August / 2001
The View from Plum Lick

What's in a name?
by: David Dick

If we're not careful, we might conclude we just arrived here on Earth unrelated to thousands of others much braver and likely just as interesting as ourselves. We might not even give a tinker's darn about all those who've gone before us.
We'll never know how it felt to have flatboated or steamboated down the Ohio, canoed up the Missouri, and slogged the rest of the way up the Platte toward Oregon in 1866, only 20 years after the British relinquished their claim to the Oregon territory.
It's one thing to have read Francis Parkman's Oregon Trail, Kentuckian A.B. Guthrie Jr.'s Way West, or James A. Michener's Centennial. It's another important piece of business to know that maybe just one restless or reckless cousin or a whole passel of kinfolks felt passionate about extending the United States of America all the way to the Pacific Ocean.
The issue at hand is to put out a bugle call to discover who we are and who we were, where we are and where we were. It's called genealogy, the study of family connections-good or bad, right or wrong.
I had thought all along that my grandfather, Rev. Coleman W. Dick, was an only child. Nobody in my family ever said a word about even the possibility of other brothers and sisters, the children of Van and Zerelda Stephens Dick. (She's buried in Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, but I don't know where my great-grandfather was laid to rest.)
After giving a talk at the historical and genealogical society in Salem, Indiana, I just happened to mention the names of Van and Zerelda. About two years later, after one person had spoken to another person and that individual had passed along the names of my ancestors to somebody else, did I discover that a child of the Dick family left what would come to be known as Kentuckiana and headed for Oregon!
The source of my new knowledge is Edmund G. Fisher's Descendants of Thomas and Jane (Jefferson) Stephens of Baltimore County, Maryland, 1745-1999. Cousin Ed, the genealogist, and I now talk by e-mail between Kentucky and Oregon, and I now know that Van and Zerelda (Ed spells it Zerilda) had ten children: Philip, Franklin, Mary Elizabeth, Harriet, Silas, Martha, Samuel, Joseph, Coleman (my grandfather), and Sarah.
Frank became postmaster at La Grande, Oregon, and later was elected to Oregon's House of Representatives (1885-1888) and Senate (1888-1891).
"For some 35 years the Dicks made their home in a large, though not particularly distinctive, Victorian mansion at S.W. 14th and Salmon Streets, in Portland's central business district. This home was demolished long after Frank and (his wife) Marquis' deaths to make room for a freeway expansion project."
When I was in Portland for a 20th-century educators' conference, I didn't know that one of my ancestors 100 years before had walked the same downtown streets. And Oldham County, Kentucky, will never be the same, because "Rilda" and Van's roots are there: "As newlyweds, the Dicks lived briefly near Madison, Indiana, but by 1838 were residing on a 230-acre farm at Westport in Oldham County where Van had strong family ties. Ohio River trade dominated Westport's commercial life and provided ample business for the small cooperage Van operated for some years on his farm. The couple's ten children were born and reared in Westport. Little of Van and Rilda's later lives is currently known."
This is where I do my genealogical part. The next edition of Cousin Ed's mammoth volume will include the descendants of grandfather Coleman, my father, Samuel, my daughter, Nell, and her daughter, Celina Rose, who has the distinction of being the first descendant of Thomas and Jane Stephens to be born in the 21st century!

David Dick was a retired news correspondent and University of Kentucky professor emeritus, and a farmer and shepherd. Read more about him at www.kyauthors.com.