The Last Will and Testament of Bridget Conley Lowry (1825-1904)

Probate Court-August 6th 1904
Estate of Bridget Lowry
Deceased

Be it remembered that heretofore to wit: August 6th 1904 came Michael Lowry Jr. and filed in the probate court of Columbiana County, Ohio. The last will and testament of Bridget Lowry, deceased, together with an application to admit the same to probate and a waiver of notice, which will, application and waiver are as follows, to wit:

In the name of the Beloved Father of all. Amen: I, Bridget Lowry of the City of Leetonia, Columbiana County, Ohio, being of sound mind and memory, do make, publish, and declare this to be my last will and testament.

First: My wish is that all my just debts and funeral expenses be paid as soon as after my death as possible.

Second: I give and bequeathe to my beloved son Michael Lowry a life interest in and to the following described property: situated in the village of Leetonia, County of Columbiana, Ohio and known as being North end of [Grancel] East part of lot No. 725 (New number) in the village of Leetonia, Ohio, and which is of a depth of Eighty (80) feet from North boundary of said lot No. 725 in said Village of Leetonia, Ohio. also a life interest in the following described piece of property situated in the Village of Leetonia in the County of Columbiana in the State of Ohio, being known as Lot No. 722 [ed: 712?] as n ew numbered in the town plat of Leetonia formerly known as sub lot No. 15 in lot No. 11 in said village. And after the death of the said Michael Lowry, I give and bequeathe to the said children of Michael Lowry, to wit Maggie Lowry, Anastasia Lowry, Edward Lowry, Charles Lowry, and Raymond Lowry, both of the above described pieces of property, each to take share and share alike.

Third: I give and bequeathe to my beloved husband, Michael Lowry, a life interest in and to the following described property, situated in the township of Salem, County of Columbiana and state of Ohio, and known as being lots numbers 22,23 in John Clapsaddles second addition to Leetonia (New Nos. 934 and 935) and after the death of my husband, I give and bequeath the said property in fee simple to my beloved children Michael Lowry, Edward Lowry, Margaret Lowry, and Ann Connors each to take share and share alike.

Fourth: It is my wish that the following described property be sold after my death and the proceeds be devoted toward the payment of my funeral expenses, said property being described as follows. To wit: situated in Salem Township, Columbiana County, and State – and known as being lots No. 14 and 15 in John Betz’s second addition of lots in Leetonia and in order that said property may be sold with as little expense as possible. I authorize and impower my executor herein to make all necessary deeds and papers for said transfer.

Fifth: It is my wish and I hereby command my children and grandchildren to give to the pastor of St. Patricks Church of Leetonia, Ohio, the sum of twenty-five ($25.00) Dollars to be used for the purpose of celebrating Mass for the repose of my soul.

Sixth: I hereby appoint and nominate my beloved son, Michael Lowry executor of my last will and testament.

In testimony whereof I hereunto set my hand 1st day of August A.D. 1902.
Bridget X Lowry
Her Mark

Source:

Columbiana County, Ohio, Record of Wills, Last will and testament of Bridget Lowry, pg. 69, 6 Aug 1904; “Ohio, Probate Records, 1789-1996,” database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-27622-28206-36?cc=1992421&wc=S24N-3TP:266278701,268149001 : accessed 9 Mar 2025), Wills 1903-1905 vol 19-20, image 395 of 658.

John Puhl in the National Soldier’s Home

On a snowy Sunday, November 13, 1910, in Dayton, Ohio, John Puhl walked into the National Soldier’s Home. Essentially an early Veterans Affairs hospital, the home provided not just medical care but also short and long-term lodging to veterans, most of the Civil War. As the National Park Service describes, “Requirements for admission were that soldiers had been honorably discharged from military service and that they had contracted their disabilities during the war. Men admitted themselves to the home voluntarily and could request a discharge. The homes were run in a military fashion: men wore uniforms and were assigned to companies; bugles and cannons signaled daily schedules. The homes provided schools, churches, hospitals, and gardens thought to be therapeutic for the veterans.”

It’s likely that John signed in that Sunday for medical care. His wife Emma was still living in Pittsburgh, so it’s doubtful he initially intended to live there for the rest of his life, although he could have if he wished. The intake form states Emma lived at 2621 Linwood Avenue in Pittsburgh (until 1907 the independent city of Allegheny) in the Pleasant Valley neighborhood, at the time an enclave of German, Irish, Italian, and Polish families primarily living in single-family homes. The form fails to capture that they lived with eight others in the home of their daughter Ida and son-in-law (and Major League baseball player) Augustus Dundon, their three children, and Ida’s siblings Harry, Bertha, and Grace. John was a molder in an iron foundry, a typical job in Pittsburgh’s booming steel and iron industry.

John’s intake form states that he was 5 foot, 5 inches and had “effective hearing and vision, old injury to left hip with about 1/2 inch shortening of the leg accordingly, G.S.W left shoulder, cardiac hypertrophy, arteriosclerosis, dermal condition good.” While most of those ailments are representatives of the diet and medical condition of most men his age, the G.S.W. – gunshot wound – could represent a Civil War injury and the needed disability to be seen for care in the National Soldier’s Home.

John stayed in Dayton for seven months, checking himself out on June 25, 1910. According to available records, he did not return to Dayton for further treatment. He died in Pittsburgh in 1916.

Editor’s Note: John Puhl is the older brother of Margaret Puhl Pepperney (1849 – 1923). Margaret is the wife of Frank Pepperney (1847 – 1927) and mother of George P. Pepperney (1871 – 1962).

Sources

1910 U.S. census, Allegheny County, Pittsburgh, population schedule, tract X4, enumeration district (ED) 629, sheet 1B, dwelling 17, family 18, household of August Dondon; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 3 Feb 2024); FHL microfilm 1375321, citing NARA publication  T624, roll 1308.

“An Atlas of the North Side: Pleasant Valley Neighborhood Area of Pittsburgh 1977,” Pittsburgh Neighborhood Alliance, 1977; University of Pittsburgh Center for Urban and Social Research, site search “Pleasant Valley,” (https://web.archive.org/web/20120415121104/http://www.ucsur.pitt.edu/files/nrep/1977/north%20side%20pleasant%20valley%20PNA%201977.pdf : accessed 3 February 2024).

Larue, Paul, “A Nation Repays Its Debt: The National Soldiers’ Home and Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio (Teaching with Historic Places),” National Park Service, 2003-2004, (https://www.nps.gov/articles/a-nation-repays-its-debt-the-national-soldiers-home-and-cemetery-in-dayton-ohio-teaching-with-historic-places.htm : accessed 3 February 2024).

“Pennsylvania, U.S., Veterans Burial Cards, 1777-2012,” digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com : accessed 3 Feb 2024), entry for John Puhl; citing Pennsylvania Veterans Burial Cards, 1929-1990, Series 1, Folder No. 393, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Register of Members, Entries 33000-34499, to the National Soldier’s Home at Dayton, Ohio, John Puhl, 34178, image 613 of 786; U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938; Ancestry.com, Provo, Utah, Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.

“Weather Forecast,” Dayton Daily Herald, 12 Nov 1910, pg 1, masthead; digital image, (https://www.newspapers.com : accessed 3 Feb 2024), Newspapers.com.