Thursday, June 11, 2026

Rex Needed You to Find Him

 

Uncle Peg’s Chronicles

June 11, 2026

“Rex Needed You to Find Him”

 

“These were their settlements. And they kept good family records.”

 

Don’t forget to look for the title which is embedded in the chronicle.

 

 


 

FAMILY ALBUM

 

 




 

 

And I Quote:

 

Did you know? These are like letters to the editor for me. I share them because they encourage me and I appreciate them so much.

 

Please do send the article on Fenwick and Maud.  They are an interesting couple! – Jeanni. 

 

Congratulations on your “Generations” article. Yes, I would love for you to send me a copy to read . . .  I am very happy for you. – Annmarie.

 

Hi Peg, My rememberer is horrible and I too have a good many projects on hold because my get up and go, got up and left, but I am still hoping to find it someday. Chandler and I had a great trip to Austria and briefly Southern Germany! . . . I would enjoy a copy of your "Generations" article about Uncle Fenwick and Aunt Maud . . . – Julia.

 

Thanks for the mention of James Ballantyne. Please send me the link to the last will and testament you mentioned. It's interesting that the whole Goodenough family ended up in California. Again, thank you for all you do. – Marvin.

 

. . . It [article about Uncle Fenwick and Aunt Maud] was quite wonderful. I hope you have had positive feedback. I sent it to Lori, Jim, and Marcus at the museum . . .  it was an article that touched both my NB roots and my 60 year life here in NW Ontario. Well, well done! Lots of research, organizing and editing. – Jan. The people mentioned – Jan, Lori, Jim, and Marcus are not family. They are genealogists, family historians, and/or a curator who helped me from Rat Portage. Bless them.

 

1926 to 1928

 

1924 to 1928 are the years that our Holmes ancestors spent renewing relationships that had somehow fallen by the wayside but with organization, letter writing, and challenging travel – by hook or by crook – they managed to come together again. They reacquainted and rediscovered their family ties. And then, one by one, they died, and many of those ties died with them.

2026 to 2028

There are photos and documents in this chronicle. Request an email if you wish to see them.

I have received gifts from some of you, much appreciated gifts of a variety of sorts. But last week, I received a gift from a stranger, a gift that touched me to my genealogical core. It is a gift that has changed my thinking and my perspective of a few of the less savory and exemplary of our ancestors of descent and collateral lines. From here on in, I will now consider that once upon a time, they were innocent babes. What happened to change them? I’m sure they have their different reasons. The stranger. Susan, is quickly becoming a kindred spirit. She lives near the cemetery where Rex and his sister, Myrne Seiler, live. She sent the photos to me.

Rex needed you to find him. As you likely know he has no headstone, nor anything visibly marking his grave. The cemetery helped me find his exact location, then they put in an in-ground vase for flowers.

And then, Susan purchased flowers to put on his lonely grave.

You will find an essay about Charles Rex Goodenough (at birth) aka Bert Rex Gordon (at burial) in the family history section. I put it into our genealogy group as an example of how to break down a brick wall, removing references that would identify you. Susan replied. She discovered that she has Loyalist roots in New Brunswick. She offered to go to the cemetery to take photos and see what she could find. She repeated her offer. I said to myself, she is sincere in her desire to do this, and I gave her the sites of Rex’s remains and that of his potential third wife. Flo is still a work in progress. Susan also put flowers on Flo’s grave, just in case she might be his wife. She put a photo of the cemetery on Find a Grave.

 

This kind staff member put an in-ground vase for flowers at Rex’s grave site. He also gave her a business card so I could contact the proper person at the cemetery. Rex lies between Viola B Long and James E Stotenburg, should any of you wish to go to what the website says is the largest cemetery in the US.

 

A few of you will remember Rex Goodenough. He’s the one who left a suicide note and disappeared. He did not commit suicide, and I wonder how they were able to locate him in the big city of Los Angeles, but they did. He descends from Frances A Holmes, daughter of Daniel and Charlotte, and wife of James W Ballantyne. In this order:

Daniel and Charlotte

James Ballantyne and  Frances A Holmes

Charles H Goodenough and Anna Louise Ballantyne

Charles Rex Goodenough, with several aliases listed in the history lesson. The common name was Rex.

 

Susan put this photo in Rex’s Find a Grave Memorial.

Susan and I continue to chat. I am so touched by her kindness. I want the descendants of Annie and Charles Goodenough, Brenda, Leanne, and Marvin, to know of her kindness to our family. Rex’s Find a Grave memorial number is 127009595. I believe the date of birth is off by a couple of years. He died on November 18, 1939. 

 

This is the distant view from Rex’s burial place. Isn’t it lovely. My bit of research tells me this is Mount Baldy, aka Mount Saint Antonio, and it is about 45 miles from Los Angeles. Rex’s sister, Myrne, and her husband, Waldo Seiler, are buried in the same cemetery. They had no children.

This is a closer view of the tree that provides shades for Rex and those he lies close to. After telling Susan a bit of his story, this is what she said:

“It had crossed my mind one possibility for no headstone was something not good. But I too hope he'd found happiness . . .

Yes, I've developed an interest in genealogy. I was surprised in my initial research to find out I'm related to a loyalist. I'd learned in school about loyalists, but just the tarring/feathering and that they fled to Canada. Nothing about their lives after that, nothing empathetic toward them. 

 

I'm going to spend some time appreciating this DeMerchant/loyalist line before moving deeply onto others, learning about this brand new (for me) perspective. The 4th of July is coming up, which I will be experiencing very differently this year now knowing my loyalist family roots.”

 

I think my intrigue in genealogical research is something I would do, even if I had no one to share it with. But it’s moments like this that bring me a joy I can hardly describe.

 

My Confusion about

Nellie June Goodenough

Ancestry. Iowa, US Births, 1856 to 1940 for June Goodenough

https://www.ancestry.ca/imageviewer/collections/61441/images/61441_b1045578-00117?pId=302106200

Nellie June, who generally went by June, never married. She completed her high school education, and worked as a clerk, a stenographer, a bookkeeper, and a credit manager at the Waterbury Chemical Company in Des Moines for several years. This company, founded by Frank C Waterbury, was a major supplier of cod liver oil. Mr. Waterbury was also the vice president of the Des Moines College of Pharmacy. She moved on to Carley’s (Inc.), where she worked as a bookkeeper for a merchant who sold suits, millinery and furs.                                                                                                                                                                     June moved with her family to Los Angeles, California, sometime about 1926. There, Anna, their mother, and June and Myrne shared apartments; at some places, Rex lived with them. June worked as a bookkeeper, and later as an auditor, at Union Manufacturing Company. Verify all this.                                                     June always lived with a family member. In 1930, they were all together in California: Anna, Rex, June and Myrne, and living close to Fanny. After her mother passed away, she shared a place with Rex until his second marriage. Her Aunt Jessie lived with her for a couple of years, and then June moved into her sister and brother-in-law’s house on Oakford Drive in Montebello. 1940 census which includes 1935, but that is it. I can no longer locate this info. I can locate June in some voters lists and directories; as far as I know, she lived with Myrne for the rest of her life, and always worked as a bookkeeper. June passed away in Los Angeles on August 26, 1981; five days before her sister, Fanny Davis.                                                                            Obviously, in 2017 I had some information that I do not have now. And it is important. I cannot find the 1930 census for Annie Goodenough (mother), Rex, June, or Myrne; only Fanny Davis. According to the info that I had, everyone lived within 5 miles of Fanny. I might have to do some deleting. And, that frustrates me.

 

 

FAMILY HISTORY LESSON

 

                Do you know what a genealogical brick wall is? It’s a detail you can’t figure out. It’s someone, sometime, somewhere, or something you look for, for a long time. You look for records but they elude you. You don’t know where else to look.                                                                                                                                        What should you do if you cannot break down this brick wall? You could go to others for help. You might join a Facebook group for the alleged location. You might write to family members. You might pay a professional. If that doesn’t work, my advice is to put your problem away for a while, and come back to it. New details are added online all the time. Eventually, you might face the fact that the record just does not exist, but I recommend that you come back to it from time to time.                                                                 On the day I sent out the previous chronicle, I broke down a brick wall that I have chinked away at from time to time since about 2017. Paula helped me; Brenda M helped me. But Charles Rex Goodenough, usually known as Rex, taunted me. As I review the Ballantyne family for “Westmorland,” I check out some of my facts and revise what I have written. It was time to have another looksee for the elusive Rex.                                                                                                                                                                                                    I found the answer at FamilySearch. I always wondered if Rex changed his name. Perhaps he was trying to cover his tracks.                                                                                                                                                       How did he get into our family tree? You should all know by now, Daniel and Charlotte (Hoyt) Holmes, so let’s start with them.                                                                                                                                                               Daniel and Charlotte’s first child was Frances Ann Holmes, born in New Brunswick in 1837 and died in Iowa in 1902. She married James W Ballantyne, born in Scotland in 1833 and died in Iowa in 1906.                                                                                                                                                                                                                             James and Fanny had a daughter, Anna Louise Ballantyne, born c. 1863 in Ontario, and allegedly died 1931 in California.                                                                                                                                                                               Anna aka Annie married Charles Henry Goodenough, born in Wisconsin in 1859 and died in Iowa in 1911.                                                                                                                                                                                                                             Charles and Annie had a son, Charles Rex Goodenough, born in Iowa c. 1892. Rex is my mystery man. A timeline is in order.

 

Timeline of C Rex Goodenough

 

1895 – Census of Iowa. Rex Goodenough, born about 1892.

1900 – US Census of Iowa, C Rex Goodenough, age 8.

1910 – US Census of Iowa, Charles R Goodenough, age 18.

1912 – Marriage of Charles R Goodenough, age 25, to Edna R Malin.

1917 – WWI Draft Registration of Charles Rex Goodenough, born September 5, 1892. Claims an exemption as he has a wife and a child. No reason to lie about his age.

1920 – US Census of Iowa, Rex C Goodenough, age 28, has a wife and two children.

1920 – Newspaper clippings in October. Rex Goodenough disappears. Clippings give his occupation as a mechanic.

 

 

 

 

1922 – Rex and Edna’s youngest daughter dies. He is called Rex Goodenough on her death record.

1929 – Edna filed for divorce. It was granted on grounds of desertion. She received no alimony.

1930 – I cannot find a census record or a directory record. I believe he is California.

1934 – Rex G Goodenough marries Vera. The printing is clear on the index record. It definitely says Rex G.  On the actual record, he is called Rex Gordon Goodenough. I believe they divorced.

Before 1939 – I believe he married for a third time, a lady name Flo May. As I have not found a record, perhaps they partnered instead.

1938 – Rex Gordon. City Directory of Los Angeles. Living with aunt, Jessie Ballantyne, at 666 S. Sydney Dr. Page 164 and 795. Mechanic. (Also there with Florence in 1940, although he was dead.)

1939 – Bert Rex Goodenough, also known as Bert Rex Gordon, died on November 18. Mrs. Flo May Goodenough (Gordon), his wife, was the informant.

 

 

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9SJ-NPVQ?view=index&personArk=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AQLL3-39RH&action=view&cc=2001287&lang=en&groupId=

 

Was this the record of our Rex? Let’s look at the information that the informant gave.

 

  • His date of birth is similar, September 5, 1890. I think I will stick to the information on his draft registration, but I’d like to see a record of birth to be sure. I’ll not quibble about it.
  • He is the proprietor of an auto repair shop, and has worked in this profession for twenty-five years.
  • He was born in Humboldt, Iowa.
  • His father was Charles A Goodenough. His mother was Annie L Ballantyne, who was born in Canada.

 

All of these facts indicate that Bert Rex Goodenough alias Gordon is our Rex.

Always interesting to me is the cause of death; in this case, coronary sclerosis and an embolism.

 

Bert Rex Gordon is buried in the Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, California. Dates match the death record. A Florence Gordon is buried in the same cemetery, but in a different section; death 1963. I sent a query to the cemetery, asking if they are husband and wife. I await their reply.

So ends the life of Charles Rex Goodenough, alias Charles Gordon Goodenough, alias Bert Rex Goodenough, alias Bert Rex Gordon. Husband of Edna R Malin, Vera Rozelva Bachman Meyers Gilbert (Gilbert as of 1940), and allegedly Flo May (Maiden Name Unknown) Goodenough or Gordon. Father to Patricia and Rachel.

 

                When you break down a brick wall, you will almost always get new questions. Flo May is, so far, as elusive as Rex.

               

This ends week twenty-four of our centennial virtual celebration of 1926 – 2026.

 

 

Thursday, May 28, 2026

My Giddyup Go Has Come Back

 

Uncle Peg’s Chronicles

May 28, 2026

“My Giddyup Go Has Come Back


 

“These were their settlements. And they kept good family records.”[1]

Don’t forget to look for the title which is embedded in the chronicle.

 


 

 

 

FAMILY ALBUM

This is the family of Charles and Anna (Ballantyne) Goodenough. Anna was the daughter of James and Fanny (Holmes) Ballantyne. Fanny was the first child of Daniel and Charlotte. Charles and Anna are in the back, June is on Charles’ lap. Rex is in the center, and Frances is on the right.

And I Quote:

 

Re your note on not finding the Census of Agriculture:
On the LAC census pages, you will find the other schedules after the population pages, parish by parish. Schedule 3 is Agriculture. However, I could only find the “Western part” of Sussex parish, so the population data for the Eastern part, which contains what became Cardwell (and others, I presume), seems to be missing.
~ Cliff Marks – a friend of the family, and always helpful, especially when it comes to that area of the province. Thanks, Cliff. I will take Karl at his word.

 

This is not a quote from the chronicle, but a quote from Dave, editor of “Generations,” re my article about H Fenwick Holmes. He’s always sparse with his words, so I appreciate it: Good article.

 

 

1926 to 1928

 

1924 to 1928 are the years that our Holmes ancestors spent renewing relationships that had somehow fallen by the wayside but with organization, letter writing, and challenging travel – by hook or by crook – they managed to come together again. They reacquainted and rediscovered their family ties. And then, one by one, they died, and many of those ties died with them.

2026 to 2028

                These past two weeks, I went back in time to 2017 and 2018, to my binder of blurbs that I wrote to you on a weekly basis. They were called “Book Update Thursday” and “3 Rs Thursday.” And that is just what they were: updates of my book. I didn’t reveal many secrets, so the updates were as ambiguous to me as I suppose they were to you. However, they were invaluable to me.                                                                     I find it weird that I forgot all about the book I was writing at the time. I didn’t even mention the title; it was always the “grandchildren book.” I did much work at the time, and then I dropped it. Some of you did some work on the book as well, especially Paula. I suppose I have a good forgetter.                                              From June 14, 2018. “Did you ever have a project that you just had to shelve for a while? Maybe a knitting project, or quilting, or woodworking, or poetry? That’s my grandchildren book. I have lost the je ne sais quoi that I need to get back to it. I will. Just not now. My giddyup go just got up and went. It will come back. Please bear with me.”                                                                                                                                                     Well. My giddyup go has come back. I went to my long list of WORD documents and found it: “Far From the Old Post Road.” My grandchildren book. There’s a lot of stuff in there: some, I can no longer find on line. Into my “Westmorland” it goes; I incorporate, make the changes, and verify the citations. I will leave FFTOPR as is. This will be a great help to me going forward. My thanks to all of you who helped me with providing photos, stories, and edits, especially if your rememberer is better than mine.

MEMORIAL DAY

Trace Holmes posted a tribute to his dad on the Memorial Day Weekend.

82 years ago, my dad was sitting in a barracks in England waiting for Ike to decide when to invade France. After Normandy, he was seriously injured by shrapnel somewhere in Belgium and was sent back to England for surgery. By the time his wound was healed, Germany had surrendered, so they shipped him back to the US to take part in the invasion of Japan. While on the ship to Boston, Japan surrendered, so they gave him a purple heart and discharged him. He thumbed home from Boston, which was the first time I ever saw him because he was in England when I was born.                                              He got a job and soon bought a fixer-upper with a VA loan. He modernized the house, always had a job, and with my mom eventually saw all three of his offspring graduate from college.                     Most of his friends who came home did the same thing. They were a specially breed.

Thinking of you Dad.”

 

FAMILY HISTORY LESSON

                It’s always fun to review an ancestor and find new stuff, but sometimes, the stuff isn’t always fun. I am presently reviewing the James and Fanny Ballantyne family. Fanny was the first child of Daniel and Charlotte. She married James W Ballantyne, went off to live with or near his family in Smith Falls, Ontario, and then off they went to Brooklyn, Iowa. They are both buried in Brooklyn. Their children left me with more questions than answers.  Paula will probably remember them, for she dug as deep as I did. You may find this a tangled web, although I don’t suppose it was their intention to confuse us 120 years later. I’ll try to sort it out logically in the CCC.                                                                                           If you forget all about these people, have a look at your book or pdf copy – pages 73 to 77.         Thanks to FamilySearch’s rather new Full Text search capability, I have found another mention of the Bever connection in James’ Last Will and Testament and some of the probate. I also located the Last Will and Testament and part of the probate of their daughter, Charlotte. She left the bulk of her estate to her older sister, Jessie, but also a small amount ($90) to others. $90 stretched further in 1935, when Charlotte died. The others were her nephews and nieces: Fannie Davis, Mabel Kimball, June Goodenough, Myrne Goodenough, and Rex Goodenough.                                                                  James’ probate acknowledged Jessie’s alleged last name, Bever, and confirms her relationship with William Kilmer.                                                                                                                                                                                Further research tells of the potential consequences of adultery back then.                                                            Charlotte’s LW&T gives me more to work on, but so far, it hasn’t helped with records. That is the list of the nephews and nieces.                                                                                                                                       Charlotte leaves money to Mabel Kimball. It says she predeceased the testatrix, Charlotte. So, I have a wide window of a date of death, and a new last name. The date of death was between the writing of the will in 1931 and the probate of 1935. She is called Mabel Kimball. Now, is that an error in spelling of “Kilmer,” or a new husband? I still cannot find any marriage records or a death record for Mabel/Mable.  Since Mabel died, her share of the money went to her son, Lyle Ballantyne, also known as Lyle Bever and Lyle Kilmer by times. Can you see how Paula and I were confused?                                           I learned from the probate that Jessie was living in California in 1935. Fannie was there, and I suspect the rest were as well.  At least, I know for sure that Rex did not commit suicide, and he was in Los Angeles in 1934. I don’t know his eventual date and cause of death.

In 1935:

Jessie lived at 223 North St. Andrews Place, Los Angeles. Given the house, I take it she was boarding there, but I don’t know that for a fact. It currently has 5 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms, and is for sale for $2,395,000. (Probate instructions.)                                                                                                                     Arthur and Fanny Davis lived on LaVerne Ave, Los Angeles. (Census of 1940, which also included addresses for 1935.)                                                                                                                                                                   June Goodenough lived with her sister and brother-in-law, Waldo and Myrne Seilor, on Oakford Drive, Los Angeles. Both LaVerne Ave and Oakford Drive are in Montebellow Township. (Census of 1940.)

I do not know where Rex lived, but in 1934, he married as his second wife, Vera Mayers, in Los Angeles.  (Marriage record.)                            Lyle and his wife, Alletta, lived on Whittier Blvd in Montebello Township, Los Angeles. (Census record of 1940.                                                                                                 All of these addresses are between one and nineteen miles of each other. (Google Maps.) The house where Jessie lived in 1935 is for sale, if you are interested.

https://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/223-N-St-Andrews-Pl_Los-Angeles_CA_90004_M20863-18096?cid=sem_7219905398_20039856195_151983378850_787568724237:G:s&s_kwcid=AL!15120!3!787568724237!!!g!!&gclsrc=aw.ds&sitelink=&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=20039856195&gbraid=0AAAAAD6NRB91uRKosi-Q6Gt-YM-mV_R-5&gclid=CjwKCAjwq6DQBhBVEiwA4ZD5XEmxX0w02NOMJAHgEwe9BMeIOjKQleOuDfPNUCnKFOoVDF8dcLSGTBoCtQIQAvD_BwE               

One more thing. I found the obituary of Charles Henry Goodenoug, husband of Anna Louise. (See the header photo for a picture. That made my day. I hate saying, “I cannot find . . .,” although I have to.

Link is: https://livermore.advantagepreservation.com/viewer/?i=f&by=1911&bdd=1910&d=01011882-12311980&fn=livermore_gazette_usa_iowa_livermore_19111116_english_8&df=371&dt=380

 

This ends week twenty-two of our centennial virtual celebration of 1926 – 2026.

 

 

Rex Needed You to Find Him

  Uncle Peg’s Chronicles June 11, 2026 “Rex Needed You to Find Him”   “These were their settlements. And they kept good family recor...