My grandmother was Margaret Josephine
Patton. She was born in Emmetsburg on June 14, 1882. Shortly before her death in
September 1972, she dictated her family history to my Aunt Mary. The document
was transcribed using the same wording and punctuation as in my aunt's original
version. The footnotes were added by me and are used to clarify or embellish
parts of the story..... Jim Mahoney ,
July 2006
The following was dictated to Mary Fleming by Margaret Josephine (Josie) Mahoney in
1972 shortly before she died in September 1972 at the age of 90. Mary was
Josie’s second child and only daughter.
Mary asked me to write something about her grandparents who had died before I moved
to Boonefrom Emmetsburg, Iowa in August 1910. My father, Mike Patton and Catherine
Joyce were married inPrairie du Chien, Wisconsin on June 4, 1865.Both were born in
County Mayo, Ireland but never met until they came to America.Pa was 35 at the
time and Ma would be 20 on June 24th. Pa worked for the Milwaukee Railroad and my
mother was a maid in the home of a wealthy fur trader whose home is now one of
the show places in Prairie du Chien. The man she worked for later became an
official in some foreign country. I don’t remember just what but I know she got
a letter from him at the time but I was too youngto remember what it was about.
While living in Wisconsin, three children were born to them. Mary Jane (Mollie)
born on April 19 1866, Sarah Ann, February 22 and John four years after Mary Jane
on her birthday. Sometime after that they moved to Palo Alto County, Iowa and began
farming in Great Oak Township. Catherine Elizabeth (Lil) was born in May 1872,
Helen Honore (Nellie) born Feb 24, 1879. Sometime later they moved to Emmetsburg.
Matt Patton was born between Lil and Nellie as was William and I was the youngest
of the 8 born June 14, 1882.
The Milwaukee Railroad, in order to get the town to move from its original location
on the Des Moines River a mile or two west, made wonderful offerings like a store
sight for any store that would move. Two blocks in the center for the Courthouse.
Every church was given a block of ground and the location for two cemeteries. When
the Patton’s moved into Emmetsburg, they bought 3 blocks of ground and moved the
farm in with them. Three blocks of ground adjoining were owned by some New York
concern that did nothing with the ground so the eight Patton’s had plenty of
play room. The Milwaukee RR ran east-west thru the town and soon the Burlington
RR ran a diagonal line. Soon after the Burlington sold to Rock Island and I don’t
know what railroad has it now.
Deaths in the Patton family
Sarah Ann died in May 1885 at the age of 17. Quick consumption it was called then,
now it is TB. John,who was working for the Burlington RR in Lincoln, Nebraska,
died at age 24 of appendicitis. William died at age 31 of pneumonia in 1909.
Nellie, who had married Merrill Mobrey died in Miami, Florida at age 45 and
was buried in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Chicago. Her husband died two years later
and is buried beside her. My Mother’s two brothers, Pat and Matt Joyce, each owned
general stores in the new town. Later the parents, Martin and Mary Joyce moved to
Emmetsburg with their daughter who was born in the US. All three are buried in
E’burg. Pat Joyce was the father of Joe Joyce wholater lived in Santa Monica, Calif.
Joe’s brother Will died of TB in E’burg and is buried there in the Joyce lot with
two daughters who died in infancy. Matt Joyce was shot by the Sheriff of Palo Alto
County in his store. Father Smith pastor of Assumption Church and Pat Joyce were
the two that saved the Sheriff from a mob which had gathered to hang him.
Matt Joyce had married Ella Healy of Fort Dodge and they had five small children.
Matt, twin girls Kittie and Mary, Tom and Robert. Aunt Ella’s parents took her back
to Fort Dodge to live after the funeral in E’burg. They sent Matt and Tom to Ann
Arbor to college[4]. Matt became a lawyer and Tom a doctor who went from the Mayo
Clinic to Portland, Oregon.
Tom gave every Saturday to work in the county home and died very suddenly after
his return home one Saturday. He was married and had two daughters but I have
forgotten their names. Matt’s two girls and I roomed together in Cedar Falls
where we were attending the State Teacher’s College. That was the name at the
time 1901-1902. Kittie died shortly after of TB and Mamie married a farmer boy
from Ackley, Ia.who was attending the college and moved to a farm in South Dakota
where she later died of TB. The oldest boy, Matt, became a famous lawyer in
Minneapolis. He was US Attorney for Minnesota at the time of his death.
The youngest boy, Bob, joined the Passionist Order but died of TB in Fort Dodge
before he was ordained. After that Aunt Ella had Uncle Matt’s body removed
from E’burg and buried in Fort Dodge with the rest of the family.
My mother had other brothers, too. Will did odd jobs around E’burg but every
Christmas sent the Patton’s a barrel of apples. A brother, Austin, was killed
near San Luis Obispo, Calif.He was riding a small machine while inspectin the
railroad when an engine of alate train hit his machine. He had a wife and family.
Uncle Will married late in life and the couple left E’burg and no one heard
anything about them. Uncle Matt worked on a boat on the Mississippi before
coming to Iowa. My Uncle Tom Joyce was killed while working for a new railroad
being built somewhere out west. He left a wife and baby son living in Sanborn,
Iowa. Tom was buried in E’burg as his wife went to live with her people. Lil, Bill
and I stopped to see them once when we went out to Mitchell to see Matt Patton.
Ma had two sisters besides Lottie, the one born in America. One joined the Sisters
of Mercy and was known as Sister Mary Anastasia. She taught school in Atlanta,
Georgia. My mother heard of her death while at church when Father Smith asked for
prayers for her. Uncle Pat Joyce got the news and as he and Ma were not on
speaking terms, he told Fr. Smith to make the announcement. (Pat had kept the
sheriff from the mob) The other sister, Ann, married Henry Cassidy and they
lived in Kentucky where they ran a toll road before the Civil War. Some friends
of Henrys’ got him drunk one night and when he came to he was in the Confederate
Army. Sometime after that they moved to Hull, Iowawhere they lived for many years.
There was ten children born to this family, two dying in infancy. The oldest,
Mary, was married to Charley Howard before the
twins were born. The family met at Mother’s funeral and had a picture taken. I
think I gave that picture to Madeline to show her Passionist friends in DM,
because Father Charles Cassidy was in the group. Aunt Ann died very suddenly.
After breakfast she put on water to heat before doing the family wash. She had
died before the water was hot. There were three girls in the Cassidy family;
Mary, Kit, and Celia. Boys were Ed, Pat, Jack, Will (Father Charles), Charley,
Frank and Tom. (Two sets of twins) Patand Jack were railroad men in Texas.
Jack lost an arm when he fell off a train when it stopped suddenly. He was
walking on the top of the cars as the brakemen had to do in those days. Pat
went to South America, made money but couldn’t get back into the US because he
left without getting a visa. Before he died, he sent his sister Mary
Howard who had lots of bad luck, all his valuables including money. Mary had
married Charley Howard who was a telegrapher at a town outside Minneapolis
and from him she learned telegraphy and when he was taken sick, she was able to
run the station. The Howard’s had three children, 2 girls and a boy who was
badly burned from a candle lighted Xmas tree and died soon after from pneumonia.
Mary Howard and her brother Tom visited here in Boone one day when I bro’t Lil
home from the local hospital and had Mrs. Harris as a nurse for her.
The Cassidy Twins, Charley and Celia were born August of the same year 1882 in
which I had been born June 14. Charley drowned in Lake Minnesota while staying
at a hotel in Minneapolis. The next morning he was missing and the empty boat
was there. As far as I know they never found the body. Charley’s picture is
in my Kodak album with him is his dog.
Frank Cassidy was a tramp printer and often came to E’burg and worked for a time in
the shop of the Democrat. Once he came here to show colored pictures at the
Princess Theater. He looked me up. He didn’t know my married name and under
‘attorneys’ he found Mahoney whose wife was Josephine. Then he phoned me and
later came up to the house. That was the last I ever heard of him. In my Kodak
album is a picture of Celia Cassidy, Bessie Howard and me sitting on the steps
of St. Thomas Church in E’burg. Celia Cassidy visited me in Boone once. Later
she went to Europe and then disappeared.”
**THE FOLLOWING ARE ADDITIONS MADE A WEEK BEFORE SHE DIED
“Cousins of mother. Two brothers, Ned and Tom Joyce. Ned was a farmer, a high type of
person, lived west of town. Mrs. Ned Joyce was in on the beginning of 4H and
received several commendations from Ames. She had 3 daughters and 5 sons.
Her daughter, Kate, taught school and attended city institute for two weeks
every summer and stayed at the Patton’s. Ned was a director of a school and
Lil in either the Joyce or Crowley schools. Kate Joyce Brennan had dinner
at Aunt Lil’s funeral. Her husband was the man who had the beard and came
with Father Farrelly to Dad’s funeral.
There is a story of some relatives of Brennan’s being in jail. ‘Down comes the
courthouse or out comes John Henry. We’ll take it down brick by brick’. Tom
Joyce was single, ran a saddlery, dressed well, was crippled. He would take the
Patton’s out for buggy rides on Sundays.
Mom’s mother and Mrs. Sammin were first cousins. James, a shoemaker, was about the
smartest man in E’burg. Once a season he would run the family out and they had
to hide under the porch. He was a devil! The wife’s fault because she didn’t
stick up for herself. Sammin went to Algona with Bryan. Every famous person
who came to Chautauqua always went to see Sammin. Henneberry Kelly was a
secretary to a congressman who promised he would send seeds---Sammin said
he didn’t want seeds, he wanted statistics.
One Xmas eve, in whispers, Pa told Ma there was a prisoner in the haystack. He
wouldn’t turn him in on Xmas eve and in the morning he was gone.Pa died in 1901.
That summer and fall I went to Cedar Falls. They reduced the wages from $45 to
$40 when they got me instead of a man. They gave a big party for the man they
ran out for making love to his aunt!!!
One of mom’s students wasn’t 100% but he took care of her horse. Grandparents
were Martin Joyce and Mary Maxwell Joyce. Sisters of Catherine Joyce Patton were
Ann Cassidy, Lottie Joyce, and Sister Anastasia. Brothers were Pat, Matt,
William and Tom. Cousin was Mrs. Kate Maxwell Sammin, mother of Joe, Nell and
Nettie. Father’s relatives were all on the McDonnell side; Anthony, Alex,
Terry (married Sarah), Mike, John from Pa., Mary from Denver. Terry and wife
and Mike are buried in the cemetery next to the Patton’s.
Dad’s FamilyTimothy and Mary Hickey Mahoney were married in Kenosha, moved to Boone
County, Harrison Township. Two children died in infancy; one is buried in Kenosha,
the other died in Boone and is buried in the Herron lot before Mahoney’s had a lot.
William, Frank, George, Harry, Ed, Dora, Mary, T.J.; All except Will are buried
in Boone.Dora married Pete Reilly and Mary Ellen (Mayme) married Alfred Murphy.
Margaret Josephine Patton, daughter of Michael and Catherine Joyce Patton, was
born on June 14, 1882 in Emmetsburg, Iowa. Graduated from Saint Mary’s Academy
in June 1900. Attended Iowa State Teacher’s College for three quarters. Left
on advice of a doctor who said I had heart trouble. On the advice of my brother,
Matt who was working in Mason City, I consulted his doctor Egloff who said my
trouble was anemia. I had my first blood count in his office. At the time they
took the sample from the lobe of the ear. Dr. Egloff had me take medicine that
was supposed to be from beef blood. It helped.
When I returned from Mason City, the County Supt. Of Schools, Anna Donovan, called
me and asked me to take the principalship of a two room independent school at
Rodman, Iowa where they had just run the man principal out of town. I had one
boy in that school who was older than I but I taught 6-7-8 grades there for two
years. The second year, Mary Crowley taught the primary room. The evening
passenger train didn’t stop at Rodman but Father Costello, the assistant
priest at Assumption parish, took the matter up with the supt. Of the railroad
at Cedar Rapids and the train stopped at Rodman on Sunday nights and let us off.
We got a ride back to Emmetsburg on a freight train late Friday p.m.
The nest year I taught 5th grade in West Bend, then took 5th
grade in E’burg, then 7th and 8thgrades. In 1910 I came
to Boone at the request of Supt. Meredith who had been Supt. in E’burg when I
was teaching there. I taught 7th grade at Lowell School until January
1911 when I was made Principal at incoln after Gracie Tucker was elected County
Supt.of Schools at the November election. The one at Lincoln won the election
after running against the one at Page. The law has been changed since then.
I taught at Lincoln school until June of 1913 when I married T.J. Mahoney on
June 30. I have lived here since except for time in Washington 1917-19 when
T.J. was discharged from the Army after World War I. While living in Washington,
D.C., Mary was born Nov. 29, 1918 in our apartment on Columbia Road just across
the street from the Christian Scientist Church (1769 was the number, Imperial
Apts.) Aunt Mollie came to Washington to care for John while I would be in
the hospital. That was the time of the first flu epidemic and they wouldn’t
take pregnant women as they said it meant death to both mother and child so
Mary was born in the apartment under the care of a woman doctor whose office
was in the same bldg. this doctor gave us our first small Xmas tree which I
put in the umbrella stand in our hall and decorated it with bits of cotton.
When John saw it he said, ‘Oh, see the pretty flower’.
All five of us left Washington for Chicago. T.J. went on to Boone but Maty was
sick and I and the two babies and Mollie stayed. When the doctor came he said the
baby would be ok but he said the mother had the flu and should be in bed so we
stayed another week. Aunt Helen had taken Helen Ferguson and Muriel to live
with her while Mollie was in D.C. with me, so now she had a houseful but not for
long as Mollie and the girls could return to their home in LaGrange. T.J. came back to
Chicago to go home with me and the two babies. When T.J. went to Washington, we
divided the living room at 815-12th so Grandma and Grandpa Mahoney could
have a downstairs bedroom and Aunt Dora and Uncle Pete took over. They moved to
815 because the house on Green St had no furnace and you couldn’t get hard coal
for heating the stove.
In the meantime Uncle Pete had bo’t the corner house on Story and they moved
there taking Grandpa with them as Grandma had died in Sept. 1918. Earlier that
year T.J. was sent out to interview the governors of Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas
to find out how the draft was being taken in those states. John and I came with
him. While there, the Henry Hermans took us out to the country to see the damage
on some farms after the cyclone which struck in May of that year. The Hermans
had just built the brick house on south Story now owned by the Mandershields and
she took us all thru’ it. She said there was criticize for building as this
time but she said she wanted the house while the children were still home and
not after they left.”
[1] Michael Patton and Catherine Joyce were married in St. Gabriel’s Church by
Father Lucien Galtier who established the city of St. Paul, Minnesota. St.
Gabriel’s is the oldest parish in Wisconsin still operating as a church.
[2] The “wealthy fur-trader” was Hercules Dousman. He became Wisconsin’s first
millionaire and his home “Villa Louis” is a National Historic Landmark and on .
the National Register of Historic Places. The home is now a museum and open to the public.
[3] The sheriff who shot and killed Matt Joyce was actually Marshall E.J. Larkin.
Marshall Larkin was tried and acquitted of murder in December 1886.
[4] Matt and Tom Joyce both attended the University of Michigan but neither finished.
Matt Joyce later attended Notre Dame and graduated with the class of 1901. He received
an Honorary Law Degree from Michigan in 1906.
[5] Tom Joyce was First Surgical Assistant to Dr. Charles Mayo. He founded the
Portland Clinic shortly after moving to Oregon. The Portland Clinic is still
in operation today and Tom’s picture is still used in their advertising.
[6] Matt Joyce was appointed US Superior Court Judge by President Hoover in
1932. He served on the bench until his death in 1956. Among those who
appeared before him as defendants were Ma Barker and her sons.
Back to Palo Alto Bios Page
©Palo Alto County
IAGenWeb