Notes


Matches 19,501 to 19,550 of 26,208

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
19501 http://library.ndsu.edu/grhc/history_culture/family/renners/andreas.html Renner, Andreas (I35048)
 
19502 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Bade, Sarah (I18985)
 
19503 http://longislandgenealogy.com/1891/Marriages/Grooms_WYZ.html
Wass, Charles and Fleischbein, Julia of Hicksville, daughter of August Fleischbein, married 24 April 1900 at Hicksville by Rev. Fr. Fuchs 
Family (F59426)
 
19504 http://marshaswarrickweb.com/cemeteries/northviewcem.htm Fisher, Artis A. (I88306)
 
19505 http://marshaswarrickweb.com/cemeteries/northviewcem.htm Ahrens, Esther M. (I166818)
 
19506 http://maxkade.iupui.edu/springer/ch7/ch7_p1.html
Before the arrival of Boniface Wimmer and his small group of German Benedictines from Bavaria in 1846, the Redemptorists had sent members of their religious order to Philadelphia and Baltimore. Once established in these two cities, they set up small colonies for German Catholic immigrants in the interior of Pennsylvania. One such colony was St. Mary's of Elk County in north- central Pennsylvania. The site was originally called Marienstadt, which later became Saint Marystown and then Saint Mary's. In December of 1842 a small group of German Catholics arrived there to build log houses as their future homes. It is believed that at that time advertisements in Munich newspapers portrayed the original colony of St. Mary's as a busy city with ships lining up at its wharf.[5] Today we would call such a portrayal the epitome of false advertising, since there is no water to be found in that part of Pennsylvania. A few years later the Redemptorists arranged for Sisters of Notre Dame to provide instruction for the children of St. Mary's settlers. The women arrived in 1847. However, the Redemptorists and the Sisters departed two years later, at which time the parish was entrusted to the Benedictines of St. Vincent in Latrobe through a decree by Bishop O'Connor of the Pittsburgh Diocese. St. Vincent's abbot Boniface Wimmer in turn brought a small number of German Benedictine nuns from St. Walburg in Eichstaett, Bavaria, to Marienstadt in 1852. After their arrival, a handsome Neo-Gothic brick church with a single spire was constructed and consecrated in 1869.[6] The church interior is a wonderful example of the efforts by German-American church artists to create a place of great beauty, where God's presence could be felt through the visual representation of biblical themes and Catholic dogma. figure 97St. Mary's church history notes that the main altar was designed and placed in the sanctuary in 1866 by Cosmas Wolf and members of the Covington Altar Building Stock Company.[7] Ten years later the German-American artist Wilhelm Lamprecht painted the Immaculate Conception on this altar 
Nist, Aloysius (I150616)
 
19507 http://mcnygenealogy.com/cem/holy2.htm Langknecht, Michael (I35671)
 
19508 http://mcnygenealogy.com/cem/holy3.htm
RICHTER, CHARLES 5239 1880
RICHTER, CHARLES 5631 1881 
Richter, Karl (I85535)
 
19509 http://members.aol.com/ruthpohl/dat37.htm#10 Family (F15141)
 
19510 http://members.cox.net/chiefstorm/gen/t560m701.htm
There is some confusion as to exactly which person is this Michael Tanner. For one thing, the name Tanner seems to have evolved from and changed back to Danner for some individuals. Also, Getzendanner appears to have been another root version changed to Tanner. Worse, there appear to have been at least two Michael Tanners in the same area of PA at about the same period of time.
One Michael Tanner was in PA and MD in the 1730s and was involved in the Cresap disturbances. This likely is the one listed as arriving Philadelphia 27 Sep 1727 aboard the Ship James Goodwill, from Rotterdam, but last of Falmouth. Brethren Pioneers considers this is the Michael Tanner identified on this page. The book states that he was born in Mannheim, Germany (according to A. R. Wentz) and that he had a first wife Amy with whom he arrived in Philadelphia in September 1727 as Mennonites. During the Cresap disturbances, he was leader and spokesman for the German settlers and had his land sold by Cresap in 1735. In 1737, Tanner was captured in a raid and briefly held in Annopolis. The book goes on to observe that he was prominent in York County, his name appearing frequently in various records. In 1770, Tanner and his second wife Eva were listed as members of Little Conewago Brethren Congregation near Hanover and they had eight children. Tanner bought 50 acres of Miller's Chance and a lot in Taneytown in 1765 and added another lot in 1786. In 1770, he bought 51 acres of Owing's Chance. The two large parcels were deeded by Michael and wife Eve to their son-in-law John Storrum (John Storm) in 1777. Son-in-law Michael was the executor for Michael Tanner's will in 1777. Based on evidence below, it appears that Brethren Pioneers has mixed the doings of two Michael Tanners. The Mennonite Michael Tanner/Danner can be distinguished by the following:
Wives: Amy, Anna
Children: Jacob, Heinrich/Henry, Philip (both Michaels had a son Michael, Jr.); Catharine, Anna, Mary, Elizabeth.
Timing: Probably anything predating about 1740 in America.
Location: Residing in Manheim Twp (now Heidelberg Twp), specifically near Hanover; land in Heidelberg & Codorus Twps.
Stephen M. Lawson's page talks about a Michael Tanner who did not arrive here until 15 years later. He notes that the primary information source for Tanner family is from Miles S. Philbeck's article "The Search for Michael Tanner," in the Bulletin of the Genealogical Society of Old Tryon County, Inc., Feb. 1995 (23:1, pp. 1-13). Michael Tanner/Danner - b. about 1701, Wiesloch, Germany; d. about Mar. 1777, Frederick Co., MD. Called citizen and baker at Walldorf, Germany in baptism of daughter Apollonia. Arrived at Philadelphia, PA on Sep. 24, 1742 aboard the Robert and Alice, In a deed dated Jun. 11, 1772 in Frederick Co., MD, all Michael's children are named, except for Apollonia. Will dated Sep. 5, 1776 and filed Mar. 23, 1777 in Frederick Co., MD. Married Jan. 17, 1728, Walldorf, Germany. Maria Eva - b. Germany. Apparently Roman Catholic. Two daughters were baptized at the Walldorf Catholic Church, and son Michael at the Leimen Lutheran Church. Based on the data from Germany, I have to agree that the Michael Tanner in this lineage was not the one involved with Cresap (besides, my ancestors never seem to have done anything to make them famous).
Will of Teater Danner of Dover Twp, York Co, PA was written 16 Jan 1759 and probated 14 Mar 1759. The youngest son Tobias was to care for his mother; a brother Casper and sister Judit are mentioned. Administrative account cc/a-187 filed 25 Aug 1761. Tobias Tanner is listed in the 1762 and 1772 tax lists for Dover. 
Danner, Johannes Michael (I76523)
 
19511 http://members.cox.net/leewise/d46.htm#P1367 Family (F5151)
 
19512 http://members.cox.net/leewise/d46.htm#P1515 Family (F5278)
 
19513 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family (F7497)
 
19514 http://members.cox.net/leewise/d87.htm#P1346 Weis, Johannes Adam (I3402)
 
19515 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Norris, Janet Roberta (I12219)
 
19516 http://members.tripod.com/~Vide_Poche/b_fried.html
Bumb , Leonard b. 1850 d. 1907
Bumb , Sarah b. 1848 d. 1918
Bumb , Leonard M. b. 10-22-1905 d. 4-24-1987
Bumb , Edith K. b. 8-22-1909 d. 7-6-1986
Bumb , Sophia b. 7-6-1825 d. 1-4-1904
Bumb , Henry b. 1861 d. 1927
Bumb , Anna M . b. 1867 d. 1952 
Bumb, Leonhardt (I66844)
 
19517 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-26/
Henry Menkel

Johann Heinrich Christopher (Henry) Menkel was born January 31, 1823 in Landau Principality of Waldeck, Prussia and died July 29, 1889 in Miltonsburg. He was buried in the Abandoned Cemetery (Free Cemetery) in Miltonsburg. Henry immigrated to America in 1846 with his brother Heinrich Ludwig and his sister Mary Elisabeth. He was naturalized on October 3, 1859 in Monroe County. Henry Menkel was a cabinet maker. His father was Johann Otto Menkel, born December 7,1770 in Landau, Principality of Waldeck, Prussia and his mother was Marle Charlotte Wilhemine Friederike Bunte born September 12, 1788 in Landau, Principality of Waldeck, Prussia.

Henry?s brother, Heinrich Ludwig Menkel, born July 28, 1825, and his sister Marie Elizabeth also emigrated to the United States. Ludwig was murdered between Clarington and Miltonsburg in 1846 while traveling from Wheeling to Miltonsburg to visit his brother in (?).

Henry Menkel?s wife was Carolina Roos, born December 4, 1825 in Rumbach, Schenau, Germany. Carolina Roos? mother was Christine Magdalene Jacky (Yockey), born July 25, 1797 in Schonau RB. Henry and Carolina had nine children, all of whom were born in Miltonsburg:

Carolina Elisabetha, born July 16, 1849, died ?; Carolina married Jacob Roth and lived in Woodsfield.
Heinrich Louis, born August 29, 1851; died May 4, 1911. He married Ophilia Rhines and was a roofer and sheet metal worker in Scio, Ohio.
Juliana, born January 25, 1853 (died as a child)
Karl Charles, born June 15, 1855; died July 29,1929. Charles was a cabinet maker who also made coffins. He never married and lived all of his life in the double house on Lot 26 with his brother Phillip and sisters Julia and Lucinda.
Friedrich Philipp, born December 30, 1857; died July 8, 1933. July 8, 1933. Phillip was a house painter.
Julia L. born January 27, 1860; died November 25, 1933
Lucinda Charlotte, born April 3, 1862; died August 16, 1927
William Oliver, born February 27 1864; died January 31, 1927. William, who married Hattie Frank at age 40, learned the monument trade and lived in Miltonsburg. Church records state that he committed suicide; however, rumors at the time held that he was shot by his wife.
Edward Herman, born April 29, 1868; died March 15, 1922. He married Emma Steed and, after learning the monument business in Miltonsburg, opened a monument business with his younger brother, Theodore in Woodsfield. Later, Edward?s son Clyde entered this business with him.
Theodore Franklin, born February 1870; died (?). He entered the monument business with Edward Herman.

Following is an excerpt from one of Henry?s obituaries:

A sad loss to the village of Miltonsburg, Ohio, during the past week is the death of Mr. Henry Menkle, who had resided in that place for many years, and by living the life of an honest, upright and kind-hearted citizen, had won the admiration and respect of the entire town and vicinity. He died last Monday morning at 1 o?clock, of brain fever, after a short illness. Mr. Menkle was about 66 years of age, and had been a resident of Miltonsburg about forty years. He came to America from Landow, Germany, in 1844. Deceased leaves a wife, five sons, three daughters and many other friends to mourn his loss. To these the Gazette extends its sympathy. The funeral took place Tuesday afternoon and was conducted by the I.O.O.F., of which the deceased had been a member many years. The funeral is said to have been the largest witnessed in Miltonsburg for years, as hundreds of old friends for miles around were present.

Oral History

Hulda Landefeld Young recalled her Aunt Dorothy Landefeld Feiock telling her that she played cinch in this house with Julia and Lucinda Menkel.
Lot 26 Owners

(Partial List)

1846 Daniel Wollenweber
1847 Valentine Gates
1848 Valentine Gates
1849 Valentine Gates
1850 Valentine Gates
1855 Henry Menkel
1860 Henry Menkel
1870 Henry Menkel
1875 Charles Menkel
1880 Henry Menkel
1885 Henry Menkel
1890 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1895 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1899 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1905 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1910 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1915 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1920 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1925 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1930 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1935 J. L. and L. C. Menkel
1940 John A. and Fred H. Claus
1945 John A. and Fred H. Claus
1950 Racy and Velma G. Carpenter 
Menkel, Johannes Heinrich (I150845)
 
19518 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-30/
Lot 30 Owners

(Partial List)

* 1848 Henry Yockey
* 1849 Henry Yockey
* 1850 John Hine
* 1855 John Hine
* 1860 George Feiock
* 1870 George Feiock
* 1875 George Feiock
* 1880 George Feiock
* 1885 Henry Claus
* 1890 Henry Claus
* 1895 Henry Claus
* 1899 Henry Claus
* 1905 Adam Landefeld
* 1910 Adam Landefeld
* 1915 Adam Landefeld
* 1920 Adam Landefeld
* 1925 Adam Landefeld
* 1930 Adam Landefeld
* 1935 Adam Landefeld
* 1940 Adam Landefeld
* 1945 Simon L. Miller
* 1950 Simon L. Miller (part of the lot)
* 1950 Paul Egger and Wilda Turner (part of the lot) 
Egger, Paul L. (I78757)
 
19519 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-30/
Ola Steed Egger and Albert Egger
About 1945 Lot 30 was split. Albert and Ola Egger purchased the north part on which the house was located and Simon Miller the shop on the south part. Albert and Ola lived at Lot 42 from about 1920 until Albert?s death about 1935. They had two children: Paul (1911-1991) and Wilda Egger Turner. Paul learned the barbering trade in Miltonsburg and practiced barbering in Miltonsburg and Woodsfield. 
Egger, Albert Conrad (I78754)
 
19520 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-30/
Simon Miller
Leo Simon Miller was born in 1880 and died in 1951. Simon?s father was John Miller, who was born May 11, 1844, in Monroe County and died May 11, 1915, and his mother was Mary Anna Crock Miller. Mary Anna was born on June 16, 1846, near Fulda, Noble County, Ohio and died on April 4, 1922, in Barnesville, Ohio. Simon?s parents were married on February 4, 1867, in St. Mary?s Church in Fulda, Ohio and in 1884 they moved to Monroe County, Ohio. Their children were: Elizabeth, George, Andrew, Barbara, Edward, Apollonia, and Leo Simon. 
Miller, Simon Leo (I122870)
 
19521 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-7/
Lot 7

Tax records indicate that Frederick Stenzel built a modest structure ($90) on this lot in 1847 and (a) more substantial structure(s) ($367) by 1850. Oral history suggests that this house remained until it was torn down by Charlie Smith about 1920. Hulda Landefeld Young recalled that the Stenzel family lived in a two-story house on this lot when she visited Miltonsburg as a young girl between 1910 and 1920.
Christian Yockey

See Lot 5.
David Pearson

See Lot 2.
Frederick and Barbara Stenzel

Frederick Stenzel was born July 28, 1812 and died March 4, 1877. The 1860 census listed the following members of the Stenzel family: Frederick, a brewer, age 48; Barbara, 38; Elizabeth, 17; John, 15; Caroline, 13; Charles, 8; Jacob, 7; Emaline, 3; and Lucetta, 5 months. The 1880 census listed: Barbara, 58; Emaline, 22; Mary V., 16.
John Jacob Stenzel

An obituary for John Jacob Stenzel, who died in 1926 in Ansonia, Ohio, lists his birth date as August 30, 1853, and his parents as George and Barbara Stenzel. The date of 1853 is consistent with the birth date of John Stenzel as listed in the 1860 census, and it is likely that Frederick Stenzel?s full name was George Frederick Stenzel. The article further stated that John Jacob Stenzel came to Darke County, Ohio at age 17 (1870), where he resided on a farm near Ansonia until his death.

On February 13, 1876, John Jacob Stenzel married Miss Alice Baughman, who died on November 10, 1904. They had four sons, three of whom (John, Herman, and Frank) were alive in 1826. On September 8, 1910, he was united in marriage to Matilda Egger. At the time of his death, his sister Elizabeth was living in Miltonsburg, Emma in Wheeling, and Jennie in Pittsburgh.

Miltonsburg oral history mentions a cave on Lot 7 during the early years of Miltonsburg. Caves, which might have been similar to the springhouses often found in Monroe County farmsteads, were often associated with the breweries and, as noted, Frederick Stenzel was a brewer in 1860. Apparently this cave was similar to the one that still exists in 2006 on Outlot 14.
Charles Menkel

An obituary for Charles Menkel, born July 30, 1907, listed his parents as Louella N. Stenzel, who was born in Monroe County on April 6, 1871 as the wife of Theodore Franklin Menkel, born in Miltonsburg in February, 1870.
Oral History Notes

Other persons who probably lived in this house include Simon Luley, Herbert and Marie Landefeld, Fred Kress, and Albert and Ola Egger.

The original house was torn down by Charlie Smith (Schmidt), who built a much smaller house on the lot about 1920. There was a spring house (sometimes described as a cave) behind (west) of this house. When Charlie Smith built his new house, he used some of the stones from this spring house (which he also removed) in the foundation.
Lot 7 Owners

(Partial List)

1835 Christian Yockey
1836 David Pearson
1837 David Pearson
1844 Frederick Stenzel
1845 Frederick Stenzel
1846 Frederick Stenzel
1847 Frederick Stenzel
1848 Frederick Stenzel
1849 Frederick Stenzel
1850 Frederick Stenzel
1855 Frederick Stenzel
1860 Frederick Stenzel
1866 Frederick Stenzel
1870 Frederick Stenzel
1875 Frederick Stenzel
1880 Barbara Stenzel
1885 Barbara Stenzel
1890 Barbara Stenzel
1899 Barbara Stenzel
1905 Barbara Stenzel
1910 Jacob Stenzel
1915 Frederick Stenzel
1920 Charles Schmidt aka Smith
1925 Charles Schmidt
1930 Charles Schmidt
1935 Charles Schmidt
1940 Charles Schmidt
1945 James and Eunice Coss
1950 James and Eunice Coss 
Stenzel, Georges Frédéric (I75871)
 
19522 http://miltonsburgproject.paul-e-young.org/lot-7/
Lot 7

Tax records indicate that Frederick Stenzel built a modest structure ($90) on this lot in 1847 and (a) more substantial structure(s) ($367) by 1850. Oral history suggests that this house remained until it was torn down by Charlie Smith about 1920. Hulda Landefeld Young recalled that the Stenzel family lived in a two-story house on this lot when she visited Miltonsburg as a young girl between 1910 and 1920.
Christian Yockey

See Lot 5.
David Pearson

See Lot 2.
Frederick and Barbara Stenzel

Frederick Stenzel was born July 28, 1812 and died March 4, 1877. The 1860 census listed the following members of the Stenzel family: Frederick, a brewer, age 48; Barbara, 38; Elizabeth, 17; John, 15; Caroline, 13; Charles, 8; Jacob, 7; Emaline, 3; and Lucetta, 5 months. The 1880 census listed: Barbara, 58; Emaline, 22; Mary V., 16.
John Jacob Stenzel

An obituary for John Jacob Stenzel, who died in 1926 in Ansonia, Ohio, lists his birth date as August 30, 1853, and his parents as George and Barbara Stenzel. The date of 1853 is consistent with the birth date of John Stenzel as listed in the 1860 census, and it is likely that Frederick Stenzel?s full name was George Frederick Stenzel. The article further stated that John Jacob Stenzel came to Darke County, Ohio at age 17 (1870), where he resided on a farm near Ansonia until his death.

On February 13, 1876, John Jacob Stenzel married Miss Alice Baughman, who died on November 10, 1904. They had four sons, three of whom (John, Herman, and Frank) were alive in 1826. On September 8, 1910, he was united in marriage to Matilda Egger. At the time of his death, his sister Elizabeth was living in Miltonsburg, Emma in Wheeling, and Jennie in Pittsburgh.

Miltonsburg oral history mentions a cave on Lot 7 during the early years of Miltonsburg. Caves, which might have been similar to the springhouses often found in Monroe County farmsteads, were often associated with the breweries and, as noted, Frederick Stenzel was a brewer in 1860. Apparently this cave was similar to the one that still exists in 2006 on Outlot 14.
Charles Menkel

An obituary for Charles Menkel, born July 30, 1907, listed his parents as Louella N. Stenzel, who was born in Monroe County on April 6, 1871 as the wife of Theodore Franklin Menkel, born in Miltonsburg in February, 1870.
Oral History Notes

Other persons who probably lived in this house include Simon Luley, Herbert and Marie Landefeld, Fred Kress, and Albert and Ola Egger.

The original house was torn down by Charlie Smith (Schmidt), who built a much smaller house on the lot about 1920. There was a spring house (sometimes described as a cave) behind (west) of this house. When Charlie Smith built his new house, he used some of the stones from this spring house (which he also removed) in the foundation.
Lot 7 Owners

(Partial List)

1835 Christian Yockey
1836 David Pearson
1837 David Pearson
1844 Frederick Stenzel
1845 Frederick Stenzel
1846 Frederick Stenzel
1847 Frederick Stenzel
1848 Frederick Stenzel
1849 Frederick Stenzel
1850 Frederick Stenzel
1855 Frederick Stenzel
1860 Frederick Stenzel
1866 Frederick Stenzel
1870 Frederick Stenzel
1875 Frederick Stenzel
1880 Barbara Stenzel
1885 Barbara Stenzel
1890 Barbara Stenzel
1899 Barbara Stenzel
1905 Barbara Stenzel
1910 Jacob Stenzel
1915 Frederick Stenzel
1920 Charles Schmidt aka Smith
1925 Charles Schmidt
1930 Charles Schmidt
1935 Charles Schmidt
1940 Charles Schmidt
1945 James and Eunice Coss
1950 James and Eunice Coss 
Stenzel, John Jacob (I87448)
 
19523 http://missionaries.griffith.edu.au/biography/hey-nikolaus-1862-1951

From an impoverished background Hey rose to become an influential and often controversial figure in Aboriginal policy in North Queensland, earning the enmity of those who vied with the missions in recruiting Aboriginal labour. He pursued a morally rigid pietist style of governance, along the Moravian model of socially segregated spaces on the mission. As a Moravian, Hey is a somewhat unusual figure, because he did not come from a Moravian community, but rather asked for admission to the Unity of Brethren when he was already past his youth. Without the benefit of a fine Moravian school education, he was thrust into a position of responsibility when the leader of the mission died after a short period at Mapoon.

Family background

Johann Nikolaus Hey was born on 7 March 1862 in Dörrenbach near Bergzabern in the Palatine as the third of eight children of the farmers Jakob and Philippine Hey. His father died in 1874, when Nikolaus was 12. He had seven years of public school education (Volksschule) from 1868 to 1875. In a class of ten pupils he usually came third or fourth, although his school leaving results at age 13, show excellent results.

He then had to work the family farm and continued to attend Sunday school for three years. He was able to avoid military service due to ill health. His mother died in 1886, when he was 24, and this caused him to think of abandoning the farm where he struggled along with his sister. He and his brother both applied for admission to Basle, but while his brother was accepted there, Nikolaus was rejected for being too old.[1]

When he asked for admission to the Moravian mission college at Niesky he was already 26 years old. He recommended himself as apt at carpentry, gardening and other skills, frankly admitting a lack of academic talents. He also emphasised very strongly that he was a sinner returning to the fold.

I have been very irresponsible because early on a tendency towards sin manifested itself in me. I ran with the pack, perhaps not visibly but internally with thoughts and plans and an appetite for sin and the rejection of everything Godly. But I know that the Lord’s spirit worked itself in me since my sixth year, how I sometimes shed tears because of my sins, and that I could never sin with a clean conscience. My mother was very strict in this regard because she knew the dangers of the world especially for young people, but on the other hand she was also full of love. …

Up to my 20th year I was deep in the terrible darkness of sin. Twice I left home to vent my lust for the devil and the world. I had drifted far away from God. I am ashamed of this period. …. The prayers of my mother followed me everywhere … she spent whole nights praying for me … but she was only granted to witness the conversion of our oldest brother. …… The sin became more and more of a burden to me and I wholeheartedly longed to be freed from it. But the devil worked against it. At first he covered up my sin to me, and when God uncovered it to me the devil returned to say it was too late for me, I had overdone it. But where the sin has become mighty, grace becomes even mightier.[2]

The intensity of this plea for admission, and the stark realism with which Hey referred to the devil, imprinted his countenance as a missionary among heathen, who wandered, as he himself had once done, in darkness.

Here is the full text of Hey’s application letter in German. More

Missionary preparation

Hey attended the Niesky college from Easter 1889 to March 1891. He was called into service in North Queensland, and just before his departure, in February 1891 he was admitted to the Unity of Brethren. His examiners wrote the following report about Hey:


With an introvert countenance, and great spiritual earnestness. Hard on himself, but truly humble and therefore big-hearted and mild in his judgement of others. Friendly, extremely obliging and ready to serve. Raised in strictness by pious parents. Practical and very proficient, can put his hand to anything although he hasn’t learned a trade. Very industrious. His intellectual talent appears not to be outstanding, but one must take into consideration his deficient prior education and resultant deficit in knowledge and lack of practice in retention. His progress is clearly evident and the capacity for clear thought - which is at any rate something that can be variously interpreted - will develop as a result of his indefatigable industry. Altogether a very promising student in view of future serviceability.[3]

Hey spent three months in Ireland to improve his English. There he was ordained as deacon (Diaconus) at Gracehill on 13 May 1891 and introduced to his allocated wife, Mary-Ann Barnes, the sister of Mrs Ward who had also been designated with her husband for the Mapoon mission. The Barnes sisters were raised in a Moravian community (they were referred to as Gemeinekinder – community children). Mary-Ann (Minnie) was born in Balinderry on 24 December 1869, and called into missionary service in North Queensland on 4 June 1891, age 22, the day before her sister, brother-in-law and future spouse departed for Melbourne. The Wards and Hey arrived in Melbourne on 15 July 1891 where they met the sponsors of the mission, and reached Mapoon on 28 November 1891.

A year later Hey took three months leave from the mission, during which time he visited German communities to initiate collections for the new mission, and at the end of the year he married Minnie at Thursday Island, on 5 December 1892. The government resident at Thursday Island, former Queensland Premier John Douglas acted in loco parentis at the wedding – he made the wedding arrangements, carried the costs, and gave the bride away. Douglas maintained a strong interest in the mission and was very supportive of its missionaries. [4]

Leading Mapoon

Hey acted as assistant missionary at Mapoon until the death of Ward in January 1895. This bereavement shook the missionary family, and they took five months furlough to recover their own health, before re-building the mission.

Hey struggled to find the right ways of exerting discipline and authority, unable to accept indigenous people as fully human.

There have been cases when I was unable to proceed adequately with certain persons if they allowed themselves to be gripped by anger and attacked my own person. That’s when my love was at an end and I would have liked to punish them. In that frame of mind I was unable to achieve anything positive. Premeditated action would only have caused damage and so often days passed before I could love again. For example, we have a man called Charlie, or Lazy Charlie. If I responded only with love to all his infringements he would get worse all the time. The saying goes that you give two pieces of bread to a bad dog. If I did this with Charlie the result would be the same as rewarding a pet that has stolen something, it would surely do the same thing again. Only fear can tame such natures. But let’s not forget, these are only ten percent. I really did give one of our young men who had stolen some nails a double portion of flour, saying ‘that’s for the pilfering’. He looked at me and I said, ‘Your stealing caused me more pain than something worse from anyone else, because I did not expect this from you. The extra flour is your punishment.’ He walked away downcast and I haven’t seen him again. He was ashamed for a whole week. The biggest punishment could not have achieved what half a pound of flour did.[5]

In mid-1896 assistant missionary Rev. Brown arrived with his wife Frieda, so that Hey was able to take eight months’ furlough in 1897, which he used to garner support for a second station at Weipa. At this time he already had two children.

Minnie bore four children at Thursday Island, the first Matilda Evelyn Jane on 25 December 1893 (Jane), the second Phillipina Elizabeth on 17 June 1896 (Ina), the third Frederick James on 4 August 1899 (Fred), and her last confinement at age 36 was with John Ward on 15 May 1905 (John). By now the girls were already attending Claremon College in Sydney. In February 1909 Fred was also sent there to attend Scot's College , whith the children's school fees covered by Herrnhut. The separation of children from their parents was the lot of missionary couples. [6]


During a furlough of twelve months in 1903 the Heys took the girls to Sydney. They also used this period to return to Europe, and travelled in Australia to gain support for the opening of a third mission station at Aurukun in 1904. Months before the girls were to start school, Hey mentioned in his letter to Herrnhut how difficult it was for Minnie to part with her children. The director at Herrnhut tried to offer his sympathy:

I am touched by what you write about Sr Hey’s difficulty in getting over the impending parting with her children. It is one of the hardest trials of missionary life, but not a monopoly of that service. Tell Sr. Hey she must not impair rest and health by brooding. The same afflictions are accomplished in her sisters, who are in the flesh. Sr Townley at Makkovik is sadly missing her girl and boy, left behind in England. I was over at Kleinwelka [the Herrnhut school] the other day, and saw the children there, over whom many a heartache has been dissolved in prayer from parents’ lips. So pass on to your good wife the very human comfort that others have felt the same, along with the Divine comfort that the Heavenly Father knows what it is to part with a beloved and only begotten son on our behalf, and so to speak for the sake of Missions. May the Angel of the Covenant bless your lassies! [7]

Whether or not it was much comfort for Minnie that ‘others have felt the same’, it was deemed to be practically unavoidable that one parted with one’s children for the sake of their education. Many missionary children were raised in the Kleinwelka school near Herrnhut. Although receiving much praise, the schools conducted on the missions were clearly not of a standard adequate for the children of the missionaries themselves (Schwarz at Cape Bedford being a notable exception).

Hey had little education and was from a lower class background. His teachers found him practical, industrious, obliging and ‘serviceable’. He was thrust into the leadership of Mapoon by default and became an advisor for policy makers and ethnographers as an expert eye-witness at the frontier. Struggling with English, he occasionally copied the passages of others to relate his observations.

For example, in a letter to the Colonial Secretary where Hey was ‘speaking from his observation and experience gained by living almost 6 years amongst the natives’ he explained the absconding from luggers as follows:

The natives are recruited often willingly enough. They have heard strange tales of the sea from their friends and they are willing to go on a cruise for time. ……. They are anxious to return to their own country. They talk of this amongst themselves, seize the first favourable opportunity and make a dash for freedom. (Hey, 1 July 1897)

Douglas had already written to the Colonial Secretary on this matter four years earlier:

They are recruited often willingly enough. They have heard strange tales of the sea from their friends, and they are willing to go on a cruise for a time. …. there comes over them …. an irrepressible desire to return to their own country ….. They talk of this among themselves. …. Then they agree to seize the first favourable opportunity, and they make a dash for freedom. (Douglas, 16 February 1893)

On the question of polygamy and its effects Hey wrote:

The old men become the possessors of a plurality of wives and do not hesitate to lend their superfluous spouses to unprincipled men of various nationalities for a small compensation. Such dealings are not only detrimental to the women, but has a demoralizing effect, on all, to the lowest degree. (Hey, 1 July 1897)

Archibald Meston, who wanted to prohibit Aboriginal participation in the marine industry, had already made strikingly similar observations the year before:

These undesirable marine visitors sometimes leave a legacy of disease, and always a certain demoralisation against which the missionaries have to wage perpetual warfare. The chief trouble is with the old men who have a plurality of wives. (Meston, 1896)

Hey reached the conclusion that Aboriginal participation in the marine industry should be more closely controlled by the mission rather than prohibited. He argued that marine work need not necessarily be detrimental,

if worked under proper supervision, possessing as it does such relation to their native occupation of fishing as to be congenial to their habits and harmonizing with the idiosyncrasies of the blacks on the coast. … [If part of their wages were controlled] for the general amelioration of the blacks the recruiting of natives would be somewhat justified. (Hey, 1 July 1897)

Police Commissioner William Parry-Okeden’s report in 1897 contained the same solution:

I think that bêche-de-mer and turtle fishing, if worked under proper supervision for the benefit of the aborigines, would prove a most suitable outlet for their labour, possessing as it does such relation to their native occupation of hunting as to be congenial to their nature and habits, and harmonising perfectly with the idiosyncrasies of the coast black; and if successfully carried on it would turn out to be of valuable financial assistance in carrying out any scheme for the general amelioration of the blacks. (Parry-Okeden, Report, 1897)

It appears that Hey took the advice of experts surrounding him rather than providing expert advice based on his own observations. Before a royal commission into the marine industry in 1908, he relied on an observation made by Walter Roth in 1900 to estimate the wages the young men were bringing back from their marine work.[8]

Hey found the demands made on him as an expert taxing. In 1896 he wrote ‘not a month passes where we don’t send 30 to 40 letters, often [answering] requests for beetles, plants, and so on’.[9] He was more comfortable with paternalistic governance, supported by the two women in his family, his wife and sister-in-law, and considered the missionaries at Weipa and Aurukun as his assistants. His style was described even by friendly observers as a ‘limited monarchy’.[10] He believed in a beneficient style of discipline that relied on shaming, which could only work if his authority was unquestioned. But his authority at the mission was based on undermining the authority of tradition, and was therefore constantly questioned.

Nobody should think that our blacks are very grateful for everything we have done for them. My relationship with our people shows many similarities with that between Moses and the people of Israel.[11]

A personal setback came in 1907 when an incident involving physical punishment made media headlines and led to a public inquiry, exposing Hey’s style of governance to public scrutiny (see Mapoon entry). He had to suffer chastisement from the Queensland government, against which he also sought to assert his authority. Earlier that year he had reported to Herrnhut how authoritatively he was able to deal with the local protector:


In late November [1906] I unexpectedly received a request from the protector at Thursday Island … to place our grown half-caste girls at his disposal to hire them into service at Thursday Island. This (Protector Costin) is the third official within three years, and each change brings new conditions. In order to clear up any misunderstandings from the start (Mr Costin had only been in his job for a month) I immediately travelled to Thursday Island myself and had a three-hour conversation with my new superior. At first he assumed a threatening countenance but I soon realized that I was dealing with a young inexperienced man who was conscientious but as a newcomer influenced by Mr Howard [the Chief Protector, and former protector at Thursday Island].

Suffice it to comment here that at the end he was satisfied that I would only rent out such girls who in my opinion are capable and have received a sufficient education. I also need to first know into which family each one of them is to be assigned, and without my permission no steps can be undertaken. When I took leave from Mr Costin he surprised me with the request that he would be most obliged if in future I was to subject all his actions to the utmost criticism[12]

It must have been difficult for Hey to be subjected to the utmost criticism himself so soon afterwards.

During World War I the anti-German sentiment deeply traumatized Hey. Although his naturalisation in 1898 spared him from internment as an enemy alien, he was still exposed to hostile and suspicious attitudes, and to several house-searches.[13] He understood clearly that the days of German empire, and of building up networks of German missions, were over.

Retirement

The Heys retired from missionary service in Oct 1919 and moved to Sydney on a pension of £88, topped up in the following year by the Presbyterian Church to £120. During his retirement Hey performed voluntary work in Sunday Schools, gave bible lessons in state schools, and conducted hospital visitations and funeral services and other preaching functions. He became an honorary member of the Presbyterian church council, and also gave expert witness advice to the Queensland government on the treatment of people of mixed descent, which became a topical issue in the 1930s. In 1936 he was asked to comment on the population statistics reflected in the records of the North Queensland Moravian missions, which suggested a reduction by 5,000 people within a year. Should the indigenous population not have increased as a result of mission work? Hey responded that such figures were always wrong, because the difficulty was whether and to what extent persons of mixed descent were included in them.[15]

Whether or not the figures were wrong, the missions could not halt the decimation of indigenous people resulting from introduced sickness, settler violence, and the erosion of traditional systems resulting from displacement, the destruction of the natural environment, and contact with settler society.

Hey died in Sydney at age 89 on 28 October 1951. 
Hey, Johannes Nikolaus (I312300)
 
19524 http://murderpedia.org/male.S/s/spengler-william.htm

Parolee Search - NYS Division of Parole
161.11.133.89/ParoleeLookup/details.asp?nysid=04611581M?
DIN: 81C0645. Name: william h spengler. Date of birth: 9/26/1950. Race / ethnicity: white. Release to parole supervision: 4/22/1998. Parole status: discharged

Parolee Search

Parolee Lookup glossary.



Parolee information:
NYSID: 04611581M
DIN: 81C0645
Name: william h spengler
Date of birth: 9/26/1950
Race / ethnicity: white
Release to parole supervision: 4/22/1998
Parole status: discharged
Effective date: 8/22/2006

Offense information (most recent):
Crime of conviction Felony class County of commitment
MANSLAUGHTER 1ST (REV 09/78) b monroe

http://www.democratandchronicle.com/assets/pdf/A21985601224.PDF

2012 Webster, New York shooting
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2012 Webster, New York shooting
Location 191 Lake Road
Webster, New York, U.S.
Coordinates 43°14'13?N 77°31'22?WCoordinates: 43°14'13?N 77°31'22?W
Date December 24, 2012
c. 5:30 a.m.-c. 11:00 a.m. (EST)
Attack type murder-suicide, arson, shootout
Weapon(s) Bushmaster .223 semiautomatic rifle[1]
Deaths 4 (including the perpetrator)
Injured (non-fatal) 3
Suspected perpetrator William H. Spengler, Jr.[2]

In the early morning of December 24, 2012, firefighters responding to a fire in Webster, New York, a suburb of Rochester were fired upon by 62-year-old William H. Spengler, who was believed to have deliberately set the fire. Two firefighters were killed.
Contents

1 Shooting
2 Victims
3 Perpetrator
4 Reaction
5 See also
6 References

Shooting

According to police, Spengler set his house on 191 Lake Road and the family car on fire in the early morning hours of Christmas Eve, and then armed himself with three guns: a Smith & Wesson .38-caliber revolver, a Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun, and a .223-caliber Bushmaster semiautomatic rifle.[3][4] When firefighters arrived shortly after 5:30 am, he ambushed them from his porch. Two firefighters were killed, and two others were injured.[5]

Spengler exchanged shots with police, who arrived with an armored truck to remove the firefighters and 33 nearby civilians.[4] Police say Spengler was then chased on foot, and died when he shot himself in the head. His body was discovered nearly six hours later.[6][7][8] Due to the shooting, fire crews were unable to resume fighting the blaze until 11:30 a.m. By then, six other houses had burned to the ground, and two others had been rendered uninhabitable.[9]

A severely burned body found inside Spengler's house is believed to be Spengler's 67-year-old sister Cheryl, with whom he was living.[5] The shooting was suspected to have followed an argument between Spengler and Cheryl.[4] A two-to-three-page typewritten letter written by Spengler was found at the scene. It reflected Spengler's intent to ambush first responders, but offered no motive for the shooting.[3] In it he wrote: "I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down, and do what I like doing best, killing people."[10]
Victims

The two firefighters killed in the shooting were 43-year-old Lieutenant Michael Chiapperini, the public information officer for the Webster Police Department, and 19-year-old Tomasz Kaczowka, who also worked as a 911 dispatcher. The two wounded firefighters were Joseph Hofstetter, who was shot in the pelvis (with the bullet then lodged in his spine), and Theodore Scardino, who was shot in the chest and knee. Both were hospitalized at Strong Memorial Hospital for serious injuries, and were declared to be in stable condition.[5] In addition to the two wounded firefighters, officer John Ritter was slightly injured when a bullet hit the windshield of his car.[4]
Perpetrator

Police identified the gunman as 62-year-old local resident William H. Spengler, Jr.[7] Spengler previously spent 17 years in prison for murdering his 92-year-old grandmother with a hammer in 1980.[6][8][11] He had not attracted the attention of police since then. William Spengler "could not stand" his sister Cheryl, according to a friend, Roger Vercruysse. Spengler's mother Arline, to whom he was said to have been close, died two months earlier.[6]

Investigators immediately began focusing on how Spengler obtained the gun, since as a convicted felon he was barred from buying, owning or possessing a firearm. Before the day was out, agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms discovered that the Bushmaster and the shotgun had been purchased in June 2010 at Gander Mountain in Henrietta, another Rochester suburb. The owner of record was Dawn Nguyen, a neighbor of Spengler, who had recently moved to the suburb of Greece. In an interview with agents that night, Nguyen admitted buying the guns, but claimed they had then been stolen. However, according to investigators, the next day Nguyen texted a Monroe County sheriff's deputy and admitted buying the guns for Spengler in an illegal straw purchase. On December 28, William Hochul, the United States Attorney for the Western District of New York, announced that Nguyen had been arrested and charged with knowingly making a false statement in connection with the purchase of a firearm from a Federal Firearms Licensee. She also faces state charges of filing a false business record?the form she filled out stating that she was the owner of the guns.[12][13]
Reaction

In a statement, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said, "All of our thoughts and prayers go to the families and friends of those who were killed in this senseless act of violence." New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman also said, "The contributions made by the fallen and injured officers in Webster will never be forgotten."[4]

Firefighter ambush gunman had previously killed his gran in hammer horror attack
25 Dec 2012 16:11

The 67-year-old lured two firefighters to their death by starting a house fire and then gunning them down
Killer: William H. Spengler Jr Killer: William H. Spengler Jr
AP

A gunman who shot dead two firefighters after luring them to a blaze has previously been in prison for killing his grandmother with a hammer.

Crazed shooter William Spengler, 62, spent 17 years in jail after killing the 92-year-old in 1980 in a horrific attack.

He murdered his grandmother at the house next door to where he shot five firemen yesterday - killing two and seriously wounding two others.

His sister Cheryl, 67, who lived with him in Webster, New York State, has not yet been accounted for, according to police.

One friend today claimed Spengler ?hated? his sister and ?could not stand her?.

Investigators are still trying to work a motive for the killings.

Spengler was paroled in 1998 for the hammer murder and had led an apparently quiet life since.

His victims were named as Police Lt. Michael Chiapperini, 43, the Webster Police Department?s public information officer, and 19-year-old Tomasz Kaczowka, also an emergency dispatcher.

Colleagues described Chiapperini as a ?lifetime firefighter? with nearly 20 years with the department, and called Kaczowka a ?tremendous young man?.

Two other firefighters who were also shot and wounded - Joseph Hofstetter and Theodore Scardino - are thought to be stable in hospital.

Hofstetter was hit once in the pelvis, and the bullet lodged in his spine, authorities said, while Scardino was hit in the chest and knee.

Spengler traded shots with police officers who arrived with an armored truck they used to remove the injured, as well as people living nearby.

He was chased on foot from his perch, then killed himself before he could be subdued, cops said.

Spengler?s mother, Arline, died in October.

Police vehicles are seen at the scene of the shooting and fire on Lake Road Crime scene: Police vehicles attend the fire
Seth Binnix/MPNnow.com/Messenger Post Media


In her obituary, donations are understood to have been directed to the ?West Webster Firemen?s Association (Ambulance Fund).??

A police source said: ?We are aware of it and are trying to figure out a connection.?

Roger Vercruysse, who lived next door to Spengler, said he doted on his mother and ?hated? his sister.

He said: ?He loved his mama to death? adding he: ?couldn?t stand his sister? and ?stayed on one side of the house and she stayed on the other.?

The incident, which comes as debate rages in the United States about gun control following the Newtown school massacre earlier this month, happened shortly before 6:00 am in a small lakefront residential community.

Police chief Gerald Pickering said: ?It does appear that it was a trap that was set for our first responders.

?The neighbourhood is popular with recreational boaters but is normally quiet this time of year.

?People who get up in the middle of the night to fight fires, they don?t expect to get shot and killed.

?We are a safe community, a tragedy like this is just horrendous.?

The firefighters were shot as they approached the scene of the blaze - a car and a house engulfed in a fire that they now believe was set intentionally by Spengler.

Mr Pickering said: ?Four of the firefighters were shot. Two are deceased, two were transported to area hospitals.?

A fifth off-duty police officer who responded was also shot and wounded.

One of the injured firefighters - all volunteers - was able to escape and call for help.

The injured man was heard on a police scanner shouting: ?We are being shot at. Multiple firemen down.

"Multiple firemen are shot. I am shot. I think he is using an assault rifle. We have multiple firemen down. Working fire.?

A security cordon was put up around the scene and residents were evacuated.

Seven homes were destroyed in the blaze, as the shooting thwarted initial efforts to douse the flames.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said state police and the Office of Emergency Management were working with local law enforcement to respond to the scene.

He also offered his condolences to the families of the victims of the ?horrific shooting? and ?senseless act of violence.?

Mr Cuomo said: ?New York?s first responders are true heroes as they time and again selflessly rush toward danger in order to keep our families and communities safe.

?We as the community of New York mourn their loss as now two more families must spend the holidays without their loved ones.?

The incident in Webster came 10 days after a shooting rampage at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut that saw a disturbed young man gun down 20 children, aged six and seven, and six adults.

The shooter, Adam Lanza, had killed his mother at their home before heading to the school, where he eventually took his own life.

The Newtown shooting has revived debate in the United States on the country?s gun laws, which are far more lax than in most other developed nations.

President Barack Obama said he would support a new bill to ban assault rifles, and has put Vice President Joe Biden in charge of a panel looking at a wide range of other measures, from school security to mental health.

Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein has pledged to introduce a bill in January that would ban at least 100 military-style semi-automatic assault weapons, and would curb the transfer, importation and possession of such arms.

But the nation?s most powerful gun lobby, the National Rifle Association, strongly opposes any new restraints in gun sales, with the group?s executive vice president Wayne LaPierre calling Feinstein?s proposal ?phony.?

The United States has suffered an explosion of gun violence over the last three decades, including 62 mass shooting incidents since 1982. 
Spengler, William H. (I152292)
 
19525 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family (F43892)
 
19526 http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1988&dat=19760315&id=b3YiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=X6wFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4159,1761159 Willhauck, Agnes Frances (I276148)
 
19527 http://ontario.nygenweb.net/ontariochroniclebmdnoticespart2.htm
23 January 1901 BORN - In Canandaigua, Jan. 14, to Mr. and Mrs. Lucius J. Wilcox, a daughter. In Canandaigua, Jan. 11, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Rife, a daughter. MARRIED - In Stanley, Jan. 17, Clarence C. Cook of Flint and Mable V. Ludwig of Stanley. In Stanley, Jan. 17, Frank Roome and Myrtle O. Ludwig, both of Stanley. In Himrods, Jan. 9, Edward Smith of Gorham and Louisa Nageldinger of Potter. 
Family (F32156)
 
19528 http://pegihouck.com/family_history.html

David Joseph Houck, son of Joseph and Catharine [Buser] Houck, was a teacher, carpenter, and Justice of the Peace. In 1891 he engaged in the bottling business, buying out the firm of Gregory & Miller which he conducted until 1901, when he purchased from Jacob Krug the American House on Miller Street, Hastings, of which he was proprietor. From 1898 to 1901 he served Hastings as councilman for two years filling the president’s chair. During this incumbency he inaugurated a fight against the Independent Water Company, advocating municipal ownership, which fight he carried out successfully, and today the borough enjoys the privilege of its own water supply as the result of his untiring efforts. He had been reared on a farm in Nicktown, Pennsylvania.

Catherine Gessler [stemming from the Von Gesslers, Von meaning royalty, from the Black Forest region of Germany, had been, according to Letty Houck Shutty, political exiles and later pardoned], a kind and compassionate woman, became his wife. Catherine was the daughter of a Civil War hero [having won the Mill-Race], Colonel Eberhard Gessler, buried at Union Cemetery, St. Boniface, and Caroline [Sidler] Gessler. Nine children were born to them, Austin being the first-born. 
Houck, David Joseph (I351544)
 
19529 http://perilloux.org/genealogy/aqwg874.htm
Edgar Albert Perilloux [Parents] was born on 29 Jul 1895 in New Orleans, LA. He died in Oct 1969. Edgar married Irma Claire Fabacher on 12 May 1951.

Other marriages:

Windstein, Laura Matilda

Irma Claire Fabacher. 
Fabacher, Irma Clare (I59050)
 
19530 http://pilot.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#collectionId=1307272;p=1;surname=abele;searchType=standard;givenName=anna Hines, Mary Ann (I64728)
 
19531 http://politicalgraveyard.com/geo/WV/am-legion.R-Z.html
George H. Seibert, Jr. (b. 1913) ? of Wheeling, Ohio County, W.Va. Born in Wheeling, Ohio County, W.Va., February 27, 1913. Republican. Lawyer; served in the U.S. Army during World War II; member of West Virginia state house of delegates, 1953-76 (Ohio County 1953-74, 3rd District 1975-76); delegate to Republican National Convention from West Virginia, 1960 (member, Credentials Committee); candidate for Presidential Elector for West Virginia, 1980. Presbyterian. Member, American Bar Association; Freemasons; Shriners; Phi Sigma Kappa; American Legion. Presumed deceased. Burial location unknown. 
Seibert, George Hugo (I252140)
 
19532 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Maryann Theresa (I289090)
 
19533 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Suzann Marie (I289091)
 
19534 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Thomas Edward (I289092)
 
19535 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Burke, Geraldine (I289097)
 
19536 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Thomas Edward (I289098)
 
19537 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, John Francis (I289095)
 
19538 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Bowers, Marita Ann (I289101)
 
19539 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Kathleen Anne (I289102)
 
19540 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, John Francis (I289103)
 
19541 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Andrew Michael (I289104)
 
19542 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Timothy Joseph (I289087)
 
19543 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Douglas Lee (I289088)
 
19544 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Dyer, Joseph Thomas (I289089)
 
19545 http://pr-morefamily.org/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I7517&tree=query4ppp Noll, Sharon Rose (I289093)
 
19546 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Quinn, Anthony Jude (I289099)
 
19547 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Quinn, Elizabeth Ann (I289100)
 
19548 http://probate.cuyahogacounty.us/ml/pa.urd/mliw1010.o_display?09591890758577
Bride Groom Prefix Prefix First Name ANNA First Name WILLIAM Middle Name M Middle Name B Last Name HAMMER Last Name KENNEDY Suffix Suffix Gender F Gender M Record Key 0229856070 Record Key 0229856069 
Family (F6894)
 
19549 http://probate.cuyahogacounty.us/ml/pa.urd/mliw1010.o_display?11626108097470Bride Groom Prefix Prefix First Name MARY First Name ALFRED Middle Name GERALDIN Middle Name J Last Name STRICKER Last Name HAMMER Suffix Suffix Gender F Gender M Record Key 0205854923 Record Key 0205853905 Family (F6901)
 
19550 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family (F6906)
 

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