Hi Clint,My mother was the youngest child of Charles Hayden and Grace Ellen[Porter] Kirk born October 4, 1905, Lena was the oldest and Roy the middle child.When mom was around 3 & 1/2 years old the family had moved to Shirley, Indiana when Charles Hayden died and they returned to Kentucky for burial. Grace Ellen died there six weeks later in the same bed all the children had been born in.Leroy David and Matilda [Hamm] Kirk took the children in and when Leroy David died in 1911 Matilda cared for the children until her passing in 1914.Mom's aunt Sarah [Kirk] Grayson had first sent for Lena and Roy and brought them here to Kewanee IL., and sometime after that had finally sent for my mother but the children had been seperated for a number of years.Lena Kirk married Al Heinrich and they farmed here for many years in the Kewanee area later moving to Leesburg, Florida in the 1960's. They were the parents of three sons, Al Heinrich Jr., Randall, and Gene. The three boys also eventually located in Florida, Al somewhere close to Leesburg, Randall now living in Tampa, and Gene living for many years in Fort Lauderdale where he practiced corporate law. Gene and Al are in very poor health, but Randall when I visited him a year ago is still in excellent health. Lena and Al were buried in Leesburg when they passed.Roy KIrk went west around 1920 eventually settling in Medford Oregon where he spent the rest of his life. He had been a heavy equipment operator and in his later years drove a cab.My mother had left Kewanee in the mid 1920's and worked in Chicago where she met and married my father Robert L. Gray with my sister Pat being born in 1927 and myself in 1932. When I was a year old my father died and my mother brought us back to Kewanee and we lived with Sarah and Thomas Grayson for the next 12 years or so. They were like a second set of parents to me and to this day I still fervently wish I had paid more attention to all the stories Aunt Sarah had told about the family in Kentucky.I will try to scan a few old photos and send them along over the next day or so as I dig them out. My mother had written down what childhood memories she could remember and I can send those along to you also because they will give you a much better perspective of life in Kentucky at that time frame. I'm not at all sure how they would scan, so if you will send me your mailing address I can make sure you get something more legible. Meantime, if there is something more detailed in the way of material I might provide you, please don't hesitate to ask.Very cordially yoursCharlie Gray