Sandy has pulled articles from either the Charleston Daily Mail or the Gazette which you may find interesting. There is a January 1974 article (with photo) about Belle Arbogast and her educational prowess. There is a 1972 write-up of the first Elk View Junior High Championship Track Team which included Barry Arbogast!
Verba Arbogast--with granddaughter Betsy Samples, appear in a March 1964 article about her many readings of the Bible. We wish that the copy from Newspapers.com was clearer.
Finally, an Arbogast from the 1930s who was something of an entrepreneur. (We know of no relation to him).
Curious about a family's ancestor during the Civil War, we were surprised to find that THREE of his sons had enlisted and fought in the Union Army from Charleston and/or Pendleton County, (now) West Virginia. George Washington Arbogast and his wife, Mary (Reed) were parents of ten children. Their teenage sons, Michael, Francis, and George Jr., served with the 7th Regiment, West Virginia Cavalry. Among the many splendid web sites researching this regiment's history is:
First, a page from the 1860 Federal Census showing the family of George and Mary "Arbagas" living in Clay County, Virginia, beginning on line 20.
Another record (see attached) reports these dates' events on a Michael Arbogast:
June 1862 (8th VA Infantry) Wounded at the Battle of Cross Keys on June 8. Absent sick, with leave.
July 1862 - Absent sick at Cumberland Hospital
Dec. 1862 - Absent since Dec. 5.
July 1863 - July 24, Cherry Run. Deserted before the Enemy.
A later record dated January 26, 1865 shows:
Wheeling W Va. Pvt., Co. K, 7th Reg. West Virginia Cavalry, Remarks: Deserted at Cherry Run July 18, 1863.
This battle at Cherry Run was soon after Gettysburg. Two different records show two desertion dates--both in July 1863 at Cherry Run. I found this from Michael's commanding officer, Benjamin Kelley. My word, the sheer number of soldiers, horses, and gear moving through the countryside!
Cherry Run, Va., July 22, 1863—12.30 p.m.
TO: Major-General Meade:
I crossed the Potomac at this place with my force, about 6,000 strong—3,200 infantry, 2,500 cavalry, and three batteries—on the 15th and 16th instant, and occupied Hedgesville, Berkeley County, 7 miles west of Martinsburg. On Saturday and Sunday skirmished briskly with Hampton’s brigade near Martinsburg. On Monday, Hill’s and Ewell’s corps moved from Bunker Hill to Martinsburg, and a strong cavalry force was sent through Mill’s Gap into the Back Creek Valley to cut off my retreat. It therefore became necessary to fall back to this point, and recross the river.
I am ready to go forward again at any moment, and annoy and harass the flank and rear of the enemy; whenever I can do so without unnecessarily endangering my small command. Will you please keep me advised of your movements and whereabouts, so that I can act in concert with and subordinate to your movements?
B. F. Kelley,
Brigadier-General
I do not find young Michael on the 1870 Federal Census. He appears on the 1850 and 1860 rolls, but is hiding from me in later censuses. The 1860 census transcriptions spells his last name as "Arbagas" so evidently I'm not sufficiently creative in my use of keyword searches. I will continue to guess at how his name might have been misspelled. Or perhaps he died soon after the War? No pension record has been found for a Michael Arbogast. His whereabouts were also unknown to family historian/cousin, Chuck Eades. Did he seek his fortune in gold in California? Was he sent to Andersonville or another prison?
GEORGE, JR.: Young George had to obtain his Dad's consent to volunteer, and I think he lied about his age. Please see the images within this gallery.
On September 1, 2015 Ancestry.com added millions of pages of probate records from 50 U.S. states onto its database. Many of these documents were already on the free site at Familysearch.org, having been microfilmed from county courthouses years ago. The two companies have since partnered. Ancestry.com has added and WILL CONTINUE TO ADD (beautiful words!) more wills to its new database.
Why do probate records make a family historian sing out loud? "An inventory of the estate assets can reveal personal details about the deceased’s occupation and lifestyle," notes Ancestry.com. Names of family members are given in these records which some times differ from names recorded in a family's old Bible. Ah, ha! Children's names might appear--from earlier marriages now long forgotten. I love surprises. And my fav probate shocker was learning of a great-great's new wife preparing a new will for her husband to sign in his final hours. A will that left his two adult children only one dollar each. (The resulting Coffee family lawsuit to be shared later)
But first, in appreciation of the guy who pays my genealogy expenses, I submit this will from his fourth great-grandfather. Born in British America about 1762, 4xGreat-Grandfather is thought to have died in Circleville, Pendleton County, Virginia before April 1821. As you will see, he left his mark on this document on December 20, 1820.
Ancestry.com. West Virginia, Wills and Probate Records, 1724-1978 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.