James
Frazier Reed Businessman
from Springfield, Illinois.
Age: 45
Survived
Parents: Reed and
Martha Frazier
b. 14 Nov 1800, Co. Armagh,
Ireland
m. 14 Oct 1835 Springfield,
Sangamon Co., IL to Margret Wilson Keyes
Ch: Martha Jane, James Frazier Jr., Thomas Keyes, Dallas (?) Gershom Francis, Charles Cadden,
Willianoski Yount.
d. 24 Jun 1874 San Jose, Santa
Clara Co., CA
James F. Reed dominates the story
of the Donner Party. He was a man of strong personality,
described as intelligent and energetic but also as
aristocratic and overbearing.
Reed was born in Northern
Ireland, but he was reportedly of noble Polish
extraction and the name was originally
"Reednoski." After his fathers death,
Reed and his mother emigrated to the United States; when he was old
enough "to be of some service to himself," his mother sent him to live
with a relative in Virginia, who employed Reed as a clerk in his store.
In about 1825 Reed went to the lead district of Illinois, where he began
his lifelong interest in mining, and moved on to Springfield in 1831.
During the Black Hawk War (1831) he joined a local volunteer militia
company led by Jacob M. Early, serving with Abraham Lincoln, Stephen
Douglas, and
James Clyman. After his return to Springfield Reed ran several
businesses over the years: a general store, a starch factory, a sawmill,
and a furniture factory. He also speculated in railroad contracts and
real estate, and served as the U. S. pension agent for Springfield.
According to his stepdaughter
Virginia, it was James Reed who conceived the idea of
going west and organized the group from Springfield. He
had first thought of going to Oregon, but decided on
California instead, and spent nearly a year preparing for
the journey.
One of his preparations was to
have a comfortable wagon built for his ailing wife and
mother-in-law to ride in. Much has been made of this
vehicle, the so-called "Pioneer palace car." Although it was larger
than his other wagons, there is no reason to accept George R.
Stewarts description of it as "huge" and
"looming" over all the others in the wagon
train. In addition to the family wagon, the Reeds had two
others to carry provisions and other supplies. They took
extra cattle, horses, and several dogs. With them
traveled three teamsters, Milt
Elliott, Walter
Herron, and James
Smith, and two servants, Baylis
Williams and his sister Eliza.
Along the Humboldt, on October 5,
1846, Reed became involved in a dispute between two
teamsters and in the ensuing fight stabbed
John Snyder to
death. He was banished from the train and went ahead to
Sutters Fort for supplies, but snow blocked the pass when he and
William McCutchen tried to
return to the wagon train at the beginning of November.
Reeds attempts to organize
another relief party met with temporary failure. Most of
the able-bodied American settlers had enlisted to fight
in the Mexican War, and horses and provisions
were also scarce. Reed participated briefly in the war,
and on January 2, 1847, was involved in a skirmish known
as the Battle
of Santa Clara. The Americans
prevailed and five days later a treaty was signed. In
all Reed spent a few weeks in the area where he would
later settle, and took steps to secure land for
himself and his dependents.
In February Reed led the Second
Relief to the camps. He met his wife, Virginia, and James, Jr. coming out of the mountains with the First
Relief in an emotional reunion. Learning that Patty
and Tommy were still at the lake, and knowing that the
rest of his family would soon be safe, he hurried over the
mountains. As he was leading the refugees down to the
California settlements, however, a blizzard set in. When
the storm eased two days later, most of the emigrants had
become too weak to continue. Reed took three with him,
but had to leave the rest behind at what was to become
known as Starved Camp. They were rescued four days later
by John Stark.
After recuperating in the Napa
Valley at the ranch of George C. Yount the Reeds continued on to Santa Clara
County. They settled in San Jose, where Reed was an
active member of the community. Although he arrived
almost destitute, Reed did well in real estate and mining
ventures and the family prospered. Reed died at the age
of 73 and was laid to rest beside his beloved Margret at San Jose's Oak Hill Cemetery.
The day after the Donners and Reeds joined the wagon
train captained by William Russell, Reed wrote a letter
to his brother-in-law; see Reed
Joins the Russell Train: Letter to James W. Keyes, May
20, 1846. Reed wrote and preserved numerous
other documents dealing with the Donner Party, including the
Miller-Reed Diary, a
diary of the Second
Relief, letters, and a memoir.
Margret
Wilson Keyes
Wife of James
Frazier Reed
Age: 32
Survived
Parents: Humphrey Keyes (b. 13
Nov 1764, Keyes Ferry, Jefferson Co., WV, d. 11 Oct 1833,
Springfield, Sangamon Co., IL) m. 24 Apr 1803 to Sarah
Handley (b. abt
1776, Monroe Co., WV, d. 29 May 1846, Alcove
Spring, Marshall Co., KS)
b. 31 Mar 1814 Union, Monroe Co.,
WV
m1. 13 Sep 1832 Springfield,
Sangamon Co., IL, to Lloyd Carter Backenstoe (b.
20 Jun 1811 in Augusta Co., GA, d. 9 Sep 1834 in
Springfield, Sangamon Co., IL)
Ch: Virginia Elizabeth Backenstoe
m2. 14 Oct 1835 Springfield,
Sangamon Co., IL, to James Frazier Reed
Ch: Martha Jane, James Frazier Jr., Thomas Keyes, Dallas (?) Gershom Francis, Charles Cadden,
Willianoski Yount.
d. 25 Nov 1861 San Jose, Santa
Clara, CA
The spelling "Margret"
is Mrs. Reeds own.
When Margret was born, Monroe County was in Virginia;
it became part of West Virginia when that state was created in 1863.
Margret Keyes first
husband, Lloyd Backenstoe, was a tailor who worked in her
brother James shop. Backenstoe died of cholera at
the age of 23 in September 1834, leaving his widow with a
baby daughter, Virginia.
James F. Reed and Margrets
brother James Keyes were close friends. Reed had been
engaged to their sister Elizabeth, but she died in the
same cholera epidemic as Lloyd Backenstoe. A year later
Reed married Margret. She was ill, but was married as she
lay in bed, with Reed standing beside her holding her
hand.
The Reeds had four children
before they left Springfield. Patty, James, Jr., and
Tommy accompanied their parents to California, but the
fourth, a little boy, died as a baby. There is
conflicting information about this childPatty gave
his name as Dallasbut a tombstone inscription
published in 1896 probably contains the most accurate
version. " Gershom Francis Reed"
had been born on 29 Dec 1844 and died 10 Dec 1845. The
baby was buried beside his grandfather Keyes. The
knowledge that she would have to leave him behind must
have added to Margrets grief, for the gravestone
read, "Touch not my little grave, Mama is far
away."
Margret Reeds frail health
was one of the reasons her husband wanted to move to
California. She was particularly troubled by sick
headaches. When disaster struck, however, she rallied and
became, as Virginia said, "the bravest of the
brave." All her children survived the ordeal in the
mountains.
On February 6, 1848, less than a year after her
escape from the snow, Margret
bore her next child, Charles Cadden Reed. Willianoski Yount, called Willie,
followed in 1850 but lived only nine years. Margret's sick headaches never
returned, but her health was not robust and she died at
age 47, a comparatively young woman. On her deathbed she
spoke of a bright light that the curtains could not shut
out, and named departed loved ones she saw about her:
her
mother, Willie, Lloyd Backenstoe,
Mary Donner, and others. She lies
beside her husband in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Virginia Elizabeth
Backenstoe
Daughter of Lloyd Carter
Backenstoe and Margret Wilson
Keyes ;
stepdaughter of James
Frazier Reed
Age: 13
Survived
b. 28 Jun 1833
Springfield, Sangamon Co., IL
m. 26 Jan 1850 San
Jose, Santa Clara Co., CA to John Marion Murphy
(b. 08 Jan 1824 in Canada, d. 19 Feb 1892, San
Jose, Santa Clara Co., CA)
Ch: Mary M., Lloyd
M., Mattie H., John Marion Jr., Virginia B.,
Julia Ada, Daniel James, Annie Mabel, Thaddeus
Stanley
d. 14 Feb 1921 Los Angeles, CA
Virginia was only a baby
when her mother married James F. Reed, who was appointed
her legal guardian on 10 September 1836. Although he did
not formally adopt her, Virginia went by his surname.
There was a strong bond between them and Reed did not
treat her any differently than he did his natural
children.
Virginia was a noted
equestrian who won prizes for horsemanship in her later
years. She considered a horse her "pet of pets"
and could not remember being unable ride. She had a
cream-colored pony, Billy, to ride across the plains and
enjoyed going out with her stepfather every day, until
Billy gave out and had to be left behind.
Virginia wrote letters to
her cousin, Mary Catherine Keyes, on July 12, 1846 and
May 16, 1847. These two documents, her letters to
historian C.F. McGlashan, and her memoir, "Across the Plains in the Donner
Party," are
important contributions to our knowledge of the Donner
Party. Her writing is sprightly, informal, and full of
human interest. (Click here for an article about her memoir.)
At Donner Lake, impressed
with piety of the Breen family, Virginia vowed that if
God would spare her familys lives, she would become
a Catholic. All the Reeds survived, and Virginia kept her
promise.
On her way down from the
mountains, one of the young men helping with the relief
efforts proposed to her, young and half-starved as she
was. The idea was incomprehensible to her, and she
refused him. (See Perry McCoon and Virginia Reed on the Myths page.)
When Virginia was sixteen she ran off to marry
John Marion Murphy, a pioneer who had arrived in
California with the Townsend-Stephens-Murphy Party of
1844. (See Donner Party Bulletin No. 12
for the story of her elopement.) Murphy was involved in local politics
and engaged in a number of business enterprises,
including real estate and insurance. After he became ill,
Virginia assisted him and continued his business after
his death in 1892. She became the first woman on the
Pacific Coast to engage in the fire insurance business.
The Murphys had nine children, three of whom died young.
Virginia Reed Murphy died in 1921 at the age of
eighty-seven.
Martha Jane
"Patty" Reed
Daughter of James Frazier Reed and Margret Wilson
Keyes
Age: 8
Survived
b. 26 Feb 1838 Sangamon
Co., IL
m. 25 Dec 1856 Santa
Cruz Co., CA to Frank Lewis (b. 15 Dec 1828 in
Lancaster, Worcester Co., MA; d. 18 Jun 1876 San
Jose, Santa Clara Co., CA)
Ch: Kate, Margaret,
Frank Reed, Martha Jane, James Frazier, Carrie
E., Susan Augusta; another child who died as a
baby
d. 4 Jul 1923 East Twin Lakes, Santa Cruz Co., CA
Patty Reed was only a
child of eight when her family left Springfield, but she
too retained many memories which she shared with various
writers, including C. F. McGlashan, Evelyn Wells, and
Katherine Wakeman Cooper. She also preserved a wealth of
family documents and artifacts, later donated to
Sutters Fort in 1946.
The most famous of these
is "Dolly," a little wooden figure under four
inches high. According to Patty, when her family was
caching their goods along the trail, the children were
told they had to leave everything behind. Among other
items, Patty rescued "Dolly" from the sand, and
slipped them into her dress. Safely at the settlements,
Patty took "Dolly" out and Margret Reed began
to crynot because Patty had disobeyed her, as Patty thought, but
because she was glad that her daughter had had some
comfort during her trials at the lake.
Patty grew into a small
woman, with dark brown eyes. She married Frank Lewis on
Christmas Day, 1856. Lewis died in 1876, leaving Patty
with several children to support. She did this by keeping
a boarding house, first in Santa Cruz, then in Capitola.
Like her parents, she is buried in San Joses Oak
Hill Cemetery.
Patty was the special pet
of her grandmother, Sarah Handley Keyes, who died in
Kansas not six weeks after the journey began. To
read about that distressing event and Pattys later efforts to locate her
grandmothers grave, see
Patty Reed
Remembers.
James Frazier Reed, Jr.
Son of James Frazier Reed and Margret Wilson
Keyes
Age: 5
Survived
b. 26 Mar 1841 Sangamon
Co., IL
m. 16 Mar 1879 San Jose,
Santa Clara Co., CA to Sarah Adams
d. 17 Sep 1901 Capitola, Santa Cruz Co., CA
Margret, Virginia, and James F. Reed, Jr. were rescued
by the First Relief. Five-year-old Jimmy found it hard to
struggle through the snow. His mother enticed him to
continue with promises that when he reached California he
would have his own horse and would never have to walk
anymore. McGlashan wrote, "This promise was
literally fulfilled. James F. Reed, Jr., since reaching
California, has always had a horse of his own. No matter
what vicissitudes of fortune have overtaken him, he has
always kept a saddle horse." When John Denton gave
out, he looked so comfortable resting by the fire that
Jimmy wanted to stay with him.
His big sister Virginia recounted, "we went over
great hye mountain as steap as stair steps in snow up to
our knees litle James walk the hole way over all the
mountain in snow up to his waist, he said every step he
took he was a gitting nigher Pa and somthing to
eat." Years later she wrote, "He was the
youngest child that walked over the Sierra Nevada."
James Jr. joined his father and brother in mining and
real estate ventures and spent most of his life in San
Jose, California. He died at the home of his sister Patty in Capitola
and was buried in San Jose's Oak Hill Cemetery.
Thomas Keyes Reed
Son of James Frazier Reed and Margret Wilson
Keyes
Age: 3
Survived
b. 02 Apr 1843 Sangamon
Co., IL
d. 24 Jul 1915 Santa Cruz
Co., CA
Tommy Reed seems to have
been particularly close to his sister Patty. On May 25,
1846, J. Quinn Thornton recorded an incident in which
Pattys enthusiastic affection nearly bowled Tommy
over.
The Reed family left the
lake camp in February 1847 with the First Relief, but
Patty and Tommy were too weak to continue and had to be
taken back to the Breen cabin to wait for the next rescue
party. Patty took care of her little brother. When James
Reed arrived with the Second Relief, Tommy didnt
recognize him and asked Patty, whom he had come to regard
as his mother, if that were really his father.
After their rescue, the
survivors put on a lot of weight. Patty later wrote that
Tommy became "as stout as a little alderman."
Thomas Reed never
married. He lived in San Jose most of his life, and in
his later years he made his home with Patty. When he died in 1915,
Thomas was the last surviving male of the Donner Party. He, too, is buried in the
Reed-Lewis plot at Oak Hill Cemetery in San Jose.
Sarah
Handley
Mother of Margret Wilson
Keyes, mother-in-law
of James
Frazier Reed
Age: [70]
Perished
Parents: John Handley (b.
1746, d. 13 Jan 1811) and Mary Harrison (b. 1745, d. 4
Dec 1829)
b. Abt 1776 Monroe Co., WV
m 24 Apr 1803
Humphrey Keyes (b. 13 Nov 1764, Keyes Ferry,
Jefferson Co., WV; d. 11 Oct 1833, Sangamon Co.,
IL)
Ch: Gershom, James
Washington, Alexander, Margret
Wilson,
Elizabeth, Robert Cadden
d. 29 May 1846 Alcove
Spring, Marshall Co., KS
(For more genealogical
information about Sarah Keyes, see
John & Mary (Harrison) Handley
genealogy page.)
Surname also given as
Hanley in some sources.
Jefferson and Monroe counties were originally in
Virginia; they became part of West Virginia when that state was created
in 1863.
In 1879 Virginia Reed
Murphy gave her grandmothers age as 70, as do all sources
from 1846, but in her 1891 memoir, she reported that her
grandmother had been 75. The younger age is more likely
to be correct.
Two reasons have been
given as to why the ailing Mrs. Keyes decided to emigrate
to California. According to diarists Edwin Bryant and
George McKinstry, Mrs. Keyes was hoping to meet her
youngest son, Robert Cadden, on the trail. Years later,
however, Virginia Reed Murphy reported that her
grandmother could not bear to be parted from her only
daughter. For either or both of these reasons, Grandma
Keyes rode in a bed in the comfortable wagon that Reed
had built for his family. On May 20, Reed wrote his
brother-in-law:
- I am affraid Your mother
will not stand it many week[s] or indeed days, if
there is not a quick change... I have been
talking this moment with Your Mother[.] She says
she feels very much like she was going to die one
of her eyes pains her much and She is so blind
that she cannot take her coffee or plate if it is
set near her this morning[.] She cannot eat
anything I am of [the] opinion a few days will
end her mortal carear
Nine days later, while
the company was stopped at the Big Blue River, Sarah
Keyes died. Her death was a blow to Margret Reed. The
funeral was conducted with as much ceremony as
circumstances allowed. Thornton recorded:
- Mrs. Keyes, the
mother of Mrs. Reed, who had been for some time
ill, died on the morning of this day. John
Denton, an Englishman from Sheffield, busied
himself in preparing a decent slab of stone to
put at her head, and in carving upon it a
suitable inscription. A humble grave was dug
under the spreading boughs of a venerable oak,
about sixty or seventy yards from the wayside,
and thither her remains were followed by a
silent, thoughtful, and solemn company of
emigrants, who were thus admonished that they
were indeed pilgrims, hastening to a land
"from whose bourne no traveler
returns." After obtaining permission from
Mrs. Reed, I requested the Rev. J. A. Cornwall to
preach upon the occasion...
-
- I had no
acquaintance with the deceased. She had been,
indeed, confined to her bed, when her son-in-law,
Mr. Reed, was making his arrangements for the
journey. She could not, however, bear the thought
of remaining behind. A wagon had been arranged
with reference to her comfort. She had been
carried to it in her bed, and had there remained
until her spirit returned to God who gave it, and
her body was laid in its silent grave in the
wilderness. I was informed that her departure was
peaceful and full of hope. The inscription upon
the grave-stone, and upon the tree above it, is
as follows: "Mrs. Sarah Keyes, died May 29,
1846: Aged 70."
The grave was noted by
several passing emigrants in later years, but the exact
location is now unknown. Grandma Keyes was not buried
near Manhattan, Kansas, as Virginia Reed Murphy
mistakenly reported in 1891, but at Alcove Spring near Marysville; for an
explanation of how the confusion arose, see That Old Grave. A purported gravestone was found
in 1994, but its authenticity has not been established.
|