ELIZABETH CAROLINE DOBBINS WINTON
24 January 1831 - 27 January 1922
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In the Civil War Veteran Widow's Pension Files there is a letter that Elizabeth C. Winton sent to Washington DC in 1898 after she heard the news of her husband's death in an old Soldier's home in Leavenworth. She appeals for assistance as the widow of John R. Winton, a Civil War veteran.
….Now I will tell you something of the former part of
our lives. John R. Winton and I were
married at a hotel in Lawrence , Kansas on the 26th day of October in 1857 by a
Camalite [sic] minister, and we lived at what was then Prairie City ,
now called Media, Douglas County, Kansas until about 1863 in the spring. We then went to Dayton , KY
where we lived until the fall of 1881, when John R. Winton came home in July
that year with a very loathsome case of gonorrhea. In all those years we had had four children,
two girls in Kansas and two boys in Kentucky .
Now in 1881 we just had one daughter living
about 14 years old. She was already very
sickly so I was compelled to leave him.
I stayed in Dayton till in December 1881 then came here to Las Animas
[Colorado] to my brother [James Sellers Dobbins] and have been right here ever
since. John wandered about from one
[Veterans] Home to another, up in Wisconsin ,
at Leavenworth , and Dayton , Ohio ,
and finally wanted to come back to me.
He said he was well and wanted to come back. I had not applied for a divorce but heard
that he had, but he denied ever getting a divorce, but I said I would not live
with him unless he married me again.
So you see he came here to my home that I
had earned all myself and had three hundred and ninety eight dollars laid by beside
taking care of my daughter and making the living for her. She died in 1885, and now my money is all
gone and I have broke myself down waiting on him for he has been sick nearly
ever since he had come here. I have been
an invalid ever since last May, am scarcely able to cook a bite for
myself. Can you do anything ….? Mrs. E. C. Winton
There IS a record of a second marriage to him in the Bent County, Colorado Courthouse, and she did receive a Widow's pension.
Her obituary provides most of what I know about her life. It says she "was one of the pioneer residents of 1882...accompanied by her daughter, Alvira, who later passed away. She opened a boarding house shortly after coming to the city and conducted it for some time, after which she followed dressmaking as long as she was able to do this work. She was a faithful member of the First Presbyterian Church in Las Animas, Colorado."
She was my dad's "Auntie Winton."
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