[Preface] 
                [Orville's 
                Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, Two 
                careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]
                Family
                In 
                  Anglo-Saxon tradition, the Harrold name appears in both English 
                  and German families, sharing a range of spellings (Harold, Herald, 
                  etc.). Orville’s particular lineage arrived in America with 
                  Richard Harrold in 1681, among Penn’s followers to Philadelphia. 
                  They were thus English-born Quakers (Society of Friends), some 
                  of Orville’s relatives continuing to be so into modern generations. 
                  Richard Harrold and his offspring continued an associated with 
                  three other families (Beals, Beeson, and Mills) that have intermingled 
                  down through the Indiana lineage to the present. 
                The 
                  original group arrived from England between 1681 and 1701, including 
                  a Sarah (Harrold) Mills, who was likely an aunt or cousin of 
                  Richard’s. Richard Harrold married Mary Ann Beals in 1710 at 
                  the Concord Meeting House (of Friends) in Nottingham, Pennsylvania. 
                  Mary had been born there to John Beals, the original Beals immigrant. 
                  Most Indiana Harrolds can trace their way back to those original 
                  Harrolds and Beals by at least one path, and probably several. 
                  Two of Richard’s and Mary’s daughters married two Mills brothers 
                  (sons of Sarah Harrold Mills). In the next generation, four 
                  Harrold brothers and sisters married four Beeson brothers and 
                  sisters (descendents of Sarah Harrold Mills through Mary Mills). 
                Orville 
                  Harrold’s grandparents, Miles and Malinda Harrold, were both 
                  descendents of the original Richard and Mary, and were descendents 
                  of John Beals by two independent paths. Orville and his first 
                  wife, Effie Kiger, were both great grandchildren of Catherine 
                  Harrold and Valentine Gibson, by two independent paths. There 
                  appear to be at least three marriages between Gibsons and Kigers. 
                  Catherine Harrold and Valentine Gibson were both descendents 
                  of the original John Beals by independent paths. These families 
                  braided together over eight generations. Every generation contained 
                  brothers named John and Jonathan. In Orville’s lineage, only 
                  his grandfather Miles, and the original Richard (son of a Jonathan), 
                  were not named John or Jonathan.
                Little 
                  of all that is remarkable; close groups have maintained intertwining 
                  families since the beginning of history, and Quakers tended 
                  to marry within meeting. In this case, the intertwining continued 
                  over a long-term migration from Pennsylvania to North Carolina, 
                  up through Tennessee and Kentucky, on into Ohio and Indiana. 
                  That migration occurred over several generations, creating periodic 
                  separations that later converged in Indiana. The ultimate attractor 
                  was America’s Northwest Territory, comprising Ohio, Indiana, 
                  Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin. In addition to supporting 
                  land grant colleges through leases on government lands, the 
                  Northwest Territory charter banned slavery, which philosophically 
                  attracted southern Quakers to fresh new farm country. While 
                  Quakers occasionally held slaves, Quakers were generally opposed 
                  to slavery as an affront to intellectual freedom, so that many 
                  left southern states during the early 19th century.
                Two 
                  different traditions relate how Richard Harrold arrived in Pennsylvania. 
                  One is that he came with his father, Jonathan, while surviving 
                  details make more believable that he arrived at Salem, New Jersey 
                  aboard the ship Henry and Ann with John Mills Sr., who 
                  was married to Sarah Mary Harrold. While Richard was likely 
                  an infant or toddler then, he reportedly sawed lumber for Philadelphia 
                  homes with John Mills before marrying Mary Ann Beals. Richard 
                  and Mary died in northeast North Carolina. 
                As 
                  prime Pennsylvania land became increasingly scarce, Quakers 
                  moved to the Cane Creek section of Rowan County, in eastern 
                  North Carolina. This became the largest Quaker settlement in 
                  the state, Beeson, Harrold, Mills, Gibson, and Hiatt families 
                  being there by 1752. While Jonathan 1 and Catherine Hiatt were 
                  born in Pennsylvania, they married at Hopewell Meeting, Virginia, 
                  in 1745, and owned land thereabouts, before arriving in North 
                  Carolina in 1752. By 1770, Jonathan 1 and a Valentine Gibson 
                  (two generations previous to the Valentine Gibson mentioned 
                  above) were both Rowan County “Overseers”, being minor officials 
                  in charge of local roads. They were joined in North Carolina 
                  by Macy, Starbuck, Coggeshell, and other families from Nantucket, 
                  where limited family stocks had resulted in their “breeding 
                  idiots”. Joining Deep River Monthly Meeting by 1785, these new 
                  families are thus marrying later with Harrolds in Delaware County, 
                  Indiana. As this original Rowan County was huge, Jonathan 1’s 
                  grave has successively occupied Surray, Stokes, and presently 
                  Forsythe Counties.
                Meanwhile, 
                  Jonathan 2 and his future wife, Charity Beeson, had both been 
                  born in Virginia, before marrying and raising their family in 
                  North Carolina. This North Carolina generation, including Jonathan 
                  3, constituted the beginning of the northern migration, which 
                  became so extensive that several monthly meetings were discontinued. 
                  Their children were born in Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana, many 
                  eventually joining the White Water Monthly Meeting in Wayne 
                  County, Indiana. The family of Orville’s first wife, Effie Kiger, 
                  was intermarrying with Gibsons no later than this migration 
                  period. By the 1820’s, most of these families were living in 
                  Indiana. Orville Harrold, Effie Kiger, and the author’s family 
                  were born in Delaware County, Indiana, among the farms south 
                  of Muncie.
                At 
                  about age 10 (ca. 1920), the author’s father heard Orville sing 
                  at a relative's house in Muncie. Living by an electric "traction" 
                  line running from Muncie down to New Castle, Father walked up 
                  the line from his farming village to pick up a young girl relative 
                  on a nearby farm, and they rode on up to Muncie, where she played 
                  piano for Orville' singing. 
                The 
                  question lingers of whether Orville is related to 20th 
                  century opera composer, Jack Beeson, born in Muncie, Indiana. 
                  A connection is likely, and clues probably reside in William 
                  W. Hinshaw’s Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, 
                  published in 1936.
                This 
                  question also regards a New York singer and voice coach named 
                  Jack Harrold, who died in 1994. He sang with the New York City 
                  Opera, and in Broadway musicals, The Unsinkable Mollie Brown 
                  and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. It 
                  was stated during his lifetime, and in an obituary, that he 
                  was the son of Orville Harrold. Jack Harrold was born to a New 
                  Jersey postman, where Orville never lived, and even himself 
                  declared that he was not related to Orville. (stated in a phone 
                  conversation with Orville’s granddaughter, and any possible 
                  family tie would go back many generations)
                While 
                  early Quakers were rigid about maintaining life and family within 
                  meeting, Quaker thought is based on knowing from within, so 
                  that Quakers tended to become increasingly freethinking and 
                  non-dogmatic, blending through marriage and assimilation. Orville’s 
                  family were practicing Methodists. Orville seemed to have little 
                  sense of his genealogy, perhaps relating mostly to his mother’s 
                  maternal family, which had a musical tradition.
                Next 
                  ...
                
[Preface] 
                  [Orville's 
                  Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                  Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                  London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                  1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                  Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, 
                  Two careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]