Family History

My Great-Grandmother - Ada Frances Potter

Ada Frances Potter Was born on September 2, 1863 in Lena Stephenson, Illinois and her parents were Catharine Viele Potter and Christopher Potter. At a tender age, she accompanied her mother and grandparents on a 6 month long trip west across the prairie. They followed the Oregon Trail, taking the Overland Trail cutoff and arriving in Boulder, Colorado on August 1st, 1865.

On February 11, 1866 her mother, Catharine married David J. Goodail in Boulder.

1870 census shows Catharine and Ada in the home of David J. Goodail. Catharine was 33 at the time and owned real estate valuing $350. It is said that Catharine was the first woman in Boulder, possibly even in Colorado to have a legal will drawn up. In the will, she left Ada the property. 1870 census also shows Ada had a half brother born to Catharine and David. He was a year old at this time and his name was George.

When Ada was about ten years old, her mother died in childbirth on August 14, 1874. At the time of her death, Ada was to receive her inheritance, but since Catharine had remarried, the will reverted to her second husband and Ada was sent to live with her Aunt Rosetta and Uncle Fred Kohler on their ranch, George stayed with his father. Ada went to her grave telling family she had been cheated out of her inheritance; no one believed her.

Ada married Franklin Amidon, a gold miner and they lived in Cripple Creek Colorado (Teller County) and he worked as a gold miner at Portland Mill. 



Known children of Frank and Ada were:

John Franklin Amidon born October 31, 1892. He married Jessie Farren on March 5, 1911 in Colorado Springs and died of cancer in 1943.

Rosetta Bernice Amidon born April 7, 1894 in Eastonville, Colorado. She married Edgar Clarkson Bigler and they had three children, Florence Katherine, Edgar Clarkson Jr. and Bonnie Bee.

Frederick Martin Amidon (Mutt) born October 5, 1896.

The 1900 census estimates the year of their marriage as 1881. It also states she was the mother of six children, four of which were living at that time. Address listed for 1905-1906 is 942 S. Tejon (Colorado Springs?) and 1906-1908 at 944 S. Tejon. Also at that time it seems two of their children, John and Rosetta were boarding at 918 S. Sahwatch. John was employed at Amidon and Son Teas and Coffees on 1005 Colorado Ave.

Other residences listed are as follows:

1908 - 916 S. Sahwatch
1910 - 701 S. Cascade
1911 - 122 Hill
1913 - 1210 Lincoln Ave. This became 1210 Kiowa after Colo. Springs annexed Colorado City in 1917.
1916 - 1022 Sahwatch

November 12, 1916 Franklin Amidon (Ada’s husband) died from a cerebral hemorrhage at his residence at 1022 Sawatch St.

Ada’s further residences:
1922 - 505 Spruce
1924 - 108 N. Spruce
1926 - 13 S. Chestnut
1930 - 720 W. Bijou with her daughter Rosetta’s family.
1940 - 104 N. 3rd St. with her daughter Rosetta’s family.

Bonnie Bigler Eason (Ada’s granddaughter) said while Ada was living with the family, she would not allow her daughter and son-in-law to sleep in the same room and would tell Bonnie awful stories about “being with a man”. Bonnie remembers her as being a “bitter old woman”.

Carla Hale, Ada’s great-granddaughter remembers being a young girl, living in the home with Ada. Carla was forbidden to go to “great-gran’s” room, but since the room was so interesting -filled with things great-gran collected due to her “senility” (dementia), Carla would go in anyway at risk of getting a spanking. All would be well as they talked and played until great-gran would forget who she was and would become hysterical and begin screaming. Carla’s mom would come in and rescue Carla (now in tears), and Grandma Rosetta (Ada’s daughter) would come in to calm Ada.

Ada died the day before she turned 90, September 1, 1953. She is buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Colorado Springs. There is no stone marker as no one in the family could afford one for her.

My Great-Great Grandmother

Blog EntryJul 11, '12 3:31 PM
for everyone
Catharine Viele was born on April 16th 1836 in Illinois,
Her parents were James Boyd Viele 1809 – 1895 and Lucinda Emerson 1816 – 1867
On April 23, 1856 she married Christopher Potter, a Civil War Soldier.
*Potter, Christopher, married Catherine Vela on April 23, 1856. License #1053. Stephenson County, Illinois. Volume B, Page 65.
Sept. 2, 1863 her daughter, Ada Frances Potter was born
In 1865 she traveled by wagon train, moving with her family from Illinois to Colorado and they arrived in Boulder on August 1st.
Family stories say that she was the first woman in Boulder, possibly even in Colorado to have a legal will drawn up. In the will, she left her daughter Ada, a sizable amount in property, but when Catharine remarried, the estate reverted to her new husband and Ada spent the rest of her life telling friends and family that she was cheated out of her inheritance.
Christopher Potter, Catharine’s first husband married Rebecca Wakman on December 9, 1866
Potter, Christopher, married Mrs. Rebecca Wakman on December 9, 1866. License # 00005208. Rock Island County, Illinois. Volume 00C, 0081.
February 11, 1866 Catharine married David J. Goodail in Boulder
Charles Dabney J. P. D. A. Robinson Wit. Book E Page 235
Boulder County  Marriage Records
May 7th 1867 Lucinda Emerson (Catharine’s mother) died.
On June 4, 1868 in their Boulder home, Catharine and her husband David Goodail hosted the wedding of her sister, Rosetta to Frederick W. Kohler.
June 8, 1868: Albert, Catharine’s younger brother, moved in with their sister, Rosetta and her husband on the Kohler ranch.
1869 A son was born to Catharine and David; they named him George.
1870 census: David J. Goodail. He was 33 at that time, a carpenter born in Vermont. Value of personal estate: $250. Value of real estate $500.
1870 census: Catharine in the home of David J. Goodail. Age 33 Occupation: keeping house with real estate value of $350. This is the inheritance that Ada was to receive but reverted to David at the time of Catharine’s death. 
1870 census: Ada, age 5 born in IL – George age 1 born in CO
Catharine died on August 14, 1874.
According to the Boulder Genealogical Society and the City of Boulder Parks and Recreation site:
She was pregnant and they had to operate; she survived 18 hrs. and was buried in Columbia Cemetery. 
Block Book 2 map of B57 has Mrs. D.J. Goodail in grave #3 in B57 NW. This map was drawn very early on, probably by an early sexton. Her marker is in the east half of B58, the lot just south of B57. A photo of her marker and the marker to the north, George Harris who d Nov 1884, was taken pre 1966 by Muriel Wolle, Art Professor at Univ of Colorado. In 1971 the marker to the north was missing, only a base was there. Her remains may have been moved to the SE of B58 from NW of B57.
Following her mother's death, Ada went to live with her Aunt Rosetta Kohler on the Kohler ranch.
David J. Goodail married 31 Dec 1894 Emily J. Williams, teacher of Union Grove, Whiteside Co, IL, in the east. They returned to Boulder a few days ago. (Boulder County News 22 Jan 1875:3) 1880 Fulton, Whiteside Co, IL: David Goodail 44 M carpenter VVT VT VT, Emily 26 IL IL IL, George 11 CO VT IL, Birdie 4 CO VT IL.
In 1876 a daughter, Birdie was born to David and his second wife, Emily. By the 1880 census they had moved to IL
1880 census: Ada Goodail, age 16, was living with her aunt and uncle Rosetta (Viele) and Fred Kohler in Boulder in 1880.

1880 census: David Goodail age 44. Residence: Fulton, Whiteside, IL
Spouse: Emily Goodail age 26
Child: George Goodail age 11
Child: Birdie Goodail age 4 born in CO
1900 Census finds Christopher Potter in the Kansas State Soldiers’ Home in Dodge City, Ford, Kansas. According to information from Records of the Deaths and Burials at the Kansas State Soldiers’ Home in Fort Dodge, Ford County, Kansas he died on January 10, 1901

The Viele Family Moves West

Blog EntryJul 20, '12 5:09 PM
for everyone
James Boyd Viele Sr. was born May 30, 1819 near Schenectady, New York where he lived for 23 years and worked as a foreman of the first railroad between Schenectady and Albany on the Mohawk and Albany road. In 1833 (age 14) he moved with his parents to Bath, New York where he was a carpenter. In 1835 in Bath, he married Lucinda Emerson. They had eight children and they moved to Rock River, Illinois in 1841 where he ran a ferry for two years; then they moved to Stevenson County, Illinois. In 1865 they crossed the plains to Colorado.
Boulder County Miner article says James B. drove westward in early 1864 from Freeport, IL. 'In spite of the Indian troubles of that year, Viele recrossed the plains to buy farm machinery and to bring his family to Colorado. It took the family eight months to get here. His wife was ill. 
“Rosetta (James’ daughter) related how she in company with her parents, crossed the plains with ox teams, some cows being yoked up with the oxen and landed in Boulder the 1st day of August, 1865. One team of horses, however, was in the caravan, Rosetta herself driving them all the way from Omaha. ‘We brought with us our pet cow, which was tied behind the wagon and also a threshing machine. At night the cows were milked and the milk set on the running board of the threshing machine, and in the morning it was skimmed and put in a churn, with the fresh morning’s milk and from the jolting of the wagon during the day, by night we had butter enough to do us the next day and buttermilk to supply others of the party, out of which hot biscuits were made.’ “
According to Albert Viele as interviewed by Forest Crossen in 1960:
“Father and brother came in 1864 to Colorado. Mother had asthma. Was good for health to move here. Mother and children moved in 1865. Horses and wagon. Stopped at a fort and needed 100 rounds of ammunition and 100 men before they could go further. Waited for two other trains. Wagon boss. Saw Indians, put livestock in circle and kept watch. Third day came upon a massacre of a whole camp. Dug graves. Went on. Came through Denver. Camped on Hank Green Farm (now Martin Acres) in Boulder. Natural spring. Father had bought home on Pearl St. “
There were not many homes in Boulder in 1865. They pitched their tent on the public square (in 1912, this area was the court house grounds). He later bought a little four room house and a good sized tract for the trifling sum of $600. In 1912 this was the site of the Colorado Cafe. Lucinda died about a year after the family arrived. Their daughter Rosetta kept house for her father and the rest of the children.' (BCM 12 Sept 1912) 'The entire Viele family crossed the plains in 1865 in wagons drawn by horses, cows & ox teams. Their first home in Boulder was a combination log & frame house where the Colorado Cafe stood 1947.
He homesteaded south of Boulder City and spent his first five years here taking the thresher from farm to farm to harvest barley, oats and wheat. He and his sons slept in the fields and were fed by the farmers' wives. Albert states: “ Had a ten horse-power separator. One man drove horses. Threshed nearly year-round.” He also was the first to switch to a steam-powered thresher in 1878. Viele Lake in south Boulder is named after him.'
James Boyd Viele Sr. died December 22, 1895 of Pneumonia. He had owned property in Boulder, (“James B. Viele owned lot 11 in block 67, assessed at $375. His vacant lots on the northwest corner of eighth and Pearl Streets were assessed at $200. James B. Viele personal property $845.00”). “All property estimated at $7000.00 goes to his daughter Mrs. Fred W. Kohler except $2000. for son Albert. 


Children of James and Lucinda Viele:
I include in this document quite a bit about the Kohler's. We are not blood related to them, (my mother was led to believe we were because they didn't know the whole story) but there is a connection since our great-grandmother, Ada went to live with them (her Aunt Rosetta and Uncle Frederick Kohler) following her mother's (Catharine) death. I felt this would be applicable to understanding Ada and may print portions of that again under Ada's file.
Catherine - born April 16, 1836 in Illinois and died in childbirth August 14, 1874 in Boulder Colorado. Married Christopher Potter, a Civil War soldier on April 23, 1856 Daughter: Ada Frances Potter. She was buried in Columbia Cemetery. She married David J. Goodail on February 11, 1866 in Boulder.
Benjamin – born November 16, 1838; died in 1840
Thomas Jefferson – born May 20, 1841.  died September 13, 1887 suddenly by a stroke of apoplexy.  “His wife Polly Allen died May 6, 1887 at home 3 miles SE of Boulder. Her daughter and Mrs. Cora Allen went to visit her at about noon. She greeted them at the door, then started vomiting and died 5 minutes later. Dr. Ambrook did not know the cause. Now a large family of children are left without parental care”. Thomas is buried in Columbia Cemetery in Boulder.
Rosetta – born October 14, 1848 in Stphenson Co, Illinois
Rosetta married Frederick W. Kohler on June 4, 1868 in Boulder at the home of D.J. Goodail (husband of Rosetta’s sister, Catherine A.) – son of Frederick Kohler and Christina. (?)
“When Mrs. Kohler was married a few years later there was only one carriage in the place and Mr. Kohler went some distance to secure the use of it for the occasion. He himself owned a light wagon, but that was not quite the thing for a bridal tour.”
“In the early days,” she said, “there were no trees except along the creek, and when they wanted shade for celebrations, the men would go up in the mountains and bring down silver spruce trees and place them where they were wanted, standing them up against the buildings and sticking them in the ground.”
Rosetta’s husband Frederick W. Kohler Sr. was born in Germany and spent his first 18 years on a farm in Saxony Germany. He came to the United States in 1849 at age 18. He worked on a farm in Pennsylvania for 7 years, his first year’s wages coming to $100.00. He saved his money and in 1856 went to California by way of the Isthmus to try his luck gold mining. He made good in Calavaras County, in the Mother Lode country but lost it all in a bank swindle. He made another stake and moved east to Colorado Territory in 1862. He arrived in Colorado a poor man. He bought a quick claim deed and filed a homestead of 160 acres on which he built his ranch house. The farm was on Baseline Road, a mile east of Boulder at the Marshall Road Crossing, there he raised Hereford cattle.
Fred was Boulder County Commissioner two terms in 1885 on ‘a prominent and influential citizen of Boulder. He stands high in business, fraternal and political circles and was member of Mystic Shrine of Denver Fred Kohler, Sr. was an early settler to Boulder, arriving in 1862. He became a successful rancher in the area of what is now Baseline, and was a two-term County Commissioner. He was also one of the organizers of the Boulder National Bank.
Information found at the Columbia Cemetery website:
Fred Kohler, Sr. was an early settler to Boulder, arriving in 1862. He became a successful rancher in the area of what is now Baseline, and was a two-term County Commissioner. He was also one of the organizers of the Boulder National Bank. In 1903, Mr. Kohler and his wife, Rosetta, built this house in town right behind their son, Fred Jr.'s house at 942 Spruce Street. Fred Sr. reportedly committed suicide in the bathroom of the house in 1904. Their son and daughter-in-law, Ed and Rose, moved in to the house with Rosetta in 1904. Fred Jr. was president of the Boulder National Bank for many years. According to the city directory, they remained after Rosetta's death in 1919, until 1946, when Carl G. Anderson bought the house as a rental.
In 1903, Mr. Kohler and his wife, Rosetta, built this house in town right behind their son, Fred Jr.'s house at 942 Spruce Street. ' The log cabin was standing in 1912 about a mile down in the field. 'Our big house came later, was nearly a mansion in those days,' said Rosetta who had lived on the farm for 40 years in 1912. In 1955 the original farm house, barn and some acreage was owned by Mrs. E.C. Kohler, a daughter-in-law. Fred Sr. reportedly committed suicide in the bathroom of the house in 1904. He'd been despondent and nervous lately and had insomnia. He worried about everything. He died owning 800 'princely acres of valuable farm land, etc.'  'He was known for his liberality, his enterprise, his generosity and his strictest probity.’ He cut his throat when he locked himself in the bathroom. Fred left his farm on Baseline to his sons Fred W. Kohler Jr. and C.E. Kohler, 'the well known stockman.' Fred Kohler's land was 'near the Bureau of Standards. Some of his land was purchased for the right-of-way into Boulder on Boulder Denver Turnpike; for the Highland Park subdivision and the Crestwood Hotel.
Their son and daughter-in-law, Ed and Rose, moved in to the house with Rosetta in 1904. Fred Jr. was president of the Boulder National Bank for many years. According to the city directory, they remained after Rosetta's death in 1919, until 1946, when Carl G. Anderson bought the house as a rental.
Albert Viele (Catharine and Rosetta’s brother) remembers early days on the pioneer Kohler ranch
By Forest Crossen
(Carnegie Branch Library for Local History, Boulder, Colorado (newspaper, May 1960?)
The Fred W. Kohler ranch house, big barn and buildings on Baseline road immediately east of 28th street stand out as one of the last landmarks of pioneer boulder. The house goes back almost a century.
One beautiful May morning Albert Viele and I drove in and stopped under one of the big cottonwood trees. Al who came to Boulder as a child in 1865 and is the city’s oldest living settler, at once brightened up.
“I came to live here after my mother’s death, May 14, 1867,” he explained as we walked over to the house. My sister Rosetta married F.W. Kohler June 3, 1868. She took me with her.”
Original House
That’s the original house, the two-story part running east and west across the front. Kohler had it ready for her to move into. It’s build of good native lumber, hauled down from the mountains.
“My brother Jeff- Jefferson – built that big south addition in 1872 or ’73. At first, it was all one big room upstairs, big enough to dance two set. We used to have dances up there, have god times.”
Al looked out across the wide lawn to the front. “There’s the old picket fence and gate, where my father used to tand and greet people coming along the road.” He turned and motioned, “Right there east of the house is the old stone rot cellar. We used to store potatoes, vegetables and fruit in there. Kohler set out quite an orchard west of the house.”
Born in Germany
Kohler, born in Germany came to the United States in 1849 as a youth of 18. He worked on a farm in Pennsylvania, his first year’s wages coming to $100. He saved his money and in 1856 went to California to try his luck gold mining. He made good in Calaveras County in the Mother Lode country, but lost it all in a bank swindle. He made another stake and moved east to Colorado Territory in 1862. He bought a quick claim deed and filed on a homestead of 160 acres, on which he built his ranch house.
Al had already told me about the barn raising. A fine carpenter and jointer named Wood had made the timber framework, hewing it out with a broad axe. He had mortised all joints, bored holes for pinning them; then came the barn raising. Men from all around came in for that was the way of the country in pioneer days. Their families came with them, bringing big baskets of fried chicken, potato salad, homemade cheese, crunchy bread baked from native wheat flour, fresh butter, cakes and pies galore.
Keg of Beer
“We could get good local beer in those days,” said Al, smiling. Kohler had three or four kegs from Billy Cook’s little brewery up on the north bank of Boulder Creek, just west of the present city hall.
“The men started raising the framework. As they fitted the joints together, Wood drove in sharpened hardwood pins with a wooden maul, and then he sawed off the pins flush with the timber. There are no nails in that framework.”
Now a Stable
We walked over to the barn, now occupied by the Flatirons Stable.
“Here are the same old timbers they put in first,” explained Al. “The north-south timbers were pinned in later. They used to drive in on the floor above from the south side with loads of hay. We used to flail out peas – Kohler raised a lot of peas – to feed to hogs.”
His eyes lighted at a sudden memory. “We had a bay horse that was bad to kick. One night I was currying him when one of the men came up behind with a lantern.”
Fire Started
“The horse caught the lantern with a hind foot, jerked it up against the manger and broke it. The kerosene set the hay and straw afire.
“I untied the bay and another horse. The bay ran out, but the other one ran back farther in the barn.
My father was here then, and he had three men sleeping on the west side. They ran over and smothered the fire with blankets.
The blaze had set my clothes afire. The men yelled to me, “run and jump in the well, Opp.” Opp was my nickname. I ran for the well, which was down there about a hundred yards. It was only about six feet deep. I was burned but that water saved me.”
Ready For Dance
On the way back we stopped for another look at this big structure. “They did that raising all in one day. That night we held a dance on the big second floor.”
It had started off lively, the singing strings of fiddles going out on the night air, the clear voice of the caller reaching, the stamp of flying feet blood-stirring. Far into the night, until the last keg was emptied, then home sleepily behind patient horses that could see their way in the darkness.
“Before Kohler built the barn,” Al went on, “he had a cow shed east of the house. We heard that old story about cows getting down on their knees at midnight on New Year’s Eve and bellowing. Some kids and I came out and kept watch…all we got was a fine fooling.”
We paused beside the car, a little reluctant to leave this place of mellow memories. When it was new, the west had not been cleared of hostile Indians, the silver boom at Caribou was in full swing, men were dreaming of railroads that would cross the mountaints, of great things. The sky was the limit for willing hands and stout hearts.
Viele passed his 100th birthday May 18. Funeral Service at 1st Congregational Church?
James Boyd Jr. – born October 20, 1850. “Viele, James B. Jr., died November 7 1895 at home SE of Boulder of consumption. He was well known in this county and was highly respected. He was buried at Columbia Cemetery”.
Jacob Edward – born March 18, 1853; died May 22, 1874 of  scarlet fever at the age of 21 years, 2 months and 4 days, in Boulder, at the home of DJ Goodail, husband of his sister, Catherine. Each of the Goodail children and their parents Edward and Catherine had scarlet fever. Jacob was unmarried and was buried at Columbia Cemetery.
Albert – born May 18, 1860 in Lena Illinois. Albert went to live with his sister, Rosetta following his mother’s death. He lived at 1116 Mapleton for at least 22 years and married Erna Groven Arnold and later Abbie L. Spicer on July 24, 1881 in Boulder. He is listed as having no children on his history form at Carnegie Branch Library for Local History Boulder, Colorado. He is also listed as a descendant of a Revolutionary War veteran – no other details given. He attended school in the first schoolhouse in Boulder. His funeral service was possibly at the 1st Congregational Church.

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