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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Dora Alice Blanchard: Birth: 26 SEP 1865 in Elwood, Missouri. Death: 29 APR 1956 in Springfield, Missouri

  2. Delia A. Blanchard: Birth: 2 APR 1867 in Missouri. Death: 2 APR 1948

  3. Henry W. Blanchard: Birth: 23 DEC 1868 in Missouri.

  4. Sarah Francis (Fannie) Blanchard: Birth: 9 NOV 1870 in Springfield, Missouri.

  5. Robert E. Lee Blanchard: Birth: 12 AUG 1874 in Missouri.

  6. Mary Virginia (Virgie) Blanchard: Birth: 3 SEP 1877 in Missouri. Death: 13 FEB 1918 in Springfield, Mo.

  7. John M. Blanchard: Birth: 25 JUN 1880 in Missouri. Death: 8 APR 1914 in Nevada


Family
Marriage:
Notes
a. Note:   1. Death Cert.
  2. Blanchard, G.I. is found in pg. 181 Greene Co. MO. U.S. Census 1880.
  3. Blanchard, Green I. is found in pg. 324 Greene Co. MO. U.S. Census 1850.
  4. According to the headstone at Clear Creek Cem in MO,, Green Irwin was a Mason.
  5. Clear Creek Cemetery is located 3.75 miles South, 1 mile West of Willard, Missouri. Its is also 1/4 Mile West of Tatum Chapel Baptist Church.
  6. From the 1904 Greene Co. MO Plat Book, in the Greene County, MO Archives and Records Center, Springfield, MO:
  Any data with an asterisk at the end means that the original transcriber wasn't sure of their reading.
 If the person lived in town, the name of the town is listed rather than the township/range/section.
 Please note: Business names are mixed in among individuals. LAST NAME FIRST NAME OR INITIALS TOWNSHIP RANGE SECTION BLANCHARD G. I. 29 23 11 BLANCHARD Estate 29 23 10 7. PAST & PRESENT OF GREENE COUNTY, MISSOURI, VOL 2
 Fairbanks, Jonathan & Tuck, Clyde Edwin. Indianapolis, A. W. Bowen & Co, 1915
  GREEN IRWIN BLANCHARD.
  There is a recess in every man�s brain that answers to the call of the wilderness, a heritage of pre-historic origin which will be with us always. If given the opportunity, it will respond at once to nature�s beauty and depth. What is more natural than man's love for the conditions and environment that gave him food and shelter, enabling him to live during the dawn of his existence? Thus it is easy to understand why many of us prefer the country and life on the farm to that of the city. One such family is the Blanchards of whom Green Irwin Blanchard, of Center township, Greene county, is a creditable representative. For generations they have tilled the soil, made a good living and been happy. The older members knew what it was to fight the wilderness in order to live, but this they did courageously and successfully, and never complained that their lot was hard.
 Mr. Blanchard was born on December 17, 1838, at Russellville, Logan county, Kentucky. He is a son of Henry Hudson Blanchard and Mary (Patton) Blanchard, both of whom were born, reared and educated in that county and state and there they were married and established their home. Their parents were from North Carolina, immigrating to the Blue Grass state in an early day. The family is of English origin but for the last four generations they have lived in the United States. When our subject was one year old he was brought by his parents in 1839 to Greene county, Missouri, the family locating in Center township on what is known as Leeper's Prairie and theirs was the first house built in that that neighborhood, their nearest neighbor being over three miles away. When Henry H. Blanchard landed in the wilds of this locality his worldly possessions consisted of a broken down wagon, a team of ponies in the same condition and five dollars in money; but, being a man of enterprise, he forged ahead and at the time of his death in 1862 he had acquired over three hundred acres of good land, several hundred head of live stock and a competency, besides a comfortable home. This was considered quite an achievement for those days and proves the sterling mettle from which the Blanchards are made. His family consisted of but two sons, Green I. of this sketch and John A., who was born in 1836. The latter received his education in the district schools of Greene county and here worked on the home farm when a boy, and he devoted his active life to general farming. He took a deep interest in public affairs and in 1872 was elected recorder of deeds of Greene county, the duties of which office he ably discharged for four years, then moved back to the farm, and later he served fourteen years as justice of the peace and was a member of the school board for several years, giving satisfaction as a public servant in every respect; in fact, he was a strong personality and influential in his locality. His death occurred in 1895.
 Green I. Blanchard grew to manhood on the home farm in Center township where he worked when a boy and he received his education in the schools of his community, attending subscription schools until he was fifteen years old, after which the public schools being established he attended them until he was twenty-one years old. He was twelve years old when the family moved to within a mile of Elwood and there our subject lived until his marriage in 1860 to Mary Eaton, who died in 1884. For his second wife he married Mrs. Mary E. Lawdermilk, nee Craven , a daughter of Thomas G and Mary Craven, of Center township, in September, 1886. The first marriage resulted in the birth of seven children, six of whom are still living, namely: Dora A, born on September 26, 1865, married in 1883 A. A. Vaughan, a cabinet maker in the Frisco shops at Springfield, and they have one child, Earl, born on July 24, 1895; he was graduated from the Springfield public schools, and is now a teacher in a manual training school there. Delia A., born April 2, 1867, married in 1884, B. L. Chastain, a contractor of Springfield; Henry W., born on December 23, 1868, is a conductor on the Rock Island railroad, lives in Kansas City, married Cora O�Neil in 1890 and they have one child, Irwin, who was born in 1911. Fannie, born on November 9, 1870, married on May 30, 1893, Millard Brady, a railroad man of Parsons, Kansas; they have one child, Grace, who is now eleven years old; Robert Lee, born on August 12, 1874, who is a conductor on the Missouri Pacific railroad; he lives in Kansas City, and he married Bernice Gilty of that place. Virginia, born on September 3, 1877, married F. E. Blockman, a farmer living near Elwood, Center township, and they have two sons, Robert and June, fifteen and thirteen years old, respectively. John M., born on June 25, 1880, was a railroad man and died in Nevada, April 8, 1914; he married Della Kindrix, of Center township, this county, who, with one child, Geraldine, eleven years old, survives him.
 Our subject�s second wife was born on May 17, 1855, in Randolph county, North Carolina ; she was first married to Dr. A. A. Lowdermilk, who died in 1884. She spent her girlhood in North Carolina and their she was educated. When nineteen years of age she removed with her parents to Greene county, Missouri, the family locating near Springfield where she lived until her marriage.
 Our subject has made a success as a general farmer. He moved to his present farm of fifty-five acres in Section II, Center township, in 1892 and here he has a neat home.
 Mr. Blanchard was a soldier in the Civil War, having enlisted in May, 1863, in the Sixth Missouri Provisional Militia and served faithfully until August, 1864.
 Fraternally, he is a member of United Lodge No. 5, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons. He belongs to the Baptist Church. Politically, he is a Democrat.
  8.Family found in "Morley + Blanchard Families", 1998 Pg 247



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