Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Elijah Stone Estes

Male 1814 - 1887  (73 years)

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  • Name Elijah Stone Estes 
    Birth 30 Jan 1814  Morgantown, Burke, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
    Gender Male 
    Alternate birth 30 Jan 1814  Collettsville, Caldwell, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [7
    Death 3 Dec 1887  Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Find all individuals with events at this location  [5, 8, 9
    Alternate death 8 Dec 1887  Hinckley, DeKalb, Illinois Find all individuals with events at this location  [3, 7
    Burial Lake Cemetery, Saint Francis, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Find all individuals with events at this location  [3, 8
    Person ID I41850  Ancestry of PNH, TNH, and others
    Last Modified 3 Jan 2025 

    Father Langston Estes,   b. Abt 1786   d. 25 Nov 1851, Caldwell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 65 years) 
    Mother Mary "Polly" Moore,   b. 15 Nov 1790   d. 13 Feb 1875 (Age 84 years) 
    Family ID F24497  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Zebiah Walker Wentworth,   b. 19 Apr 1810, Maine Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 2 Jul 1887, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 77 years) 
    Marriage 4 Nov 1836  Fort Dearborn (later Chicago), Illinois Find all individuals with events at this location  [3, 4, 10, 11
    Children 
    +1. Lucy Ellen Estes,   b. 22 Jul 1837, Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 25 May 1910, Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 72 years)
    Family ID F24488  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 3 Jan 2025 

  • Notes 
    • Carl Baehr (citation details below):

      When white settlers began arriving in the Milwaukee area in 1835, there were very few Southerners among them. Elijah Stone Estes, 21, who abhorred the slavery that was prevalent in his native North Carolina, was an exception. He had left his home and worked his way west. When he reached Illinois, he headed north to Chicago where he lived for a year before coming to the Cream City.

      Here he claimed 160 acres of land south of Milwaukee. The property fronted on Lake Michigan for one half mile and extended inland for another half mile and included what is now South Shore Park. He built a log cabin near the shore, but he couldn’t have a successful farm without a wife, so he went back to Chicago and there he found Zebiah Wentworth, a woman four years his senior. They married in Chicago in 1836 and during the next 14 years they had six children who reached adulthood.

      In the mid-1850s, the family moved to Dunkirk in Dane County where they established another farm. Estes held onto his Bay View acreage and it paid off. In 1866, a year after the Civil War ended, the Milwaukee Iron Company was founded, forming the core of what is now the Bay View neighborhood. Workers flocked to the new factory which manufactured rails for the burgeoning railroad industry and land values in the area skyrocketed.

      The Estes family returned to Bay View where their land’s value had increased substantially while they were gone. Their household was smaller now, with only two children still at home. In 1871, the “Mrs. Zebiah Wentworth Estes Subdivision” was created with three streets named for the family: Estes Street, Wentworth Street (later changed to Wentworth Avenue), and Ellen Street. The family also built a new seven-room brick home on the bluff at E. Estes Street and S. Shore Drive, overlooking the lake shore. Peculiar for its time, their subdivision was in Zebiah’s name rather than Elijah’s, and an image of their home in an illustrated atlas, 11 years before Elijah’s death, referred to it as the residence of Mrs. Z. W. Estes.

      Zebiah Wentworth Estes was born in Maine in 1810 and in addition to naming the streets, she has sometimes been credited with naming Bay View itself. She died there in July 1887 from “complications of diseases,” as it was reported. Five months later Elijah passed away. He’d had a stroke several years earlier and went to winter in North Carolina but when he got there he felt poorly and headed back home. He stopped at his daughter Ellen’s home west of Chicago and there he died. That same year, Bay View was annexed and became a neighborhood of Milwaukee

      Lucy Ellen was the Estes’s oldest child who was known by her middle name and Ellen Street was named for her. She married a Methodist minister, Isaac Linebarger, and moved to his home in Illinois where they raised their family. Years later, Ellen recalled her childhood days in Bay View and reminisced that Lake Michigan had claimed the family’s log cabin and most of their apple orchard, leaving both several hundred feet out in the water. She also remembered the sinking of the Sebastopol in 1855 off Bay View Park and that its cargo washed ashore for days after it went down. Today, about 50 percent of the wreckage lies in the sand under 15 feet of water not far offshore.

      Before her death in 1910, Ellen Estes Linebarger expressed her wish that a street on their land be named Linebarger. That wish was fulfilled the next year when the last of the Estes farmland was subdivided by her son, Judge Paul Linebarger. He created “Linebarger’s Subdivision” and christened Linebarger Terrace, the fourth and final street in Bay View to be named for a member of the Estes family.

      From Estes Genealogies (citation details below):

      Brother Estes finding himself failing in health, and dreading the rigor of a Wisconsin winter, went this fall to the home of his boyhood, hoping thereby to regain his health. Still failing, he started for his home, but only got as far as the home of his daughter, and after a few days the summons came. He was a fine specimen of a man and a Christian -- kind, cheerful, honest, benevolent, loving and beloved. He united with the Bay View M. E. church Oct. 15, 1862, and was a faithful member until the Master called him to his reward. His funeral was held in the M. E. church, Bay View, Dec. 11, 1887, his pastor preaching the sermon, whence his remains were taken and laid by the side of his wife. The large congregation, many of whom were Roman Catholics, together with the children of the place, who wept around his casket, showed how universally he was respected and loved. His end was peaceful and happy. On the Sabbath evening before his death he joined with his daughter and family in singing "On Jordan's stormy banks I stand," etc. His desires are realized, and he rests.

  • Sources 
    1. [S8046] St. Francis Historical Society Newsletter, May 2010.

    2. [S8044] Find a Grave page for Elijah Stone Estes., date and state only.

    3. [S8047] St. Francis Historical Society Newsletter, March 2010.

    4. [S8048] Carl Baehr, "Estes Street Honors Bay View Pioneer." Urban Milwaukee, 1 Oct 2018., year only.

    5. [S8049] Lake Protestant Cemetery / Thompson Ave. Cemetery History, at Milwaukee County Wisconsin Genealogy., date only.

    6. [S170] The Wentworth Genealogy, English and American by John Wentworth. Boston: Little, Brown, 1878., state only.

    7. [S8051] Estes Genealogies 1097-1893 by Charles Estes. Salem, Massachusetts: Eben Putnam, 1894.

    8. [S8044] Find a Grave page for Elijah Stone Estes.

    9. [S8048] Carl Baehr, "Estes Street Honors Bay View Pioneer." Urban Milwaukee, 1 Oct 2018., month, year, and place only.

    10. [S8051] Estes Genealogies 1097-1893 by Charles Estes. Salem, Massachusetts: Eben Putnam, 1894., says "Sept. 4, 1836".

    11. [S170] The Wentworth Genealogy, English and American by John Wentworth. Boston: Little, Brown, 1878., date only.