James M. Wolfe (1851–1921)
James Maurice Wolfe was born on July 26, 1851, in Monticello, Lewis County, Missouri. His parents were John Harnett Wolfe, an Irish Catholic farmer, and Louisa Durbin. Wolfe had four older sisters: Mary Ann (b. 1839), Lucretia Ann (b. 1843), Honora L. “Hannah” (b. ca. 1845), and Teresa Louisa (b. 1848).
Wolfe’s father, a native of County Limerick, had traveled with his brother Richard Wolfe to the United States in 1836 in search of their brother, James H. Wolfe. In a letter home dated December 26, 1836, John Wolfe writes that “Brother James Wolfe died in the state of Mississippi the first [of the] year he went to Natchez. The fine learned man. There is nothing grieves Richard [and me] more than to say that we cant see, hear or find our brother alive on his Estate after the bold stroke we made in going to him five thousand miles from home.” Family oral history—contained in a letter by Jane C. “Dollie” Woulfe and dated August 1956 from Cratloe, County Limerick—speculates that James Wolfe had been murdered. Whatever the case, John and Richard Wolfe remained in Missouri, settling next door to one another in Lewis County.
Nothing is known of James Wolfe’s early life. At some point he moved from Lewis County, in northeastern Missouri, to Tarkio Township, Atchison County, in the northwestern part of the state. About 1885 he married Mary Jane “Jennie” Swan, of Peru, Nemaha County, Nebraska, and the couple had four children: Harvey Lewis (b. 1886), Ina W. (b. 1887), Lucretia Iona (b. 1889), and John (b. 1891).
The federal census of 1900 lists Wolfe as living in Tarkio and working as a brick manufacturer. By 1920, Wolfe had moved to Omaha, Nebraska, where he lived with his wife and son Harvey. The census also indicates that he served as caretaker for David Cole.
Wolfe died at the Swedish Mission Hospital in Omaha on November 4, 1921, of apoplexy complicated by arterio sclerosis. Jenny Wolfe died on May 6, 1943, in Maryville, Nodaway County, Missouri. She and her husband are buried together at Tarkio Home Cemetery.
Top of the page: plat map of Lewis County from Standard Atlas of Lewis County, Missouri (1916)
Selected Sources
Death Certificate, 1921.
Federal Census, 1900.
J. D. H., “Written Over a Century Ago; Interesting Letter from West Limerick Exile,” Limerick Leader, May 13, 1939.
Letter from Dollie Woulfe to Sr. Mary Caelan (Helen Woulfe), August 1956.
A Letter from John H. Wolfe to his family, December 26, 1836; rough transcription.