At 94 years young, Mom is my hero for a lot of reasons. She's been doing genealogy since the 1970s and has done an amazing job of it and works on it almost every day. I love her stories and this is the one that really got me hooked on genealogy. Enjoy! DKW
Our Scamps and Scoundrels: The Counterfeiting Twins
By Virginia Williams Kelly.
(As seen in?The Old Pike Post, Genealogical Society of Allegany County, Maryland, Vol. 29, No. 3, September 2012, Cumberland Maryland.)
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Every family has their fair share of ancestor scallywags. Family history enthusiasts respond in various ways: a?few are ashamed as though their long-ago relative had anything much to do with their own reputations. Most enthusiastically embrace the inappropriate behavior as an interesting twist to the fabric of life. After all, we weren?t there and we don?t know all the facts and events. So let the legends of our scamps and scoundrels of long ago live on and enjoy a moment in the sun of our curiosity about them!On May 7, 1984, I copied the following episode from the Frostburg Mining Journal. It was on microfilm at Frostburg State University, Microfilm No. per an 4899 F75F7, 1890-1895. It tells the story of two House ancestors who got in a mite of trouble. My mother was Emma Whetstone Williams and the two subjects of this article were her cousins, Edward and Joseph House, twins born February 16, 1868. But it all turned out alright in the end. Read on and see how.
Constable Owen England arrested Joseph House on Monday as an accomplice of his brother Edward House who was arrested last Saturday on the charge of passing counterfeit? money. It is alleged that the bogus money was passed in Eckhart on May 23 and was in $1 coins made of block tin. The twins were given a hearing before U.S. Commissioner Henderson and Edward admitted having made 14 pieces of the bogus money, molded from an impression in plaster of Paris but said that Joseph did not know they were counterfeit, Both were committed for the action of the U.S. Grand Jury and taken to Baltimore Yesterday.
Monday morning Alexander Phillips and sheriff David Walker of Cumberland, Owen England of Frostburg, James Brady of Washington Mines, Samuel Logsdon and Mrs. Ann Logsdon both of Clarysville, Mrs. Schmeider and Miss Mary Schmeider of Eckhart left for Baltimore to appear before the U.S. Grand Jury, in the case of Edward and Joseph House charged with making and passing counterfeit money. They will have to make the trip again, probably in September to attend the trial.
Saturday 20 September 1890: (Edward Said He Did It!) The Baltimore Sun on Tuesday gives the following account of the trial of local interest.
Joseph House and Edward House of
The rest of the story
So, because Joseph was married, his brother, Edward, took the blame and did the time because he was a single man! You might be wondering what became of Edward Francis House after he served time in jail.He was released about 1891 and married Martha Edith Denison in 1892. The 1900 census finds him living in Frostburg,
By the 1910 census he is living in
Rev. House was the pastor of
On October 21, of that very same year tragedy struck the family and Rev. Edward Francis House and his wife were both critically injured in an automobile accident. They both died on October 21st.?
Source: http://nutsfromthefamilytree.blogspot.com/2013/02/black-sheep-sunday-counterfiting-twins.html
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