Melvin Rudolph Turner
Melvin was born
on February 19, 1853, in Lincoln, Penobscot, Maine, the son of Luther Turner
and Anceline (Hawes) Turner. He lived
there until sometime in the 1870’s, when he “went west” to Colorado. Two of his brothers went around the same
time. In 1880, he was living in Rio La
Plata, La Plata, Colorado, single, working as a mail carrier. In 1900, he was living in Indian Creek, San
Juan, Utah, working as a farmer.
Later in life,
at age 50, he married Maggie Dresser [Gresser] (Margaret Rachel Rohwer
[Rohner]) on the 11th of July, 1901.
They had one son, Willard Howard Turner, born in Durango, La Plata, Colorado,
on October 18, 1903. They must have
separated, because in 1910, 1920, and 1930, he was living apart from her in
Paradox, Montrose, Colorado. In 1930, he
was living with his son’s wife’s parents.
He died on
September 6, 1932, in Pueblo, Pueblo, Colorado.
Unfortunately,
that is all the information I have on Melvin.
Mostly I have followed his trail in census records. Sometime in
2009, I decided to track down my great-great grandfather’s descendants. The family had already been tracked back to
him, but I had NO information on any of his children except my great
grandmother Flora. Thanks to census
information, family pictures, letters, and other research I was able to fill in
Flora’s brothers and sisters, their children and grandchildren and a little
further in some cases. I was fairly
satisfied and left it at that. Most of
the family was back in Main and Massachusetts or Utah, and western Colorado.
In September of
this year, I took a road trip to Colorado for a high school reunion, and visited
friends and cousins along the way. My
first stop was in Fowler, (EASTERN) Colorado to visit my cousin. While there we went by the Fowler cemetery so
I could take pictures of the family gravestones. He showed me the gravestone of Melvin R
Turner, and told me that he had been down and out and died in Pueblo, Colorado,
and that the family had been located and they brought him to Fowler to bury him
near his sister Flora, and had provided a marker.
What?! My great-great uncle Melvin buried in
Fowler? Died in Pueblo, likely a
drunk? That didn’t make sense. He had been living in Utah and WESTERN
Colorado for his adult life! What was he
doing in Pueblo?
When I got
home, I did into a Google search for Melvin’s name. I found an article on the “Telluride Blanket”
which had a pamphlet online!
http://www.telluridemuseum.org/exhibits/
My great-great Uncle, Melvin Turner, FOUND the “Telluride Blanket”! The pamphlet also had quite a bit of information on Melvin, including the fact that he had been badly injured in a horseback riding accident in the early 1900’s. Evidently, he had received severe head injuries, and had been treated with opium.
http://www.telluridemuseum.org/exhibits/
My great-great Uncle, Melvin Turner, FOUND the “Telluride Blanket”! The pamphlet also had quite a bit of information on Melvin, including the fact that he had been badly injured in a horseback riding accident in the early 1900’s. Evidently, he had received severe head injuries, and had been treated with opium.
According to
the pamphlet about the Telluride Blanket, he’d been taken to a hospital in
Montrose shortly before his death. I still
don’t know how or why he ended up dying in Pueblo, but at least there is a
possible explanation for his appearing to be destitute and a drunkard.
There was a
page missing from the pamphlet, so I called the Telluride Museum the next day,
and they kindly sent me a full pdf of the pamphlet. They have, evidently, been looking for
relatives of Melvin for many years and came up empty. Until I called them and told them I’m
related, although very distantly.
I won’t be too
much help to them, but I do have some good quality pictures of Melvin, and
maybe I have enough research on some of the Utah family that they might have
something to go on to find closer relatives.
I have found a
short article about his death among my mother’s things. Evidently, he did visit his sister Flora
fairly often.
I wonder how
far reaching his discovery was in shaping some of her family’s future……Flora’s
daughter Ellen dabbled in unearthing Indian artifacts near her home in Nepesta. Ellen’s oldest son became a Park Ranger and
became the Superintendent at Mesa Verde.
Ellen’s oldest daughter married an avid archaeologist. Several of Ellen’s grandchildren collect
Indian pottery and other objects. Was
Melvin the inspiration for their interests?
I wasn’t too
far away from Telluride on my way home from Colorado. I wish I had known about this then so I could
have visited the museum and seen the blanket.
Good excuse to go back to Colorado sometime soon.
I have a newspaper clipping with a picture showing
Melvin and his brother Hiram as using river boats on the Colorado River at some
point in time, and I have found a letter from his sister Ella asking my
grandmother if she knows any more about the circumstances of his death.© Linda C Robinson 2016
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