Leila Editha and Henry Marion Aulick


By Lillie Dale Baker Smith

 

Now a history of a lady who lived to the greatest age of anyone in the Grants Lick precinct and who was typical of most wives and mothers in the pioneer days.  Mrs. Leila Editha Aulick, daughter of  Foster Byrd and Margaret Gosney, born November 13, 1846 in Campbell Co.  She was united in marriage 16 Oct 1865 to Henry Marion Aulick at her home by Brother J M Barbee of Falmouth. 

She had baked seven loaves of salt rising bread the day before her marriage and hung it in the cellar with a meal sack.  Seventy five guests ate wedding dinner with them.  Her father paid five dollars for the wedding cake.  She kept the box in which it came and when she celebrated her 90th birthday, the  box was decorated with crepe paper and was quite attractive on the table holding the cake with ninety candles.  Forty two relatives and friends ate dinner with her.  They were thrilled to hear her reminisce her marriage and later life.

After the wedding dinner was served the bride and groom rode horseback to Kenton Station where they took the train for Falmouth on their way to the home of the groom's parents where his sister was married that evening. All others who went from Campbell County via horseback arrived in time for the marriage which was performed by Brother Barbee.

The Aulicks lived with his parents for a time, then bought a farm in the Grants Lick precinct where they raised a family of twelve children, and also reared four of their orphaned grandchildren.  On her birthday in 1926, Leila related many interesting incidents of the Civil War and exhibited many relics she had saved.  She told of her grandparents coming from Virginia to Kentucky.  Her grandfather told his wife if she would ride the stallion which they owned to Kentucky, they would give the animal his freedom which they did upon arriving here.  They turned him loose and never heard of him again.

Mrs. Aulick's grandmother was then only nine years old and she also made the trip on horseback.  The following week two hundred more started to Kentucky from Virginia and on the way all were slain by Indians except one woman who escaped injury and fled to the woods to meet her doom.  The following day she noticed a bird flit from tree to tree then back to her and she decided if she followed the bird it may lead her to something and in a few hours she arrived at a settlement and her life was saved.

Mrs. Aulick was a fine Christian woman and had read her Bible through many times.  She died 24 Dec 1937 in Grants Lick at the age of 92.

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Children of Leila Editha Byrd and Henry Marion Aulick

1. Margaret Frances Aulick b-10 Oct 1868 in Grants Lick; d-6 Dec 1934 in Crittenden Grant Co KY; m-E L Arnold
2. Mary Aulick b-1871 in Grants Lick
3. Elizabeth Florence Aulick b-1872 in Grants Lick; d-29 Jan 1930 in Christian Co KY; br-Grants Lick
4. Henry Foster Aulick b-19 Sep 1874 in Grants Lick
5. Olga Aulick b-1876 in Grants Lick
6. Aurella Jewel Aulick b-1878 in Grants Lick; d-3 Nov 1959 in Campbell Co
7. Leora O Aulick b-23 Apr 1880 in Grants Lick; d-9 Sep 1973 in Lexington KY; m-Wheeler
8. Carrie B Aulick b-May 1882 in Grants Lick
9. Mahlen Spurgeon Aulick b-1 Feb 1884 in Grants Lick
10. Beulah E Aulick b-May 1887 in Grants Lick; d-1968; m-Leroy Beedle
11. Carey Judson Aulick b-5 Aug 1888 in Grants Lick
 

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