Remembering
Tuolumne…..
By Joseph Celentano, Research Committee
E-mail: JCelentano@TuolumneMuseum.org
.
This month we take a look at
the Francis Clinton Cullers family.
TCMM member Sharon Cullers McCrystal wrote this article for us
last year. She is in the process of
extensive genealogy research into her family and has consented to share the
Cullers story with us.
The
Cullers Family is related by marriage to our own Ed McDow. Elmer Ernest McDow, (Ed's Father)
married Laura Belle Cullers (Ed's mother).
Francis Clinton Cullers was born in Luray, Page
County, Virginia on September 10, 1837 to William Henry Cullers and Catharine
Huffman. Francis came to the Pacific
Coast and the Mother Lode in 1853, by the familiar Isthmus of Panama route.
Directing his steps toward the southern mines, he began digging at Yankee
Hill, near Columbia, and remained there for the almost unprecedented time of
sixteen years!
His next and final location
was in Confidence. Francis married Anna Maria Eastwood in Sonora
on July 4, 1867. At the time he was 31
years old and she was 16. Anne Marie was
born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Their
children were William Clinton, Henry Milton, George (nmn), Laura Belle,
Francis Robert and Leroy (Roy) Charles. Leroy
(Roy) Cullers owned a grocery store in Tuolumne.
Sharon states her father, Charles
Clinton Cullers, was diagnosed with Ankylosing Spondylitis, a genetic
condition that is a rheumatic disease that causes arthritis of the spine and
sacroiliac joints and can cause inflammation of the eyes, lungs, and heart
valves. It varies from intermittent episodes of back pain that occur throughout
life to a severe chronic disease that attacks the spine, peripheral joints and
other body organs.
It is of interest to note
that Francis Clinton's son, William Clinton Cullers was so crippled with
arthritis that his mother, Anne Marie, moved in with him and took care of
him. William never married.
Francis Clinton Cullers spent the first years of his
residence in Columbia, where he was engaged in mining, which occupation, like
most of the pioneers, he followed until he died. From Columbia, he moved to
Arastraville, where the last years of his life were spent. Francis named the mining settlement of Arastraville,
which is where the Ponderosa Hills subdivision is now located. An arrastra is a process for grinding ore to
get out the gold. A circle is built of stones and is filled in with ore. In the middle is a pole with horizontal
wooden beams. Heavy stone weights were
attached to the beams. When turned by a
mule or ox the ore was ground. In the
end they used water to flush out the ground ore and the gold remained.
Francis Clinton Cullers enjoyed the esteem of his
associates to a remarkable degree. He held the office of Worthy Chief of
the large and flourishing fraternal organization, Lodge of Good Templars. Francis was a man who enjoyed the respect and
good will of all who knew him, as he was considered honest, and trustworthy. He
died July 6, 1905 and is buried at Carter's Cemetery in Tuolumne Township.
On another interesting note,
the Cullers family is also related to the Rozier family by
marriage. Anne Marie Eastwood's mother
was Margaret Doyle Eastwood Rozier.
Another story told to Sharon
Cullers McChrystal by Ed McDow was about Ed's favorite uncle, Henry Milton
Cullers. "He could play the violin
by ear. He could play piano. He taught me how to hunt and told me to shoot
the deer in its eye. One day he got
twenty thousand dollars in gold out of the Hard Time Mine in Arastraville when
they first started mining. The mine went
underground for ten miles. The vein ran
out and his wife, Grace Ann Parkinson Cullers, grabbed him by the nape of the
neck one day and told him they were moving.
He got a job managing orchards in Placerville".
We wish
to thank Sharon for sharing with us her personal memories of the Cullers
Family.
We solicit articles from all
members of the community, so if you have an interesting story relating to your
own personal experiences of "Remembering Tuolumne", contact Joe
Celentano of the TCMM Historical Research Committee at 928-3516 and leave a
message.
…and thus, another page turns in the history of
Remembering Tuolumne.
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