Sunday

Lorenda Judd's Story Continues

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Lorenda Judd Part One

Who Was Lorenda Ursula Judd?

Who was Lorenda Ursula Judd?

For many women of the 19th century, the historical record is frustratingly thin. They appear in census lines, in birth records, in burial listings — often as little more than a name beside a husband’s. Lorenda is no exception. What we know of her life comes largely through the documents connected to her husband and children.

But sometimes, if we follow the breadcrumbs carefully enough, a fuller picture begins to emerge.

Today, we’re looking at one photograph and a collection of records to see what they reveal about Lorenda — and to correct a bit of misinformation along the way.


A Single Photograph, A Thousand Questions




The only known image associated with Lorenda appears to date from the late 1850s to the 1860s. The clothing tells us quite a bit. The woman’s dress features dropped shoulder seams — a defining characteristic of women’s fashion during that era.

Lorenda died in 1867 at the age of 51. The woman in this photograph appears to be in her late 40s or early 50s. The timing aligns.

The adult man pictured is very likely her husband, Cyrus T. Judd. The young boy could be their youngest son, Frank Judd, who was born in 1857. If the photograph was taken shortly before Lorenda’s death, Frank would have been about ten years old — which matches the age of the child in the image.

At first glance, one might wonder if the adult male could be one of their older sons and the child a grandson. But when we examine the birth timeline more closely, that scenario becomes far less likely.


A Life Measured in Birth Records

Lorenda married Cyrus in 1835. She was 19 years old; he was 22. At the time, they were living in Norfolk, New York.

Their first child, Curus Newell Judd, was born in September 1836 — about nine months after their marriage. Lorenda was just 20 years old.

Over the next two decades, the pattern continued:

  • Age 22 – Second child born

  • 1839 – Curus died at age three

  • Age 24 – Third child born (1840)

  • Age 27 – Fourth child born (1843)

  • Age 30 – Fifth child (a daughter) born (1846)

By 1850, the family had relocated west to Winnebago County, Illinois — joining the steady migration of families seeking opportunity on the frontier.

  • Age 39 – Sixth child born (1855)

  • Age 41 – Frank born (1857)

  • 1859 – Daughter Alice died at age four

Pregnancy followed pregnancy. Grief followed joy. Recovery time would have been minimal. Frontier life was physically demanding even without repeated childbirth.

When we look again at the photograph — at the woman’s tired expression — we begin to see more than just an image. We see endurance.


The Colorado Question

The Judd family later moved to Colorado, where Lorenda died in 1867 at the age of 51.

Here is where careful research becomes especially important.

Her death location is commonly listed online as “Colorado City, Pueblo County.” However, this is historically inaccurate.

The Colorado City in Pueblo County did not exist in 1867. At that time, the area was generally referred to as Greenhorn. While known to traders and settlers, it had not yet been formally established as Colorado City.

Decades later, in 1965, another Colorado City adopted the name “Old Colorado City” to distinguish between the two locations. Over time, this renaming contributed to confusion in genealogical databases like Ancestry and Find A Grave.

It’s a powerful reminder: online records are only as accurate as the research behind them. Names change. Boundaries shift. Without context, errors become “facts.”


Piecing Together a Quiet Life

Lorenda left behind no diary that we know of. No preserved letters. No written reflections in her own words.

What she did leave behind were children.
Graves of children.
Migration records.
And one photograph.

From these fragments, we see a 19-year-old bride in New York.
A mother who buried at least two children.
A woman who moved west as the country expanded.
A life that ended at just 51 years old.

History often remembers the men who signed deeds and led households. But the strength of families — especially on the frontier — rested heavily on women like Lorenda.

By following the breadcrumbs she left behind, we give her something she was rarely afforded in her lifetime: a voice in her own story.

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