Leaming - Ephraim - Montgomery InGenWeb Project

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Leaming - Ephraim


Source: Crawfordsville Journal, Nov. 28, 1885
 

 
This week the Journal had a call from Ephraim T. Leaming of  Yellow Spring, Ohio and a brother of Joel Leaming of Browns  Valley, one of the old citizens of this County. Mr. L. gave an  interesting narrative of meeting by chance another brother,  Reuben H. Leaming of Baltimore, whom he had not seen for 48  years. The Leaming family are natives of Maryland and the  Journal's visitor has, a son living in Baltimore who is a proof  reader on one of the papers in that city. The father went to  Baltimore last July on a visit to his son. During his visit the  son mentioned the name of Leaming in the directory and suggested  to his father that the man might be a relative. The son asked the  full name of the long lost brother of his father, and was told  that it was Reuben Hays Leaming. The directory was opened and  there it was, Reuben H. Leaming, Superintendent of the 5th  Regiment Armory and residence at No. 39 Bruce Street. They at  once repaired to the Armory and inquired for the Superintendent.  An interesting colloquy took place in which the visiting brother  asked a good many questions about the family until he satisfied  himself that the Superintendent was his brother. Finally the  visitor gazed earnestly into the Superintendent's face, said "If  you are Reub Leaming, then I am your brother, Eph." It took a  moment for the two brothers to realize that they confronted each  other. It is needless to say there was joy in the Leaming house  that night. Mr. Leaming states that he and his brothers were b.  in Carroll Co, Md. In 1836 the family was broken up in  consequence of the death of their father, and he, then a young  man, removed to the West. He settled at Wilmington, Clinton, Ohio  where he lived for 30 years and afterwards, 12 years ago, he  removed to Yellow Springs, where he now lives. Reuben was but 7  years old. They kept track of each other until the war, when  Reuben enlisted, after which he heard nothing more of him, the  news being that he had been killed in one of the Va. battles. For  over 20 years he supposed his brother to be dead. The two are old  men now, Reuben being 55 and Ephraim 73. Joel is 76. Verily,  truth is sometimes stranger than fiction.
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