Jim McClain, 1898

I’m presenting a set of portraits of the children of Nathan and Mary McClain taken in 1898. More details about that set is in this previous post. The next child in the line-up is James Nathan “Jim” McClain.

Jim turned 17 years old in March 1898, so was probably 17 in this portrait. He was 20 when Nathan and Mary moved the family to Oregon in 1901. He stayed behind in Paxton, Nebraska.

In 1906 he married Susan Knowles. They had three children in the general vicinity of Paxton between 1907 and 1910: Elmer, Howard and Mary. Sometime in 1911, they seem to have moved to Oregon. While there, daughter Myrtle and son Earl were born. Before July 1916 they returned to Nebraska, near Sutherland (just across the county line from Paxton) where two more sons, Clyde and Raymond, were born. (Raymond’s middle name was “Pershing.” Apparently Jim and Susan were fans of the general?)

Tragedy struck in 1921 when Susan died in childbirth. Apparently the baby was lost, too.

Jim married a widow, Lavina Boyer Davidson, the next year. It appears that she came into the marriage with five children: Flossie, Orville, Ethel, Edwin and Ray. With the seven children Jim had, that made a household with twelve children ranging in age from 15 to 1.

Jim and Lavina went on to have three more children: Esther, Opal and Ruby. Sadly Opal passed away at about age 2.

The 1930 census shows they had moved again, but still not far from Paxton. The big change is that Jim changed from farming to ranching. About 1937 they moved to Grand Coulee, Washington where Jim worked on the dam. I have only that bare fact, not the reason for it. He was 56 years old, so not the ideal age to take up a career as a construction worker. But it was the Depression and this may have seemed like the only way to survive. They seem to have remained in Washington for the rest of their lives. Jim passed away in 1948, age 67. Lavina, who was ten years younger than Jim, passed away in 1968, age 76. Both are buried in Wilbur, Washington, near Grand Coulee.

Jim seems to have moved around a fair amount, though never far from Paxton (except for the moves to Oregon and Washington, of course). It isn’t clear whether he ever owned land. The only census that asked about ownership was 1920 and at that time he was renting the farm he was working. But that may not be representative, since they’d returned from Oregon just a few years before. At least two of his children ended up in the vicinity of Paxton (Elmer and Mary). They probably weren’t on any land Jim owned (if he ever owned any) unless they specifically sought that out. And likewise they probably weren’t on the land Nathan and Mary had in Paxton unless they specifically sought that out (which seems unlikely). The scenario that Jim remained on the farm (that his father left when he moved to Oregon), farmed it until later in life, and passed it on to one of his children is clearly not valid.

Here is the “rest of the story” on Jim’s offspring:

  • Elmer married Eva Gifford in 1926, in North Platte, Nebraska (30 miles from Paxton). They seem to have had five or six children and remained in Nebraska the rest of their lives. He passed away in 1986.
  • Apparently Howard did not maintain contact with his cousins. He married someone named Freda around 1935. In the 1940 census he is living in the next county over from Paxton, working in the county shops, and they have two daughters.
  • Mary married Carl Rundback in April 1933 (just before Mom and Dad). They had three children and remained in Paxton the rest of their lives. She passed away in 2003.
  • Myrtle married Hank Prosise in 1934. They ended up in eastern Washington. They had four children, one of which (Gary) was a missionary in Brazil when I was growing up. Myrtle passed away in 2004.
  • Earl passed away in 1950, age 37, in Washington. According to Uncle Barney’s records he married someone named Lois and they had two children.
  • Clyde married Marjorie Smith in 1939. They ended up in the Seattle area. They had four children. He passed away in 1996.
  • Ray married Veida LeBaron in 1938. They ended up in the vicinity of The Dalles. They had four sons. Ray passed away in 2005.
  • Esther married John Gigous in 1941. They apparently remained in the Grand Coulee area most of their lives, though they passed away a year apart in Kitsap County, Washington, on Puget Sound (John in 2006, Esther in 2007). They had two daughters.
  • Ruby may have married someone with the last name Adams. That’s about all I know. She passed away in 1994 and was living in the Grand Coulee area at the time.
  • I don’t have any information on the four children Lavina had with her first husband.

In summary, it seems that Jim contributed more than his share to the number of cousins Mom had. ;–)

6 thoughts on “Jim McClain, 1898”

  1. I should clarify that when I say Jim “stayed behind” when the family moved to Oregon in 1901, I mean only that he did not come to Oregon permanently. I have no specific knowledge of who actually got onto the train when they left Paxton. Jim may have come with the family to help with the move and returned to Nebraska either from La Grande when they thought they were going to stay there, or from Albany/Tallman once they got settled there. The thing I can say for sure is that Jim was back in Nebraska by March 21, 1906 when he married Susan Knowles. There is a four or five year year period during which I have no definite knowledge of where Jim was. There is also the possibility that Jim came to Oregon intending to stay, but changed his mind once he got there.

    The end result of any of these possibilities is the same: the family is in Oregon and Jim is in Nebraska.

  2. Lloyd, I’m enjoying putting together pieces of the puzzle called “The Extended McClain Family”! My dad mentioned Mary and Myrtle, and I think I met Myrtle and Hank Prosise at some time. I also knew Gary and Nancy Prosise as missionaries in Brazil. We knew Ray and Veida McClain and their four boys. We couldn’t imagine a McClain family with boys!

    1. I’m enjoying this too, Judy. I’m only regretting that I didn’t pay better attention when Mom talked about her cousins. To me as a kid, they were just people with weird names, with connections to the McClains that I didn’t understand. I knew Gary Prosise was related to us, for example, but didn’t ever get how. Stepping through these portraits is making me think about each individual family (of Mom’s aunts and uncles) in a way I never have before. They’re becoming more than just names on a family tree somewhere.

      One thing that strikes me is what an amazing thing it was that all these cousins spread over such a wide territory were able to keep in contact over their whole lives—and not just “contact” but to maintain the feeling of family among all of them. Quite a rare and remarkable thing, it seems to me.

  3. All extremely interesting! I used to correspond faithfully with Gary Prosise, my second cousin, but I am embarrassed to say that I don’t know where he is now or how he is. If any of you have his current address, please let me know. He even came to visit us when Peter was about 2 and we were living in Tacoma.

  4. I am Rubys youngest child. (Not so young at 70). I have pictures of my grandma (Lavina) and grandpa and some of his brothers too. So interesting to hear our history.

  5. I am Rubys youngest daughter. It’s fun to see all these comment from people who are possibly cousins who I have no idea. I have some old pictures of grandma (Lavinia) and grandpa (James) from Grand Coulee and some in Nebraska on their watermelon farm.

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