| Harold Newcomer Born: Private Died: | Nellie
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| David Newcomer |
| Charles E. Breitenbucher | Dilla Knox |   | ||
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| Elmer Breitenbucher | Esther Stretzler |   | ||
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| Dale Edwin Breitenbucher Born: 18 SEP 1922 Died: OCT 1983 | Jo Ann Fonch
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| Jeffery Breitenbucher | ||
| Sharon Jo Breitenbucher |
Lived in Canton, Stark, OH at time of birth.
| Johann Leonard Stitzlein | Catherina Magdalena Bross | James W Temple | Eva Kyser |   |
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| Fred Leonard Stitzlein | Emma Mayrilla Temple |   | ||
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| Elmer Wilford Stitzlein Born: 3 SEP 1904 Died: 3 MAR 1983 | Mary Elizabeth Breitenbucher
Born: 20 JUL 1905 Died: 8 MAR 1993 | |||
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| Elmer Wilford Jr Stitzlein | ||
| Mary Jane Stitzlein | ||
| Anna Mae Stitzlein | ||
| Carol Lee Stitzlein |
SSN
STAE
Elmer: 7th and 1st US Cavalry stationed at Fort Apache Arizona, Camp Harry J Jones, Douglas Arizona, Fort Bliss and Camp Marfa Texas, 1920 to 1923 mostly on Mexican border patrol. Some of the old timers in his troop had fought the Indians in Arizona and New Mexico during the 1890's.
SSN: Social Security #: 165-34-6105, PA, between 1959 and 1961.
Obituary:
Elmer W. Stitzlein, 78, of RD 1, Lakeville, died Saturday evening in Mission Hospital, Mission, Texas, following a long illness. Born Sept. 3, 1904, in Alum Rock, he was the son of Frederick and Emma Temple Stitzlein. Mr. Stitzlein was employed for 42 years with the R.S. Railway Postal Service, retiring in 1964. He served an enlistment with the 7th and 1st U.S. Army Cavalry on the border patrol in Texas. He was a member of Zion Lutheran Church of Loudonville and the Railway Mail Association. Survivors include his wife, Mary Elizabeth (Betty) Stitzlein, whom he married Aug. 25, 1925; one son, Elmer W. Jr. of Seattle; three daughters, Mrs. Marion (Mary Jane) Allison of Wooster, Anne Schneider of Chicago and Carol Lee Stitzlein of Painesville and nine grandchildren. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday in Zion Lutheran Church, Loudonville, with the Rev. Robert Pflueger officiating. Burial will be in Loudonville Cemetery. Friends may call in the Byerly Funeral Home, Loudonville, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and at the church one hour prior to the services. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society or Zion Lutheran Church.
*Elmer's notes*
Elmer Wilford Stitzlein married Mary Elizabeth (Betty) Breitenbucher in her sister's, Mrs. Albert (Helen) Arnholt's home on S. Market Street, Loudonville by Reverend John H. Kuhlman. (I mention this only because it can no longer be done). They left Loudonville by local train to Wooster. From Wooster by Cleveland and Southwestern Interurban (Electric) lines to Cleveland by way of Seville and Medina. After a few days in Cleveland they traveled to Akron by Northern OH Power and Light Interurban Express. (Akron at that time had a 10 track Union Interurban Station). After visiting in Akron we went by NOP&L to Canton where we took the Penna RR#22 (Manhattan Limited) to Pittsburgh where we started housekeeping on Mt. Washington. At the time we were married there was a vast network of Electric Interurban Lines east of the Missssippi. They ran high speed passenger and freight service. From the terminals they usually had express trains (1-2-3 car operations) leaving on the hour and local trains on the half hour.
Betty was born near Big Prairie on a farm located on what is now OH 226. The daughter of George and Ellen McMillen Breitenbucher. She had two older sisters, Mrs. Albert (Helen) Arnholt, Mrs. Herbert (Lulu) Mackey and one younger brother, Harold. The family moved to a farm west of Nashville. Betty attended country school for a few years and then Nashville School where she graduated from HS. She attended Aultmen School of Nursing at Canton and, after raising her family, worked at geriatric nursing for about 10 years.
Elmer was born near Greer and grew up on Mt. Vernon Avenue in Loudonville where his father, Fred, was engaged in farming. He left home after Eva was married and joined the army at Fort Hayes in Columbus OH. He served in the 7th and 1st US Cavalry in Texas, N. Mexico and Arizona mostly along the Mexican Border before the border patrol service was organized. Drugs were no problem at that time, they were smuggling Chinamen and liquor that were then illegal in the US. He was with L Troop of the 1st Cavalry when it was stationed at Fort Apache Arizona. It left there in October 1922 when the war department turned the Arizona and N. Mexico Indian Reservations over to the Department of Interior. Lieutenant W. Fletcher was in command at the time. After arriving and rejoining the regiment at Camp Harry J. Jones, Douglas, Arizona, Captain Lucian J. Truscott was assigned command. He later became a Lieutenant General during WW2. The 1st cavalry division was being organized at that time and we hiked, with our animals, to Camp Marfa (later Fort D.A. Russell) at Marfa Texas. This was in the winter of 1922 and the distance about 1000 miles. After discharge Elmer returned to Arizona where he got a job mucking in the Copper Queen mine in Bisbee. The price of copper dropped that winter and they closed down a lot of mining operations. He returned to Loudonville, worked for his father that summer, became engaged to Betty and went to business school where h e studied accounting that fall. Early in the winter he entered t he Railway Mail Service, (Post Office Dept.) at Pittsburgh Terminal. He worked there until mid 1927 and also as a substitute o n various lines centering on Pittsburgh. He was transferred to work between Pittsburgh and Chicago and, with the exception of 6 months between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, he finished the rest of his more than 42 years of service on this line (PRR). (Unfortunately this service no longer exists and post office service has deteriorated ever since.) After transfer, they moved to 30 4 E. Main, Loudonville, bought a home on Humm Ave. then N. Spring St. and in 1947 moved to a small farm 5 miles east of Loudonville where they now live. Elmer retired in 1964 because of heart trouble and Betty in 1966. They spend their winters in Mission Texas and have been married nearly 56 years at the time of this writing (late 1970's).
Elmer and Betty were married on Thanksgiving Day, 1925, in the home of her sister, Mrs. Albert Arnholt, on S. Market St., Loudonville. They ere attended by Lillie (Johnson) Remington and Clovis Maurer. Reverend John H. Kuhlman of Zion Lutheran Church, Loudonville officiated. Only family members were in attendance. (I mention the following because it is of historical interest.) They left Loudonville that evening by local train for Wooster. (At that time there were 6 local trains stopping at Loudonville and 2 thru trains making flag stops.) At Wooster, at the Public Square, they boarded an interurban car, which was run by the Cleve land and Southwestern (Electric) Lines, for Cleveland by way of Seville and Medina. They stayed at the Hotel Cleveland on the Public Square for a few days and then went to Akron by Northern OH Power & Light Interurban Express. They boarded the express on the Public Square. In the various cities the interurbans utilized the local street car tracks, most of which were laid right in the streets. When they got to the edge of a city they would then have their own right of way. They detrained at the Akron Interurban Station which had been completed just a few years and had 10 station tracks. After the day of the interurbans was over it was converted in to a bus station. After visiting with relatives they took the NOP&L to Canton. (There was frequent service on these lines. NOP&L ran express trains out of Cleveland to Canton every hour on the hour and local trains every hour on the 1/2 hour. They carried passengers, newspapers, mail in closed pouches and package express. They also had heavy freight runs for both car load and less than car load heavy freight. The 2 train an hour schedule was maintained about 18 hours per day and most of the freight runs were made at night.) In Canton they took Penna RR #22 (Manhattan Limited) to Pittsburgh where they started housekeeping in a furnished apartment at 100 Republic Street on Mt. Washington.
They lived there on a budget of $100 per month which included $50.00 per month rent. Elmer was employed at the time in the Railway Mail Service Terminal Post Office which was located on Ferry Street (No longer exists) at the Monongahela River Wharf. This was within walking distance of Duquesne Heights inclined railway station. They frequently rode this incline but most of the time, in order to save the 5" fare, they walked down the 365 steps from Grandview Ave. on Mt. Washinton and often, towards the end of the month, they would also walk up the steps. It was about a mile from the base of the steps to the RMS terminal. The walk across the Point Bridge (at the junction of the Allegheny and Monongahela to form the OH River) was beautiful in nice weather but crossing it on a cold winter midnight seemed to be the coldest place on earth. During the fall & winter of 1926, Betty also worked as an extra in the terminal where they worked circulars, papers and parcels.
Betty was a daughter of GEORGE HENRY BREITENBUCHER and ELLA McMillen (Daughter of Immer and Mary Crum McMillen). She was born on a farm on what is now OH 226 about 1.5 miles west of Big Prairie. She had two older sisters, Lulu (Mrs. Herbert) Mackey and Helen (Mrs. Albert) Arnholt, also 1 younger brother, Harold. Shortly after Betty was born (1908) the family moved to the Ed Weimer farm about 1 .5miles west of Nashville. >From here Betty attended country school and then Nashville School, where she graduated. She was 8 years old when her mother died from a long-term siege of heart disease and 19 when her father died. Lulu managed the home until she was married and then Helen did. After Helen established her home Betty was responsible for about 3 years until her father died. She was still attending school and often remarks about getting up in the middle of the night to work out her bread and then baking it in the morning after which, having missed a ride, she would walk 2 miles to school. Her father helped as much as he could with the house in what time he could spare from the farm. She entered Aultman Hospital School of Nursing in Canton and left it in 1925 to get married. We raised a big garden every year and she canned as much as 300 cans a year of vegetables, fruit and meat. With the exception of fresh meats we bought very few groceries, excepting staples and househol d supplies, while the children were growing up.
Betty was a good mother and she had most of the responsibility for the children as Elmer was gone more than 1/2 of the time on his job. She helped them in their activities in school and out, including driving them to many functions. She was a girl scout leader for many years. She was a good seamstress and made most of the girls' clothing. She was also an excellent cook.
Elmer was born on a farm about 3 miles south of Greer at Black's Crossing and near Alum Rocks, where the Stitzlein & Strang Reunion was held for many years. On April 1 1905 they moved to 311 N Mt. Vernon Ave which Fred had bought along with a 60 acre farm which lay at the rear of the house. He bought these properties from 'Deacon' Taylor who also owned the Loudonville Mill (Taylor's Peerless Flour), later the Loudonville Milling Co. & now owned by Sunshine Biscuit. Elmer was 4 years old when his mother died from appendicitis. Surgery at that time was almost unheard of, especially in the rural areas. Not too long afterwards his father married Martha Mathilda Long, daughter of George and Magdalen Karcher Long. She had made her living as a seamstress and she was also a good cook & housekeeper but of poor personality t o have charge of children. She was a very, very strict disciplinarian, often downright mean and none of our friends were ever welcome in our home. It had ceased to be a happy home. Fred's religious principles would not permit him to divorce so we all had to make the best of it. The girls, especially Eva, protected Elmer much of the time. Life would have been untenable at home without their help. Elmer was 15 when Eva married and he left home just a few weeks later. He joined the army (Ht 5'11'' wt 155) and received his recruit training in the 7th cavalry at Ft. Bliss Texas. He was with the 7th Cavalry when the War Dept restored their colors to them. (They had lost them in the Battle of the Little Bighorn in the 1870's in Montana under Lt Col George Custer.) After training, he was assigned to the 17th Cavalry stationed at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii. In a short time, didn't even get to go on a pass to Honolulu, the entire regiment was moved to the Presidio of Monterey in Calif where it was placed on an inactive status. The personnel was split between the 11th Cavalry at Monterey and, including Elmer, to the 1st Cavalry at Camp Harry J Jones, Douglas AZ. He was assigned to "L" Troop which was on detached service and stationed at Ft Apache in the White River Indian Reservation. This was the last military organization to be stationed on any Reservation in Arizona and New Mexico. L Troop rejoined the regiment in November 1922 and the post was turned over to the Interior Dept. The border patrol service had not yet been organized (organized in 1924-5) and various cavalry regiments were responsible for the patrolling. At that time they were smuggling Chinamen & Liquor (Prohibition) instead of drugs and wetbacks. The 1st was responsible for the area west to N aco & Ft Huachuca and east to Hachita N Mex. While I was with the regiment, troops were called out a number of times because of Yaqui Indian (a tribe of Apaches living in the Sierra Madre Occidental Mountains in Mexico (Sonora)), raids on border ranches including several times to John Slaughter's San Bernadino Ranch which lay on the border in N Mex, Ariz & Mexico. Most of these calls were futile because by time we would get there the Indians would be long gone with the animals they had stolen. John Slaughter (regardless of what the western fiction writers say about Wyatt Earp) was the man who made a law-abiding town out of Tombstone. In 1923-21 they re-organized the army, putting it on a peace time basis after WW1. As part of this re-organization they organized 2 cavalry divisions consisting of 4 regiments of cavalry, 2 of Light Field Artillery, 1 Machine Gun Squadron, 2 Brigade Hdqtrs and other auxiliary troops. As part of this re-org. we were transferred to Camp Marfa (Later called, in WW2, Ft D A Russell) at Marfa Texas. We hiked there, with our animals, in Mid Winter. Marfa was headquarters of the Big Bend Area a nd we had outposts at Costollon (Now in Big Bend Park), LaJitas, Presidio, Ruidosa and Candelaria, all along the river. The next post to the west was Ft Hancock (an outpost of Ft Bliss). During the Indian Wars Ft Quitman was in between. Ft Clark (5th Cavalry & 1st Brig. Hdqtrs.) was the next post to the west. Elmer was discharged at Marfa and returned to Arizona where he got a job mucking in the Copper Queen Mine (in Bisbee) which went more than a mile underground. It was hot and wet underground. The min e was cribbed with heavy timbers and was blasted thru solid rock but the mountain creaked and groaned all the time. For a novice underground worker, this was nerve-wracking and 2 months was all I could take. I quit and got a job in the Copper Queen Smelter (in Douglas) as a Furnace man Helper and then running a motor (small electric locomotive) on the blast furnace feed floor. Our wages were governed by the price of copper. Copper went low enough that Phelps Dodge started to curtail operation. They shut down several furnaces and I was out of a job. Work was scarce so I went to Dallas Tex, which was reputedly booming, but jobs were almost non-existent there. I returned to OH and agreed to farm for my father that summer. I had taken a Civil Service Exam for the Railway Mail Service while in Arizona. Because of my army field service the Civil Service Commission wrote asking if I would accept appointment to the new Border Patrol Service that was being organized. About the same time I was offered an appointment to the R M Service under the Chief Clerk at Los Angeles. My father induced me to stay in the east so I had my eligibility suspended for the 6 months necessary to change state rights for appointment to OH. I started to business school in Akron and after a few months was offered appointment to the RMS under Chief Clerk OW Yarnell. He had charge of District 5 including the Pittsburgh Terminal, and furnishing substitutes for the small lines and emergency runs on the big lines out of Pittsburgh. In 1927 I was transferred under the Crestline O Office (CC J R Caldwell) which had jurisdiction over lines between Pittsburgh & Chicago, Mansfield & Coshocton & Detroit & Mansfield. I served more than 6 years as a substitute on runs to NY, Buffalo, St Louis, Cincinnati, Cleveland and may short runs in Western Pa and eastern OH. In 1931 I was appointed to a regular position between Pittsburgh & Cincinnati. In exactly 6 months I was transferred to the Pittsburgh & Chicago Railway Post Office where I spent the rest of my working life, the last 12 years as foreman and General Foreman. I retired in 1964. I retired with almost 43 years of government service. On Dec 21, 1959 I had a heart attack, (anterior infarction) a blood clot lodged in the rear of the heart muscle. I was in my room in the Ft Dearborn Hotel. After treatment by emergency medical service, they told me I could go home under my home Doctor's care. Some of the crewmembers got me to the train in a taxi and a wheel chair at the station and got me la id down on a stretcher in the baggage car where I could relax. The mail crew kept coming back to check on my condition and helped me off at Wooster where Daughter Anna & her husband were waiting on me. They took me to the emergency room of Wooster Hospital where Dr McMillen was waiting and I was admitted to the Hospital. Betty stayed with me all night and in the morning, because of exceptionally cold weather, could not start the car. She went to Anna's and changed into her uniform, had breakfast and started to walk to work at the nursing home. Almost there, she slipped on glare ice, fell and broke her leg. Within an hour after she left the Hospital she was back in as a patient. That year, Christmas in our family was decidedly not very merry. A few days after Christmas, Betty was released on crutches. Carol was our chauffeur for some time until we were both qualified to drive. It was almost 5 months before the doctor would permit me to take the wheel.
We bought furniture after about 6 months marriage (1926) and moved to nicer quarters on Callowhill St, then to Streeper St where we were evicted because Betty became pregnant, then to 125 Kathleen St where Elmer Jr was born. In the spring of 1928 we moved to 304 E Main, Loudonville O and 2 years later we bought a new house on Humm Ave where Mary & Anna were born. In 1937, for space reasons, we bought a larger house on N Spring St located on a lot next to the Baker allotment. We lived there during the war and in 1947 we moved to our present home which we rebuilt on the farm we purchased in1943. The house was originally a log cabin, and was built when the land was bought from the government in the early 1830's. It is located in Holmes County, Washington Township Road (new road designation as of 1981 is 467). When we were doing the excavation around the walls to enlarge the house, we found some old wooden spoons and soothing syrup bottles. The floors in the old house were old hand sawed and hand tongue and groove oak boards of random widths. The present living room was built onto the original log cabin before we moved in.
There were originally 53 acres with the log house and barn and also a gas well.
We did some grain & hay farming, raised chickens & eggs, raised cattle (and had our own meat & milk), and also had about 30 hives of bees which kept us in honey and gave us some to sell. After the children, except Carol, had left home we gave up any farming operations and Betty went back to nursing (geriatric). About a year after retirement I began to feel somewhat better and I spent some time selling Tupperware and did quite well on sales but the automobile expenses ate up all the profit. We went to Florida that winter and the next spring I took a job running the 19th hole at the Wooster Country Club. Betty assisted me and we stayed there for 5 years working summers only. It was a good setup and the 5 years really put us on our feet. We had bought a travel trailer 3 years before I retired and after retirement we traveled with it all winter, mostly in the south and southwest, however, in the winter of 1966 we left home in late October, visited with Anna in DeKalb Ill and then went on to Seattle. We hit zero weather in N Dakota but no snow at all on the way out. We stayed at our son's home until after Thanksgiving and then after Thanksgiving we spent all the time until Christmas sight seeing & beach-combing along the south Puget Sound, Hood Canal and the Washington Coast down the mouth of the Columbia. Many nights, we were the only ones in the campgrounds and we really had a ball in the Olympics, the rain forests and the coast. (Note: Our first trip to Seattle was in 1933 when we were both delegates to the Convention of the Railway Mail Association. We saw no paved roads from Mason City, Iowa, except cities, until we were 35 miles E of Portland on the Columbia River Highway. We returned home by way of Los Angeles, El Paso, Houston, Little Rock, Memphis and crossed the OH at Paducah Ky mostly on gravel roads.) Winter 1966 - We left Seattle day after Xmas and spent 3 months with our trailer Oregon & Calif coast, Death Valley, Phoenix, Tucson, Douglas Ariz, El Paso, Marfa, San Antonio TX & Corpus Christi State Park & then home. We have traveled extensively over the Western US, Canada & Mexico.
We have since bought a small modular home located in a Mobile Home Park in Mission Texas. We are presently spending about 6 winter months there and the summer in OH. We are members of Zion Lutheran Church in Loudonville but we actually attend Trinity Lutheran in Mission more than we do our home church.
One item I forgot: When L troop 1st Cavalry arrived back in Camp H J Jones, Capt. Lucian J Truscott was assigned to command. He was very prominent in WW 2 in the African Invasion and in Europe and was promoted to Lieut. General under Eisenhower during invasion of Europe.
| Frank Knoble Born: 30 AUG 1870 Died: UNKNOWN | Mary Sprang
Born: 21 SEP 1873 Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Albert Knoble | ||
| Kenneth Knoble |
| George Frederick Young | Bernice Lucille Strang |   | ||
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| George William Young | Yang Young Sun |   | ||
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| Michelle Li Young Born: Private Died: | ||||
| John Newbould |   | |||
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| Thomas Newbould | Margaret Wooruff |   | ||
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| Thomas Newbould Born: Died: UNKNOWN | ||||
| Fred Leonard Stitzlein | Emma Mayrilla Temple | George Henry Breitenbucher | Mary Ellen (Ella) McMillen |   |
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| Elmer Wilford Stitzlein | Mary Elizabeth Breitenbucher |   | ||
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| Mary Jane Stitzlein Born: Private Died: | Marion Stanley Allison
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| Randle Le Roy Allison | ||
| James Wilford Allison | ||
| Laura Lee Allison |
| Kenneth Albert Kopp | Margurite Viola Stitzlein | Roger Long |   | |
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| Donald Kenneth Kopp | Joan Long |   | ||
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| Richard Kopp Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Myrtle Thompson | Raymond Sylvester Gardner | Eva Beatrice Stitzlein |   | |
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| LeRoy Taylor (Tay) McKinley | Miriam Elizabeth Gardner |   | ||
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| Paul Lawrence McKinley Born: Private Died: | Terrie Louise McClure
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| Christopher Andrew McKinley |
| Susannah Elizabeth Born: Private Died: |
Born: Died: | |||
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| Minerva Jane Graham | ||
| Lewis Graham | ||
| Lincoln Graham | ||
| Nancy Graham |
| Johann Ulrich Zoebst | Anna Margaretha Simon | Christmann Peter |   | |
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| Niclaus Zoebst | Maria Barbara Peter |   | ||
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| Anna Margaretha Zoebst Born: 3 DEC 1751 Died: UNKNOWN | Johann Richert
Born: 19 MAR 1750/51 Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Marguerite Richert |
| Clarence Harold Bigler | Alice Mae Weaver |   | ||
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| John Delbert Hughes | Carol Jean Bigler |   | ||
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| Cynthia Hughes Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Charles Strang | Cora Taylor |   | ||
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| Bernice Lucille Strang Born: Private Died: | George Frederick Young
Born: (Private) Died: | |||
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| Constance Carol Young | ||
| Sandra Louise Young | ||
| George William Young | ||
| Rose Marie Young |
| Nellie Kaiser Born: Died: 12 AUG 1935 | Charles Schauweker
Born: JUL 1864 Died: 6 MAR 1932 | |||
| Johann George Stitzlein | Barbara Maria Streng | John G. Emmert | Barbara (Emmert) |   |
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| Johann Hieronymus Stitzlein | Rosian Dorothea Sophia Emmert |   | ||
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| Caroline Stitzlein Born: DEC 1875 Died: UNKNOWN | Amos Lifer
Born: Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Alma Lifer | ||
| Vera Lifer | ||
| Brice Lifer |
Caroline was in the runaway accident which injured her mother an d
causing her death. Caroline's head was injured and she suffere d from
severe headaches the rest of her life.
| Clara Raby Born: Private Died: | Stanton Carey
Born: (Private) Died: | |||
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| Sarah Elizabeth Carey |
| Louis L. Osterlund | Nellie Olson |   | ||
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| Charles Leonard Osterlund | Irene Petersen |   | ||
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| Leonard Osterlund Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Lefrance Born: Private Died: | Ernestine
Born: (Private) Died: | |||
| Arthur Harrison Armstrong | Gertrude Esther Gortner | Edward Leander Stitzlein | Ada Pearl Strang |   |
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| Richard H Armstrong | Wava Stitzlein |   | ||
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| Joseph Armstrong Born: Private Died: | Kathi Vincent
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| Angela Jo Armstrong |
| Henry Breitenbucher |   | |||
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| Jacob Breitenbucher Born: OCT 1779 Died: 31 DEC 1854 | Unknown Kiefer
Born: Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Unknown Breitenbucher |
| Elizabeth (Lizzie) Root Born: Died: UNKNOWN | Clarence Dilgard
Born: Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Stella Dilgard |
| Lawrence Eugene Young | Violet (Young) |   | ||
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| Edward Wysocky | Ellen Frances Young |   | ||
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| Lawrence Wysocky Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Simon Peter Carl Born: 4 JUL 1852 Died: 29 OCT 1923 | Caroline Schmidt
Born: 10 AUG 1856 Died: 19 DEC 1943 | |||
| Eli Mackey | Emma Schmidt | George Henry Breitenbucher | Mary Ellen (Ella) McMillen |   |
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| Herbert Mackey | Lulu Viola Breitenbucher |   | ||
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| Norma Jean Mackey Born: Private Died: | Terry Johnson
Born: Private Died: | |||
| George Smith | Christina Moser | John Shoutd | Mary Magdalene Stitzlein |   |
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| Ralph Alvin Smith | Pearl Eunice Angeline Shoutd |   | ||
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| Bernard Eugene Smith Born: Private Died: | Glorene Schlegel
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| Judy Louise Smith | ||
| Victoria Lynn Smith | ||
| Vivian Pearl Smith | ||
| Corrinna Smith | ||
| Lee Eugene Smith |
| John Gardner | Alice Stull | Fred Leonard Stitzlein | Emma Mayrilla Temple |   |
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| Raymond Sylvester Gardner | Eva Beatrice Stitzlein |   | ||
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| Miriam Elizabeth Gardner Born: Private Died: | LeRoy Taylor (Tay) McKinley
Born: Private Died: | |||
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| John Taylor McKinley | ||
| James Patrick McKinley | ||
| Joesph Raymond McKinley | ||
| Thomas Richard McKinley | ||
| Paul Lawrence McKinley | ||
| William Michael McKinley | ||
| Miriam Elizabeth McKinley |
| Patrick James Byrnes | RosaLee Margaret Raymond |   | ||
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| Shawn Patrick Byrnes | Julie Marie Elliott |   | ||
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| Hunter Elliott Byrnes Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Catherine Zeiter Born: 2 JAN 1787 Died: 6 NOV 1876 | John Schafer
Born: 9 APR 1786 Died: 30 APR 1864 | |||
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| Catherine Schafer |
| Otman Fromme | Loretta (Fromme) | Carl Stitzlein | Thelma Moherman |   |
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| LeRoy Fromme | Dianna Dee Stitzlein |   | ||
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| Rebecca Catherine Fromme Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Richard Shreve | Margaret Newbold |   | ||
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| Thomas Shreve | Mary Wigle |   | ||
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| Sarah Jane Shreve Born: 3 NOV 1831 Died: AFT. 1895 | ||||
| Adam Ullman | Barbara Lambert |   | ||
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| George Ullman | Rebecca Merklinger |   | ||
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| Anna Ullman Born: Died: UNKNOWN | ||||
| Cora Taylor Born: Died: UNKNOWN | Charles Strang
Born: Died: UNKNOWN | |||
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| Bernice Lucille Strang |
| Leonard James Byrnes | Carolyn Irene Osterlund |   | ||
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| Howard Leonard Byrnes | Vera Kral |   | ||
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| Terry Byrnes Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Ruth Shaw Born: Died: UNKNOWN | Clarence Eldon Snively
Born: 25 OCT 1891 Died: 1954 | |||
| Jacobus Schoonmaker | Gitty Vandervoort |   | ||
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| James Schoonmaker | Mary Clark Stockton |   | ||
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| Esther Schoonmaker Born: Died: UNKNOWN | ||||
| Carl William Huffman | Stella Mae |   | ||
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| Paul Franklin Huffman Born: Private Died: | Patsy Jo Gardner
Born: (Private) Died: | |||
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| Michael William Huffman | ||
| Brian James Huffman | ||
| Christopher Andrew Huffman | ||
| Timothy Allen Huffman |
| Wm. Smith | Catherine McSorley | John McAndrews | Sarah McGonigal |   |
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| John Smith | Sarah McAndrews |   | ||
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| Catherine Smith Born: Private Died: | ||||
| Michael Schmidt | Katherine Peters | Adam Bernhard | Catherine Schafer |   |
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| John Philip Smith | Catherine Bernhard |   | ||
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| Charles Smith Born: Died: UNKNOWN | ||||