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Charles R.

Source 285 – News Article: Regarding Charles R. Thomas, Adventurer

March 22, 2025 by Admin

Title: Adventurer Reminisces. C.R. Thomas, 91 Monday, Recalls “Lustiest” Era in America
Book/Periodical: Grand Rapids Press
Locality:
Date: approximately October 1953
Page:
Repository: Jan Fisher?
Detail: 

Adventurer Reminisces

A Grand Rapids man who once shared a tent with William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody when both were Indian scouts in the Dakotas, will be 91 years old Monday.

Charles R. Thomas of 878 Sixtieth St SE, who enjoyed every minute of the “lustiest era in American history” as a circus roustabout, a lumbering man, a railroad worker and a cattle rancher, will be feted with an open house from 2 to 4 pm Sunday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Martin Hoorn of 883 Sixty-First St. SE.

Thomas, who lives alone and does his own cooking and housework, left his farm home in North Dorr when he was 18 to join a circus. He lived in the life of an adventurer from then on.

Recalls Highlights

Some of his experiences: running logs down the Mississippi river, negotiating with members of the Blackfoot Indian tribe when the Redmen were enthusiastic about going on the warpath, holding in one arm the most famous midget who ever lived and the midget’s wife in the other and carrying them through a milling circus crowd, being wiped out by hoof and mouth disease as a cattleman in Texas and Tennessee.

These were highlights. But brighter memories for Thomas are events which occurred while he was pursuing what was one of the roughest, toughest occupations in the world – lumbering in Michigan and Minnesota in the 1880’s.

Government Estimator

Thomas was a professional lumber estimator for the government and he says he can still tell within a few board feet how much lumber is in any given 80 forest acres. In this capacity he lived six years in northern Minnesota in the woods with another man, closer to Indians than any whites. It was here he rode logs down the Mississippi.

“But the Mississippi log runs were tame, compared with those on the Muskegon river,” says Thomas. He recalls the time he mounted his first log on a Michigan river run – and promptly fell in. It was far from funny, Thomas says, trying to survive in a rushing river full of grinding, bumping logs. But when he dragged himself out, veteran lumbermen just laughed and told him to try a smaller log next time. Small logs, he learned, were far easier to ride than big ones.

It was during his lumbering days in Michigan that Thomas became the friend of a famous rowdy of that brawling era, “Silver Jack” O’Driscoll, who had built an almost legendary reputation for proficiency at gouge-as-gouge-can fist-fighting.

Wasn’t Half Bad

And Thomas wants to do a little something toward sweetening “Silver Jack’s”memory. “He wasn’t half as bad as people thought,” says Thomas. “He was always decent to me.”

Thomas stayed two months with the circus, which he joined in Kalamazoo. It was, of course, P.T. Barnum’s “Greatest Show on Earth”.

One day, when Thomas was standing near the stable tent, watching a huge crowd gather around a circus barker across the way, he felt a tug at his sleeve. It was Mrs. Tom Thumb, wife of “General” Tom Thumb, the midget who was Barnum’s headline attraction for years. The midget’s wife, even smaller than her famous husband, wanted Thomas to carry her and the “General” through the crowds so they wouldn’t be trampled on their way to another tent. Thomas complied, carrying “General” Tom Thumb on one arm and Mrs. Tom Thumb on the other.

“They were cute little rascals,” Thomas recalls.

After leaving the circus, Thomas drove mules for grading work on the now defunct Clover Leaf Railroad between Toledo, Ohio, and St. Louis, Mo.

Then came a stint as Indian scout in northern Minnesota and the Dakotas where the Blackfoot Indians were “feeling their oats in deadly fashion.”

The night he spent with Buffalo Bill, says Thomas, didn’t leave much of an impression. “He was just another scout then,” he says. After enough adventure to fill an ordinary lifetime, Thomas came back to Michigan and immediately entered the lumber trade. He was a lumberjack, a buyer and a transporter, in addition to being an estimator. When the lumbering era began to fade after the turn of the century, Thomas, then married, bought a cattle ranch near East Jordan.

In 1921, when his wife’s health failed, he moved his family to southern United States, where he engaged in cattle-ranching in Tennessee and Texas.

At one time, he says, he had a sizable outfit, but hoof and mouth disease, on one of its periodic rampages, struck down his herd and for the next few years Thomas and his family lived in almost every state in the southwest while he worked at a variety of occupations.

In 1931, the family returned to Grand Rapids where Thomas was employed by a local contractor. He retired for good in 1933.

Thomas’ wife, Iva, died in 1947. He has two daughters besides Mrs. Hoorn. They are Mrs. James St. Arno of Detroit and Mrs. Harry Hine of Cadillac. He has a son, Robert of Detroit, also 11 grandchildren and a great-grandchild. 

Filed Under: Newspaper Tagged With: Charles R., Thomas

Source 258 – Marriage License – Charles Thomas, Marie

March 22, 2025 by Admin

Title: Marriage License for Charles R. Thomas and Marie A. Caminsky (wife 1)
Date: March 2, 1898
Locality: Byron, Kent County, MI
Repository:
Detail: web file URL: ???

Date of License: March 1, 1898
Date of Marriage: March 2, 1898
Place of Marriage: Byron, Kent Co., Mich.
Name Who Married: Rev. C. Otquau

Full Name of Bridegroom: Charles R. Thomas, age 34, white, of Dorr, Allegan Co., Mich
Birthplace: Dorr, Mich.
Occupation: Farming
Father: George S. Thomas
Maiden Name of Mother: Julia Irwin
Times Previously Married: none
Witness: George S. Thomas, Dorr, Mich.

Bride: Marie A. Caminsky, age 19, white, of Byron Twp., Kent Co., Mich
Birthplace: Germany [around 1879]
Occupation: none
Father: Godfred Caminsky
Maiden Name of Mother: Amelia Tillman
Times Previously Married: none
Witness: Bertha Caminsky, Byron, Mich.

Filed Under: Vital Record: Marriage Tagged With: Caminsky, Charles R., Marie A., Thomas

Source 257 – Marriage License – Charles Thomas, Alta A. Brown

March 22, 2025 by Admin

Title: Marriage License for Charles R. Thomas and Alto A. Brown (wife 2)
Date: April 17, 1907
Locality: Lowell, Kent County, MI
Curator: Christine Fisher
Detail: web file  URL: ???

April 17, 1907 – Lowell, Kent County, Michigan

Groom: Charles R. Thomas, age 42, white, of Dorr Allegan Co.
Birthplace: Dorr, Mich.
Occupation: Timberman
Father: George S. Thomas Dorr Allegan
Maiden Name of Mother: Julia Irwin
Times Previously Married:
Witness: Scott W. Thomas; Lowell, MI

Bride: Alto A. Brown, age 20, white, of Wyoming Twp
Birthplace: Wyoming Twp
Occupation: Domestic
Father: William Brown
Maiden Name of Mother: Amelia Tillman
Times Previously Married: none
Witness: Lucinda M. Thomas Lowell, MI

Filed Under: Vital Record: Marriage Tagged With: Alta A., Brown, Charles R., Thomas

Source 109 – Official Letter by Lorene E. Lodge, Estate of Viola Thomas

September 8, 1920 by Admin

08 September 1920

State of Michigan – The Probate Court for the County of Kent

In the Matter of the Estate of Viola Thomas, Minor.
First Annual Account.
To the Probate Court of said County:
The Grand Rapids Trust Company, a Michigan Corporation, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, respectfully represents unto this Honorable Court that it was on the 5th day of September, A.D. 1919, duly appointed Guardian of the estate of said Minor, and submits the following as its First Annual Account as such Guardian, covering the period from the date of its appointment to September 5th, 1920.

It charges itself as follows: Debits
Property as per Inventory on file:
Draft for $479.70
Check 690.87
1170.57
Total Property as per inventory on file 1,170.57
[missing a portion of this page]
01 April 1920 Public service of Northern Illinois paid six months interest to April 1, 1920, at 5% on $1000. bond …

It credits itself as follows: Credits
Disbursements:
17 Sept 1919 Paid Charles R. Thomas in full of services re care of Minor as allowed by order of Court, dated Sept 5, 1919… $250.00
11 Feb 1920 Paid Ralph A. Mosher, County Treasurer, tax of one-half of 1% on 1-$1000. Public Service of Northern Illinois bond… $5.00
19 Feb 1920 Paid Charles R. Thomas to apply on account of care, clothing, etc. of minor… $50.00
26 April 1920 Paid Charles R. Thomas to apply on account of care of minor… $50.00
Sept 1920 Paid Grand Rapids Trust Co., fees as Guardian for year ending Sept. 5, 1920… $10.00

21 Sept 1919 To purchase of 1-$1000.00 Public Service of Northern Illinois First and Refunding 5% bond, due Oct. 1, 1956, No. 22952, at 87… $870.00

It further represents that the foregoing account contains a correct statement of all the good, chattels, rights, credits and estate which have come into its knowledge or possession, and also of all expenditures and disbursements by it made for or on account of said estate.

It, therefore, prays that the foregoing account be allowed as its First Annual Account as Guardian of the estate of said Minor, and for the allowance of its fees as such Guardian for the period covered by the foregoing account in the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00), and that due notice on the hearing of this account and petition be given as required by law.

Grand Rapids Trust Company as Guardian of the Estate of Viola Thomas, Minor,
by Robert D. Graham, President

On this 8th day of September, A.D. 1920, before me, a Notary Public in and for said County, personally appeared Robert D. Graham, President of the Grand Rapids Trust Company as Guardian of the Estate of Viola Thomas, Minor, who being duly sworn says, that he has read the foregoing account and petition by him signed in behalf of said Trust Company and knows the contents thereof, and that the same is true to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief.

Signed: Lorene E. Lodge, Notary Public, Kent County, Michigan
Commission expires: March 27, 1922

Filed Under: Estate Record, Letter: Official Tagged With: Charles R., MI - Grand Rapids, Thomas, Viola

Source 108 – Official Letter: Discharge of Administrator, Estate of Alta Thomas

June 19, 1915 by Admin

Author: Judge of Probate, State of Michigan – Probate Court for the County of Kent
Title: Letter to Charles R. Thomas regarding Estate of Alta A. [Brown] Thomas
Date: 19 June 1915
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

State of Michigan – Probate Court for the County of Kent
Discharge
In the matter of the estate of Alta Thomas, deceased, to Charles R. Thomas greeting.

Whereas, it appears by the records and proceedings of said court that you have in all things fully and justly performed and discharged all and singular the duties and obligations which by law and the orders of said court were required and enjoined upon you as administrator of said estate, and that you have duly and fully accounted for and administered all of said estate which has come into your possession, in the manner provided by law:

Now, therefore, you are hereby discharged, exonerated and acquitted from any and all liabilities concerning your said trust, and your doings and proceedings are forever quieted, your official bond cancelled, and your letters of administration heretofore granted are hereby revoked and annulled. Testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said court, at the City of Grand Rapids in said county, this 19th day of June 1915.
…. – Judge of Probate

Filed Under: Estate Record, Letter: Official Tagged With: Alta A., Brown, Charles R., MI - Grand Rapids, Thomas

Source 015 – Official Letter: George E. Nichols, Estate of Alta Thomas

March 24, 1915 by Admin

Author: George E. Nichols of Ionia, MI
Title: Letter to Mrs. Charles R. Thomas [Iva M. (Cooper) Thomas] of Ellsworth, MI
Date: 24 March 1915
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

March 24, 1915
Mrs. Charles R. Thomas
Ellsworth, Michigan

Dear Mrs. Thomas:
Yours of the 2nd at hand. Charlie ought not to attempt by any means to come to Grand Rapids until he gets well so that he can do so in safety. If he should come down here he is liable to get badly hurt and laid up all summer. You tell him I say for him to keep quiet. Spring is now opening up and in the course of the next four weeks he will want to be in a position to get busy. I will look after the master of the settlement of the estate of the child [Viola Thomas], but have him send me down the administrator’s account signed by him so that notice can be given ahead for say three or four weeks and he can come down then and we will fix it up and get the whole thing arranged, but by no means should he attempt to come now, because we couldn’t clean it up if he did. I have the money in the bank here and I will look after it so there will be no trouble.
With best regards, Yours truly,
George E. Nichols, Attorney at Law, National Bank Annex, Ionia, Michigan

Filed Under: Estate Record, Letter: Official Tagged With: Charles R., Cooper, George E., Iva M., Nichols, Thomas, Viola

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