On this day in 1892, Vesta Maude (or Maud) Craft was born in Huntington, West Virginia to farmer Oliver Craft and his wife, Mary Gilmore Craft. On June 4, 1914, she married my husband's 1c1r, Byron Thomas Wood (1891-1968). Byron and Vesta Maude had ten children together, although two sadly died in infancy.
Over the years, Vesta was mentioned in the local newspaper (The Daily Sentinel-Tribune of Bowling Green, Ohio) a few times...as Mrs. Husband's Name, which I know was the custom of the day. Her given name was not written in the newspaper.
In 1929, Mrs. Byron T. Wood won a $10 prize in a kitchen inspection contest that looked at improvements such as new pressure cookers (her category). It was Vesta.
When Vesta died in 1949, her obituary (excerpt at top) read: Mrs. Byron Wood Rites Saturday. In four paragraphs, Vesta's given name was not written in the newspaper. Not once.
Yet her married daughters were listed as survivors, with their given names and married surnames. On the other hand, her three surviving sisters were listed as Mrs. Husband's Name.
Was Vesta named for the Roman goddess of home, hearth, and family? I don't know, but today I'm remembering the Wood family's only woman named Vesta.
"Written" is this week's #52Ancestors genealogy prompt from Amy Johnson Crow.



















