To find his biological family I researched all of the cousin's family trees that he was a DNA match with, and then started creating a family tree for my husband based on all the family members his cousins had in common. By the time I had confirmation as to who his parents were, I had a lot of his family tree already completed. However his paternal line proved to be more of an enigma.
This man appeared on records for the first time in 1906, registering to vote in San Francisco, CA stating that he was 24, and worked as a “peddler”. I am not sure if they had to show proof of age during this time, and since issuing a birth certificate was not standardized in the United States until 1902, I am not sure how he could have proved it. This was the same year as the great San Francisco Earthquake, when “devastating fires broke out in the city that lasted for several days, destroying about 28,000 buildings. As a result of the quake and fires, over 3,000 people died and over 80% of San Francisco was destroyed. The death toll from the earthquake and resulting fire is the greatest loss of life from a natural disaster in California's history.” - Wikipedia
In May of 1907 he married a Portuguese girl named Therese Gomes. He put his official name as “Happy Jack” Walker on the marriage registration information. He doesn’t list his age. I am not sure if any documentation was needed during this era to marry. They had a son together, my husband’s Grandfather, Raymond, born the next year in September. On the 1910 US Federal Census, any record of them as individuals, or as a couple, are nowhere to be found, but their son is found living with her parents in Alameda, CA. She is found again in 1920 remarried, and the son, Raymond, is living with her under her married last name.
This couple must have divorced before 1926, because she had remarried by then, and he had moved back to California. He is found residing in San Francisco, CA in 1927, and his occupation is a “Theater Performer”. In 1929 he is found living in Sacramento, CA working as an “Actor”, and that same year he married a woman from California named Georgiana. On the 1930 US Federal Census, the daughter is found with her mother Martha, and the son is found with Happy Jack in San Francisco (which makes me believe he wasn’t Martha’s son). On the Census he lists his age as 35 (even though it has been 12 years since he was supposedly 33 when he got married), born in New York, states that he was 16 at the time of his first marriage in 1907 even though at time he was saying he was 25. Under “military experience” he says “WW”, but I can find no record of him, under any variation of this name, even signing up for the draft. He also states now that his father is from England, his mother was born in the USA, and his occupation is working in Advertisement. By this time, his first born son, Raymond, who had stayed with his mother, Therese, has married and has 2 daughters of his own, and is still residing in Alameda, CA.
Based on the pattern he set, of making up ages and parental history his whole life and the lack of any evidence of his existence prior to 1906, I feel it safe to assume his identity was completely fabricated.
The previous research I had done into all the versions of his name, versions of his parents names, and versions of his birth dates, had come up empty. So I decided to follow a different trail of information, the Jewish history of his cousins. This decision was as a result of finding that a 1st cousin had his DNA results show up for me to compare. This 1st cousin’s DNA matches helped me find even more cousins, some of which were grandchildren of immigrants with 100% European Jewish ancestry. This method proved to be fascinating, and because of this, a new theory of his true identity was emerging. There was pretty much no denying, at that point, that our mysterious “Happy Jack” Walker from maybe Ireland, sometimes Scotland, perhaps England… just wasn’t. The following section is my theory about the real identity of Happy Jack Walker:
Elias, along with his siblings, his mother Katrina Croost, his father Moses Benjamin Fransman (son of Benjamin Moses Fransman born in 1791), his uncle Jacob and his aunt Siphora, immigrated in 1864 from the Netherlands, through England, to America.
Through DNA I determined that my husband’s closest cousins share the same ancestor patriarch: Benjamin Moses Fransman (father of Moses Benjamin Fransman, grandfather of Elias Moses Fransman) born in the year of 1791 in Amsterdam, Holland, the Netherlands.
Based on this common denominator I started building a family tree, and traced each immigrant’s (Moses, Jacob, and Siphora) children and grand-children down through the years, until I was able to find someone who fit the profile of Happy Jack Walker’s stated time and place of birth.
Grace Valker died in 1908, in Massachusetts, from heart failure due to exhaustion. I can’t find any of the other mentioned family members for the 1910 US Federal Census.
I do know that in 1909, in Illinois, Benjamin married a woman named Lydia Shore (see update below on how they met), and that he used his given name Frenchman on the document. They are found on the 1920 US Federal Census, under the name Sterling, in Kentucky, where now he proclaims to be a Psychologist, born in New York, and that his father is English. He has a daughter named Dorothy born in 1901, another daughter, Ruth, who was born November of 1912 in Illinois. On Ruth’s birth certificate he uses his given name of Frenchman, but she goes by the last name of Sterling until she marries and takes on the last name of Brauer.
*UPDATING AS OF NOV. 15, 2019:
I have been in contact with Ruth's descendants recently and they have added some insight into this period of time. I had assumed that Grace and Benjamin had a daughter together, born October of 1901 in Utah, named Dorothy Sterling. I assumed this because she is listed on the1920 census as Ben's daughter born during the time he was married to Grace. Dorothy went by this last name until she married in 1924 and took on the last name of Miller. Apparently later on in life Dorothy learned she was adopted.
"The story goes that my Grandma (Lydia) was a nurse hired to take care of Dorothy as the family traveled around doing the Keith Theater Circuit. They lived in Newport, KY, Washington DC, Charleston, W VA, Chicago, New York city, etc. Grandpa Ben was at times a ventriloquist, mind reader, etc. His trunks said, "Busy Ben Theater" on them."
Under the name Benjamin Sterling he is found in the 1928 and 1929 city directory of Little Rock, Arkansas as a Psychologist. On the 1930 US Federal Census he and this family are still in Arkansas, he is no longer employed, and now he finally states that his father is from Holland and his mother is from Poland. He died this same year.
Some unanswered questions: Did he vanish on his first wife, Annie, and she presumed him dead because he had changed his name? Or was it easier to claim to be a widow than trying to track him down for a divorce? Did he change his name because he didn’t want anyone to know of his Jewish heritage, or was it more exotic to pretend to be French for his persona, even though he was using an English last name like Sterling?
So now let’s look at some side by side facts:
- Henry is documented as being born July 14th of 1889 in New York; “Happy Jack” Walker states he was born July 16th of 1889 in New York on the official documents of his later life. Pretty damned close.
- We can assume Henry accompanied his father west to Oregon, since he is not in any Census data with his mother, thus answering how “Happy Jack” Walker is found on the West Coast even though he was born in New York. There is no paper trail for either identity before 1906.
- We can also assume that Henry, being the son of a traveling entertainer, picked up tips from his father’s trade, and carried on in that industry – learning to take on a stage name, for example.
- Henry’s step-father went by Jack. Henry’s step-mother’s last name was Valker. Henry had just turned 16 when his mom remarried, soon followed by his dad remarrying. “Happy Jack” Walker showed up in records for the first time in Alameda, California at the end of 1906, age 17. So at least we have some hint as to where he came by the stage name. This is also too much of a coincidence to not be accurate.
- After he married Therese Gomes he disappears again from records, but shows up in Oregon/Washington to marry his second wife: A pattern similar to his father’s. I used to wonder what took him north, but if he lived there with his father in his early years then it makes sense that it would have been a home base of sorts. Perhaps he knew where to get work, because by this point he is saying he is an actor/entertainer/theater professional.
- A pattern of a nomadic life as a traveling entertainer, as well as a trail of relationships and multiple children, is shown by both men.
- Finally, the Jewish ancestor that the cousins have in common is the patriarch Benjamin Moses Fransman born in 1791. So based on scientific data, there is no other explanation for this family connection than to be descended from this man. Other cousins have DNA connections to the wives (Pinto and Hilfstein) as well, further cementing the relationship.