The Townsend Family

William Henry and Nellie Townsend, two of the Owyhee’s oldest and respected pioneers are laid to rest here along with their daughter Jenny.

William was born in Vermont in 1832. In 1853, he caught the gold fever and crossed the plains for California where he mined at all the prominent mining localities until 1857. In 1862 he joined a party bound for the Powder River District, and landed in what is now called Owyhee County, camping on the site of what was subsequently known as Ruby City. He engaged in mining for several years and then entered the furniture and undertaking business. Mr. Townsend participated in several Indian skirmishes of the county, was a member of the Odd Fellows fraternity, and served two terms as county commissioner. He died at age 74, and at the time, was one of the longest continuous residents of the county, having assisted in staking out the town of Silver City when the residents of Ruby City first began to remove to this site. He married Nellie Scales in 1878. They had five children who all grew up in the community. Upon his death, the local newspaper editor wrote, “Truly the old ranks are rapidly thinning out! They confronted the hardships of a wilderness, and are leaving it filled with prosperous and contented homes.”   

Nellie Scales Townsend died in 1916 at age 71. The newspaper said after suffering but a few days from a partial paralytic stroke, the soul of Mrs. Nellie Townsend was called to its reward from the home of her son, Bert, in this city. The deceased was one of the pioneer women in this county, having come in the early 60s with her husband and has lived in this county and state almost continuously since. She was born in Ireland in 1845. 

William and Nellie’s daughter Rachel Jennie Townsend was born on October 20, 1878. The Owyhee Nugget reported that Miss Jennie, as she was known, had been a lifelong invalid and died at the age of 32 at her home in DeLamar. The sorrowing family has the sympathy of the entire community in their hour of pain. She died on March 31, 1911.

Leonis Adobe Museum Historic Home and Ranch
  1. The Leonis Adobe House
  2. Miguel Leonis, The Big Basque
  3. Espiritu Chijulla Leonis
  4. Marcelina Leonis
  5. Juan Menendez
  6. Living Room
  7. Corner Cabinets
  8. Piano
  9. Dining Room
  10. Kitchen
  11. Cellar and Pantry
  12. Upper Rear Hallway
  13. Menendez Room
  14. Espiritu's Bedroom
  15. Sewing Room
  16. Front Upstairs Veranda
  17. Outdoor Oven or Horno
  18. Oak Tree
  19. Poultry and Doves
  20. Guinea Hens
  21. Turkeys
  22. Barn and Blacksmith Shop
  23. Carriages and Buggies
  24. Miguel's Land and Property Map
  25. Bath House
  26. Laundry Area
  27. Well and Windmill
  28. Tank House and Water Tank
  29. Orsua Room
  30. Vineyard
  31. Fruit Trees
  32. Vegetable Garden
  33. Longhorn Cattle
  34. Merino Sheep
  35. Nubian and Angora Goats
  36. Percheron Draft Horses
  37. Farm Implements
  38. Wagons
  39. Outhouses
  40. The Plummer House