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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

49 Five Little Words

Elizabeth Crull, My Maternal 2nd Great-Grandmother

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks

Week 49 – December 2, 2025

Prompt: Written




Five little words stopped me in my tracks:


"Elizabeth Crull ordered to Almshouse. "




They appeared in a short notice titled County Court in The Springfield (MO) Leader on January 10, 1878. Until that discovery, the last record I had of Elizabeth and her husband Daniel was the 1870 census in Spring River Township, Lawrence County, Missouri—thirty-two miles west of Springfield. I had never thought to look for the family in Springfield.


But recently Nancy—who helped me research my great-grandparents Lucinda and Josiah Coon long before I knew Lucinda’s maiden name—sent me the link to that newspaper snippet. And with those five words, a new path opened.


Following the Clue


My first questions were immediate and practical:

What was the Almshouse like?

Did it have a cemetery where Elizabeth might be buried?

Did Daniel die before she was admitted?

And why was Elizabeth in Springfield at all?



The Greene County Almshouse—also called the county poor farm—sheltered the impoverished, disabled, or ill. It wasn’t a place people entered lightly.


I posted my new clue on Facebook, and Annette—one of my genealogy friends with a legendary personal library—replied within hours. She said she had a book that indexed the Superintendent’s Register of the Almshouse. She scanned it and sent me a PDF.

There, on page 50 (page 56 of the scan), I found Elizabeth Crull, age 40.

But then came the surprise.

Lucinda, age 14, was listed too.

And beside her—Samuel, age 6—a younger sibling I had never heard of.


The Almshouse Records



The index listed their dates of admission and dismissal. The “date of death” column was blank for all three, confirming that Elizabeth did not die in the Almshouse.


Their timeline:

January 8, 1878 – Elizabeth and Samuel admitted

March 10–11, 1878 – Elizabeth dismissed; Samuel dismissed the next day

November 11, 1878 – Elizabeth, Lucinda, and Samuel all readmitted

January 13, 1879 – All three dismissed together


The index noted that the original Superintendent’s Register was held at the Greene County Archives and Records Center, so I contacted them to see whether anything more could be learned. Jake at the Archives checked for a surviving court record (none exists) but confirmed they still had the original register itself. Within minutes he photographed the relevant pages and emailed them to me. The entries didn’t offer much beyond what the index provided, though they did include Elizabeth, Lucinda, and Samuel’s race—listed as white—but seeing those original pages felt like touching their lives directly.























So why were they admitted? Illness seems unlikely with all three together.

Most likely they were destitute.


What Five Little Words Revealed


Those five words—“Elizabeth Crull ordered to Almshouse”—gave me more than I expected.


I learned:

Elizabeth lived at least until 1878, extending her known life by eight years.

Lucinda had a younger brother, Samuel Crull.

The family lived in Springfield in 1878–79, adding a new location to their story.


The Springfield Thread


Springfield has appeared in this family’s story before.

Lucinda wrote in her Bible that she and Josiah Coon were married in Indian Territory in 1898, yet her oldest son, Charlie Walter Coon, was born in Springfield in 1890.


Her son Frank Coon’s WWII draft registration gives his birth as February 29, 1898 in Springfield, while his WWI registration and Social Security record list February 29, 1896. Since 1896 was a leap year, that is likely correct.


Family lore says that Charlie died in Springfield when the horse-drawn hearse he was driving overturned.


Springfield keeps returning—quietly, unexpectedly—like a place that refuses to be left out of the story.






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