Family history serendipity is real. Thanks to a kind fellow researcher, I recently discovered my ancestor’s divorce case that answers the question of what happened to Isabella Weatherford’s first husband, John W. Carpenter. I had her marriage on 3 January 1875, the birth of her first daughter, Clem, on 3 October 1875, and a second marriage to Robert Royston on 16 January 1877. With no death record, I assumed that perhaps John had died or deserted Isabella. But she wouldn’t have been able to legally marry again without being a widow or divorced.
A newspaper article in The Dallas Daily Herald provided the clue that resolved this part of Isabella’s history.1
Docket for Thursday, October 28th, 1875
Dallas County, Texas
2745 Bell Carpenter vs Jno W. Carpenter
Checking the FamilySearch Catalog, I saw that the court cases were arranged by case number, and browsing the digitized microfilm, I found the correct case.2
The file held twenty-six images that needed to be transcribed, so I turned to Claude.ai and created a project titled the “Isabella Weatherford Divorce Case File.” I gave AI the following prompt:
You are an expert genealogist and transcriptionist. I have a divorce court file from 1875 for Belle Carptenter vs. John W. Carpenter in Dallas County, Texas. I will be uploading the documents. You are to transcribe the documents keeping the line breaks accurate. Put any unknown or undecipherable words in square brackets.
Next, I started a document in Google Docs to hold the transcriptions. I started with the source citation, then gave each document an image number and a description. Next, I uploaded the image to AI to transcribe and then added the transcription to the Google Doc. How did Claude.ai do with the transcription? Amazing! I corrected only about three items in the entire case file. This is a huge improvement over AI’s past transcription ability. AI even handled the certificates with lines, typed text, handwritten numbers, and words beautifully. In the past, it had struggled with this type of document.
When the transcription was complete, I copied the entire transcription from the Google Doc into my Claude project and prompted:
Using the complete transcription of the court case, provide a table of the key dates and events. The table should first have the date, then persons involved, then the action, then the image number and description.

AI – Created Table for the Timeline
I had instructed AI to include the image number and description as the source for each item so I could double-check it against the Google Doc. Because it used the data I first transcribed and checked document by document, and there were no hallucinations. This method saved me hours of time.
Looking at the timeline, I noticed that the marriage certificate I had stated 3 January 1874 as the marriage date, but the court document stated 3 January 1875. More closely examining the marriage certificate, I noticed it was very blurry and the date obscured. But on the same document it clearly read, “witnessed my hand, this 5 day of February A.D. 1875.” Apparently, the recorder mixed up the year on the first date. Since the marriage took place at the beginning of 1875, the clerk was probably used to writing 1874!3

1875 Marriage Certificate for Bell Weatherford and John W. Carpenter, Dallas County, Texas
My final prompt was to have AI write a blog post explaining this court case. Below is the post, and although it is a very sad story, I’m grateful to have this chapter in Isabella’s life uncovered. Her second marriage was happier. She had an additional six children and left a widow’s pension that details her later life.
Isabella died in 1942 at the age of 84. She had lived through the Civil War, Reconstruction, the Great Depression, and multiple moves between Missouri, Texas, Indian Territory/Oklahoma, and New Mexico. Perhaps going through this challenge so early in life gave her the strength to deal with other trials throughout her life. Born on 4 March 1858, she would have been not quite seventeen at the time of the unfortunate marriage.
“Until Death Do Us Part… Or Five Weeks Later”: A Tale of Marital Woe in 1875 Dallas4
In the archives of Dallas County’s Civil District Court lies a poignant story that offers a window into both marriage and legal proceedings in post-Civil War Texas. The case of Belle Carpenter v. John W. Carpenter (1875-1877) provides a fascinating glimpse into 19th-century divorce proceedings, women’s legal standing, and how courts handled allegations of abandonment and cruelty.
A Brief Union
On January 3, 1875, Belle and John W. Carpenter exchanged vows in Dallas County, Texas. According to Belle’s testimony, their marriage began happily, with Belle functioning as what was then considered an exemplary wife—”faithful and affectionate,” managing household affairs “with prudence and economy,” and treating her husband “with kindness and forbearance.”
But this domestic bliss proved startlingly brief. After approximately five weeks, Belle claimed that John “commenced a course of cruel, outrageous, and inhuman treatment” toward her.
Illness and Abandonment
The situation deteriorated dramatically when Belle fell seriously ill in mid-February 1875. Her petition describes her as “confined to her bed by a severe spell of sickness,” during which John allegedly neglected to provide her with medical attention or medicine. Belle’s court filings paint a harrowing picture of a bedridden woman who “begged and implored” her husband for medical assistance, which he refused “at all times” despite being “amply able” to provide it.
On February 25, 1875—less than two months after their wedding—John abandoned Belle while she remained ill. According to her petition, he “wholly neglected and refuses to receive her as his wife or to furnish her the necessaries of life,” leaving her without arrangements for care or support during her illness.
Slander and Defamation
Belle’s petition further alleged that after deserting her, John engaged in character assassination, using “slanderous words calculated to bring her into public infamy and disgrace.” Specifically, she claimed that in public places and in front of various people, John declared that Belle “had been guilty of adultery” and was “a common prostitute”—allegations she vehemently denied as “false and wholly unfounded.”
The Legal Process Begins
On May 21, 1875, Belle initiated divorce proceedings in Dallas County District Court. Unable to afford the legal costs, she filed an affidavit of poverty, stating she was “too poore to pay the costs of said suit.” The court issued summonses to locate John, but he proved difficult to find, with the sheriff returning one summons noting he was “not found in Dallas Co Texas.” Eventually, on June 7, 1875, John acknowledged the petition, writing directly on the court document: “I hereby accept service on the within Petition & Waive citation & service of copy of Petition.”
An Unexpected Development
The case took an unexpected turn when, on October 3, 1875, Belle gave birth to a daughter named Clem Carpenter. This revealed that Belle had been pregnant during the early months of their marriage and throughout the initial legal proceedings. In March 1876, Belle amended her petition to address this new circumstance, adding in July 1876 a specific request for custody, arguing that John was “wholly incompetent to have the Care & Control of said Child” while she was “fully Competent & able to take the proper Care of said Child.”
John’s Defense and the Court’s Decision
John finally filed his answer on February 8, 1876, through his attorney W.K. Young. His response was brief but direct: he “denies all and singular the allegations in Plaintiff’s Petition.” Despite this denial, the court ultimately sided with Belle. A jury, led by foreman George W. Baird, found “the allegations as set forth in the petition of Plaintiff to be true.”
The final hearing dissolved the bonds of matrimony between Belle and John, restored to Belle “all the privileges of a single Person,” and ordered John to pay court costs.
Aftermath and Enforcement
Collecting the $8.20 in court costs proved challenging. On December 27, 1876, the court issued an execution order against John’s property to recover the costs. However, when Sheriff W.M. Moon attempted to execute this order, he reported on June 16, 1877: “No property found on which to levy this Execution.”
Historical Significance
This case provides valuable insights into divorce proceedings in post-Civil War Texas. Though divorce was stigmatized in the 19th century, Texas law provided legal avenues for women to escape abusive or untenable marriages. Belle’s successful petition demonstrates that courts could be receptive to women’s claims of cruelty and abandonment, particularly when physical welfare was at stake.
The case also illuminates aspects of marriage, gender roles, and legal proceedings in 1870s Texas. Belle’s petition carefully emphasized her fulfillment of expected wifely duties, suggesting that proving oneself a “good wife” was important to securing a favorable divorce outcome. Meanwhile, John’s alleged slander about Belle’s sexual conduct points to the double standards of the era, where a woman’s reputation was particularly vulnerable to such accusations.
Belle Carpenter v. John W. Carpenter reminds us that behind the formal legal documents of historical court cases lie very human stories of hope, disappointment, suffering, and the pursuit of justice. This brief marriage and lengthy legal proceeding offers a window into both personal tragedy and the evolving legal protections for women in 19th-century America.
Sources
- Docket, Thursday, October 28th, The Dallas Daily Herald, Friday, 1 October 1875, p. 2, col. 4, para. 6, #2745, Bell Carpenter vs Jno W. Carpenter; Newspapers (https://www.newspapers.com/image/86540671/?match=1&terms=carpenter : accessed 15 March 2025).
- Dallas County Civil District Court, Belle Carpenter vs John W. Carpenter, 1875, case file #2745; imaged FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C3S2-P951-1 : accessed 15 March 2025), IGN 008505510, images 675 – 700.e
- Dallas County, Texas, photocopy of marriage license, Carpenter-Weatherford, 3 Jan 1874, Volume E Page 407, County Clerk, Dallas.
- “Write a blog post based on this court case,” prompt by Diana Elder to Claude 3.7 Sonnet, 15 March 2025, based on the transcription of the divorce file found at Dallas County Civil District Court, Belle Carpenter vs John W. Carpenter, 1875, case file #2745; imaged FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C3S2-P951-1 : accessed 15 March 2025), IGN 008505510, images 675 – 700..
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