the manager of this Memorial, is a great-great-great grandson of James Walden (1794-1853) who is a great uncle of Professor Elisha Chisolm Walden (1871-1909) who is a second cousin to Bruce's great-grandfather George Reynolds Morton (1846-1920). On August 9, 2022, Bruce composed the following first draft of a "bio" of his second cousin-three- times-removed, Prof. Elisha Chisolm Walden, and solicits suggestions for its improvement.
* * * * *
BIRTH & PARENTS: Elisha Chisolm Walden (1871–1909) was born on November 24, 1871, at Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. At the time of Leonard's birth, the Rev. John Morgan Walden was serving as the senior minister of a congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, in metropolitan Cincinnati, Ohio. John Morgen and Martha (Young) Walden named the fourth-born of their five children Elisha Chisolm Walden after his paternal uncle Elisha C. Walden (1800-1876).
* * * * *
ELISHA CHISOLM WALDEN's FOUR SIBLINGS are described in the order of their birth.
(1) Leonard Walden was born on November 24, 1871, at Columbiana County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. At the time of Leonard's birth, the Rev. John Morgan Walden was serving as the senior minister of a congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, at Lynchburg in Columbiana County, Ohio. Of John Morgen and Martha (Young) Walden's five children, Leonard was the first to be born. Durng June 1881, Leonard Walden graduated with an undergraduate liberal arts degree at Ohio Weseyan University in Delaware, Ohio. In 1883, he received an M.D. degree from the Ohio Medical College. For three decades thereafter, Dr. Leonard Walden, M. D., successfully practiced medicine n the suburban Bond Hill area of Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio. During the year 1899, Dr. Leonard Walden completed post-graduate medical studies at the University of Berlin in the German Empire. His November 26, 1898, Application for a U. S. Passport is depicted in the second photograph attached to this Memorial. That Application provides documentary evidence for many important events in his life including his post-graduate study of medicine as the University of Berllin in the German Empire. Others equally noteworthy are mentioned in Dr. Leonard Walden's obituary published by the Dayton, Ohio, "Daily News" on December 30, 1931, an obituary whose text may be viewed in the fourth photograph attached to this Memorial. According to this obituary, his collection of postal stamps was considered to be "one of finest" such "collections in Dayton, Ohio." Dr. Leonard Walden never wed. After he retired, circa 1913, from the practice of medicine in the Bond Hill neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio, he moved to nearby Dayton, seat of Montgomery County, Ohio, in order to reside close to his sister, Matilda (Walden) Royal (1864–1935), her husband, the Rev. Stanley Olin Royal, (1851-1914), who resided at 835 North Broadway in Dayton with two of their daughters., Mary and Marguerite. A third daughter, Martha E. Royal ( 1887–1891), had died in childhood.
* * * * *
(2) Mary Walden (Bowman, 1862-1926) was born on July 11, 1862, at Winterset, seat of Madison County, Iowa. During the year 1884, Mary Walden wed Pennsylvania-born Samuel Brittain Bowman (1856–1939), an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, and the eighth-born of the eleven children of Methodist Episcopal Bishop Thomas Bowman (1817-1914) and Matilda (Hartman) Bowman (1821-1879), both of whom had been born in Pennsylvania. Mary (Walden) Bowman and Samuel Brittain Bowman raised no children. Throughout forty-two years of marriage, the couple devoted their adult lives to the service of successive local congregations within the Methodist Episcopal Church, North, Samuel as a local church pastor and Mary as the unsalaried hard-working pastor's wife.
Mary and Samuel died respectively in 1926 and 1939 at Denver, capitol city of Colorado, and are interred on the Walden family plot at Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery beside the graves of Mary (Walden) Bowman's parents. her four siblings, her three nieces, her husband, and her brother-in-law, Stanley Olin Royal.
* * * * *
(3) Matilda Walden (Royal, 1864-1935) was born in Cincinnati, seat of Hamilton County, Ohio, and was named after her paternal grandmother, Matilda (Young) Walden (1805-1833). Circa 1884, Matilda wed the Reverend Stanley Olin Royal (1851-1914) , a Methodist Episcopal Church, North, pastor with.whom she raised three daughters: Mary Goode Royal (1885–1971), Martha E. Royal (1887–1891), and Elizabeth Bonar Walden (1876–1900), none of whom ever wed.
* * * * *
(5) Elizabeth Bonar "Bess" Walden (1876–1900) was born near Cincinnati at Madisonville in Hamilton County, Ohio, to the Reverend John Morgan Walden (1831-1914) and Martha (Young) Walden (1835-1925) who had been born respectively in Warren County, Ohio, and Knox County, Ohio. John Morgan Walden & Martha (Young) Walden named the youngest of their five children, Elizabeth "Bess" Bonar Walden, after her maternal grandmother, Sarah Elizabeth (Bonar) Young (1799–1847). Elizabeth enjoyed the priveleges of an upper-middle class upbringing that included a secondary education and travel to Europe, as is indicated on her 1898 U.S. Passport attached to this Memorial as its second captioned photograph. Elizabeth Bonar "Bessie" Walden died at the age of twenty-four in Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 17, 1900, without having ever wed.
* * * * *
ELISHA CHISOLM WALDEN's ACADEMIC CAREER ENDED IN HIS DEATH AT AGE 37: Elisha Chisolm Walden became a professor of science at the University of Chattanooga, seat if Hamilton County, Tennessee. Elisha's professorial career, so full of promise, ended there on October 19, 1909, at the age of thirty-seven without hia having ever been married. Several days later, Bishop John Morgan Walden delivered his son Elisha's funeral oration at Cincinnati's Central Union Station before a large audience of family members and friends who had assembled there to meet the "Southern Railway" train that brought Elisha's body home to Cincinnati. This assembly included many members of the Freedman's Aid Society, an organization that the Rev. John Morgan Walden had helped to establish in 1866 and on whose Board of Directors he would serve for the rest of his life. John Morgan & Martha (Young) Walden's sons Leonard & Elisha, daughters Elizabeth "Bess" Bonar Walden and Matilda (Walden) Royal, and Matilda's husband, the Reverend Stanley Olin Royal, had also become members and benefactors of the Freedman's Aid Society which helped support Black schools and churches in all American states subject to federal Reconstruction from 1867 to 1877 and thereafter during nine decades of harshly discriminatory "Jim Crow" laws enforced by individual states of the American South until the enactment of the national Civil Rights Act of 1965.
* * * * *
Atop the enormous grave monument to John Morgan & Martha (Young) Walden and all five of their children stands a sculpted granite Bible opened to two pages of which the first page cites FIRST CORINTHIANS, XV, 57: "But thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through Our Lord Jesus Christ" (over sin and death). The second page cites GALATIANS, VI, 14: "But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world." Presumably Bishop John Morgan Walden selected these citations from the King James Version of the New Testament. To the first citation, Bruce Garver has added (within parentheses) four words which summarize the preceding two verses -- 55 & 56 -- from FIRST CORINTHIANS, XV. All evidence suggests that Bishop John Morgan Walden selected these passages from Scripture and helped to design this Walden & Royal family grave monument.
* * * * *
Bruce Morton Garver thanks FAG member "Pam" for having on July 29, 2022, transferred to him the management of this Memorial created by "Auto-Graver".
* * * * *
The following obituary of Elisha Chisolm Walden was published on October 21, 1909, by the "Times Union" of Jacksonville, Florida This obituary is among those obtained from indexed cards at the East Stake Family History Center in Jacksonville, Florida, by- Regina Rigney Deters - [email protected]
"Surrounded by members of the Freedman's Aid Society, and a host of other sympathetic friends, Bishop John M. Walden, of the Methodist Episcopal church, held a brief funeral service over the body of his son, Prof. Elisha Walden, in the Central Union railroad station, on its arrival here from Chattanooga, Tenn., today.
"The bishop's son, who was professor of science in the University of Chattanooga, Tenn., died Tuesday morning immediately after an operation for intestinal trouble, and the body was brought North for burial. When it arrived today the members of the Freedman's Aid Society and friends met the train, and the body was taken to the waiting room, where the bishop conducted services, and told of the life work of his son.
"At the conclusion of the services the body was removed to a vault in Spring Grove cemetery. It was not intended to hold the services in the depot, but this was decided on when the bishop was met at the train by sympathetic friends on his return from the South with the body".
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Gravesite Details

Springgrove.org/=78633.tif.pdf



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