New conditions

Another trove in my grandfather’s box of family papers is a stack of canceled passports. Most of them are for my grandfather, ranging from the 1950s into the 1980s, but one – a handsome little book, containing a parchment that folds out to four times the stored size – belonged to his father, Campbell Steward,[1] reflecting the changed conditions for travel that followed the Great War.

Ancestry.com has Campbell’s passport application from 1924, with an affidavit from a neighbor testifying to his American citizenship, and a more elaborate one – a separate sheet attached to the application – from an old family friend, Henry G. Wisner,[2] concerning Campbell’s birth in New York City in 1852: “the aforesaid statements are made by me soley [sic] for the purpose of establishing the date and place of birth of the said Campbell Steward due to his inability to obtain a birth certificate in conformity with the rules and regulations governing the issuance of passports by the Department of State of the United States Government.”[3] This in spite of the fact that Campbell and Margaret Steward had traveled extensively abroad in the years before a passport became a requirement.[4]

The Stewards planned to sail on the France in December 1924, in keeping with a family preference for French liners, and their trip was for “travel and pleasure” in Italy, France, and England. (Their mail address would be the Equitable Trust Co. in Paris.) The passport contains a visa for France issued in New York on 9 December, and another indistinct stamp (perhaps for their Italian sojourn) dated later in December. They were in France on 23 December. A final French stamp, on 15 April 1925, marks the end of their trip, as they boarded the Paris at Le Havre.

Another Ancestry database picks up the story.[5] Somewhere along the line they had met up with their eldest son, also Campbell,[6] and while the parents were destined for their home in Goshen, New York, Uncle Campbell was en route to Kebo in Bar Harbor, where the family had a summer cottage. The Steward family arrived at New York on 21 April.

Useful as the Ancestry passport applications database can be, there is something very pleasing about handling one of the resulting passports – which, as I look at it, is missing the photo of my great-grandparents from the application. My grandfather had it, prised out and glued into an album, as it was probably one of the better photos he had of his parents!

Notes

[1] Campbell Steward (1852-1936) married Margaret Atherton Beeckman in 1885.

[2] Henry Gabriel Wisner (1840-1928).

[3] U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 [database on-line], Roll 2662 – Certificates: 488350-488849, 06 Nov 1924-07 Nov 1924.

[4] In reviewing some of their other travel, I see my great-grandparents sailed on the Baltic in 1905 with Edward J. Smith, later captain of the Titanic.

[5] New York, Passenger and Crew Lists (including Castle Garden and Ellis Island), 1820-1957 [database on-line].

[6] Campbell White Steward (1886-1960).

About Scott C. Steward

Scott C. Steward was the founding editor at Vita Brevis; he served as NEHGS Editor-in-Chief 2013-2022. He is the author, co-author, or editor of genealogies of the Ayer, Le Roy, Lowell, Saltonstall, Thorndike, and Winthrop families. His articles have appeared in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, NEXUS, New England Ancestors, American Ancestors, and The Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, and he has written book reviews for the Register, The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, and the National Genealogical Society Quarterly.

6 thoughts on “New conditions

  1. Kebo is a golf course in Bar Harbor, Maine. I am unaware of a town or another place in Maine called Kebo. Can you elaborate, please? I was born and raised in Bar Harbor and live nearby now. Thank you.

    1. I imagine this was the Kebo Valley Club, and he was taking a room there. His brother, my grandfather, lived full time at the Myopia Hunt Club in Hamilton (Mass.) before his marriage, so extended stays at country clubs were not uncommon a century ago.

  2. That could be, but I am also not aware that Kebo had rooms at their club at that time. That building burned years ago, was replaced by one that also burned and that was replaced with the present club. I will check into that further. Thanks.

  3. I enjoyed your findings on the Beekman Family. Aunt Mattie’s husband, Amos, was my Great Great Grandfather Amos Tuck French’s second wife. They knew each other from childhood and apparently shared a great and lasting bond! It was interesting to read a bit about her background. It’s funny how the same family names come up over and over from The Gilded Age.. LeRoys… Stuyvesants… Beekman… Belmont… Vanderbilt… Hunt (the father and son architects) It was a much smaller world and these people grew up together and formed various bonds that lasted forever!

    1. Hi, Bill! You should read the book I wrote with Newbold Le Roy on the Le Roy family, as Pauline (Le Roy) French is also a cousin. (My great-great-great-grandmother was Harriet Banyer Le Roy, whose uncle was a forebear of Pauline’s.)

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