Servants & Tenants

By Name

Charlie Burns

Dave Aiken

Eliza Hawkins

By Type of Work


Harry & Sussie Roseberry

Harry and Sussie Roseberry were tenants at the Dinsmore Homestead for many years and raised their family there.  We at Dinsmore are very thankful for Harry’s presence because he was instrumental in keeping the buildings and the artifacts in the main house in good order.  Had Harry not lived on the property, Dinsmore might not even exist today as a museum.

Harry outside the Cook Cabin

Harry Roseberry was born in 1881 to George and Mary Jane Sebree Roseberry.  In 1894 Harry first came to work on the Dinsmore farm, though George had been working for Julia on a seasonal basis previous to that.  On November 23, 1904, Harry married Sussie Riley a Boone County native.  There were four daughters born to the family – Cleopatra, Essie, Annie Myrtle, and Mary Ruby.

Harry died in 1970 and was buried next to his wife and Essie in the Belleview Baptist cemetery, less than a mile from the farm where he spent so much of his life.

Read here for an extended biography.



Julia Farley Loving

Born in Virginia, Julia was living in St. Paul when she agreed to accompany Patty Selmes to the Dakota Territory to keep house. Julia helped to raise Isabella and then followed her to New York City and raised her children, Martha and Bobby Ferguson. Over six feet tall and fluent in French, she retired to California. When Martha Ferguson died, she requested to be cremated and to have her ashes placed in Julia Farley Loving’s grave.

Read here for an extended biography.



Sally Taylor

Sally Taylor – born ca. 1810, perhaps in Mississippi. She was on the plantation in Louisiana & brought to Kentucky with all of her children except Adam and Henry, two of the oldest. James Dinsmore never mentioned her husband but it is odd that he purchased Jamison soon before moving here, so I suspect he may have been the one. Her children that we know of are: Adam (1830), Daniel (1831), Henry (1833), Nannette (1835), David (1838), Angeline (1840), Judy (1841), and Jane (1842). Mandy/Amanda may be her child & was born in 1850 or so. Julia always mentioned an Aunt Susan in the 1880s & 1890s – she may have been another daughter.



Basketmakers

All names in bold worked for Julia.  All others worked for James.

Frederick Schneider
Christopher Schmidt
Jacob Phillippe
Johannes Weisickle

Peter & John Zimmerman
Frederick Naegle
Mr. Grenat
Barnabas Schmidt
Peter & John Deck
Johannes Bletz
Henry & Peter Keim
John Bohner
Carl Graff
Jacques Mosse
Nicholas Miller
August Bohen
Mathieu Saladen
Ignace Suffreit
August Cook
Jacob Wyman/Wimmen
Jacob Klopp
Joe Maurer

Weaving

John Schofield

Vintners

Wine House

All names in bold worked for Julia.  All others worked for James.

Mr. Morrison (1840's)
Mr. Grenat (1850's)
Joseph Hunt (1870's)

Fencing & Farming

All names in bold worked for Julia.  All others worked for James.

Mr. Morrison
Daniel & Jacob Koons
Clark Green
J. R. Spencer
Samuel & Nathan Gibbs
Benjamin & Woodford Searcy
John Cantwell

Horse Barn

James Odell
Conrad Noll
Henry Darling
James & Richard Louden
Absalom Adams
James Majors
Milton Merchant
Charlie Rockwell
Jilson Hawkins
Joe West
Richard Louden
Flave Louden
Bill Lacy
John Beatty
Henry Bradford
John Lacy
Charley Burns
Isaac Sanders
Leomer Loudon
Harry Roseberry 

House Servants & Cooks

Hearth in the Cook Cabin

The following people all worked for Julia.

Eliza Hawkins
Angeline Beatty
Sally Taylor

Susan Steele
Susan Taylor
Lou Kelly
Fanny Strader Lee
Mrs. Bradford
Emma Hunt
Lou Kelly

Building Workers

Cook Cabin

John Brady

Absalom Adams
Berry Searcy
Hiram Horton
George McClure
Charles Symonds
Dave Aiken (worked for Julia)
Charlie Burns (worked for Julia)

Timber

David Hickman
Mr. Pugh