Welcome to TiddlyWiki created by Jeremy Ruston; Copyright © 2004-2007 Jeremy Ruston, Copyright © 2007-2011 UnaMesa Association
<<showtoc>>
!!From Baden, Germany in the 18th Century
John Albright (Albrecht), son of Johan Heinrich Albrecht, arrived in Crawford County in 1829 and was one of the first settlers of Whetstone township. His father, Heinrich ( Henry), had died 1820 and was buried at St Peter's Lutheran Church (Fetterhofs), in Halifax Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania (north of Harrisburg). John's grandfather, Jeorg Adam Albrecht, had immigrate from Keckarbishofsheim, Baden, Germany ```N49° 17.772' E08° 57.893' - 23 kilometres ESE of Heidelberg - see [[Family Origins in Europe]]. ``` in the 1750's. Jeorg had settled in Pennsylvania just north of Philadelphia. Heinrich, his first son was born in New Hanover, Montgomery Co. He was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. Three other children were born in Colebrook, Berks County and Joerg (d:1785) was buried in Providence Township, Montgomery County. Heinrich married Catherina Schoff in 1786 and moved to Halifax Township in Dauphin Co where he lived the rest of his life.
!!!Location Maps of the Albrights
The origins of the Albrights in Europe is marked on the map on the page [[Family Origins in Europe]]. Look at the marker slightly east of Mannheim Germany.
((PA Map Here(Make a map of Pennsylvania showing where the Albrights lived)))
John Albright had two sisters who were married in Dauphin County and stayed in Pennsylvania. His older sister, Susanna, married Daniel Schupp, whose mother was Anna Maria Diebler the Aunt of John George Diebler. Diebler also brought his family to Crawford County, Ohio and settled in Whetstone Township 1/4 mile east of Albright. ```The Dieblers are also ancestors in the Kehrer line. Sarah R. Diebler, daughter of John George married John Cook, who had immigrated from Hesse-Darmstadt and purchased land next to John George Diebler. Cook's daughter, Elizabeth, married John Jr. in 1864.```
!!The Move to Ohio
John Albright (b:1794) married to Sarah Shafer in 1816 then in 1829 left Pennsylvania at the age of 35 years and purchased 73 acres in Whetstone township ```East half of the NE quarter of section 4 of Whetstone Township``` to farm. Two sons and two daughters came with them, Susanna (11), Elizabeth (9), Joseph (7) and Henry (2). Three more children were born to the family in Ohio; Rebecca (1830), Savilla (1833) and John Jr (1837).
John was shoemaker as well as a farmer and did well for his family. By 1865 all of his children had families and were farming in the area. John Jr, Henry and Joseph had land adjacent to their father's land. Henry did especially well with 224 acres of land for his farm. Joseph and Elizabeth Albright had both married into the same Darger family, a common occurrence in small communities.
Disaster struck John Sr. in 1866 when he beaten severely during a robbery at his home. He died from the wounds and the perpetrators were never found. The story became embedded in the history of Whetstone Township ``` from the History of Crawford County Ohio 1912: "... Mr. Albright prospered, and later moved to near New Winchester. In 1866, at 2 a. m., on the morning of May 1, his door was broken in with a post wrenched from the gate, and several men, all disguised, entered the house and demanded his money, as it was generally believed he kept a considerable sum about him. He refused and was clubbed into unconsciousness.
His son John hurried to his father's assistance, knocked down two of the men, before he himself was hit with a club, and pounded into unconsciousness. As the women arrived they were scared into submission, and the robbers ransacked the house, and secured $300 in cash and what jewelry and other valuables they could lay their hands on, and left.
Both father and son were badly bruised, the father so seriously that he died in August. Mr. Albright was living near New Winchester at the time of the robbery, and suspicion pointed to several parties who had hurriedly left that section immediately after the robbery.
They were traced to Mt. Vernon, and here a clue was obtained to the perpetrators. A girl, who had left about the same time, had been arrested for stealing. She had stolen some meat from a butcher shop, and not being accustomed to eating raw meat, had broken into a church, and stolen sufficient of the Sunday School library to cook the meat. She mentioned the names of several parties who had been guilty of a number of robberies in and around New Winchester, but no trace of them." ``` . Sarah, John's wife lived until December 1874.
In 1864, only John Jr was left at home helping his father with the farm. Nearby was the farm of John Cook whose oldest daughter was Elizabeth. That year, John Jr and Elizabeth Cook married and took up farming on 80 acres just north of the land of John Albright Sr. Soon they have two girls, Amanda(b:1866) and Lucinda(b:1868). Amanda was born the same year that her grandfather, Albright, was attacked and robbed in his home (May). John Sr, died later in that year (August) from the wounds inflicted during the robbery (see footnote).
Amanda married into another Whetstone family, the Kehrers; in 1889, at the age of 23, she married Samuel Kehrer who lived a bit over a mile northwest of the Albright Farm. Samuel was the son of another pioneer migrant from Pennsylvania, Martin Kehrer, (//See the [[Kehrer]] Story for description of Amanda and Samuel Kehrer's history//)
!!Other Albrights in Crawford County
In the same year (1829) the John Albright moved to Ohio, Joseph Albright, son of Daniel, moved to Crawford County from Columbiana County, Ohio. Joseph was born in Juniata County, PA in 1801 and had moved to near New Lisbon, Ohio with his father in 1813. Joseph's uncle was the famous, Jacob Albright, a co-founders of the Evangelical Church, sometimes called the Albright Methodist Church. Daniel and Jacob were born in Berks County, PA. Daniel had been born in about 1776 and was a bricklayer by trade.
Joseph may have learned from his father and built the first brickyard in Crawford County on 20 acres of land. His wife was Hannah Jury of Columbiana County, OH. It is not known if this line of Albrights is related to John Albright. Although John Albright was from Dauphin County, PA, his uncles, Friedrich and Christian Albrecht had been born in Berks County, PA., where Joseph's father and uncle were also born.
It is surprising that the two sets of Albrights moved to Crawford County in the same year. It is possible that the two were cousins and had been in communication ... that has yet to be proven.
!!!Footnotes
| Johan Heinrich Albrecht<br>b:Montgomery Co, PA 1760-1820 | Elizabeth Schoff<br>b:PA 1765-1803 | ? | ? | Peter Cook<br>b:Hesse-Darmstadt 1778-1835 | Elizabeth Miller<br>b:Germany ?-1858 | John G. Diebler<br>b:Dauphin Co,PA 1783-1866 | Mary Magdelana Wise<br>b:Union Co, PA 1788-1874 |
|>| John Albright<br>b:Dauphin Co, PA 1794-1866 |>| Sarah Shafer<br> 1795-1874 |>| John Cook<br>b: Hesse-Darmstadt 1816-1889 |>| Sarah Diebler<br>1819-1903 |
|>|>|>| John Albright<br>1837-1897 |>|>|>| Elizabeth Cook<br>1844-1899 |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Amanda Jane Albright<br>1866-1931 |
!!!!Additional Pedigree
__Johan Heinrich Albrecht__
>father: Joerg Adam Albrecht b: Neckar Bishofsheim, Baden 1732-1785 - mother: Eva Barbara Friedle b: Berks Co, PA
>grandfather: Joseph Albrecht b: Neckar Bishofsheim, Baden 1688 - grandmother: Maria Margareth Benner b: 1692
__John G. Diebler__
>father was Albrect Diebler b: abt 1755 and mother Catharina Schupp b: Lancaster Co, PA 1752-1817
>grandfather was Mathew (Mathias Diebler) b: 1707 in Kirchheim Germany
>great grandfather was Johann Leonhart Dobler
__Mary Magdelana Wise__
>father: Christopher Wise b: Montgomery Co, PA 1761-1819 - mother: Elizabeth Herb b: PA 1768-1849
>grandfather: Frederick Wise b:1738 d: Montgomery Co,PA 1788 - grandmother: Maria Christena Beltz b: Montgomery Co, PA 1744-1800
>great grandfather: Simon Beltz d: Montgomery Co, PA 1753
/***
|''Name:''|AnnotationsPlugin|
|''Description:''|Inline annotations for tiddler text.|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz ( lewcid@gmail.com )|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#AnnotationsPlugin|
|''Code Repository:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/svn/plugins|
|''Version:''|2.0|
|''Date:''||
|''License:''|[[Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License|http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.2.3|
!!Usage:
*{{{((text to annotate(annotation goes here)))}}}
* To include the text being annotated, in the popup as a title, put {{{^}}} as the first letter of the annotation text.
** {{{((text to annotate(^annotation goes here)))}}}
!!Examples:
Mouse over, the text below:
* ((banana(the best fruit in the world)))
* ((banana(^ the best fruit in the world)))
***/
// /%
config.formatters.unshift({name:"annotations",match:"\\(\\(",lookaheadRegExp:/\(\((.*?)\((\^?)((?:.|\n)*?)\)\)\)/g,handler:function(w){
this.lookaheadRegExp.lastIndex=w.matchStart;
var _2=this.lookaheadRegExp.exec(w.source);
if(_2&&_2.index==w.matchStart){
var _3=createTiddlyElement(w.output,"span",null,"annosub",_2[1]);
_3.anno=_2[3];
if(_2[2]){
_3.subject=_2[1];
}
_3.onmouseover=this.onmouseover;
_3.onmouseout=this.onmouseout;
_3.ondblclick=this.onmouseout;
w.nextMatch=_2.index+_2[0].length;
}
},onmouseover:function(e){
popup=createTiddlyElement(document.body,"div",null,"anno");
this.popup=popup;
if(this.subject){
wikify("!"+this.subject+"\n",popup);
}
wikify(this.anno,popup);
addClass(this,"annosubover");
Popup.place(this,popup,{x:25,y:7});
},onmouseout:function(e){
removeNode(this.popup);
this.popup=null;
removeClass(this,"annosubover");
}});
setStylesheet(".anno{position:absolute;border:2px solid #000;background-color:#DDFFDD; color:#000;padding:0.5em;max-width:15em;width:expression(document.body.clientWidth > (255/12) *parseInt(document.body.currentStyle.fontSize)?'15em':'auto' );}\n"+".anno h1, .anno h2{margin-top:0;color:#000;}\n"+".annosub{background:#cfc;}\n"+".annosubover{z-index:25; background-color:#DFDFFF;cursor:help;}\n","AnnotationStyles");
// %/
<<showtoc>>
!!Reber Family Connection
[>img[Young Herman Reber|images/Young_Herman_Reber_sm.jpg][images/Young_Herman_Reber.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
The connection to the Baerkircher family of Bucyrus exists because Frank Reber's first wife was Maria Baerkircher. Maria died soon after giving birth to Herman Reber and when Frank remarried Herman became the oldest child of a larger [[Reber Family]]. Herman had memorabilia from Maria and that was passed down to my mother, Leota (Reber) Bogan and to me (Larry Bogan).
!!Origins
Frederick Baerkircher and Sophia Liedle are the parents of the first Baerkirchers in Crawford County Ohio. They were married in the county on the 21st for August 1883. The couple returned to Germany, where they were raised, within a year of the marriage. During that period, three children were born to them: Ernest Franklin (b: 15 June 1884), Maria Sophia (b: 6 Sept. 1885) and Sophia Karoline (b: 26 Aug. 1886 but died in infancy the same year).
The family of four returned to the USA aboard the vessel, "The Aller", in Sept. 1887 accompanied by sister Caroline Liedle and husband, Ernest Sieder. They became naturalized citizens but went to Enerprise, Kansas instead of Ohio. Son Fredrick Henry was born (b: 27 Dec 1887) while in Kansas. The Sieders stayed in Kansas, but the Baerkirchers returned to Crawford County in 1889 and settled on a farm just north of Bucyrus in Holmes County. Their last child, Sophia C. was born here on the 30 December 1890. ```The farm is located on the east side of Sandusky Road just north of the current US Rt 30 interchange```.
The parents both died in 1906 but the family was able to keep the farm and live there until they found partners. They did have to leave school, Herman at age 16 and Sophia at age 16 but Fred stayed to age 17. The two sister were the first to marry, first Maria (age 23) married Frank Reber in May then Sophia (age 18) married George Teynor in June of 1909.
[<img[Baerkircher Siblings August 1910|images/Baerkircher_Siblings-1910_sm.jpg][images/Baerkircher_Siblings-1910.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
In 1910 brother, Fred, was living with Sophia and George Teynor while brother, Herman, was with Maria and Frank Reber. It is probably no coincidence that Maria named her son Herman. The family stayed together. The family farm was eventually sold in April 1911 to F.E. Gearhart, the father of Alma Gearhart, who Herman Gottlieb Baerkircher married in Dec 1912.
!!Maria's and Sophia's Families
Both of the Baerkircher girls were not to have long married lives. Maria died three months after giving birth to son, Herman (b: 10 June 1910) while Sophia had two sons (Carl b: Sep 1909 and Ernest b: Sep 1911) before passing away in February of 1914. Neither of Sophia's sons lived long, Carl died at the age of 11 and Ernest at 38. However, Ernst married Juanita Perrin in 1933 and had one son Richard Eugene Teynor. Descendants of Richard have the Baerkircher connection. Sophia's husband, George Teynor married again and had six more children who have no Baerkircher relationship.
!!!Brother Ernest Baerkircher
Ernest (Sophia's brother not son) married Esther Matson sometime before 1917 in Hamilton, KY but the couple had no offspring. They lived in Barberton, Ohio and he worked at the Diamond Match Company. Esther died in February 1939 and Ernest, who had been ill with tuberculosis since 1937, entered a convalescent home in Akron, Ohio to die there a few months later. ((Ernest was buried in Bucyrus' Oakwood Cemetery while his wife was interred in Barberton.))
!!!Brother Fredrick Baerkircher
[>img[Quaker School Card|images/Quaker_School_Card_sm.gif][images/Quaker_School_Card.gif]]
Brother, Frederick, married Daisy Roger and they had daughter, Margaret, in 1916 but the marriage ended in divorce in 1923. ``` Daisy married two more times, first Edward H. Stephens in 1930, then to Oscar Anderson around 1954. Daisy died 23 May 1970. ``` Margaret was named Margaret Moony in the 1950's then referred to Mrs. M. Hughes in 1962 with two children. They are Baerkircher descendants.
Frederick remarried in December 1925 to Jessie Smith ``` Jessie Smith was born in Canada and the Fred Baerkirchers lived there until 1927.``` After working in his brother, Herman, grocery store in Bucyrus for a few years, Fred and Jessie moved to Cleveland, Ohio before 1930 ((U.S. Census shows his location.)) . Fred worked at Universal Freight but after a appendectomy in March 1931 developed an abscess on his lung, had an operation July 1931 and died in December ```As with Ernest, Fred was buried in Bucyrus' Oakwood Cemetery```. He left his widow, Jessie, and a daughter, Marjorie, whose fates are unknown.
!!!Brother Herman Baerkircher
<<imagebox>>Brother, Herman was most successful in providing Baerkircher descendants. In 1910 when living with Frank and Maria, he was working in a slaughter house as a butcher. He eventually owned and operated a grocery store on North Sandusky Avenue in Bucyrus. ``` As a young boy, living on Gaius Street just two block south of the store, I frequently bicycled there to get bread and other items for my mother. He had some competition with another local grocery at the end of Gaius Street. Herman, sold meat and one specialty item was the German sausage, Bratwurst. This became popular with travelers on Ohio Route 98 (Sandusky Avenue in Bucyrus) to Lake Erie they would stop and buy his sausage. Eventually more and more was produced in the city as it became known and Bucyrus became known as the Bratwurst capital of Ohio.```
Herman and Alma (Gearhart) Baerkircher had only one son, Frederick Herman, born in 1914 but he lived to a respectable age of 78 and died in 1992. In turn, Frederick, who married Lucille Winter in (?), had two sons, Allen and Herman, who carry on the Baerkircher name.
----
//Thanks to Karen Baerkircher (wife of a grandson of Herman Gottlieb Baerkircher, Allen Baerkircher) for many of the details included in this narrative.//
!!!Footnotes:
Johann Nicholas Andaes Bogen ([[JNA Bogen]]) was the founder of my branch of German Bogans in North America.
The table below shows the events that lead to the Bogan's settling in Crawford County Ohio in 1835-1848.
|date(s)| Events |h
|1719|6 June - Andeas Bogen```Andeas Boge is the son of Martin Boge - from //German Births and Baptisms 1558-1898// ``` married Anna Eleanora Rhenhemier in Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany|
|1729|21 March - Georg Henrich Bogen born to Andreas and Anna Bogen in Darmstadt```Andeas and Anna Bogen are known to have three other children: Benjamin b:1720, Margaretha Eleonora b:1722 and Johann Fiedrich b:1731. ```|
|1754|31 Oct - Georg Henrich Bogen married Catherina Elisabetha Schneider, in Stadpfarrei Evangelish in Darmstadt|
|1755|((Johann Nicholas Andaes Bogen(use JNA Bogen for short))) born at Starkenburg, Darmstadt (~Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany)<br>to Georg and Catherina Bogen (second child Dorothea born 26 Nov 1757)|
|''1776 or 78''|Nicolas Bogen joins the Erbprinz Regiment - "Hessian" army to fight on the British side in the American Revolution|
|1781|British and Hessians captured by Americans at Yorktown, VA (Oct) <br> J.N.A. Bogen incarcerated at Fredrick, Maryland (Nov)|
|1783|J.N.A. Bogen discharged and stays in Frederick, MD (June)<br>Dr. J.N.A. Bogan is listed as a physician in Frederick, Maryland<br>(aka Johann Nicholas Andraes Bogen)|
|1784|Dec 7 - "Anthony Frederick Bogern [Bogen] married Mary Koontz"<br>(aka Johann Friedreich and Amalia Magdalena Koontz)|
|1785|((John Henry Bogen(use John H Bogen for short))) born (26 Dec) to<br>Johann Friderich Nicolas Andreas Bogen and wife Amalia Magdalena|
|1786<br>1789<br>1792<br>1795<br>1797<br>1800|Christening of children of Johann Friderick and Amalia Bogen<br>Johann Heinrich Bogen (8 Jan) AKA John Henry <br>Catharina Elisabeth Bogen<br>Johann Frederick Thomas Bogen<br>Catharina Bogen<br>Fridericke Bogen<br>Carolina Bogen<br> all at the Lutheran Evangelical Church, Frederick Co, Maryland|
|~1805|John H practices medicine for a living|
|1811<br>|Nov 29 - John Henry Bogen (of Petersburg, PA - near Lancaster) marries Margaret Lind (aka Lynd) - Frederick Co, MD|
|1814|Eleanor Bogen, first child of John H. and Margaret Bogen born in Pennsylvania (Feb)|
|1816|Samuel Bogen born to John H. and Margaret - Frederick Co, MD<br>(the Census' gives Samuel's birth place as Maryland however in HCCO1881*, his biography say Gettysburg, PA)|
|1818|Joseph L born to John H and Margaret Bogen (19 Oct)<br>Joseph is christened in Evangelical Lutheran Church in Carlisle, PA|
|1819|J.N.A. Bogen dies in Carlisle, PA (17 Oct) |
|1820|May - Amalia (called Margaret) Bogen dies in Frederick, MD <BR> Oct - Carolina Bogen marries Willam R. Elvin of New Market, MD<br>John H. and his family are in Waterford, VA (US Census)|
|-<br>1823<br>1826<br>1832|Children born to John H. and Margaret Bogen in Virginia<br>son John W born (12 Feb)<br>daughter Caroline born<br>daughter Susan E. born|
|1830|John H purchases 4 acres of land (for $191) in Loudoun Co, just west of Lovettsville, VA|
|about 1835|John H and family move to Stark Co, Ohio|
|1838|12 Nov - Samuel marries Charlotte Bowers (of Stark Co)<br>29 Nov - Eleanor marries Laman Haines (of Stark Co)|
|1839|Joseph L marries Margaret Carnes (born Scotland) |
|1840|John H and all of his families move to Clarendon Twp., Marion Co, Ohio<br>This includes Samuel, Joseph, and Eleanor and their spouses |
|1847|Joseph L and family moves to Indiana (Lagrange County)<br>He and his family listed in the 1850 US Census as in Eden Twp.|
|1848|John H with Samuel and their families move to Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio <br>Each purchases about ~100 acres North of the small town of North Robinson. [[1855 Property Map]]<br> John H., Samuel, and John W. are listed in the 1850 US Census for Crawford County|
|~1855|Joseph L and family join Bogans in Ohio, settles in Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio<br>He buys and clears 100+ acres East of North Robinson [[1855 Property Map]]|
|1856|Susan E. marries Jeremiah Correll (10 Jan)|
|1857|Caroline marries Gilbert G Hall (5 Nov)|
|1858|John H (age 72) dies and is buried in plot A27 of the Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, Ohio<br>His farm on the Mansfield road is sold|
|1860|Margaret is living in Claridon Twp., Marion County, Ohio with eldest daughter Elenor Haines (US Census)|
|1868|Margaret dies and is buried with John H.|
|1871|John W (age 48) marries Candace Ferrall (18 Oct)- last child of John Henry to get married|
|after 1880|In 1880's the Bogan Clan has proliferated in Crawford County<br>The living [[Grand Children of John Henry Bogan]] are shown below in the list of children's families |
!!!Footnotes:
<<showtoc>>
!!Bogan Family Movements in the United States 1784-1853
[img[Map Showing the Movements of the Bogen Families from Frederick, Md, to Crawford Co, OH|maps/Bogen_Movement1784-1850-tn.gif][maps/Bogen_Movement1784-1850.gif]]<<imagebox>>
This map shows the movements of John Henry Bogen and his families until they settle in Crawford County , Ohio
//(Click on the Image for a larger version)//
Most of the period from from about 1850's to the 1950′s, the Bogan families were in Crawford County, Ohio but in a 30 year transition period from 1820 to 1850 they spent time in Loudoun County Virginia, then Stark County and Marion County of Ohio. Joseph Bogan’s family also spent a few years in Eden Township, Lagrange County, Indiana. It is these three locations that this article (blog) is concerned with. More details of the movements of the early Bogens is in the table of events in [[Bogan Early Chronology]].
!!Loudoun County, Virginia
''Maryland and Virginia (Loudon Co) Map 1839''
[>img[Map of Maryland and Virginia 1839|maps/FrederickMD-LoudonCoVa1839.gif]]
John Henry Bogan and family were recorded as being in this county during both the 1820 and 1830 US census. It was not until about 1835 that they moved to Ohio so they were here for 25 years. They did not stay in one spot because in 1820 they were in the small town of Waterford but by 1830 they were near Lovettville nearer the Potomac River. The locations are approximately specified by the + symbols on the yellow Loudoun County area. This is not far from where John Henry was born and raised in Frederick, Maryland, north of the Potomac River.
While Waterford was a Quaker town, the area around Lovettville was settled by German immigrants. The lands belonged to Lord Fairfax. The + marks on the map in Loudoun County show approximately where the Bogen’s were located for the two census’. John Henry purchased a plot of land in 1832
In setting up his household and medical practice, John was loaned items from his wife’s brother, John Lind. They were recorded in a deed in Loundoun Co, VA and were:
//“Two horses, two cows, one beaueau, one tin plate stove, four feather beds and
bedsteads and bedding. Three tables, one chest, one –, one looking glass
one copper kettle, one set of chains, two saddles, one gold watch and chain and
seal, all – surgical instruments, medicines and shop furniture, one cupboard, all –
glass and –, –, washing tubs, wheels, — and medicine book.”//
The property purchased from Gideon Householder was about 4 acres for which John Henry paid $190. It was 165 feet wide and 1043 ft long. The location is not known but Axlines, Householders and Coopers were known to be neighbors and these names appear on an 1853 survey map of Loudoun County in the area shown on the map below.
[img[Possible Location of John H.Bogen's property in Loudoun County, VA 1832|maps/JHBogan_LoudounCoVA-tn.gif][maps/JHBogan_LoudounCoVA.gif]]<<imagebox>>
!!Nimishillin Township, Stark County, Ohio
''Location of John H. Bogen Family in Stark County 1835-39''
[>img[Location of John Henry Bogen in Stark Co, OH|maps/Canton_Area+Bogan_Section.gif]]
It would be interesting to know why the John Henry Bogan clan decided to go to Stark County in Ohio from Loudoun County, Virginia in 1835 and how did they travel between the two sites?
Records show that John H. Bogen resided in range 7, section 9 of Nimishillen Township of Stark County. The location of the section is shown on the map. Actual property location is not know.
While here, the oldest three children were married:
*Eleanor to Laman Haines in1837
*Samuel to Charlotte Bowers in 1837
*Joseph to Mary Carnes in 1838
*Claridon Township, Marion County, Ohio
At the beginning of the year in 1940 the Bogan Clan consisting of four families, left Stark County and settled in Claridon Township in Marion County. These were:
*John Henry (age 55) and wife, Margaret (Lind) Bogen with children: John W (age 17), Caroline (age 14), Susan (age 8)
*Laman (age 22) and wife Eleanor (age 26) (Bogen) Haines
*Samuel (age 24) and wife, Charlotte (Bowers) Bogen with Sylvester (age 1) Bogen
*Joseph (age 22) and wife, Mary (Carnes) Bogan
In Laman’s biography in the history of Marion County, Ohio the date of the move is given as January 1840. Laman purchased 40 acres and began farming, later to have a farm of 800 acres to leave to his family.
The rest of the clan did not stay in Marion County but moved a small distance Northeast to buy farmland near the small villiage of North Robinson in Whetstone Township of Crawford County. John Henry and Samuel Bogen made the move in 1848. A year ealier Joseph and his family moved to Indiana.
!!Eden Township, Lagrange County, Indiana
It was only the family of Joseph L. Bogan that left Marion County for Indiana in 1847. The family there for the 1850 census of Eden Township in Lagrange County. All of the children were listed as having been born in Ohio and the youngest at the time, Jefferson, was a year old (b: Oct 1848). There is other evidence that Jefferson may have been born in Indiana ```The biography of Joseph Bogan in the History of Crawford County 1881, states that he left Ohio in 1847 and returned in 1855```. Older brother, George, was born July 1847 in Marion County, Ohio. The next three children of the family, Joseph, Samuel, and Mary Ellen (b: Oct 1854) were born in Indiana. By the time the last child of the family (Sara Jane) came in 1858, the family was back in Ohio on their Jackson Township property in Crawford County, Ohio.
Why did Joseph take his family to Indiana and why did they only stay there about eight years? The census lists Joseph as a farmer in 1950 with a value of only $500. Their location in Eden Township is not known but the family order in the census put them near the families of William Marly, Thomas Fisher and George Humpheys all from Virginia or Maryland. These families had property in sections 22 and 23 of the township, a mile or two Northwest of Haw Patch.
There is an 1852 map of Indiana. Eden township and its neighbors are shown in the figure below. The township was not very settled at the time with only one small villiage of Haw Patch. This area of indiana is mostly flat prairie with only small undulations. As shown in the map there are areas of wet prairie (shaded areas on the map). A description of the township from a History of Lagrange County written in 1882 ```The History of Lagrange and Noble Indiana, 1882 by R.H. Rerick 1882 published by Chicago F.A. Battey and Company Publishers 1882 ``` gives some idea of the environment the Bogan’s had back then.
//“The southeastern quarter of Eden Township is included in that broad area of fertile country which the early settlers called the Haw Patch. About one Congressional township of land in LaGrange and Noble Counties is embraced in this tract, which is distinguished throughout by a rich soil, freedom from marshes, level, or very gently rolling surface, and a perfect adaptability to successful agriculture. At the opening of the country to settlement, it was densely covered by beautiful forests, in which sugar maple and black walnut were most abundant, and remarkably free from small growths, except hawthorn and wild grapes. The abundance of the hawthorn was the most striking peculiarity of the region, and gave rise to the name by which it is so widely known. ….
The almost impassable swamps running through the township from the north to south have prevented the building of many important roads.“// The area around Haw Patch was one area where roads could be constructed.
''Eden Township, Lagrange County, Indiana and surroundings (1852)''
[>img[Map of Eden Township, Lagrange Co, IN 1852|maps/Eden_twp_IN_1852map.jpg]]
One paragraph in the ‘History’ says: “Life in Eden before 1840 was from all accounts less enjoyable than existence in the earlier Eden about the year one. The weeds seemed to defy the farmers; they choked the grain and covered everything. It is said that horses and cattle were often lost in them. As if the weeds were not enough, the birds were innumerable, and they flocked to the little wheat patches, making music all day long and helping themselves for reward. Between the weeds and the birds, ‘what shall the harvest be,’ was a serious question. ”
Perhaps it was the lawlessness of the area that made the Bogans leave. A gang of outlaws and horse thieves operated in the Haw Patch area and only after the Clearspring and Eden Detective Police were formed in 1858 did the menace abate. By then the Joseph Bogen's were in Crawford County, Ohio.
Also there was very little industry in the township. The first saw-mill and grist-mill were not constructed until 1854 in the middle of the township. My guess is that the Bogans lived and farmed somewhere near Haw Patch (later to be come the town of Topeka ). By the time Joseph Bogan moved his family back to Ohio, the family numbered two adults and nine children. Locations of the Bogan farms in Crawford County is shown on [[Family Farms - 1855 Crawford County]].
!!!Footnotes
''Bogan Pedigree''
In this chart the families Koontz, Lind, Carnes occur.
The [[Kunkel Pedigree]] has more ancestors in this line.
|''7gp''|Georg Henrich Bogen```Georg Henrich Bogen's father was Andeas Bogen and grandfather was Martin Boge//(birth records of Andreas give his and his fathers, Martin, surname as Boge but later records of Andeas' marriage have the name as Bogen)//```<br>Darmstadt, 1729-|Catherina Schneider|Heinrich Koontz```Heinrich (Henry) Koontz's father was Heinrich Koontz born 1700 in Germany```<br>1735-1822|Dorthea Federkeil<br>1733-1798|Albert Van der Lind|?|Valentine Null|?|
|6gp|>|[[JNA Bogen]]<br>b:Darmstadt<br>1755-1819|>|Amalia Magdelana Koontz<br>1761-1820|>|John Nicholas Lind<br>1749-1823|>|Mary Null<br>1760-1787|>|John Cairns<br>b Scotland|>|Catherine Dewar|
|5gp|>|>|>| John Henry Bogen<br>b:Fredrick, MD<br>1785-1858 |>|>|>| Margaret Lind<br>1771-1868 |>|>|>|Andrew Carnes<br>1785-1854|>|>|>|Margaret Pagan<br>1785-1869|
|4gp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Joseph Lind. Bogan<br>b: Gettysburg, PA<br>1818-1887 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Mary A. Carnes<br>b: Scotland<br>1816-1882 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Charles Kunkel<br>b: York Co, PA<br>1811-1883 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Elizabeth Dome<br>b: PA<br>1820-1885 |
|3gp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Henry Harrison Bogan<br>1846-1913 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Leah Anne Kunkel<br>1849-1934 |
|ggp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| William Edgar Bogan<br>1873-1955 |
<<notes heading:"Suggestions" tag:"Notes">>
In the movement of the Bogen family from Maryland, Virginia, and Ohio, two other families appear to be closely involved. John Henry Bogen married Margaret Lind and her sister Elizabeth married John Correll. Both families moved to Stark County, Ohio. Some of Correll family then moved to Crawford county, Ohio, where John Henry Bogen eventually settled. How did these families know and interact with each other? Maybe a closer look at the history of these families will shed some light on this relationship?
Children of Nicholas and Mary (Null) Lind of Taneytown, Carroll Co, MD
* John Lind ```John as older brother loaned Margaret and her husband household goods and medical equipment to start their lives in Loudoun County, VA - this was recorded in an agreement registered in VA``` – moved to Jackson Twp, Stark Co, OH – Farmer
* Abraham Lind – Carpenter in Canton Twp, Stark Co, OH 1850
* Margaret Lind – married John H. Bogen 1811, PA (see Bogan migrations – PA, VA, OH – Stark Co 1835-40)
* Elizabeth Lind – married John Correll 1812, PA (moved to Plain Twp, Stark Co, OH 1834)
** Son Jeremiah Correll marries Susan Bogan daughter of John H. Bogen in Crawford Co.
* Nicholas Lind married Elizabeth Cooper in Lovettsville, VA ```John H. Bogen and family lived near Lovettsville, VA around 1830 before moving to Stark County, OH.```
Corrells of Adams Co, Pennsylvania (father Jacob K. Correll of Lancaster PA)
* Jacob Noll Correll lived in Crawford County, OH (buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
* Sarah Jane Correll married Andrew Pontius in Plain Twp, Stark Co, OH
* Jeremiah Correll married Susan E. Bogan in Crawford Co, OH
* Josiah Correl lived and died in Plain Twp, Stark Co, OH
!!!Footnotes:
*Add some of the info on Lind's in Stark County
*Put in the WikiWords to appropriate links
*Find out if Jeremiah Correll's parents moved to Crawford
!!!Bogans
The following pages contain information on the Bogan line of the family.
//click on the title to bring up the page.//
<<tagging Bogan>>
!!!Pfahlers
The following pages contain stories and information on the Pfahler line of the family.
//click on the title to bring up the page.//
<<tagging Pfahler>>
<<notes>>
<<notes>>
<<showtoc>>
The history of the orgins and movements of the Bogans from Germany, to Maryland, Indiana and Ohio are given on the pages:
*[[JNA Bogen]] - gives the life of the first Bogen (JNA) to come to North America
*[[Bogan Early Chronology]] - outlines the events in the Bogan history up to the great grandchildren of JNA Bogen.
*[[Bogan Family Home Locations]] - describes details of the areas settled by John Henry Bogan and his son Joseph.
*[[Bogen in Germany to Bogan in Ohio]] - describes the migration of JNA, John Henry and Joseph Bogan and only lists the line of Bogans to my generation.
*[[Grand Children of John Henry Bogan]] - lists all the children of John Henry Bogen and grand-children - more detail is given here.
This page will give information of the generations of Bogans after John Henry.
!John Henry Bogen and Children
John Henry has been adequately discussed so this page will mainly describe only the line of his son Joseph Lind Bogen.
Details of the other children of J.H.Bogen are:
;Amelia Magdalene Bogen
:The first child born in Frederick, MD in 1812 but nothing else is known of her. In 1820 the US census counts only one female child in the family under 10 years of age and that was sister, Eleanor. Presumably Amelia died before that time.
;Eleanor Dorothea Bogen
:Born in 1814, Eleanor married Laman C. Haines in Stark County, Ohio in 1838 and they followed John H. to Claridon township, Marion County from Stark County and settled there for the rest of their lives. They raised four children, Monroe, Frances, Columbus, and Martha.
;Samuel J Bogen
:Born in 1816 in Frederick Maryland and married Charlotte Bowers in 1837 in Stark County, OH. Samuel purchased 64 acres north of North Robinson, OH in Whetstone township, Crawford County. They raised a large family of 11 children (one died at birth).
**Sylvester (1839-1896) went to Bradner in Woods County and Toledo, OH and raised four children
**Emeline (Bogen) Heckert (1841-1912) went to Bradner in Woods County, OH and raised six children
**Martha (Bogen) Heller (or Weller) went to the Dakota Territory in 1870s then to San Diego, California in 1900.
**
;Joseph Lind Bogen
:Born in 1818 in Carlisle, Pennsylvania and described below.
;John W. Bogen
:Born in 1823 in Loudoun county Virgina.
;Caroline Bogan
:Born in 1826 in Loudoun county Virgina.
;Susan Elisabeth Bogen
:Born in 1832 in Loudoun county Virgina.
!Joseph Lind Bogan and Children
The sojourn of Joseph and his family in Indiana from 1847 to 1855 is presented in the [[Bogan Family Home Locations]] page. On returning to Ohio, he obtained 100 acres of fine virgin land in Jefferson Township south of the future site of North Robinson. He cleared and improved the land for farm and expanded it later to 120 acres. His oldest son John helps until he married and moves away in 1870's.
The oldest child in this family was ''Ephelia Margaret Bogan'', born in 1840 while the family was living in Claridon township of Marion County, Ohio. She married Amos McKanna in 1858 and that story is told on the page [[Ephelia Bogan and Amos McKanna]]. Amos fought in the Civil War and the family lived in nearby Crestline before moving to Kansas in the 1870's.
''John Andrew Bogan'' enlisted (age 21) to fight in the civil war during 1863-65```John A. Bogan's Civil War Record:
Enlisted: Galion, June 23, 1863 co. B 5th Indep. Batn.cav - wounded in the left hand at Crackers Neck, Ky;
served 8 mo. in batn. e at Poplar Plains, Ky obtaining the rank of Corporal.
Re-enlisted: 1864 co. B 13th OVC; about 4 mo. in hospital at Baltimore, Md, City Point, Va; Wilmington, Del chronic diarrhea;
dis. at Wilmington, Del June 27, 1865. Obtained the rank of Sargent.
Engagements 40.```. He married Sarah Chambers after the war in 1868, first living and working with his father (1870) but then moved to Bucyrus, living on Prospect Avenue while working as a carpenter. The family had three children, Cora, Ida and Amos, by 1878. John died of congestion of the lungs in 1909 and the family continued living on Prospect Avenue, Bucyrus.
''William Lemon Bogan'' became a railroad engineer probably with help from his brother-in-law Amos McKanna, who he lived with in Crestline for awhile around 1870. He married Mary Louise Price in 1871 and they raised eight children from 1871 through 1893 when the last son, Ivan was born. William was still an engineer in 1880 but the family was living in Jefferson township not too far from his parents. In 1900 the William was renting land to farm and had four adult children at home plus Merrill age 10 and Ivan age 7. Two of the adult children died, Amos in 1901, Annette in 1903, then William died in 1909. Mary Louise raised Merrill and Ivan, living on Western Avenue in North Robinson, Ohio.
''George W. Bogan'' never married and died at the young age of 23.
''Jefferson L. Bogan'' married Mary Kunkel in 1870 and they had five children before she died. In 1880 Jefferson was widowed and lived at his fathers farm with their children Charles, Daisy and Jessie.
''Joseph Monroe Bogan'' married Mary Elizabeth Morrison in 1875 and first living with the minister, John Aumiller near the Bogan family farm in 1880. He was a lumber dealer in North Robinson, Ohio in 1900 and continued that trade when the family moved to Bucyrus before 1910. They lived at 341 West Mansfield Street in Bucyrus. There were nine children born to the family, all by 1892.
''Samuel J. Bogan'' married Mary Jane Eusey in 1882. Farmer in Jefferson township, from 1900 until passing away in 1906. Mary Jane died three years later in 1909 but raised nine children.
!Henry Harrison Bogan
Henry was the third son and fourth child of Joseph L.Bogan and he eventually took over the family farm.
!William Edgar Bogan
!Chester Bogan and Siblings
!!!Footnotes:
Unfinished - continue to fill in details
Working John Henry Children and Joseph L. children
*A Bogan Family Story is needed for the more recent Bogans. It tends to stop when they get to Crawford County
* The Burwells and Custers have been researched - show their Pedigree chart
<<showtoc>>
!!Origins in Germany
The Crawford County Bogan's are descendants of many German families but the family name comes from one Hessian soldier who came from the region Hesse-Darmstadt of Germany. ```Germany was not a nation at this time but was a collection of many small principalities. Unification did not come until the 19th century and was a long process that was not concluded until 1877. In the late 18th century, Hesse-Darmstadt was a state made of two region one south and the other north of Frankfurt.``` He was Johann Nicholas Andreas Bogen born 1755 and hired himself out to the German mercenaries who supplied the British with soldiers for the American Revolutionary War. ```Nicolas Bogen was in the ~Hesse-Kassel Fuselier Regiment Erbprinz which saw limited action until the final battle of the War at Yorktown, Virgina in 1881. He was an aide to the regiment medic. The Erbprinz arrived after the Battle of Long Island but were probably in the Westchester County campaign and involved with the capture of Fort Washington.``` I will call him JNA Bogen for short. He was born and raised in the city of Darmstadt. ```The Bogen family lived in the city of Darmstadt, region of ~Hesse-Darmstadtead from about the 1700. His paternal grandfather was Andreas Bogen and maternal grandfather Johann Nicolaus Schneider from whom he received his names. A practice of German parents was to name children after grandparents. He had three sons and a daughter born from 1720 to 1731. Andreas Bogen's wife's name was Anna Eleonora and one of JNA Bogen's granddaughters give name was Elenora.```
!!Settlement in Maryland
The ~Hesse-Kassel Fuselier Regiment Erbprinz was with British troops in New York City most of the war and was engaged in the final deciding battle of the Revolution at Yorktown, Virginia in 1781 where JNA Bogen was captured with other British troops. He was sent to imprisonment in Frederick, Maryland where he remained until 1783 when most of the Hessians were released and sent back to Germany. JNA chose to stay in North America as did thousands of other germans. He settled in Frederick and married (in 1784) Magdalena Koontz the daughter of a german family (Henry Koontz) ```Heinrich Koontz was born about 1735 in Hesse-Darmstadt and moved to North America in the mid-18th century before the Revolutionary War to settle in Frederick, Md. His wife was Dorothea Federkeil (1733-1798). Some of the Koontz family moved to places that the Bogens appear. Johann Balthasar Koontz (youngest son of Heinrich) died in Stark County, OH in 1935. Balthasar's son, Baltzer, Jr. moved to Whitley County, IN near Lagrange County where Joseph L. Bogen family resided from 1847-1853. ``` Since JNA had been a medical assistant during the war, he took up the occupation of physician in Frederick.
<em><strong>Map of the Movement of the Bogan Families </strong>
This Google map has much more detail than apparent from this view. Click on the icons and center the map on the areas of interest then zoom in to see the details of locations of the Bogan's through the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. Locations are Germany, Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana.</em>
[iframe http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=117962888433570561367.00046a9cc822b528ce0cc&ll=45.621742,-38.454208&spn=17.194516,94.288788&output=embed 600 450]
<em>View <a href="http://maps.google.ca/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&t=k&source=embed&msa=0&msid=117962888433570561367.00046a9cc822b528ce0cc&ll=45.58329,-38.496094&spn=58.773445,112.5">Bogan Ancestor Migration to Ohio</a> in a larger map</em>
!!Second Generation in Pennsylvania
In 1785 JNA's first son, Johann Heinrick was born. There were four other children born to the Bogen's in Frederick but John Henry was the one that brought the Bogans to Ohio ```Not much is known of John Henry's siblings except that sister Carolina (b. 1797) married William Elvin from New Market, MD in Frederick in Dec 1820. Another sister Catherina Elisabeth born in Sept 1789 died as a baby in Feb 1790. There were three other Bogen children Johann Fridrich Thomas (b. 1792), Catharina (b. 1795) and Fredrike (b. 1800). I have no information where any of these siblings went. There was a Thomas Bogan in Northumberland Co, PA in 1820 with approximately the correct age.```. The JNA Bogens were active in the Emmanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church of Frederick, Maryland. John Henry trained as a physician, persumably with his father and practiced his profession in several places in nearby Pennsylvania and Virginia. He was known to be of Petersburg ```It is not clear which Petersburg, PA it was in 1811 since there were several. However, at that time there was a Petersburg outside of Duncannon, PA not far from Carlisle. There were two Peterburgs near Gettysburg, PA one northeast and the other southeast of the town. Location is different on an 1811 and 1822 map of Pennsylvania.``` , Pennsylvania when he married Margaret Lind in 1811. The oldest child was daughter, Eleanor, born in 1814 somewhere in Pennsylvania. The oldest son, Samuel, born in 1816, may have been born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, according to one source. The family was in Carlisle, Pennsylvania when his third child, Joseph Lind Bogen, born in 1818. John Henry's family seemed to have moved frequently. JNA Bogen must have been living with John Henry's family in 1819 because he died in Carlisle that year ```JNA had his home in Frederick, Md for sale in 1818 and it is not know where he is buried; his grave is not the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Frederick, Maryland or in the 'Old Graveyard' in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.```.
!!Fifteen Years in Virginia
JNA's wife Magdalena Bogen lived until 1820 and died in Frederick, Maryland, presumably while living with her father who lived until 1822. ``` It is interesting that Magdalena's father, Henry Koontz, had left a will that mentioned a debt to him of JNA Bogen's and deducted it from Magdalena's inheritance but he outlived his daughter and son-in-law.``` The 1820 U.S. census shows that the family of John Henry Bogen was in Loudoun County, Virginia near or in the town of Waterford. The family stayed in Loudoun County for over a decade and by the 1830 U.S. census had moved north to the area around Lovettsville, Viginia. This area is known to have been settled by people of German ancestry, more so than the Waterford area which was settled by Quakers. The children, John, Caroline and Susan were born to the Bogens in Loudoun County in 1823, 1826, and 1830 respectively.
[img[Possible location of J.H.Bogen Property - Loudoun Co, VA|maps/JHBogan_LoudounCoVA_tn.gif]]
[[Click for larger image|maps/JHBogan_LoudounCoVA.gif]]
!!The Move to Stark County, Ohio
[img[Location of J.H.Bogen in Stark Co, OH|maps/JHBogan_StarkCoLocation.gif]]
John Henry purchased four acres of land west of Lovettsville in 1830 but by 1835 the family has moved to Stark County, Ohio. They may have moved there with some cousins in the Koontz family who also are there at the same time ```German families were know to move and settle in groups. This is seen in other german ancestor family in other parts of this history```. In 1838, the two oldest children of John Henry's family marry. (First Samuel to Charlotte Bowers, then Eleanor to Laman Haines, both in the month of November). The next year, 1839, Joseph married Margaret Cairns. Land records shows that John Henry had property in Nimishillen Township of Stark County (see details on the above map).
!!Next Stop Marion County, Ohio
The families were in Stark County only about five years and by the 1840 U.S. census showed them all in Claridon Township of Marion County, Ohio. All four families are there, the Laman Haines, Samuel Bogen, Joseph Bogen, as well as John Henry's family.
!!Final Settlement in Crawford County, Ohio (with a short sojourn into Indiana)
Joseph Bogen is the first to leave Marion County in about 1847 and move to Eden Township, Lagrange County, Indiana. The next year (1848) both John Henry and his son's, Samuel, family purchase property and move to Whetstone Township, Crawford County, Ohio. Both had about 100 acres of farmland north of the small town of North Robinson. Joseph must have not liked it in Indiana since he joined his father and brother near North Robinson in about 1853. He obtained 100 acres in what is now Jefferson Township south east of the town. He had to clear the land of forest before farming it. The Haines (Laman and Eleanor) stayed in Claridon Township of Marion County and descendants of that family are there to this day.
!!The Bogans in Crawford County
John Henry's daughter, Susan married in 1856 to Jeremiah Correll and the next year Caroline married Gilbert Hall. The year after that John Henry passed away (1858) at the age of 72 and was buried in the new cemetery in Bucyrus, Ohio called Oakwood. The youngest child, John W. , who had been living with his parents, moved to Bucyrus when the family farm was sold. John Henry's wife Margaret went to live with her daughter, Eleanor Haines, near Marion and lived there until her death in 1868 (she is buried with John Henry in Oakwood cemetery).
John W married at the age of 48 (1871) to Candace Farrell. They continued to live in Bucyrus. All the Bogan's after John Henry spelled the surname as Bogan except Samuel who was buried as Samuel Bogen.
The male children of Samuel, Joseph, and John W. all stayed in Crawford County and provided the Bogan name to all subsequent Bogans in the County. My father, Raymond E. Bogan is a descendent of Joseph L. Bogan. My Bogan family line is:
Johann Nicholas Andraes (Hesse-Darmstadt to Maryland)
> John Henry (Maryland to Pennsylvania to Virginia to Ohio)
> Joseph Lind (Pennsylvania to Virginia to Ohio to Indiana to Ohio)
> Henry Harrison (Ohio)
> William Edgar (Ohio)
> Chester Harrison (Ohio)
> Raymond Edward (Ohio)
The three female children of John Henry settled in different places:
*Eleanor Haines in Claridon Township, Marion County, Ohio</li>
*Susan Correll in Bucyrus, Crawford County, Ohio</li>
*Caroline Hall in Cherry Township, Montgomery County, Kansas</li>
!!!Footnotes
By 1950 the Bryant family of Montgomery County, Ohio had been there for two generations. All ancestor families were from Pennsylvania and resided there for most of the late 19th and early 20th century. Two branches, The Bryants and Panners, lived in Pittsburgh in a section called Temperanceville, or West End. Two branches of the family, the Oakes and Cryders, were from Clinton County where they were farmers. An Oakes and a Cryder married and moved to Pittsburgh where their daughter married a Bryant son.
Most of the following information was gleamed from U.S. censuses with help from a couple of death or cemetery records. Unfortunately, several of the female ancestor's maiden names are unknown and those lines of the family can not be described.
!!Bryants
The earliest Bryant known is John who was born about 1810 in Wareham, Massachusetts and married Mary Taber of nearby Fairhaven, MA in 1832. The family moved to Pittsburgh in the late 1840's after there were six children. John was a Nail Cutter and three of his son were Nailors in 1860 in a suburb of Pittsburgh called Temperanceville (on the west bank of the Allegheny River). Son Joseph P. Bryan changed occupation from nailer in 1860 and 1870 to meat cutter in 1880 and to printer in 1900. Joseph's son John H. also became a printer about the same time and was living on Lorenz Ave in what is now the West End part of Pittsburgh (and used to be called Temperanceville). John married Caroline Panner. It is John and Caroline's third child, Charles S. Bryant, who married Mabel T. Oakes in in Pittsburgh in 1933 then moved to Dayton, Ohio in 1947.
!!Panners
The Panners arrived from Pfalz region of Germany (Annweiler) in the early 19th Century. John Panner worked as a teamster in Pittsburgh during the 1860's, died of typhoid fever in 1880 and was buried in a German Cemetery in that city. The family of John and Catherine had nine children. Caroline, the eighth child, born in 1871, married John H. Bryant in Pittsburgh in 1896.
!!Oakes
The earliest Oakes we know of is William T. who was born in Pennsylvania (probably Clinton County) in about 1827. He married in about 1950 to Sarah (maiden name unknown), with whom he had a large family of twelve children. William was a laborer in 1860, a lumberman in 1870 and a tobacco raiser in 1880. In 1860 the family was in Wayne Township of Clinton County but moved to Pine Creek Township by 1880```Wayne County is south of the Susquehanna River while Pine Creek is across the river on the north side```. The youngest of these children was Grant Lewis Oakes born in 1868 at Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania.
Grant (age 30) married Rebecca Ellen Cryder (age 17) in Clinton county in 1898 and they moved to Pittsburgh just before 1900 where Grant got work as a laborer. Their first child died of measles at 10 months and was buried back in Jersery Shore, Pennsylvania```Jersey Shore is a small town just across the county boarder in Lycoming County from Pine Creek township in Clinton County``` where Grant was born. The family grew very quickly and by 1922 there were twelve more children born to the couple. Rebecca died at age 41 in 1923 and Grant had to raise all the children on his own. Grant worked as a driver for a coal company and teamster. Their residence was on 2nd Avenue in Pittsburgh from 1900 through 1920 then in 1930 they were living at 1056 Lessing Ave in the West End of Pittsburgh (this is a little west of where the Bryants lived). The oldest daughter was Mabel Theresa and she married Charles S. Bryant in 1933 at the age of 33 years.
!!Cryders
The Cryders immigrated to North America from Germany sometime in the early 19th century. The first ancestor known is Philip Kryder who was a farmer in Gallagher Township, Clinton County, Pennsylvania. Philip had a good farm as its value was $2000 in 1850 and increased to $5000 by 1860. His wife's name was Rebecca (maiden name unknown) and she was born about 1811 as was Philip. (some census records say the were born in New York State and others Pennsylvania). Eleven children were born to them between 1832 and 1851. Zacharia Taylor was the ninth and born in March 1848. Taylor married Annie (maiden name unknown) sometime before 1874 and they had four children before she died sometime around 1890. Taylor married again in 1891 to Hattie (maiden name unknown) and between 1892 and 1908 five more children are added to the family.
Taylor and Annie's second child is Rebecca Ellen Cryder born in 1881 who married Grant L. Oakes in Clinton County.
----
UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Give maps of living location of families in Clinton County and Pittsburgh.
!!!Footnotes:
<<showtoc>>
!! Descendants of John Bryant
{{{
1-John Bryant b. Abt 1815, Massachusetts
+Mary b. Abt 1813, Massachusetts
|--2-Joseph P. Bryant b. Apr 1833, Massachusetts, d. Bef
| 1910
| +Mary Ann b. Dec 1847, Pennsylvania
| |--3-John H. Bryant b. 24 Sep 1870, Pittsburgh,
| | Allegheny Co, PA, d. 1944, (Greentree Cemetery,
| | Allegheny Co, PA)
| | +Caroline C. Panner b. 28 Apr 1871, Pittsburgh,
| | Allegheny Co, PA, m. 24 Sep 1896, Allegheny Co, PA,
| | d. 1940, (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA),
| | par. John Panner and Catherine
| | |--4-Joseph P. Bryant b. Sep 1897, Pennsylvania, d.
| | | Bef 1910
| | |--4-Mary P. Bryant b. Oct 1898, Pennsylvania
| | | +William H. Scott b. Abt 1901, Pennsylvania
| | |--4-Charles Sumner Bryant b. 28 Oct 1900,
| | | Pittsburgh, PA, d. 10 Mar 1970, Hamilton, Ohio
| | | +Mabel Thresa Oakes b. 9 Jun 1900, Pittsburgh,
| | | PA, m. 8 Aug 1933, Pittsburgh, PA, d. Feb 1990,
| | | Florida, par. Grant Lewis Oakes and Rebecca
| | | Ellen Cryder
| | | |--5-Barbara Ann Bryant b. 29 Nov 1938, Hamilton,
| | | | Ohio
| | | +Daryl Allen Bogan b. 31 Jul 1942, Bucyrus,
| | | OH, m. 1 Sep 1967, Hamilton, Ohio, par.
| | | Raymond Edward Bogan and Leota Jane Reber
}}}
See [[Bogan Pedigree]] for living descendent
{{{
| | |--4-Cora C. Bryant b. Abt 1902, Pennsylvania
| | |--4-John Homer Bryant b. 1903, d. 1957, (Greentree
| | | Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| | |--4-Harold L. Bryant b. Abt 1906, Pennsylvania
| | |--4-Dorothy Bryant b. Abt 1908
| | |--4-Geraldine Bryant b. Abt 1909
| |--3-May E. Bryant b. Jan 1872, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Charles S. Bryant b. Aug 1874, Pennsylvania
| +Lillie b. Abt 1879, Pennsylvania
| |--4-Orville Bryant b. Abt 1906, Pittsburgh,
| | Allegheny Co, PA
|--2-John Bryant b. Abt 1835, Massachusetts
|--2-Samuel Bryant b. Abt 1838, Massachusetts
|--2-Sarah Bryant b. Abt 1840, Massachusetts
|--2-James Bryant b. Abt 1842, Massachusetts
|--2-Rebecca Bryant b. Abt 1847, Massachusetts
}}}
!!Descendants of Henry Panner
{{{
1-Henry Jakob Panner
+Elizabeth Hauck
|--2-John Panner b. 17 May 1827, Germany, d. 23 May 1880,
| (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| +Catherine b. Abt 1830, Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, d.
| 14 Aug 1882, (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| |--3-Mary Panner b. Abt 1852, Pennsylvania
| |--3-John Panner Jr b. Abt 1853, Pennsylvania, d. 1920,
| | (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| | +Barbara b. 1858, d. 1923, (Greentree Cemetery,
| | Allegheny Co, PA)
| |--3-Samuel Panner b. Abt 1854, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Henry Panner b. Abt 1858, Pennsylvania, d. 1892,
| | (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| |--3-William Panner b. Abt 1860, Pennsylvania, d. 25 Mar
| | 1882, (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
| |--3-Philip Panner b. Abt 1861, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Louis Panner b. Abt 1866, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Caroline C. Panner b. 28 Apr 1871, Pittsburgh,
| | Allegheny Co, PA, d. 1940, (Greentree Cemetery,
| | Allegheny Co, PA)
| | +John H. Bryant b. 24 Sep 1870, Pittsburgh,
| | Allegheny Co, PA, m. 24 Sep 1896, Allegheny Co, PA,
| | d. 1944, (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA),
| | par. Joseph P. Bryant and Mary Ann
}}}
See Bryant Descendants above for details
{{{
| |--3-Georg F. Panner b. 9 Nov 1869, d. 2 May 1878,
| | (Greentree Cemetery, Allegheny Co, PA)
|--2-Anna Maria Panner c. 24 Aug 1817,
| Evangelisch-Reformierte Kirche, Annweiler, Pfalz, Bavaria
}}}
!!Descendants of William Oakes
{{{
1-William T. Oakes b. Abt 1827, Pennsylvania
+Sarah J. b. Abt 1830, Pennsylvania
|--2-Irene Oakes b. Abt 1852, Pennsylvania
|--2-Robert Oakes b. Abt 1853, Pennsylvania
|--2-M. Ellen Oakes b. Abt 1854, Pennsylvania
|--2-Elizabeth Oakes b. Abt 1855, Pennsylvania
|--2-Emma Oakes b. Abt 1856
|--2-Elizabeth F. Oakes b. Abt 1858, Pennsylvania
|--2-George W. D. Oakes b. Aug 1859, Pennsylvania
|--2-George Washington Oakes b. Oct 1861, Pennsylvania
| +Unknown
| |--3-Alice Oakes b. Mar 1882
|--2-Mary A. Oakes b. Abt 1862, Pennsylvania
|--2-Anna D. Oakes b. Abt 1865, Pennsylvania
|--2-Abraham L. Oakes b. Abt 1866, Pennsylvania
|--2-Grant Lewis Oakes b. 16 Sep 1868, Jersey Shore, PA, d.
| 7 May 1958
+Rebecca Ellen Cryder b. 14 Apr 1881, m. 1898, Clinton
Co, PA, d. 19 Feb 1923, par. Zacharia Taylor Kryder
and Annie
|--3-Annie Oakes b. Abt May 1899, Pittsburgh, Allegheny
| Co, PA, d. 2 Mar 1900, Pittsburgh, Allegheny Co, PA
|--3-Mabel Thresa Oakes b. 9 Jun 1900, Pittsburgh, PA,
| d. Feb 1990, Florida
| +Charles Sumner Bryant b. 28 Oct 1900, Pittsburgh,
| PA, m. 8 Aug 1933, Pittsburgh, PA, d. 10 Mar 1970,
| Hamilton, Ohio, par. John H. Bryant and Caroline C.
| Panner
| |--4-Barbara Ann Bryant b. 29 Nov 1938, Hamilton, Ohio
| |
| +Daryl Allen Bogan b. 31 Jul 1942, Bucyrus, OH,
| m. 1 Sep 1967, Hamilton, Ohio, par. Raymond
| Edward Bogan and Leota Jane Reber
}}}
See [[Bogan Pedigree]] for living descendent
{{{
|--3-Florence E. Oakes b. Abt 1903, Pennsylvania
|--3-Grant L. Oakes Jr b. Abt 1905
|--3-John T. Oakes b. Abt 1906
|--3-Rebecca M. Oakes b. Abt 1907, Pennsylvania
|--3-Sylvia I. Oakes b. Abt 1909
|--3-Clyde L. Oakes b. 1910, Pennsylvania
|--3-Hazel E. Oakes b. Abt 1911
|--3-Helen E. Oakes b. Abt 1914, Pennsylvania
|--3-Robert R. Oakes b. Abt 1915
|--3-Frances L. Oakes b. Abt Jun 1918
|--3-Delwin C. Oakes b. Abt Jan 1920
|--3-Glenn N. Oakes b. Abt 1922, Pennsylvania
}}}
!!Descendants of Philip Kryder
{{{
1-Philip Kryder b. Abt 1811, New York
+Rebecca b. Abt 1811, New York
|--2-Valentine Kryder b. Abt 1832, New York
|--2-Samuel Kryder b. Abt 1834, New York
|--2-Precilla Kryder b. Abt 1836, Pennsylvania
|--2-Asher Kryder b. Abt 1838, New York
|--2-Isabella Kryder b. Abt 1841
|--2-Saul Kryder b. Abt 1842, New York
|--2-Sarah Kryder b. Abt 1843, New York
|--2-Robert B. Kryder b. Abt 1845, New York
|--2-Zacharia Taylor Kryder b. Mar 1848, Pennsylvania
| +Annie b. Abt 1854, Pennsylvania
| |--3-John Cryder b. Jun 1875, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Rebecca Ellen Cryder b. 14 Apr 1881, d. 19 Feb 1923
| | +Grant Lewis Oakes b. 16 Sep 1868, Jersey Shore, PA,
| | m. 1898, Clinton Co, PA, d. 7 May 1958, par.
| | William T. Oakes and Sarah J.
}}}
See Descendants of Oaks above for details
{{{
| |--3-Lizzie Cryder b. Aug 1887, Pennsylvania
| |--3-Mathias Cryder b. Jul 1878, Clinton Co, PA
| +Hattie b. Sep 1863, Pennsylvania, m. 1891, Clinton Co,
| PA
| |--3-Howard Cryder b. May 1892, Clinton Co, PA
| |--3-James Cryder b. Oct 1894
| |--3-Leota Pearl Kryder b. Jun 1898, Clinton Co, PA
| |--3-Malita J. Cryder b. Abt 1904
| |--3-Minnie Cryder b. Sep 1908
|--2-Joseph Kryder b. Abt 1849, Pennsylvania, d. 1850,
| Gallagher Twp, Clinton Co, PA
|--2-Daniel Kryder b. Abt 1851, New York
}}}
Daryl Bogan married Barbara Bryant in 1967. The diagram below shows her pedigree to her great grandparents.
| Joseph P. Bryant^^3^^<br>b:1838 MA - d:bef1920 Pittsburgh | Mary Ann - <br>1851 -? | John Panner^^1^^<br>b:1827 Germany <br>d:1880 Pittsburgh | Catherine - <br>b:1830 Darmstadt d: 1882 Pittsburgh | William T. Oakes<br>b:1827 Clinton Co, PA d:? | Sarah J. - <br>b: abt 1839 PA | Taylor Cryder^^2^^<br>b: abt 1848 Clinton Co, PA d:? | Annie - <br>b: abt 1854 Clinton Co, PA d:? |
|>| John H. Bryant<br>1870-1944 Pittsburgh |>| Caroline C. Panner<br>1871-1940 Pittsburgh |>| Grant L. Oakes<br>1868-1858 Pittsburgh |>| Rebecca E. Cryder<br>1881-1923 Pittsburgh |
|>|>|>| Charles S. Bryant<br>b:1900 Pittsburgh d:1970 Ohio |>|>|>| Mabel T. Oakes<br>b:1900 Pittsburgh d:1990 Florida |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Barbara Ann Bryant<br>b:1938, Hamilton, Ohio |
1. John Panner's parents were Henry J. Panner and Elizabeth Hauck both born in Annweiler, Pfalz, Bavaria
2. Parents of Z. Taylor Cryder were Phillip and Rebecca Kryder (both born abt 1811, Philip in New York state)
3, Parents of Joseph Bryant were John and Mary Bryant of Massachusetts (county unknown)
| Burwell, John | Spencer, Agness | - | - | Custard (Coster), Conrad (1685-1772)^^1^^ | Adams, Susannah (1692-1747)^^2^^ | Swartwout, Barnardus (1697-1773)^^3^^ | Margaret (Geetrje) Decker (1700-)^^4^^ |
|>| Burwell, Joseph (1731-1808) |>| Robbins, Mary (1741-1808) ||>| Custard (Coster), William (1729-1806) |>| Swartwout, Sarah (1735-1827) |
|>|>|>| Job Burwell (1780-1860) |>|>|>| Catherine Custard (1777-1830) |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Eliz Burwell (1810-1865) |
1 - Parents:Kuster, Arnold (1669-1739) and Conrad, Gertrut (-)
2 - Parents: Adams, Richard (1670-1748) and Opdengraeff, Gertien (1680-1770)
3 - Parents: Swartwout, Antoni (1664-) and Coobes, Jennetje Jacobse (1672-)
4 - Parents: Decker, Jacob Janse (-) and Kortrecht, Annetje Henrickse
NEED TO FILL IN PLACE DETAILS
The Cairns (also mis-spelled Kerns or Carnes) came from Scotland. This is one of the few families in the Bogan line that did not come from Germany. The patriarch of the family was Andrew Cairns who was born in Culross, Perthshire in August 1785 ``` This information is from '//Parents, Birth date and location from Scotland Births and Baptism 1564-1950//' available at ''~FamilySearch.com'' and was selected because it was the only Andrew with the correct birth date whose father was John (this is given in the John Cairn biography), however if the records are not complete this could be the wrong Andrew (Andrew and John are common given names in Scotland).```. Culross is a small town on the north shores of the Firth of Forth and in the County of Fife. ```In 1830 this was part of the county of Perth, the large county in the center of Scotland and Culross was a Parish that formed an exclave some miles away from the rest of the county, on the boundaries of Clackmannanshire and Fife. ``` The oldest children were known to have been born in Dumfieshire, Scotland```This birthplace is given in the Biography of John Cairns in the //History of Stark County, OH 1881//```, which is in the south of Scotland, just north of the Firth of Solvay. The Cairns were shepards in Scotland for many generations ```This is from John Cairn's biography. If the information here is correct, perhaps the Cairns roamed and took jobs all over Scotland, including Culross and Dumfries.```.
[>img[Scotland where the Cairns were born|maps/culross&dunfries_scotland-tn.jpg][maps/culross&dunfries_scotland.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
//Culross is at the upper marker and Dunfries at the lower one. - click on the image for larger one//
Andrew and Margaret (Pagan) Cairns immigrated to North America in 1833, eventually arriving in Stark County, Ohio with ten children. ``` The biography of John Cairns, (in History of Stark County, OH 1881 - Washington Twp) oldest of the Cairns boys states the number of children was eight but all of the ten Cairns children were born before the 1832 date. The most likely reason is that two children, William b:1820 and Christina b:1821 died of Cholera in 1834 only two years after arriving in the US.``` The oldest two children Elizabeth and John arrived a year earlier (1832) and purchased 72 acres of land in Ohio for a farm. Andrew and Margaret were 47 years old and John was 19. The youngest child, Jane, was only one year old. The family lived on the farm in Washington Township and which son John could managed. (Andrew died in 1854 and Margaret in 1868). David Fox, Jane's husband, took over the homestead from John in about 1869, but John continued to live on the farm until his death sometime after 1882. ```John Cairn is listed as living with the Foxes in 1870 and 1880 censuses. He is at Mary (Cairns) Bogan's funeral in 1882.```.
In November 1839 Mary Cairns, age 23, married Joseph L. Bogen. He was 21 and from neighboring Nimishillen township to the west. The Cairns lived near Maximo, OH and the Bogans near That same year Joseph moved with his new wife to Marion County, Ohio along with his father and siblings. Joseph and Mary moved two more times in the next few years but eventually end up with the Bogan families in Crawford County, OH (see [[Bogan Family Home Locations]])
[<img[Map of Stark County Ohio|maps/Louisville-MaximoOH-tn.jpg][maps/Louisville-MaximoOH.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
By 1855 all of the Cairns children were married or had moved away.
Of the surviving eight children Half, the oldest three and the youngest remain in Stark County but the four move away but stay in Ohio.
*Elizabeth married William Porter in Stark County
*John never married and stayed on the family farm
*Margaret married John Shaffer, a neighbor's son.
*Agnes married Gordon Scott and moved to Columbiana County, OH
*Janet married John Grimm and moved to Williams Co, OH
*Allison moved to Williams Co also.
*Jane married David Fox and lives on the Cairn family farm
!!!footnotes
!Descendants of Christian Volkmer - b:1825 Saxony, Germany
{{{
1-Christian Volkmer b. 11 Jul 1825, Saxony, Germany, d.
22 Mar 1904, Ohio</b>
+Maria Dorothea b. 7 Jun 1813, Bremen, Sachen, Germany, m.
Unknown, d. 9 Dec 1868, (Brokensword Cemetary)
|--2-Olivert Volkmer b. Abt 1843, Saxony, Germany
|--2-Charles Volkmer b. Abt 1846, Saxony, Germany
|--2-Lewis Volkmer b. 14 Aug 1851, Ohio, d. 13 Jul 1929,
| (Brokensword Cemetary)
| +Emma Nachbar b. 1 Sep 1861, m. 7 Mar 1893, Crawford
| Co, OH, d. 25 Nov 1946, (Brokensword Cemetary), par.
| Johann Jacob Nachbar and Marie Elisabetha Krebs
| |--3-Ruth Evadne Volkmer b. 6 Nov 1898, Ohio, d. 22 Jun
| | 1944, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Romanus Cover b. 1888, m. 21 Dec 1919, Crawford Co,
| OH, d. 1964, (Brokensword Cemetary)
| |--4-Cloyd L. Cover b. 15 May 1933, d. 13 Jan 1934,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Raymond Franklin Christy b. 22 Jul 1893,
| Willoughby, OH, m. 28 Mar 1937, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| 15 Oct 1958, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Catherine Seibert b. Abt 1853, Holmes Twp, Crawford
| Co, OH, m. 10 Aug 1871, Crawford Co, OH, d. Bef 1893,
| par. Peter Seibert and Catherine Weaversmith
| |--3-John C. Volkmer b. 24 Nov 1878, Ohio, d. 5 Feb
| | 1957, Crawford Co, OH
| | +Mary Elizabeth Laipply b. 24 Aug 1878, Ohio, m. 3
| | Nov 1898, Crawford Co, OH, d. 5 Dec 1965, Crawford
| | Co, OH, par. Simeon Laipply and Matilda Bauer
| | |--4-Clemence Villist Volkmer b. 26 Feb 1899,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Mar 1963, (Brokensword
| | | Cemetary)
| | | +Vona Eileen Cox b. 23 Apr 1897, d. 31 Jul 1975,
| | | (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | |--4-Russell J. Volkmer b. 11 Aug 1900, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | d. 27 Aug 1970, Coldwater, Branch Co, MI
| | | +Verda Matilda Kehrer b. 24 Apr 1900, m. Did Not
| | | Marry, d. 14 Oct 1943, Bucyrus, OH, par. Samuel
| | | Manuel Kehrer and Amanda Jane Albright
| | | |--5-Leota Jane Reber b. 7 Feb 1919, Columbus,
| | | | Ohio, d. 1 Mar 1998, Chattanooga, Tennessee
| | | +Raymond Edward Bogan b. 15 May 1917, Bucyrus,
| | | OH, m. 15 May 1938, Bucyrus, OH, d. 23 Mar
| | | 2006, Bucyrus, OH, par. Chester Harrison
| | | Bogan and Anona Fern Pfahler
| | | |--6 For Children to Leota and Raymond see
}}}
__[[JNA Bogen Descendants]]__
{{{
| | | +Stella Bertha Albertine Grohnke b. 20 Oct 1901,
| | | m. 1921, Toledo, Lucas Co, OH, d. 30 Apr 1989,
| | | Coldwater, Branch Co, MI, par. Rudolf Gottfied
| | | Grohnke and Amelia Manthey
| | | |--5-Shirley Julia Volkmer b. 12 Feb 1922, d. 12
| | | | Feb 1922, (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | | |--5-Russell Volkmer Jr b. 7 Mar 1925, d. Dec
| | | | 1991, Toledo, OH
| | | |--5-Arland H. Volkmer b. 1 Apr 1926, d. 6 Dec 2006
| | | |
| | |--4-Lalah May Volkmer b. 25 Oct 1901, d. 3 Feb 1903,
| | | (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | |--4-Ray Arland Volkmer b. 27 Apr 1904, Crawford Co,
| | | OH, d. 10 Apr 1966, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +Naomi M. Morton b. 15 Oct 1903, m. Crawford Co,
| | | OH, d. 5 Nov 1988, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Lucile Marie Volkmer b. 3 Mar 1909, d. 27 Apr
| | | 1918, (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | |--4-Velma B. Volkmer b. 13 Sep 1911, d. 6 Nov 1981,
| | | Marion, Ohio
| | | +Donald E. Wingert b. 3 Aug 1907, d. 16 Dec 1985,
| | | Marion, Ohio
| | |--4-Carl Elmer Volkmer b. 11 Sep 1913, Brokensword,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 10 Apr 1971, Galion Hospital
| | +Virginia Isabella Pollock
| |--3-Emma Volkmer b. 28 Jun 1881, Ohio, d. 15 Sep 1909,
| | (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | +Frederick Simeon Laipply b. 14 Feb 1883, d. 10 Feb
| | 1960, (Brokensword Cemetary), par. Simeon Laipply
| | and Matilda Bauer
| | |--4-Harold Frederick Laipply b. 20 Sep 1901,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 6 Sep 1975, (Brokensword
| | | Cemetery)
| | |--4-Virgil Leroy Laipply b. 13 Jun 1905, Crawford
| | | Co, OH, d. 3 Aug 1966, (Brokensword Cemetery)
| |--3-Hoadly E. Volkmer b. 1887, Ohio
| |--3-Roy V. Volkmer b. 30 May 1887, Ohio, d. 27 Oct
| | 1967, (Brokensword Cemetary)
| +Elma Pearl Williamson b. 11 Mar 1892, Ohio, m. 12
| May 1910, Crawford Co, OH, d. 16 Oct 1944,
| (Brokensword Cemetary)
| |--4-Hemeth G. Volkmer b. Abt 1911
| |--4-Catherine J. Volkmer b. Abt 1915
| |--4-Alma Pauline Volkmer b. Sep 1916
| | +Roy Douglas Toms
| |--4-Eva M. Volkmer b. Feb 1918, Ohio
|--2-Amelia Volkmer b. 14 May 1855, Ohio, d. 13 Aug 1888,
| Brokensword, Crawford Co, OH
|--2-Emma Volkmer b. 28 Feb 1859, d. 22 Sep 1874,
| (Brokensword Cemetary)
+Nancy Houpt b. 31 Sep 1846, m. 10 Sep 1882, Crawford Co,
OH, d. 1890, (Nazereth Luthern cemetary, Chatfield,
Crawford Co.), par. George Washington Houpt and Lydia M.
|--2-Bertha Volkmer b. Oct 1881, Crawford Co, OH
}}}
Background: #fff
Foreground: #000
PrimaryPale: #8cf
PrimaryLight: #0a0
PrimaryMid: #044
PrimaryDark: #014
SecondaryPale: #ffc
SecondaryLight: #fe8
SecondaryMid: #064
SecondaryDark: #841
TertiaryPale: #eee
TertiaryLight: #ccc
TertiaryMid: #999
TertiaryDark: #666
Error: #f88
The following is a list of the color terms used by TiddlyWiki
and the sections of TiddlyWiki that are controlled by each
term in the default color scheme.
| Name | Controls the colors of: |Default<br>color|h
|Background: |1) Background or 'paper' <br>2) Text in the title and subtitle | #fff |
|Foreground: |-Text | #000 |
|~PrimaryPale: |-Interface Options box | #8cf |
|~PrimaryLight: |-Top of the Header gradient | #18f |
|~PrimaryMid: |1) Text in the MainMenu<br>2) text for links<br>3) text in the lists of tiddlers and tags<br>4) bottom of the Header gradient | #04b |
|~PrimaryDark: |1) Text of the items in the top of the right hand menu<br>2) the text of the buttons on the tiddlers. | #014 |
|~SecondaryPale: |-Background of the boxes in those tiddlers that show snippets of the TiddlyWiki code | #ffc |
|~SecondaryLight: |-Tiddler buttons or items in the right hand menu are highlighted | #fe8 |
|~SecondaryMid: |1) Title cells in tables,<br> that is, cells which begin with an exclamation mark (!)<br>2) box that appears when changes have been saved<br>3) tiddler buttons when they are selected | #db4 |
|~SecondaryDark: |- Titles of the tiddlers | #841 |
|~TertiaryPale: |1) right hand menu that shows lists of tags and tiddlers<br>2) tag button on the tiddlers | #eee |
|~TertiaryLight: |- Borders around the right hand menus | #ccc |
|~TertiaryMid: |1) unselected tabs behind the list of tags<br> 2) tiddlers in the bottom right hand menu | #999 |
|~TertiaryDark: |- Subtitle of each tiddler (ie,<br> - 1) the author of the tiddler<br> - 2) the most recent date it was modified<br> - 3) date it was created) | #666 |
| Error: | | #f88 |
<<showtoc>>
!!Kesters of Whetstone, Crawford County Ohio
Lydia Kester married Daniel Kehrer in Nov 1864. Her parents (Jacob and Salome Wise Kester) had came to Ohio from Union (now Synder) County Pennslyvania in 1828. ```According to HCCO1881, they came in a Conestoga wagon purchased with money of Salome``` She had been born in 1840 (the fifth of six children by 1850).
The first child was Samuel born in 1865.
!!!Kesters in Union County, Pennsylvania
Jacob Kester's parents were John Kester (b:1765 Union Co, PA) and Catherine Bub/Stueben both of who lived and died in Union County, PA. The family had about 11 children of which Jacob was the second oldest. He and his older brother, John, immigrated to Ohio while the rest of the siblings moved to Iowa or Kansas. Jacob's sister, Sophia married Solome Wise's brother Henry in Pennsylvania and moved to Cedar County, Iowa. So the Kesters and Wises were friends and neighbors in Union County.
A John and Lydia Kester (Kister) were buried in the ~Kester-Dunkard Cemetery near .....
!!!Kesters in Crawford County, Ohio
Lydia Kester Kehrer and Daniel farmed in Whetstone Twp on Kehrer Road and raised eight children. (( Older sister Sarah, b 1838, married William Lowmiller, cousin of Mary Plank)) Land Warranty ....
Jacob, besides being a farmer with 80 acres of land worth $4200 in 1850 was on the local school board and a Justice of the Peace in Whetstone Township.
!!Cooks of Whetstone Township, Crawford County, Ohio
Elizabeth Cook married John Albright (jr) (see [[Albright Family]]) in Apr 1864. She was born in 1844, one of ten children of John Cook and Sarah Diebler who had a large farm (340 acres) in Whetstone Township.
John Cook had been born (1816) in Germany in the region of ~Hesse-Darmstadt. He had arrived in Ohio in about 1834 with his parents, Peter ```Peter Cook died only a year after arriving Ohio, but had been in North America since 1830 - where?``` and Elizabeth (Miller) Cook.
Sarah Diebler (b 1819) was born in Pennsylvania, (either Dauphin or Union County) to John G. Diebler and Mary M. Wise. The family came to Crawford County in 1828, the same year as the Kesters. The Diebler and Wise families had been in Pennsylvania many years before moving to Ohio. John was a house builder as well as farmer.
John Dieber's father was Albert (b abt 1755 in PA) and grand-father was Michael (b 1734 in PA). It was John's great ~grand-father, Mathias, (b 1709 Germany) who came to North America on the ship Elizabeth in 1728. (( A Mathias and Albrecht Diebler served in the Revolutionary army at the Battle of Long Island - more in Lonz notes))
Mary Wise Diebler's Father was Christopher Wise (1761-abt 1820) who moved from Montgomery County where he was born to Beaver Township, Union County, Pennsylvania. Her grand-father was Frederick Wise 1738-1788 who lived in Montgomery County. Frederick had served as a Lt.Colonel in the Revolutionary Army while his son was in the Cumberland Co, PA. Mary's younger sister, Salome, married Jacob Kester.
!!!Footnotes:
<<showtoc>>
!!Coopers
In 1864 John George Pfahler married Rhoda Cooper (age 19, b: 21 Mar 1845). A picture of them is on the [[Pfahler Family]] story page. Rhoda was the daughter of Edward Cooper, one of the pioneers of Crawford County, Ohio. Edward, at age 14, arrived in the county from Cadiz township of Harrison County, Ohio with his step-father, Disberry Johnson in 1821. Edward’s father, George, who was from Pennsylvania ```I have not been able to find any information on George’s orgins or any of his ancestors but one strong possibility exists for orgins in Washington County, PA. ```, died in 1812 in Harrison County when Edward (b: 22 Mar 1807) was only five years old. Mary Wood``` Mary was the daughter of Isaac and Ann Wood born in Pennsylvania in about 1785. Mary's mother was mentioned in the will of Thomas Buskirk of Virginia and Kentucky so that may have been her maiden name.```, George's widow remarried in June 1817 to Disberry Johnson in Harrison County, Ohio. The ~Johnson-Cooper children numbered 18 when they came to Crawford County```Six children were Coopers, Six children were Johnsons from a previous marriage, and there were six Johnson children born to Mary (Wood) Cooper Johnson in the years 1812 to 1821```.
Edward was talented and could make ‘bucket, boot, barrel, or frame house’ as well as entertaining as a muscian. He took up farming when he reached age and owned 160 acres 1 mile SE of Leesville in Jackson Twp```SE quarter of section 8``` (now Jefferson Township) and just west of Crestline on the Crestline road```See the Atlas of Crawford County 1855```. Edward married Eliz Burwell (age 18) in 1828 and Rhoda was the seventh of nine children born to them. Eliz died in 1865 while Edward lived to be 85 passing away in October of 1892, and had three more wives and two more children.
Eliza Burwell was the daughter of Job and Catherine (Custard) Burwell who had married in Washington County, PA in 1800. Her great-grandfather, Joseph Burwell (b:1731) moved from Connecticut to Washington Couny, PA. Many of the sons her grandfather, Isaac, including Job moved to Crawford county and farmed there until about 1850. The Custer side of Eliza's family are from Philadelphia and Montgomery County, PA having immigrated from Prussia before the American Revolution. Her mother, Catherine Custer, was born in Philadelphia in 1777 and married in Cross Creek, Washington Co, PA in 1800.
!!Schwabs of Wurttemburg
These Schwabs are from Hollenbach in Wurttemburg, Germany. The father of the family was a land owner and baker. Several of the children of Johann Georg and Anna Maria Barbara (Steigauf) Schwab immigrated to the United States in about 1850 ```Son George Michael b:1831 was know to have immigrated at the age of 19 years. A biography of George Michael Frederick Schwab states that he 'came to the US in 1854 and first worked as a baker in Philadelphia.```. They settled in Pennsylvania and Ohio. The person of most interest is, Johanna Margarthea Barbara Schwab, who married George Fetter from Crawford County, Ohio. Hanna, as she was called, was born 17 Oct 1838 in Wurttemburg and came to the U.S. with her youngest brother, John, to Pottstown, PA in 1866.
The father, Johann Georg Tobias was born in October of 1800. He and his wife, Anna Maria (m: 28 Aug 1832) had four boys and four girls all born in Hollenbach, Wurttemburg, Germany. Tobias died 18 Jan 1856 in Hollenbach. Perhaps it is his death that induced the children to emigrate. Anna stayed in Hollenbach and died there in 1876. We have information on all the boys:
| name | date of birth | died | buried |h
| "George" Michael Fredrich | b: 16 Jan 1834 | d: 7 Mar 1896 | Pottstown, Montgomery Co, PA |
| Johann Georg Ludwig "Frederich" | b: 21 Feb1841 | d: 23 Apr 1923 | Pottstown, Montgomery Co, PA |
| "Charles" Georg Friedrich Tobias | b: 18 Aug 1843 | d: | |
| Johann Georg Friedrich Leonhard | b: 20 Aug 1847 | | |
| Johann Georg "John" | b: 25 Jan 1852 | d:17 Oct 1916 | Shelby, Richland Co, Ohio |
The girls are less well known:
| name | birth date | death date | died in |h
| Eva Juliana "Barbara" | b:26 Aug 1835 | d:11 Jan 1904 | Hollenbach, Germany |
| Maria Margareta Barbara | b: 15 Dec 1836 | | |
| Johanna Margareta Barbara | b: 17 Oct 1838 | d: 2 May 1892 | Galion, Crawford Co, Ohio |
| unnamed | b: 16 Mar 1846 | d: 16 Mar 1846 | Hollenbach, Germany |
The Schwab brothers all were in the bakery or confectionary business. In 1860 George Michael was a Master Baker in Pottstown, PA and brother Fred was living with him and was baker also. It was Fred Schwab (b: 1841) who moved to Shelby, Richland County, Ohio in about 1862 and bought property there in 1866 to start a bakery ```Fred Schwab and family are in Sharon Twp, Richland Co, OH in the 1870 US Census - his wife is Mary and they have three girls, Anna (age 5), Clara (age 3) and Georgia (age 1).``` . In 1871 Fred handed the bakery over to his youngest brother John and he moved back to Pottstown, PA. ```As of 1870 John Schwab was working as a baker in Pottstown for another bakery. The Shelby Bakery was to continue operating for a long time, first under the operation of Fred, then handed over to John who ran it with his family, finally it became the Lorenz Bakery extending opertation into the early-20th century.``` Hanna must have come to live in Shelby with Fred because she met and married George Fetter by 1869. Hanna was George Fetter's second wife; he had married Angeline Phenosdal in 1860. ```George Fetter and Hannah Swope (spelling used in he wedding record) were married in Richland County in 1869```. George had immigrated from ~Hesse-Darmstadt area of Germany in about 1848 with his father, George Sr. Hanna and George lived lived and farmed in Liberty Township, Hanna had two children and died in 1892 at the age of 54. Their story is presented on the [[Fetter Family]] pages. John Schwab died in 1916 in Shelby. There were other Schwabs in Crawford County and lived in the Chatfield area but in appears that there are no relatives in this group (See the section below on Charles Fayette Schwab).
!!Charles Fayette Schwab
Other Schwabs are associate with the family in the next generation. George and Hanna Fetter's daughter, Clara, married Charles Pfahler and his sister, Sarah Pfahler, married Charles Fayette Schwab. Charles' Father was from Chatfield Township, Crawford Co., OH and his father, Christian Schwab, was born in Rieschweiler, Bayern in 1847. Charles' mother was Sarah Ann Fail, the daughter of Daniel L. and Catherine Fail.
The Schwabs arrived from Bavaria in about 1856 and settled in Bloom Township, Seneca County, OH, the county just north of Crawford County. Christian was only 9 years old at the time. His father was Chistian Sr, mother was Anna Elisabeha (Wolf) Schwab and there were three brothers, Jacob (b: 1845), Heinrich (b:1851), and Friedrich (b:1852). Two more sons were born to the family while living in Seneca County. In 1875 Christian married Sarah Ann Fail; they initially lived in Bloomville, Seneca county ```Charles Schwab their second born in 1878 was born in Bloomville, OH.``` but they moved to live in township of Crawford County. Christian and Sarah had eight children:
*Dana (1876)
*Charles (2 Jun 1878)
*Lydia Alice (1880)
*Okey Marie (1882) m: Ralph Cooper (Middlefield, OH)
*Gaynor E. (1884)
*Ferna E. (1886) m: Ross (Marion, IN 1963)
*Charlotte (1888) m: Berry (Detroit, MI 1963)
*Nina M. (1895) m: Miller 1963
In May of 1896 after a weekend of heavy drinking, Christian was talking with friends on his front porch. Unexpectedly, he left their company, went up to his bedroom, lay down and shot himself through the heart with his shotgun. In the obituary describing this startling event, it was mentioned that a brother of his attempted suidicide a month earlier.
Charles F. was 18 years old at the time and he did not marry until 1908 when he web Sarah Pfahler. He became a contractor, and purchased a farm in Sulphur Springs, Crawford Co, OH. He and Sarah had two daughters, Mildred (b: 1915) and Geraldine (b:1917) ``` Geraldine married Raymond Heiby of Sulphur Springs and they had a farm next to Charles' ```. Sarah's father, George, comes to live with them after Rhoda died in 1910 and died in 1921. Charles died of heart ailment in 1963 and Sarah lived 20 more years passing away at the age of 97 years.
<<notes>>
!!!footnotes
Include the info/photos Pottstown PA etc
Coopers, include the possible origins in Washington Co, PA and the connection with the Woods - include the latest on Mary Wood's mother.
Pictures of Fred Schwab
Pictures of Charles and Sarah Schwab
Pictures of Shelby Bakery
<<showtoc>>
!!Jonathan Crall Descendants
{{{
1-Jonathan Crall b. , Switzerland
+Unknown
|--2-Matthias Crall b. Abt 1690, Basel, Switzerland, d. 12
| Apr 1785, Lebonon Twp, Lancaster Co, PA
| +Mary Betsy Shaffer b. 1720, Pennsylvania, d. 14 Apr
| 1788, Lebanon Co, PA
| |--3-Christian Crall I b. 1743, Pennsylvania, d. 2 Dec
| | 1805, Lower Paxton Twp, Dauphin Co, PA
| | +Magdalena b. 1747, Pennsylvania
| | |--4-Maria Crall d. 1805
| | |--4-Christian Crall II b. 1771, Dauphin Co, PA, d.
| | | 17 Jul 1805, Dauphin Co, PA
| | | +Eve Shope b. 1807, par. Bernhard Shope and
| | | Unknown
| | | |--5-Susanna Crall
| | | |--5-Elizabeth Crall
| | | |--5-Christian Crall III b. 18 Nov 1805, Dauphin
| | | | Co, PA, d. 27 Sep 1892, Liberty Twp, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | |--4-Matthias Crall b. 21 Jun 1772, Dauphin Co, PA,
| | | d. 2 Jan 1862, Franklin Twp, Richland Co, OH
| | |--4-Elizabeth Crall b. 1778, Pennsylvania, d. Abt
| | | 1809, Pennsylvania
| | | +Bernhard Shope Jr b. Abt 1778, m. Abt 1806, d. 5
| | | Feb 1864, Centre Co, PA, par. Bernhard Shope and
| | | Unknown
| | |--4-Henry "Henrich" Crall b. 1779, Dauphin Co, PA,
| | | d. 18 Jul 1862, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | +Elizabeth Henshew b. 1788, Harrisburg, Dauphin
| | | Co, PA, m. Abt 1809, Pennsylvania, d. 31 Jan
| | | 1862, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | |--5-Simon Crall b. 2 Jun 1808, Pennsylvania, d.
| | | | 19 Dec 1882, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | +Elizabeth Becker b. 11 Jan 1808,
| | | | Pennsylvania, m. Feb 1830, Dauphin Co, PA, d.
| | | | 16 Aug 1855, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | +Elizabeth McGinnis b. 7 Oct 1816, m. 10 Jun
| | | | 1858, Crawford Co, OH, d. 11 Apr 1875, (Crall
| | | | Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | +Fannie Kider
| | | |--5-John G. Crall b. 18 Dec 1809, Dauphin Co, PA,
| | | | d. 25 Nov 1879, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | +Elizabeth Raysor b. 11 Feb 1807, m. 16 Apr
| | | | 1835, Dauphin Co., PA, d. 6 Jan 1893, (Crall
| | | | Cem. Liberty Twp), par. John Raysor and
| | | | Susanna Fackler
| | | | |--6-Elizabeth Crall b. 7 Dec 1843, Dauphin Co,
| | | | | PA, d. 17 Jul 1894
| | | | | +Ephram Milton Moore b. 9 Sep 1838,
| | | | | Columbiana County, OH, m. 12 Mar 1868,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 2 Jun 1903
| | | | |--6-David Crall b. 1839, Dauphin Co, PA, d. 24
| | | | | May 1864, Danville Confederate Prison
| | | | |--6-John Raysor Crall b. 1837, Dauphin Co.,
| | | | | PA, d. , Michigan
| | | | | +Mary Catherine Ferral m. 10 Jan 1860,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--7-Clark Crall
| | | | | +Catherine Stephenson b. , Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | d. 1883
| | | | | |--7-Earl W. Crall b. 17 Oct 1875, Liberty
| | | | | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 18 Dec 1926,
| | | | | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | +Mabel B. Campbell b. 4 Apr 1875,
| | | | | | Whetsone Twp Crawford Co, OH, m. 20 Jun
| | | | | | 1904, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Apr 1967,
| | | | | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par.
| | | | | | John Benton Campbell and Jennie Frazier
| | | | | | Shanks
| | | | | | |--8-Clark Campbell Crall b. 4 Jul 1908,
| | | | | | | d. 10 Oct 1947, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | | +Pearl M. Oberlander b. 5 Aug 1907,
| | | | | | | d. 27 Jan 1998, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH), par. Clarence
| | | | | | | Oberlander and Mary D. Reamsnyder
| | | | | | | |--9-Earl Walter Crall b. 19 Jun 1941,
| | | | | | | | Marion, Ohio
| | | | | | | | +Bonnie Sue Bogan b. 23 Sep 1944, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | | | | | | m. 17 Aug 1966, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | | | | | | par. Raymond Edward Bogan and Leota Jane Reber
}}}
See [[JNA Bogen Descendants]] for details here
{{{
| | | | | | | |--9-Sylvia Joyce Crall b. 25 Jun 1936, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | |--8-Gail Everett Crall b. 18 Jun 1914,
| | | | | | | d. 10 Jan 1993, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | |--8-Wilma D. Crall b. 18 May 1919, d. 10
| | | | | | | Dec 1975, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | |--8-Muriel Bernice Crall b. 5 Apr 1905,
| | | | | | | d. 25 Nov 1985, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | |--7-Maude Crall
| | | | | |--7-May Crall
| | | | | |--7-Lawrence Crall
| | | | | |--7-Dilla M. Crall
| | | | | |--7-Lee S. Crall
| | | | |--6-Elias Oliver Crall b. 9 Oct 1850, Dauphin
| | | | | Co., PA, d. 20 Aug 1923, Hicksville,
| | | | | Defiance Co, OH
| | | | | +Lovina Spahr b. 8 Nov 1852, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH, d. 30 Dec 1909, Hicksville, Defiance
| | | | | Co, OH
| | | | |--6-William Henry Crall b. 13 Aug 1848,
| | | | | Liberty Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 28 Nov
| | | | | 1923, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Angeline Schaeffer b. 11 May 1846,
| | | | | Illinois, d. 2 Jun 1894, (Oakwood
| | | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | |--6-Mary A. Crall b. 12 Jul 1853, d. 21 Jan
| | | | | 1854, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | |--6-Oliver K. Crall b. 13 Jun 1856, Liberty
| | | | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Mary C. Kerr m. 21 Dec 1880, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH, par. David E. Kerr and Margaret
| | | | | Dobbins
| | | | | |--7-Arthur K. Crall
| | | | | |--7-Homer Boyd Crall
| | | | | |--7-Nellie B. Crall
| | | | |--6-Susan Crall b. Abt 1859, Liberty Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +S. D. Meyers m. 29 Nov 1881, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | |--5-Susannah Crall b. 1813, d. 3 Nov 1873, Van
| | | | Wert Co, OH
| | | | +John Fortney b. 25 Nov 1818, Swatara,
| | | | Schuylkill co, PA, m. Abt 1839, d. 8 Feb
| | | | 1887, Indiana
| | | |--5-Henry S. Crall Jr. b. 26 Oct 1818, d. 11 Aug
| | | | 1900, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | +Julia Ann Keiter b. 9 Jul 1819, d. 10 Apr
| | | | 1887, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Harriet Crall b. Abt 1840, Pennsylvania
| | | | |--6-Simon Crall b. Abt 1842, Pennsylvania
| | | | |--6-Reuben Crall b. Abt 1845, Pennsylvania
| | | | |--6-Elizabeth Crall b. 20 Dec 1847, Ohio, d.
| | | | | 11 Apr 1874, (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | | | +Lewis J. Wert b. 12 May 1851, d. 16 Jna
| | | | | 1875, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Emanuel Crall b. Abt 1849, Ohio
| | | |--5-David Crall b. 25 Nov 1821, Harrisburg,
| | | | Dauphin Co, PA, d. 29 Apr 1907, Richland Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | +Maria Stentz b. 1825, Harrisburg, Dauphin Co,
| | | | PA, m. 12 Apr 1846, Richland Co, OH, d. 1914,
| | | | par. John Stentz and Sophia Hentz
| | | |--5-Elizabeth Crall b. 27 Apr 1811, d. 6 May
| | | | 1884, (Charlton United Methodist Cemetery,
| | | | Harrisburg, PA)
| | | +William L. Crum b. 16 Mar 1807, d. 25 Sep
| | | 1884, (Charlton United Methodist Cemetery,
| | | Harrisburg, PA), par. Leonard Crum and Anna
| | | Catherine
| | | |--6-Susan Crum b. 1832, d. 1891
| | | |--6-Amos Crum b. 1852, d. 1927
| | |--4-John Crall b. 28 Nov 1798, Dauphin Co, PA, d. 8
| | | Mar 1877
| | +Mary Buck b. 30 Nov 1804, m. 31 Aug 1824,
| | Dauphin Co, PA, d. 17 Sep 1867
| | |--5-Amos Crall b. 19 Dec 1827, Dauphin Co, PA
| |--3-Abraham Crall b. 5 Apr 1743, Lebanon Co, PA, d. 5
| | Oct 1823, Lebanon Co, PA
| |--3-Mary Crall b. 1741
| |--3-Elizabeth Crall b. 1745
| |--3-Catherine Crall b. 1749
| |--3-Anna Crall b. 1753
| |--3-Henry Crall b. 1755, d. 1802, Heidelberg Twp,
| | Lebanon Co, PA
| |--3-Magdalena Crall b. 1757
| |--3-Barbara Crall b. 1764
|--2-Ulrich Crall
|--2-Christian Crall d. 1758
}}}
!!John Campbell Descendants
{{{
1-John Campbell b. 1 Oct 1788, d. 3 Jan 1867, (Campbell
Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
+Unknown
|--2-Edward Campbell b. 16 Dec 1816, d. 5 Nov 1901,
| (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
+Amanda Tupps b. 8 Sep 1820, m. 4 Jan 1838, Crawford
Co, OH, d. 19 Oct 1889, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone
Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
|--3-John Benton Campbell b. 4 Apr 1849, d. 30 Jun 1914,
| (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co,
| Ohio)
| +Jennie Frazier Shanks b. 28 Sep 1851, d. 28 Jun
| 1931, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford
| Co, Ohio), par. David Shanks and Jessie Frazier
| |--4-Mabel B. Campbell b. 4 Apr 1875, Whetsone Twp
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Apr 1967, (Oakwood
| | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Earl W. Crall b. 17 Oct 1875, Liberty Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH, m. 20 Jun 1904, Crawford Co,
| | OH, d. 18 Dec 1926, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | OH), par. John Raysor Crall and Catherine
| | Stephenson
}}}
See Crall Descendants for details here
{{{
| |--4-Urias Edward Campbell
|--3-Samuel K. Campbell b. 20 Dec 1841, d. 26 Feb 1908,
| (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co,
| Ohio)
|--3-Catharine Campbell
|--3-Lettie J. Campbell
}}}
!!Jacob Oberlander Descendants
{{{
1-Jacob Oberlander b. Abt 1765, Lancaster Co., PA, d. Abt
1816, Chanceford Twp, York Co, PA
+Susanna Baugher b. Abt 1773, Berwick Twp, York Co, PA, m.
Abt 1797, d. 21 Apr 1814, Chanceford Twp, York Co, PA
|--2-Jacob Baugher Oberlander b. 24 Dec 1803, Hanover Twp,
| York Co, PA, d. 22 Jan 1887, (Brokensword Cemetary,
| Crawford Co, OH)
+Elizabeth Albrecht b. 2 Jul 1805, Hanover Twp, York
Co, PA, d. 23 May 1883, (Brokensword Cemetary,
Crawford Co, OH)
|--3-Adam Oberlander b. 27 Oct 1827, d. 18 Apr 1882,
| (Brokensword Cemetary)
| +Caroline Hieber b. 11 Mar 1834, Weiler zum Stein,
| Marbach, Wurttemberg, Germany, m. 5 Jan 1851,
| Crawford Co, OH, d. 22 May 1908, (Brokensword
| Cemetary), par. Georg Jacob Hieber and Chritina
| Fritz
| |--4-George Addison Oberlander b. 27 Jun 1853, Lykens
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Mary Elizabeth Oberlander b. Abt 1855, Lykens
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 22 Jun 1908, (Brokenswor
| | d Cemetary)
| | +Frank Barney m. 23 Feb 1873, Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Fidelia Oberlander b. Abt 1859, Lykens Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Martha Oberlander b. Abt 1862, Lykens Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Jacob Anson Oberlander b. 23 Jan 1863, Lykens
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Emma Oberlander b. Abt 1865, Lykens Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Paul Oberlander b. 3 Aug 1866, Lykens Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 13 Jan 1937, Bucyrus,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Adam W. Oberlander b. 1870, Lykens Twp, Crawford
| | Co, OH
| |--4-Clarence Oberlander b. 17 May 1870, d. 23 Mar
| | 1943, (Brokensword Cemetary)
| | +Mary D. Reamsnyder b. 3 Sep 1871, m. 10 Feb
| | 1897, Crawford Co, OH, d. 25 Jul 1949,
| | (Brokensword Cemetary), par. Edward Reamsnyder
| | and Eva Tittlebaugh
| | |--5-Pearl M. Oberlander b. 5 Aug 1907, d. 27 Jan
| | | 1998, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | +Clark Campbell Crall b. 4 Jul 1908, d. 10 Oct
| | | 1947, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par.
| | | Earl W. Crall and Mabel B. Campbell
| | | |--6-Earl Walter Crall b. 19 Jun 1941, Marion,
| | | | Ohio
}}}
See [[JNA Bogen Descendants]] for details here
{{{
| | | |--6-Sylvia Joyce Crall b. 25 Jun 1936,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | |--5-Leo E. Oberlander b. 1904
| | |--5-Robert Charles Oberlander b. 12 Nov 1913, d.
| | | 12 Jun 1987, (Union Cemetary, Liberty Twp,
| | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | +Esther Ulmer m. 23 Sep 1939, Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-William Henry Oberlander b. 27 Jan 1857, Lykens
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 23 Feb 1925, Liberty
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| |--4-Elza Oberlander b. Abt 1877, Lykens Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH
|--3-Henry J. Oberlander b. 31 May 1847, Lykens Twp,
| Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Apr 1919, Bloomville, Seneca
| Co, OH
+Sarah Jane Feltis b. Abt 1856, Ohio, m. 25 Jun
1874, Crawford Co, OH
|--4-Ona Belle Oberlander b. 1878, d. 9 Dec 1937,
| Ottawa Lake, MI
| +John William Weisenauer b. 1 Apr 1873, Lykens
| Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 11 Feb 1897, Crawford
| Co, OH, d. 7 Oct 1934, Ottawa Lake, MI
|--4-Lawrence Oberlander r
}}}
!! Crall Origins
[>img[Henry Crall|images/Crall_Henry.jpg]]
The [[Crall Pedigree]] shows the major lines of ancestors for Earl Walter Crall (b: 1941)
The Crall families have been in the U.S. since the late 17th century and in Crawford County, Ohio since the mid-19th century. The Cralls origins are in Europe in Basel, Switzerland while that of the Oberlanders is in Wurrtemberg, Germany.
Descendants of the first Crall are listed in [[Crall Families Descendants]].
!!The Crall Line
In 1850 there were three farm families of Cralls living in Liberty township. All the parents had been born in Pennsylvania.
*Henry (age 71) and Elizabeth (age 65) Crall (parents of Henry and Simon Crall)
>Henry moved his family from Dauphin County, PA to Crawford County, OH in 1852
*Simon (age 42) and Elizabeth (age 42) and eight children
*Henry (age 32) and Julia (age 31) and five children
UNDER CONSTRUCTION - TO BE CONTINUED
<<notes>>
[>img[Index Map of Family Properties|maps/Crall_Index_CrawfordCo_tn.gif][maps/Crall_Index_CrawfordCo.gif]]<<imagebox>>
By 1855 most of the families of the Crall pedigree were living on farms in Crawford County, Ohio. There were three distinct regions of the county where families were located.
*Oberlanders in the North West (Holmes Township)
*Cralls in the North East (Liberty Township)
*Campbells in the South East (Whetstone-Jefferson Townships)
The index map here shows where the detail maps are in the County.
//Click on the map for a large image//
[img[Oberlander Farms|maps/button.gif][maps/Oberlander_prop.gif]]<<imagebox>> ''Oberlanders''
[img[Oberlander Farms|maps/button.gif][maps/Crall_prop.gif]]<<imagebox>> ''Cralls''
[img[Oberlander Farms|maps/button.gif][maps/Campbell_prop.gif]]<<imagebox>> ''Campbells''
//To select the property map desired
- click on a button//
Print out a Descendancy list of the earliest Crall - Mathias Crall
Look at info from Dauphin Co, PA
Get Data on Cralls and correct database as per wheeler geneology http://wheeler-roots.org
!!Direct Ancestors of Earl Walter Crall
| John G. Crall^^1^^<br>b:1809 Dauphin Co, PA<br>d:1879 Crawford Co, OH <br> //see Note// | Elizabeth Raysor<br>(1807-1893) | - | - | Edward Campbell^^2^^<br>(1816-1901) | Amanda Tupps<br>(1820-1889) | David Shanks | Jessie Frazier | Jacob B. Oberlander^^3^^<br>(1803-1887)<br>York Co, PA | Elizabeth Albrecht<br>(1805-1883) | - | - | - | - | - | - |
|>| John R. Crall<br>(1837-?) |>| Catherine Stephenson<br>(?-1883) |>| John B. Campbell<br>(1849-1914) |>| Jennie F. Shanks<br>(1851-1931) |>| Adam Oberlander<br>(1827-1882) |>| Caroline Hieber<br>(1834-1908) |>| Edward Reamsnyder |>| Eva Tittlebaugh |
|>|>|>| Earl W. Crall<br>(1875-1925) |>|>|>| Mabel B. Campbell<br>(1875-1926) |>|>|>| Clarance Oberlander<br>(1870-1943) |>|>|>| Mary D. Reamsnyder<br>(1871-1949) |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Clark C. Crall<br> (1908-1947) Marion, Ohio |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Pearl M. Oberlander<br>(1907-1998) Marion, Ohio |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Earl W.Crall<br> 1941- Ohio |
1. - Note: The following are the known ancesters of '' John G. Crall'' //(gggf = great great grand father)//
;gggf: __Jonathan Krall__ - b: Basel, Switzerland
;ggf: __Matthias Crall__ - b:1690 Basel, Switzerland - d:1785 Lancaster Co, PA
:Mary Betsy Shaffer - b:1720 PA - d:1788 Lebanon Co, PA
; gf:__Christian Crall__ - b: 1743 Lancaster Co, PA - d:1805 Lower Paxton Twp, Dauphin Co, PA
: Magdalena ? - b:? - d:1747
;f:__Henry Crall__ - b:1779 Dauphin Co, PA - d: 1865 Crawford Co, OH
:Elizabeth Henshew - b:1788 Harrisburg, PA - d:Crawford Co, OH
2 - The father of Edward Campbell was ''John Campbell'' (1788-1867) who moved from Wayne Co, OH to Crawford in 1823.
3. - Parents of Jacob B. Oberlander were ''Jacob and Susanna (Baugher) Oberlander'' who lived in York County, PA
/***
|Name|DcTableOfContentsPlugin|
|Author|[[Doug Compton|http://www.zagware.com/tw/plugins.html#DcTableOfContentsPlugin]]|
|Contributors|[[Lewcid|http://lewcid.org]], [[FND|http://devpad.tiddlyspot.com]], [[ELS|http://www.tiddlytools.com]]|
|Source|[[FND's DevPad|http://devpad.tiddlyspot.com#DcTableOfContentsPlugin]]|
|Version|0.4.1|
|~CoreVersion|2.2|
<<showtoc>>
!Description
This macro will insert a table of contents reflecting the headings that are used in a tiddler and will be automatically updated when you make changes. Each item in the table of contents can be clicked on to jump to that heading. It can be used either inside of select tiddlers or inside a system wide template.
A parameter can be used to show the table of contents of a seperate tiddler, <<showtoc tiddlerTitle>>
It will also place a link beside each header which will jump the screen to the top of the current tiddler. This will only be displayed if the current tiddler is using the <<showtoc>> macro.
The appearance of the table of contents and the link to jump to the top can be modified using CSS. An example of this is given below.
!Usage
!!Only in select tiddlers
The table of contents above is an example of how to use this macro in a tiddler. Just insert <<showtoc>> in a tiddler on a line by itself.
It can also display the table of contents of another tiddler by using the macro with a parameter, <<showtoc tiddlerTitle>>
!!On every tiddler
It can also be used in a template to have it show on every tiddler. An example ViewTemplate is shown below.
//{{{
<div class='toolbar' macro='toolbar -closeTiddler closeOthers +editTiddler permalink references jump'></div>
<div class='title' macro='view title'></div>
<div class='subtitle'>Created <span macro='view created date DD-MM-YY'></span>, updated <span macro='view modified date DD-MM-YY'></span></div>
<div class='tagging' macro='tagging'></div>
<div class='tagged' macro='tags'></div>
<div class="toc" macro='showtoc'></div>
<div class='viewer' macro='view text wikified'></div>
<div class='tagClear'></div>
//}}}
!Examples
If you had a tiddler with the following headings:
{{{
!Heading1a
!!Heading2a
!!Heading2b
!!!Heading3
!Heading1b
}}}
this table of contents would be automatically generated:
* Heading1a
** Heading2a
** Heading2b
*** Heading3
* Heading1b
!Changing how it looks
To modifiy the appearance, you can use CSS similiar to the below.
//{{{
.dcTOC ul {
color: red;
list-style-type: lower-roman;
}
.dcTOC a {
color: green;
border: none;
}
.dcTOC a:hover {
background: white;
border: solid 1px;
}
.dcTOCTop {
font-size: 2em;
color: green;
}
//}}}
!Revision History
!!v0.1.0 (2006-04-07)
* initial release
!!v0.2.0 (2006-04-10)
* added the [top] link on headings to jump to the top of the current tiddler
* appearance can now be customized using CSS
* all event handlers now return false
!!v0.3.0 (2006-04-12)
* added the ability to show the table of contents of a seperate tiddler
* fixed an error when a heading had a ~WikiLink in it
!!v0.3.5 (2007-10-16)
* updated formatter object for compatibility with TiddlyWiki v2.2 (by Lewcid)
!!v0.4.0 (2007-11-14)
* added toggle button for collapsing/expanding table of contents element
* refactored documentation
!To Do
* code sanitizing/rewrite
* documentation refactoring
* use shadow tiddler for styles
!Code
***/
//{{{
version.extensions.DcTableOfContentsPlugin= {
major: 0, minor: 4, revision: 0,
type: "macro",
source: "http://devpad.tiddlyspot.com#DcTableOfContentsPlugin"
};
// Replace heading formatter with our own
for (var n=0; n<config.formatters.length; n++) {
var format = config.formatters[n];
if (format.name == 'heading') {
format.handler = function(w) {
// following two lines is the default handler
var e = createTiddlyElement(w.output, "h" + w.matchLength);
w.subWikifyTerm(e, this.termRegExp); //updated for TW 2.2+
// Only show [top] if current tiddler is using showtoc
if (w.tiddler && w.tiddler.isTOCInTiddler == 1) {
// Create a container for the default CSS values
var c = createTiddlyElement(e, "div");
c.setAttribute("style", "font-size: 0.5em; color: blue;");
// Create the link to jump to the top
createTiddlyButton(c, " [top]", "Go to top of tiddler", window.scrollToTop, "dcTOCTop", null, null);
}
}
break;
}
}
config.macros.showtoc = {
handler: function(place, macroName, params, wikifier, paramString, tiddler) {
var text = "";
var title = "";
var myTiddler = null;
// Did they pass in a tiddler?
if (params.length) {
title = params[0];
myTiddler = store.getTiddler(title);
} else {
myTiddler = tiddler;
}
if (myTiddler == null) {
wikify("ERROR: Could not find " + title, place);
return;
}
var lines = myTiddler .text.split("\n");
myTiddler.isTOCInTiddler = 1;
// Create a parent container so the TOC can be customized using CSS
var r = createTiddlyElement(place, "div", null, "dcTOC");
// create toggle button
createTiddlyButton(r, "toggle", "show/collapse table of contents",
function() { config.macros.showtoc.toggleElement(this.nextSibling); },
"toggleButton")
// Create a container so the TOC can be customized using CSS
var c = createTiddlyElement(r, "div");
if (lines != null) {
for (var x=0; x<lines.length; x++) {
var line = lines[x];
if (line.substr(0,1) == "!") {
// Find first non ! char
for (var i=0; i<line.length; i++) {
if (line.substr(i, 1) != "!") {
break;
}
}
var desc = line.substring(i);
// Remove WikiLinks
desc = desc.replace(/\[\[/g, "");
desc = desc.replace(/\]\]/g, "");
text += line.substr(0, i).replace(/[!]/g, '*');
text += '<html><a href="javascript:;" onClick="window.scrollToHeading(\'' + title + '\', \'' + desc+ '\', event)">' + desc+ '</a></html>\n';
}
}
}
wikify(text, c);
}
}
config.macros.showtoc.toggleElement = function(e) {
if(e) {
if(e.style.display != "none") {
e.style.display = "none";
} else {
e.style.display = "";
}
}
};
window.scrollToTop = function(evt) {
if (! evt)
var evt = window.event;
var target = resolveTarget(evt);
var tiddler = story.findContainingTiddler(target);
if (! tiddler)
return false;
window.scrollTo(0, ensureVisible(tiddler));
return false;
};
window.scrollToHeading = function(title, anchorName, evt) {
var tiddler = null;
if (! evt)
var evt = window.event;
if (title) {
story.displayTiddler(store.getTiddler(title), title, null, false);
tiddler = document.getElementById(story.idPrefix + title);
} else {
var target = resolveTarget(evt);
tiddler = story.findContainingTiddler(target);
}
if (tiddler == null)
return false;
var children1 = tiddler.getElementsByTagName("h1");
var children2 = tiddler.getElementsByTagName("h2");
var children3 = tiddler.getElementsByTagName("h3");
var children4 = tiddler.getElementsByTagName("h4");
var children5 = tiddler.getElementsByTagName("h5");
var children = new Array();
children = children.concat(children1, children2, children3, children4, children5);
for (var i = 0; i < children.length; i++) {
for (var j = 0; j < children[i].length; j++) {
var heading = children[i][j].innerHTML;
// Remove all HTML tags
while (heading.indexOf("<") >= 0) {
heading = heading.substring(0, heading.indexOf("<")) + heading.substring(heading.indexOf(">") + 1);
}
// Cut off the code added in showtoc for TOP
heading = heading.substr(0, heading.length-6);
if (heading == anchorName) {
var y = findPosY(children[i][j]);
window.scrollTo(0,y);
return false;
}
}
}
return false
};
//}}}
The descendent lists start from the earliest ancestors that are known with that surname. These lists will show siblings and cousins not listed in pedigrees. Each list is truncated where it would duplicate descendants in another list.
The major families are with Descendency Lists are:
!!!Bogan Side Families
Bogan, Smith, Pfahler, Fetter, Kunkel, ~VanVoorhis,
!!!Kehrer Side Families
Kehrer, Albright, Kester, Cook, Reber, Volkmer, Laipply, Brucklacher, Diebler
The lists are as follows:
<<tagging Descendants>>
<<notes>>
Redo:
Descendant Charts still needed;
Pfahler
Fetter
Laipply
Diebler
Brucklacher
Other associated families of interest
Koontz
Baerkircher
''horizontal:''
{{{
* menu #1
** [[item #1-1]]
** [[item #1-2]]
** [[item #1-3]]
* menu #2
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
* menu #3
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
<<dropMenu>>
}}}
* menu #1
** [[item #1-1]]
** [[item #1-2]]
** [[item #1-3]]
* menu #2
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
* menu #3
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
<<dropMenu>>
''vertical:''
{{{
* menu #1
** [[item #1-1]]
** [[item #1-2]]
** [[item #1-3]]
* menu #2
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
<<dropMenu vertical>>
}}}
* menu #1
** [[item #1-1]]
** [[item #1-2]]
** [[item #1-3]]
* menu #2
** [[item #2-1]]
** [[item #2-2]]
** [[menu #2-3]]
<<dropMenu vertical>>
/% %/
/***
|''Name:''|DropDownMenuPlugin|
|''Description:''|Create dropdown menus from unordered lists|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz ( lewcid@gmail.com )|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#DropDownMenuPlugin|
|''Code Repository:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/svn/plugins|
|''Version:''|2.1|
|''Date:''|11/04/2007|
|''License:''|[[Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License|http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.2.5|
!!Usage:
* create a two-level unordered list using wiki syntax, and place {{{<<dropMenu>>}}} on the line after it.
* to create a vertical menu use {{{<<dropMenu vertical>>}}} instead.
* to assign custom classes to the list, just pass them as parameters to the macro {{{<<dropMenu className1 className2 className3>>}}}
!!Features:
*Supports just a single level of drop-downs, as anything more usually provides a poor experience for the user.
* Very light weight, about 1.5kb of JavaScript and 4kb of CSS.
* Comes with two built in css 'themes', the default horizontal and vertical.
!!Customizing:
* to customize the appearance of the menu's, you can either add a custom class as described above or, you can edit the CSS via the StyleSheetDropDownMenu shadow tiddler.
!!Examples:
* [[DropDownMenuDemo]]
***/
// /%
//!BEGIN-PLUGIN-CODE
config.macros.dropMenu={
dropdownchar: "\u25bc",
handler : function(place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler){
list = findRelated(place.lastChild,"UL","tagName","previousSibling");
if (!list)
return;
addClass(list,"suckerfish");
if (params.length){
addClass(list,paramString);
}
this.fixLinks(list);
},
fixLinks : function(el){
var els = el.getElementsByTagName("li");
for(var i = 0; i < els.length; i++) {
if(els[i].getElementsByTagName("ul").length>0){
var link = findRelated(els[i].firstChild,"A","tagName","nextSibling");
if(!link){
var ih = els[i].firstChild.data;
els[i].removeChild(els[i].firstChild);
var d = createTiddlyElement(null,"a",null,null,ih+this.dropdownchar,{href:"javascript:;"});
els[i].insertBefore(d,els[i].firstChild);
}
else{
link.firstChild.data = link.firstChild.data + this.dropdownchar;
removeClass(link,"tiddlyLinkNonExisting");
}
}
els[i].onmouseover = function() {
addClass(this, "sfhover");
};
els[i].onmouseout = function() {
removeClass(this, "sfhover");
};
}
}
};
config.shadowTiddlers["StyleSheetDropDownMenuPlugin"] =
"/*{{{*/\n"+
"/***** LAYOUT STYLES - DO NOT EDIT! *****/\n"+
"ul.suckerfish, ul.suckerfish ul {\n"+
" margin: 0;\n"+
" padding: 0;\n"+
" list-style: none;\n"+
" line-height:1.4em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li {\n"+
" display: inline-block; \n"+
" display: block;\n"+
" float: left; \n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li ul {\n"+
" position: absolute;\n"+
" left: -999em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li:hover ul, ul.suckerfish li.sfhover ul {\n"+
" left: auto;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish ul li {\n"+
" float: none;\n"+
" border-right: 0;\n"+
" border-left:0;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish a, ul.suckerfish a:hover {\n"+
" display: block;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li a.tiddlyLink, ul.suckerfish li a, #mainMenu ul.suckerfish li a {font-weight:bold;}\n"+
"/**** END LAYOUT STYLES *****/\n"+
"\n\n"+
"/**** COLORS AND APPEARANCE - DEFAULT *****/\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li a {\n"+
" padding: 0.5em 1.5em;\n"+
" color: #FFF;\n"+
" background: #0066aa;\n"+
" border-bottom: 0;\n"+
" font-weight:bold;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li:hover a, ul.suckerfish li.sfhover a{\n"+
" background: #00558F;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li:hover ul a, ul.suckerfish li.sfhover ul a{\n"+
" color: #000;\n"+
" background: #eff3fa;\n"+
" border-top:1px solid #FFF;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish ul li a:hover {\n"+
" background: #e0e8f5;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li a{\n"+
" width:9em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish ul li a, ul.suckerfish ul li a:hover{\n"+
" display:inline-block;\n"+
" width:9em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish li {\n"+
" border-left: 1px solid #00558F;\n"+
"}\n"+
"/***** END COLORS AND APPEARANCE - DEFAULT *****/\n"+
"\n\n"+
"/***** LAYOUT AND APPEARANCE: VERTICAL *****/\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li{\n"+
" width:10em;\n"+
" border-left: 0px solid #00558f;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical ul li, ul.suckerfish.vertical li a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover a {\n"+
" border-left: 0.8em solid #00558f;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover a:hover{\n"+
" width:8em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical {\n"+
" width:10em; text-align:left;\n"+
" float:left;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li a {\n"+
" padding: 0.5em 1em 0.5em 1em;\n"+
" border-top:1px solid #fff;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical, ul.suckerfish.vertical ul {\n"+
" line-height:1.4em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover ul, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover ul { \n"+
" margin: -2.4em 0 0 10.9em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover ul li a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover ul li a {\n"+
" border: 0px solid #FFF;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover a, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover a{\n"+
" padding-right:1.1em;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"ul.suckerfish.vertical li:hover ul li, ul.suckerfish.vertical li.sfhover ul li {\n"+
" border-bottom:1px solid #fff;\n"+
"}\n\n"+
"/***** END LAYOUT AND APPEARANCE: VERTICAL *****/\n"+
"/*}}}*/";
store.addNotification("StyleSheetDropDownMenuPlugin",refreshStyles);
//!END-PLUGIN-CODE
// %/
Pennsylvania was the most common location of most ancestors but some were located in nearby New York (Van Voorhis), Maryland and Virginia (Bogen) locations. The map below shows where the ancestors resided for a time. The table lists family, where, when and what part of the family were at the spot.
The Bogens and Van Voohris appear in more locations than the other families. In the Bogans it because John Henry moved frequently and was at all of the location shown for that family. With the Van Voorhis' it was because they were here for a longer period and several of their family moved to new locations. One Van Voorhis, Captain Daniel, was a drifter and lived in four of the locations shown on the map.
The earliest time listed for a particular family would be about when they arrived from Europe although some families such as the Kesters came at an earlier time that is not known. Families on the maternal side of a marriage lost their identity and so some families such as the Kleinfelters appear to never have left Pennsylvania. In most cases some members of the family, siblings and cousins, did not leave and their descendents are still in the locations specified.
This map was made using Google Maps and the list of locations is available as a kml file that can be used in Google Earth to plot these locations in good detail.
*[[KML File of Ancestor Locations|files/Ancestors in PA NY MD VA.kml]]
[img[Map of Ancestral Homes in Eastern U.S.A.|maps/ancestorsNY-PA-VA-tn.jpg][maps/ancestorsNY-PA-VA.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
Click on the map for a larger version
| Family | Location | Dates of Residence | Years | Which Family |h
| Bogen | Frederick, MD | 1783-1818 | 35 | Johanne Nicholas Andreas |
| Bogen | Petersburg, PA | 1810-1819 | 9 | John Henry |
| Bogen | Loudoun County, VA | 1819-1835 | 16 | John Henry |
| Fetter | Clearfield County, PA | 1848-1853 | 7 | George Sr. |
| Smith | Wheatfield Twp, Perry County, PA | 1788-1835 | 47 | John Jacob<br>Joseph |
| Kehrer | Loyalsock Twp, Lycoming Co, PA | 1805 - 1834 | 29 | Johannes (John) |
| Brucklacher | Hepburn Twp, Lycoming Co, PA | 1805 - 1838 | 33 | Daniel<br>Nancy |
| Van Voorhees | Flatlands, Kings Co, Brooklyn, NY | 1660-1730 | 70 | Steven Coert<br>Coert Steven<br>Johanne Coert |
| Van Voorhees | Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY | abt1700-1764 | abt 64 | Cornelius<br>Daniel<br>Capt Daniel |
| Van Voorhis | Fishkill Landing, Dutchess Co, NY | 1730-1810 | 80 | Johanne Coert<br>Coert<br>Sarah<br> Samuel |
| Van Voorhis | Rancocas Creek, NJ <br> Pigeon Creek, Carroll Twp, Washington Co, PA | 1780-1785<br>1785-1819 | 5<br>34 | Capt. Daniel |
| Van Voorhis | Carroll Twp, Washington Co, PA | 1810-1821 | 11 | Samuel Newton |
| Kester | Hartley Twp, Union Co, PA | bef 1765-1828 | > 63 | John<br>Jacob |
| Albrecht | Montgomery Co, PA | abt 1750-1785 | abt 35 | Joerg Adam<br>John Heinrich |
| Albrecht<br>Albright | Halifax Twp, Dauphin Co, PA | abt1785-1829 | abt 44 | Johann Heinrich<br>John |
| Diebler | Dauphine Co, PA | abt1730-1828 | abt 98 | Mathias<br>Albrecht<br>John George |
| Kirkpatrick | Rye Twp, Perry Co, PA | bef1750-abt1837 | >87 | Richard<br>Moses<br>Moses<br>Mary |
| Kunkel | Shrewsbury Twp, York Co, PA | 1776-1835 | 59 | Johann Heinrick<br>John Michael<br>Charles |
| Kleinfelter | Shewsbury Twp, York Co, PA | 1752-on | > 100 | Johann Peter<br>John Michael<br>Elisabeth Christina |
Female branches of families many times get lost because the daughter takes on her husband’s surname making it difficult to find her in historic records. This is the story a daughter of Joseph Lind Bogan who married into the ~McKanna family.
In 1855 Joseph L. Bogan and family had been back in Ohio from Lagrange County, Indiana for only a couple years. Joseph had established his family on a modest 100 acre farm just a mile south of North Robinson. It was that year that his oldest daughter, Ephelia Margaret, caught the eye of a local laborer, Amos ~McKanna. We know of the encounter from a description in Amos’ brief autobiography called “Book of His Life” ( A transcribed copy of his narrative is here).
His narrative relates incidents in his life starting with the death of his mother in 1849 in north western Ohio (most likely near Grover Hill, OH) when he was 12 years old. His family was split up after the event with the brothers and sisters placed at grandparents, other relatives and ‘strangers’ in Ashland County, Ohio ``` Amos’ paternal grandparents had passed away by this time so it must have been his mother’s parents. Her maiden name is uncertain but was either VanZile or Vengile. The location is identified as being near Hayesville in Vermillion Twp, Ashland Co. OH. My search of the 1850 census found 3 ~VanZile families (no Vengiles) including Thomas ~VanZile who was a pioneer of this area and patriarch of the families – There was only one Ezeriah ~McKanna listed in this township, living with a Dougherty family living nearby the ~VanZiles. There were no other McKannas recorded there. ``` while his father went to Pennsylvania. Amos was very attached to his older half-brother, Alfred, and when the later decided to head back to the old homestead in western Ohio, Amos joins him. They have a brief travel-adventure but find nothing for them at their destination. Their father returned from Pennsylvania to indenture them to families in Sycamore and Belle Vernon, Ohio. Alfred was soon on the move again and left for nearby Bucyrus to take a job on the ‘new’ railroad. Amos joined him there in 1853.
Amos had little schooling during this time but was handy with an ax and took a job cutting 500 cord of wood for one of the Bogans living near North Robinson```In all of his narrative, Amos never mentioned the names of his soon-to-be in-laws. It is only late in the tale that he reveals that the wood he is cutting is for Ephelia’s uncle. This could be either Samuel Bogen who had property north of North Robinson or John Bogen, who was living with his father, John Henry Bogen, on property north of Samuel’s. Most likely it was Samuel wood he was cutting since it was Ephelia’s grandfather who owned the farm. The name of the family is know only because marriage records give that Amos married Ephelia Bogan. ``` He managed a crew of five wood-cutters and was the best all of them all and as a result he got the attention of Joseph Bogan and his daughter, Ephelia. Amos introduces himself to the father and daughter during a visit (to Samuel Bogen presumably) and eventually starts dating her.
Locations of Events in the Life of Amos McKanna – (Google Map)
Zoom, Pan and Click on the event for information
<html><iframe width="600" height="400" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=204862204125835037704.00049cc3b15024868fa1e&ie=UTF8&t=h&ll=39.799096,-90.475116&spn=11.808922,18.676758&z=5&output=embed"></iframe></html>
View ~McKanna-VanZile-Bogan Story in a larger map
About this time, Amos’ brother’s writes to him from Kansas. Being with his brother drew him away from the area, even to the point of leaving his ‘blue-eyed girl’, as he called her. In March of 1855, he left Ohio to join Alfred working on the railroad in Manhattan, Kansas. In his travels west he took rail and boat to Leavenworth, Kansas but decided to walk from there to Manhattan. In the process, he got lost, found his way, met John Brown, and almost was killed by wolves but was saved by Indians. He joined Alfred who soon left Manhattan to follow John Brown in his activities with the Border Ruffians. After only a year in Kansas, Amos got lonely, then ill and decided in 1856 to return to Ohio.
Amos used up all of his cash on his return, but found sympathetic shelter in the home of his last employer in North Robinson. He was still ill on arrival so Ephelia was notified and she went to her uncle’s place and cared for him until he ‘could walk’. It turns out that he and Ephelia had made some promise of marriage before he left Ohio and he was accepted into the Joseph Bogan family. Amos wanted to work on the railroad but Joseph does not want a railroad worker as a son-in-law and encourages him to be come a farmer by offering to rent a farm for him. Joseph was generous enough to find the farm, pay the rent and give him a horse to work the land. After he had the farm going, he and Ephelia got married on 24 June 1858 ```The Crawford County marriage records give the year as 1858 ``` (although in Amos' narrative he remembered 1856 as the year).
Their first son, Joseph (probably named for Ephelia’s father), was born on 4 April 1859 in Crawford County, presumably at their farm. The Civil War started in the next year and although Amos did not volunteer, he was soon drafted and became a private in the 57th Ohio Infantry, Company A ```The 57th Ohio Infantry was organized in September of 1861 at Findlay Ohio. The 57th was involved in many battles throughout the war until mustered out in August 1865. ```. Amos was captured by the Confederates, probably at the battle of Chickasaw Bayou in December 1862 and spent six months in captivity. He returned home in mid-1863 to Ohio ``` Note: Amos says he was captured in the swamps in a retreat during the battle of Vicksburg but there were no such battles during the siege of Vicksburg which took place from May to July 1864. Amos’ son was born in March of 1864 so he had to be back home by June 1863. The Battle of Chickasaw Bayou was a defeat and retreat for the Union army and was preliminary to the Battle of Vicksburg. ``` . Amos was not satisfied with farming and the family moved to nearby Crestline, Ohio, a railroad center. He took a job as a Locomotive Engineer ``` When Amos was in Kansas in 1855, he had a job of maintaining a steam engine for a sawmill and gained the knowledge for steam engines. ``` and helped his wife raise five more children there. He mentioned in his narrative that he worked on the Pittsburg to Fort Wayne railway as a First Class Engineers around 1870.
The Amos McKanna family moved to Kansas about 1880 and settled in Fairview Township, Russell County, Kansas. At the time of the move the ages of the six children were: – Joseph at 21, William at 16, Elihu at 13, Della at 10, and twins Mary and Martha at 4.
In Kansas, Amos took up farming again. The family were blessed with another set of twins, Albert and Oliver in 1881. In July 1888 he traded the farm north of Bunker Hill, KS for one in Boone County, MO but by December of that year they had moved to Emporia, Kansas. Amos and wife, Margaret ``` In the census records, Ephelia, gave the name Margaret, her second name.```, stayed here until she died in 1905. Amos remarried in October of 1906 to Nancy Cooley. Both McKanna’s lived to 1915 when they died the same day, 30 October ```Thanks to Cherilee Ward who gave me a copy of the “Book of His Life: Amos McKanna” and other details on Amos McKanna’s history ```.
All the McKanna children lived in the state of Kansas but Joseph and William moved away later in their lives. In the list below you will note that oldest son, Joseph, went to Grover Hill, OH, perhaps he inherited the old McKanna place there ```This fact needs to be checked in the public land records```.
[>img[Oldest Son, Joseph, and his wife when they lived in Paulding Co, OH|images/PauldingCoHistory-McKanna.jpg]]
Below is a list of the children and where they resided at various US Census.
*Joseph S. b:1859 [Grover Hill, Paulding Co, OH 1900] [Putnam Co, OH 1910]
*William A. Harrison b:1864 [Berthoud, Larimer Co, CO 1900, 1920]
*Elihu H. b:1867 [Emporia, KS 1910]
*Della (Rockefeller) b: 1870 [location ?]
*Mary (Post) b: 1876 [location ?]
*Martha Jane (Bishop) b:1876 [location ?]
*Albert J b: 1881 [Emporia, Lyon Co, KS 1900-1920]
*Oliver b: 1881 [Hutchinson, Reno Co, KS 1910] [Benton Co, AR 1920]
Ephelia Margaret Bogan had two younger sisters, Mary Ellen who married Joseph ~McClintock and Sarah Jane who married John Overs. The ~McClintocks stayed in Crawford County Ohio, living in Bucyrus. The Overs moved to the small town of Burbank in Wayne County Ohio. I have no story comparable to the McKanna’s with which to illustrate their lives.
!!!Footnotes
These families are those of my parents who lived their lives in Crawford County, Ohio. Most of my ancestors are of German ancestors who arrived in North America (U.S.of A.) in the 18th and 19th century and either settled in Pennsylvania before moving to Ohio, or later came directly to Ohio. Most of them then stayed in the area for the rest of their lives. Below is a family tree for three previous generations. Use this to explore the ancestry.
These pedigree charts only go back to the grandparents of my parents. I have the pedigrees much farther back and those are linked to the names of the grandparents. Other families will appear in those pedigrees with links to more distant ancestors. An example is the ~VanVoorhis family that is in the Bogan line and goes back to 1600 and New Amsterdam.
!!!Father's Pedigree
|ggp|W. Edgar Bogan<br>(1873-1955)|Jessie May Smith<br>(1875-1957)|Charles E Pfahler<br>(1873-1936)|Clara Fetter<br>(1874-1952)|
|gp|>| Chester Bogan<br>(1896-1986) |>| Anona Pfahler<br>(1897-1996) |
|p|>|>|>| Raymond Bogan<br>(1917-2006) |
More Bogan Ancestors are in [[Bogan Pedigree]], [[Pfahler Pedigree]], [[Fetter Pedigree]], and [[Smith Pedigree]].
!!!Mother's Pedigree (bloodline)
|ggp|Samuel Kehrer<br>(1865-1942)|Amanda Albright<br>(1866-1931)|John C Volkmer<br>(1878-1957)|Mary Laipply<br>(1878-1965)|
|gp|>| Verda Kehrer<br>(1900-1943) |>| Russell Volkmer<br>(1900-1970) |
|p|>|>|>| Leota Reber <br>(1918-1998) |
More Kehrer Ancestors are in [[Kehrer Pedigree]] and in [[Albright Pedigree]].
Leota Reber was born from the union of Verda Kehrer and Russell Volkmer who did not marry.
Verda married Frank Reber in 1919 after Leota was born and they adopter her formally as a Reber in 1924. Leota's Reber family line is given below.
!!!Mother's Family Pedigree
|ggp|Samuel Kehrer|Amanda Albright|John J. Reber<br>(1843-1911)<br>b:Berne, Switzerland|Mary Plank<br>(1863-1914)<br>b: Blairsville, PA|
|gp|>| Verda Kehrer<br>1900-1943 |>| Frank Reber<br>(1888-1938) |
|p|>|>|>| Samuel Reber (Leota's half brother) <br>(1920-1942) |
Frank and Verda Reber had six children: Samuel, Delores, Onda, Robert, Jacqueline, and Frederick
The family of most of the ancestors in the 19th century, living in Crawford County, Ohio were on farms. This large map shows the location of those families concentrated mostly in Whetstone and Jefferson Townships with a couple in neighboring townships such as Jackson and Sandusky townships. This information is from the //Atlas of Crawford County 1855//. Jefferson Township did not exist in 1855 and Jackson Township was the name of most of that area.
//Put your mouse over the area of the farm and information text will appear.//
<html>
<map name="map1" ID="map1">
<area shape="rect" coords="702,154,723,194" href="files/JGPfahler.txt" title="John George Pfahler (1855) 80 A, Sandusky Twp. Section 25, John Kaler on west" />
<area shape="rect" coords="854,47,864,59" href="files/GFetter.txt" title="George Fetter town plot in West Libery" />
<area shape="rect" coords="498,373,527,407" href="files/SBogen.txt" title="Samuel Bogen (1855) 64 A Whetstone Twp. Section 1" />
<area shape="rect" coords="454,320,498,361" href="files/JHBogen.txt" title="John W. Bogan (1855) 120 A Whetstone Twp. Section 2 - John Henry Bogan's home" />
<area shape="rect" coords="565,443,601,475" href="files/JLBogan.txt" title="Joseph L Bogan (1855) 124 A, Jackson Twp. Section 10" />
<area shape="rect" coords="867,434,907,474" href="files/ECooper.txt" title="Edward Cooper (1855) 160 A, Jackson Twp. Section 8" />
<area shape="rect" coords="811,588,832,636" href="files/CKunkel.txt" title="Charles Kunkel (1855) 70 A Jackson Twp. Section 19 " />
<area shape="rect" coords="599,653,638,675" href="files/DJohnson.txt" title="Disberry Johnson (1855) 90 A Polk Twp. Section 26 " />
<area shape="rect" coords="539,552,564,593" href="files/JSmith.txt" title="Joseph Smith (1855) 100 A, Jackson Twp. Section 22 - Job Burwell on east" />
<area shape="rect" coords="235,602,257,642" href="files/JKester.txt" title="Jacob Kester (1855) 80 A Whetstone Twp. Section 29" />
<area shape="rect" coords="207,642,235,680" href="files/MKehrer.txt" title="Martin Kehrer (1855) 120 A Whetstone Twp. Section 29" />
<area shape="rect" coords="299,718,316,802" href="files/JAlbright.txt" title="John Albright (1855) 150 A Whetstone Twp. Sections 4&33" />
<area shape="rect" coords="386,757,402,797" href="files/JCook.txt" title="John Cook (1855) 74 A Whetstone Twp. Section 3 - John Diebler west side" />
<area shape="rect" coords=" " href=" " />
<area shape="rect" coords=" " href=" " />
</map>
<img src="maps/Crawford_Co_Ancestor_Properties.gif" usemap="#map1" width="1058" height="850" >
</html>
/% COMMENT: Modify this map to include more families later on
[img[Farm Location in Crawford County|maps/Crawford_Co_Ancestor_Properties.gif]]
Click on Image for Large Map THIS IS THE FIRST METHOD OF SHOWING THE MAP PRESERVED HERE %/
!!Boundary Changes - Crawford County
When the early settlers purchased farms in the area, some were, at the time, in Richland County. The final boundaries of Crawford County were not settled until 1842. The eastern part of Crawford Galion and east was in Richland County. The farm of Charles Kunkel and Edward Cooper were in Richland County when they were purchased.
The map of Europe below centers on Germany where most of the families originated. West central Germany was the location of most families - Wurttemberg, Hessen, Baden, and Rhineland. Two families, the Van Voorhees (from the Netherlands) and the Rebers (from Switzerland) are shown outside Germany. Germany did not become united as a nation until the mid 1870's and all of these families left before then, so most origins are identified by the region. Some families are from the United Kingdom and they are not shown here. See [[Origins]] for more details.
Hover the cursor of your mouse over the icons on the map to identify the family there.
The city or region and date of the birth of the person who immigrated to North America will be shown.
<html>
<map name="europe_map" id="europe_map">
<area shape="circle" coords="180,87,20" title="VanVoohees, Hees, Netherland, 1660">
<area shape="circle" coords="499,688,20" title="Pfahler, Amstetten, Wurttemberg, 1832 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="457,469,20" title="Kunkel, Floesbach, Gelnhausen, Hessen, 1750">
<area shape="circle" coords="416,589,20" title="Albright/Albrecht, Neckerbischofsheim, Baden, abt 1750 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="436,696,20" title="Kehrer, Betzinger, Baden-Wurttemberg, 1805">
<area shape="circle" coords="371,347,20" title="Smith, Wittgenstein, Baden, 1786 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="277,907,20" title="Reber, Berne, Switzerland, abt 1870 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="387,506,20" title="Fetter 1848 & Cook 1830, Hesse-Darmstadt ">
<area shape="circle" coords="610,377,20" title="Volkmer, Stadtilm, Thuringia, Saxony, bef 1856 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="335,553,20" title="Siebert, Hettenleidelheim, Bad Durkheim, Rheinland, bef 1840">
<area shape="circle" coords="319,567,20" title="Siebert, Hoch..">
<area shape="circle" coords="284,584,20" title="Bauer, Schmitshausen, Pfalz, abt 1852 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="471,367,20" title="Diebler, Kirchheim, ..., 1728 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="301,523,20" title="Diehl, Under Capeln, Glan River Valley, ... 1720 ">
<area shape="circle" coords="419,533,20" title="Bogan, Michelstadt, Hesse-Darmstadt, 1776">
<area shape="circle" coords="240,539,20" title="Kunckle, Glasshaus, Neuhutten, first home">
<img src="maps/Europe_Ancestors_mapB.jpg" title="Map of Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland where most ancestors originated" usemap="#europe_map" width="732" height="976">
</html>
Put your cursor over the orange dots to determine what family lived in this area of Germany, Netherlands or Switzerland.
[img[Germany and Surrounding Countries with Origins of Families|maps/Europe_ancestors.jpg]]
[>img[Drawing by Tunis of Pioneer Travel|images/Tunis_TravelScene_sm.gif]]There are so many ancestors in our past that it is difficult to visualize where they were and what they were doing at any one time. I have picked this two decade period (roughly one generation) early in the 19th century because it corresponds to the time the Bogan families were migrating to their final settlement in Crawford County, Ohio. I will summarize activities of the families of my great-great grandparents (this includes 20 families).
!!Historical Events of 1820-1840
Ohio became a state in 1803
| Year | Event(s) |h
| 1820 | Monroe elected for 2nd term as president of the US<br>Congress authorized extension of the <br>''[[National Road|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Road]]'' through Ohio toward the Mississsippii |
| 1824 | Inconclusive presidental election with John Q. Adams being selected as president |
| 1825 | ''[[Erie Canal|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eire_Canal]]'' finished from Albany to Buffalo, NY |
| 1828 | ''[[Baltimore and Ohio Railroad|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%26O_Railroad]]'' construction begins (connects Maryland with Ohio) <br> Andrew Jackson elected as President of the US |
| 1831 | ''Mechanical Grain Reaper'' invented by ~McCormick |
| 1832 | Andrew Jackson re-elected as president of the US<br>''[[Ohio Canal|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_and_Erie_Canal]]'' from Lake Erie to Ohio River is completed |
| 1836 | ''Arkansas'' becomes a state<br> Martin ~VanBuren elected president of the US |
| 1837 | ''Michigan'' becomes a state<br>Panic of 1837 (depression)<br> National Road stopped at Valdalia, Ill |
| 1840 | William Henry Harrison elected as president of the US<br> (Harrison died in 1841 and John Tyler becomes president) |
!Bogan Families
;Bogans
:JNA Bogan the first member of the family in North America died in 1819 and his oldest son, John Henry, moved his family to Loudoun County, Virginia. The last three of seven children were born there. The family stayed there for 15 years then moved to Stark County, Ohio for a few years until in 1840 they went to Marion County, Ohio. While in Stark County, three children, Eleanor, Samuel and Joseph married their partners ```Samuel married Charlotte Bowers in Nov 1837, Eleanor married Laman Haines in Nov 1838 and Joseph married Mary Cairns in Nov 1839```.
;Kunkels
:In 1820 Kunkels were established on farms in York County, PA. John Michael had 110 acres in Hopewell Township and his father Henry had 150 acres in Shrewsbury Township. Henry was the original Kunkel from Florsbach, Germany and died in 1827. John Michael's second son, Charles, moved to Sandusky Township, Richland County, OH in 1835 and settled on a 75 acre farm in section 19 of Sandusky Township. Charles was single until 1843 when he married Elizabeth Dome (Thom?).
;Smiths
:The Smiths had been in Perry County, PA since they left Wittgenstein, Baden, Germany in 1786. John Jacob Smith had left to avoid military service and by 1820 had nine children (seven boys and two girls) on a small farm. In 1835, youngest son, Joseph obtained 152 acres in the NW quarter of section 22 of Jackson Township, Crawford county. Brothers Jacob, Christian, George, and Daniel and sister Catherine (Smith) Gearhart also moved to Crawford County. In 1840 Joseph married Nancy Kirkpatrick in Richland County, OH.
;~VanVoorhis
:In 1822 Samuel Newton ~VanVoorhis obtained a patent for 80 acres for the East half of the SE quarter of section 21 in Whetstone Township of Crawford County, OH. Samuel had been living in Carroll Township of Washington county, PA with wife Sarah (Myers) ~VanVoorhis and his six children. Daughter, Harriet, was born in 1826 in Crawford County. Son, William Roe, married Hanna Jones in 1824 and raised a family in Cra. In 1836 the William Roe VanVoorhis family moved to Michigan and did not return until 1841 after Hanna died. In 1840 Samuel ~VanVoorhis was in Whetstone Township at the head of a family of nine. On return William Roe married Almeda Johnson, daughter of Disberry Johnson, in 1842 in Crawford County.
;Pfahlers
:Brothers John George and Matthias Pfahler arrived in the United States only in 1832 from Wurttemberg and purchased land in Crawford County and were naturalized there in June of 1840.
;Fetters
:The Fetters were still in the region of ~Hesse-Darmstadt in 1840. George Fetter who immigrated to the US in 1848, was a millwright, and had six children, who would come to N. America with him.```The Fetter children were Nicholas, Adam, George, Jacob, Catherine and Henry. Their mother was Catherine (Beach) Fetter.```
;Coopers
:The Coopers were early pioneers in Ohio. In 1821 Edward Cooper, at age 14, came to Crawford County from Harrison County, Ohio, with his mother Mary and father-in-law, Disberry Johnson. He married Eliz Burwell in 1828 and the family had five children by 1840 living on their farm in the SE quarter of section 8 in Jackson Township.
;Schwabs
:This family is still in Wurttemburg, Germany. Johanna Margarita Barbara Schwab was born there in 1838 and immigrates to the U.S. after 1840.
!Kehrer Families
;Kehrers
:Johannes Kehrer had immigrated from Baden-Wurttemberg in 1805 and settled in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania to farm there. In 1811 son, John, was born and in 1813 Martin was born. The two sons along with their sister Anna Maria (Kehrer) Stump purchased land in Whetstone Township, Crawford County in the early 1830s and moved there in 1838.
;Kesters
:John and Catherine (Stueben) Kester were living in Union County, PA in 1820 with a family of ten children. Oldest son, Jacob, was a log driver on the Susquehana River and in 1824 married Saloma Wise, also of Union County. John Kester died in 1826. The two emigrate to Ohio in 1828 using a conestoga wagon financed by Soloma. Most of Jacob's brothers and sisters also left Pennsylvania, but most went to Iowa, to Cedar County. In Crawford County, Ohio, Jacob obtained 80 acres to farm in section 29 of Whetstone Township. By 1840 the family consists of seven children. Son Joseph born in 1829 became a minister in the German Reform Church. Lydia Kester was born in 1840 and would later marry Daniel Kehrer.
;Albrights
:In 1820 John Albright was married to Sarah Shafer (m:1816), had two daughters, and was living in Dauphin County, PA. John's father, Johan Heinrich, also living there, died in that year. The family with four children moved to 73 acres in Whetstone Township, Crawford Co, OH in 1829. John was a boot and shoe maker as well as a farmer. The last of the seven children, John Jr, the Kehrer's direct ancestor was born in 1837.
;Cooks
:Peter Cook was in Hesse-Darmstadt in 1820 and immigrated to the U.S. in 1830 to settle in Whetstone Township of Crawford County, OH by 1834 ```The Peter Cook family stopped for four years in Franklin County, PA before going on to Ohio```. With him came his sons John and Henry Cook. Peter worked as a tailor as well farming 37 acres but died in 1835 soon after arriving in OH. John became a plasterer, worked hard and established a 340 acre farm in Whetstone Township.
;Volkmers
:Christian Volkmer, who was to come to America was not born until 1825 and was only 15 in 1840, lived in Saxony in the town of Stadtilm Thuringia.
;Seiberts
:Peter Seibert immigrated to the US from Hochspeyer, Kaiserslautern, Rheinland-Pfalz during this period. His brothers and sisters end up in Pittsburgh but he got a farm in Holmes Township in Crawford County, OH. He married Catherine Weaversmith there in Jan 1841.
;Laipplys
:Patriarch, Michael Laipply was an early Ohio settler and had 161 acres in Beaver Township of Mahoning County, Ohio by 1806. He died in 1821 leaving the property to the family. Sons, Michael (b: Germany 1786) and John (b: Ohio 1806) Laipply had farms made of the family acres plus additional nearby land. The families live in Mahoning county through 1840 and did not move to Crawford until the 1870's.
;Bauers
:The Bauers are living in Schmitshausen, Pfalz, Germany during this period. Adam is born to Peter and Barbara (Early) Bauer in 1819. Adam married in Pfalz in 1847 and immigrated to Chatfield Township, Crawford County, OH sometime after that.
!Reber Families
;Rebers
:Rudolf Reber and wife Margaret Teuscher, were living in Berne, Switzerland (ages unknown). They had a son in 1843, John Jacob, who in 1868 immigrated to Ohio.
;Planks
:No information on the family for that period.
;Lowmillers
:Adam Lowmiller was a weaver in Beaver township, Union County, PA. In 1920 he was 11 years old and we have no information on his parents. By 1840 he was married to Catherine Baker and their sons Daniel and William were in the family.
!!!!Footnotes:
<<showtoc>>
There are many Fetter families in North America. The Fetters discussed here are a descendent from one family that immigrated from Germany (~Hesse-Darmstadt) in 1848 and first settled in Bell Township of Clearfield County (about 10 miles east of Puxsutawney) in Pennsylvania ```The biography of sone, Nicholas Fetter, in 1881 states that they stopped over in Blair County, Pennsylvania but the 1850 US Census shows Clearfield County``` then moved to Crawford County, Ohio. There was already an unrelated George Fetter (age 40) in Claridon Township, Marion County, Ohio in 1850.
!!Arrival in North America
George Fetter was 42 years old when he moved his family across the Atlantic. They arrived on the “Larch” from London on 27 July 1848. With him was his wife Catherine (Beach) Fetter, and four sons, Nicholas (b:1832), Adam (b:1834), George A. (b:1836) and Jacob (b:1846). Their first settlement was in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, where Henry (b:1850) was born. George farmed and was a shingle maker.```Most of the information is from the biography of Nicholas Fetter in the History of Crawford County, Ohio 1881. Unaccountable, the US census lists the youngest children, Henry and Catherine as being born in Hesse-Darmstadt.```
!!Move to Ohio
In 1853 the family moved to Vernon Township in Crawford County, Ohio, settling on a small plot of land in the village of West Liberty.```George Fetter in listed in the index of the 1855 Atlas of Crawford County as having land in Section 17 of Vernon Twp, but there is nothing on the map that can be seen, however, the village of West Liberty is in that section```
In 1859, George’s oldest son, Nicholas, married Mary Heckler and set up his own household leaving George and Catherine plus George Junior, Adam, Catherine, Jacob and Henry in the West Liberty home. Nicholas went to work in a sawmill and by 1870 owned and operated his own mill in Crestline by 1870. George Junior was head of the household and supported the family as a tailor and Adam was working as a day laborer. The next year in 1860, George Junior married Angeline Phenosdal (in Richland County). Adam remained with his father until 1867 when he moved to Plymouth Townwhip in Richland County, married Hannah Knox and began farming there.
!!George A. Fetter and Family
George and Angeline had two sons Albert Samuel (b:1861) and Charles Henry (b:1867) but Angeline died shortly after Charle's birth. George A. married Johannah Margarita Schwab in 1869 ```Johanna is the daughter of a George Schwab and was born in Wurttemburg, in 1838. There are other Schwabs in the Chatfield area of Crawford County but they are not relatives. There is no evidence of her father, George, in Crawford County cemeteries. ```. By 1870 George Sr. was living with family of George A while wife Catherine is living in separately next to son Jacob. In 1872 George Sr. married Catherine Miller and moved to a home next to Jacob Fetter```George must have divorced Catherine because she did not die until 1884 and was living next to son Jacob and George in West Liberty in 1880```. George Sr. died in 1883.
Jacob married Phylinda Healy in 1866 and his older brother, Adam, much later (in 1903 at the age 69) married her half-sister, Ida. Both were daughters of Horace Healy. Adam's first wife, Hanna, died sometime before the turn of the century.
Two children, George Wesley (b:1871) and Clara Fetter (b:1874), were born to George A and Hannah (as Johanna Margarita was called). G. Wesley did not marry and died at a young age of 25 and Clara married farmer Charles Edward Pfahler in 1896. In 1900 the Charles Pfahlers are living in Sandusky Township near cousin, Jacob Fetter's```Jacob Wesley is the second son of Jacob and Phylinda (Healy) Fetter``` farm. Charles is a farm laborer. Clara's first child was Anona Pfahler, born in 1897, who later married Chester Bogan. Clara had another daughter in 1903 and a son in 1913 both of who marry into the Bogan clan but that story is told in the [[Pfahler Family]] story.
George A. Fetter’s family was not long lived and the 1890s was hard on the family. His second wife Hanna died in 1892 at age 54, he died in 1894 (one day before his 58th birthday ```4 Nov 1836 ``` , and his son George Wesley died in 1896 before Clara’s wedding. Clara’s half-brothers had longer lives: Albert lived to 1935 and Charles Henry to 1948.
No old photos of any of the Fetter family have come down to me. I do have a photo of Clara (Fetter) Pfahler and that is displayed on the Pfahler Stories page. The [[Pfahler Family]]’s and [[Bogan]]’s stories continue here.
!!!Footnotes
|George Fetter<br>b:~Hesse-Darmstadt 1806<br>d:Crawford Co, OH 1883|Catherine Beach<br>b:~Hesse-Darmstadt 1801<br>d:Crawford Co, OH 1884|Johann Georg Toias Schwab<br>b/d:Wurtemburg<br>1800-1856|Anna Maria Barbara Steigauf<br>b/d:Wurttemburg<br>1807-1876|
|>|George A. Fetter<br>b:~Hesse-Darmstadt 1836<br>d:Crawford Co, OH 1894|>|Johanna Margaretha Barbara Schwab<br>b:Wurtemburg1838<br>d:Crawford Co, OH 1892|
|>|>|>| Clara E. Fetter<br>1874-1952 |
George Fetter's father is known to be Henry Fetter and lived and died in ~Hesse-Darmstadt area of Germany.
/***
|''Name:''|FootnotesPlugin|
|''Description:''|Create automated tiddler footnotes.|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz ( lewcid@gmail.com )|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#FootnotesPlugin|
|''Code Repository:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/svn/plugins|
|''Version:''|2.01|
|''Date:''|10/25/07|
|''License:''|[[Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License|http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.2.2|
!!Usage:
*To create a footnote, just put the footnote text inside triple backticks.
*Footnotes are numbered automatically, and listed at the bottom of the tiddler.
*{{{Creating a footnote is easy. ```This is the text for my footnote```}}}
*[[Example|FootnotesDemo]]
***/
// /%
//!BEGIN-PLUGIN-CODE
config.footnotesPlugin = {
backLabel: "back",
prompt:"show footnote"
};
config.formatters.unshift( {
name: "footnotes",
match: "```",
lookaheadRegExp: /```((?:.|\n)*?)```/g,
handler: function(w)
{
this.lookaheadRegExp.lastIndex = w.matchStart;
var lookaheadMatch = this.lookaheadRegExp.exec(w.source);
if(lookaheadMatch && lookaheadMatch.index == w.matchStart )
{
var tiddler = story.findContainingTiddler(w.output);
if (!tiddler.notes)
tiddler.notes = [];
var title = tiddler.getAttribute("tiddler");
tiddler.notes.pushUnique(lookaheadMatch[1]);
var pos = tiddler.notes.indexOf(lookaheadMatch[1]) + 1;
createTiddlyButton(w.output,pos,config.footnotesPlugin.prompt,function(){var x = document.getElementById(title+"ftn"+pos);window.scrollTo(0,ensureVisible(x)+(ensureVisible(x)<findScrollY()?(findWindowHeight()-x.offsetHeight):0));return false;},"ftnlink",title+"ftnlink"+pos);
w.nextMatch = lookaheadMatch.index + lookaheadMatch[0].length;
}
}
});
old_footnotes_refreshTiddler = Story.prototype.refreshTiddler;
Story.prototype.refreshTiddler = function(title,template,force)
{
var tiddler = old_footnotes_refreshTiddler.apply(this,arguments);
if (tiddler.notes && tiddler.notes.length)
{
var holder = createTiddlyElement(null,"div",null,"footnoteholder");
var list = createTiddlyElement(holder,"ol",title+"footnoteholder");
for (var i=0; i<tiddler.notes.length; i++)
{
var ftn = createTiddlyElement(list,"li",title+"ftn"+(i+1),"footnote");
wikify(tiddler.notes[i]+" ",ftn);
createTiddlyButton(ftn,"["+config.footnotesPlugin.backLabel+"]",config.footnotesPlugin.backLabel,function(){window.scrollTo(0,ensureVisible(document.getElementById(this.parentNode.id.replace("ftn","ftnlink"))));return false;},"ftnbklink");
}
var count = tiddler.childNodes.length;
for (var j=0; j<count; j++){
if(hasClass(tiddler.childNodes[j],"viewer")){
var viewer = tiddler.childNodes[j];
}
}
viewer.appendChild(holder);
tiddler.notes = [];
}
return tiddler;
};
setStylesheet(
".tiddler a.ftnlink {vertical-align: super; font-size: 0.8em; color:red;}\n"+
".tiddler a.ftnlink:hover, .tiddler .footnoteholder a.ftnbklink:hover{color:#fff;background:red;}\n"+
".tiddler div.footnoteholder{margin:1.8em 1.0em; padding:0.1em 1.0em 0.1em 1.0em ;border-left: 1px solid #ccc;}"+
".tiddler footnoteholder ol {font-size: 0.9em; line-height: 1.2em;}\n"+
".tiddler .footnoteholder li.footnote {margin: 0 0 5px 0;}\n"+
".tiddler .footnoteholder a.ftnbklink{color:red;}\n","FootNotesStyles");
//!END-PLUGIN-CODE
// %/
John Henry Bogen was the patriarch of all Bogans in Crawford County, Ohio. He had six children who had the following children (Married names of females are in parentheses):
>//(See [[Bogan Early Chronology]] for John Henry's movements and final settlement in Crawford County, OH to establish all the Bogan's in that location) - More details of the children of John Henry are in [[JNA Bogen Descendants]].//
!!!Eleanor & Laman C Haines: four children
*2 male (Monroe W Haines, Columbus L Haines)
*2 female (Francis E //Marchant//, Martha //Huffman//)
|>|>|>| Eleanor ''Bogan'' __m__ Laman C. ''Haines'' |
| Monroe W. Haines | Columbus L. Haines | Francis E. (Haines) ''Marchant'' | Martha (Haines) ''Huffman'' |
!!!Samuel Bogen & Charlotte Bowers: ten children
*3 male (Slyvester, Emmanuel, William Silas)
*7 female (Emeline //Heckert//, Martha //Weller//, Selinda //Caskey//, Amelia -, Mary E //Gelbaugh//, Sarah A //Sheldon//, Catherine //Scheckler//, Tabitha //Eicher//)
!!!Joseph L Bogan & Mary Carnes: ten children
*7 male (John Andrew, William Lemon, Henry Harrison, George W, Jefferson L, Joseph Monroe, Samuel J)
*3 female (Ephelia M //Mckanna//, Mary E //~McClintock//, Sara Jane //Over//)
!!! John W Bogan & Candace Ferrall: three children
*2 male (Harry J, William R)
*1 female (Cora E //Harris//)
!!!Caroline & Gilert Hall: two children (in Cheery Twp, Mongomery Co, Kansas 1880)
*Andaville
*Margaret G
!!!Susan & Jeremiah Correll #: six children
*3 male (John F, William W, Monroe E)
*3 female (Cora E -, Ethel E //Odeffer//, Jennie D //Omweg//)
//#(Jeremiah Correll was a grandson of John Lind and cousin of Susan)//
!Descendants of Hans Kunckel
{{{
1-Hans Kunckel b. 1530, Glasshaus, Neuhutten, Germany
+Anna Wolfgang b. 1535, Glasshaus, Neuhutten, Germany, m.
1554, d. 1571, Glasshaus, Neuhutten, Germany
|--2-Johannes Jurg Kunckel b. 1565, Glasshaus, Neuhutten,
| Germany, d. 1640, Glasshaus, Neuhutten, Germany
+Elisabeth Christina Houser b. 1573, Glasshaus,
Neuhutten, Germany, m. 1591, d. 1633, Glasshaus,
Neuhutten, Germany
|--3-Johan Georg Kunckel b. Abt 1595, Glasshaus,
| Neuhutten, Germany, d. 1645, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| Hessen, Germany
+Anna Magdalina Unknown b. Abt 1600, Florsbach,
Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, m. Abt 1620, Germany
|--4-Hans Jacob Kunckel b. Abt 1630, Florsbach,
| Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. Apr 1712,
| Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany
+Elisabeth Ickus b. Abt 1640, Lohrhaupten,
Geinhausen, Germany, m. Abt 1655, Lohrhaupten,
Geinhausen, Germany
|--5-Hans Nikolaus Kunckel b. 20 Mar 1677,
| Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 14
| May 1723, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| Germany
| +Elisabeth Steigerwald b. 1681, m. 30 Jan
| 1703, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| d. 20 Mar 1732, par. Eberhard Steigerwald and
| Unknown
| |--6-Johann "Martin" Kunckel b. Abt 1706,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d.
| | 15 Nov 1771, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| | Hessen, Germany
| | +Anna Margaretha Schuster b. 1721,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, m.
| | 18 Feb 1738, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| | Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Susanna Margarethe Kunckel b. 10 Jun
| | | 1739, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | | Germany
| | |--7-Johann Melchior Kunckel b. 3 Mar 1741,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 8 Feb 1801
| | |--7-Johann Michael Kunckel b. 28 Apr 1741,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. Bef Apr 1788, Shrewsbury Twp, York
| | | City, PA
| | |--7-Infant Kunckel b. 30 Nov 1744,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 30 Nov 1744, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| | | Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Anna Barbara Kunckel b. 10 Jan 1747,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 4 Jun 1765, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| | | Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Johann Heinrich "Henry" Kunkel b. 15
| | | Feb 1751, Florsbach, Germany, d. 1827, Y
| | | ork Co, Pennsylvania
| | | +Elisabeth Christina Kleinfelter b. 17
| | | Feb 1763, York, PA, m. 22 Apr 1783,
| | | Springfield Twp, York Co, PA, d. 28 Mar
| | | 1815, (Fissel Cem, Glen Rock, PA), par.
| | | Johann Michael Kleinfelter and
| | | Appolonia Gerberich
| | | |--8-John Michael Kunkel b. 12 Feb 1784,
| | | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, d. 7
| | | | Aug 1846, (Middleton Cem, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH)
| | | | +Susanna Diehl b. 2 Feb 1785,
| | | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, m.
| | | | Abt 1805, Fawn Twp, York Co, PA, d.
| | | | 1 Dec 1814, Fawn Twp, York Co, PA,
| | | | par. Johann Carl (Charles) Diehl and
| | | | Anna Christiana Stabler
| | | | |--9-Catherina Kunkel b. 2 Mar 1806,
| | | | | d. 1 Feb 1897, Parma, Ohio
| | | | |--9-Susanna Kunkel b. 1807, d. , Ohio
| | | | |--9-Joseph Kunkel b. 9 Mar 1809, York
| | | | | Co, Pennsylvania, d. 1 Nov 1850, (
| | | | | Fissel Cem, Glen Rock, PA)
| | | | |--9-Charles C. Kunkel b. 6 Jun 1811,
| | | | | York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 4 Sep
| | | | | 1883, (Middleton Cem, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH)
| | | | | +Elizabeth Dome b. 17 Nov 1820,
| | | | | Harrisburg, Dauphin Co, PA, m. 7
| | | | | Apr 1843, Richland Co, OH, d. 1
| | | | | Oct 1885, (Middleton Cem,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH), par. Unknown
| | | | | Dome and Unknown
| | | | | |--10-Nancy Kunkel b. 1837, Ohio
| | | | | | +Alex Dacy m. 21 Feb 1860,
| | | | | | Crawford Co Ohio - Sandusky
| | | | | | Twp
| | | | | |--10-Sarah Kunkel b. 15 Dec 1837,
| | | | | | Ohio, d. 2 Jul 1863,
| | | | | | (Middleton Cem, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | OH)
| | | | | | +Charles (or) W Orr m. 2 Apr
| | | | | | 1863, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--10-Charles C. II Kunkel b. 28
| | | | | | Jul 1839, Ohio, d. 12 Aug
| | | | | | 1866, Ohio
| | | | | |--10-Joseph Wallace Kunkel b. 13
| | | | | | Jan 1844, Richland Co, OH, d.
| | | | | | 19 Nov 1917, (Fairview
| | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | +Catherine Burgin m. 19 May
| | | | | | 1864, Crawford Co Ohio -
| | | | | | Sandusky Twp
| | | | | |--10-Daniel Kunkel b. 1 May 1845,
| | | | | | Ohio, d. 23 Nov 1902,
| | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | |--10-Samuel Elias Kunkel b. 22 Feb
| | | | | | 1847, Crawford Co, OH, d. 15
| | | | | | Oct 1906, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | |--10-Leah Anne Kunkel b. 13 Mar
| | | | | | 1849, Ohio, d. 6 Nov 1934,
| | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | +Henry Harrison Bogan b. 1 Jan
| | | | | | 1846, Ohio (Marion Co.), m. 2
| | | | | | Jul 1870, North Robinson, OH,
| | | | | | d. 10 Mar 1913, (Fairview
| | | | | | (Galion, Ohio)), par. Joseph
| | | | | | Lind Bogan and Mary A. Carnes
}}}
See __[[JNA Bogen Descendants]]__ starting at Henry Harrison Bogan
{{{
| | | | | |--10-John R Kunkel b. 1851,
| | | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co Ohio,
| | | | | | d. 1851, (Middleton Cem,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | | |--10-Mary C Kunkel b. Abt 1852,
| | | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co Ohio,
| | | | | | d. Bef 1880
| | | | | | +Jefferson L Bogan b. 10 Oct
| | | | | | 1848, Indiana (Lagrange Co),
| | | | | | m. 24 Dec 1870, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | OH, d. 29 May 1905, Fairview
| | | | | | (Galion, Ohio), par. Joseph
| | | | | | Lind Bogan and Mary A. Carnes
| | | | | | |--11-Fannie Bogan
| | | | | | |--11-Laura Bogan b. 30 Oct
| | | | | | | 1871, d. 14 May 1877,
| | | | | | | (Middleton Cem, Crawford
| | | | | | | Co, OH)
| | | | | | |--11-Charles Linn Bogan b. 20
| | | | | | | May 1875, d. 21 May 1931,
| | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | |--11-Daisy Belle Bogan b. 1877,
| | | | | | | d. 29 Jan 1905
| | | | | | |--11-Jessie A Bogan b. 17 Jul
| | | | | | | 1877, d. 2 Apr 1907,
| | | | | | | Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | | | |--10-William A Kunkel b. Oct 1854,
| | | | | | d. 23 Sep 1855, (Middleton
| | | | | | Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | | |--10-Jacob Aakason Kunkel b. Abt
| | | | | | 1858, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--10-Elizabeth Ellen Kunkel b.
| | | | | | 1856, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--10-Delila J Kunkel b. 1861, Ohio
| | | | | +James Emery b. 1846,
| | | | | Pennsylvania, m. 28 Dec 1878,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--9-Henry Kunkel b. 2 Sep 1814, Fawn
| | | | | Twp, York Co, PA, d. 2 Nov 1894,
| | | | | Fawn Twp, York Co, PA
| | | | +Ruth White b. 1818, Hartford Co,
| | | | MD, m. 1838, Hartford Co, MD, d.
| | | | 1852, Pennsylvania
| | | | +Sarah V. Herbert b. 1828,
| | | | Hartford Co, MD, m. 1853, Fawn
| | | | Twp, York Co, PA, d. 14 Feb 1898,
| | | | Fawn Twp, York Co, PA
| | | | +Anna Catherine Sentz b. 1791, York
| | | | Co, Pennsylvania, m. 1815,
| | | | Pennsylvania, d. 13 Jun 1870,
| | | | Bluffton, Wells Co, IN, par. Peter
| | | | Sentz and Unknown
| | | | |--9-Michael Kunkel b. 21 Sep 1816,
| | | | | York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 7 May 18
| | | | | 86, Bluffton, Wells Co, IN
| | | | | +Julia Mason b. Abt 1816, Richland
| | | | | Co, OH, m. 20 Jun 1839, Sandusky
| | | | | Twp, Richland Co, OH, d. 1847,
| | | | | Middleton, Jefferson Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Mary Ann Kleinknight b. 3 Dec
| | | | | 1827, Middleton, Butler Co, OH,
| | | | | m. 1 Mar 1849, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | d. 27 Feb 1913, Bluffton, Wells
| | | | | Co, IN
| | | | |--9-Elizabeth Kunkel b. 1818, d.
| | | | | After 1907
| | | | |--9-Samuel Daugherty Kunkel b. 25 Aug
| | | | | 1820, Shrewsbury Twp, York City,
| | | | | PA, d. 1 May 1915, Monmouth, Root
| | | | | Twp, Adams Co, IN
| | | | |--9-Mary Kunkel b. Abt 1822, York Co,
| | | | | Pennsylvania, d. After 1907
| | | | | +Frederick Myers m. 22 Aug 1841,
| | | | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| | | | |--9-Lydia Kunkel b. Abt 1826,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. After 1907
| | | | | +David W. Gilliland m. 10 Nov
| | | | | 1845, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--9-Polly Dianah Kunkel b. Abt 1824,
| | | | | York Co, Pennsylvania
| | | | |--9-Matilda Kunkel b. 4 Jun 1828,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Aug 1911,
| | | | | Forrest, Livingston Co, IL
| | | | | +Andrew Miller m. 5 Dec 1852,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--9-Nancy Kunkel b. Abt 1831,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. After 1907
| | | | | +Henry Miller m. 7 Jun 1849,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Alex Dacy m. 21 Dec 1860,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--9-Rebecca Kunkel b. 15 Nov 1836,
| | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co Ohio, d.
| | | | | 25 Dec 1920, Lancaster Twp, Wells
| | | | | Co, IN
| | | | |--9-Louisa Kunkel
| | | |--8-Eva Elizabeth Kunkel b. 3 Nov 1791,
| | | | York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 22 Nov
| | | | 1885, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +John Hise b. , York Co,
| | | | Pennsylvania, m. fall 1819, York Co,
| | | | Pennsylvania
| | | | |--9-William H. Hise b. 25 Jul 1818,
| | | | | York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 19 Aug
| | | | | 1905, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +Isabelle Ridgely b. 15 Jul 1818,
| | | | Wayne Co, Ohio, m. 13 Mar 1845,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 10 Mar 1895,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, par. Westall
| | | | Ridgely and Elizabeth Heim
| | | | |--10-Sarah C. Hise
| | | | |--10-John W. Hise
| | | | |--10-Andrew H. Hise
| | | | |--10-Nora B. Hise
| | | | |--10-Rebecca Hise
| | | | |--10-Samuel L. Hise
| | | | +Samuel Lare b. 17 Aug 1794,
| | | | Pennsylvania, m. 31 Jul 1844,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 27 Oct 1878,
| | | | (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | | |--8-Rebecca Kunkel d. 1877
| | | +Ehrman
| | |--7-David Kunckel b. 20 Mar 1753,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. Abt 1810-1820, Middlebrook, Augusta
| | | Co, VA
| | | +Elizabeth b. 21 Sep 1762, Fittlinger,
| | | Geinhausen, Prussia, m. Abt 1780,
| | | Fittlinger, Geinhausen, Prussion, d. ,
| | | Augusta Co, VA
| | | |--8-Jacob Kunckel
| | |--7-Anna Elizabeth Kunckel b. 24 May 1755,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Johann (John) Kunckel b. 12 Nov 1757,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 1821, Pennsylvania
| | +Anna Barbara Kleinfelter b. 31 May
| | 1761, Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, m.
| | York Co, Pennsylvania, par. Johann
| | Michael Kleinfelter and Appolonia
| | Gerberich
| | |--8-John Kunckel Junior b. 20 Aug 1781,
| | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, d. 9
| | | Aug 1816, Hopewell Twp, York Co, PA
| | |--8-Elizabeth Kunckel b. 5 Nov 1782,
| | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| | |--8-Mary Magdalena Kunckel b. 1784,
| | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| | |--8-Justina Kunckel b. 13 Oct 1790,
| | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| | +Magalena Lindenberg b. 15 Aug 1700,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, m.
| | 5 Jan 1727, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | Germany, d. Abt 1737, Florsbach, Geinhausen
| | , Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Hans Georg Kunckel b. 1727, Florsbach,
| | | Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 1729,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Anna Margarethe Kunckel b. 1730,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 1733
| | |--7-Johannes Kunckel b. 1735, Florsbach,
| | | Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 1790,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany
| | |--7-Johann Peter Kunckel b. 1737,
| | | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany,
| | | d. 1737, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | | Germany
| |--6-Johannes (Hans) Michael Kunckel b. Abt
| | 1704, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | Germany, d. 1 Jun 1729, Florsbach,
| | Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany
| |--6-Johann Peter Kunckel b. 18 Oct 1716,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d.
| | 9 May 1789, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | Germany
| |--6-Johan Eberhard Kunckel b. 12 Dec 1722
| |--6-Lorenz Kunckel b. Abt 1714, Florsbach,
| | Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 22 Jun
| | 1725, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| | Germany
| |--6-Anna Margarethe Kunckel b. 12 Dec 1718,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d.
| | 22 Feb 1719, Florsbach, Geinhausen,
| | Hessen, Germany
| |--6-Johannes Eberhard Kunckel b. 12 Nov 1722,
| | Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d.
| | , Pennsylvania
|--5-Johann Sebastian Kunkel b. 18 Feb 1675,
| Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 14
| Oct 1737, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| Germany
+Anna Catharina Samer b. 10 Dec 1677,
Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, m. 29
Jan 1700, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
Germany, d. 4 Mar 1744, Florsbach,
Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, par. Unknown and
Unknown
|--6-Eva Elisabeth Kunkel b. 29 Sep 1703,
| Florsbach, Hessen, Germany, d. After 1754
| +Johann Peter Kleinfelter b. 2 Apr 1702,
| Florsbach, Hessen, Germany, m. 21 Jun
| 1724, Kempfrenbrunn, Germany, d. Unknown,
| par. Hans Jorg Kleinfelter and Margaretha
| Rheinhart
| |--7-Johann Michael Kleinfelter b. 10 Jun
| | 1736, Florsbach, Germany, d. 17 Jul
| | 1807, Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| +Appolonia Gerberich b. 10 Jun 1736,
| Altfeld bei Marktheidenfeld, Bavaria,
| Germany, m. Abt 1758, d. After 1780,
| Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, par.
| Johannes Hans Gerberich and Christina
| Schuh
| |--8-Elisabeth Christina Kleinfelter b.
| | 17 Feb 1763, York, PA, d. 28 Mar
| | 1815, (Fissel Cem, Glen Rock, PA)
| | +Johann Heinrich "Henry" Kunkel b. 15
| | Feb 1751, Florsbach, Germany, m. 22
| | Apr 1783, Springfield Twp, York Co,
| | PA, d. 1827, York Co, Pennsylvania,
| | par. Johann "Martin" Kunckel and
| | Anna Margaretha Schuster
| | |--9-John Michael Kunkel b. 12 Feb
| | | 1784, Shrewsbury Twp, York City,
| | | PA, d. 7 Aug 1846, (Middleton
| | | Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Susanna Diehl b. 2 Feb 1785,
| | | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA, m.
| | | Abt 1805, Fawn Twp, York Co, PA,
| | | d. 1 Dec 1814, Fawn Twp, York Co,
| | | PA, par. Johann Carl (Charles)
| | | Diehl and Anna Christiana Stabler
| | | |--10-Catherina Kunkel b. 2 Mar
| | | | 1806, d. 1 Feb 1897, Parma,
| | | | Ohio
| | | |--10-Susanna Kunkel b. 1807, d. ,
| | | | Ohio
| | | |--10-Joseph Kunkel b. 9 Mar 1809,
| | | | York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 1
| | | | Nov 1850, (Fissel Cem, Glen
| | | | Rock, PA)
| | | |--10-Charles C. Kunkel b. 6 Jun
| | | | 1811, York Co, Pennsylvania,
| | | | d. 4 Sep 1883, (Middleton Cem,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Elizabeth Dome b. 17 Nov 1820,
| | | | Harrisburg, Dauphin Co, PA, m.
| | | | 7 Apr 1843, Richland Co, OH,
| | | | d. 1 Oct 1885, (Middleton Cem,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH), par. Unknown
| | | | Dome and Unknown
| | | | |--11-Nancy Kunkel b. 1837, Ohio
| | | | |--11-Sarah Kunkel b. 15 Dec
| | | | | 1837, Ohio, d. 2 Jul 1863,
| | | | | (Middleton Cem, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH)
| | | | |--11-Charles C. II Kunkel b. 28
| | | | | Jul 1839, Ohio, d. 12 Aug
| | | | | 1866, Ohio
| | | | |--11-Joseph Wallace Kunkel b.
| | | | | 13 Jan 1844, Richland Co,
| | | | | OH, d. 19 Nov 1917,
| | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | |--11-Daniel Kunkel b. 1 May
| | | | | 1845, Ohio, d. 23 Nov 1902,
| | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | |--11-Samuel Elias Kunkel b. 22
| | | | | Feb 1847, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | d. 15 Oct 1906, (Fairview
| | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | |--11-Leah Anne Kunkel b. 13 Mar
| | | | | 1849, Ohio, d. 6 Nov 1934,
| | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | |--11-John R Kunkel b. 1851,
| | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co
| | | | | Ohio, d. 1851, (Middleton
| | | | | Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | |--11-Mary C Kunkel b. Abt 1852,
| | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co
| | | | | Ohio, d. Bef 1880
| | | | |--11-William A Kunkel b. Oct
| | | | | 1854, d. 23 Sep 1855,
| | | | | (Middleton Cem, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH)
| | | | |--11-Jacob Aakason Kunkel b.
| | | | | Abt 1858, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--11-Elizabeth Ellen Kunkel b.
| | | | | 1856, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--11-Delila J Kunkel b. 1861,
| | | | | Ohio
| | | |--10-Henry Kunkel b. 2 Sep 1814,
| | | | Fawn Twp, York Co, PA, d. 2
| | | | Nov 1894, Fawn Twp, York Co,
| | | | PA
| | | +Ruth White b. 1818, Hartford
| | | Co, MD, m. 1838, Hartford Co,
| | | MD, d. 1852, Pennsylvania
| | | +Sarah V. Herbert b. 1828,
| | | Hartford Co, MD, m. 1853, Fawn
| | | Twp, York Co, PA, d. 14 Feb
| | | 1898, Fawn Twp, York Co, PA
| | | +Anna Catherine Sentz b. 1791,
| | | York Co, Pennsylvania, m. 1815,
| | | Pennsylvania, d. 13 Jun 1870,
| | | Bluffton, Wells Co, IN, par.
| | | Peter Sentz and Unknown
| | | |--10-Michael Kunkel b. 21 Sep
| | | | 1816, York Co, Pennsylvania,
| | | | d. 7 May 1886, Bluffton, Wells
| | | | Co, IN
| | | | +Julia Mason b. Abt 1816,
| | | | Richland Co, OH, m. 20 Jun
| | | | 1839, Sandusky Twp, Richland
| | | | Co, OH, d. 1847, Middleton,
| | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +Mary Ann Kleinknight b. 3 Dec
| | | | 1827, Middleton, Butler Co,
| | | | OH, m. 1 Mar 1849, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH, d. 27 Feb 1913,
| | | | Bluffton, Wells Co, IN
| | | |--10-Elizabeth Kunkel b. 1818, d.
| | | | After 1907
| | | |--10-Samuel Daugherty Kunkel b. 25
| | | | Aug 1820, Shrewsbury Twp, York
| | | | City, PA, d. 1 May 1915,
| | | | Monmouth, Root Twp, Adams Co,
| | | | IN
| | | |--10-Mary Kunkel b. Abt 1822, York
| | | | Co, Pennsylvania, d. After
| | | | 1907
| | | | +Frederick Myers m. 22 Aug
| | | | 1841, Shrewsbury Twp, York
| | | | City, PA
| | | |--10-Lydia Kunkel b. Abt 1826,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. After 1907
| | | | +David W. Gilliland m. 10 Nov
| | | | 1845, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--10-Polly Dianah Kunkel b. Abt
| | | | 1824, York Co, Pennsylvania
| | | |--10-Matilda Kunkel b. 4 Jun 1828,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Aug
| | | | 1911, Forrest, Livingston Co,
| | | | IL
| | | | +Andrew Miller m. 5 Dec 1852,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--10-Nancy Kunkel b. Abt 1831,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. After 1907
| | | | +Henry Miller m. 7 Jun 1849,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +Alex Dacy m. 21 Dec 1860,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--10-Rebecca Kunkel b. 15 Nov
| | | | 1836, Jackson Twp Crawford Co
| | | | Ohio, d. 25 Dec 1920,
| | | | Lancaster Twp, Wells Co, IN
| | | |--10-Louisa Kunkel
| | |--9-Eva Elizabeth Kunkel b. 3 Nov
| | | 1791, York Co, Pennsylvania, d. 22
| | | Nov 1885, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +John Hise b. , York Co,
| | | Pennsylvania, m. fall 1819, York
| | | Co, Pennsylvania
| | | |--10-William H. Hise b. 25 Jul
| | | | 1818, York Co, Pennsylvania, d.
| | | | 19 Aug 1905, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +Isabelle Ridgely b. 15 Jul
| | | 1818, Wayne Co, Ohio, m. 13
| | | Mar 1845, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| | | 10 Mar 1895, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | par. Westall Ridgely and
| | | Elizabeth Heim
| | | |--11-Sarah C. Hise
| | | |--11-John W. Hise
| | | |--11-Andrew H. Hise
| | | |--11-Nora B. Hise
| | | |--11-Rebecca Hise
| | | |--11-Samuel L. Hise
| | | +Samuel Lare b. 17 Aug 1794,
| | | Pennsylvania, m. 31 Jul 1844,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 27 Oct 1878,
| | | (Crall Cem. Liberty Twp)
| | |--9-Rebecca Kunkel d. 1877
| | +Ehrman
| |--8-Christina Kleinfelter b. 19 Apr 1764
| | +John Adam Stabler b. 1 Nov 1760, m.
| | Abt 1784, d. 19 Nov 1791, par.
| | Christian Stabler and Anna Fritz
| |--8-Anna Barbara Kleinfelter b. 31 May
| | 1761, Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| +Johann (John) Kunckel b. 12 Nov
| 1757, Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen,
| Germany, m. York Co, Pennsylvania,
| d. 1821, Pennsylvania, par. Johann
| "Martin" Kunckel and Anna Margaretha
| Schuster
| |--9-John Kunckel Junior b. 20 Aug
| | 1781, Shrewsbury Twp, York City,
| | PA, d. 9 Aug 1816, Hopewell Twp,
| | York Co, PA
| |--9-Elizabeth Kunckel b. 5 Nov 1782,
| | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| |--9-Mary Magdalena Kunckel b. 1784,
| | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
| |--9-Justina Kunckel b. 13 Oct 1790,
| | Shrewsbury Twp, York City, PA
|--6-Lorenz Kunkel b. 10 Dec 1750, Florsbach,
| Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany, d. 27 Jan
| 1830, (Glenn Rock Cemetery, York Co, PA)
}}}
Background: #ffffff
Foreground: #000033
PrimaryPale: #e5edf4
PrimaryLight: #679DC2
PrimaryMid: #005B99
PrimaryDark: #014
SecondaryPale: #ffc
SecondaryLight: #fe8
SecondaryMid: #FFA02F
SecondaryDark: #841
TertiaryPale: #eee
TertiaryLight: #ccc
TertiaryMid: #999
TertiaryDark: #666
Error: #f88
MainAccent: #e22882
MainAccentLight: #ee7fb4
SecondAccent: #5bbf21
SecondAccentLight: #9DD97B
SecondAccentSuperLight: #E7F6DF
MuchLessSubtle: #666;
LessSubtle: #999;
Subtle: #ccc
SubtleLight: #ddd
SubtleSuperLight: #eee
<!--{{{-->
<div class='title' macro='view title'></div>
<div class='toolbar' macro='toolbar +saveTiddler -cancelTiddler deleteTiddler'></div>
<div class='editor' macro='edit title'></div>
<div macro='annotations'></div>
<div class='editor' macro='edit text'></div>
<div class='editor' macro='edit tags'></div><div class='editorFooter'><span macro='message views.editor.tagPrompt'></span><span macro='tagChooser'></span></div>
<!--}}}-->
<!--{{{-->
<div class='header'>
<div class='headerShadow'>
<span class='siteTitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteTitle'></span>
<span class='siteSubtitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteSubtitle'></span>
</div>
<div class='headerForeground'>
<span class='siteTitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteTitle'></span>
<span class='siteSubtitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteSubtitle'></span>
</div>
</div>
<div id='topMenu' refresh='content' tiddler='TopMenu'></div>
<div id='mainMenu' refresh='content' tiddler='MainMenu'></div>
<div id='displayArea'>
<div id='messageArea'></div>
<div id='tiddlerDisplay'></div>
</div>
<div id='footer' refresh='content' force='true' tiddler='Footer'></div>
<!--}}}-->
/*{{{*/
body { text-align:center; background:#fff url(bg_top.png) repeat-x top left; }
#contentWrapper { width:750px; text-align:left; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; position:relative; overflow:hidden; clear:both; }
div.header { display:block; height:80px; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Foreground]]; overflow:hidden; clear:both; position:relative; }
div.header div.headerForeground { padding-top:2em; }
div.header div.headerForeground span.siteTitle h1 { position:absolute; margin:0; padding:0; top:10px; left:8px;}
div.header div.headerShadow { display:none; }
#topMenu ul { margin:0; padding:0; list-style:none; width:100%; overflow:hidden; clear:both; }
#topMenu ul li { float:left; margin:0; padding:0; }
#topMenu ul li a { height:18px; vertical-align: middle; text-decoration:none; display:block; float:left; font-size:12px; font-weight:bold; color:[[ColorPalette::Background]]; margin:0 20px 0 0; padding:5px 8px 5px 8px }
#topMenu ul li a:hover { background-color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]]; }
#topMenu a.button { float:right; margin:0.8em 0 0 1.5em; color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]]; border-width:0;}
#topMenu a.button:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccent]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Background]];}
#mainMenu { margin:30px 0 4em 0; padding:0; width:160px; text-align:left; line-height:1em; overflow:hidden; clear:both; float:left; position: inherit;}
#mainMenu ul { list-style:none; margin:0; padding:0; }
#mainMenu ul li {margin:0; padding:0;}
#mainMenu ul li a.tiddlyLink {margin:0; padding:6px 8px; display:block; text-decoration:none; font-size:1.1em; font-weight:bold; color:[[ColorPalette::Foreground]]; text-align:left; clear:left; }
#mainMenu ul li a.tiddlyLink:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::Background]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Foreground]]; }
#mainMenu a.button {margin-left:8px; color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]]; border-width:0px; }
#mainMenu a.button:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccent]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Background]];}
#mainMenu input.txtOptionInput {border:solid 1px #ddd; border-top:solid 1px #aaa; border-bottom:solid 1px #eee; margin:4px 0 0 8px; padding:2px 4px; color:[[ColorPalette::LessSubtle]]; background:transparent url(./images/bg_search.png) repeat-x top left;}
#sidebar { top:120px; right:0; overflow:hidden; clear:both;}
#displayArea { float:right; margin:30px 0 4em 10px;}
#tiddlerDisplay { float:left; margin:0; width:570px;}
#footer { margin-top:40px; border-top:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::Subtle]]; padding:20px 0; color:[[ColorPalette::Subtle]]; overflow:hidden; clear:both}
#footer a.button { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccent]]; border-width:0;}
#footer a.button:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Background]];}
div.tiddler { margin:0em 0 4em 0; padding-top:0em; }
div.tiddler div.title { font-size:2em; margin-left:0; color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccent]]; display:inline;}
div.tiddler div.viewer { font-size:1.3em; margin-left:0px; width:450px;}
div.tiddler div.subtitle { display:none; }
div.tiddler div.toolbar { text-align:left; margin-left:0.5em; display:inline;}
div.tiddler div.toolbar > a.button { color:[[ColorPalette::Subtle]]; border-width:0;}
div.tiddler div.toolbar > a.button:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::LessSubtle]]; background:[[ColorPalette::Background]];}
div.tiddler div.tagged { background-color:[[ColorPalette::Background]]; border-width:0; margin:0 0 2em 0;}
div.tiddler div.tagged ul li.listTitle { display:none; }
div.tiddler div.tagged ul li a { font-size:1em; display:block; border:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::Background]]; margin-bottom:2px; padding:3px 3px 3px 20px; text-decoration:none; background:transparent url(tags_matrix.png) no-repeat top left; color:[[ColorPalette::SecondAccent]]; }
div.tiddler div.tagged ul li a:hover { border-color:[[ColorPalette::SecondAccentLight]]; background:[[ColorPalette::SecondAccentLight]] url(tags_matrix.png) no-repeat 0 -59px; background-position: 0 -59px; color:[[ColorPalette::SecondAccent]];}
div.tiddler div.tagging { float:none; border:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::SubtleLight]]; padding:3px; background-color:[[ColorPalette::SubtleSuperLight]]; overflow:hidden; clear:both; zoom:1;}
div.tiddler div.tagging ul li { float:left; margin:0 1.5em 0 0; color:[[ColorPalette::LessSubtle]]; }
div.tiddler div.tagging ul li a { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]]; }
div.tiddler div.tagging ul li a:hover { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccent]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::SubtleSuperLight]];}
div.tiddler div.viewer img { float:left; clear:left; margin:0 1em 1em 0;}
div.tiddler table {margin:0; border-width:0px; }
div.tiddler table tr { border-width:0px; }
div.tiddler table tr td { border-width:0px; vertical-align:top; }
div.tiddler table tr td * { float:left; clear:left; }
.viewer pre { font-size:0.85em; }
#popup { border:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::Subtle]]; border-bottom:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::LessSubtle]]; border-right:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::LessSubtle]]; background-color:[[ColorPalette::Background]]; padding:1px 0 0 0;}
#popup li a { background-color:[[ColorPalette::SubtleSuperLight]]; color:[[ColorPalette::MuchLessSubtle]]; text-align:left;}
#popup li a:hover { background-color:[[ColorPalette::SubtleLight]]; color:[[ColorPalette::MuchLessSubtle]];}
#popup li.listBreak div {border-bottom:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::Background]]; border-top:solid 1px [[ColorPalette::SubtleLight]]; margin:0;}
form.wizard {font-size:0.8em;}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 { color:[[ColorPalette::MainAccentLight]] }
/*}}}*/
<!--{{{-->
<div class='title' macro='view title'></div>
<div class='toolbar' macro='toolbar closeTiddler
+editTiddler'></div>
<div class='subtitle'><span macro='view modifier
link'></span>, <span macro='view modified
date'></span> (<span macro='message
views.wikified.createdPrompt'></span> <span macro='view
created date'></span>)</div>
<div class='tagging' macro='tagging'></div>
<div class='tagged' macro='tags'></div>
<div class='viewer' macro='view text wikified'></div>
<div class='tagClear'></div>
<!--}}}-->
<<notes>>
<<showtoc>>
!!!The Arrival of the a Lone Bogen from Germany
Johanne Nicholas Andreas Bogen (called John N.A. here) arrived in North America as part of the Crown Prince (Erbprinz) Regiment of the German allied troops ('Hessians') of Britian in the American War of Independence. ~Hesse-Cassel was the major supplier of german troops to the British for this war but also took recruits from neighboring regions of Germany ``` Hessians in the War of Independence - 1776-1783
Hessen-Kassel had provided mercenaries to Britian in the previous Seven Years War and earlier conflicts. There was a treaty between the two nations for mutual support. ~Hessen-Kassel also relied on the revenues from supplying mercenaries for income. However, after 1776, and having supplied (along with Hessen-Hanau, Waldeck, and Brunswick) 13,000 men for the campaign in North America, she could not provide more of her men. Essential land owning farmers and craftsmen had already been exempt from military recruitment.
In order to be able to provide replacements, Hessen-Kassel, made arrangements, with their approval, to recruit from neighboring German states. This was agreeable since usually, only the young single men with no property were selected. Some states felt that many of these were not ideal citizens and were not sorry to see them leave. Some did volunteer for military duty hoping to earn some income. A few others considered it a means of getting to North America and buying land and have a farm which was more difficult to obtain in Germany. ```.
John N.A. was a medic assistant for who was transferred into this regiment in Sept 1778. The regiment itself is known to have arrived at the beginning of the war in 1776 so he could have arrived at that time. Most of the original regiment was from Hesse Cassel and the replacements were taken from neighboring German states. John N.A. is listed as Nicholas and from the ~Hesse-Darmstadt region of Germany and hence could very well have only arrived in N.A. in 1778.
The Erbprinz regiment was not in many battles and spent most of its time in New York City (1776-1781) where the British had its head quarters during the war. They were at the battles of White Plains, Long Island, and finally at Yorktown, VA. The Erbprinz regiment lost few soldiers until the final resistance of the British at Yorktown, Virgina, where they had 22 die, 62 wounded, and 482 taken prisoners. One of the dead was the chief surgeon, Bauer, who Nicholas must have known.
!!! J.N.A. Bogen's Origins
In the military records, Nicholas Bogen, gave his home as Hesse-Darmstadt, a principality in Germany, of which the city of Darmstadt was the capital in 1776. Church records of the Stsdtpfarrei Evangelisch in Darmstatdt show that Andreas Nicolaus Bogen was born to Georg Henrich Bogen and Catharina Elisabetha Schneider on 10 Oct 1755. He was christened two days later. Georg and Catharina had been married in that church the year before on 31 Oct 1754. JNA was given the Andreas name from his grandfather, Andreas Bogen while his name, Nicholas, was from his grandfather, Johann Nicolai Schneider. Records indicated that the families were both from the city of Darmstadt.
!!!A Hessian Settles in Frederick, Maryland
At Yorktown, General Cornwallis surrendered to the Americans and French armies on Oct 17, 1781. As a prisoner, John N.A. was marched to Frederick, Maryland along with other captured British and German soldiers to be held there until May 1783. He was discharged from the his regiment in June 1783 in New York City where the German soldiers were to board ships and sail back home to Germany. Nicholas did not leave for Germany but returned to Frederick, MD where he took up the occupation of a physician. In 1784 he married Magdalena Koontz, the daughter of, Henry, an earlier German immigrant to the Maryland. In 1794, Nicholas was naturalized as a U.S. citizen and took the oath of allegiance.
It was not uncommon for 'Hessians' to stay in North America. Many of the german prisoners in Frederick and other towns, would actually escape and take work in the country-side to avoid the harsh conditions in the prisons. The region around Fredrick was populated with many earlier German immigrants to the British colonies, who harbored and employed the 'Hessian'. Most of these stayed to become part of the communities. The 'Hessian' prisoners were also given the opportunity to buy their freedom ($80) or to indenture themselves to local farmers and craftsmen for three years.
It is estimated that nearly 3000 German soldiers of the 18,000 returning to Germany stayed in North America after the American Revolution. Of the 1700 Hessian prisoners at Frederick, only 900 of them returned to Germany.
Presumably, John N.A. used his experience as a medical assistant in the war to become a physician. Medicine was not very scientific at this time and there was no American Medical Association to regulate who called themselves a 'doctor' and practised medicine. He had an office and residence at 22 West Patrick Street (downtown Frederick). There is at least one notice in the Frederick, MD newspaper with a complaint against Dr. Bogen's practice, but not surprising considering the type of medicine practiced in that period. In the Frederick County Maryland, Probate Administration Accounts 1777-1799 the following show that John N.A. was practicing:
- //Henry FOUT deceased account of Philippena FOUT administrator. Paid A BOGEN Doctor. 26 Jul 1796.//
- //Michael SHOTTS deceased account of Margaret SHOTTS executor. John FISHER Doctor, & BOGEN doctor paid. 4 Dec 1798.//
But he and Margarite appeared to be pillars of the community and active in the Evangelical Lutheran church in Frederick. They sponsored many baptisms and christenings in the church.
Pictures and Maps are on the page [[JNA Bogen in Frederick, MD]].
!!!The Children of Nicholas and Magdalena
John Henry, John N.A.'s oldest son, became a physician``` In many references including announcement of his marriage, John Henry was referred to as Doctor. However, I have been unable to find any evidence that he went to medical school or that he was recognized as a physician but the records of places that he lived in.``` also and probably received his training from his father*. In 1818 John N.A. sold his home in Frederick, MD and apparently traveled with his son to Carlisle, Pennsylvania where he passed away on 27 October 1819. On the 19th October 1818, grandson, Joseph Lind Bogen, is recorded as being born in Gettysburg, PA but christened in Carlisle, PA at the First Evangelical Lutheran Church in Dec 1818. Magdelana lived another year, passing away in May 1820, but she was buried in Frederick, MD. Perhaps she went back to live with her parents OR this was the time that the Henry Bogens were moving to Virginia and they were there at the time.
John N.A. and Magdalena Bogen had five other children for whom we have little information. As far as we know they stayed in the Frederick, MD area and did not move west to Ohio. None of their family in Germany ever appeared in North America and it seemed to be his wife's family, the Koontzs, that provided the larger family group. There were other Bogens and Bogers from Germany in the nearby Maryland and Virginia settlements but there is no evidence of any interactions with them.
!!!Henry Koontz's will and JNA Bogen
A 1817 codocil of the 1816 will of Henry Koontz, Magdalena's father, gives some insight into the relationship between John N.A. and his father-in-law. The language of the codicil is interesting also.
//"Whereas by my said will I did will and bequeath to my Daughter Magdalena Bogen the sum of eight hundred and fifty dollars, current money, and one equal part of the rest and residute of my Estate. after the amount of the legacies therein bequeathed have been deducted - I hereby will and direct that my Executor by my said will appointed, retain in his hands the aforesaid bequest to my Daughter Magdalena Bogen, during her covesture(?) by her present husband, Doctor John N.A. Bogen he paying over to her the interest thereof yearly and whereas her aforesaid husband John N.A. Bogen is indebted to me in the sum of Twelve hundred Dollars current money for which I hold his obligations. I hereby will and direct that the same be reckoned in and form a part of here share of my Estate bequeathed to her as aforesaid in case her husband, John N.A. Bogen, should not be able to pay the same to my Estate bequested to her as the same to my Executor , but should my said Exectuor at any time in his Judgement think it advantageous to my said Daughter Magdalena to pay over her any part or the whole of the principle coming to her out of my Estate he is hereby impowered to do so and her receipt for the same shall be good and valid her covesture notwithstanding and on the death of her present husband my Executor is to pay over to my said daughter, Magdalena, such part of the aforesaid bequests as may be in his hands.
In testimony whereof I have hereto set my hand and affixed my seal this 24th day of April 1817.//
Henry Koontz"
Essentially, John Koontz did not want to give his daughter money when her husband, John N.A., still owed his estate some $1200. Only on John N.A.'s death would Magdelana get the money. However, part of the will had no effect since John Koontz outlived daughter and son-in-law. ```John N.A. Bogen died in 1819, Magdelana Bogen in 1820 and John Koontz not until 1822.```
!!!!footnotes:
!Descendants of Johann Fridrich Nicolas Andreas Bogen
//The following shows 10 generations of descendants and is a large list//
These are only the Bogans from the first ancestor to arrive in North America -
See [[Martin Boge Descendants]] for the earlier line of ancestors in Germany
{{{
1-Johann Fridrich Nicolas Andreas Bogen b. 1755,
Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, d. 27 Oct 1819, Carlisle, PA
+Amalia Magdalena Koontz (Kuntz) b. 29 Mar 1761, Frederick
Co, MD, m. 7 Dec 1784, Frederick, MD, d. May 1820,
Frederick Co, MD, par. Heinrich (Henry) Koontz and
Dorothea Federkeil
|--2-Johann Heinrich (John Henry) Bogen b. 26 Dec 1785,
| Fredrick Maryland, d. 19 Feb 1858, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| Bucyrus, OH)
| +Margaret Lind b. 8 Aug 1791, m. 29 Dec 1811, Frederick
| Co, MD, d. 20 Mar 1868, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH,
| par. Nicholas Lind and Mary Null
| |--3-Amelia Magdalene Bogen c. 26 Nov 1812, Evangelical
| | Lutheran, Middletown, Frederick, Maryland
| |--3-Eleanor Dorothea Bogen b. Feb 1814, Pennsylvania
| | +Laman C. Haines b. 10 Dec 1818, Lancaster Co., PA,
| | m. 29 Nov 1838, par. Alan Haines and Nancy Unknown
| | |--4-Monroe W. Haines b. 16 Feb 1841, d. 24 Feb 1910,
| | | Washington, D.C.
| | | +Mary M. Meyer b. 1 Aug 1846, Canton, Stark Co,
| | | OH, m. 24 Sep 1864, Marion Co, Ohio, d. 13 Jan
| | | 1911, Washington, D.C.
| | | |--5-Caroline Haines b. Abt 1875, Marion Co, Ohio
| | |--4-Frances E. Haines
| | | +Isaac A. Merchant m. 24 Oct 1867, Marion Co, Ohio
| | |
| | |--4-Columbus L. Haines b. 5 Jun 1844, d. 14 Aug 1879
| | | +Mahala F. Holverstott b. 18 Oct 1844, Claridon
| | | Twp, Marion Co, OH, m. 27 Mar 1864, Marion Co,
| | | Ohio
| | |--4-Martha Haines
| | +Daniel W. Huffman m. 19 Apr 1863, Marion Co, Ohio
| |
| |--3-Samuel J Bogen b. 1 Jan 1816, Gettysburg, PA, d. 27
| | Nov 1889, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | +Charlotte Bowers b. 16 May 1821, Stark Co, Ohio, m.
| | 12 Nov 1837, Stark Co, Ohio (Nimishillen Twp), d. 6
| | Jun 1884, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | |--4-Sylvester Bogan b. 1839, d. 6 Sep 1896, Toledo,
| | | OH
| | | +Martha Deardorff b. 1841, m. 4 Nov 1868,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 21 Jan 1911, Bradner, Wood
| | | County, Ohio, par. Emanuel Deardorff and
| | | Elizabeth Howenstine
| | | |--5-John S Bogan b. 1870
| | | |--5-Ida E Bogan b. Nov 1876
| | | | +Chancey M Holland b. Unknown, m. 4 Jun 1899,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, par. Austin Holland and
| | | | Unknown
| | | |--5-Harry Palmer Bogan b. 23 Mar 1887, Wood Co,
| | | | OH, d. 24 Nov 1947
| | | | +Imo May Baldwin b. , Toledo, Lucas Co, OH, m.
| | | | Wood Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Harry William Bogan b. 22 Jun 1930, d. 11
| | | | | Nov 1932
| | | | |--6-Guennola Bogan b. 15 Apr 1915, d. 16 May
| | | | | 1966
| | | | |--6-Ethel Bogan b. 8 Jan 1938, Ross Twp, Wood
| | | | | Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Clara Bogan b. 27 Jun 1932, Ross Twp, Wood
| | | | | Co, OH, d. 11 Nov 1974
| | | | |--6-Alden Bogan b. 4 Oct 1918, Ross Twp, Wood
| | | | | Co, OH, d. 28 Apr 1982
| | | |--5-Lottie Bogan b. 12 Jun 1883, Wood Co, OH
| | |--4-Emeline Bogan b. 14 Jul 1841, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | d. 9 Aug 1912, Bradner, Wood County, Ohio
| | | +George Heckert b. Aug 1840, PA, d. After 1912,
| | | Wood Co, OH
| | | |--5-Sylvester Heckert b. Jan 1862, Ohio
| | | |--5-Alice J Heckert b. Abt 1865
| | | |--5-William Heckert b. Oct 1866, Ohio
| | | |--5-Mary Heckert b. Abt 1870
| | | |--5-Franklin E Heckert b. Jul 1871
| | | |--5-James Heckert b. May 1881, Michigan
| | |--4-Martha J Bogan b. 1844
| | | +Moses Weller b. Abt 1837, m. 20 Jun 1860,
| | | Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Selinda Bogan b. 1846, d. 1906, (Luke Cemetery,
| | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Lewis H Caskey b. 24 Jun 1843, m. 2 Feb 1865, d.
| | | 28 Apr 1910, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH),
| | | par. Levi Caskey and Rebecca Dale
| | | |--5-Wallace R Caskey b. 1874, d. 1898, (Luke
| | | | Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | |--4-Emanuel L Bogan b. 2 Nov 1850, Ohio, d. 27 Nov
| | | 1922, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Rebecca R Sheldon b. 1 Jul 1848, m. 24 Mar 1870,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 21 Dec 1909, (Luke Cemetery,
| | | Crawford Co, OH), par. Henry S. Sheldon and
| | | Nancy Ridgely
| | | |--5-Clara A. Bogan b. 1875
| | | | +John W. Scarborough m. 30 Dec 1896, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | |--5-Samuel Bogan b. Jul 1887, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Myrtle Hill m. 6 Aug 1908, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Ada Jane Bogan b. 9 Sep, d. , Luke Cemetery,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | +Victor Morin m. 17 Aug 1912, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +John Orewiler m. 22 Jun 1899, Crawford Co,
| | | OH, par. George Orewiler and Unknown
| | |--4-Amelia M Bogen b. 16 Aug 1854, North Robinson,
| | | OH, d. 16 Aug 1854, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | | OH
| | |--4-Mary E Bogan b. Apr 1857, Whetstone Twp,
| | | Crawford Co, Ohio
| | | +Levi Gelbaugh b. Dec 1846, PA, m. 17 May 1870,
| | | Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Sarah A Bogan b. 4 Aug 1856, d. 21 Dec 1927,
| | | (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Annas W. Sheldon b. Abt 1850, m. 12 Feb 1874,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, par. Henry S. Sheldon and Nancy
| | | Ridgely
| | | +George Nungesser b. 1836, m. 29 Oct 1891,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 8 Apr 1910, (Whetstone
| | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | |--4-William Silas Bogan b. May 1859, d. , Luke
| | | Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +Maggie (Jennie M) Dix b. Mar 1858, m. 1 Jan
| | | 1878, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Charles R Bogan b. Jun 1881
| | | |--5-Nettie Annette Bogan b. Oct 1883, d. , Luke
| | | | Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +Harry J Warden m. 20 Jun 1904
| | | |--5-Paul H Bogan b. Jan 1889
| | | +Margaret Dronebarger
| | | |--6-Ada Virginia Bogan b. 23 Nov 1911,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 27 Jul 1913, (Luke
| | | | Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH)
| | |--4-Catherine Rebecca Bogan b. 21 Jan 1862, d. 1 Dec
| | | 1930
| | | +Charles E Sheckler b. 7 Mar 1856, m. 15 Apr
| | | 1880, d. 7 Jan 1940, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | | OH), par. Edward F. Sheckler and Unknown
| | |--4-Tabitha Bogan b. 1864
| | +James B Eicher m. 1 Jul 1879, Crawford Co, OH
| | +Mary Holman b. 8 Jul 1830, m. 13 Mar 1887, d. 12
| | Oct 1898, (Benton Cemetery, Texas Twp, Crawford Co,
| | OH)
| |--3-Joseph Lind Bogan b. 19 Oct 1818, Gettysburg, PA,
| | d. 15 Oct 1887, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Mary A. Carnes b. 3 Nov 1816, Scotland, UK, m. Nov
| | 1839, Stark Co, Ohio, d. 12 Feb 1882, (Oakwood
| | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. Andrew Cairns and
| | Margaret Pagan
| | |--4-Ephelia Margaret Bogan b. 1 Aug 1840, Marion Co,
| | | Ohio, d. 1 Sep 1905, Emporia, KS
| | | +Amos McKanna b. 10 May 1837, Marion Co, Ohio, m.
| | | 24 Jun 1858, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Oct 1915,
| | | Emporia, KS, par. Robert McKanna and Mary
| | | Vengile
| | | |--5-Joseph McKanna b. 4 Apr 1859, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 23 Oct 1916
| | | | +Ruth K. b. Abt 1859, m. Abt 1882
| | | |--5-William McKanna b. 6 Mar 1864, Crestline,
| | | | Ohio, d. 24 Mar 1943
| | | | +Ester Brown b. Jun 1867, Ohio, m. 11 Mar
| | | | 1886, Fairfied Twp, Lyon Co, KS
| | | | |--6-Linn McKanna b. May 1887, Kansas
| | | | |--6-Ann E. McKanna b. Jan 1889, Kansas
| | | | |--6-Edith McKanna b. Nov 1896, Colorado
| | | | |--6-Ada McKanna b. Abt 1907, Colorado
| | | |--5-Elihu H. McKanna b. 18 Jan 1867, Crestline,
| | | | Ohio, d. 29 Jul 1953, Emporia, KS
| | | |--5-Odelphia McKanna b. Abt 1871, Crestline, Ohio
| | | |--5-Mary McKanna b. 2 Jun 1876, Crestline, Ohio
| | | |--5-Martha Jane McKanna b. 2 Jun1876, Ohio
| | | |--5-Albert McKanna b. 17 Apr 1881, Russel, KS
| | | |--5-Oliver Amos McKanna b. 17 Apr 1881, Russel, KS
| | | |
| | |--4-John Andrew Bogan b. 13 Apr 1842, Marion Co,
| | | Ohio, d. 20 Jul 1909, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | | OH
| | | +Sarah Ann Chambers b. 18 Mar 1848, m. 6 Aug
| | | 1868, Crawford Co, OH, d. 14 Jan 1920, par. Levi
| | | Chambers and Elizabeth ?
| | | |--5-Cora May Bogan b. 31 May 1869, d. 14 Sep
| | | | 1948, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Albert F Zeller m. 3 Nov 1903, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, par. Frederick Zeller and Unknown
| | | |--5-Ida Jane Bogan b. 21 Feb 1874, Ohio, d. 6 Jun
| | | | 1951, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Shannon Holland b. 7 Oct 1873, Ohio, m. 1899,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 25 Jan 1912, (Oakwood
| | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Sydney H. Hodge b. 15 Jun 1869, Port Dover,
| | | | Ontario, Canada, m. 31 Aug 1916, d. 26 Feb
| | | | 1950, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | |--5-Amos Mack Bogan b. 2 Sep 1878, d. 21 Dec
| | | | 1960, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Tessie Viola Macfarland b. 30 Aug 1886, m. 25
| | | Feb 1950, Crawford Co, OH, d. 14 Jul 1977
| | |--4-William Lemon Bogan b. 21 Jul 1844, Ohio (Marion
| | | Co.), d. 8 Sep 1901, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford
| | | Co, OH)
| | | +Mary Loise Price b. 15 Feb 1853, North Robinson,
| | | OH, m. 25 Jan 1871, Crawford Co, OH, d. 15 Nov
| | | 1926, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| | | William L Price and Margaret Brokaw
| | | |--5-Mary Annetta Bogan b. Dec 1871, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 6 Mar 1903, (Luke Cemetery, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH)
| | | | +Unknown
| | | |--5-Amos Albert Bogan b. 28 Feb 1873, North
| | | | Robinson, OH, d. 2 May 1901, (Luke Cemetery,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--5-Joseph William Bogan b. 9 Aug 1874, d. 24 Dec
| | | | 1964, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Betha Mary Wagner b. 11 Feb 1875, m. 14 Dec
| | | | 1899, d. 20 Dec 1965, Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, par. Joseph B Wagner and Unknown
| | | | |--6-Jacob Russell Bogan b. 16 Apr 1901, d. 14
| | | | | Feb 1920, Holmes Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Harold William Bogan b. 13 Apr 1904, d. 22
| | | | | Aug 1955, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | +Ruby May Berry m. 26 Apr 1931, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH, par. Roy S. Berry and Unknown
| | | | | |--7-Vivian May Bogan b. 31 May 1932, d. 11
| | | | | | Feb 1937, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--6-Rebecca M. Bogan b. Abt 1913, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH
| | | | +R.P. Hill
| | | |--5-Margaret Aurelia Bogan b. 16 Aug 1876,
| | | | Crestline, Ohio, d. 5 Jan 1948, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | +Benjamin Franklin Eusey b. 7 Dec 1871,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, m. 25 Dec 1895, North
| | | | Robinson, Crawford Co, OH, d. 3 Feb 1955,
| | | | (Windfall Church Cemetary), par. Samuel Jüsi
| | | | and Theodora "Dora" Johanna Newhouse
| | | | |--6-William Eusey
| | | | |--6-Annette "Anita" Eusey
| | | | |--6-Raymond "Billy" Owen Eusey b. 23 Apr 1907,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Rolland V. Eusey b. 23 Apr 1907, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Charles Christopher Eusey b. 20 Dec 1910,
| | | | | Morrow Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Irene Eusey
| | | | |--6-John Eusey
| | | | |--6-Margaret Eusey
| | | |--5-George B Bogan b. Jul 1878, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Harry O Bogan b. 23 Mar 1880, Ohio, d. 23 Nov
| | | | 1935, Scioto Twp, Ross Co, OH
| | | | +Margaret
| | | |--5-Merrill Irene Bogan b. Apr 1890
| | | | +William Arteman Cooper b. 20 Jun 1888,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, m. 2 Oct 1912, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 3 Mar 1963, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH), par. Arteman Cooper and Mary F.
| | | | Steen
| | | |--5-Ivan E. Bogan b. 18 Mar 1893, d. 20 Oct 1979
| | | +Blanche Marie Pfahler b. 29 Apr 1903,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, m. 14 Jul 1923, Crawford Co,
| | | OH, d. 18 Jun 1969, (Crawford Co. Memorial
| | | Gardens), par. Charles Edward Pfahler and
| | | Clara Elizabeth Fetter
| | |--4-Henry Harrison Bogan b. 1 Jan 1846, Ohio (Marion
| | | Co.), d. 10 Mar 1913, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | +Leah Anne Kunkel b. 13 Mar 1849, Ohio, m. 2 Jul
| | | 1870, North Robinson, OH, d. 6 Nov 1934,
| | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Charles C.
| | | Kunkel and Elizabeth Dome
| | | |--5-Odelpha Bogan b. Feb 1871, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | +Jay A Hill b. Jul 1875, Ohio, m. 15 Oct 1893,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Lois V Hill b. May 1896, Shelby, OH
| | | |--5-William Edgar Bogan b. 26 Oct 1873, d. 3 Aug
| | | | 1955, North Robinson, OH
| | | | +Jessie May Smith b. 6 Feb 1875, Ohio, m. 3
| | | | Dec 1893, North Robinson, OH, d. 20 Jul 1957,
| | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Alvin Oliver
| | | | Smith and Eliza Van Voorhis
| | | | |--6-Edna Irene Bogan b. 21 May 1894, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH, d. 18 Mar 1989, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Ray Myron Bair b. 22 Apr 1889, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH, m. 21 May 1912, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | d. 8 Mar 1950, Crawford Co, OH, par.
| | | | | Samuel M. Bair and Minerva Ella Morrow
| | | | | |--7-Evelyn May Bair b. 17 Jan 1913, North
| | | | | | Robinson, OH
| | | | | +George Loren Pfahler b. 29 Nov 1913,
| | | | | North Robinson, OH, m. 8 Apr 1936,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 28 Mar 1989,
| | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Charles
| | | | | Edward Pfahler and Clara Elizabeth
| | | | | Fetter
| | | | | |--8-Marlene Louise Pfahler b. 9 Jun
| | | | | | 1941, Galion, OH
| | | | | | +Ronald Paul Patterson b. 4 Dec 1941,
| | | | | | m. 1 Sep 1962
| | | | | | |--9-Paul Edward Patterson b. 9 Oct
| | | | | | | 1966, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | +Andrea Forino b. 21 Jul 1966, m.
| | | | | | | 20 Jun 1992
| | | | | | | +Hannah Loeffler b. 4 Feb 1966,
| | | | | | | Berlin, Germany, m. 22 May 1998
| | | | | | | |--10-Marlene Riccarda Loeffler b.
| | | | | | | | 1 Sep 1997
| | | | | | |--9-Mark Loren Patterson b. 24 Sep
| | | | | | | 1970, Nashville, TN
| | | | | |--8-Charles Marion Pfahler b. 13 Sep
| | | | | | 1946, Galion, OH
| | | | | | +Barbara Elaine Brown b. 10 Aug 1947,
| | | | | | m. 22 Dec 1968, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | | par. Daniel Brown and Unknown
| | | | | | |--9-Ruth Elaine Pfahler b. 19 Sep
| | | | | | | 1971, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | |--9-David Aaron Pfahler b. 27 Dec
| | | | | | | 1973, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Timothy Ray Pfahler b. 29 Oct
| | | | | | | 1977, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | |--8-Alan Loren Pfahler b. 13 Dec 1947,
| | | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | | +Linda Marie Wagenblast b. 18 Jul
| | | | | 1949, m. 24 Mar 1968
| | | | | |--9-Valerie Lynn Pfahler b. 25 Jun
| | | | | | 1970, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | +Paul W. Lofton b. 30 Jun 1966, m.
| | | | | | Unknown
| | | | | | |--10-Paul Lofton Jr b. 11 Jul 1990
| | | | | | |--10-Preston Lofton b. 13 May 1991
| | | | | |--9-Raina Ann Pfahler b. 5 Aug 1976,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | +Mark Beach b. 5 Mar 1970, m.
| | | | | Unknown
| | | | | +Michele Denise Patterson b. 10 Sep
| | | | | 1964, m. 16 Apr 1984
| | | | | |--9-Lynn Ann Pfahler b. 21 Aug 1984,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | |--9-Denise Lara Pfahler b. 31 Oct
| | | | | | 1986, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | +Janet Pauline ? b. 4 Oct 1963, m. 11
| | | | | Jun 1994
| | | | |--6-Chester Harrison Bogan b. 5 Oct 1896, d. 7
| | | | | Jul 1986, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | +Anona Fern Pfahler b. 30 Sep 1897, North
| | | | | Robinson, OH, m. 16 Nov 1916, d. 12 Sep
| | | | | 1996, Galion, OH, par. Charles Edward
| | | | | Pfahler and Clara Elizabeth Fetter
| | | | | |--7-Raymond Edward Bogan b. 15 May 1917,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 23 Mar 2006, Bucyrus,
| | | | | | OH
| | | | | | +Leota Jane Reber b. 7 Feb 1919,
| | | | | | Columbus, Ohio, m. 15 May 1938,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 1 Mar 1998,
| | | | | | Chattanooga, Tennessee, par. Russell J.
| | | | | | Volkmer and Verda Matilda Kehrer
| | | | | | |--8-Larry Duane Bogan b. 26 May 1939,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | | +Alison Clare Davidson b. 5 Nov 1943,
| | | | | | | Lachine, Quebec, m. 2 Jul 1966,
| | | | | | | Ithaca, NY, par. Unknown and Unknown
| | | | | | | |--9-Jeffrey David Bogan b. 11 Nov
| | | | | | | | 1968, Manchester, Connecticut
| | | | | | | |--9-Laurel Jane Bogan b. 7 Mar 1972,
| | | | | | | | Mansfield, Connecticut
| | | | | | | +Joey Bernard b. Aug 1972,
| | | | | | | Moncton, New Brunswick, m. 2 Jul
| | | | | | | 1994, Fredricton, New Brunswick,
| | | | | | | par. Unknown and Unknown
| | | | | | | |--10-Evan David Bernard b. 31 Oct
| | | | | | | | 2003, Fredricton, New
| | | | | | | | Brunswick
| | | | | | | |--10-Sean Logan Bernard b. 2 Sep
| | | | | | | | 2006, Fredricton, New
| | | | | | | | Brunswick
| | | | | | |--8-Daryl Allen Bogan b. 31 Jul 1942,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | | +Barbara Ann Bryant b. 29 Nov 1938,
| | | | | | | Hamilton, Ohio, m. 1 Sep 1967,
| | | | | | | Hamilton, Ohio, par. Charles Sumner
| | | | | | | Bryant and Mabel Thresa Oakes
| | | | | | | |--9-Melissa Lynn Bogan b. 4 Jul 1968
| | | | | | | | +Todd James Mikesell b. 20 Jun
| | | | | | | | 1966, Toledo, OH, m. 7 Aug 1993
| | | | | | | | |--10-Alex Christopher Mikesell b.
| | | | | | | | | 11 Sep 1996, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | | |--10-Kyle Jacob Mikesell b. 20 Dec
| | | | | | | | | 1998, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | | |--10-Jack Bryant Mikesell b. 14
| | | | | | | | | Jan 2003, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | | |--10-Ella Paige Mikesell b. 19 Dec
| | | | | | | | | 2005, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | |--9-Marcia Bryant Bogan b. 20 Oct 1970
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | +Randy Compton b. 14 Aug 1964, m.
| | | | | | | | 26 Aug 2000, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | | |--10-Benjamin Nicholas Compton b.
| | | | | | | | | 9 Feb 2004, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | | |--10-Madeline Rose Compton b. 4
| | | | | | | | | Mar 2008, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | |--9-Kimberly Paige Bogan b. 25 Nov
| | | | | | | | 1976
| | | | | | | +Nathan Shane Owens m. 15 Jul
| | | | | | | 2006, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Sydney Lynn Bogan Owens b. 7
| | | | | | | | Nov 2009, Dayton, OH
| | | | | | |--8-Bonnie Sue Bogan b. 23 Sep 1944,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | +Earl Walter Crall b. 19 Jun 1941,
| | | | | | Marion, Ohio, m. 17 Aug 1966,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH, par. Clark C. Crall and
| | | | | | Pearl M. Oberlander
| | | | | | |--9-Wendy Jill Crall b. 15 Oct 1968,
| | | | | | | Columbus, Ohio
| | | | | | | +Robert Hleba b. 3 Jul 1970,
| | | | | | | Sweden, m. 2 Oct 1999, Berea,
| | | | | | | Ohio
| | | | | | | |--10-Sean Matthew Hleba b. 17 Feb
| | | | | | | | 2003, Fairview Park, Ohio
| | | | | | |--9-Kimberly Jo Crall b. 17 Aug 1971,
| | | | | | | Parma, Ohio
| | | | | | | +David Allen Valco b. 10 Oct 1968,
| | | | | | | Lakewood, Ohio, m. 8 Jul 2000,
| | | | | | | Berea, Ohio
| | | | | | | |--10-Ashley Loren Valco b. 2 Jun
| | | | | | | | 2004, Cuyhoga Co, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Bradley Raymond Valco b. 11
| | | | | | | | May 2007, Cleveland, Ohio
| | | | | | |--9-Sheryl Lynn Crall b. 16 Dec 1973,
| | | | | | | Parma, Ohio
| | | | | | +Frank Dilalla b. 7 Jul 1968,
| | | | | | Cleveland, Ohio, m. 5 Aug 2000,
| | | | | | Berea, Ohio
| | | | | | |--10-Tricia Antonietta Dilalla b.
| | | | | | | 2 Jun 2005, Cuyhoga Co, OH
| | | | | |--7-Irene Marie Bogan b. 10 Nov 1919
| | | | | | +Maynard James Coon b. 15 Apr 1917,
| | | | | | Bluffton, Ohio, m. 30 Jun 1940, d. 17
| | | | | | Aug 2004, Mansfield, OH, par. H. Lee
| | | | | | Coon and Mary E. Badertscher
| | | | | | |--8-James Maynard Coon b. 9 Apr 1950,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | +Suzanne Kay Carver b. 18 May 1951,
| | | | | | | m. 9 Sep 1972, Richland Co, OH, par.
| | | | | | | Kenneth Carver and Darline
| | | | | | | |--9-Jacqueline Coon b. 13 Jul 1974
| | | | | | | | +Andrew Sobowlewski m. 7 Apr 2001
| | | | | | | | |--10-Slater Andrew Sobowlewski b.
| | | | | | | | | 24 Oct 2006
| | | | | | | |--9-Kimberly Coon b. 20 Dec 1983
| | | | | | | |--9-Kelly Coon b. 11 Feb 1988
| | | | | | | +Stacey Davis b. 28 Nov 1959
| | | | | | |--8-Janis Elaine Coon b. 21 Feb 1947,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | | +Terry James Toth b. 22 Apr 1947, m.
| | | | | | | 15 Apr 1967, d. 13 Feb 1997, par.
| | | | | | | Albert J. Toth and Margery C. Martin
| | | | | | | |--9-Shelley Marie Toth b. 27 Jul 1969
| | | | | | | | +Jeffrey Redden b. 23 Mar 1969, m.
| | | | | | | | 15 Jun 1991
| | | | | | | | |--10-Calvin Jeffrey Redden b. 3
| | | | | | | | | Oct 1996
| | | | | | | | |--10-Nathaniel Wyatt Redden b. 3
| | | | | | | | | Jan 1999
| | | | | | | | |--10-Eliza Grace Redden b. 21 May
| | | | | | | | | 2001
| | | | | | | | |--10-Emmaline Kate Redden b. 23
| | | | | | | | | Feb 2003
| | | | | | | | |--10-Casey Finn Redden b. 5 Mar
| | | | | | | | | 2007
| | | | | | | |--9-Rachel Toth b. 17 Mar 1979
| | | | | | | | +Ryan Slater
| | | | | | | | |--10-Paiten Elise Slater b. 4 Feb
| | | | | | | | | 1997
| | | | | | | | |--10-Parker Weston Slater b. 4 Jan
| | | | | | | | | 1999
| | | | | | | | |--10-Preston Alexander Slater b. 1
| | | | | | | | | Nov 2000
| | | | | | | | |--10-Sydney Abbrialle Slater b. 6
| | | | | | | | | Jan 2002
| | | | | | | |--9-Alex Toth b. 14 Dec 1982
| | | | | | | | +Jennifer Rachel m. 28 Aug 2004
| | | | | | | | |--10-Audrey Jannelle Toth b. 20
| | | | | | | | | Nov 2004
| | | | | | | | |--10-Alex James Toth Jr b. 14 Sep
| | | | | | | | | 2006
| | | | | | | |--9-Joseph Toth b. 5 Mar 1985
| | | | | | | +Charlotte Clevenger m. 25 Feb 2006
| | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |--10-Cheyenne Alise Toth b. 5 Nov
| | | | | | | | 2006
| | | | | | | +Fred Buzard b. 25 Mar 1947, m. 6 Jun
| | | | | | | 2000
| | | | | | |--8-Jo Ann Coon b. 9 Jan 1958, Crawford
| | | | | | | Co, OH
| | | | | | +Robert Maxey b. 22 Mar 1958,
| | | | | | Richland Co, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Derrick Maxey b. 3 Jul 1982
| | | | | | |--9-Sara Maxey b. 14 Feb 1986
| | | | | | |--9-Emily Maxey b. 21 Oct 1993
| | | | | |--7-Glenn Alvin Bogan b. 28 Jan 1922, d. 25
| | | | | | May 1995, West Covina, Los Angeles, CA
| | | | | | +Cecile Jennette Macadam b. 30 Jun 1922,
| | | | | | m. 23 Feb 1946, Covington, VA -
| | | | | | Missionary Baptist Curch
| | | | | | |--8-Barbara Jane Bogan b. 31 Jul 1946
| | | | | | | +Kurt Williams b. Unknown, m. Unknown
| | | | | | | |--9-Lynette Marie Williams b. 29 Jan
| | | | | | | | 1968, California
| | | | | | | | +Richard Unknown
| | | | | | | | |--10-Josh Unknown
| | | | | | | | |--10-Heather Unknown
| | | | | | | |--9-Denise Lynn Williams b. 2 Dec 1969
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | +Brian Curtiss
| | | | | | | |--10-Matthew James Curtiss b. 21
| | | | | | | | Jan 2006, Chino Hills, CA
| | | | | | |--8-Jeffrey Glenn Bogan b. 24 Jun 1955
| | | | | | |--8-Steven Craig Bogan b. 5 Dec 1956
| | | | | |--7-Donald Paul Bogan b. 30 Aug 1924
| | | | | | +Audrey Ann Campbell b. 26 Oct 1926, m.
| | | | | | 23 Apr 1949
| | | | | | |--8-Diane Kay Bogan b. 19 Apr 1952,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | +Richard L. Predmore m. 21 May 1971,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH, par. Errett R. Predmore
| | | | | | | and Unknown
| | | | | | |--8-Karen Jean Bogan b. 5 Nov 1954
| | | | | | | +C. David Wright m. 11 Jun 1977,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | | |--9-Courtney Erin Wright b. 18 Aug
| | | | | | | | 1980, Saginaw, Michigan
| | | | | | |--8-Constance Sue Bogan b. 19 Sep 1959
| | | | | | +Gary Turner m. 11 Oct 1980, Crawford
| | | | | | Co, OH, par. Bobbie J. Turner and
| | | | | | Unknown
| | | | | | |--9-Cheyenne Turner
| | | | | |--7-Kenneth Lee Bogan b. 22 May 1935
| | | | | +Carol Sue Haycook b. 16 Dec 1937,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH, m. 25 May 1957, Angola,
| | | | | IN, par. Charles Edward Haycook and
| | | | | Thelma C Smith
| | | | | |--8-Cheryl Ann Bogan b. 2 May 1960,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | +James Scot Norris b. 2 Jul 1959,
| | | | | | Haysville, KS, m. 26 Jan 1985
| | | | | | |--9-Kathleen Janelle Norris b. 17 Nov
| | | | | | | 1985
| | | | | | |--9-James Kenneth Norris b. 12 May
| | | | | | | 1987, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Hannah Noelle Norris b. 15 Jul
| | | | | | | 1990, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--8-Thomas Lee Bogan b. 8 Oct 1961,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | +Diana Katherine Lill b. 28 Oct 1964,
| | | | | | Johnstown, Cambria Co, PA, m. 30 Jun
| | | | | | 1990, Wapakoneta, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Michael Aaron Bogan b. 10 Jul
| | | | | | | 1992, Auglaize Co, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Daniel Mathew Bogan b. 20 May
| | | | | | | 1996, Wapakoneta, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Gabriel Patrick Bogan b. 11 Oct
| | | | | | | 2000, Wapakoneta, OH
| | | | | |--8-Timothy Allan Bogan b. 12 Jan 1969,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | +Hayley Noelle Blue b. 26 May 1976,
| | | | | | London, OH, m. 17 Jul 1999, Mt.
| | | | | | Orab, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Delayne Seigla Bogan b. 28 Dec
| | | | | | | 1994, Ohio
| | | | | | |--9-Nathaniel Bogan b. 3 May 2000,
| | | | | | | Ohio
| | | | | | |--9-Kaleb Bogan b. 13 Jul 2005, Ohio
| | | | | |--8-Linda Kay Bogan b. 21 Aug 1973,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | +Maurice Hodapp b. 4 Jun 1972, South
| | | | | Bend, IN, m. 28 Jul 2001, Sidney, OH
| | | | | |--9-Luke Alexander Hodapp b. 6 May
| | | | | | 2003, Ohio
| | | | | |--9-Joshua Ryan Hodapp b. 17 Oct
| | | | | | 2005, Ohio
| | | | |--6-Arthur Alvin Bogan b. 15 Sep 1898, North
| | | | | Robinson, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | d. 9 Sep 1999, Galion, OH
| | | | | +Gladys L Frost b. 1 Jan 1900, m. 15 Sep
| | | | | 1919, d. 26 May 1969
| | | | | |--7-Robert Wilber (Bob) Bogan
| | | | | | +Janet Maxine Morrow m. 30 Apr 1949
| | | | | |--7-Myron Elwood (Bing) Bogan
| | | | | +Jean Evelyn Poister m. 15 Oct 1944
| | | | | |--8-William A Bogan b. 26 Nov 1950, d.
| | | | | | 27 Jan 1991, Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | | | |--8-Lynne Bogan
| | | | | +? Shifley
| | | | |--6-Paul L Bogan b. 31 Aug 1906, North
| | | | | Robinson, OH, d. 4 Jul 1975, Lucasville,
| | | | | OH
| | | | | +Lois B Morton b. 1905, m. 12 Apr 1925,
| | | | | par. Frank S. Morton and Unknown
| | | | | |--7-Richard L Bogan b. 1930, d. 8 May 1990
| | | | | |--7-Doris Bogan
| | | | | | +Harold Kuhn
| | | | | |--7-William Bogan
| | | | |--6-Ray F. Bogan b. 26 Sep 1908, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH, d. 30 Jul 1973, Lima, OH
| | | | +Evelyn Reichelderfer b. , Cridersville,
| | | | OH, m. Unknown
| | | | |--7-Marilyn Bogan
| | | | | +George Sennhauser b. , Babbitt, MN
| | | | |--7-Joanne Bogan
| | | | +Ramon Beer b. , Westerville, OH
| | | |--5-Maud E Bogan b. 1875
| | | | +William Leroy Smith b. 21 Sep 1873, Jefferson
| | | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 11 Mar 1894,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 4 Sep 1926, (Greenlawn
| | | | Cemetary, Crestline, OH), par. Alvin Oliver
| | | | Smith and Eliza Van Voorhis
| | | | |--6-Florence Smith b. Sep 1894
| | | | | +Russel Rothenberger
| | | | |--6-Alvin Smith d. 6 Oct 1923
| | | | |--6-Hazel Smith b. Dec 1899, Jackson Twp
| | | | | Crawford Co Ohio
| | | |--5-Joseph Albert Bogan b. 7 Sep 1876, d. 25 Dec
| | | | 1959, (Mansfield Cemetery, Richland Co, Ohio)
| | | | +Leora A Kemp b. Abt 1883, Greenwich City, IN,
| | | | m. 18 Dec 1901, Crawford Co, OH, d. Jan 1935,
| | | | Mansfield, OH, par. Joshua Kemp and Unknown
| | | | |--6-Thelma Bogan b. Abt 1904, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Isabelle Bogan b. Abt 1906, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |
| | | | +Wayne Young
| | | |--5-Elizabeth May Bogan b. 1879, Jefferson Twp,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 19 Sep1888, (Middleton
| | | | Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--5-Robert Lee Bogan b. 18 Mar 1883, d. 16 Aug
| | | | 1923, Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | | +Bessie Naoma Smith b. Dec 1889, Ohio, m. Abt
| | | | 1907, d. Jan 1962, Tiffin, OH
| | | |--5-Frank Leslie Bogan b. 11 Jul 1885, d. 26 Mar
| | | | 1980, Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | | +Bessie B Nungesser b. 9 Mar 1888, m. 10 Jun
| | | | 1908, Crawford Co, OH, d. 2 Aug 1979,
| | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Donald
| | | | Nungesser and Genny Schaad
| | | | |--6-Ralph L. Bogan b. Abt 1912, Jefferson Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-James Bogan b. Abt 1916, Jefferson Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Myron E. Bogan b. Abt 1920, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |
| | | |--5-Esther Blanch Bogan b. 10 Sep 1889, d. 26 Jun
| | | | 1937, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | +Oliver Jay Dewalt b. 23 Nov 1884, Ohio, m. 6
| | | Nov 1907, Crawford Co, OH, d. 9 Mar 1970,
| | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Samuel A.
| | | Dewalt and Mary Emaline Smith
| | | |--6-Elwood S. Dewalt b. Abt 1909
| | | |--6-Doyle Dewalt b. Abt 1914
| | |--4-George W Bogan b. 4 Jul 1847, Ohio (Marion Co.),
| | | d. 10 Nov 1870, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | |--4-Jefferson L Bogan b. 10 Oct 1848, Indiana
| | | (Lagrange Co), d. 29 May 1905, Fairview (Galion,
| | | Ohio)
| | | +Mary C Kunkel b. Abt 1852, Jackson Twp Crawford
| | | Co Ohio, m. 24 Dec 1870, Crawford Co, OH, d. Bef
| | | 1880, par. Charles C. Kunkel and Elizabeth Dome
| | | |--5-Fannie Bogan
| | | | +Samuel Siggle m. 3 May 1910, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | par. Henry Siggle and Unknown
| | | |--5-Laura Bogan b. 30 Oct 1871, d. 14 May 1877,
| | | | (Middleton Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--5-Charles Linn Bogan b. 20 May 1875, d. 21 May
| | | | 1931, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | +Della M McClure b. 17 Sep 1874, m. 22 Nov
| | | | 1897, Crawford Co, OH, d. 31 May 1935,
| | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Elias McClure
| | | | and Elizabeth Reynolds
| | | |--5-Daisy Belle Bogan b. 1877, d. 29 Jan 1905
| | | | +John Hollett b. 10 Oct 1879, Pennsville, m.
| | | | 30 Aug 1902, Crawford Co, OH, d. Dec 1961,
| | | | Upper Sandusky, OH, par. T N Hollett and
| | | | Unknown
| | | |--5-Jessie A Bogan b. 17 Jul 1877, d. 2 Apr 1907,
| | | | Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | +Frances (Hanny) Arter b. 25 Dec 1853, Ohio, m.
| | | 10 Sep 1882, Crawford Co, OH, d. 11 May 1933,
| | | (Fairview Cemetery, Galion, OH)
| | |--4-Joseph Monroe Bogan b. 4 Jun 1850, Lagrange Co,
| | | IN, d. 17 Jun 1927, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | +Mary Elizabeth Morrison b. 6 Oct 1853, Ohio, m.
| | | 25 Nov 1875, d. 22 Oct 1941, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | Ohio)), par. John Morrison and Mary Brokaw
| | | |--5-Clyde Nellie Bogan b. 4 Sep 1876, d. 16 Feb
| | | | 1959
| | | |--5-Victor Leroy Bogan b. 1 Jan 1878, d. 23 Apr
| | | | 1901, Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | |--5-Forest H Bogan b. Aug 1880
| | | |--5-Clara Ethel Bogan b. 20 Jan 1882, d. 23 Nov
| | | | 1962
| | | |--5-Edna Bogan b. 1884, d. 9 Oct 1888
| | | |--5-Bertha C. Bogan b. Feb 1886
| | | | +Carl F. Barraider m. 28 Sep 1912, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | |--5-Ralph J Bogan b. 24 Aug 1890, d. 2 Oct 1953,
| | | | Fairview (Galion, Ohio)
| | | |--5-Ray B Bogan b. Aug 1890
| | | |--5-Lois Irene Bogan b. May 1892
| | |--4-Samuel J Bogan b. 16 Jan 1853, Indiana, d. 10
| | | Aug 1906, Windfall Church Cemetary
| | | +Mary Jane Eusey b. 25 Apr 1861, North Robinson,
| | | OH, m. 4 Jul 1882, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 May
| | | 1909, North Robinson, OH, par. Samuel Jüsi and
| | | Theodora "Dora" Johanna Newhouse
| | | |--5-Carrie Bogan b. Apr 1883
| | | | +Clarence Orval Dix b. 15 Dec 1879, Ohio, m.
| | | | Abt 1901, Crawford Co, OH, d. Oct 1950,
| | | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | |--6-Lucille Dix b. Abt 1904, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Paul Dix b. Abt 1908, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Elihu Harrison Bogan b. 30 Nov 1885, d. 26
| | | | May 1959, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Zella Fern Siebel b. 22 Sep 1887, m. 1 Dec
| | | | 1908, d. 21 Aug 1978, Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, par. Marten Siebel and Unknown
| | | |--5-Elsie B Bogan b. May 1887
| | | | +Elmer Borts m. 14 Mar 1906, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | par. William Borts and Unknown
| | | | |--6-Virgil Warren Borts b. 1909, d. 1964,
| | | | | (Nazereth Luthern cemetary, Chatfield,
| | | | | Crawford Co.)
| | | |--5-Dora May Bogan b. May 1889
| | | | +Charles Selby Dicks m. 16 May 1907, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH, par. Abraham Dicks and Unknown
| | | |--5-Hazel Anna Bogan b. Feb 1891
| | | | +Henry Earl Cotsmire m. 12 Nov 1911, par. John
| | | | Cotsmire and Unknown
| | | |--5-Ella Marie Bogan b. 27 Jul 1893, d. 8 Jul
| | | | 1963, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Fred Schnabel b. 1884, m. 2 Jun 1914,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 14 Nov 1969, par.
| | | | Gottfried Schnabel and Unknown
| | | | |--6-M. Jeanette Schnabel
| | | | +Ellsworth D. Stansbery m. 15 Nov 1936,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--7-Fred J. Stansbery
| | | |--5-Eva E Bogan b. Feb 1895
| | | | +Amick
| | | |--5-Nioma Pearl Bogan b. Oct 1896
| | | | +Clinton Mawer m. 1 Nov 1915, Bucyrus,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-William Lee Bogan b. 12 Jan 1899, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH, d. 21 Aug 1954, (Mansfield Memorial
| | | | Park, OH)
| | | +Georgia Sheely
| | |--4-Mary Ellen Bogan b. 20 Oct 1854, Lagrange Co,
| | | IN, d. 10 Apr 1932, Bucyrus, Crawford Co, OH
| | | +Joseph A. McClintock b. 7 Aug 1856, m. 7 Jun
| | | 1877, d. 20 Dec 1936
| | | |--5-Lawrence E. McClintock b. Apr 1878, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | | +Ida b. Abt 1880, Ohio, m. 1902, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | |--6-Everet McClintock b. Abt 1904, Bucyrus,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Harold McClintock b. 1910, Bucyrus,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Walter Scott McClintock b. Dec 1879, Bucyrus,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Marnie McClintock b. Sep 1881
| | | |--5-Mand McClintock b. Sep 1884, Bucyrus,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Bessie McClintock b. Mar 1886, Bucyrus,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Ganiet McClintock b. Dec 1889, Bucyrus,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Don Carlos McClintock b. Apr 1893
| | |--4-Sara Jane Bogan b. 20 Feb 1858, Ohio, Crawford
| | | Co., d. 25 Mar 1921, Burbank, Wayne Co, OH
| | +Andrew Henry Overs b. 21 Jan 1851, Ashland
| | County, OH, m. 14 Nov 1878, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| | 7 Jan 1931, Burbank, Wayne Co, OH, par. John
| | Overs and Catherine A. Swaisgood
| | |--5-Charles Foster Overs b. 6 Sep 1879, Sullivan
| | | Co, NY, d. 6 Apr 1965, Lodi, Medina Co, OH
| | | +Effa E. Vandermark b. Jan 1880, Ohio, m.
| | | 1910, OH
| | | |--6-Paul Overs b. 29 Mar 1912, Ohio, d. Jul
| | | | 1981, Elyria, Lorain Co, OH
| | |--5-Belna Overs b. Apr 1884, Canaan Twp, Wayne
| | | Co, Ohio
| |--3-John W Bogan b. 12 Feb 1823, Loudoun Co, Virginia,
| | d. 1 Mar 1897, Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | +Candace Q Ferrall b. 3 May 1842, m. 18 Oct 1871,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 14 Aug 1909, Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH, par. Edmond Ferrall and Nancy Eaton
| | |--4-Harry Jay Bogan b. 14 Jun 1872, d. 19 Dec 1928,
| | | Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Mildred B. Allison b. 1878, m. Abt 1899, d. 26
| | | Oct 1951, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | |--5-Allison Leon Bogan b. 23 Feb 1900, d. 27 Jul
| | | | 1922
| | | |--5-Robert Allen Bogan b. 2 Jul 1904, d. 8 Jun
| | | | 1958, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Dorothy W Gaa m. 2 Jun 1926, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | par. C.P. Gaa and Unknown
| | | |--5-Bonnie F. Bogan b. Abt 1902
| | |--4-Cora E Bogan b. 1 Jun 1874, d. 2 Apr 1970,
| | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | +William Reynolds Harris b. 1 Sep 1863, m. 18 Dec
| | | 1917, Crawford Co, OH, d. 26 Oct 1936, (Oakwood
| | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. Stephen Harris and
| | | Mary Jane Monnett
| | | |--5-Stephen Ross Harris b. 23 Jun 1888, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH, d. 6 Apr 1906, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | +Arthur L. Higgins m. 14 Dec 1946, Crawford Co, OH
| | |
| | | +Joseph D. Gardner m. 1Jul 1891, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-William Raymond Bogan b. Jan 1893, Bucyrus, OH
| | +Carris E. Carlr b. Abt 1896, Ohio, m. Abt 1914,
| | par. William Carlr and Anna ?
| | |--5-Evelyn M. Bogan b. Feb 1915, Bucyrus, OH
| |--3-Caroline Bogan b. 1826, Loudoun Co, Virginia
| | +Gilbert G. Hall b. 1826, Pennsylvania, m. 5 Nov
| | 1857, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Margaret Gertrude Hall b. Abt Apr 1860, Crawford
| | | Co, OH
| | | +Harris E. Turney m. 15 Aug 1881, Independence,
| | | Montgomery Co, Kansas
| | |--4-Andaville Hall b. Abt 1864, Ohio
| |--3-Susan Elisabeth Bogan b. 10 Nov 1832, Loudoun Co,
| | Virginia, d. 17 Nov 1900, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH)
| +Jeremiah E. Correll b. 17 May 1832, Adams Co,
| Pennsylvania, m. 10 Jan 1856, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| 30 Dec 1914, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par.
| John N. Correll and Elizabeth Lind
| |--4-John Francis Correll b. 20 Dec 1856, Crawford
| | Co, OH, d. 17 May 1883, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Ida Verna Kieffer b. 21 Apr 1859, d. 4 Apr 1886,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | |--5-Harper K. Correll
| |--4-William Webster Correll b. 2 Jul 1858, Crawford
| | Co, OH, d. 12 Feb 1909, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH)
| |--4-Monroe Edison Correll b. 25 Apr 1860, Crawford
| | Co, OH, d. 30 Dec 1863, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH)
| |--4-Cora E. Correll b. 13 Apr 1862, Crawford Co, OH,
| | d. 28 Aug 1865, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| |--4-Etha E Correll b. 1865, d. 1943
| | +John Charles Fremont Odeffer b. 1855, m. 16 Jan
| | 1888, Crawford Co, OH, d. 1907
| |--4-Jennie D Correll b. 16 Feb 1867, Crawford Co,
| | OH, d. 4 Nov 1943, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | OH)
| +Samuel Omweg m. 26 Mar 1874, Crawford Co, OH
| +W. Marshall Baker m. 28 Sep 1892, Crawford Co, OH
|
|--2-Catherina Elisabeth Bogen b. 5 Sep 1789, Frederick,
| MD, d. 5 Feb 1790, Frederick Co, MD
|--2-Johann Fridrich Thomas Bogen b. 4 Aug 1792, Frederick,
| MD
| +Eva
| |--3-Wilhelm Bogen c. 21 May 1813, Evangelical Lutheran
| | Church, Frederick, MD
| |--3-Amalia Maria Bogen c. 25 Dec 1814, Evangelical
| | Lutheran Church, Frederick, MD
|--2-Catharina Bogen b. 7 Mar 1795, Frederick, MD
|--2-Carolina Bogen b. 16 Oct 1797, Frederick, MD
| +William R. Elvin b. , New Market, MD, m. 15 Oct 1820,
| Frederick Co, MD
|--2-Friderike Bogen b. 7 Jun 1800, Frederick, MD
}}}
Johann Nicholas Andreas Bogen (JNA Bogen) was held, for awhile, in the Barricks in Frederick. When he was released he stayed in the town and was a physician there from 1784 until about 1818. He and his wife Amalia Magdalena were active members of the Emmanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church.
JNA had an office on W. Patrick Street and his home was on East Patrick Street.
[img[Map of Frederick MD, Bogen Locations noted|maps/Frederick_MD_Locations.gif]]
[img[Evangelical Lutheran Church of Frederick, MD 2005|images/E_Lutheran_Church_Frederick.jpg]]
Emmanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church on Church Street
!Descendants of Johann Christ Smith
{{{
1-Johann Christ Smith b. , Richstein, Germany, d. ,
Richstein, Germany
+Katharina Elizabeth Dreschler b. , Richstein, Germany, m.
26 Oct 1735, par. Johannes Dreschler and Unknown
|--2-John Joseph Smith b. 8 Nov 1736, Baden, Germany, d. 16
| Mar 1813, Perry Co. PA
+Catherine E. Schmidt b. 8 Aug 1736, Richstein,
Germany, m. 8 May 1760, Arfeld, Germany, d. 11 Nov
1819, (Presbyterian Burial Ground, Sherman Creek,
Perry Co, PA), par. Johann Schmidt and Susanna Becker
|--3-John Jacob Smith b. 25 Jul 1767, Wittgenstein,
| Baden, Germany, d. 9 Jul 1836, Perry Co. PA
+Mary Elizabeth Fisher b. 14 Nov 1765, Richstein,
Germany, m. Jul 1788, Germany, d. 17 Feb 1847,
Perry Co. PA, par. Johannes Fischer Fisher and Maria
Schuler
|--4-Catherine E. Smith b. 24 Dec 1795, Perry Co. PA
| +Joseph Gearhart b. 11 Feb 1791, Germany, d. 11
| Feb 1864, Crawford Co, OH
| |--5-Mary Gearhart b. 1830
| |--5-John Jacob Gearhart b. 1 Jul 1831, d. 22 Oct
| | 1907, Crawford Co, OH
|--4-Jacob Smith b. 8 Jul 1797, Perry Co. PA, d. 5
| Jul 1881, (Smith Cemetary, Crawford Co, Ohio)
| +Anne Snyder b. 15 Jun 1798, Perry Co. PA, m. 1
| Apr 1820, Perry Co. PA, d. 9 Sep 1838, (Smith
| Cemetary, Crawford Co, Ohio)
| |--5-Susanna Smith b. 20 Oct 1822, Perry Co. PA,
| | d. 21 Sep 1882, (Bloominggrove Cemetary,
| | Morrow Co, OH)
| |--5-Elizabeth Smith b. 25 Dec 1823
| |--5-John Smith b. 13 Mar 1825, d. 13 Mar 1825
| |--5-Maria Smith b. 25 May 1828, Perry Co. PA, d.
| | 5 Nov 1907, Cleveland, Ohio
| |--5-Joseph Smith b. 9 Feb 1827, Perry Co. PA
| |--5-Caroline Smith b. 14 Jun 1830, Perry Co. PA,
| | d. 17 Oct 1913
| |--5-Catherine Caroline Smith b. 30 Dec 1831,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 8 May 1919
| |--5-Jonas Smith b. 9 Aug 1833
| |--5-David Smith b. 4 Apr 1836, d. 18 Apr 1909
| |--5-John Jacob Smith b. Sep 1838
| +Mary Ruth Short b. illedgible, m. 14 Jul 1840,
| Crawford Co, OH, d. 4 Aug 1852, (Smith Cemetary,
| Crawford Co, Ohio)
| |--5-Delilah Smith b. 1850
| |--5-Samuel Smith b. Abt 1844
| |--5-Amanda Smith b. Abt 1849
| |--5-Aime(?) Smith b. Abt 1845
|--4-John Jacob Smith b. 28 Jul 1799, Perry Co. PA,
| d. 26 Jul 1843, Perry Co. PA
| +Mary Elizabeth Owen b. 21 Jul 1809,
| Pennsylvania, d. 27 Aug 1873
|--4-Christian Smith b. 29 Apr 1801, Perry Co. PA, d.
| 29 Oct 1871, Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| +Unknown
| |--5-Isaac William Smith b. 1 Oct 1834,
| | Bloomfield, Center Twp, Perry Co, PA, d. 26
| | Sep 1913, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | +Susanna Sechrist b. 27 Mar 1844, Franklin Co,
| | PA, m. 29 Jun 1862, Crawford Co, OH, d. 15
| | Jan 1914, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | |--6-Mary M. Smith
| | |--6-William S. Smith
| | |--6-Alverta A. Smith
| | |--6-Luna P. Smith
| | |--6-Della L. Smith
| | |--6-Edith G. Smith
| | |--6-Alice M. Smith
| | |--6-Pearl Smith
| | |--6-R. Kelly Smith
| | |--6-Leslie M. Smith
| | |--6-Harrison G. Smith
| | |--6-Bessie N. Smith
| |--5-Baxter R Smith b. Abt 1839
| | +Sarah J ? b. Abt 1841
| |--5-Aimlia J (?) Smith b. Abt 1940
| |--5-Willimina Smith b. Abt 1840
| |--5-Herman J Smith b. Abt 1844
| |--5-Edwin G Smith b. 23 Oct 1850, Perry Co. PA,
| | d. 28 Aug 1912, North Robinson, OH
| +Alice Magers b. 1853, m. 2 Jun 1874, d. 1943,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Nancy Kirkpatrick b. 1 Oct 1805, Perry Co. PA,
| d. 27 Oct 1860, Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH,
| par. Isaac Kirkpatrick and Nancy Graham
|--4-George Smith b. 10 Jan 1803, Perry Co. PA, d. 23
| Apr 1852, (Smith Cemetary, Crawford Co, Ohio)
| +Hannah Chisholm b. 26 Sep 1806, Perry Co. PA, m.
| Perry Co. PA, d. 1 Feb 1864, (Smith Cemetary,
| Crawford Co, Ohio), par. John Chisholm and
| Margaret McBride
| |--5-Jacob C Smith b. Abt 1834
| | +Magdalena ? b. Abt 1839
| |--5-John A. Smith b. 24 Jul 1837, Jackson Twp
| | Crawford Co Ohio, d. 5 Feb 1922, (Union
| | Cemetary, Liberty Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | +Jemima Modderwell b. 17 Apr 1846, Liberty
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 28 May 1863,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 8 Mar 1923, (Union
| | Cemetary, Liberty Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| | James Watson Modderwell and Mary Peterman
| | |--6-Anna W. Smith b. Abt 1867
| | | +J.S. Keller
| | |--6-Nessie F.S. Smith b. Abt Dec 1869
| | +W.C. Charlton
| |--5-Catherine C Smith b. Abt 1842
| |--5-George B. Smith b. Jun 1846, Jefferson Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| +Barbara E. ? b. May 1841, m. 1869
| |--6-John B. Smith b. Feb 1875, Ohio
| |--6-Edward M.C. Smith b. Aug 1877
| |--6-Dallis I. Smith b. Nov 1879
| |--6-Willis L. Smith b. Nov 1881
| |--6-Hallie M Smith b. Mar 1885
| |--6-George M Smith b. Oct 1888
| |--6-Horace P Smith b. Jun 1890
| |--6-Natien E Smith b. Nov 1892
| |--6-Nevada R Smith b. Jun 1872
|--4-Mary E. Smith b. 12 Sep 1804, Perry Co. PA, d. 1
| Mar 1831, Perry Co. PA
| +Unknown Rentz
|--4-Daniel Smith b. 8 Dec 1806, Perry Co. PA, d. 17
| Aug 1881, Crawford Co, OH
| +Eva Christina Gelbach b. Abt 1 Mar 1821,
| Prussia, m. Nov 1838, d. 22 Sep 1897
| |--5-Mary Smith b. 13 Nov 1843, d. 10 Sep 1896,
| | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford
| | Co, Ohio)
| | +Henry Heckert b. 23 Apr 1839, m. 1 Mar 1866,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 4 Jun 1907, (Campbell
| | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio),
| | par. Jonas Heckert and Mary Knappenberger
| |--5-Catherine Smith b. Abt 1845
| |--5-William Smith b. Abt 1857
| |--5-Adaline Smith b. Abt 1845
|--4-Henry Smith b. 22 Jun 1808, Perry Co. PA, d. ,
| Infancy
|--4-Joseph Smith b. 12 Jul 1809, Perry Co. PA, d. 26
| Apr 1870, Crawford Co, OH
+Mary Kirkpatrick b. 1816, Perry Co. PA, m. Abt
1835, Perry Co. PA, d. 17 Dec 1839, Crawford Co,
OH, par. Moses Kirkpatrick and Margaret Jane
Garrett
|--5-Leonard Smith b. 22 Nov 1835, Perry Co. PA,
| d. 14 May 1901, Crawford Co, OH
|--5-Mary Elizabeth Smith b. 18 Dec 1836, Perry
| Co. PA, d. 1 Jun 1921, Crawford Co, OH
| +Benjamin Franklin Savage b. 26 Jan 1848, m.
| 14 Oct 1883, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Nov 1912,
| Crawford Co, OH
|--5-Joseph Gilbert Smith b. 15 Dec 1839,
| Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Aug
| 1923, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
+Amanda Van Voorhis b. 20 Apr 1843, m. 8 Nov
1863, Crawford Co, OH, d. 3 Jan 1932,
(Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. William Roe
Van Voorhis and Almeda Johnson
|--6-Lora Annetta Smith b. 11 Aug 1864, d. 5
| Mar 1931
|--6-Alice E. Smith b. 2 Oct 1867, d. 31 Aug
| 1959
|--6-Bertha Vernella Smith b. 14 Feb 1870, d.
| 17 May 1937, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
|--6-Jessie A. Smith b. 12 Jul 1872
|--6-Evelyn E. Smith b. 5 Nov 1874, d. 1 Apr
| 1966, Crawford Co, OH
|--6-Charles Van Smith b. 14 May 1877, d. 15
| Jul 1972, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
|--6-Lettie E Smith b. 22 May 1878, d. 20 Mar
| 1959, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
|--6-Clara Smith b. 1880
|--6-Helen M. Smith b. 6 Mar 1881, d. 6 Dec 1955
|
|--6-Ethel T. Smith b. 17 Sep 1882, d. 20 Oct
| 1893, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., C
| rawford Co, Ohio)
|--6-Edna L. Smith b. 17 Dec 1883, d. 12 Dec
| 1933, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| +Harry Hutchinson
|--6-Josephine E. Smith b. 9 Sep 1885, d. 11
| Jan 1926, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
+Dorsey A. Littler m. 24 Mar 1910, Crawford
Co, OH
+Nancy Kirkpatrick b. 1 Oct 1806, Perry Co. PA,
m. 13 Aug 1840, Richland Co, OH, d. 17 Sep 1866,
Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, par. Joseph
Kirkpatrick and Matilda Murphy
|--5-Matilda Ann Smith b. 30 Nov 1842, Ohio, d. 15
| Mar 1912, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| +William Michael b. 29 Dec 1830, m. 1 Jan
| 1863, Crawford Co, OH, d. 6 Jan 1910,
| Crawford Co, OH
| |--6-Joseph Michael b. 16 Nov 1863, d. 29 Jul
| | 1931, Crawford Co, OH
| |--6-Mary E. Michael b. 1865, d. 20 Jan 1942
|--5-Alvin Oliver Smith b. 15 Sep 1846, Ohio, d. 8
| Aug 1927, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| +Eliza Van Voorhis b. 15 Jul 1848, Morrow Co,
| OH, m. 17 Oct 1869, Crawford Co, OH, d. 14
| Apr 1926, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par.
| William Roe Van Voorhis and Almeda Johnson
| |--6-Florence Vernella Smith b. 25 Apr 1871,
| | Ohio, d. 24 Feb 1945, (Fairview (Galion,
| | Ohio))
| |--6-Frank Smith b. 12 Jul 1872, Ohio, d. 6 Mar
| | 1931, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | +Catherine Kibler b. 16 Oct 1872, m. 23 Dec
| | 1894, Crawford Co, OH, d. 23 Mar 1962,
| | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Frederick
| | J Kibler and Sarah Cook
| | |--7-Harvey Franklin Smith b. 19 Dec 1900,
| | | d. 14 Jul 1922, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | Ohio))
| | |--7-Verna Smith
| | | +Tollie A Cox m. 17 Mar 1915, Crawford
| | | Co, OH
| | |--7-Edith Irene Smith b. 11 Nov 1897, d.
| | | 1899, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | |--7-Ethel S Smith b. 11 Feb 1908, d. 13 Apr
| | | 1998, (Greenlawn Cemetary, Crestline,
| | | OH)
| | +Dewey S Jackson b. 17 May 1898, m. 1
| | Sep 1938, Crawford Co, OH, d. 12 Feb
| | 1985, (Greenlawn Cemetary, Crestline,
| | OH)
| |--6-William Leroy Smith b. 21 Sep 1873,
| | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 4 Sep
| | 1926, (Greenlawn Cemetary, Crestline, OH)
| | +Maud E Bogan b. 1875, m. 11 Mar 1894,
| | Crawford Co, OH, par. Henry Harrison Bogan
| | and Leah Anne Kunkel
| | |--7-Florence Smith b. Sep 1894
| | | +Russel Rothenberger
| | |--7-Alvin Smith d. 6 Oct 1923
| | |--7-Hazel Smith b. Dec 1899, Jackson Twp
| | | Crawford Co Ohio
| | +Mary Elizabeth Slick b. 21 Dec 1869, m.
| | 1899, d. 5 Feb 1947, (Greenlawn Cemetary,
| | Crestline, OH)
| | |--7-George Alvin Smith b. 26 May 1901, d. 3
| | | Oct 1923, (Greenlawn Cemetary,
| | | Crestline, OH)
| |--6-Jessie May Smith b. 6 Feb 1875, Ohio, d.
| | 20 Jul 1957, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | +William Edgar Bogan b. 26 Oct 1873, m. 3
| | Dec 1893, North Robinson, OH, d. 3 Aug
| | 1955, North Robinson, OH, par. Henry
| | Harrison Bogan and Leah Anne Kunkel
}}}
See [[JNA Bogen Descendants]] for descendants of William Edgar and Jessie May Bogan
{{{
| |--6-Harry Smith b. 11 May 1878, Jefferson Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 27 Feb 1956,
| | (Middleton Cem, Crawford Co, OH)
| | +Edith A Ashcroft b. 15 Oct 1876, Jefferson
| | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 22 Mar 1900,
| | North Robinson, OH, d. 1 Sep 1953, Galion,
| | OH, par. Adam Ashcroft and Lydia Crider
| | |--7-Ethel Smith
| | |--7-Homer Leroy Smith b. 24 Jun 1901,
| | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 17
| | | Oct 1955, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Ruth Malinda Burwell b. 1 Oct 1901,
| | | Bucyrus Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 1 Jul
| | | 1922, Crawford Co, OH, d. 22 Dec 1979,
| | | (Luke Cemetery, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| | | Alfred Allen Burwell and Dora Anna
| | | Eccleston
| | | |--8-Dora Eileen Smith b. 4 Sep 1923,
| | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| | | | 23 Sep 1942, (Luke Cemetery,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--8-Frederick Wayne Smith b. 9 Jan 1925,
| | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d.
| | | | 17 Jul 1982, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Miriam Katherine Patton m. 23 Jan
| | | | 1947, Crawford Co, OH, par. John C.
| | | | Patton and Unknown
| | | | |--9-John Frederick Smith b. 8 Jul
| | | | | 1947, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--9-Michael Wayne Smith b. 2 Aug
| | | | | 1949, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--9-Nancy Kathleen Smith b. 24 Mar
| | | | | 1952, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | +James Richard Grogan m. 19 Feb
| | | | | 1973, Maysville, Kentucky
| | | | | +Oscar David Zornes m. 27 Feb
| | | | | 1975, Wellston, OH
| | | | | +Randall Keith O'Connor m. 18 Jun
| | | | | 1978, Zanesville, OH
| | | | | +Timothy Allamon m. 26 Dec 1992,
| | | | | Shelby, OH
| | | | |--9-Paul Allen Smith b. 25 May 1957,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 4 Dec 1982,
| | | | | Liberty Twp, Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--8-James Russell Smith Senior b. 9 Jan
| | | | 1927, Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 22 Mar 1995
| | | | +Betty Mae Nickler b. 21 Dec 1928,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, m. 24 Oct 1947,
| | | | Kentucky
| | | | |--9-Patricia Darlene Smith b. 5 May
| | | | | 1948, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--9-James Russell Smith Junior b. 10
| | | | | Jul 1952, Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | +Lois Elaine Knodell b. 9 Dec
| | | | | 1953, m. 29 Oct 1972, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH, par. Gaylord Knodell and
| | | | | Patti Damschroeder
| | | | |--9-Matilda Ann Smith b. 13 Dec 1954,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--9-Beth Sue Smith b. 31 Dec 1955,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--9-Regina Lee Smith b. 23 Jun 1950
| | | | +Terry Lee Snyder b. 2 Apr 1949,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, m. 4 May 1975,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, par. Donald
| | | | Wayne Snyder and Delores Reber
| | | | |--10-Abiqail Snyder b. 10 Jul
| | | | | 1980, d. 7 Jun 2000, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH
| | | | |--10-Holly Lee Snyder b. 30 Apr
| | | | | 1982, Galion, OH
| | | |--8-Mary Alice Smith b. 1 Jun 1931
| | | |--8-Edith Mae Smith b. 26 Dec 1933,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 23 Apr 2001,
| | | | Bucyrus Hospital
| | | |--8-Barbara Ruth Smith b. 27 Aug 1936,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Milleard Bedson b. 26 Oct 1926,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, m. 1 Jul 1972, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | |--8-Carol Ann Smith b. 24 Dec 1940,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | |--8-Harry Allen Smith b. 8 Oct 1942,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | +Christine Liversidge b. 12 Feb 1952,
| | | | Leeds, England, m. 31 Jul 1971,
| | | | Leeds, England
| | | |--8-David Keith Smith b. 2 Feb 1947,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | |--7-Garnet Smith b. 24 Aug 1902, Jefferson
| | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, d. 18 Oct 1992,
| | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | +Milton LaVerne Sand b. 22 Jul 1902, Tod
| | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 21 Oct 1920,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 29 Sep 1997,
| | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | |--7-Coral Smith b. 15 Feb 1907, d. 15 Nov
| | | 1907, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--7-Cleora Smith b. 5 Nov 1909, d. 11 Oct
| | | 1991
| | | +Christian F Eichler b. 16 Sep 1903,
| | | Galion, OH, m. 29 Apr 1930, Crawford
| | | Co, OH, d. 6 Feb 1961, (Iberia
| | | Cemetery)
| | |--7-Gertrude Smith b. 3 Feb 1912, d. 9 Oct
| | | 1971, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--7-Harry Edward Smith b. 1 Jun 1920, d. 9
| | | Oct 2005, Galion, OH
| | +Blanche M. Beach b. 30 Nov 1918, m. 1
| | Mar 1941, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--8-Clarence Leroy Smith b. 16 Jan 1943
| | |--8-Phyllis Ann Smith b. 31 Dec 1947
| | |--8-Edward Michael Smith b. 27 Mar 1960
| |--6-Orva Almeda Smith b. 13 Dec 1879, Ohio, d.
| | 23 Apr 1963, (Greenlawn Cemetary,
| | Crestline, OH)
| | +William Elmer Knisley m. 4 Mar 1897,
| | Crawford Co, OH
| | |--7-Luella Knisley
| | |--7-Albertha Knisley
| | |--7-Ada Elnora Knisley b. 9 Feb 1898,
| | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co Ohio, d. 13 Dec
| | | 1919, (Greenlawn Cemetary, Crestline,
| | | OH)
| | | +Walter Hartman b. 15 Dec 1894, m. 26
| | | May 1910, Crawford Co, OH, d. 12 Dec
| | | 1918
| | |--7-Mary Alice Knisley b. 21 Aug 1900,
| | | Galion, OH, d. 23 Apr 1946
| | |--7-Pauline Knisley b. 2 Nov 1904, d. 9 Mar
| | | 1967
| |--6-Harvey Smith b. 12 Jul 1880, d. 4 Aug
| | 1893, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp., C
| | rawford Co, Ohio)
| |--6-Mary Alice Smith b. 30 May 1883, d. 22 May
| | 1953, Crawford Co, OH
| +Curtis W Tracht b. 24 Sep 1879, m. 5 Oct
| 1904, Crawford Co, OH, d. 17Sep 1954,
| (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| |--7-Ethel Tracht
| |--7-Margaret Tracht
| |--7-Naomi H Tracht b. 14 Aug 1905, d. 25
| | Feb 1970, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| +George Albertes Wilson b. 15 Nov 1894,
| m. 25 May 1934, Crawford Co, OH, d. 31
| Oct 1970, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
|--5-Mandy Smith b. 1843
+Sarah Kirkpatrick b. 23 Nov 1824, m. 28 Jun
1869, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Jan 1907, par.
Joseph Kirkpatrick and Matilda Murphy
}}}
!Descendants of Johannes Kehrer
{{{
1-Johannes (John) Kehrer b. 13 Mar 1774, Baden-Württemberg,
Germany, d. 4 May 1851, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone
Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
+Anna Margaretha Sherer b. , Germany, m. 26 Nov 1800,
Betzingen, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, d. 1819, Lycoming
Co. PA, par. Jakob Sherer and Unknown
|--2-Anna Maria Kehrer b. 4 Mar 1804, Germany, d. 9 Feb
| 1860, (Sherer Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| OH)
| +Jacob Stump b. 6 Sep 1789, Baden-Württemberg, Germany,
| m. Lycoming Co. PA, d. 14 Mar 1865, (Sherer Cemetery,
| Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par. John Stump and Un
| known
| |--3-John Stump b. Abt 1829, Hepburn Twp, Lycoming Co, PA
| |
| | +Sarah Ann Heinlen b. 27 Nov 1831, m. 14 Apr 1853,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 27 Jul 1869, (Whetstone
| | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| | John Lewis Heinlen and Hanna Wise
| |--3-Jacob Stump b. 23 Feb 1837, Crawford Co, OH, d. 23
| | Mar 1924, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Katherine Whiteamire
| |--3-Isaac Stump b. 6 Jan 1834, Hepburn Twp, Lycoming
| | Co, PA, d. 13 Jan 1918, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | OH)
| | +Elizabeth Heinlen b. 14 Oct 1837, Crawford Co, OH,
| | m. 3 May 1860, Crawford Co, OH, d. 19 May 1925,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. John Lewis
| | Heinlen and Hanna Wise
| |--3-Benjamin Stump b. 1841
| |--3-Esther Stump b. 1843
|--2-John Kehrer b. 18 May 1811, Pennsylvania, d. 1 Aug 1890
|
| +Elizabeth ? b. 8 May 1820, m. Abt 1845, Crawford Co,
| OH, d. 18 Aug 1864, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone
| Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| |--3-Elizabeth Kehrer b. Abt 1848, d. 19 Sep 1904,
| | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| | OH)
| |--3-Mary Kehrer b. Abt 1846, d. 19 Sep 1904
| |--3-Sarah Kehrer b. 11 Jan 1852, Whetsone Twp Crawford
| | Co, OH, d. 3 Jun 1890, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| +George Nungesser b. 1836, m. 28 Dec 1869, Crawford
| Co, OH, d. 8 Apr 1910, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
|--2-Martin Kehrer b. 6 Apr 1813, Lycoming Co. PA, d. 12
| Aug 1897, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| Co, OH)
+(Anna) Nancy Brucklacher b. 7 Apr 1814, Pennsylvania,
m. 1838, Pennsylvania (Lycoming Co?), d. 19 May 1890,
(Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH),
par. Daniel Brucklacher and Unknown
|--3-Daniel F Kehrer b. 11 Apr 1839, d. 1 Jul 1908,
| (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| OH)
| +Lydia Kester b. 1 Oct 1840, m. 3 Nov 1864, Crawford
| Co, OH, d. 4 Dec 1916, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par. Jacob Kester
| and Saloma Wise
| |--4-Samuel Manuel Kehrer b. 16 Nov 1865, d. 25 Apr
| | 1942
| | +Amanda Jane Albright b. 23 Nov 1866, m. 29 Oct
| | 1889, d. 23 Nov 1931, par. John Albright Jr and
| | Elizabeth Cook
| | |--5-Emelia Kehrer b. 25 Jul 1891, d. 29 Sep 1891,
| | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| | | Co, OH)
| | |--5-Infant Kehrer b. 6 Aug 1892, d. 6 Aug 1892,
| | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| | | Co, OH)
| | |--5-Nina Norena Kehrer b. 16 Sep 1893, Whetstone
| | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 25 Jul 1976,
| | | Galion, OH
| | | +Claude Mckinley Gibson b. 25 Mar 1891,
| | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, m. 21 Nov
| | | 1912, Crawford Co, OH, d. 2 Oct 1977, Galion,
| | | OH, par. Andrew H. Gibson and Lydia Campbell
| | | |--6-Arthur Theodore Gibson b. 14 Sep 1913, d.
| | | | 19 Mar 1999, Galion, OH
| | | | +Marjorie Eichler b. 28 Feb 1918, m. 19 Jul
| | | | 1943
| | | | |--7-Judith Ann Gibson b. 28 Mar 1945,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | |--7-James Arthur Gibson b. 27 Aug 1947,
| | | | | Galion, OH, Hospital
| | | | | +Marcheta Phillips b. 16 Feb 1961, m. 22
| | | | | Sep 1973
| | | | | |--8-Kerry Ann Gibson b. 16 Feb 1975,
| | | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | | | +Benjamin David Riggs m. 20 Sep 2003
| | | | | |--8-David Arthur Gibson b. 8 Nov 1978,
| | | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | | |--8-Meghan Eileen Gibson b. 1 Dec 1979,
| | | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | |--7-John Michael Gibson b. 23 May 1950
| | | | +Sandra Faye McColley b. 24 Nov 1950, m.
| | | | 19 Aug 1972
| | | | |--8-Darcy Ann Gibson b. 30 Jan 1973,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | |--8-Angela Lee Gibson b. 11 Jun 1975,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | +Bradley Michael Utz b. 1 Mar 1974,
| | | | m. 2 Sep 1995
| | | | |--9-Tyler Michael Utz b. 2 May 1994,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | |--9-Ethan Bradley Utz b. 27 Oct 1997,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | | |--9-Ryan David Utz b. 20 Apr 2000
| | | |--6-Infant Gibson b. 8 Jun 1915, d. 8 Jun 1915
| | | |--6-Infant Gibson b. 26 Aug 1916, Whetstone
| | | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 26 Aug 1916
| | | |--6-Ethel Jane Gibson b. 11 Aug 1917, d. 11
| | | | Dec 1923, Monnett Hospital
| | | |--6-Infant Gibson b. 14 Sep 1919, Whetstone
| | | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 14 Sep 1919,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio
| | | |--6-Infant Gibson b. 13 Feb 1922, Whetstone
| | | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 13 Feb 1922,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio
| | | |--6-Doris Betty Gibson b. 4 Feb 1927
| | | | +Floyd Burkhart b. 24 Mar 1925, Bucyrus,
| | | | OH, m. 24 Mar 1947
| | | | |--7-Ronald Wayne Burkhart b. 27 Jun 1948,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | |--7-Charles Robert Burkhart b. 14 Nov 1950,
| | | | | Galion, OH
| | | |--6-Ruth Marcena Gibson b. 9 Aug 1929,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 23
| | | | Mar 1984, Columbus, Ohio
| | | | +Raymond Lunger b. 12 May 1929, North
| | | | Robinson, OH, m. 12 Nov 1950, d. 20 Feb
| | | | 1985
| | | | |--7-Robert Steven Lunger b. 4 Oct 1951,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 4 Oct 1951
| | | | |--7-Ronda Sue Lunger b. 9 Jul 1960, Marion,
| | | | | Ohio
| | | | | +Lenny Shifley
| | | | | |--8-Ryan Shifley
| | | | | |--8-Kylene Shifley
| | | | |--7-Roderick Ray Lunger b. 13 Oct 1962
| | | |--6-Alice Lucille Gibson b. 15 Oct 1930,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 19 Oct 1930, Bucyrus, OH
| | | |--6-Esther Patricia Gibson b. 29 Oct 1932,
| | | | Bucyrus Hospital
| | | +John Caroll See m. 16 Oct 1954
| | | |--7-Robbie Thomas See b. 31 Jan 1956,
| | | | Galion, OH
| | | | +Robyn Augenstein m. 13 Dec 1974
| | | | +Sylvia Marie Cotsamire m. 16 Oct 1993
| | | |--7-Douglas Kevin See b. 11 May 1957,
| | | | Galion, OH
| | | | +Brenda Blaschak m. 10 May 1980
| | | |--7-Brian David See b. 9 Sep 1959,
| | | | Nuremburg, Germany
| | |--5-Carl Wilbert Kehrer b. 11 Dec 1895, d. 6 Oct
| | | 1918, Camp Sherman
| | |--5-Verda Matilda Kehrer b. 24 Apr 1900, d. 14
| | | Oct 1943, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Franklin Henry Reber b. 30 Jan 1888, m. 10
| | | Jun 1919, Bucyrus, OH, d. 12 Feb 1938,
| | | Bucyrus, OH, par. John Jacob Reber and Mary
| | | Margaret Plank
}}}
See __[[Rudolf Reber Descendants]]__ descendants of Frank and Verda Reber
{{{
| | | +Russell J. Volkmer b. 11 Aug 1900, Bucyrus,
| | | OH, m. Did Not Marry, d. 27 Aug 1970,
| | | Coldwater, Branch Co, MI, par. John C.
| | | Volkmer and Mary Elizabeth Laipply
| | | |--6-Leota Jane Reber b. 7 Feb 1919, Columbus,
| | | | Ohio, d. 1 Mar 1998, Chattanooga,
| | | | Tennessee
| | | +Raymond Edward Bogan b. 15 May 1917,
| | | Bucyrus, OH, m. 15 May 1938, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | d. 23 Mar 2006, Bucyrus, OH, par. Chester
| | | Harrison Bogan and Anona Fern Pfahler
}}}
See __[[JNA Bogen Descendants]]__ descendants of Raymond and Leota Bogan
{{{
| | |--5-Calvin Curtis Kehrer b. 20 May 1903, d. 22
| | | Aug 1974, Bucyrus, OH
| | +Hazel Rebecca Wilson m. 3 Jun 1925, Crawford
| | Co, OH, par. Almern Wilson and Unknown
| | |--6-Eugene W. Kehrer
| | +Mary E. Bechtol m. 15 Feb 1947
| | |--6-Sharon Lee Kehrer
| | +Leslie McGuire
| |--4-Henry A. Kehrer b. 30 Oct 1867, d. 11 Oct 1930,
| | (Galion City Masoleum)
| | +Matilda Beach b. 23 Mar 1872, Crawford Co, OH,
| | m. 21 Nov 1893, Crawford Co, OH, d. 12 Aug 1944,
| | (Galion City Masoleum), par. Peter Beach and
| | Amanda Cook
| | |--5-Arthur C. Kehrer b. Jun 1895
| | | +Mabel M. Tupps b. Mar 1872, Ohio, m. 30 Dec
| | | 1919, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--5-Clinton Gilbert Kehrer b. 12 Feb 1903, d. 16
| | | May 1959, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | +Doris Isabelle Curren b. 30 Jan 1906, m. 30
| | Oct 1934, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Dec 1972,
| | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Jesse Curren
| | and Unknown
| |--4-Ella Catherine Kehrer b. 7 Feb 1870, Crawford
| | Co, OH, d. 6 Sep 1936, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | +Samuel Aaron Zimmerman b. 28 Apr 1871, Ohio, m.
| | 25 Nov 1912, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Jul 1950,
| | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)), par. Peter Zimmerman
| | and Philissa Eichorn
| | +Edward William Cook m. 13 Sep 1894, Crawford Co,
| | OH
| |--4-William D. Kehrer b. 1 Aug 1872, d. 6 Feb 1936,
| | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| | OH)
| | +Mary E. Ackerman b. 8 Sep 1867, m. 4 Apr 1906,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 16 Oct 1959, (Whetstone
| | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| | Caleb Ackerman and Unknown
| |--4-Jacob M. Kehrer b. Oct 1875
| | +Daisy Goldsmith b. Abt 1880, Ohio, m. Bef 1905
| | |--5-Olive A. Kehrer b. 12 Jan 1906, d. 3 Sep
| | | 1985, Marion, Ohio
| | |--5-Ruth Kehrer b. Abt Jul 1909, Marion Co, Ohio
| |--4-Emma L. Kehrer b. 21 Oct 1878, d. 1 Jul 1970
| |--4-Joseph Albert Kehrer b. 24 Nov 1880, Whetstone
| | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 8 Dec 1952, (Oakwood
| | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Mary Matilda Brucklacken b. 14 May 1882, Hepburn
| | Twp, Lycoming Co, PA, m. 11 Oct 1911, Hepburn
| | Twp, Lycoming Co, PA, d. 13 Oct 1916, (Oakwood
| | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. Daniel Jacob
| | Brucklacken and Martha Waltz
| | +Mary Lottie Grose (2nd Wife) b. 30 Aug 1888, m.
| | Unknown, d. 26 Jan 1926
| | +Ethel E. Sonner 3rd Wife b. 31 Dec 1903, m.
| | Unknown, d. 7 Jan 1988
| |--4-Reuben Edward Kehrer b. 14 Jan 1884, d. 26 Nov
| | 1941, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | Crawford Co, OH)
| +Martha E. Love b. 15 Feb 1887, Huntington Co,
| PA, m. 21 Mar 1912, d. 13 Apr 1982, (Whetstone
| Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par.
| John Wesley Love and Rebecca Rock
|--3-Catherina Kehrer b. 12 Jul 1847, d. 22 Apr 1910,
| (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| OH)
+David Wingert b. 18 Mar 1849, d. 3 Jul 1928,
(Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
OH), par. Frederick Wingert and Margaret Lauderman
+Anna Maria Stump b. 18 Mar 1787, Baden-Württemberg,
Germany, m. After 1819, d. 10 Jun 1876, (Whetstone
Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par. John
Stump and Unknown
}}}
There are connections to the Johnsons family through both the Bogan and Pfahler side of father's family. The family is interesting because they were pioneers in Pennsylvania and Ohio.
!!Pedigree Links
Mary Wood (daughter of Isaac Wood) married George Cooper in 1803 in Jefferson County, OH but George Cooper died soon in about 1812. One of their six children was Edward Cooper (b: 1807 in Harrison Co, Ohio). and Mary remarried to Disberry Johnson in Harrison County, Ohio in 1817. Disberry also had sixl children by his first wife, then Mary and he had another half dozen including Almeda born in 1818. In 1821 this large family moved to near Galion in Crawford County, Ohio.
Almeda Johnson married William Roe ~VanVoorhis in 1842 and their daughter Eliza became the mother of Jessie May (Smith) Bogan. Edward Cooper was Almeda's half sister and he married Eliza Burwell in 1828 to raise a family that included Rhoda Cooper (b: 1845). Rhoda married George John Pfahler. (see the [[Pfahler Pedigree]] and [[Smith Pedigree]] for tables showing this link.)
!!Biological Ancestry
Two Bogan's that married a Pfahler are related to Mary Wood though both parents. The Pfahlers have ~Wood-Cooper ancestors while the Bogans have ~Wood-Johnson ancestors. These parents are:
*Chester Bogan and Anona Pfahler
*Evelyn Bair (whose parents were Edna Bogan and Ray Bair) and George Loren Pfahler
Ivan Bogan married Blanche Pfahler (Loren and Anona's sister) but Ivan was not a descendent of the ~VanVoorhis-Johnson family.
!!Johnson Family Migrations and Activities
The obituary of Disberry Johnson (dated: 1869 ) reads: ```The spelling of Disberry is my favourite but it is spelled many ways in the literature, Desberry, Desbery, Disbury, etc```
__"Death of one of the oldest pioneers of Crawford County"__
"Desbery Johnson was born Oct. 15 1766, and died in Galion, Crawford County, Ohio, Wednesday July 28, 1869, aged one hundred and two years, nine months and thirteen days. Of his birth place little is known. His father, James Johnson, moved from Virginia to Pennsylvania about the year 1762. Here, Desbery and his twin brother Griffith were born. Soon the Indians began to ravage the country, and James, with his wife and three children were compelled to retrace their steps over the hills of Pennsylvania to Virginia for safety, carrying the three children on their back. After serving an apprenticeship in Charleston, Va, Desbery, at the age of twenty two, left his native home for Kentucky's wilds, remained in Kentucky four years, then came to Charleston, on the Ohio River. He was married at the age of thirty to Jinsy McGee```Other names for Jinsy are Jean and Jenny - she was the daughter of Hugh McGee who was born in Ireland.```. From Charleston he moved to Harrison Co., Ohio. Here his wife died. He was married again in 1817 to Mary (Wood) Cooper```Disberry's brother, Griffith, had a son that he named Disbury born in 1799 in Jefferson Co, OH. This Disbury moved to Missouri and lived there most of his life, dying in Union Twp, Lewis Co, Missouri in 1883. Some genealogies confuse the two people especially concerning the marriage to Mary Wood in 1817. The younger Disbury married only once to Nancy Gardner in Guernsey Co, OH in 1823.```
, his present widow, whose age is eighty-three years. In 1821 he moved to this county one year after the County was organized. Following an Indian trail from Mansfield to Galion, which then numbered two houses, he entered one hundred and sixty acres of land in Polk Township, where he remained forty-five years, was elected Justice of the Peace, which office he filled for several years and was highly honored for his impartial judgment and decisions. His family consisted of fourteen children, eight girls and six boys, and his grandchildren number ninety-two."
The following is from the [[Johnson Family website|http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tqpeiffer/Documents/Surnames/MMPS/Johnson%20%281%29/johnson1%20mmps%20surname.htm]]
> It is most likely that the Johnson family is of English descent and possibly landed at Jamestown in the Virginia Colony during the first half of the 17th century.
>The earliest known ancestor of this lineage is ''William Johnson'' born about 1705 (probably in the colony of Virginia). It is not known to whom William was married nor when, but he had three sons named James, Griffin and Thomas. Evidence is that he lived in Essex County, Virginia. William Johnson probably moved from Virginia, around 1740, up into Western Maryland where the opportunities for himself and sons were more favorable. His name and the details of his life are still obscured in the records. The only hint of a name is the fact that a piece of land known as "Betty's Fancy" owned by Griffin Johnson in Allegany County, Maryland, had been "patented to William Johnson." Family names such as Griffin, Disberry (Disbury), and Morrison have been used as given names among these Johnson’s as the family can be traced; hence it is claimed that the wife of the William Johnson bore one of these names. William was about 80 years old when he died in Washington County, Maryland around the year 1785. At this time Washington County encompassed all of the current western Maryland counties of Washington, Allegany, and Garrett. As such it is believed that William Johnson lived in that part of Washington County now in Allegany County, Maryland.
>''James Johnson'', son of William, was born during 1740 in either Virginia or Maryland. If he was born prior to his family moving to western Maryland the most probable place would be Essex County, Virginia. If born after the aforementioned move then he was born in the western part of Frederick County, Maryland that would eventually become Allegany County.
>It is said that during the French and Indian War he served as a military engineer under General Braddock. If this is fact James would have been only 15 years old and as such may have been employed to construct roads through the wilderness during Braddock's ill-fated 1755 expedition. The likelihood of his service is heightened due to the fact that at this time he was living in Maryland at a location through which the Braddock built his Road from Cumberland, Maryland to Fort Pitt, now Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania.
>James is known to have been married four times during his life. Apparently his first marriage was around 1758 to a woman named Ann ~McMillian. This event probably occurred in Maryland. It is said that four children were produced of this union. The names of three off-spring all sons are known. Ann died around 1764.
>James Johnson’s second marriage was to Catherine Demos, a native of Berkeley County (now in West Virginia), occurred sometime between 1765 and 1769. James and Catherine had eleven children born between c.1769 and 1784. It is most probable that soon after his marriage to Catherine James migrated up into southwestern Pennsylvania. Here he settled on the edge of what was then the frontier of the English colonies in what would become Westmoreland County in 1773.
>During the American Revolutionary War James served the cause as a Ranger with a unit from Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. It is probable that his service was most likely involved in defending the western frontier against Indian attacks. During the war British authorities in Detroit encouraged the Native-Americans in Ohio to cross into Pennsylvania to strike at isolated cabins. The best method of defending the scattered settlements was to organize companies of rangers, to patrol the course of the Allegheny and Ohio, and to pursue the bands of marauders. James Johnson’s patriotic service during the war has been verified in Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) records.
>After the war it is believed that James and his family were living about 15 to 20 miles east of the Ohio River in what was then Ohio County, Virginia (now West Virginia) and would become Washington County, Pennsylvania in 1781.* James was no stranger to Indian encounters as illustrated by the following incidents. Sometime prior migrating to Ohio and, while "in camp" on McIntyre's Creek in company with two neighbors, McIntyre and Layport, the three were attacked by Indians. McIntyre and Layport were both killed and James was taken captive. The Indians took him with them to Sandusky as a prisoner, but afterwards released him and James returned home.
>By 1788 James had moved his family across the Ohio River into what was then known as Washington County which had been formed that same year as an original county of the Northwest Territory. In 1797 this area would become part of the newly formed Jefferson County, Ohio. Here James bought some improvements on what was called Beach Bottom Flats, located two and a half miles from the river, and three or four miles above the mouth of Short creek, with the expectation of holding by improvement right under the Virginia claim. Soon after he reached there, the Indians became troublesome; they stole horses, and killed a number of persons in our neighborhood. In October, 1788 his 11 year old son Henry and his 13 year old son John were captured by two Indians. During the night the boys gained their freedom by shooting one Indian and clubbing the other with a tomahawk. The entire adventure was written out in a detailed statement by Henry's son John in 1851.```The James Johnson family included eleven children of which Disberry was the oldest - there was
#Disberry b1766 d: Crawford County, OH
#Rachel b:abt 1786
#Deborah b: abt 1771
#James b: abt 1773
#John b: 1775
#Andrew William b: 1776
#Henry b: 1777
#Griffith b: 1778
#Sarah Ann b: 1780
#Mary b: abt 1780
#Nancy b: abt 1784```
>James and Catherine along with their children and grandchildren may have moved further west about 15 miles up the Short Creek into that area of Jefferson County that would be incorporated into Harrison County, Ohio in 1813. According to the history of son Andrew William Johnson this event occurred in 1804. Catherine passed away in 1815. Even though he was 75 years old James married for a third time on August 22, 1816 to Jemima Griffin. This event took place in Harrison County. James’s fourth marriage to Eleanor Mowder in 1820 is a true testament to his vitality as he was about 80 years old at the time! James was a farmer and belonged to the Methodist Church. At least one newspaper account has James living to be 111 years old and includes the claim that when he was 110, he was still plowing his own corn. If the records are correct James lived to be at least 109 years old. He is probably buried near the town of Freeport, Ohio.
Oldest son, Disberry, moved to Crawford County in 1821 with 17 children (only his oldest daughter who was married stayed in Harrison Co, OH). They came with a four-horse team, driving some cattle and hogs; and, of all the herd, an old sow was complimented as being the best leader through the woods, consequently, she was assigned the duty of carrying the bell. They arrived where Galion is now located on Oct. 15, 1821. Johnson died at Galion in his 104th year.
All the children of the family are not all known but of the known ones, four stay and live in Crawford county. They were
*Almeda (Johnson) ~VanVoorhis```Both the Johnsons and ~VanVoorhis were in Washington Co, PA at the same time and one wonders if they knew each other before moving to Crawford County```
*Henry Isaac Johnson
*Alex M. Johnson
*Hannah (Johnson) Smith
Others moved to other states:
*Mary (Johnson) ~McCallister - Putnam Co, OH
*Sarah (Johnson) ~McCoy - Missouri
*Eliza Jane (Johnson) Reed - ?
!!!footnotes:
!Descendants of Joseph Albrecht
{{{
1-Joseph Albrecht b. Abt 1688, Necker Bischofsheim, Baden,
Germany
+Maria Margaretha Benner b. Abt 1692, Germany
|--2-Joerg Adam Albrecht b. 8 Mar 1732, Keckar Bishofsheim,
| Baden, Germany, d. 1785, Providence, Montgomery Co, PA
| +Eva Barbara Friedle b. Abt 1736, Colebrook, Berks Co,
| PA, m. 16 Oct 1757, New Hanover, Montgomery Co, PA
| |--3-Johan Heinrich Albrecht b. 13 Mar 1760, New
| | Hanover, Montgomery Co, PA, d. 5 Jul 1820,
| | (Fetterhofs, Halifax Twp, Dauphin County, Pa)
| | +Catherina Elizabeth Schoff b. Abt 1765,
| | Pennsylvania, m. 7 Mar 1786, probably Dauphin Co.,
| | PA, d. 6 Jul 1803, (Fetterhofs, Halifax Twp,
| | Dauphin County, Pa)
| | |--4-Susanna Albrecht b. 7 May 1789, Dauphin Co., PA,
| | | d. 1 Dec 1863, Jackson Twp, Dauphin Co, PA
| | | +Daniel Schupp b. 11 Sep 1783, Dauphin Co., PA,
| | | m. Dauphin Co., PA, d. 1848, Jackson Twp,
| | | Dauphin Co, PA, par. Johan Georg Schupp and Anna
| | | Maria Elizabeth Diebler
| | |--4-John Albright Sr b. 21 Jan 1794, Dauphin Co.,
| | | PA, d. 11 Aug 1866, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Sarah Shafer b. 3 Apr 1795, Pennsylvania, m.
| | | 1816, Pennsylvania, d. 4 Dec 1874, (Whetstone
| | | Cemetary Row 5 #48), par. Unknown and Unknown
| | | |--5-Susanna Albright b. 26 Jan 1818,
| | | | Pennsylvania, d. 24 Jan 1892
| | | | +Robert Noblit b. 24 Mar 1813, m. 7 Mar 1839,
| | | | Crawford Co Ohio - Sandusky Twp, d. 13 Aug
| | | | 1877, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-Samuel Noblit b. 23 Jul 1840, d. 19 Sep
| | | | | 1862
| | | |--5-Elizabeth Albright b. 6 Oct 1820, Dauphin
| | | | Co., PA, d. 11 Oct 1897, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Jacob Darger b. 4 Jul 1811, m. 26 Dec 1841,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 12 Aug 1888, (Whetstone
| | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--5-Joseph Albright b. 7 Sep 1822, (St Peters
| | | | Church (Fetterhoffs), Halifax Twp, Dauphin
| | | | Co, PA), d. 28 Feb 1905, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Catharine Darger m. 26 Sep 1841, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | |--6-Manda Albright b. 19 Sep 1856, d. 13 Sep
| | | | | 1857, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Mary Gwinner b. 4 Jul 1843, m. 7 May 1865,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 12 May 1899, (Whetstone
| | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--5-Henry Albright b. 17 Dec 1827, Dauphin Co.,
| | | | PA, d. 25 May 1905, (Whetstone Cemetary Row
| | | | 14 #227)
| | | | +Laura Noblit b. 26 Nov 1840, Bucyrus, OH, m.
| | | | 24 Sep 1867, Crawford Co, OH, d. 1905,
| | | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-George F. Albright
| | | | |--6-Charles H. Albright b. 12 Jul 1868, d. 6
| | | | | Jul 1891, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone
| | | | | Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-Fred C. Albright b. 26 Sep 1869, d. 1 Dec
| | | | | 1892, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-Ida May Albright b. 10 Apr 1871, d. 11May
| | | | | 1888, (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Savina Weirick b. 24 Feb 1822, m. 19 Jan
| | | | 1854, Crawford Co, OH, d. 1 May 1866,
| | | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-John Albright
| | | | |--6-Isaac Albright b. 30 Aug 1856, Whetstone
| | | | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 8 Jul 1949
| | | | | +Rebecca L. Diebler b. 14 Nov 1856, m.
| | | | | 1877, d. 9 Sep 1906, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH), par. John
| | | | | George Diebler and Magdalena Heinlen
| | | | | |--7-Gertrude M Albright b. 15 Aug 1892, d.
| | | | | | 26 Feb 1970, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | +Daniel Jacob Reber b. 15 Nov 1893, m.
| | | | | | 20 Jun 1915, Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Sep
| | | | | | 1944, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH),
| | | | | | par. John Jacob Reber and Mary Margaret
| | | | | | Plank
| | | | | |--7-Lyda Albright
| | | | | | +Charles Nelson m. Unknown
| | | | | |--7-Alta Albright b. 26 Feb 1881, Crawford
| | | | | | Co, OH, d. 20 Apr 1957, (Whetstone
| | | | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | OH)
| | | | | | +Francis N. Neuman
| | | | | |--7-Ezra C. Albright
| | | | | | +Clyde Lowry
| | | | | |--7-Warren W. Albright
| | | | | |--7-Roy Albright
| | | | | | +Alta Love
| | | | | | |--8-Doran W. Albright
| | | | | | |--8-Maggie Albright
| | | | | | |--8-Eva Albright
| | | | | | |--8-Gertrude Albright
| | | | | |--7-Margaret "Maggie" Albright
| | | | | | +Harry Fauser
| | | | | |--7-Eva Albright
| | | | | +Margaret Ann Gracey b. 21 Apr 1849, m.
| | | | | After 1906, d. 19 Sep 1924, (Whetstone
| | | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | |--6-Agnes Albright d. Bef 1912
| | | | | +John George Kober m. 26 Oct 1882, Crawford
| | | | | Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Matilda Albright b. 23 Jun 1854, d. 11 Jun
| | | | | 1948, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | +Levi Beach b. 2 Aug 1850, m. 26 Oct 1873,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 20 Mar 1927, (Oakwood
| | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. Peter Beach
| | | | and Helena Magdeline Myers
| | | | |--7-William Lewis Beach
| | | | | +Cordelia Schuler m. 15 Dec 1917,
| | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--7-John Henry Beach
| | | | |--7-Charles Isaac Beach
| | | |--5-Rebecca Albright b. 17 Feb 1830, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 13 Apr 1909, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Isaac Snyder b. 26 Sep 1833, m. 9 Jan 1851,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 25 Oct 1892, (Whetstone
| | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH),
| | | | par. George Snyder and Unknown
| | | |--5-Savilla Albright b. 11 Jun 1833, Whetstone
| | | | Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio, d. 28 Nov 1884
| | | | +William Shaffer m. 19 Feb 1852, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | |--5-John Albright Jr b. 6 May 1837, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH, d. 3 Nov 1897, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Elizabeth Cook b. 30 Sep 1844, m. 17 Apr
| | | 1864, Crawford Co, OH, d. 1 Aug 1899,
| | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford
| | | Co, OH), par. John Cook and Sarah R. Diebler
| | | |--6-Amanda Jane Albright b. 23 Nov 1866, d. 23
| | | | Nov 1931
| | | | +Samuel Manuel Kehrer b. 16 Nov 1865, m. 29
| | | | Oct 1889, d. 25 Apr 1942, par. Daniel F
| | | | Kehrer and Lydia Kester
}}}
See __[[Johann Kehrer Descendants]]__ for Samuel and Amanda Kehrer descendents
{{{
| | | |--6-Lucinda Ellen Albright b. 12 Mar 1868, d.
| | | | 12 May 1959, (Whetstone Cemetery,
| | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | | +Clarence F. Riddle b. 18 Feb 1870, m. 6
| | | Dec 1899, Crawford Co, OH, d. 4 Jul 1941,
| | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | Crawford Co, OH), par. Frederick Riddle
| | | and Mary Worline
| | | |--7-Mary Riddle b. 1901, d. 1901,
| | | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--7-Ralph Wesley Riddle b. 16 Mar 1904,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Jul 1933,
| | | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | +Alma Kramer
| | | |--7-Infant Riddle b. 1905, d. 1905,
| | | | (Whetstone Cemetery, Whetstone Twp,
| | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | |--7-Walter E. Riddle b. 2 Jul 1907,
| | | | Bucyrus, OH, d. 18 Sep 1970, (Whetstone
| | | | Cemetery, Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH)
| | | +Beulah Snavely
| | |--4-Catherine Albright b. 16 May 1798, Upper Paxton,
| | | Dauphin Co., PA, d. 14 Mar 1855, (Salem Luthern,
| | | Elizabethville, Dauphin Co, Pa)
| | +John Burckhart Bechtel b. 14 Mar 1792, Upper
| | Paxton, Dauphin Co., PA, m. probably Dauphin
| | Co., PA, d. 24 May 1853, Upper Paxton, Dauphin
| | Co., PA
| | |--5-George Bechtel b. 26 Mar 1819, Dauphin Co.,
| | | PA, d. 11 Apr 1861, Dauphin Co., PA
| | |--5-Jacob Bechtel b. 2 Dec 1820, Dauphin Co., PA,
| | | d. 17 Aug 1888, Dauphin Co., PA
| | +Barbara Meichis b. Abt 1774, m. probably Dauphin
| | Co., PA
| | |--4-Maria Albright b. 1814
| |--3-Johann Friederick Albrecht b. 24 Jun 1768,
| | Colebrook, Berks Co, PA
| |--3-John Christian Albrecht b. 12 Sep 1773, Colebrook,
| | Berks Co, PA
| |--3-Maria Margaretha Albrecht b. 2 Jan 1762
| |--3-John Adam Albrecht b. 5 Aug 1758, New Hanover,
| | Montgomery Co, PA, d. 6 Oct 1839, Barton, Tioga, NY
|--2-Johann Balthasar Albrecht b. 19 Jul 1714,
| Neckerbischofsheim, Baden, Germany, d. 5 Dec 1763,
| Neckerbischofsheim, Baden, Germany
}}}
!!Germany to Pennsylvania
Our ancestor Kehrers arrived in the U.S. on 25 October 1805 at Philadelphia on the ship "Fair American" from Amsterdam ```Martin Kehrer biography in 1881 mentions seven children in Johanne's family but only four living in 1881. Who besides Anna Maria, John and Martin? Anna Maria died in 1860 so she is not one of the four left. How many of the seven were born in Germany and were in the party of six? - at least two others. On the Fair American in 1805 was also the family of Jacob Bruchlacher - 5 in the family```. There were six persons in the party. Johannes (age 31 on arrival) was born in Betzingen, ~Baden-Wurttemburg, Germany and that is probably where the group came from. Two of the party that we know of are Johannes wife, Margaret Sherer and daugther , Anna Maria (age 1 year). The family settled first in Fairfield Twp. of Lycoming Co, PA. where at least two more children were born, John in 1811 and Martin in 1813. The Kehrer's farmed in the hilly area of Fairfield Township northeast of Williamsport, PA. There is a road named Kehrer Hill Road near Loyalsock even today.
| Year | Person | Movement |h
| 1805 | Johann Kehrer | Betzinger, ~Baden-Wurttemburg TO USA |
| 1834 | Martin Kehrer | Fairfield Twp, Lycoming Co, PA TO Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH |
[>img[Kehrer Families about 1907|images/KehrerFamilyabt1907.jpg]]
Johanne's wife Margaret died about 1819 in Lycoming co. He soon remarried to Anna Maria Stump (b: 1804) ```Note that there are three Anna Maria's associated with Johanne Kehrer:
*Johanne's sister m: Jacob Hurr
*Johanne's daughter m: Jacob Stump
*Johanne's 2nd wife, Anna Maria Stump sister of Jacob Stump``` the sister of Jacob Stump whose wife was Anna Maria Kehrer, Johanne's daughter. (marriage was probably in Lycoming Co, PA before moving to Ohio).
!!Move to Ohio
Johanne's son, Martin Kehrer (age 20), went to Whetstone Twp, Crawford co, OH in 1833 to look for land, then in 1834 moved his parents family there. He returned to Pennyslvania in 1838 to chose a bride, Nancy Brucklacher (from neighboring Hepburn Twp of Lycoming County). Nancy's father was Daniel Brucklacher originally from Reutlingen, Baden-Wurttemburg, Germany. ```Several German-American families moved from Lycoming county at about the same time and settled on land in Whetstone Twp. Martin's sister and husband Jacob Stump (from Lycoming Co and was from Baden-Wurttemburg) settled here with their family in 1835. Two Sons of Anna Barbara Kehrer (sister of Johanne) and Jacob Hurr (George and Jacob) settled in Whetstone Twp. George married Christina Kehrer.``` A Joseph Bruchlacher was on the same ship that delivered Johann Kehrer and family to North America. None of the other Brucklachers moved to Ohio and are buried in Hepburn Twp, Lycoming Co, PA. Sister to Johanne, Anna Barbara (Hurr) stayed ```Some Kehrer's stayed in Lycoming Co, PA.
In Lycoming Co. Probate Court Book B p54 (1848) it says
//"George Kehrer, Fairfield Twp. ... names 3 sons, John George, Jacob, and Martin each a bequest... witness: Leonard Ulmer, Jacob Hurr"// 1.22.1848 - 1.19.1848 and they are from the same region of Germany as Johanne Kehrer because in Book A p146 it says:
// "John George Kehrer, weaver... to dear mother Barbara Kehrer all lands coming from estate of father situated in Beginger Co., Renfhergen, Kingdom of Wurttemburg, Germany - Executors: Sabastian Diagel, Jacob Kehrer, John George Nedale of Begingen co, Rentlingen, Wurttemburg." //- no date``` and was in Fairfield Twp of Lycoming county during in the 1850 Census.
Martin built a good farm in Whetstone Twp of 212 acres on the north side of Kehrer Road (see [[Family Farms - 1855 Crawford County]]) giving his only son, Daniel 80 acres to start his life with wife Lydia Kester who he married in 1864. Martin's brother John had land across Kehrer road on the south side. The other child of Martin was daughter, Catherina, who married David Wingert also of Whetstone Twp.
[>img[Daniel Kehrer abt 1905|images/Daniel_Kehrer.jpg]]
Daniel and Lydia Kehrer ```Lydia Kester's sister Sarah married William Lowmiller who was the son of Adam Lowmiller and guardian of Mary Plank the future wife of John Jacob Reber. It is John Jacob's son Frank who eventually married Verda Kehrer, my grandmother.[LDB] ``` had a family of eight children (born from 1865-1884), Oldest son, Samuel, obtained 78 acres land near grandfather, Martin. Daniel was a carpenter as well as a farmer and the family attended the German Reformed Church in Whetstone. Lydia's parents were Jacob Kester and Salome Wise ```Salome Wise's sister Mary Elizabeth became the wife of Adam Bair the gggrandfather of Evelyn Bair, who married the brother, Loren Pfahler, of my grandmother, Anona Pfahler. Evelyn's mother is Edna Irene Bogan, sister of my grandfather, Chester Bogan.``` who had moved to the Whetstone in 1828 from Union County, PA (now Snyder Co, PA). Daniel died of Pleurisy and 'heart trouble' in 1908 but Lydia lived on until December 1916.
Daniel's oldest son, Samuel had married Amanda Albright in 1889 and had six children, with the first two dying as babes. Living were Nina (b 1893), Carl (b. 1895), Verda (b. 1900) and Calvin (b.1903). Samuel obtained his own land to farm near the rest of the family on Kehrer Road, Whetstone Township. Carl joined the army in World War I but died of influenza in training camp in 1918.
Verda became pregnant in 1918 and went off to Columbus to have Leota in February 1919. Verda returned to Crawford County with Leota and married Frank Reber in 1920. Their story is told in the Reber's.
!!Other Kehrers in Crawford County
Another family of Kehrers settled in Crawford County about 30 years after Martin Kehrer moved there from Pennsylvania. This family lived in Bucyrus rather than Whetstone Township and it is not clear whether the two are related. I give some of their history here because of the possible connections and also the prominence of the family as merchants in Bucyrus.
The records show that in about 1864 John George Kehrer immigrated to the US from Wurttemburg, Germany and settle in Bucyrus, OH. Wurtemmburg is also where the Kehrers who first settled in Lycoming County, PA came from in 1805 but it is not clear whether they are related. The obituary of Daniel Kehrer in 1908 claimed he was a "cousin" to Georges children. He marrried in Crawford Co in 1863, to Christinna Nunnemacher so George must have arrived before 1863. They had only one son, Frank Benjamin b.1862, before she died in 1868. The Civil War was on at the time J.George arrived and in March 1865 he enlisted in the 197th regiment of the Ohio Volunteers who were mainly guards of camps and hospitals. By July 1865 the regiment was mustered out as the war was over.
George married Leah Haller in about 1870 and had seven more children. By 1872 John George had started watch repair and jewelry business. In the 1875-1876 Bucyrus Directory there is a listing:
| Jewelry<br>George Kehrer<br>W S Main south of railroad crossing |
George died in 1890 and the oldest son, Frank carries on the Jewerly business and later the younger boys also join the business. Frank B. never married and died in 1916. In the 1915 Bucyrus Directory there is an entry:
| Frank B. Kehrer & Bros.<br>Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Clocks, Silverware<br>Kehrer Block, 112 N. Sandusky Ave. |
!!!Footnotes:
| Johannes Kehrer<br>b:Baden Wurttember 1774-1851 | Anna Margaretha Sherer<br>b:Germany ? -1819 | Daniel Brucklacher<br>b:Baden-Wurrtember 1785-1852 | ? | John Kester<br>b:Union Co, PA 1765-1826 | Catherine Stueben<br>b:PA 1776-1844 | Christopher Wise<br>b:Montgomery Co,PA 1761-1819 | Elizabeth Herb<br>b:PA 1768-1849 |
|>| Martin Kehrer<br> b: Lycoming Co, PA 1813-1897 |>| Nancy Brucklacher<br>b:Lycoming Co, PA 1814-1890 |>| Jacob Kester<br>b: Union Co, PA 1796-1878 |>| Saloma Wise<br>Union Co, PA 1803-1866 |
|>|>|>| Daniel Kehrer<br>1839-1908 |>|>|>| Lydia Kester<br>1840-1916 |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Samuel Kehrer<br>1865-1942 |
Ancestors were born in Crawford Co, OH unless otherwise indicated.
|gggggggp|Richard Kirkpatrick<br> b:1712-1755|Ann Mercer<br>1709-1758|William Hayes|Elizabeth Mercer|?|?|?|?|
|ggggggp|>|Joseph Kirkpatrick<br>b: Cumberland Co, PA<br>1748-1812 |>|Margaret A Hayes|>|?|>|?|
|gggggp|>|>|>| Joseph Kirkpatrick<br>b: Cumberland Co, PA<br>1787-1843<br>d: Richland Co, OH |>|>|>| Matilda Murphy<br>b: PA<br>1792-1877<br>d: Richland Co, OH |
|ggggp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Nancy Kirkpatrick<br>b: Perry Co, PA<br>b1806 Perry Co, PA - d1866 Crawford Co, OH |
*The father of Richard Kirkpatrick was Isaac Kirkpatrick
*Nancy Kirkpatrick was the mother of Alvin Oliver Smith
!! Pedigree beginning at Charles Kunkel
|>| Johann Martin Kunckel<br>1706-1771 Florsbach |>| Ann Margaretha Schuster<br>b:1721 Florsbach, Germany |>| Johann Michael Keinfelter<br>b:1736 Florsbach<br>d:1807 York Co, PA |>| Appolonia Gerberich<br>1736 Bavaria<br>d:1780 York Co, PA |>| Carl Diehl<br>b:1717 Holmberg, Gr<br>d:1800 York Co, PA|>| Mary Ehrhart<br>1721-|>| Christian Stabler<br>b:1727 Musberg, Gr<br>d:1783 York Co, PA|>| Anna Fritz<br>b:1730 Musberg |
|>|>|>| Johann Heinrick Kunkel<br>b:1751 Florsbach Germany<br>d:1827 York Co, PA |>|>|>| Elisabeth Keinfelter<br>1763-1815 <br>York Co, PA |>|>|>| Johann Carl Diehl<br>175-1817<br> York Co, PA|>|>|>| Anna Christiana Stabler<br>1757-1819 PA |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Michael Kunkel<br>b:York Co, PA1784<br>d:1846Crawford Co, OH |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Susanna Diehl<br>1785-1814 York Co, PA |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Charles C. Kunkel<br> b:1811 York Co, PA d:1883 Crawford Co, OH |
!!!Continuing the Kunkel Pedigree from Johann Martin
| Johannes Jurg Kunckel<br>1565-1640<br>Glasshaus, Neuhutten | Elisabeth Christina Houser<br>1573-1633 |...|...|...|...|...|...|
|>| Johan Georg Kunckel<br>1595-1645 |>| Anna Magdelina b:abt1600 |>|...|>|...|
|>|>|>| Hans Jacob Kunckel<br>1630-1712<br>Florsbach, Geinhausen |>|>|>| Elisabeth Ickus<br>b:1640 Lohrhaupten, Geinhausen |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Hans Nikolas Kunckel<br>1677-1723 Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen |
(Hans Nicholas' wife was Elisabeth Steigerwald (1681-1732) )
(Parents of Johannes Jurg were Hans Kunckel b: 1530 and Anna Wolfgand (1535-1571) both of Glasshaus ) - these are the earlies Kunkels in this pedigree
[>img[Leah (Kunkel) Bogan with children (grandchildren?)|images/GGGma_Kunkel_Bogan+children-300x180.jpg]]Leah Ann Kunkel was the wife of Henry Harrison Bogan, my great, great grandfather. She had a long life and lived until November 1934, only 5 years before I was born. To the right is a picture of her with her grandchildren. My father may have know her because she died only a year before he graduated from high school but he never mentioned her. In 1920 after husband, Henry, died in 1913, she lived with her youngest daughter Esther (Bogan) Dewalt in Galion Ohio.
The Kunkels came from Florsbach in Germany. Some of them arrived as Hessian Soldiers in 1776. The traditional family story says that there were three Kunkel brothers fought for the British in the Ameican Revolution and they were in the group captured during the Revolutionary War by George Washington in late 1776 at the battle of Trenton, N.J. There is conflicting stories as to where they were while during the remainder of the revolutionary war but they did stay in North America after the war. One settled in Shrewsbury, York County, south of Harrisburg, PA and lived and died there, but later generations moved to Ohio.
!!Two lines of Kunkels and the Kleinfelters
There are two lines of Kunkels going back to the family of Hans Jacob and Elisabeth (Ickus) Kunckel and the links converge on Michael Kunkel (1784-1846) grandfather of Leah Anne Kunkel.
One son of Hans Jacob, Hans Nikolaus, is the father of Johann Martin Kunckel who fathered the Henry Kunckel that came to N.America as a Hessian and stayed. Henry (Johann Heinrich) was the grandfather of Charles C. Kunkel who settled in Crawford County from Pennsylvania.
Another son of Hans Jacob, Johann Sebastian Kunckel, had a daughter Eva Elisabeth who married Johann Peter Kleinfelter and had son Johann Michael Keinfelter (marries Appolonia Gerberich) who in turn had daughter Elisabeth Christina Kleinfelter. Christina becomes the wife to Henry (Johann Heinrich) Kunckel mentioned above.
This may be easier to follow with a table of the family descendants. Time goes down in this table.
|>| !The family line from Hans Jacob Kunckel to Leah Ann Kunkle |
|>| Hans Jacob Kunkel b:1630 m:Ickus |
|Hans Nickolas Kunkel b: 1677 | Johan Sebastian Kunkel b:1765 |
|Johan Martin Kunkel b:1706 | Eva Kunkel b:1703 m: Peter Kleinfelter 1724 |
| J. Heinrich Kunkel b:1751 (Hessian) | Michael Kleinfelter b:1736 |
|~| Elizabeth Christina Kleinfelter b:1763 |
|>| Michael Kunkel b:1781 |
|>| Charles Kunkel b:1811 |
|>| Leah Ann Kunkel b:1847 m: Henry H. Bogan |
Michael Kunkel has Hans Jacob as a great-great grandfather on his male side but is also his great-great-great grandfather on his mother’s side. Heinrich Kunkel arrived as a Hessian during the Revolutionary War, while Michael Kleinfelter arrived in N.America with his parents, Peter and Eve (Kunkel) Kleinfelter in 1751 aboard the ship ‘Duke of Bedford’
It is conceivable that the Kunkel knew the Kleinfelters from their relationship in Germany. After all J. Michael Kleinfelter’s mother was a Kunkel and they had common great grandparents. Their parents were both from Florsbach, Hessen. Perhaps, they kept in touch and Henry knew who to contact for help in Pennsylvania. Eve Kleinfelter’s brother Lorenz arrived on the same ship in 1751.
[Germany. Research was done on the KUNKEL's of this area by H. P. Göbel, of im Steingarten 3, W 6466 Grundau - Breitenborn.]
Heinrich’s Story (b 1751-d 1827)
!!!Heinrich Kunkel's Story
Relatives of this KUNKEL family for many years have told the story that Henry (b. 1751) came to America with two brothers, Michael and David, as Hessian Soldiers to fight for the Crown.
//A note written on the back of the family record of Henry Kunkel-II//:
(Courtesy of, Daniel Kunkel McDonald, of 2522 Pacific St. St. Louis, Missouri in 1980, whose mother Ida Kunkel-McDonald, died in 1947, had in her papers)
It reads as follows:// “King George, sold the three boys, HENRY, MICHAEL and DAVID KUNKEL for transportation to America after the war was over and they wished to stay here. They were subjects of the King of Hesse and were sent to fight. When they arrived, they found they were going to fight People of there own home lands, so they refused to fight. Mr. Kleinfelter bought Henry Kunkel-I. It would take seven years to pay the debt to King George. The King had placed such a heavy duty tax on the land owners, that they could not pay it. Kleinfelter, went for days trying to borrow money to pay the heavy tax, but was unable to do it. So he thought he would loose the land. Henry Kunkel asked him how much it would take. He opened his vest – - around him he had a money belt in which was enough money to pay the tax. Kleinfelter deeded half of the land to Henry Kunkel-I, who in turn married Kleinfelter’s daughter Elizabeth Christina.//
Michael Kunkel was sold to a man in Pennsylvania, and David Kunkel was sold to a man in Virginia.”
Flörsbach, Germany, is 30 miles due east of Frankfurt, 21 miles east by north of Aschaffenberg, between Frankfurt am Main, and Wurzburg, and just to the east but close to the Bavarian provincial line, . Both the Kunkels and Kleinfelters came from this village```The Protestant records for the parish of Flörsbachtal’ can be found at Kempfenbrunn, Germany. Address is Evangelisches Pfarramt, W-6487 Flörsbachtal’ – Kempfenbrunn,
The Compiler of these records has over a dozen long letters on this Henry Kunkel (b. 1751) and his documentation in the Rev. War. They are too long to list them all, and if anyone one wishes copies, you can contact me at – jekunkle@uswest.net (Jan. 2001) James Erwin Kunkel of colorado.```.
A more official account from the German records reveal that:
Henry Kunkel arrived New York City with the Hess-Hanan Regiment of the Crown Prince in 1776. Henrich had been born in Floersbach, Geinhausen, Hessen, Germany about 1750 and had been on muster by January 1770. He was not in the Revolutionary War very long before he was taken as a prisoner of war at Saratoga in Oct 1777 and was held prisoner until he indentured himself in Nov 1782 to Michael Keinfelter in York County, PA```Henry was probably held in Pennsylvania where there were POW barracks for the Americans.```.
Henry worked for and purchased land```There is a survey for 10 acres of land in 1789 to Michael Klinefelter``` from Johann Michael Keinfelter, loaned money to him and married one of his daughters (Elizabeth Christina). One of the first children was Michael II(b: 1784). Another child born in 1791, Eve, was to marry John Hise of York Co, PA who was also one of the early settlers of Crawford County, Ohio.
Henry died at the age of 76 in 1827 and is buried at Glen Rock, York Co, PA. Shortly after his death, son Michael left for Ohio. There is a Kunkel Road northwest of Fawn Grove, York County, PA on which there is a house that is built around the old log house owned by a Kunkel.
!!The Move from Pennsylvania to Ohio
Michael Kunkel had married Susanna Diehl in 1805 in Shrewbury Twp, York Co. PA and had five children before she died in 1814. Their youngest son was Charles. There were two older sons who lived and died in York Co, PA. Michael married again in 1815 to Anna Sentz and there were ten more Kunkel children```I have no information on the future of these Kunkels, they presumably moved and settled in Richland Co, Ohio with their parents.```.
It was in 1831 that both Michael Kunkel and son Charles moved to Richland County, Ohio and purchased land to start new farms. Charles purchased 80 acres, in 1835, from George Dietz for $330 just north of Galion Ohio, in Sandusky Township, Richland County at that time. In 1845 the county line was moved east and the land was then in Jackson Township of Crawford County. The land is Northeast of the corner of Market Street Rd and Brandt Rd, in Galion```The 1840 US Census for Sandusky Twp, Richland Co, OH lists six Kunkels as head of households: Jacob, Lanich, Charles, John Michael, Michael, and Henry. At that date Charles s/o Michael age 29; Henry s/o Michael age 55; Joseph s/o Michael age 31 ```.
In 1843 at the age of 32, Charles married to Elizabeth Dome (or Thom) (age 23), the daughter of a farmer living nearby. His father, Michael, died in 1846 in Richland County. Charles and Elizabeth had 13 children. Two boys born in 1851 and 1854 died in infancy. Two others, Sarah and Charles II died in their twenties (1863 and 1866). The seventh child, born in 1849, was Leah Ann who in July 1870 married Henry Harrison Bogan (age 34, who had a farm near North Robinson, Ohio). Henry had a younger brother, Jefferson L. Bogan, who married Leah Ann’s younger sister, Mary C. Kunkel (b:1852) later in the same year (December).
Here the story continues with the Bogans at Henry Harrison Bogan.
<<notes>>
!!!Footnotes:
Look at the land information from PA archives - include this here rather than the footnote 3
Russell Volkmer's ```see [[Volkmer Family]] ```mother was Mary Elizabeth Laipply, the oldest daughter of Simeon Laipply. Simeon was born in and came from Mahoning County, Ohio just south of Youngstown. In about 1872 Simeon settled in Chatfield Township and married Matilda Bauer. Later both the Volkmers and Bauers lived in Lykens Township of Crawford County and in the villiage of Brokensword. Simeon's father was John Laipply ```The name Laipply has many different spellings and its orgins are German (eg it has been written as Lipply, Liapple, and Lapply). ``` who lived and died in Beaver Township, Mahoning County leaving a farm worth over $15,000 in 1870.
''1875 Location of Laipply Farm, Mahoning County, OH'' //
(Put Cursor over this detail property map for the location map)//
<<rollover area1 maps/BeaverTwp_LaipplyFarm.jpg maps/Laipply_Location.gif>>
Note: Bull Creek has been dammed since 1875 to form Pine Lake
There were 13 children in the John Laipply family but five died in their youth leaving three daughters and five sons. John's first wife, Susanna Myers, died in 1857 after delivering 12 of the 13 children. She was the daughter of David and Catherine Myers ``` Catherine's maiden name was Turnipseed and was from Loudoun County, VA. Her heritage was also German, with her maternal grandfather being Johann Jacob Steinbrenner from Lachweiler, Jagskris, Wurttemberg. Johann Jacob immigrated to North America and died in Lovettville, VA (this near where John Henry Bogen and family lived from 1820-1835)``` of neighboring Columbiana County, OH ``` David Myers was one of several people who laid out the city of Chambersburg, OH in 1828```. In 1858 John married Mary Agnes Smith in Springfield, Ohio. The last child of the family, Amalie, was born in 1860. All of John's sons moved to Chatfield Township of Crawford County, Ohio. Joseph, Simeon, Levi and Isaiah all found wives there. Abraham was the oldest son and had set up his household in Mahoning County but later moved to Crawford County.
``` The children were:
* Catherine
* Abraham
* John (died age 9)
* Moses (died age 7)
* Joseph
* Jacob (died age 4)
* Susannah
* Carolina (died as infant)
* Matilda (died age 2)
* Simeon
* Levi
* Isaiah
* Amalie ```
It is not certain of the birthplace of John Laipply (b 1806). In one census, a son claimed his father was Germany yet another said Ohio. John's older brothers Christian (b 1797), Joseph (b 1787) and Michael (b1786) were born in Wurttemburg as was their father Michael (b 1761).
The patriach of the Laipply family, Michael obtained the farm in Beaver Township, Mahoning County, Ohio in 1806. He purchased 161 acres in section 35 of township 13 from John Neidigh who was the original Patentee. He sold his farm in Mahoning County to his children in October of 1820 before he died in 1821. Michael was the first to be buried in the family cemetery on the farm land.
!!!Footnotes
config.macros.imagebox ={};
config.macros.imagebox.handler = function (place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler)
{
var e = place.lastChild;
e.onclick = function(){TiddlyLightBox.initBox('image',this,params[1],params[2],params[0]);return false;};
}
config.macros.divbox ={};
config.macros.divbox.handler = function (place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler)
{
if (params[0]!=".")
createTiddlyButton(place,params[0],params[0],function(){TiddlyLightBox.initBox('html',params[1],params[3],params[4],params[2]);return false;});
else
{
var e = place.lastChild;
e.onclick = function(){TiddlyLightBox.initBox('html',params[1],params[3],params[4],params[2]);return false;};
}
}
config.macros.tiddlerbox ={}
config.macros.tiddlerbox.handler = function (place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler)
{
config.macros.divbox.handler(place,macroName,[params[0],"tiddler:"+params[1],params[2],params[3],params[4]]);
return false;
}
store.addNotification("TiddlyLightBoxStyles",refreshStyles);
if (!window.TiddlyLightBox)
window.TiddlyLightBox = {};
var loadingImage = "indicator.gif";
window.TiddlyLightBox =
{
_curBox: null, // [sentinel]
lightBoxHtml : '<div id="lightBoxOverlay" onclick="TiddlyLightBox.hideBox()" style="display:none"></div><div id="lightboxprogress" style="display:none;"><img src=\''+loadingImage+'\' alt=\'loading\' style="width:128px;height:128px;"></div><div class="lightBox" id="lightBox" style="display:none"><div id="lightBoxContent"></div><div id="lightBoxTitle">This is a title</div><div id="lightBoxClose"><a href:"#" onclick="TiddlyLightBox.hideBox();return false;">Click to close</a></div></div>',
createBoxWrapper : function()
{
var wrapper = createTiddlyElement(document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0],"div","tiddlyLightBoxWrapper");
wrapper.innerHTML = this.lightBoxHtml;
},
initBox : function(contentType,url,w,h,text)
{
if (this._curBox)
return;
this.showProgress();
this.hideSelects("hidden");
this.showBg();
this._curBox = true;
this.sizeTheBox(contentType,w,h);
if (contentType == 'image')
this.showImage(url,text);
else if (contentType == 'html')
this.showHtml(url,text);
return false;
},
sizeTheBox : function(contentType,w,h)
{
var box = document.getElementById("lightBoxContent");
if (w && isNaN(parseInt(w)))
{
addClass(box,w);
}
else if (w ||h || contentType == 'html')
{
box.style.width = w? w+ "px" : "450px";
box.style.height = h? h+ "px" : "280px";
if (contentType=='image')
setStylesheet("#lightBoxContent img{height:100%;width:100%;}","lightBoxImageSizeHack");
}
},
showProgress : function()
{
var progress = document.getElementById("lightboxprogress");
progress.style.display='';
this._center(progress);
},
hideProgress: function()
{
var progress = document.getElementById("lightboxprogress");
progress.style.display='none';
},
//this function lifted from Lightbox Gone Wild
hideSelects: function(visibility)
{
var selects = document.getElementsByTagName('select');
for(i = 0; i < selects.length; i++)
{
selects[i].style.visibility = visibility;
}
},
showBg: function()
{
var overlay = document.getElementById('lightBoxOverlay');
if (config.browser.isIE)
{
overlay.style.height = Math.max(document.documentElement.scrollHeight,document.documentElement.offsetHeight);
overlay.style.width = document.documentElement.scrollWidth;
}
overlay.style.display = 'block';
},
showImage: function (url,text)
{
imgPreloader = new Image();
imgPreloader.onload = function ()
{
var lb = document.getElementById("lightBoxContent");
lb.innerHTML = "<img src="+url+">";
lb.onclick = function(){TiddlyLightBox.hideBox();return false;};
TiddlyLightBox.posBox(text);
};
imgPreloader.src = url;
},
showHtml : function(theID,text)
{
var lb = document.getElementById("lightBoxContent");
if (theID.indexOf("tiddler:")==-1)
lb.innerHTML = document.getElementById(theID).innerHTML;
else
{
wikify(store.getTiddlerText(theID.replace("tiddler:","")),lb);
lb.className='tiddler';
}
lb.style.overflow = "auto";
this.posBox(text);
},
posBox: function(text)
{
this.setTitle(text);
this.hideProgress();
var lb = document.getElementById("lightBox");
lb.style.display = "";
lb.style.visibilty = "hidden";
lb.style.position = "absolute";
this._center(lb);
if(!TiddlyLightBox._curBox) return;
lb.style.visibility = "visible";
lb.style.display = "block";
},
setTitle: function(text)
{
document.getElementById("lightBoxTitle").innerHTML= (text==undefined)? '': text;
},
_center: function(lb)
{
var lbSize = new TiddlyLightBox.getElementSize(lb);
lb.style.left = (Math.round(findWindowWidth()/2) - (lbSize.width /2) + findScrollX())+'px';
lb.style.top = (Math.round(findWindowHeight()/2) - (lbSize.height /2) + findScrollY())+'px';
},
//this function lifted from Ibox
getElementSize : function(elem)
{
this.width = elem.offsetWidth || elem.style.pixelWidth;
this.height = elem.offsetHeight || elem.style.pixelHeight;
},
hideBox: function()
{
if(!this._curBox)
return;
document.getElementById("tiddlyLightBoxWrapper").innerHTML= this.lightBoxHtml;
setStylesheet("","lightBoxImageSizeHack");
this._curBox = null;
return false;
}
}
TiddlyLightBox.createBoxWrapper();
Story.prototype.findContainingTiddler = function(e)
{
while(e && (!hasClass(e,"tiddler") || !e.getAttribute("tiddler")))
e = e.parentNode;
return(e);
}
config.shadowTiddlers.TiddlyLightBoxStyles="/*{{{*/\n#lightBoxOverlay {\n position:absolute;\n top: 0;\n left: 0;\n width: 100%;\n height: 100%;\n z-index: 90; \n background-color: #000;\n -moz-opacity: 0.75;\n opacity: .75;\n filter: alpha(opacity=75);\n}\n#lightBoxOverlay[id]{ \n position: fixed;\n}\n\n#lightboxprogress { \n margin:0;padding:0;\n position: absolute;\n z-index:95;\n}\n\ndiv.lightBox {\n background: #fff;\n color: #fff;\n border: 4px solid #525252;\npadding:20px 20px 25px 20px; position:absolute; z-index:99;\n}\n\n#lightBoxClose {text-align:right; color:#000; font-size:1.0em; position:absolute; bottom:6px; right:20px;}\n#lightBoxClose a{color:#666; border-bottom:1px solid #666;cursor:pointer;}\n#lightBoxClose a:hover {color:#111; border-bottom:1px solid #666; cursor:pointer; background:transparent;}\n\n#lightBoxContent {border:1px solid #525252;color:#000; background:#fff;}\n#lightBox .tiddler {background:#fff;}\n\n#lightBoxContent img {border:0;margin:0;padding:0;display:block;cursor:pointer;}\n\n#lightBoxTitle {padding:0px; font-weight:bold; position:absolute; left:20px;bottom:6px; font-size:1.1em; color:#000;}\n\n/*}}}*/";
TiddlyLightBoxDocs
5 November 2007 (created 1 January 2007)
Documentation for TiddlyLightBoxPlugin
Credits:
This lightbox implementation is a derivative of Bob Denny's DC3.LightBox library optimized for a TiddlyWiki environment, with an emphasis on ease of use. It also uses some code and ideas from LightBox Gone Wild and Ibox. For a more feature rich and versatile option, you can't beat the DC3 library.
Concept:
I needed a light weight lightbox implementation for TiddlyThemes but none of the existing options fit the bill. The DC3 library came closest, so I set out to rewrite it. I believe the result is a quite versatile ~TW plugin. Some of the bells and whistles have been removed though since I find them annoying (animations), and there are some features yet to be implemented, as you can read further on this document. Almost the entire library has been rewritten.
Installation:
Copy the TiddlyLightBoxPlugin tiddler to your TW, tag it with systemConfig, save and reload your TW file. You will also need to save this 'loading' image to the same folder as your TW. Or you can choose one of many here. That's it, you are ready to create some lightboxes!
Usage:
There are 3 macros provide to facilitate setting up macros.
1. {{{<<imagebox>>}}}
The imagebox macro is designed to display images in the lightbox. The usage is very easy. Simply create a text or image link to an image using standard TW syntax, and follow it with {{{<<imagebox>>}}}.
{{{Eg: [img[cactus-thumb.jpg][cactus.jpg]]}}}
Let's try a text link: [[click me|triad.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
click me
This macro also accepts some optional parameters in this order:
2. description text
3. width ( as a number, like 500)
4. height (as a number, like 300)
Also, if width is passed as a word, like "bananas", then it is treated as a css class and the container for the image is given the class "bananas".
Let's try one more, with a title and a custom size:
{{{[img[cubicles-thumb.jpg][cubicles.jpg]]<<imagebox 'Office space' 300 300>>}}}
[img[images/telescopes.jpg][images/observatory.jpg]]<<imagebox 'Telescopes' 300 300>>
2. {{{<<divbox>>}}}
The divbox macro lets you put the html content of any inline div into a lightbox, you just need the id of the div in question. The idea being to create a hidden div using "display:none" and then displaying it on the click of a link/button.
You can create such a div in any tiddler by wrapping it in html tags, but using the MarkupPostBody tiddler might be the better option.
The macro can create the button for you, or you can use an existing element to launch the lightbox. To create a button, pass the label for the button as the first parameter. To use an existing element, pass the first parameter as ' ' and place the macro immediately after the element. Eg: {{{<<tiddlerbox label>>}}} or {{{<<tiddlerbox ''>>}}}
The next parameter is the id of the div to display: {{{<<tiddlerbox label theID>>}}}
These two parameters are a must for the divbox macro. There are also 3 more optional parameters, just like the imagebox macro:
3. description text
4. width ( as a number, like 500) OR className
5. height (as a number, like 300)
As an example, lets display this hidden div which I have written inline:
{{{<html><div id="testDiv" style="display:none;"><div style="text-align:center;"> Lightboxes have become very cliche, but they can still be useful!</div></div></html><<divbox "Click to see it" "testDiv" "This is a test div">>}}}
<html><div id="testDiv" style="display:none;"><div style="text-align:center;"> Lightboxes have become very cliche, but they can still be useful!</div></div></html><<divbox "Click to see it" "testDiv" "This is a test div">>
Lightboxes have become very cliche, but they can still be useful!
Click to see it
3.{{{<<tiddlerbox>>}}}
This macro lets you put the wikified contents of any tiddler into a lightbox! So you can put your MainMenu and Sidebar into a lightbox for example, and have handy links to bring them up whenever you need them. (like in say the hovering menu provided by HoverMenuPlugin). It's also very useful for when you are working on something and want to refer to some reference material without having to loose your place in your work.
The parameters for this macro are the same as for the divbox macro, except instead of the id for the div, you use the title of the tiddler.
Let's give it a go:
{{{<<tiddlerbox "menu" "MainMenu" "Thats my main menu, and the links work!">>}}}
<<tiddlerbox "menu" "MainMenu" "Thats my main menu, and the links work!">>
menu
or
{{{<<tiddlerbox "menu" "Sidebar" "Thats my sidebar!" 300 500>>}}}
<<tiddlerbox "menu" "Sidebar" "Thats my sidebar!" 300 500>>
sidebar
CSS Styling:
The css rules for the lightbox and its contents are in the TiddlyLightBoxStyles folder. You can edit them to your liking, but I recommend not changing the rules for ~lightBoxOverlay and lightboxprogress. But don't worry, if you break anything, just delete the tiddler. It's a shadow tiddler!
I'll post a diagram showing the structure of the lightbox later, to faciliate css styling.
Features comparison with DC3Lightbox:
Missing:
* IE transparency filters
* ability to create own lightbox containers
* call back functions on closing lightbox
Added:
* macros for TW usage
* optimized for TW environment
* ability to display Tiddlers in lightboxes
* preloading of images, to avoid layout problems
* removed need for manually creating styles tiddler and adding html markup.
* fixed bug with regards to selects displaying over the lightbox!
The following articles give information on the location of families using maps.
<<tagging Maps>>
[[Welcome]]
[[Families]]
[[Bogans]]
[[Reber-Kehrer-Volkmer]]
[[Stories]]
[[Descendents]]
[[Locations]]
OtherFamilies
WikiFAQ
<<toggleSideBar [Sidebar] toggle hide>>
!!Descendants of Martin Boge
//These are the Darmstadt, Germany ancestors. This list is of five generations from Martin Boge (the earliest ancestor known) to children of JNA Bogen, the first Bogan in North America. //
{{{
1-Martin Boge
+Unknown
|--2-Andeas Bogen
+Anna Eleonora Rhenheimer m. 6 Jun 1719, par. Johann
Peter Rhenheimer and Unknown
|--3-Benjamin Bogen c. 5 Jul 1720, Darmstadt, Hessen,
| Germany
|--3-Margaretha Eleonora Bogen c. 5 Apr 1722,
| Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt, Starkenburg,
| Hesse-Darmstadt
|--3-Georg Henrich Bogen b. 21 Mar 1729, Darmstadt,
| Hessen, Germany
| +Catharina Elisabetha Schneider m. 31 Oct 1754,
| Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt, Starkenburg,
| Hesse-Darmstadt, par. Johann Nicolaus Schneider and
| Unknown
| |--4-Johann Fridrich Nicolas Andreas Bogen c. 12 Oct
| | 1755, Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt,
| | Starkenburg, Hesse-Darmstadt, d. 27 Oct 1819,
| | Carlisle, PA
| | +Amalia Magdalena Koontz (Kuntz) b. 29 Mar 1761,
| | Frederick Co, MD, m. 7 Dec 1784, Frederick, MD,
| | d. May 1820, Frederick Co, MD, par. Heinrich
| | (Henry) Koontz and Dorothea Federkeil
| | |--5-Johann Heinrich (John Henry) Bogen b. 26 Dec
| | | 1785, Fredrick Maryland, d. 19 Feb 1858,
| | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | |--5-Catherina Elisabeth Bogen b. 5 Sep 1789,
| | | Frederick, MD, d. 5 Feb 1790, Frederick Co,
| | | MD
| | |--5-Johann Fridrich Thomas Bogen b. 4 Aug 1792,
| | | Frederick, MD
| | |--5-Catharina Bogen b. 7 Mar 1795, Frederick, MD
| | |--5-Carolina Bogen b. 16 Oct 1797, Frederick, MD
| | |--5-Friderike Bogen b. 7 Jun 1800, Frederick, MD
| |--4-Dorothea Eleonora Bogen b. 26 Nov 1757,
| | (Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt,
| | Starkenburg, Hesse-Darmstadt), d. 30 Jun 1836
|--3-Johann Friedrich Bogen b. 23 Jun 1731, Darmstadt,
| Hessen, Germany, d. 23 May 1791, Darmstadt, Hessen,
| Germany
+Sofia Elisabetha Diefenbach b. 1740, m. 20 Nov
1764, Evangelisch, Birkenau, Starkenbrug,
Hesse-Darmstadt, d. 20 Oct 1797, Darmstadt, Hessen,
Germany, par. Melchior Diefenbach and Unknown
|--4-Johann Jacob Bogen b. 14 Sep 1767, (Stadtpfarrei
| Evangelisch, Darmstatdt, Starkenburg,
| Hesse-Darmstadt), d. 7 Apr 1801, Darmstadt,
| Hessen, Germany
|--4-Friedich Andreas Bogen b. 30 Nov 1765,
| (Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt,
| Starkenburg, Hesse-Darmstadt), d. 2 Jan 1825
+Barbara Elisabetha Engeroffs m. 17 Sep 1793,
Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, par. Johann Philipp
Engeroffs and Unknown
|--5-Sophia Eleanora Elisabetha Bogen b. 8 Jul
| 1794, (Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt,
| Starkenburg, Hesse-Darmstadt), d. 14 Jan 1797
|--5-Marie Katharine Bogen b. 17 Dec 1795,
| (Stadtpfarrei Evangelisch, Darmstatdt,
| Starkenburg, Hesse-Darmstadt), d. 3 Jul 1823
|--5-Johann Friderich Bogen b. 26 Mar 1797, d. 24
| May 1841
|--5-Christina Eleonora Bogen b. 15 Oct 1798,
| Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, d. 28 Jun 1820
|--5-Juliane Dorothee Bogen b. 25 Aug 1800, d. 15
| Jan 1825
|--5-Anna Margaretha Bogen b. 19 Jun 1802, d. 25
| Aug 1802
|--5-Elisabetha Bogen b. 1803, bur. 19 Aug 1803,
| Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany
|--5-Carolina Gertauda Bogen b. 23 Mar 1805
|--5-Augustine Wilhelmine Bogen b. 5 Apr 1807,
| Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany
|--5-Bogen b. 1809, Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany, d.
| 16 Jun 1809
|--5-Luise Dorothee Bogen b. 29 Jan 1811,
| Darmstadt, Hessen, Germany
}}}
version.extensions.NestedSlidersPlugin= {major: 2, minor: 4, revision: 9, date: new Date(2008,11,15)};
// options for deferred rendering of sliders that are not initially displayed
if (config.options.chkFloatingSlidersAnimate===undefined)
config.options.chkFloatingSlidersAnimate=false; // avoid clipping problems in IE
// default styles for 'floating' class
setStylesheet(".floatingPanel { position:absolute; z-index:10; padding:0.5em; margin:0em; \
background-color:#eee; color:#000; border:1px solid #000; text-align:left; }","floatingPanelStylesheet");
// if removeCookie() function is not defined by TW core, define it here.
if (window.removeCookie===undefined) {
window.removeCookie=function(name) {
document.cookie = name+'=; expires=Thu, 01-Jan-1970 00:00:01 UTC; path=/;';
}
}
config.formatters.push( {
name: "nestedSliders",
match: "\\n?\\+{3}",
terminator: "\\s*\\={3}\\n?",
lookahead: "\\n?\\+{3}(\\+)?(\\([^\\)]*\\))?(\\!*)?(\\^(?:[^\\^\\*\\@\\[\\>]*\\^)?)?(\\*)?(\\@)?(?:\\{\\{([\\w]+[\\s\\w]*)\\{)?(\\[[^\\]]*\\])?(\\[[^\\]]*\\])?(?:\\}{3})?(\\#[^:]*\\:)?(\\>)?(\\.\\.\\.)?\\s*",
handler: function(w)
{
lookaheadRegExp = new RegExp(this.lookahead,"mg");
lookaheadRegExp.lastIndex = w.matchStart;
var lookaheadMatch = lookaheadRegExp.exec(w.source)
if(lookaheadMatch && lookaheadMatch.index == w.matchStart)
{
var defopen=lookaheadMatch[1];
var cookiename=lookaheadMatch[2];
var header=lookaheadMatch[3];
var panelwidth=lookaheadMatch[4];
var transient=lookaheadMatch[5];
var hover=lookaheadMatch[6];
var buttonClass=lookaheadMatch[7];
var label=lookaheadMatch[8];
var openlabel=lookaheadMatch[9];
var panelID=lookaheadMatch[10];
var blockquote=lookaheadMatch[11];
var deferred=lookaheadMatch[12];
// location for rendering button and panel
var place=w.output;
// default to closed, no cookie, no accesskey, no alternate text/tip
var show="none"; var cookie=""; var key="";
var closedtext=">"; var closedtip="";
var openedtext="<"; var openedtip="";
// extra "+", default to open
if (defopen) show="block";
// cookie, use saved open/closed state
if (cookiename) {
cookie=cookiename.trim().slice(1,-1);
cookie="chkSlider"+cookie;
if (config.options[cookie]==undefined)
{ config.options[cookie] = (show=="block") }
show=config.options[cookie]?"block":"none";
}
// parse label/tooltip/accesskey: [label=X|tooltip]
if (label) {
var parts=label.trim().slice(1,-1).split("|");
closedtext=parts.shift();
if (closedtext.substr(closedtext.length-2,1)=="=")
{ key=closedtext.substr(closedtext.length-1,1); closedtext=closedtext.slice(0,-2); }
openedtext=closedtext;
if (parts.length) closedtip=openedtip=parts.join("|");
else { closedtip="show "+closedtext; openedtip="hide "+closedtext; }
}
// parse alternate label/tooltip: [label|tooltip]
if (openlabel) {
var parts=openlabel.trim().slice(1,-1).split("|");
openedtext=parts.shift();
if (parts.length) openedtip=parts.join("|");
else openedtip="hide "+openedtext;
}
var title=show=='block'?openedtext:closedtext;
var tooltip=show=='block'?openedtip:closedtip;
// create the button
if (header) { // use "Hn" header format instead of button/link
var lvl=(header.length>5)?5:header.length;
var btn = createTiddlyElement(createTiddlyElement(place,"h"+lvl,null,null,null),"a",null,buttonClass,title);
btn.onclick=onClickNestedSlider;
btn.setAttribute("href","javascript:;");
btn.setAttribute("title",tooltip);
}
else
var btn = createTiddlyButton(place,title,tooltip,onClickNestedSlider,buttonClass);
btn.innerHTML=title; // enables use of HTML entities in label
// set extra button attributes
btn.setAttribute("closedtext",closedtext);
btn.setAttribute("closedtip",closedtip);
btn.setAttribute("openedtext",openedtext);
btn.setAttribute("openedtip",openedtip);
btn.sliderCookie = cookie; // save the cookiename (if any) in the button object
btn.defOpen=defopen!=null; // save default open/closed state (boolean)
btn.keyparam=key; // save the access key letter ("" if none)
if (key.length) {
btn.setAttribute("accessKey",key); // init access key
btn.onfocus=function(){this.setAttribute("accessKey",this.keyparam);}; // **reclaim** access key on focus
}
btn.setAttribute("hover",hover?"true":"false");
btn.onmouseover=function(ev) {
// optional 'open on hover' handling
if (this.getAttribute("hover")=="true" && this.sliderPanel.style.display=='none') {
document.onclick.call(document,ev); // close transients
onClickNestedSlider(ev); // open this slider
}
// mouseover on button aligns floater position with button
if (window.adjustSliderPos) window.adjustSliderPos(this.parentNode,this,this.sliderPanel);
}
// create slider panel
var panelClass=panelwidth?"floatingPanel":"sliderPanel";
if (panelID) panelID=panelID.slice(1,-1); // trim off delimiters
var panel=createTiddlyElement(place,"div",panelID,panelClass,null);
panel.button = btn; // so the slider panel know which button it belongs to
btn.sliderPanel=panel; // so the button knows which slider panel it belongs to
panel.defaultPanelWidth=(panelwidth && panelwidth.length>2)?panelwidth.slice(1,-1):"";
panel.setAttribute("transient",transient=="*"?"true":"false");
panel.style.display = show;
panel.style.width=panel.defaultPanelWidth;
panel.onmouseover=function(event) // mouseover on panel aligns floater position with button
{ if (window.adjustSliderPos) window.adjustSliderPos(this.parentNode,this.button,this); }
// render slider (or defer until shown)
w.nextMatch = lookaheadMatch.index + lookaheadMatch[0].length;
if ((show=="block")||!deferred) {
// render now if panel is supposed to be shown or NOT deferred rendering
w.subWikify(blockquote?createTiddlyElement(panel,"blockquote"):panel,this.terminator);
// align floater position with button
if (window.adjustSliderPos) window.adjustSliderPos(place,btn,panel);
}
else {
var src = w.source.substr(w.nextMatch);
var endpos=findMatchingDelimiter(src,"+++","===");
panel.setAttribute("raw",src.substr(0,endpos));
panel.setAttribute("blockquote",blockquote?"true":"false");
panel.setAttribute("rendered","false");
w.nextMatch += endpos+3;
if (w.source.substr(w.nextMatch,1)=="\n") w.nextMatch++;
}
}
}
}
)
function findMatchingDelimiter(src,starttext,endtext) {
var startpos = 0;
var endpos = src.indexOf(endtext);
// check for nested delimiters
while (src.substring(startpos,endpos-1).indexOf(starttext)!=-1) {
// count number of nested 'starts'
var startcount=0;
var temp = src.substring(startpos,endpos-1);
var pos=temp.indexOf(starttext);
while (pos!=-1) { startcount++; pos=temp.indexOf(starttext,pos+starttext.length); }
// set up to check for additional 'starts' after adjusting endpos
startpos=endpos+endtext.length;
// find endpos for corresponding number of matching 'ends'
while (startcount && endpos!=-1) {
endpos = src.indexOf(endtext,endpos+endtext.length);
startcount--;
}
}
return (endpos==-1)?src.length:endpos;
}
window.onClickNestedSlider=function(e)
{
if (!e) var e = window.event;
var theTarget = resolveTarget(e);
while (theTarget && theTarget.sliderPanel==undefined) theTarget=theTarget.parentNode;
if (!theTarget) return false;
var theSlider = theTarget.sliderPanel;
var isOpen = theSlider.style.display!="none";
// if SHIFT-CLICK, dock panel first (see [[MoveablePanelPlugin]])
if (e.shiftKey && config.macros.moveablePanel) config.macros.moveablePanel.dock(theSlider,e);
// toggle label
theTarget.innerHTML=isOpen?theTarget.getAttribute("closedText"):theTarget.getAttribute("openedText");
// toggle tooltip
theTarget.setAttribute("title",isOpen?theTarget.getAttribute("closedTip"):theTarget.getAttribute("openedTip"));
// deferred rendering (if needed)
if (theSlider.getAttribute("rendered")=="false") {
var place=theSlider;
if (theSlider.getAttribute("blockquote")=="true")
place=createTiddlyElement(place,"blockquote");
wikify(theSlider.getAttribute("raw"),place);
theSlider.setAttribute("rendered","true");
}
// show/hide the slider
if(config.options.chkAnimate && (!hasClass(theSlider,'floatingPanel') || config.options.chkFloatingSlidersAnimate))
anim.startAnimating(new Slider(theSlider,!isOpen,e.shiftKey || e.altKey,"none"));
else
theSlider.style.display = isOpen ? "none" : "block";
// reset to default width (might have been changed via plugin code)
theSlider.style.width=theSlider.defaultPanelWidth;
// align floater panel position with target button
if (!isOpen && window.adjustSliderPos) window.adjustSliderPos(theSlider.parentNode,theTarget,theSlider);
// if showing panel, set focus to first 'focus-able' element in panel
if (theSlider.style.display!="none") {
var ctrls=theSlider.getElementsByTagName("*");
for (var c=0; c<ctrls.length; c++) {
var t=ctrls[c].tagName.toLowerCase();
if ((t=="input" && ctrls[c].type!="hidden") || t=="textarea" || t=="select")
{ try{ ctrls[c].focus(); } catch(err){;} break; }
}
}
var cookie=theTarget.sliderCookie;
if (cookie && cookie.length) {
config.options[cookie]=!isOpen;
if (config.options[cookie]!=theTarget.defOpen) window.saveOptionCookie(cookie);
else window.removeCookie(cookie); // remove cookie if slider is in default display state
}
// prevent SHIFT-CLICK from being processed by browser (opens blank window... yuck!)
// prevent clicks *within* a slider button from being processed by browser
// but allow plain click to bubble up to page background (to close transients, if any)
if (e.shiftKey || theTarget!=resolveTarget(e))
{ e.cancelBubble=true; if (e.stopPropagation) e.stopPropagation(); }
Popup.remove(); // close open popup (if any)
return false;
}
// click in document background closes transient panels
document.nestedSliders_savedOnClick=document.onclick;
document.onclick=function(ev) { if (!ev) var ev=window.event; var target=resolveTarget(ev);
if (document.nestedSliders_savedOnClick)
var retval=document.nestedSliders_savedOnClick.apply(this,arguments);
// if click was inside a popup... leave transient panels alone
var p=target; while (p) if (hasClass(p,"popup")) break; else p=p.parentNode;
if (p) return retval;
// if click was inside transient panel (or something contained by a transient panel), leave it alone
var p=target; while (p) {
if ((hasClass(p,"floatingPanel")||hasClass(p,"sliderPanel"))&&p.getAttribute("transient")=="true") break;
p=p.parentNode;
}
if (p) return retval;
// otherwise, find and close all transient panels...
var all=document.all?document.all:document.getElementsByTagName("DIV");
for (var i=0; i<all.length; i++) {
// if it is not a transient panel, or the click was on the button that opened this panel, don't close it.
if (all[i].getAttribute("transient")!="true" || all[i].button==target) continue;
// otherwise, if the panel is currently visible, close it by clicking it's button
if (all[i].style.display!="none") window.onClickNestedSlider({target:all[i].button})
if (!hasClass(all[i],"floatingPanel")&&!hasClass(all[i],"sliderPanel")) all[i].style.display="none";
}
return retval;
};
// adjust floating panel position based on button position
if (window.adjustSliderPos==undefined) window.adjustSliderPos=function(place,btn,panel) {
if (hasClass(panel,"floatingPanel") && !hasClass(panel,"undocked")) {
// see [[MoveablePanelPlugin]] for use of 'undocked'
var rightEdge=document.body.offsetWidth-1;
var panelWidth=panel.offsetWidth;
var left=0;
var top=btn.offsetHeight;
if (place.style.position=="relative" && findPosX(btn)+panelWidth>rightEdge) {
left-=findPosX(btn)+panelWidth-rightEdge; // shift panel relative to button
if (findPosX(btn)+left<0) left=-findPosX(btn); // stay within left edge
}
if (place.style.position!="relative") {
var left=findPosX(btn);
var top=findPosY(btn)+btn.offsetHeight;
var p=place; while (p && !hasClass(p,'floatingPanel')) p=p.parentNode;
if (p) { left-=findPosX(p); top-=findPosY(p); }
if (left+panelWidth>rightEdge) left=rightEdge-panelWidth;
if (left<0) left=0;
}
panel.style.left=left+"px"; panel.style.top=top+"px";
}
}
// TW2.1 and earlier:
// hijack Slider stop handler so overflow is visible after animation has completed
Slider.prototype.coreStop = Slider.prototype.stop;
Slider.prototype.stop = function()
{ this.coreStop.apply(this,arguments); this.element.style.overflow = "visible"; }
// TW2.2+
// hijack Morpher stop handler so sliderPanel/floatingPanel overflow is visible after animation has completed
if (version.major+.1*version.minor+.01*version.revision>=2.2) {
Morpher.prototype.coreStop = Morpher.prototype.stop;
Morpher.prototype.stop = function() {
this.coreStop.apply(this,arguments);
var e=this.element;
if (hasClass(e,"sliderPanel")||hasClass(e,"floatingPanel")) {
// adjust panel overflow and position after animation
e.style.overflow = "visible";
if (window.adjustSliderPos) window.adjustSliderPos(e.parentNode,e.button,e);
}
};
}
<<search>><<closeAll>><<permaview>><<newTiddler>><<newJournal "DD MMM YYYY" "journal">><<saveChanges>><<slider chkSliderOptionsPanel OptionsPanel "options »" "Change TiddlyWiki advanced options">>
!!!Major Families Origins and Arrival Date in North America
As of October 2011, this genealogy has records of the following number of individuals in the major families. Some of the branch families are more numerous and origins are more ancient, eg the ~VanVoorhis family. Most of the families originated in Germany but at a time before Germany was a nation so the regions are given if available, otherwise Germany is used.
The database has 2640 individuals with about ''700 unique Surnames'' and in 957 Families
[NOTE: The tables are sortable by clicking on the header of the column by which you want to sort - click a second time to sort in the opposite direction.]
|sortable|k
| !Family Name | !Persons in Database| !Oldest birth | !Origins | !NA arrival |h
| Bogan / Bogen | 112 | bef 1700 | Darmstadt, ~Hesse-Darmstadt Germany<br>49° 52.30'N 8° 38.65'E | 1776 |
| Smith | 60 | bef 1736 | Wittgenstein, Baden, Germany<br>50° 59.153'N 8° 27.754'E | 1786 |
| Pfahler | 50 | bef 1797 | Amstetten, Wurttemburg Germany<br>48° 34.671'N 9° 52.515'E | 1832 |
| Fetter | 23 | bef 1806 | ~Hesse-Darmstadt Germany<br>49° 52.669'N 8° 38.610'E | 1848 |
| Kehrer | 40 | bef 1774 | Betzinger, ~Baden-Wurttemburg Germany<br> 48° 31.008'N 9° 10.763'E | 1805 |
| Albright / Albrecht | 29 | abt1688 | Necker Bischofsheim Baden Germany<br>49° 17.734'N 8° 57.767'E | abt 1750 |
| Volkmer | 17 | 1825 | Stadtilm, Thuringia, Saxony, Germany<br>N50° 46' 0" E11° 5' 0" East | bef 1856 |
| Liapply | 13 | abt 1785 | Wurttemburg, Germany | bef 1800 |
| Reber | 27 | bef 1843 | Berne, Switzerland<br>46° 57.016'N 7° 26.429'E | 1868 |
| Plank | 2 | bef 1863 | unknown | unknown |
!!!Related Families Arrivals and Origins
|sortable|k
| !Family Name | !Persons in Database| !Oldest birth | !Origins | !NA arrival |h
| Kunkel | 34 | 1530 | Glasshaus, Neuhutten<br>49° 38.711'N 7° 0.994'E<br>Florsbach, Geinhausen, Hessen<br>50° 7.869'N 9° 24.752'E | 1750<br>1776 |
| Kleinfelter | 7 | 1637 | Florsbach, Hessen<br>50° 7.869'N 9° 24.752'E | 1751 |
| ~VanVoorhis | 54 | 1600 | Hees, Drenthe, Netherlands<br>52° 44.926'N 6° 22.046'E | 1660 |
| Schwab | 8 | bef 1838 | Wurttemberg, Germany | abt 1850 |
| Cook | 16 | 1778 | ~Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany<br>49° 52.669'N 8° 38.610'E | 1830 |
| Seibert | 5 | 1717 | Hettenleidelheim, Bad Durkheim, Rheinland<br>49° 32.148'N 8° 4.394'E | bef 1840 |
| Bauer | 6 | bef 1819 | Schmitshausen, Pfalz, Germany<br>49° 18.514'N 7° 30.673'E | abt 1852 |
| Lind / Linn / ~VonderLind | 8 | bef 1749 | Germany | Unknown |
| Bruchlacher | 6 | 1785 | Reutlinger, ~Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany<br> 48° 28.995'N 9° 13.073'E | 1805 |
| Diebler | 21 | bef 1707 | Kirchheim, Germany<br>50° 50.425'N 9° 34.455'E | 1728 |
| Cairns/Carnes | 7 | bef 1785 | Culross, Perth, Scotland | 1833 |
| Diehl | 6 | abt 1664 | Under Capeln, Glan River Valley, Germany<br>49° 45.359'N 7° 41.982'E | abt 1720 |
| Kester | 11 | 1731 | Germany | bef 1731 |
| Wise (Weiss) | 20 | 1738 | Germany | bef 1738 |
| Kirkpatrick | 36 | bef 1712 | Unknown | bef 1712 |
| Weaversmith | 1 | 1819 | Unknown | bef 1819 |
| Burwell | 42 | bef 1731 | Unknown | bef 1731 |
| Johnson | 17 | 1705 | Probably English | bef 1705 |
| Cooper | 20 | bef 1800 | Probably German (name: Kuipfer) | bef 1800 |
!!!Other Families to be Added to the Tables
These are the families about which very little is known and are listed here because they are ancestor surnames.
''Pagan, Dome (or Thom), Meyers, Fisher, Murphy, Shaffer, Beach, Wood, Custard, Wagman''
!!Time Line of Ancestor Arrivals in North America
| Year | Family, Individual | First Settlement |h
| 1660 | Van Voorhees, Cornelius | New Amsterdam (NYC) |
| 1705 | Johnson, - | -, VA |
| 1712 | Kirkpatrick, - | -, PA |
| 1720 | Diehl, - | -, PA |
| 1728 | Diebler, - | -, PA |
| 1731 | Kester, -<br>Burwell, - | Union Co, PA<br>unknown |
| 1738 | Wise, - | -, PA |
| 1750 | Albright, - | Berks Co, PA |
| 1751 | Kleinfelter, - | York Co, PA |
| 1776 | Bogan, Nickolas<br>Kunkel, Henry | New York City, NY |
| 1786 | Smith, Joseph | Perry Co, PA |
| 1800 | Laipply, John <br> Cooper, George | Columbiana Co, OH<br>Harrison Co, OH |
| 1805 | Kehrer, Johann<br>Bruchlacher, Daniel | Lycoming Co, PA<br>Lycoming Co, PA |
| 1819 | Weaversmith, - | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1830 | Cook, Peter | Franklin Co , PA |
| 1832 | Pfahler, George | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1833 | Cairns, Andrew | Stark Co, OH |
| 1840 | Seibert, - | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1848 | Fetter, George | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1850 | Schwab, George | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1852 | Bauer, - | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1856 | Volkmer, Christian | Crawford Co, OH |
| 1868 | Reber, Jacob | Wyandot Co, OH |
<div class='header' macro='gradient vert #FFF #FFF '>
<div class='gradient'>
<div class='titleLine' >
<span class='searchBar' macro='search'></span>
<span class='siteTitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteTitle'></span>
<span class='siteSubtitle' refresh='content' tiddler='SiteSubtitle'></span>
</div>
<div id='topMenu' refresh='content' tiddler='MainMenu'></div>
</div>
</div>
<div id='bodywrapper'>
<div id='sidebar'>
<div id='sidebarOptions' refresh='content' tiddler='SideBarOptions'></div>
<div id='sidebarTabs' refresh='content' force='true' tiddler='SideBarTabs'></div>
</div>
<div id='displayArea'>
<div id='messageArea'></div>
<div id='tiddlersBar' refresh='none' ondblclick='config.macros.tiddlersBar.onTiddlersBarAction(event)'></div>
<div id='tiddlerDisplay'></div>
</div>
<div id='displayFooter'></div>
</div>
Four level Pedigree Table (1,2,4,8) use 1,3,7,
|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|
|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|
|>|>|>|...|>|>|>|...|
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|...|
Five level Pedigree Table (1,2,4,8,16) use 1,3,7,15
|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|
|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|>|...|
|>|>|>|...|>|>|>|...|>|>|>|...|>|>|>|...|
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|...|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|...|
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|...|
[>img[images/George_Rhoda_Pfahler1880-tn.jpg][images/George_Rhoda_Pfahler1880.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
//Shown to the right are Rhoda, George and son George about 1865 - click on the picture for a larger version//
The Pfahlers of Crawford County, Ohio are decendent from two bothers, Mattias (b 1792) and George (b 1797) ``` Some source including the US Census spell the name as Failor``` from Wurttemburg, Germany. These two sons of a George Phahler immigrated to the USA in 1832 and arrived by boat in New York City. ``` The name Pfahler is thought to come from the name of a region of the Bavarian forest, Pfahl. This is a quartz ridge over 100 km long that runs parallel and just north of the Donau River between Regensburg and Passau. Those that worked there were called Pfahlers. Other sources suggest that Pfahlers were those that constructed fences or Pfahls. ```
They broght their families with them. Mattias and wife Barbara (Pfahler) came with four children of which one died during the voyage ((Mattias Jr, Fredricka and Jane were born in Germany)). George and wife Carolina (Wagman ```Cemetery records in Crawford County give her name as Wagner```, age 18) had been married in Germany but waited to start their family in North America.
The families first traveled to Canton, Ohio where they briefly settled byt Mattias and George walked to Crawford County and purchased land on which to start their new lives. By 1833 (1) the two owned 80 acres farms in Sandusky Twp, of Crawford County Ohio. George's land was about a mile south of Mattias' property. George became naturalized in Crawford County in June 1840.
These lands in Crawford County were part of the Old and New Purchase, land from the Wyandot Indians that was available in 1807 and 1817 (2). George's property was the Eastern half of the NE quarter of section 25 in Sandusky Twp. The NW corner of the property touched on Loss Creek. Mattias purchased the NE half of the NE quarter of section 24 in Sandusky Twp. and on the border with Vernon Twp. Jacob and John Kaler had land adjacent to both brother's properties. ```
*1855 Atlas of Crawford County - George PfahlerGeorge's property was the Eastern half of the NE quarter of section 25 in Sandusky Twp. The NW corner of the property touched on Loss Creek.</li>
*1873 Atlas - Same property</li>
*1894 and 1912 Atlas of Crawford Co (In Rural Schools of CCO 1820-1930)Property split into three parts, long N-S sections.
**Western 32 acres to John George Pfahler d:1921</li>
**Middle 16 acres to Car. Arter (Caroline Pfahler m. Benjamin Arter d:1910),</li>
**Eastern 40 acres to Charles Pfahler d:1916</li>
```
Both brothers had to hew their farms from the dense hardwood forests that grew in this part of Ohio. Mattias (and probably George) was a member of the German Luthern Church and a Democrat. Loss Creek Lutheran Church was the local church in Sandusky township and just down Cox Road on what is now County Road 20.``` In about the year 1840, the Lutherans organized a society and built a church on Lost Creek. The society is in a prosperous condition. (from History of Crawford County Ohoi 1881, HCCO1881) ```
George I (John George) and Caroline had six children. The oldest son, William, moved to Van Buren Twp, Putnam County, OH to farm. When George died, the 80 acres were split into three farms. George II got the western half of the 80 acre farm and Caroline and Charles split the other half with Charles getting 30 acres. Widow Catherine (d:1887) lived with Charles' family. Sophia (b:1849) married John Croft who farmed in Claridon Township, Marion County. The youngest son, Christian (b:1852) moved to Marion Township in Henry County, Ohio and farmed there for most of his life but moved back to Crawford county by 1920 to Cranberry Township.
George II married Rhoda Cooper in 1864 and they had nine children in the years between 1864 through 1886. (See the picture above that has Rhoda and George with their first child George III - this image was taken in about 1865!!). Rhoda had two sets of twins: In October of 1873 she had Ida and Charles then at the next birth in October of 1876 she had James and Jemima. Three more children followed these four, Christopher (b1879), Oliver (b1882) and Sarah (b1886).
Jacob Kaler's family lived just west of the George Pfahlers. The two oldest Pfahler children married Kalers. George III married Lettie Kaler in 1886 and Caroline married John Kaler about 1885 ```John Frank Kaler lived from 1856 to 1946 (aged 90) and there is a picture of him in my database. He was considered part of the Bogan-Pfahler family - LDB```. Caroline wife, died in 1905 at the age of 39. The Fetters also must have been well know to the Pfahler family because Charles married Clara Fetter (daughter of George Fetter) in 1896 and Oliver married Clara's cousin Melissa May Fetter (daughter of Jacob) in 1905 ```George (b:1836) and Jacob Fetter (b:1846) were sons of George and Catherine (Beach) Fetter ```.
[img[Clara (Fetter) Pfahler with children Anona Bogan, George Loren, and Blanche Bogan - about 1950s|images/Pfahlers_family-tn.jpg]]
The Pfahler family in the 1950's - Clara (Fetter) Pfahler with Anona, Loren and Blanch
Charles Edward Pfahler and Clara Fetter had three children, Anona (b:1897), Blanche (b:1903) and George Loren (b:1913). The family lived on a rental farm north of North Robinson on the Lower Leesville Road. ((By the mid-1960s the family land at Loss Creek is in other hands (Walter Michael) and only a small home plot north of the road through quarter section is owned by Jacob Pfahler, son of Charles Pfahler )) Edward farmed but was also a bus driver for the North Robinson School in an era which switched from horse-drawn to motor-driven buses. The two girls of the family eventually married two Bogan cousins. Anona (m:1916) to Chester Bogan, son of William Edgar Bogan and Blanche (m: 1923) to Ivan Bogan, youngest son of William Lemon Bogan. William Lemon was William Edgar's uncle so there is a generation difference between Chester and Ivan. The two sisters eventually end up living next door to each other in North Robinson at the corner of Caskey and Western Streets.
Youngest child Loren also marries into the Bogan clan. He married Evelyn Bair, the daughter of Ray and Edna (Bogan) Bair. Edna was the sister of Chester Bogan so Anona, sister to Loren became, through marriage, Loren's aunt. Loren also lived in North Robinson across the Main Street from Ray and Edna Bair. Charles Edward died in 1936 and Clara moved into North Robinson, living at the opposite end of Western Avenue from Anona and Chester Bogan. Clara passed away in 1952.
Anona's oldest son was Raymond Edward Bogan, (b:1917) my father. See the stories of the Bogans for more stories of this part of the family. Anona lived the longest of the three Pfahler children and almost reached the age of 99 when she died in 1996.
!!!Footnotes
----
|gggggp|George Cooper<br>d:1812 PA|Mary Wood<br>b: abt 1785 PA|Job Burwell<br>1780-1860<br>b:NJ d: Morrow Co, OH|Catheine Custard<br>1777-abt 1830<br>Philadelphia, PA|George Pfahler<br>b&d Wurtemburg|?|?|?|
|ggggp|>| Edward Cooper<br>b:Harrison Co, OH<br>1808-1892 |>| Elizabeth Burwell<br>b:PA<br>1810-1865 |>| John G. Pfahler<br>b:Wurtemburg<br>1797-1880 |>| Caroline Wagner<br>b:Wurtenburg<br>1814-1887 |
|gggp|>|>|>| Rhoda Cooper<br>1845-1910 |>|>|>| J. George Pfahler<br>1840-1921 |
|ggp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Charles Edward Pfahler<br>1873-1936 |
More ancestors of the [[Burwell-Custard Pedigree]] family are known and are shown in another presentation.
Mary Margaret Plank was born to George Plank and Elizabeth Lowmiller in 1863 in Pennsylvania ``` There is only one reference to Marys parents in the cemetery records and no other. Supposedly she was born in Blairsville, PA but I could find no evidence in the census of George Plank there. In some places Planck becomes Blanck or Blank. I have not been able to find any information on Geoge Plank or Blank (LDB).```. The first record of Mary in the US census are in 1870 and 1880 when she was living with the family of Adam and Catherine (Baker) Lowmiller. The Lowmillers had raised a family of eight children but by this time their children were grownup or died. According to a biography of Adam's son, William, Mary's mother, Eliza Ann, was deceased by 1870 having been married first to a Mr. Blaine and then a Mr. Martin.
Adam was 62 years old and Catherine, 56 in 1870. Adam was a weaver and farmer living in West Beaver Township of Snyder County, PA. Adam was Mary Plank's grandfather who, at the time, was 6 years old. There was one other child in the family, Catherine Baker an 8 year old niece of Catherine Lowmiller. The Lowmillers were apparently raising some of their relative's children. Mary was still with the Lowmillers in 1880 but Catherine Baker had left the family by then. (presumably married at age 18).
[<img[Mary Margaret Plank - age 21|images/plank_Mary_age21_sm.jpg]]
Of Adam and Catherine Lowmiller's children, two sons, Daniel (b 1838) and William (b 1840), emigrated to Crawford County, Ohio in 1859. There is a biography of Daniel and of William in the HCCO1881 ```History of Crawford County Ohio 1881 p__ ```. William farmed in Whetstone Township, married Sarah Kester daughter of Jacob and Salome (Wise) Kester whose other daughter, Lydia, married Daniel Kehrer (see the story of the [[Kehrers]]). William (d 1917) and Sarah (d 1909) Lowmiller are buried in the Whetstone Cemetery. Daniel fought in the Civil War from 1862-65 (see his biography in HCCO1881), worked as a contractor in Bucyrus, died in 1896 and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery.
Adam, the father, died in 1889 and was buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Bucyrus, Ohio. He moved to Crawford County to be with his sons after his wife died in Pennsylvania. His wife Catherine (Baker) is buried in the Union Methodists Cemetery in West Beaver Township, Snyder Co, PA having died in Apr 1885. Since Mary Planck married John Jacob Reber in 1886 (at age 23), Adam must have brought Mary from Pennsylvania to Ohio in 1885 right after his wife died.
!!The Lowmillers in Pennsylvania
The Lowmillers appear in the US census' in Pennsylvania from 1840 through 1880 and the occupants of their home tell an interesting story. The 1840 census only lists the head of household and the age range of the children. At that time there were three children, all under the age of five, two boys and a girl ```probably William, just born, Daniel, age 2 and perhaps daughter, Susan. I have no information on Susan except as that included in a biography of William in 1912. That is as follows:
//Adam Lowmiller and wife were born in Pennsylvania, married there and reared a family of eight children, namely: Susan, deceased, who was the wife of William Straus; Daniel Henry, who is deceased; William H.; Mary, who is the wife of Ruben Treaster; Eliza Ann, deceased, who was married first to a Mr. Blaine and second to a Mr. Martin; Catherine, who is wife of David Harmony; and two who died infancy. By trade the father of the above family was a weaver and after he was employed in a tannery.(from the __History of Crawford Co, OH__ 1912 p728)```.
In 1850 Adam is a laborer with only two girls Polly (Mary) age 7 and Catherine age with them. In the interim since 1840 three girls were born to the Lowmillers, Mary in 1843, Elizabeth in 1845, and Catherine in 1849 so they had six children by this time. The question is: where are Daniel, Susan, William and Elizabeth? All of these children are know to grow to adulthood. A clue occurs in the 1860 cenus.
In 1860 none of the Lowmiller children are living at home but there is a young boy of age five with them. Daniel and William had left for Ohio by this time and Susan was probably married. However, Catherine, now 11 years old was working as a domestic with the Amos Neirman family in West Beaver Township. Mary now 17 years old, is living with Emanuel Baker (presumably a cousin) as a domestic in Union Township, Mifflin County, PA. In the same location is Elizabeth, age 15, working as a domestic for the Benjamin Zeck (or Beck) family.
The Lowmillers were obviously a poor family and had to hire out their children to be able to make a living. That is probably where Daniel, William and Susan were in 1850's. The value of Adam Lowmillers farm in 1860 was only $300 and he had a personal value of $100. In 1870 the farm was $500 but personal value was only $60. This is low as most farms were in the thousands of dollars of evaluation. Because of this practice of hiring out their children, it has been challenging to piece together the Lowmiller family and especially to make the link from Adam Lowmiller to Elizabeth Lowmiller and to Mary
!!! Footnotes
This is a list of the Plugins and Summary Information on them.
!!!LightBoxPlugin
{{{[img[text|image-tnURL][imageURL]]<<imagebox>>}}}
Click on the Thumb Nail image and the image will appear in a light box.
{{{[img[cubicles-thumb.jpg][cubicles.jpg]]<<imagebox 'Office space' 300 300>>}}}
The size of the lightbox and a title can be added in the macro
{{{<<tiddlerbox "ButtonName" "Tiddler" "Title in the Lightbox" width height>>}}}
A tiddler can be put in the light box by clicking on the button
There is also a div version of the lightbox - see the LightboxDoc for information.
!!!TiddlerNotesPlugin
Use the following anywhere in a tiddler and you will get a note space at the top of the tiddler. The tiddler note will be place in a separate tiddler with the heading, tag and comment as filled in. The heading, tag and suffix are optional.
{{{<<notes heading:"My Notes" tag:"NoteTiddlers" suffix:"Comments">>}}}
See TiddlerNotesPlugin in for more details.
!!!FootnotePlugin
Footnotes are written at the place they are needed but surrounded by triple back single quotes as:
{{{This text needs a footnote here ```This is the footnote``` and the text continues...}}}
The text set off will appear at the bottom of the page with a number and that number will placed where the footnote was written as a superscript. The footnotes are numbered in sequence on the page.
See FootnotePlugin for more details.
!!!AnnotationsPlugin
This PlugIn will give a text in a dropdown box at the word
{{{((word(definition of the word)))}}}
To include the word in the dropdown box put a caret in front of the definition such as
{{{((word(^definition of the word)))}}}
See AnnotationsPlugin for more details.
!!!TableSortingPlugin
Tables can be sorted by clicking in the header of the column to be used for sorting by adding the following:
{{{|sortable|k}}}
{{{|col 1 header|col 2 header|col 3 header|h}}}
{{{| col 1 row 1 | col 2 row 1 | col 3 row 1 |}}}
etc
The sortable and k before the table
and the h to define the neader
This will make the header of the table filled and bold lettering.
/***
|''Name:''|~PopupMacro|
|''Version:''|1.0.0 (2006-05-09)|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#PopupMacro|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz|
|''Description:''|Create popups with custom content|
|''Documentation:''|[[PopupMacro Documentation|PopupMacroDocs]]|
|''~Requires:''|TW Version 2.0.8 or better|
***/
// /%
{{{
config.macros.popup = {};
config.macros.popup.arrow = (document.all?"▼":"▾");
config.macros.popup.handler = function(place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,theTiddler) {
if (!params[0] || !params[1])
{createTiddlyError(place,'missing macro parameters','missing label or content parameter');
return false;};
var label = params[0];
var source = (params[1]).replace(/\$\)\)/g,">>");
var nestedId = params[2]? params[2]: 'nestedpopup';
var onclick = function(event) {
if(!event){var event = window.event;}
var theTarget = resolveTarget(event);
var nested = (!isNested(theTarget));
if ((Popup.stack.length > 1)&&(nested==true)) {Popup.removeFrom(1);}
else if(Popup.stack.length > 0 && nested==false) {Popup.removeFrom(0);};
var theId = (nested==false)? "popup" : nestedId;
var popup = createTiddlyElement(document.body,"ol",theId,"popup",null);
Popup.stack.push({root: button, popup: popup});
wikify(source,popup);
Popup.show(popup,true);
event.cancelBubble = true;
if (event.stopPropagation) event.stopPropagation();
return false;
}
var button = createTiddlyButton(place, label+this.arrow,label, onclick, null);
};
window.isNested = function(e) {
while (e != null) {
var contentWrapper = document.getElementById("contentWrapper");
if (contentWrapper == e) return true;
e = e.parentNode;
}
return false;
};
setStylesheet(
".popup, .popup a, .popup a:visited {color: #fff;}\n"+
".popup a:hover {background: #014; color: #fff; border: none;}\n"+
".popup li , .popup ul, .popup ol {list-style:none !important; margin-left:0.3em !important; margin-right:0.3em; font-size:100%; padding-top:0.5px !important; padding:0px !important;}\n"+
"#nestedpopup {background:#2E5ADF; border: 1px solid #0331BF; margin-left:1em; }\n"+
"",
"CustomPopupStyles");
config.shadowTiddlers.PopupMacroDocs="The documentation is available [[here.|http://tw.lewcid.org/#PopupMacroDocs]]";
}}}
//%/
!Description:
Using the popup macro you can create popups with any wiki text. The wiki text can be written in the macro call, can be generated using a different macro, or included from a tiddler.
!Usage:
*the button label is the first parameter
*the text to put in the popup is the second parameter
**embed macro output like forEachTiddler or tiddlerList
***start macro calls with {{{<<}}} like normal, but end with {{{$))}}}
**define popup content inline, or embed from a tidder using the core tiddler macro {{{<<tiddler$))}}}
*you can nest popups up to one level
**nested popups have an id of 'nestedpopup' for easier styling.
**specify unique id's for nested popups by passing the id as a third parameter.
----
!Example's
''Put a forEachTiddler macro generated list in a popup:''
{{{<<popup forEachTiddlerDemo [[<<forEachTiddler where 'tiddler.tags.contains("systemConfig")']]$))}}}
<<popup forEachTiddlerDemo [[<<forEachTiddler
where
'tiddler.tags.contains("systemConfig")'$))]]>>
''Use the core {{{<<tiddler>>}}} macro to put the contents of a tiddler into a popup:''
MainMenu popup:
{{{<<popup MainMenu [[<<tiddler MainMenu$))]]>>}}}
<<popup MainMenu [[<<tiddler MainMenu$))]]>>
''Or create a custom menu in a tiddler using various macro's and normal tiddlylinks.''
{{{<<popup CustomMenu '<<tiddler CustomMenu$))'>>}}}
<<popup CustomMenu '<<tiddler CustomMenu$))'>>
this menu was created with a combination of forEachTiddler and normal tiddlyLinks!
Note that the 'Plugins' button opens a second nested popup.
Source tiddler: CustomMenu
''Or define your custom menu inline.''
{{{<<popup 'Inline Custom Menu' [[Custom Menu
*MainMenu
----
<<forEachTiddler
where
'tiddler.tags.contains("systemConfig")']]$))]]
>>}}}
<<popup 'Inline Custom Menu' [[Custom Menu
*MainMenu
----
<<forEachTiddler where 'tiddler.tags.contains("systemConfig")'$))]]
>>
''Note: you can pass a third parameter and it will be set as the id of any nested popups''
By default, nested popups have an id of 'nestedpopup' to facilitate styling.
----
!Current Issues:
*better support for custom classes for popups and nestedpopups
----
!Code
PopupMacro
<<showtoc>>
!!John Jacob Reber of Switzerland
John Jacob Reber was born in 1843 in Berne, Switzerland. ```The US census mention birth places as in Saxony and Germany``` John J. Reber first appears in the 1870 census in Eden Twp. Wyndot Co, OH working Godfrey Blaiser as a carpenter. At that point he was not yet a naturalized citizen of the U.S.of A. John Jacob's father was Rudolf Reber ```Leota (Reber) Bogan had in her possession when she died, an old, key-wound watch which was housed in a case from Kehrer Jewelers. The watch had engraved inside the back cover, the initials M.R.R. My guess is that it was the watch of M. Rudolf Reber, Frank Reber's grandfather who lived and died in Switzerland. The watch is "Swiss-made by "Bautte". 42 mm , 8 Jewels, key wind and set. Ca. early - mid 1800's. The Bautte company becomes the Girard Perregaux watch company by the 20th century.``` and mother, Margaret Teuscher and neither one of them came to North America. ```Interestingly, John Jacob had a sister, Margarite Reber who marries a John Teuscher. The latter was born in Switzerand but dies and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Bucyrus, Ohio in 1906. A note to her daughter, Bonnie, found in Leota (Reber) Bogan's notes, mentions daughter Wilhelmine:
"Bonnie, Wilhelmine gave me her beautiful oak bed for you. Remember, you have the fancy hand-carved headboard. She was a cousin of my father, Franklin Henry Reber.
Love Mom."
Wilhelmine never married but lives to be 78 and died in 1949.```
Ten years later, in June 1880, John Jacob was living in Bucyrus with his first wife, Louisa Seibold, who he had married in 1872. At that time their children were Mary Rebecca, age 5, William F., age 3 and John Edward, 7 mo. Their first boy, Charles, born in 1873 had died at age 7 months. Louisa had come from Wurttemburg, Germany where she was born in 1843. She passed away in May 1882 (age 39), during child birth. The child, Jacob L., died five months later. Louisa had a sister Christina who married a John Richley in 1881 and John would enter the Reber lives later.
John Jacob and his family were living on South Poplar Street in 1900 and he was still working as a carpenter. He had remarried in 1886 to Mary Plank and they added six more children to
[img[Mary Plank Reber and grandson, Herman - abt 1910|images/Plank_MaryHerman_sm.jpg]]
the family. Two children had died as infants leaving (in 1900) Frank H. age 12, Thomas B. age 10, Nellie J. age 8, and Daniel J age 7. Two children from John's previous marriage, Edward, 23, a carpenter and William, 20, were still living with the family. It is Frank, oldest of Mary's children, who was to become my mother's step-father.
!!Mary Plank's Origins
Mary Plank's was from Pennsylvania. She was apparently orphaned when young, because, at the age of 6, she was living in the home of Adam and Catherine Lowmiller. This was in West Beaver Twp., Snyder Co., PA. in 1870. Mary's parents had been George Plank and Elizabeth Lowmiller, and Adam was most likely Mary's grandfather since he was 61 in 1870. She was still with the family in 1880 in W. Beaver Twp. Adam Lowmiller lived to be 80 years old and died in 1889 in Bucyrus, OH. Mary must have come to Ohio with him in the early 1880's after Adam's wife died in Pennsylvania. ```The Adam Lowmiller's had two boys William and Daniel (Mary's uncles) who migrated to Crawford County in 1859 before Adam moved there.``` Mary met and married John J. Reber in 1886 at age 22 (John J. was 42 at the time).
John J. Reber's sons, William, Edward, Thomas and Daniel remained in Crawford county, and were buried in Oakwood Cemetery. Only his daughter Nellie, who married Ray W. Lambright, moved away to Illinois. Eldest daughter Mary Rebecca married Ernst Starkweather and lived her life in Crawford County.
!!Frank Reber and Maria Baerkirchers
In 1910 Frank Henry Reber (age 22) was a barber and owned his own shop. He married Maria Baerkircher in 1909 and in the census year Marie's brother, Hermann was living with the
[img[Marie Baerkircher Reber|images/Baerkircher_mariereber_sm.jpg]]
Marie (Baerkircher) Reber
Rebers. That same year, Maria, died in September after giving birth to their son Herman in June. Now Frank must raise his young son by himself. (For more information on this family see the <a href="http://www.bogan.ca/stories/?p=586" target="_blank">story of the Baerkirchers</a> in this collection)
!!John J. Reber dies
John Jacob (age 68) Reber died in September of 1911 and Mary, his wife, died three years later (age 51). At the 1910 US census four children were in the John J. Reber home on Sandusky Avenue. Edward, 30, who never married and was unemployed; Thomas, 21, was working at a freight house; Jennette, 20, was a domestic for Thomas Town on Poplar St.; and Daniel, 17, was working at a dry cleaning factory. Thus John and Mary Reber lived long enough to see their oldest son, Frank, marry have a son and lose his wife in one year.
!!Frank and Tula Shaw
Frank married again in 1915 to Tula Shaw (age 17 at the time) and she had one child in Januray of 1916 but he (named John Jacob) died when less than one year old. Frank divorced Tula by 30 June 1916 on the grounds that the child was not his. ((Interesting Note: Tula had a twin, Lulu Shaw. The sisters were raised in a family of 12 children in Eden Township of Wyndot County, Ohio, near where Frank's father, first settled.))
Frank Reber entered military service during World War I and spent time in Camp Sherman at Chillicothe, OH in 1918. It is not know with whom Herman, Frank's son now age 7, lived with during this period.
!!Frank Reber and Verda Kehrer
In June 1919, Frank married for the third time, this time to Verda Kehrer who had a new baby daughter, Leota. Verda, was from Whetstone Twp., south east of Bucyrus a few miles. She had been to Columbus where Leota was born out of wedlock. Her father was Russell Volkmer of Brokensword who apparently had no intentions of marrying Verda. In 1920, Russell was away to Toledo, OH., to work on the railroad with his brother Clemence.
Frank and Verda, formally adopted Leota in 1924 and she became Leota Reber. For some reason her name on the adoption document gave her former surname as Volkmer despite the fact that her birth certificate showed that it was Kehrer. The name of the father on the birth certificate is Russell Volkmer. The adoption was after Verda gave birth to her first son, Samuel Jacob Reber in May 1920. Frank and Verda had six more children with Delores being the next, born in 1926.
Children of Frank Reber or Verda Reber:
| !Name | !Birth Date | !Comment |
| Herman | Jun 1910 | mother was Maria Baerkircher |
| John Jacob | Jan 1916 |died as infant - mother: Tula Shaw|
| Leota | Mar 1919 |father was Russell Volkmer (adopted)|
| Samuel | May 1920 |- retarded and institutionized|
| Dolores | Jun 1926 |-|
| Onda | Nov 1927 |-|
| Mary | Sep 1929 |-|
| Robert | May 1931 |-|
| Jackqueline | Nov 1934 |-|
| Frederick |Mar 1938 | stillborn |
In 1920 Frank was a taxi driver but he soon took up the job as tinner at Walther's Hardware in Bucyrus and remained in this occupation until his death in 1938. Sometime before 1930, the family moved from poplar Street to 300 Galen Street on the north side of the railroad tracks. The house was very close to the tracks and shook every time one of the heavy steam locomotives passed by. I remember, at least once, as a very young boy staying at grandma, Reber's home in an upstairs bedroom experiencing that horrendous noise at night.
!!The Richley Relationship and Property
A note written by Leota Reber says that 'John Rickley' ```John Richly was born in Neckerhausen Germany, Neusugan, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Edingen-Neckarhausen is a municipality in the district of Rhein-Neckar-Kreis, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is situated on the left bank of the Neckar, 10 km east of Mannheim, and 8 km northwest of Heidelberg.
Lat (DMS) 49° 27' 59N
Long (DMS) 8° 35' 57E```
"came to live with us 6 Nov 1924". John's wife, Christina (Siebold) Richly died in October 1924 when he was 81 years. A few years later in Nov 1927, John Richly enters into an agreement with Frank Reber saying
"In consideration of John Richly this day conveying to Frank H. Reber of Bucyrus, Ohio, certain real estate as is described in a deed bearing even date herewith, and in consideration of John Richly turning over to said Frank H. Reber, all his personal property, which has been done, the said Frank H. Reber, agrees with the said John Richly, that he, the said Frank H. Reber, will make a suitable home for said John Richly so long as the John Richly may live, and to furnish said John Richly the comforts of a home and to
nurse him in illness and upon the death of said John Richly to furnish and provide for said John Richly a suitable burial, all of which shall be done by the said Frank H. Reber at his own costs and expenses." ```from a document in the possession of Jackie Reber Moseman```
John Richly died in Oct 1930 and was buried in Chatfield. The property eventually passed to Frank Reber but caused some problems in the Reber family and there were law suits against Richly for the property. The property was in Chatfield and was sold by Verda Reber for $75 in 1940.
!!Tough Times for the Rebers in the 1930's
1938 was an eventful but difficult year for the Rebers. Herman at 28 years old was away pursuing a career in music and organ playing in Chicago. Samuel, then 18 years, had been institutionalized in Columbus. There were six children at home. In February, Frank suddenly became sick and died of 'high blood pressure'. The next month, March, baby Frederick was born to Verda but died. Then, in May, Leota, the oldest daughter, married Raymond Bogan, and left to set up her own home.
[img[(back) Onda, Frank, Delores, Verda (front) Mary, Jackie, Robert and Leota|images/Reber_Family_Portrait_abt1937_sm.jpg]]
Verda kept a few notes in a diary during this period and comments often that she is very tired all the time. ```Verda had kept infrequent notes in a small appointment book for the years of 1939, 40, and part of 41. These were found in the papers of Leota Reber Bogan``` Her income came from sewing, laundering and renting out the garage. In addition to maintaining a household of five children (ages 4 to 12 in 1938), she periodically took care of her grandson, Larry (b:1939), for Leota and Raymond. She died in October of 1943 of high blood pressure and a cerebral hemorage. (the children were then ages 9 through 17 years.)
Leota's siblings lived, temporarily, with her family but Delores and Onda soon moved to live with other relatives. Mary took on a job, child sitting for the Colby family, and moved to Connecticut with them. Jackqueline and Robert, the youngest, lived with the Bogans until they finished school and were able to be on their own.
There are no Rebers of Frank Reber's line since Herman and Robert, the two male children, though married, never had any children of their own. ```Michael Reber is Robert's son however, he is the son of Robert's wife, Opel, from a previous marriage.```
The following are pages with stories and information on the branches of my mother's side of the family
Reber was her adopted name and she was raised in the Reber family.
Kehrer was her mother's name and the surname given to her at birth.
Volkmer was her biological father's name.
!!Rebers
<<tagging Reber>>
!!Kehrers
<<tagging Kehrer>>
!!Volkmers
<<tagging Volkmer>>
<<notes>>
!!!!Books:
# History of Crawford County, Ohio 1881
# History of Crawford County, Ohio and Representative Citizens 1912<br>Chicago, Ill., ~Richmond-Arnold Pub. Co.,1912, 1279 pgs.
# A Centenial Biographical History of Crawford County, Ohio 1902 //by Hopley, John E.//<br>Chicago , Lewis Pub. Co.,1902, 871 pgs.
# United States Federal Census 1790 every 10 year through 1930
# Atlas Crawford County Ohio 1855 (CCCOGS)
# Cemeteries of Crawford County Ohio Volume 3 ((CCCOGS (Crawford County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society)))
# Cemeteries of Crawford County Ohio Volume 2A (CCCOGS)
# Marriages of Crawford County Ohio 1831-1997 Vol 2 (CCCOGS)
# Rural Schools of Crawford County Ohio 1820-1930 (CCCOGS)
# Kunkle Book (E.Kunkel, Colorado)
# Kunkle Book (Galion Public Library)
# Steven Coerte ~VanVoorhees and his Descendants in America<br>Van Voorhees Association (2nd Revised Ed.) June 1932
# Notes on the Ancestry of Major Wm. Roe Van Voorhis of Fishkill, Duchess Co, NY<br>by Elias W. Van Voorhis 1881
# Naturalization Records of Crawford County, OH
!!!!Websites:
# Heritage Quest (http://www.heritagequest.com) <br>for US Census and old books and documents (membership required)
# Rootsweb (http://www.rootsweb.com) World Connect
# Family Search (http://www.familysearch.org)
# Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com) - membership required
# Conover's Genealogy (http://www.conovergenealogy.com) - Van Voorhis
# Van Voorhis Family Website (http://www.vanvoorhees.com)
# Ohio Genealogical Society (http://www.ogs.org) - membership required
!!!!Genealogical Libraries
# Library of the Ohio Genealogical Society (Mansfield, Ohio)<br>Obituaries, Biographies in 19th century county histories
# Bucyrus Public Library (Bucyrus, Ohio)<br>Newspaper on microfilm (Bucyrus Telegraph Forum and precursors)
# Galion Public Library (Galion, Ohio)<br>History of the Kunkels
# Crestline Public Library (Crestline, Ohio)
# Marion Public Library (Marion, Ohio)
# Leesburg Public Library, VA<br>Records of the Virginia land owned by John Henry Bogen
# Frederick Historical Society, Frederick, MD<br>Newspaper and Cemetery Records of Bogens
# Dauphin County Historical Society, Harrisburg, PA<br>
Mostly Albright information
# Lycoming County Historical Society, Williamport Public Library, PA
# Genealogical Society, Williamsburg, PA
# Franklin and Marshall University Library, Lancaster, PA (Hetrina on the Hessians)
!!!!Other Genealogical Researchers
# Jodie Shumaker Mcxxxx
# Koontz
# Baerkircher (Baerkircher)
# McKanna (McKanna)
# Nancy Allamon (Smith)
# Kunkel
Publishers:
* CCCOGS = Crawford County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society
2012 - This list is just a beginning
It needs extensive additions.
config.macros.rollover = {};
config.macros.rollover.handler= function(place,macroName,params) {
if (params.length<3) return;
var name = params[0];
var img1 = params[1];
var img2 = params[2];
var url = (params.length==3) ? img2 : params[3];
var options = (params.length>=5) ? params[4] : "";
wikify("<html><a target = '_blank' href='"+url+"' onmouseout=\"document."+name+".src='"+img1+"'\" onmouseover=\"document."+name+".src='"+img2+"'\"> <img "+options+" name='"+name+"' src="+img1+"></a></html>",place)
}
!!Description
A TiddlyWikiMacro that inserts an image with a rollover backup image. It takes three mandatory arguments:
*a unique name to identify the img tag. If not unique, none of the rollover macros will work.
*the default image
*the secondary image
and two optional arguments:
*the url the image points to when clicked. If not given, the second image will be the target.
*optional arguments passed to the image tag
!!Example
Using less than three arguments does nothing:
{{{<<rollover a b>>}}}
Exactly three arguments links to the second image:
{{{<<rollover three images/rollover1.gif images/rollover2.gif>>}}}
<<rollover three images/rollover1.gif images/rollover2.gif>>
The two optional arguments:
{{{<<rollover four images/rollover1.gif images/rollover2.gif images/rollover3.gif align="center">>}}}
This image is also a link <<rollover four images/rollover1.gif images/rollover2.gif images/rollover3.gif align="center" >>
So Click it to see
!!Installation
Import (or copy/paste) this tiddler into your document: and tag it with "systemConfig"
!Descendants of Rudolf Reber
{{{
1-Rudolf Reber
+Margaret Teuscher m. Unknown
|--2-John Jacob Reber b. 18 Aug 1843, Berne, Switzerland,
| d. 7 Sep 1911, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Mary Margaret Plank b. 15 Nov 1863, Blairsville,
| Pennsylvania, m. 11 Mar 1886, Crawford Co, OH, d. 3
| Jan 1914, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. George
| Plank and Elizabeth Lowmiller
| |--3-Ida May Reber b. Abt 1887, d. 27 Mar 1888
| |--3-Franklin Henry Reber b. 30 Jan 1888, d. 12 Feb
| | 1938, Bucyrus, OH
| | +Maria Sophia Baerkircher b. 6 Sep 1885, m. 5 May
| | 1909, d. 7 Sep 1910, par. Frederick Baerkircher and
| | Sophia Lidle
| | |--4-Herman Franklin Reber b. 10 Jun 1910, d. 25 May
| | | 1986, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Jewel M. Cain b. 31 Aug 1913, m. 24 Jun 1948, d.
| | 19 Jan 1999, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH),
| | par. James Cain and Effie Barnett
| | +Tula Ethel Shaw m. 30 Jun 1915
| | |--4-John Jacob Reber b. 13 Jan 1916, d. 26 Jul 1916,
| | | (Union Cemetary, Liberty Twp, Crawford Co, OH)
| | +Verda Matilda Kehrer b. 24 Apr 1900, m. 10 Jun
| | 1919, Bucyrus, OH, d. 14 Oct 1943, Bucyrus, OH,
| | par. Samuel Manuel Kehrer and Amanda Jane Albright
| | |--4-Samuel Jacob Reber b. 30 May 1920, d. 17 Jul
| | | 1942, Orient, OH
| | |--4-Delores Reber b. 8 Jun 1926, Bucyrus, OH, d. 25
| | | Jul 2007, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Donald Wayne Snyder b. 13 Oct 1927, Crawford Co,
| | | OH, m. 8 Jun 1947, Crawford Co, OH, d. 23 Apr
| | | 2000, Crawford Co, OH, par. William J Snyder and
| | | Alpha Eveline Sheaffer
| | | |--5-Terry Lee Snyder b. 2 Apr 1949, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | +Regina Lee Smith b. 23 Jun 1950, m. 4 May
| | | | 1975, Crawford Co, OH, par. James Russell
| | | | Smith Senior and Betty Mae Nickler
| | | | |--6-Abiqail Snyder b. 10 Jul 1980, d. 7 Jun
| | | | | 2000, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Holly Lee Snyder b. 30 Apr 1982, Galion, OH
| | | | |
| | | |--5-Carl Snyder b. 29 Jul 1955
| | | | +Yvonne Sue Langlois b. 5 Jul 1955, m. 14 Jul
| | | | 1974, par. Dave Langlois and Unknown
| | | | |--6-Melissa Snyder b. 12 May 1975
| | | | |--6-Jeremy Allen Snyder b. 16 Sep 1976
| | | | |--6-Jason Allen Snyder b. 16 Sep 1976
| | | | |--6-Amanda Snyder b. 28 Mar 1978
| | | | |--6-Joshua Snyder b. 1 May 1993
| | | |--5-Barbara Jean Snyder b. 23 Feb 1952, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | +Larry Neil West m. 4 Dec 1971
| | | +John Lee Kendell b. Aug 1951, m. 7 Feb 1976
| | | +Mark Schneider b. 7 Feb 1957, m. 25 Aug 1979
| | | |--6-Ryan Schneider b. 31 Jan 1987
| | | |--6-Christopher Schneider b. 7 Sep 1992
| | |--4-Onda Lucille Reber b. 26 Nov 1927, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | d. 23 Dec 1981
| | | +Earl Ward Croneis b. 20 Jan 1925, Tod Twp,
| | | Crawford Co, OH, m. 27 Nov 1949, Bucyrus, OH, d.
| | | 6 Aug 2000, Bucyrus, OH
| | | |--5-Karen Sue Croneis b. 1 Oct 1951, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | |--5-Jean Ann Croneis b. 3 Feb 1953, Crawford Co,
| | | | OH
| | | | +Thomas Wheeler b. 15 Oct 1954, m. 15 Oct
| | | | 1977, d. 2005
| | | | |--6-Thomas Jr Wheeler b. 22 Mar 1976
| | | | |--6-Marcie Wheeler b. 25 Dec 1978
| | | | +? Thomas m. 27 Apr 1996
| | | | |--7-Dylan Thomas b. 10 Jun 1996
| | | |--5-Sandra Kay Croneis b. 6 Oct 1954, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | | +Charles Bosworth b. 18 Apr 1954, m. 22 Mar
| | | | 1975
| | | | |--6-Christine Bosworth b. 22 Oct 1980
| | | | |--6-Scott Arthur Bosworth b. 26 Mar 1982
| | | |--5-Joyce Elaine Croneis b. 4 Aug 1956, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | | +Dennis Thomas Vaughn b. 14 Jul 1951, m. 12
| | | | Oct 1975
| | | | |--6-Brian Vaughn b. 23 May 1979, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH
| | | | | +Kerri
| | | | | |--7-Logan Nicholas Vaughn b. 19 Jan 2010
| | | | |--6-Amy Vaughn b. 24 Oct 1981, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | |--6-Gregory Vaughn b. 7 Oct 1985, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH
| | | |--5-Janet Irene Croneis b. 11 Mar 1963, Crawford
| | | | Co, OH
| | | +Roy Alan Schulaw b. 19 Aug 1955, m. 9 Jun
| | | 1984, par. Elmer Schulaw and Unknown
| | | |--6-Cory Schulaw b. 17 Sep 1987
| | | |--6-Adam Schulaw b. 12 Jul 1987
| | | |--6-Tyler Schulaw b. 30 Sep 1993
| | |--4-Mary Louise Reber b. 23 Sep 1929, Bucyrus, OH,
| | | d. 13 Sep 1989, Guilford, CT
| | | +John Leslie Leslie b. 20 Apr 1926, m. 13 Jun
| | | 1948, d. 25 Jan 2008, N. Guilford, CT
| | | |--5-Judy Louise Leslie b. 17 Jul 1949
| | | | +Gary Bath Coart b. 20 Dec 1945, m. 14 May 1971
| | | |
| | | | |--6-Jason Coart b. 25 Nov 1973
| | | | |--6-Jonathon Coart b. 17 Nov 1975
| | | |--5-Thomas David Leslie b. 20 Jan 1951
| | | | +Cynthia Lou Mackenzie b. 15 Apr 1953, m. 15
| | | | Aug 1970
| | | | |--6-Thomas David Jr Leslie b. 27 Jan 1971
| | | | | +Debbie ? m. 17 Aug 1991
| | | | | |--7-Kimberly Leslie b. 15 Feb 1996
| | | | |--6-Michael John Leslie b. 13 Nov 1973
| | | | | +Jennifer ? b. 14 Feb 1973, m. 1 Oct 1994
| | | | |--6-David Matthew Leslie b. 22 Jul 1977
| | | | +Carmella ? b. 26 Feb 1973, m. 1995
| | | | |--7-Miguel Leslie b. 29 Nov 1995
| | | |--5-Stephen John Leslie b. 4 Mar 1955, Connecticut
| | | |
| | | +Cynthia Downer b. 26 Mar 1956, m. 8 Oct 1976
| | | |--6-Stephen Justin Leslie b. 12 Jun 1978
| | | |--6-Alice Rachel Leslie b. 31 Aug 1979
| | |--4-Robert Curtis Reber b. 14 May 1931, d. 11 Jun
| | | 2004, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Opal Lorrain Baum b. 25 Dec 1930, m. 12 Jul
| | | 1959, d. 7 Nov 1975, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus,
| | | OH), par. Guy Baum and Nellie Schrader
| | |--4-Jacqueline Sue Reber b. 6 Nov 1934, Bucyrus, OH
| | | +Charles Mosman b. 24 Feb 1933, m. 24 Apr 1954,
| | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | |--5-Debra Mosman b. 24 Oct 1955
| | | |--5-James Mosman b. 5 Feb 1961
| | | +Lynne Miller b. 13 Nov 1959, m. 22 Sep 1984
| | | |--6-Brittaney Mosman b. 1 Apr 1986
| | | |--6-Elissa Mosman b. 11 Apr 1989
| | | +Tamara Lynn Short m. 27 Jun 1981, Wyndot Co,
| | | OH
| | |--4-Frederick Ivan Reber b. 15 Mar 1938, d. 15 Mar
| | | 1938
| |--3-Thomas Benjamin Reber b. 4 Jun 1889, d. 19 Jul 1933
| | +Alice Rebecca Korb b. 5 Jul 1893, m. 8 Nov 1917,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 16 Jul 1959, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH), par. John Korb and Elizabeth Treftz
| | |--4-Maximillian Warren Reber b. 29 Sep 1920, Summit
| | | Co, OH, d. 11 Sep 1974, Galion, OH, Hospital
| | | +Ruth Lucille McClenathan m. 10 Aug 1957,
| | | Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Marvin John Reber b. 6 Aug 1928, d. 10 Mar 1994,
| | | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | +Mary Lou Wilt m. 21 Apr 1961, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Charles Thomas Reber b. 26 Jul 1918, d. 15 Feb
| | | 1978, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | +Dorothy Naomi Curts b. 6 Oct 1919, m. 24 Dec
| | | 1939, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Oct 1995, (Oakwood
| | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH), par. Willard C Curts and
| | | Hulda Wood
| | |--4-Ruth E. Reber
| | | +Harold Lutz m. 12 Oct 1947, Crawford Co, OH
| | |--4-Marjorie A. Reber
| | +Ronald Senna m. 31 Oct 1954, Crawford Co, OH
| |--3-Nellie Jennette Reber b. 31 Jul 1890
| | +? Macks
| | +William Ray Lambright m. 26 Apr 1911, Crawford Co,
| | OH, par. Frank Lambright and Unknown
| |--3-Daniel Jacob Reber b. 15 Nov 1893, d. 30 Sep 1944,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Gertrude M Albright b. 15 Aug 1892, m. 20 Jun 1915,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 26 Feb 1970, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH), par. Isaac Albright and Rebecca L.
| | Diebler
| |--3-Infant Reber b. Abt 1899, d. 1899
| +Louisa Seibold b. 22 Aug 1843, m. 25 Jan 1872,
| Crawford Co, OH, d. 9 May 1882, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| Bucyrus, OH), par. Frederick (Frank) Seibold and
| Christina Krauter
| |--3-Charles R Reber b. 10 Jan 1873, d. 30 Aug 1873,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| |--3-Mary Rebecca Reber b. 30 Nov 1874, d. 3 Apr 1950,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Ernest Dell Starkweather b. 3 Jun 1881, m. 14 Sep
| | 1919, Crawford Co, OH, d. 26 Feb 1953, (Oakwood
| | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| |--3-William F Reber b. 14 Mar 1877, d. 3 May 1935,
| | (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | +Anna Marie Drouth b. 6 Aug 1878, m. 5 Jun 1904,
| | Crawford Co, OH, d. 24 Aug 1958, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | Bucyrus, OH), par. John Drouth and Catherine
| | Hessenauer
| | |--4-William H. Reber b. Abt 1912, Florida
| | |--4-Richard K. Reber b. 1816, Florida
| |--3-Edward John Reber b. 12 Nov 1880, Crawford Co, OH,
| | d. 4 Feb 1931, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
|--2-Margarite Reber
+John Teuscher b. 26 Sep 1836, Switzerland, d. 21 Jan
1906, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
|--3-Wilhemine Teuscher b. 31 Jul 1871, d. 20 Nov 1949,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
|--3-John Teuscher b. 14 Aug 1862, d. 18 May 1937,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| +Anna M. Ackerman b. 28 Jan 1854, m. 12 Jul 1890,
| Crawford Co, OH, d. 23 Sep 1930, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| Bucyrus, OH)
|--3-Jacob Teuscher b. 7 Jan 1864, d. 7 May 1941,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
|--3-August Teuscher b. 25 Aug 1877, d. 24 Feb 1938,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
|--3-Rosa B Teuscher b. 8 Oct 1869, d. 9 Nov 1919,
| (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
+Edward Peter Beer m. 8 Apr 1891, Crawford Co, OH
}}}
!Descendants of Steven Coerte Van Voorhees
{{{
1-Steven Coerte Van Voorhees b. 1600, Hees, Drenthe,
Netherlands, d. 16 Feb 1684, Flatlands, Kings Co, NY
+Aeltje Wessels m. Bef 1633, d. Bef 1649, Netherlands
|--2-Coert Stevense Van Voorhees b. Abt 1638, Hess,
| Drenthe, Netherlands, d. After Jun 1699, Flatlands,
| Kings Co, NY
| +Marretje Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven c. 10 Apr 1644,
| Dutch Reformed Church, New Amsterdam, m. Bef 1664, New
| Amsterdam, d. Abt 1702-1709, New Amsterdam, par.
| Gerret Wolfersen Van Kouwenhoven and Aeltje Cornelis
| Cool
| |--3-Stephen Coerte Van Voorhees b. Cir 1667, d. 16 Feb
| | 1723 or 1724
| |--3-Marretje Van Voorhees b. 1667, d. Unknown
| |--3-Altje Coerte Van Voorhees b. Cir 1667, d. 12 Nov
| | 1746
| |--3-Albet Coerte Van Voorhees b. Cir 1673, d. Cir 1748
| |--3-Neeltje Van Voorhees b. 30 Jun 1676, d. 4 Aug 1750
| |--3-Cornelius Coerte Van Voorhees c. 3 Jun 1678, Dutch
| | Reformed Church, Flatbush, Kings Co, NY
| | +Annetje Papalje c. 27 Mar 1681, Flatbush, Kings Co,
| | NY, m. Abt 1696, par. Daniel Jorise Papalje and
| | Sarah Klock
| | |--4-Daniel Van Voorhees b. 17 Dec 1701, Oyster Bay,
| | | Long Island City, Queens, NY, d. , Oyster Bay,
| | | Long Island City, Queens, NY
| | | +Femmetje Bennet b. 24 Apr 1706, m. 27 Nov 1724,
| | | par. Jan Adrianse Bennet and Femetje Papalje
| | | |--5-Elizabeth Van Voorhees b. 14 Jul 1725, d. 17
| | | | Mar 1792
| | | |--5-William Van Voorhees b. 1727, d. 1784
| | | |--5-Cornelius Van Voorhees b. 6 Oct 1729, d. Cir
| | | | 1820
| | | |--5-John Van Voorhees b. 23 Jun 1736, d. 6 Dec
| | | | 1811
| | | | +Femmetje Bennet b. 18 Mar 1742, m. 17 Jul 1763
| | | |
| | | | |--6-Daniel Van Voorhees b. 1764, d. 1831
| | | | |--6-Mary Van Voorhees b. 1766, d. 1846
| | | | |--6-John Van Voorhees b. 2 Aug 1768, d. 2 May
| | | | | 1848, Hamptonburgh, Orange Co, NY
| | | | | +Sarah Van Voorhis b. 6 Aug 1777, m. 23 Nov
| | | | | 1797, Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill,
| | | | | Dutchess Co, NY, d. 17 Nov 1859, par.
| | | | | Captain Daniel Van Voorhis and Sarah Van
| | | | | Voorhees
| | | | | |--7-Phoebe Van Voorhees b. 1798, d. 1810
| | | | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhees b. 1800, d. 1812
| | | | | |--7-Susanna Van Voorhees b. 1802
| | | | | |--7-Samuel Newton Van Voorhees b. 1804, d.
| | | | | | 1826
| | | | | |--7-Sally Ann Van Voorhees b. 1806, d. 1826
| | | | | |--7-William Van Voorhees b. 1809, d. 1834
| | | | | |--7-Mary Remsen Van Voorhees b. 1811
| | | | | |--7-Emaline Van Voorhees b. 1813
| | | | | |--7-Elizabeth Van Voorhees b. 1815, d. 1873
| | | | | |--7-Jane Van Voorhees b. 1818
| | | | |--6-Bennet Van Voorhees b. 1771
| | | | |--6-Abraham Van Voorhees b. 1773, d. 1834
| | | | |--6-Femmetje Van Voorhees b. 1776
| | | | |--6-William Van Voorhees b. 1779
| | | | |--6-Jeronimus Van Voorhees b. 1785, d. 1851
| | | |--5-Captain Daniel Van Voorhis b. 8 Jul 1738,
| | | | Oyster Bay, Nassau Co, NY, d. 21 Feb 1819,
| | | | Caroll Twp., Washington Co, PA
| | | | +Sarah Van Voorhees b. 12 May 1746, Fishkill,
| | | | Dutchess Co, NY, m. 7 May1769, Presbyterian
| | | | Church, Rumbout, Duchess Co, NY, d. 15 Sep
| | | | 1777, par. Coert Van Voorhees and Catherin
| | | | Filkin
| | | | |--6-Samuel Newton Van Voorhis b. 9 Jul 1774,
| | | | | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 21 Feb 1857, North
| | | | | Robinson, OH
| | | | | +Sarah Myers b. 18 Jan 1784, Dutchess Co.
| | | | | NY, m. 22 Jun 1800, Dutch Reformed Church,
| | | | | Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, d. 20 Sep 1848,
| | | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | | Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 13 Apr 1801
| | | | | | +Elizabeth Hamilton
| | | | | | +Heley Jones
| | | | | |--7-William Roe Van Voorhis b. 24 May 1803,
| | | | | | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 4 Aug 1893,
| | | | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | | +Almeda Johnson b. 18 Mar 1818, Harrison
| | | | | | Co, Ohio, m. 30 Jun 1842, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | OH, d. 7 Jul 1910, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio),
| | | | | | par. Disberry Johnson and Mary Wood
| | | | | | |--8-Amanda Van Voorhis b. 20 Apr 1843,
| | | | | | | d. 3 Jan 1932, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | | +Joseph Gilbert Smith b. 15 Dec 1839,
| | | | | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 8
| | | | | | | Nov 1863, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Aug
| | | | | | | 1923, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)),
| | | | | | | par. Joseph Smith and Mary
| | | | | | | Kirkpatrick
| | | | | | | |--9-Lora Annetta Smith b. 11 Aug
| | | | | | | | 1864, d. 5 Mar 1931
| | | | | | | |--9-Alice E. Smith b. 2 Oct 1867, d.
| | | | | | | | 31 Aug 1959
| | | | | | | |--9-Bertha Vernella Smith b. 14 Feb
| | | | | | | | 1870, d. 17 May 1937, (Fairview
| | | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--9-Jessie A. Smith b. 12 Jul 1872
| | | | | | | |--9-Evelyn E. Smith b. 5 Nov 1874, d.
| | | | | | | | 1 Apr 1966, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | |--9-Charles Van Smith b. 14 May 1877,
| | | | | | | | d. 15 Jul 1972, (Fairview
| | | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--9-Lettie E Smith b. 22 May 1878, d.
| | | | | | | | 20 Mar 1959, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--9-Clara Smith b. 1880
| | | | | | | |--9-Helen M. Smith b. 6 Mar 1881, d.
| | | | | | | | 6 Dec 1955
| | | | | | | |--9-Ethel T. Smith b. 17 Sep 1882, d.
| | | | | | | | 20 Oct 1893, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | | Ohio)
| | | | | | | |--9-Edna L. Smith b. 17 Dec 1883, d.
| | | | | | | | 12 Dec 1933, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | | | +Harry Hutchinson
| | | | | | | |--9-Josephine E. Smith b. 9 Sep 1885,
| | | | | | | | d. 11 Jan 1926, (Fairview
| | | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | +Dorsey A. Littler m. 24 Mar 1910,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | |--8-James M Van Voorhis b. 19 Jan 1846,
| | | | | | | d. 10 Jan 1931, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | |--8-Mary Van Voorhis b. 12 Sep 1846, d.
| | | | | | | 26 Apr 1850
| | | | | | |--8-Eliza Van Voorhis b. 15 Jul 1848,
| | | | | | | Morrow Co, OH, d. 14 Apr 1926,
| | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | +Alvin Oliver Smith b. 15 Sep 1846,
| | | | | | | Ohio, m. 17 Oct 1869, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | OH, d. 8 Aug 1927, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio)), par. Joseph Smith
| | | | | | | and Nancy Kirkpatrick
}}}
See __[[Johann Christ Smith Descendants]]__ for the family of Alvin and Eliza Smith
{{{
| | | | | | |--8-George Smith Van Voorhis b. 15 Oct
| | | | | | | 1850, d. 31 Jan 1927, (Oakwood
| | | | | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | | +Sarah Macclure m. 12 Dec 1874,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | +Mary Conelia Shaw m. 27 Dec 1882,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | |--8-Martha Van Voorhis b. 4 Apr 1852
| | | | | | | +John Shoup b. 27 Mar 1846, Portage
| | | | | | | Twp, Wood Co, OH, m. Nov 1873, Wood
| | | | | | | Co, OH, par. Matthew Shoup and
| | | | | | | Catherine Shinew
| | | | | | |--8-John R. Van Voorhis b. 18 Feb 1855,
| | | | | | | d. 19 Mar 1856
| | | | | | |--8-Isaac Van Voorhis b. 18 Feb 1855, d.
| | | | | | | 10 Jan 1931
| | | | | | | +Lydia Unknown m. Abt 1879
| | | | | | |--8-Alice Van Voorhis b. 24 May 1857, d.
| | | | | | | 25 May 1884
| | | | | | |--8-Albert Van Voorhis b. 26 May 1857,
| | | | | | | d. 13 Feb 1892, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | | +Hanna Jones b. , Wayne Co, MI, m. 1824,
| | | | | | d. 1841, par. Unknown and Unknown
| | | | | | |--8-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 11 Jun 1827,
| | | | | | | d. 22 Feb 1897, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | | +Elizabeth Hofman b. 25 Jul 1826, m.
| | | | | | | 4 May 1852, d. 23 Oct 1911, (Oakwood
| | | | | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | |--8-Hiram.N. Van Voorhis b. 25 Sep 1825,
| | | | | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio
| | | | | | | +Sara Ann Beck b. 26 Feb 1831, New
| | | | | | | Lisbon, Columbiana Co, OH, m. 15 Mar
| | | | | | | 1849, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | |--8-Abraham Van Voorhis b. 19 Sep 1830,
| | | | | | | d. 4 Sep 1832
| | | | | | |--8-Sarah Van Voorhis b. 29 Aug 1829
| | | | | | |--8-Rebecca J. Van Voorhis b. 29 Dec 1832
| | | | | | |
| | | | | | |--8-Catherine Van Voorhis b. 11 Oct 1836
| | | | | |--7-Rev. Charles Edward Van Voorhis b. 8
| | | | | | Oct 1809, Dutchess Co. NY, d. 12 Dec
| | | | | | 1896, Knox Co, OH
| | | | | | +Susan Jones m. 9 Jul 1832
| | | | | | +E. Ferguson
| | | | | |--7-Susan Van Voorhis b. 7 Jan 1812
| | | | | | +Hiram Jones m. 1 Jan 1828
| | | | | |--7-Sally Ann Van Voorhis b. 16 Aug 1816
| | | | | | +George Kiefer m. 21 Aug 1836
| | | | | |--7-Isaac M. Van Voorhis b. 1 Mar 1821, d.
| | | | | | 23 Mar 1875, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | +Barbara Hancock b. 20 Jul 1821, m. 24
| | | | | | Mar 1842, Crawford Co, OH, d. 29 May
| | | | | | 1903, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | |--7-Harriet Van Voorhis b. 2 Feb 1826, d.
| | | | | | 13 Feb 1915, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | +James M Beck b. 22 Mar 1821, m. 1 Mar
| | | | | 1844, Crawford Co, OH, d. 21 Mar 1857,
| | | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | | Crawford Co, Ohio), par. Henry Beck and
| | | | | Unknown
| | | | | +David Beck b. 9 Dec 1827, d. 27 Nov
| | | | | 1877, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone
| | | | | Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio), par. Henry
| | | | | Beck and Unknown
| | | | |--6-Sarah Van Voorhis b. 6 Aug 1777, d. 17 Nov
| | | | | 1859
| | | | +John Van Voorhees b. 2 Aug 1768, m. 23 Nov
| | | | 1797, Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill,
| | | | Dutchess Co, NY, d. 2 May 1848,
| | | | Hamptonburgh, Orange Co, NY, par. John Van
| | | | Voorhees and Femmetje Bennet
| | | | |--7-Phoebe Van Voorhees b. 1798, d. 1810
| | | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhees b. 1800, d. 1812
| | | | |--7-Susanna Van Voorhees b. 1802
| | | | |--7-Samuel Newton Van Voorhees b. 1804, d.
| | | | | 1826
| | | | |--7-Sally Ann Van Voorhees b. 1806, d. 1826
| | | | |--7-William Van Voorhees b. 1809, d. 1834
| | | | |--7-Mary Remsen Van Voorhees b. 1811
| | | | |--7-Emaline Van Voorhees b. 1813
| | | | |--7-Elizabeth Van Voorhees b. 1815, d. 1873
| | | | |--7-Jane Van Voorhees b. 1818
| | | | +Mary Newton b. 28 Nov 1755, m. 12 Jul 1780,
| | | | German Reformed Church, Philadelphia,
| | | | Philadelphia Co, PA, d. 31 Oct 1789, (Van
| | | | Voorhis Cem., Carroll Twp, Washington Co, PA)
| | | | |--6-John Van Voorhis b. 3 Mar 1781, d. 28 Jun
| | | | | 1874
| | | | |--6-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 22 Dec 1783, d. 6
| | | | | Aug 1852
| | | | |--6-Abraham Van Voorhis b. 28 Dec 1785, d. 4
| | | | | Dec 1871, (Van Voorhis Cem., Carroll Twp, W
| | | | | ashington Co, PA)
| | | | | +Jane Phillips b. Abt 1809, d. 29 Oct 1893,
| | | | | (Van Voorhis Cem., Carroll Twp, Washington
| | | | | Co, PA)
| | | | |--6-Mary Van Voorhis b. 30 Jan 1788, d. 11 Aug
| | | | | 1789, (Van Voorhis Cem., Carroll Twp,
| | | | | Washington Co, PA)
| | | | +Nancy Myers b. 1762, Hagerstown, Washington
| | | | Co, PA, m. 3 May 1791, Carroll Twp,
| | | | Washington Co, PA, d. 17 Feb 1840, Carroll
| | | | Twp, Washington Co, PA
| | | | |--6-Elizabeth Van Voorhis b. 19 Dec 1792, d.
| | | | | 18 Aug 1875
| | | | |--6-Isaac Van Voorhis b. 15 Mar 1794, d. 4 Jun
| | | | | 1875, (Van Voorhis Cem., Carroll Twp,
| | | | | Washington Co, PA)
| | | | +Mary H Hair b. 10 Mar 1797, Berkley Co,
| | | | Virginia, d. 14 Apr 1876, (Van Voorhis
| | | | Cem., Carroll Twp, Washington Co, PA)
| | | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 15 Mar 1820, d.
| | | | | 12 Mar 1848, (Van Voorhis Cem., Carroll
| | | | | Twp, Washington Co, PA)
| | | |--5-Antje Van Voorhees b. 24 Oct 1741, d. Unknown
| | | |--5-Jerome Van Voorhees b. 8 Apr 1743, bur. After
| | | | 1794
| | | |--5-Abraham Van Voorhees b. 6 Nov 1751, d. Bef
| | | | 1811
| | | +Marretje Phillips c. 30 Nov 1763, Dutch
| | | Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY,
| | | m. Abt 1782
| | | |--6-Peter Van Voorhees b. 8 Sep 1795, Dutchess
| | | | Co. NY, d. 6 Dec 1867, Osnaburgh, Stark
| | | | Co, OH
| | | +Margaret Sickman b. 19 Feb 1805,
| | | Washington Co, PA, m. 2 Jan 1821,
| | | Washington Co, PA, d. 28 Sep 1875,
| | | Osnaburgh, Stark Co, OH
| | | |--7-Abraham Van Voorhis
| | |--4-Cornelius Van Voorhees b. Cir 1705, d. Nov 1784
| | | +Marretje Ditmars m. ~1723
| | |--4-Coert Van Voorhees b. Cir 1697, d. Cir 1775
| | |--4-Abraham Van Voorhees b. Cir 1698, d. Bef 1754
| | |--4-Sarah Van Voorhees b. 12 Apr 1710, d. 12 Dec 1789
| | |
| |--3-Annetie Van Voorhees b. 5 Dec 1680, d. Unknown
| |--3-Johannes Coerte Van Voorhees b. 20 Apr 1683,
| | Flatlands, Kings Co, NY, d. 10 Oct 1757, (Van
| | Voorhis Family Buring Ground, Fishkill, NY)
| +Barbara Van Dyck b. 20 Dec 1682, Brooklyn, Kings
| Co, NY, m. 19 Nov 1703, New York, d. 18 Apr 1743,
| Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, par. Achias Van Dyck and
| Jannetie Lamberts
| |--4-Jannetje Van Voorhees b. 15 Sep 1704, d. 11 Nov
| | 1792
| | +Col. John Brinkerhoff b. 1702, m. 12 Mar 1725,
| | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 26 Mar 1785
| |--4-Coert Van Voorhees b. 5 Apr 1706, d. 18 Mar
| | 1785, Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY
| | +Catherin Filkin b. 21 Aug 1707, Brooklyn, Kings
| | Co, NY, m. 16 Jun 1727, Fishkill, Dutchess Co,
| | NY, d. 22 Jan 1777, Dutchess Co. NY, par. Henry
| | Filkin and Catherine Vonck
| | |--5-Catherine Van Voorhees b. 25 Nov 1730, d. 16
| | | Jan 1789
| | | +Dr. Hendrick Van Beuren m. 12 Nov 1725,
| | | Dutchess Co. NY
| | |--5-Barbara Van Voorhees b. 25 Nov 1730, d. 16
| | | Aug 1807
| | | +Richard Van Wyke
| | |--5-Jannetje Van Voorhees b. 21 Mar 1733, d. 13
| | | Sep 1801
| | | +Joseph Horton m. Unknown
| | |--5-Henry Van Voorhees b. 21 Apr 1735, d. 13 Sep
| | | 1801
| | | +Hannah Flageler b. 12 Oct 1747, m. 9 Jan
| | | 1766, Dutchess Co. NY, d. 25 Sep 1833
| | |--5-Johannes Van Voorhees b. 27 Jun 1738
| | |--5-Marya Van Voorhees b. 27 Apr 1740, d. 12 Feb
| | | 1787
| | |--5-Cornelis Van Voorhees b. 30 Apr 1742, d. 1
| | | Apr 1769
| | | +Unknown
| | |--5-Magdalena Van Voorhees b. 13 Apr 1744, d. 4
| | | Mar 1826
| | | +Christian Dubois b. 13 Jun 1746, m. 19 Oct
| | | 1768, Dutchess Co. NY, d. 17 Dec 1807
| | |--5-Sarah Van Voorhees b. 12 May 1746, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY, d. 15 Sep 1777
| | | +Captain Daniel Van Voorhis b. 8 Jul 1738,
| | | Oyster Bay, Nassau Co, NY, m. 7 May1769,
| | | Presbyterian Church, Rumbout, Duchess Co, NY,
| | | d. 21 Feb 1819, Caroll Twp., Washington Co,
| | | PA, par. Daniel Van Voorhees and Femmetje
| | | Bennet
| | | |--6-Samuel Newton Van Voorhis b. 9 Jul 1774,
| | | | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 21 Feb 1857, North
| | | | Robinson, OH
| | | | +Sarah Myers b. 18 Jan 1784, Dutchess Co.
| | | | NY, m. 22 Jun 1800, Dutch Reformed Church,
| | | | Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, d. 20 Sep 1848,
| | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 13 Apr 1801
| | | | | +Elizabeth Hamilton
| | | | | +Heley Jones
| | | | |--7-William Roe Van Voorhis b. 24 May 1803,
| | | | | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 4 Aug 1893,
| | | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | | Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | +Almeda Johnson b. 18 Mar 1818, Harrison
| | | | | Co, Ohio, m. 30 Jun 1842, Crawford Co,
| | | | | OH, d. 7 Jul 1910, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio),
| | | | | par. Disberry Johnson and Mary Wood
| | | | | |--8-Amanda Van Voorhis b. 20 Apr 1843,
| | | | | | d. 3 Jan 1932, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | +Joseph Gilbert Smith b. 15 Dec 1839,
| | | | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH, m. 8
| | | | | | Nov 1863, Crawford Co, OH, d. 7 Aug
| | | | | | 1923, (Fairview (Galion, Ohio)),
| | | | | | par. Joseph Smith and Mary
| | | | | | Kirkpatrick
| | | | | | |--9-Lora Annetta Smith b. 11 Aug
| | | | | | | 1864, d. 5 Mar 1931
| | | | | | |--9-Alice E. Smith b. 2 Oct 1867, d.
| | | | | | | 31 Aug 1959
| | | | | | |--9-Bertha Vernella Smith b. 14 Feb
| | | | | | | 1870, d. 17 May 1937, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | |--9-Jessie A. Smith b. 12 Jul 1872
| | | | | | |--9-Evelyn E. Smith b. 5 Nov 1874, d.
| | | | | | | 1 Apr 1966, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Charles Van Smith b. 14 May 1877,
| | | | | | | d. 15 Jul 1972, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | |--9-Lettie E Smith b. 22 May 1878, d.
| | | | | | | 20 Mar 1959, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | |--9-Clara Smith b. 1880
| | | | | | |--9-Helen M. Smith b. 6 Mar 1881, d.
| | | | | | | 6 Dec 1955
| | | | | | |--9-Ethel T. Smith b. 17 Sep 1882, d.
| | | | | | | 20 Oct 1893, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | Ohio)
| | | | | | |--9-Edna L. Smith b. 17 Dec 1883, d.
| | | | | | | 12 Dec 1933, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | | +Harry Hutchinson
| | | | | | |--9-Josephine E. Smith b. 9 Sep 1885,
| | | | | | | d. 11 Jan 1926, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | +Dorsey A. Littler m. 24 Mar 1910,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--8-James M Van Voorhis b. 19 Jan 1846,
| | | | | | d. 10 Jan 1931, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | |--8-Mary Van Voorhis b. 12 Sep 1846, d.
| | | | | | 26 Apr 1850
| | | | | |--8-Eliza Van Voorhis b. 15 Jul 1848,
| | | | | | Morrow Co, OH, d. 14 Apr 1926,
| | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | +Alvin Oliver Smith b. 15 Sep 1846,
| | | | | | Ohio, m. 17 Oct 1869, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | OH, d. 8 Aug 1927, (Fairview
| | | | | | (Galion, Ohio)), par. Joseph Smith
| | | | | | and Nancy Kirkpatrick
| | | | | | |--9-Florence Vernella Smith b. 25 Apr
| | | | | | | 1871, Ohio, d. 24 Feb 1945,
| | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | |--9-Frank Smith b. 12 Jul 1872, Ohio,
| | | | | | | d. 6 Mar 1931, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | | +Catherine Kibler b. 16 Oct 1872,
| | | | | | | m. 23 Dec 1894, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | | | d. 23 Mar 1962, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio)), par. Frederick J
| | | | | | | Kibler and Sarah Cook
| | | | | | | |--10-Harvey Franklin Smith b. 19
| | | | | | | | Dec 1900, d. 14 Jul 1922,
| | | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--10-Verna Smith
| | | | | | | |--10-Edith Irene Smith b. 11 Nov
| | | | | | | | 1897, d. 1899, (Fairview
| | | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--10-Ethel S Smith b. 11 Feb 1908,
| | | | | | | | d. 13 Apr 1998, (Greenlawn
| | | | | | | | Cemetary, Crestline, OH)
| | | | | | |--9-William Leroy Smith b. 21 Sep
| | | | | | | 1873, Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | OH, d. 4 Sep 1926, (Greenlawn
| | | | | | | Cemetary, Crestline, OH)
| | | | | | | +Maud E Bogan b. 1875, m. 11 Mar
| | | | | | | 1894, Crawford Co, OH, par. Henry
| | | | | | | Harrison Bogan and Leah Anne
| | | | | | | Kunkel
| | | | | | | |--10-Florence Smith b. Sep 1894
| | | | | | | |--10-Alvin Smith d. 6 Oct 1923
| | | | | | | |--10-Hazel Smith b. Dec 1899,
| | | | | | | | Jackson Twp Crawford Co Ohio
| | | | | | | +Mary Elizabeth Slick b. 21 Dec
| | | | | | | 1869, m. 1899, d. 5 Feb 1947,
| | | | | | | (Greenlawn Cemetary, Crestline,
| | | | | | | OH)
| | | | | | | |--10-George Alvin Smith b. 26 May
| | | | | | | | 1901, d. 3 Oct 1923,
| | | | | | | | (Greenlawn Cemetary,
| | | | | | | | Crestline, OH)
| | | | | | |--9-Jessie May Smith b. 6 Feb 1875,
| | | | | | | Ohio, d. 20 Jul 1957, (Fairview
| | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | +William Edgar Bogan b. 26 Oct
| | | | | | | 1873, m. 3 Dec 1893, North
| | | | | | | Robinson, OH, d. 3 Aug 1955,
| | | | | | | North Robinson, OH, par. Henry
| | | | | | | Harrison Bogan and Leah Anne
| | | | | | | Kunkel
| | | | | | | |--10-Edna Irene Bogan b. 21 May
| | | | | | | | 1894, Crawford Co, OH, d. 18
| | | | | | | | Mar 1989, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Chester Harrison Bogan b. 5
| | | | | | | | Oct 1896, d. 7 Jul 1986,
| | | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--10-Arthur Alvin Bogan b. 15 Sep
| | | | | | | | 1898, North Robinson,
| | | | | | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | | OH, d. 9 Sep 1999, Galion, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Paul L Bogan b. 31 Aug 1906,
| | | | | | | | North Robinson, OH, d. 4 Jul
| | | | | | | | 1975, Lucasville, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Ray F. Bogan b. 26 Sep 1908,
| | | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH, d. 30 Jul
| | | | | | | | 1973, Lima, OH
| | | | | | |--9-Harry Smith b. 11 May 1878,
| | | | | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | | | d. 27 Feb 1956, (Middleton Cem,
| | | | | | | Crawford Co, OH)
| | | | | | | +Edith A Ashcroft b. 15 Oct 1876,
| | | | | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | | | m. 22 Mar 1900, North Robinson,
| | | | | | | OH, d. 1 Sep 1953, Galion, OH,
| | | | | | | par. Adam Ashcroft and Lydia
| | | | | | | Crider
| | | | | | | |--10-Ethel Smith
| | | | | | | |--10-Homer Leroy Smith b. 24 Jun
| | | | | | | | 1901, Jefferson Twp, Crawford
| | | | | | | | Co, OH, d. 17 Oct 1955,
| | | | | | | | Bucyrus, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Garnet Smith b. 24 Aug 1902,
| | | | | | | | Jefferson Twp, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | | OH, d. 18 Oct 1992, (Fairview
| | | | | | | | (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | | | |--10-Coral Smith b. 15 Feb 1907,
| | | | | | | | d. 15 Nov 1907, Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | | OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Cleora Smith b. 5 Nov 1909,
| | | | | | | | d. 11 Oct 1991
| | | | | | | |--10-Gertrude Smith b. 3 Feb 1912,
| | | | | | | | d. 9 Oct 1971, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Harry Edward Smith b. 1 Jun
| | | | | | | | 1920, d. 9 Oct 2005, Galion,
| | | | | | | | OH
| | | | | | |--9-Orva Almeda Smith b. 13 Dec 1879,
| | | | | | | Ohio, d. 23 Apr 1963, (Greenlawn
| | | | | | | Cemetary, Crestline, OH)
| | | | | | | +William Elmer Knisley m. 4 Mar
| | | | | | | 1897, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | | |--10-Luella Knisley
| | | | | | | |--10-Albertha Knisley
| | | | | | | |--10-Ada Elnora Knisley b. 9 Feb
| | | | | | | | 1898, Jackson Twp Crawford Co
| | | | | | | | Ohio, d. 13 Dec 1919,
| | | | | | | | (Greenlawn Cemetary,
| | | | | | | | Crestline, OH)
| | | | | | | |--10-Mary Alice Knisley b. 21 Aug
| | | | | | | | 1900, Galion, OH, d. 23 Apr
| | | | | | | | 1946
| | | | | | | |--10-Pauline Knisley b. 2 Nov
| | | | | | | | 1904, d. 9 Mar 1967
| | | | | | |--9-Harvey Smith b. 12 Jul 1880, d. 4
| | | | | | | Aug 1893, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co,
| | | | | | | Ohio)
| | | | | | |--9-Mary Alice Smith b. 30 May 1883,
| | | | | | | d. 22 May 1953, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | +Curtis W Tracht b. 24 Sep 1879,
| | | | | | m. 5 Oct 1904, Crawford Co, OH,
| | | | | | d. 17Sep 1954, (Fairview (Galion,
| | | | | | Ohio))
| | | | | | |--10-Ethel Tracht
| | | | | | |--10-Margaret Tracht
| | | | | | |--10-Naomi H Tracht b. 14 Aug
| | | | | | | 1905, d. 25 Feb 1970,
| | | | | | | (Fairview (Galion, Ohio))
| | | | | |--8-George Smith Van Voorhis b. 15 Oct
| | | | | | 1850, d. 31 Jan 1927, (Oakwood
| | | | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | +Sarah Macclure m. 12 Dec 1874,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | | +Mary Conelia Shaw m. 27 Dec 1882,
| | | | | | Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--8-Martha Van Voorhis b. 4 Apr 1852
| | | | | | +John Shoup b. 27 Mar 1846, Portage
| | | | | | Twp, Wood Co, OH, m. Nov 1873, Wood
| | | | | | Co, OH, par. Matthew Shoup and
| | | | | | Catherine Shinew
| | | | | |--8-John R. Van Voorhis b. 18 Feb 1855,
| | | | | | d. 19 Mar 1856
| | | | | |--8-Isaac Van Voorhis b. 18 Feb 1855, d.
| | | | | | 10 Jan 1931
| | | | | | +Lydia Unknown m. Abt 1879
| | | | | |--8-Alice Van Voorhis b. 24 May 1857, d.
| | | | | | 25 May 1884
| | | | | |--8-Albert Van Voorhis b. 26 May 1857,
| | | | | | d. 13 Feb 1892, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | | +Hanna Jones b. , Wayne Co, MI, m. 1824,
| | | | | d. 1841, par. Unknown and Unknown
| | | | | |--8-Daniel Van Voorhis b. 11 Jun 1827,
| | | | | | d. 22 Feb 1897, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | | +Elizabeth Hofman b. 25 Jul 1826, m.
| | | | | | 4 May 1852, d. 23 Oct 1911, (Oakwood
| | | | | | Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | |--8-Hiram.N. Van Voorhis b. 25 Sep 1825,
| | | | | | Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, Ohio
| | | | | | +Sara Ann Beck b. 26 Feb 1831, New
| | | | | | Lisbon, Columbiana Co, OH, m. 15 Mar
| | | | | | 1849, Crawford Co, OH
| | | | | |--8-Abraham Van Voorhis b. 19 Sep 1830,
| | | | | | d. 4 Sep 1832
| | | | | |--8-Sarah Van Voorhis b. 29 Aug 1829
| | | | | |--8-Rebecca J. Van Voorhis b. 29 Dec 1832
| | | | | |
| | | | | |--8-Catherine Van Voorhis b. 11 Oct 1836
| | | | |--7-Rev. Charles Edward Van Voorhis b. 8
| | | | | Oct 1809, Dutchess Co. NY, d. 12 Dec
| | | | | 1896, Knox Co, OH
| | | | | +Susan Jones m. 9 Jul 1832
| | | | | +E. Ferguson
| | | | |--7-Susan Van Voorhis b. 7 Jan 1812
| | | | | +Hiram Jones m. 1 Jan 1828
| | | | |--7-Sally Ann Van Voorhis b. 16 Aug 1816
| | | | | +George Kiefer m. 21 Aug 1836
| | | | |--7-Isaac M. Van Voorhis b. 1 Mar 1821, d.
| | | | | 23 Mar 1875, (Oakwood Cemetery,
| | | | | Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | | +Barbara Hancock b. 20 Jul 1821, m. 24
| | | | | Mar 1842, Crawford Co, OH, d. 29 May
| | | | | 1903, (Oakwood Cemetery, Bucyrus, OH)
| | | | |--7-Harriet Van Voorhis b. 2 Feb 1826, d.
| | | | | 13 Feb 1915, (Campbell Cemetery,
| | | | | Whetstone Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio)
| | | | +James M Beck b. 22 Mar 1821, m. 1 Mar
| | | | 1844, Crawford Co, OH, d. 21 Mar 1857,
| | | | (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone Twp.,
| | | | Crawford Co, Ohio), par. Henry Beck and
| | | | Unknown
| | | | +David Beck b. 9 Dec 1827, d. 27 Nov
| | | | 1877, (Campbell Cemetery, Whetstone
| | | | Twp., Crawford Co, Ohio), par. Henry
| | | | Beck and Unknown
| | | |--6-Sarah Van Voorhis b. 6 Aug 1777, d. 17 Nov
| | | | 1859
| | | +John Van Voorhees b. 2 Aug 1768, m. 23 Nov
| | | 1797, Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY, d. 2 May 1848,
| | | Hamptonburgh, Orange Co, NY, par. John Van
| | | Voorhees and Femmetje Bennet
| | | |--7-Phoebe Van Voorhees b. 1798, d. 1810
| | | |--7-Daniel Van Voorhees b. 1800, d. 1812
| | | |--7-Susanna Van Voorhees b. 1802
| | | |--7-Samuel Newton Van Voorhees b. 1804, d.
| | | | 1826
| | | |--7-Sally Ann Van Voorhees b. 1806, d. 1826
| | | |--7-William Van Voorhees b. 1809, d. 1834
| | | |--7-Mary Remsen Van Voorhees b. 1811
| | | |--7-Emaline Van Voorhees b. 1813
| | | |--7-Elizabeth Van Voorhees b. 1815, d. 1873
| | | |--7-Jane Van Voorhees b. 1818
| | | +Francis Brett b. Bef 1715, m. 7 Jun 1764, New
| | | York, par. Roger Brett and Catherine Rombout
| | |--5-Zachariah Van Voorhees b. 21 Mar 1748, d. 3
| | | Jul 1811
| | +Anna Lawrence b. 27 Aug 1751, m. 12 Feb 1772,
| | Dutchess Co. NY, d. 10 Dec 1781
| |--4-Johannis Van Voorhees Junior b. 6 Aug 1708, d.
| | Abt 1750, Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY
| | +Gerritje Van Benschouten c. 11 Nov 1711, Dutch
| | Church, Poughkeepsie, NY, m. 30 Sep 1731
| | |--5-Sara Van Voorhees b. 1732, Fishkill, Dutchess
| | | Co, NY, d. 1740
| | |--5-Barbara Van Voorhees b. 1733, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY
| | |--5-Katrina Van Voorhees b. 1735, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY
| | |--5-John Van Voorhis c. 10 May 1737, Dutch
| | | Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY,
| | | d. After 1795, (Van Voorhis Buial Grounds,
| | | Fishkill landing, NY)
| | | +Hannah Roe c. 3 Oct 1742, m. 13 May 1762,
| | | Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess Co,
| | | NY, d. Abt 1770
| | | |--6-Major Wiliam Roe Van Voorhis c. 10 May
| | | | 1737, Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill,
| | | | Dutchess Co, NY, d. 2 Nov 1828, (Dutch
| | | | Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess Co,
| | | | NY)
| | | | +Rachel Vail b. 1 Jun 1767, m. 12 May 1788,
| | | | Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, d. 12 Jun 1845,
| | | | (Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess
| | | | Co, NY)
| | | | |--7-Dr Isaac Van Voorhis b. 22 Feb 1790,
| | | | | Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, d. 15 Aug
| | | | | 1812, Fort Dearborn (Chicago)
| | | | |--7-Elias Van Voorhis b. 14 Aug 1791, d. 17
| | | | | Aug 1869
| | | | |--7-Hannah Van Voorhis b. 10 Dec 1793, d.
| | | | | 29 Mar 1876
| | | | |--7-Hester Van Voorhis b. 24 Dec 1795, d.
| | | | | 11 Feb 1823
| | | | |--7-John Van Voorhis b. 25 Nov 1798, d. 27
| | | | | Jan 1799
| | | | |--7-Joseph Vail Van Voorhis b. Jan 1801
| | | | |--7-Rachel Ann Van Voorhis b. 5 Dec 1802,
| | | | | d. 23 Jan 1803
| | | | |--7-Susanna Van Voorhis b. 14 Apr 1805
| | | | |--7-William Roe Van Voorhis b. 20 Mar 1809,
| | | | | d. 16 Jul 1833
| | | | |--7-Julia Van Voorhis b. 1812
| | | | |--7-Cornelius Westbrook Van Voorhis b. 3
| | | | | Feb 1813
| | | |--6-Elias Van Voorhis b. 3 May 1767, Fishkill,
| | | | Dutchess Co, NY
| | | +Ranche Van Nostrand b. 1749, m. 13 Oct 1771,
| | | Fishkill, Dutchess Co, NY, d. 25 Jan 1831,
| | | (Dutch Reformed Church, Fishkill, Dutchess
| | | Co, NY)
| | | |--6-Adriana Van Voorhis
| | | |--6-Sarah Van Voorhis
| | | |--6-John Van Voorhis
| | | |--6-Cornelius Van Voorhis
| | | |--6-Joshua Van Voorhis
| | | |--6-Harriet Van Voorhis
| | |--5-Sara Van Voorhees b. 1740, Fishkill, Dutchess
| | | Co, NY
| | |--5-Elias Van Voorhees b. 1742, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY
| | |--5-Jannetje Van Voorhees b. 1748, Fishkill,
| | | Dutchess Co, NY
| |--4-Zacharias Van Voorhees b. 10 Dec 1710
| |--4-Gerrit Van Voorhees b. 13 Mar 1713
| |--4-Maria Van Voorhees b. 16 Sep 1716, Dutchess Co.
| | NY
| |--4-Hendrick Van Voorhees b. 20 Mar 1719, Fishkill,
| | Dutchess Co, NY
| |--4-Jacob Van Voorhees b. 14 Oct 1723, Fishkill,
| | Dutchess Co, NY
|--2-Wessel Van Voorhees b. 25 Sep 1640, Netherlands, bur.
| 14 Jan 1641, Netherlands
|--2-Marchien Stevense Van Voorhees b. Abt 1640, d. Abt 1702
|
|--2-Jan Kiers Van Voorhees b. , Netherlands, d. Abt 1705
+Willemtje Roelofs Seuberinge b. 1619, Hees, Drenthe,
Netherlands, m. 1649, Hees, Drenthe, Netherlands, d.
1690, Flatbush, Kings Co, NY
|--2-Lucas Stevense Van Voorhees b. 1652, Hees, Drenthe,
| Netherlands, d. 1735, Flatbush, Kings Co, NY
| +Catherine Hansen Van Noortstrand b. Abt 1650, m. 1671,
| Flatlands, Kings Co, NY, d. , Flatlands, Kings Co, NY
| |--3-Annetie Lucasse Van Voorhees b. 5 Apr 1686,
| | Flatlands, Kings Co, NY, d. 30 Sep 1774, Flatlands,
| | Kings Co, NY
|--2-Jan Stevense Van Voorhees b. 1652, d. 1735
|--2-Albert Stevense Van Voorhees b. , Netherlands, d.
| After 1727
|--2-Aeltje Van Voorhees b. , Netherlands
|--2-Jannetje Stevense Van Voorhees b. , Netherlands
|--2-Hendrickje Stevense Van Voorhees b. , Netherlands, d.
| Abt 1692, New Amsterdam
}}}
version.extensions.ShowPopupPlugin=
{ major:2, minor:0, revision:1, date:new Date(2011,3,5) };
config.macros.showPopup = {
tip: 'display "%0" in a popup',
init: function() {
config.shadowTiddlers.ShowPopup =
'<<showPopup tiddler:[[$1]] label:"$2" tip:"$3" buttonClass:"button $4" width:"$5" popupClass:"$6" "$7">>';
config.annotations.ShowPopup =
'created by ShowPopupPlugin';
},
handler: function(place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler) {
var p=paramString.parseParams('name',null,true,false,true);
var tid=getParam(p,'tiddler','TiddlerName');
var label=getParam(p,'label',tid);
var tip=getParam(p,'tip',this.tip.format([tid]));
var buttonClass=getParam(p,'buttonClass','');
var width=getParam(p,'width','auto');
var popupClass=getParam(p,'popupClass','');
var above=params.contains('above');
var b=createTiddlyButton(place, label, tip, this.click, buttonClass, null, null,
{ tid:tid, popupClass:popupClass, width:width, above:above });
b.innerHTML=label; // for HTML entities, images, etc
},
click: function(ev) { var ev=ev||window.event;
var p=Popup.create(this); if(!p)return false;
addClass(p,this.getAttribute('popupClass'));
var d=createTiddlyElement(p,'div');
var s=d.style; s.whiteSpace='normal'; s.width=this.getAttribute('width'); s.padding='2px';
wikify(store.getTiddlerText(this.getAttribute('tid'),''),d);
if (this.getAttribute('above')!='true') Popup.show();
else Popup.show('top','left',{x:0,y:-jQuery(d).outerHeight()});
ev.cancelBubble=true; if(ev.stopPropagation)ev.stopPropagation(); return false;
}
}
<<closeAll>><<permaview>><<newTiddler>><<newJournal 'DD MMM YYYY'>><<saveChanges>><<slider chkSliderOptionsPanel OptionsPanel 'options »' 'Change TiddlyWiki advanced options'>>
Genealogy of the Bogan, Kehrer, Reber and Related Families of Crawford County, Ohio
<<showtoc>>
[img[Smith Reunion 1918|images/tn-Smith_Gathering_1918.jpg]]
Smith Reunion at the home of Alvin Smith with Bogans Attending
[[Click for larger image|images/Smith_Gathering_1918.jpg]]<<imagebox >>
!!From Germany to Pennsylvania 18th Century
Jessie May Smith (1875-1957) was my great grandmother on the Bogan's side. Her father, Alvin Oliver Smith (1846-1927), owned a 100 acre farm south of North Robinson. (see Crawford Co Properties map) Alvin was descended from Smiths that originally came from Richstein ``` NOTE: The German homeland is situated in Siegen-Wittgenstein, Arnsberg, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany, and its geographical coordinates are 50° 59' 0" North, 8° 27' 0" East and its original name (with diacritics) is Richstein. Siegen-Wittgenstein
level: administrative region of level 3
location: Arnsberg, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany ``` or Wittgenstein in Baden Germany in about 1786 ``` A biography in the History of Crawford County, Ohio 1881 says 1788 )) and settled in, what is now, Wheatfield Twp., Perry County, Pennsylvania. (( Until 1820 this was Cumberland County, Perry County was formed from it in that year, with Rye Twp containing what would become Wheatfield Twp. in 1827. Later, parts of Wheatfield Twp would be used to make Penn Twp and parts of Miller, Center and Carrol Twps. ``` This area just north-west of Harrisburg on the west side of the Susquehanna River near the town of Duncannon, PA.
The eldest Smith to come to North America was John Joseph Smith (1736-1813) who arrived (~1786-88) with his family including John Jacob (1767-1836) as a young man. The family purchased a small farm in an area near Sherman's Creek and the towns of Delville and Shermansdale. ``` There is a Land Warrants Perry County but in Juniata Twp farther north in the County:
Jacob Smith; 242.23; 17 Sep 1829
[acres returned 242,,23]
[recorded Vol H No 26 p523]
[Book C220 page 155.156 Juniata] - There were other Smiths in Perry county in 1800 and this may be one of the others.```
This area is very scenic with long, high ridges and rolling valleys in-between. The patriarch, John Joseph Smith died in 1813 and his son John Jacob died in 1836. They were buried in the grounds of the Presbyterian Church at Sherman's Creek. By this time the Smith families needed more and better farmland so most of John Jacob's children moved to Jackson Twp.,Crawford County, Ohio in 1837. There were six sons at this time and four of them plus one of the two sisters moved to Ohio.``` Four sons, Jacob (1797-1881), George(1803-1852), Daniel(1806-1881) and Joseph(1809-1870) and one sister Catherine Smith Gearhart (1795-?) move in 1837 while Christian Smith (1801-1871) comes later in the 1850's. John Jacob Smith (1799-1843) stayed in Perry County, PA``` The youngest of the siblings was Joseph who had obtained two plots of land of 40 and 89 acres in Jackson Twp, Crawford Co., OH in May 1835. This was wooded land at the time and he had to cut his farm from that land. Today it is all fields.
''The Kirkpatrick Connection:'' Brother, Christian Smith, stayed in Perry Co, Wheatfield Twp and in partnership with Isaac Kirkpatrick ``` Find the relationship with the Kirkpatrick girls that marry Christian and Joseph Smith``` builds an up-down sawmill at Delville on Sherman's Creek. He married a Nancy Kirkpatrick girl and only moved to Ohio after he sold his interest in the mill in 1853. The Kirkpatricks had been in the Sherman Creek area since 1750 when Richard Kirkpatrick had to be removed from the area because he settled on indian land. He returned and purchased land for a farm when the land was opened for settlement after the French and Indian wars. He had at least two sons, Joseph and Isaac. Joseph was the father of Nancy and Sarah Kirkpatrick who both became wives of Joseph Smith. Isaac is the father of the Nancy Kirkpatrick that married Christian Smith.
!!!Map of Migration
Zoom into the three locations on the map to see the more precise regions in which the Smith's lived. In Ohio, the farm location is marked.
<html>
<iframe width="640" height="525" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=204862204125835037704.00046df81cce0005c9361&ie=UTF8&ll=45.680643,-37.195826&spn=10.609075,91.316607&t=h&output=embed"></iframe><br /><small>View <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=204862204125835037704.00046df81cce0005c9361&ie=UTF8&ll=45.680643,-37.195826&spn=10.609075,91.316607&t=h&source=embed" style="color:#0000FF;text-align:left">Smith Migration - Germany, PA, OH</a> in a larger map</small></html>
!!The Smiths in Crawford County, Ohio
Siblings of Joseph that came to Ohio were
*Catherine (1795-~1862) m: Joseph Gearhart
*Jacob (1797-1881) m: Anne Snyder
*Christian (1801-1871) m: Nancy Kirkpatrick
*George (1803-1852) m: Hannah Chisholm
*Daniel (1806-1881) m: Eva Gelbauch
Joseph had three wives all from the Kirkpatrick clan, two were sisters. He married his first wife, Mary E., in about 1835 in Pennsylvania before he moved to Ohio, but she died in 1839 at the child birth of her third child, the first two were born in Pennsylvania before the move. That third child was Joseph Gilbert Smith who married Amanda Van Voorhis ( sister of Eliza Van Voorhis, my g-g grandmother). They had 12 children.
Joseph married a cousin, Nancy Kirkpatrick, the next year (1840) and had three more children over the next five years. The last child was Alvin Oliver, my g-g grandfather.
In 1860 Joseph's farm was worth $5000 up from $1200 in 1850 so the family was doing well. Living with the family (5 children) was Nancy's younger sister, Sarah Welsh. (( In 1860 Census Hannah (Mrs George) Smith is head of the household and living next to Job Burwell - on the 1855 atlas of Crawford County, Joseph Smith and Job Burwell are neighbors)) Sarah had married James Welsh shortly after she moved to Ohio (m:1844 in Richland Co), but by 1850 Sarah is living with her sister's family. She is still there in 1866 when Nancy passes away. In August of 1869 Joseph married Sarah and, in October of the same year, youngest son, Alvin, married Eliza Van Voorhis. Joseph lived less than a year more and passed away the next April (1870).
Sarah was then head of the Household with Leonard and Elizabeth (unmarried at 33 and 32) at home helping to run the farm. In 1870 Alvin and Eliza had set up home a few kilometres east of the homestead near Middleton. ```1873 Atlas shows Alvin with 100 acres next to D. Smith with 60 acres - the two occupied the same quarter section```
Next door to Sarah, Daniel, Joseph's older brother had taken over the 60 acres that Jacob had farmed. Sarah remarried in 1896 to John Dawson of Annapolis but Alvin takes over the family farm. Over the years thay have eight children, all living into the 20th century. Oldest daughter, Florence never married but younger sister, Jessie May married William Edgar Bogan in 1893, son of Henry Harrison, who had a farm two sections north of the Smith farm. Older brother William Leroy also married into the Bogan family, to William Edgar's sister Maud in 1894.
Alvin and Eliza live and operate the farm until the mid-1920's when they both passed away (1927 and 1926 respectively).
Alvin's son Harry obtained the eastern half of the farm and this is passed to Harry's youngest son, Harry. The western half passed out of the Smith family after Alvin dies.
!!!Footnotes
~HCCO81 = History of Crawford County Ohio 1881
CCCOGSO = Crawford County Chapter of the Genaealogical Society of Ohio
The Smiths are from Germany (name probably originally Schmidt) but settled in Perry County Pennsylvania before moving to Crawford County.
| Johann Chist Smith<br>-<br>Katharina E Dreschler |
| John Joseph Smith (1736-1813) | Catherine E Schmidt<br>1736-1819 | Johanne Fischer Fisher | Maria Schuler | Joseph Kirkpatrick | Margaret Ann Hayes | ? | ? | Daniel Van Voorhis | Sarah Van Voorhees | ? | ? | James Johnson<br>b:VA 1740-1849 | Catherine Demoss<br>b:Frederick Co, VA 1743-1815 | Isaac Wood | ? |
|>| John Jacob Smith<br>b: Wittegenstein, Baden 1767-1836 |>| Mary E Fisher<br>b: Richstein Germany 1765-1847 |>| Joseph Kirkpatrick<br>b:Cumberland Co, PA 1748-1812 |>| Matilda Murphy<br>b: PA 1792-1877 |>| Samuel Van Voorhis |>| Sarah Myers<br>(1784-1848) |>| Disberry Johnson<br>b:Westmoreland Co, PA 1766-1869 |>| Mary Wood<br>b:PA 1785 |
|>|>|>| Joseph Smith<br>b: Perry Co, PA 1809-1870 |>|>|>| Nancy Kirkpatrick<br> b: Perry Co, PA 1806-1866 |>|>|>| William Roe Van Voorhis<br>b: Dutchess Co, NY 1803-1893 |>|>|>| Almeda Johnson<br>b: Harrison Co, OH 1818-1910 |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Alvin Oliver Smith<br>1846-1827) |>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Eliza Van Voorhis<br>(1848-1926) |
|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Jessie May Smith<br> (1875-1957) |
More Ancestors of the Smiths are shown in the [[Van Voorhis Pedigree]] and the [[Kirkpatrick Pedigree]]
The following are links to stories about specific families.
<<tagging Story>>
/***
!General
***/
/*{{{*/
body {
background: #EEEEEE;
}
#contentWrapper{
background: #fff;
border:1px solid #DDD;
margin: 0 1em;
padding:0;
height:1%;
}
/*}}}*/
/***
!Links
***/
/*{{{*/
a,
a.tiddlyLink,
a.button,
a.externalLink,
#sidebarOptions .sliderPanel a{
color: #005533;
text-decoration: none;
background: transparent;
border: 0;
}
a:hover,
a.tiddlyLink:hover,
a.button:hover,
a.externalLink:hover,
#sidebarOptions .sliderPanel a:hover
{
border: 0;
color: #005533;
text-decoration: underline;
background:transparent;
}
/*}}}*/
/***
!Header
***/
/*{{{*/
.gradient {margin-top:1em; background:#008844;}
.titleLine{padding: 30px 40px 15px 30px;}
.titleLine a:hover{color:#fff; border-bottom:1px dotted #eee; text-decoration:none;}
.titleLine a{color:#fff; border-bottom:1px dotted #ccc;}
.siteTitle {
font-size: 2.2em;
font-weight: bold;
color:#fff;
}
.siteSubtitle {
font-size: 1.0em;
display: block;
margin: .3em auto 1em;
color:#fff;
}
/*}}}*/
/***
!TopMenu
***/
/*{{{*/
#topMenu br {display:none; }
#topMenu { background: #007722; font-size:1em; }
#topMenu { padding:5px 32px; }
#topMenu .button, #topMenu .tiddlyLink {
margin-left:0.1em; margin-right:0.1em;
padding:0.5em;
color:white; font-weight:bold;
}
#topMenu a.button:hover, #topMenu a.tiddlyLink:hover { background:#fff; color:#333; text-decoration:none;}
/*}}}*/
/***
!Display
***/
/***
!!!Display General
***/
/*{{{*/
#displayArea { margin: 0em 15.7em 0em 0em; }
#displayFooter {
clear: both;
}
/*}}}*/
/***
!!!Tiddler
***/
/*{{{*/
.tiddler {margin-bottom:1em; padding-bottom:1em;}
.tiddler {padding-left:1.5em;}
.title {color:#333; font-size:1.8em; border-bottom:1px solid #333; padding-bottom:0.3px;}
.subtitle { font-size:90%; color:#bbb; padding-left:0.25em; margin-top:0.1em; }
.shadow .title {
color: #aaa;
}
h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 { color: #333; background: transparent; padding-bottom:2px; border-bottom: 1px dotted #666; }
* html .viewer pre {
margin-left: 0em;
}
.viewer hr {
border: 0;
border-top: solid 1px #333;
margin: 0 8em;
color: #333;
}
.viewer a.button {color:#000; border:1px solid #1D65BC; font-weight:bold;}
.viewer a.button:hover{color:#fff; background:#3371a3; text-decoration:none;}
.tagClear {clear:none;}
/*}}}*/
/***
!!!Editor
***/
/*{{{*/
* html .editor textarea, * html .editor input {
width: 98%;
}
/*}}}*/
/***
!Sidebar
***/
/*{{{*/
#sidebar{
position:relative;
float:right;
margin-bottom:1em;
display:inline;
width: 16em;
}
/*}}}*/
.toolbar .button {color:#bbb; border:none;}
.toolbar .button:hover, .toolbar .highlight, .toolbar .marked, .toolbar a.button:active {background:transparent; color:#111; border:none; text-decoration:underline;}
.tiddler {border-bottom:3px solid #EEF1F3; padding-bottom:2em; padding-top:0em;}
.title {border-bottom:none; margin-right:8em;}
img {margin-left:5px;margin-right:5px;}
h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 { color: #030; background: transparent; padding-bottom:2px; border-bottom: 2px solid; border-color: green; }
#sidebar {background: #EBEEF1 ; right:0;}
#displayFooter {
clear: both;
}
#tiddlerDisplay{padding-top:1em;}
#sidebar .tabSelected, #sidebar .tabSected:hover {
color: #000;
background: #dbdee3;
border-top: solid 1px #B2B6BE;
border-left: solid 1px #B2B6BE;
border-right: solid 1px #B2B6BE;
border-bottom:solid 1px #dbdee3 !important;
padding-bottom:1px;
text-decoration:none;
}
#sidebarOptions, #sidebarTabs {border-left: 1px solid #B2B6BE;}
#sidebarTabs {border-bottom: 1px solid #B2B6BE;}
#sidebar .tabUnselected, #sidebar .tabUnselected:hover {
color: #F0F3F5;
background: #B2B6BE ;
border: solid 1px #B2B6BE ;
padding-bottom:1px;
}
#sidebarTabs .tabContents {border:none; background:#DBDEE3; }
#sidebarTabs .tabContents {border-top:1px solid #B2B6BE;}
#sidebarTabs .tabContents .tabContents {border-left:1px solid #b2b6be;}
.viewer pre, .viewer code {
border: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
background: #EBEEF1;}
#sidebarOptions .sliderPanel {
background: #EBEEF1; border:none;
}
#sidebarOptions input {
border: 1px solid #1d65bc;
}
#sidebarOptions input:hover, #sidebarOptions input:active, #sidebarOptions input:focus {
border: 1px inset #3371a3;
}
.tagging, .tagged {
border: 1px solid #dbdee3;
background-color: #ebeef1;
}
.selected .tagging, .selected .tagged {
background-color: #dbdee3;
border: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
}
.tagging .listTitle, .tagged .listTitle {
color: #bbb;
}
.selected .tagging .listTitle, .selected .tagged .listTitle {
color: #014;
}
.tagging .button:hover, .tagged .button:hover {
border: none; background:transparent; text-decoration:underline; color:#014;
}
.tagged .highlight, .tagged .marked, .tagged a.button:active {text-decoration:underline; background:transparent; color:#014;}
.tagging .button, .tagged .button {
color:#bbb;
}
.selected .tagging .button, .selected .tagged .button {
color:#014;
}
.viewer blockquote {
border-left:7px solid #ebeef1;
}
.viewer table {
border: 1px solid #3371a3;
}
.viewer th, thead td {
background: #3371a3;
border: 1px solid #3371a3;
color: #fff;
}
.viewer td, .viewer tr {
border: 1px solid #3371a3;
}
.editor input, .editor textarea {
border: 1px solid #1d65bc; background:#ebeef1;
}
.editor {padding-top:0.3em;}
.editor textarea:focus, .editor input:focus {
border: 1px inset #3371a3; background:#fff;
}
.popup {
background: #3371a3;
border: 1px solid #333;
}
.popup hr {
color: #333;
background: #333;
border-bottom: 1px;
}
.popup li.disabled {
color: #333;
}
.popup li a, .popup li a:visited {
color: #eee;
border: none;
}
.popup li a:hover {
background: #3371a3;
color: #fff;
border: none;
text-decoration:underline;
}
.viewer .button:active, .viewer .marked, .viewer .highlight {
color: #fff !important;
background: #3371a3;
border: 0;
}
.button:active {background:#1d65bc; border:0;}
#sidebar .button:active, #sidebar .marked, #sidebar .highlight {color:#014; background:transparent;text-decoration:none}
#messageArea {
border: 2px dashed #3371a3;
background: #dbdee3;
color: #fff;
font-size:90%;
}
#messageArea .button {
color: #1d65bc;
background: #ebeef1;
text-decoration:none;
font-weight:bold;
border:none;
}
#messageArea a.button {color:#1d65bc;}
#messageArea .button:hover {text-decoration:underline;}
.viewer .tabSelected, .viewer .tabSelected:hover{
color: #014;
background: #eee;
border-left: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
border-top: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
border-right: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
}
.viewer .tabUnselected, .viewer .tabUnselected:hover {
color: #fff;
background: #B2B6BE;
}
. viewer .tabContents {
color: #014;
background: #ebeef1;
border: 1px solid #B2B6BE;
}
.searchBar {float:right; font-size:0.9em;}
.searchBar .button {display:block; border:none; color:#ccc;}
.searchBar .button:hover{border:none; color:#eee;}
.searchBar input{
border: 1px inset #1d65bc; background:#dbdee3;
}
.searchBar input:focus {
border: 1px inset #3371a3; background:#fff;
}
.blog h2, .blog h3, .blog h4{
margin:0;
padding:0;
border-bottom:none;
}
.blog {margin-left:1.5em;}
.blog .excerpt {
margin:0;
margin-top:0.3em;
padding: 0;
margin-left:1em;
padding-left:1em;
font-size:90%;
border-left:1px solid #ddd;
}
#tiddlerWhatsNew h1, #tiddlerWhatsNew h2 {border-bottom:none;}
div[tags~="RecentUpdates"], div[tags~="lewcidExtension"] {margin-bottom: 2em;}
#topMenu .fontResizer {float:right;}
#topMenu .fontResizer .button{border:1px solid #3371A3;}
#topMenu .fontResizer .button:hover {border:1px solid #fff; color:#3371A3;}
#sidebarTabs .txtMainTab .tiddlyLinkExisting {
font-weight: normal;
font-style: normal;
}
#sidebarTabs .txtMoreTab .tiddlyLinkExisting {
font-weight: bold;
font-style: normal;
}
/***
|''Name:''|TableSortingPlugin|
|''Description:''|Dynamically sort tables by clicking on column headers|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz ( lewcid@gmail.com )|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#TableSortingPlugin|
|''Code Repository:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/svn/plugins|
|''Version:''|2.02|
|''Date:''|25-01-2008|
|''License:''|[[Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License|http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.2.3|
!!Usage:
* Make sure your table has a header row
** {{{|Name|Phone Number|Address|h}}}<br> Note the /h/ that denote a header row
* Give the table a class of 'sortable'
** {{{
|sortable|k
|Name|Phone Number|Address|h
}}}<br>Note the /k/ that denotes a class name being assigned to the table.
* To disallow sorting by a column, place {{{<<nosort>>}}} in it's header
* To automatically sort a table by a column, place {{{<<autosort>>}}} in the header for that column
** Or to sort automatically but in reverse order, use {{{<<autosort reverse>>}}}
!!Example:
|sortable|k
|Name |Salary |Extension |Performance |File Size |Start date |h
|ZBloggs, Fred |$12000.00 |1353 |+1.2 |74.2Kb |Aug 19, 2003 21:34:00 |
|ABloggs, Fred |$12000.00 |1353 |1.2 |3350b |09/18/2003 |
|CBloggs, Fred |$12000 |1353 |1.200 |55.2Kb |August 18, 2003 |
|DBloggs, Fred |$12000.00 |1353 |1.2 |2100b |07/18/2003 |
|Bloggs, Fred |$12000.00 |1353 |01.20 |6.156Mb |08/17/2003 05:43 |
|Turvey, Kevin |$191200.00 |2342 |-33 |1b |02/05/1979 |
|Mbogo, Arnold |$32010.12 |2755 |-21.673 |1.2Gb |09/08/1998 |
|Shakespeare, Bill |£122000.00|3211 |6 |33.22Gb |12/11/1961 |
|Shakespeare, Hamlet |£9000 |9005 |-8 |3Gb |01/01/2002 |
|Fitz, Marvin |€3300.30 |5554 |+5 |4Kb |05/22/1995 |
***/
// /%
//!BEGIN-PLUGIN-CODE
config.tableSorting = {
darrow: "\u2193",
uarrow: "\u2191",
getText : function (o) {
var p = o.cells[SORT_INDEX];
return p.innerText || p.textContent || '';
},
sortTable : function (o,rev) {
SORT_INDEX = o.getAttribute("index");
var c = config.tableSorting;
var T = findRelated(o.parentNode,"TABLE");
if(T.tBodies[0].rows.length<=1)
return;
var itm = "";
var i = 0;
while (itm == "" && i < T.tBodies[0].rows.length) {
itm = c.getText(T.tBodies[0].rows[i]).trim();
i++;
}
if (itm == "")
return;
var r = [];
var S = o.getElementsByTagName("span")[0];
c.fn = c.sortAlpha;
if(!isNaN(Date.parse(itm)))
c.fn = c.sortDate;
else if(itm.match(/^[$|£|€|\+|\-]{0,1}\d*\.{0,1}\d+$/))
c.fn = c.sortNumber;
else if(itm.match(/^\d*\.{0,1}\d+[K|M|G]{0,1}b$/))
c.fn = c.sortFile;
for(i=0; i<T.tBodies[0].rows.length; i++) {
r[i]=T.tBodies[0].rows[i];
}
r.sort(c.reSort);
if(S.firstChild.nodeValue==c.darrow || rev) {
r.reverse();
S.firstChild.nodeValue=c.uarrow;
}
else
S.firstChild.nodeValue=c.darrow;
var thead = T.getElementsByTagName('thead')[0];
var headers = thead.rows[thead.rows.length-1].cells;
for(var k=0; k<headers.length; k++) {
if(!hasClass(headers[k],"nosort"))
addClass(headers[k].getElementsByTagName("span")[0],"hidden");
}
removeClass(S,"hidden");
for(i=0; i<r.length; i++) {
T.tBodies[0].appendChild(r[i]);
c.stripe(r[i],i);
for(var j=0; j<r[i].cells.length;j++){
removeClass(r[i].cells[j],"sortedCol");
}
addClass(r[i].cells[SORT_INDEX],"sortedCol");
}
},
stripe : function (e,i){
var cl = ["oddRow","evenRow"];
i&1? cl.reverse() : cl;
removeClass(e,cl[1]);
addClass(e,cl[0]);
},
sortNumber : function(v) {
var x = parseFloat(this.getText(v).replace(/[^0-9.-]/g,''));
return isNaN(x)? 0: x;
},
sortDate : function(v) {
return Date.parse(this.getText(v));
},
sortAlpha : function(v) {
return this.getText(v).toLowerCase();
},
sortFile : function(v) {
var j, q = config.messages.sizeTemplates, s = this.getText(v);
for (var i=0; i<q.length; i++) {
if ((j = s.toLowerCase().indexOf(q[i].template.replace("%0\u00a0","").toLowerCase())) != -1)
return q[i].unit * s.substr(0,j);
}
return parseFloat(s);
},
reSort : function(a,b){
var c = config.tableSorting;
var aa = c.fn(a);
var bb = c.fn(b);
return ((aa==bb)? 0 : ((aa<bb)? -1:1));
}
};
Story.prototype.tSort_refreshTiddler = Story.prototype.refreshTiddler;
Story.prototype.refreshTiddler = function(title,template,force,customFields,defaultText){
var elem = this.tSort_refreshTiddler.apply(this,arguments);
if(elem){
var tables = elem.getElementsByTagName("TABLE");
var c = config.tableSorting;
for(var i=0; i<tables.length; i++){
if(hasClass(tables[i],"sortable")){
var x = null, rev, table = tables[i], thead = table.getElementsByTagName('thead')[0], headers = thead.rows[thead.rows.length-1].cells;
for (var j=0; j<headers.length; j++){
var h = headers[j];
if (hasClass(h,"nosort"))
continue;
h.setAttribute("index",j);
h.onclick = function(){c.sortTable(this); return false;};
h.ondblclick = stopEvent;
if(h.getElementsByTagName("span").length == 0)
createTiddlyElement(h,"span",null,"hidden",c.uarrow);
if(!x && hasClass(h,"autosort")) {
x = j;
rev = hasClass(h,"reverse");
}
}
if(x)
c.sortTable(headers[x],rev);
}
}
}
return elem;
};
setStylesheet("table.sortable span.hidden {visibility:hidden;}\n"+
"table.sortable thead {cursor:pointer;}\n"+
"table.sortable .nosort {cursor:default;}\n"+
"table.sortable td.sortedCol {background:#ffc;}","TableSortingPluginStyles");
function stopEvent(e){
var ev = e? e : window.event;
ev.cancelBubble = true;
if (ev.stopPropagation) ev.stopPropagation();
return false;
}
config.macros.nosort={
handler : function(place){
addClass(place,"nosort");
}
};
config.macros.autosort={
handler : function(place,m,p,w,pS){
addClass(place,"autosort"+" "+pS);
}
};
//!END-PLUGIN-CODE
// %/
[>img[Raymond Bogan Family ~1950 Leota and Raymond, Bonnie, Larry and Daryl |images/BoganFamily1950.jpg]]
I am Larry Bogan and am responsible for the information in this Wiki. My parents were Raymond Bogan and Leota Reber and this is about their ancestors. My primary ancestors, the Bogans and Kehrers, lived in Crawford County, Ohio for nearly 150 years so much of their history comes from that area. The first version of my family tree was published in August 2005 as a small booklet and distributed to my nearest relatives so my father saw it before he died in 2006. My mother died in 1998 before I became interested in my genealogy. I wish I had started collecting information many years early so that I could have gained from their knowledge and experiences. Most of what I have learned about my family comes from publications and data collections created by dedicated genealogists and historians. Only the pictures are from family collections... fortunately, my mother and grandmother labeled their collections of old pictures.
The task of piecing together many facts to make a family tree is addictive and I have gone on beyond my immediate family. The result is a database with links to related families.
__Current Address__
(Oct 2011):
>6539 Brooklyn Street
>Cambridge Station, Nova Scotia
>~B0P1G0 Canada
''email:'' larry@bogan.ca
__Education:__
*Elementary: Kersley, Bucyrus Ohio
*High School: Bucyrus H.S. 1957
*College: Case Institute of Technology 1961 BS Physics
*Graduate School: Cornell University 1968 ~PhD Physics (experimental solid state)
__Employment__
*University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 1968-1972
*Acadia University, Wolfville, Nova Scotia 1975-1999
*Retired 1999-
[img[Author: Larry Bogan - age 72 on a kayak outing|images/Larry_72.jpg]]
/***
|''Name:''|TiddlerNotesPlugin|
|''Description:''|Add notes to tiddlers without modifying the original content|
|''Author:''|Saq Imtiaz ( lewcid@gmail.com )|
|''Source:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/#TiddlerNotesPlugin|
|''Code Repository:''|http://tw.lewcid.org/svn/plugins|
|''Version:''|2.1|
|''Date:''|26/10/07|
|''License:''|[[Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License|http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.2.3|
!!Concept:
*The TiddlerNotesPlugin allows you to add notes to tiddlers, without needing to edit the original tiddler. This means that your original content will remain unaltered, and if you update it in the future, you won’t lose your notes. Notes are stored in separate tiddlers, but can be viewed and edited from within the original tiddler.
*For a tiddler titled "~MySlide", the notes are by default saved in a tiddler titled "~MySlide-Notes" and is given a tag of "Notes". The suffix and tags of the notes tiddlers are customizable. You can have one or multiple notes per tiddlers. So it is possible to have for example, teacher's notes and student's notes in the same file.
*Notes can be configured to start off blank, or pre-filled with the contents of the original tiddler.
!!Usage:
*{{{<<notes>>}}} is the simplest usage form.
* additional optional parameters include:
**{{{heading:}}} the heading to use for the notes box
**{{{tag:}}} the tag to be given to the notes tiddler
**{{{suffix:}}} the suffix to be used when naming the notes tiddler
* a full macro call could look like: {{{<<notes heading:"My Notes" tag:"NoteTiddlers" suffix:"Comments">>}}}
* To avoid adding {{{<<notes>>}}} to each tiddler you want notes for, you could add the macro call to the ViewTemplate
** below the line {{{<div class='viewer' macro='view text wikified'></div>}}} add the following line: <br> {{{<div class='viewer' macro='notes'></div>}}}
** Used in combination with the ~HideWhenPlugin or ~PublisherPlugin, you could have notes be shown only for tiddlers with specific tags. The ~PublisherPlugin would allow you for instance to only have the ~TeachersNotes visible to the teacher, and the ~StudentsNotes for the same tiddler visible to the Student.
!!Configuration
*<<option chkPrefillNotes>> Enable to pre-fill notes with the original tiddler's contents
!!Demo:
* [[MySlide]]
***/
// /%
//!BEGIN-PLUGIN-CODE
if (!config.options.chkPrefillNotes)
config.options.chkPrefillNotes = false;
function createTiddlyElement(theParent,theElement,theID,theClass,theText,attribs)
{
var e = document.createElement(theElement);
if(theClass != null)
e.className = theClass;
if(theID != null)
e.setAttribute("id",theID);
if(theText != null)
e.appendChild(document.createTextNode(theText));
if(attribs){
for(var n in attribs){
e.setAttribute(n,attribs[n]);
}
}
if(theParent != null)
theParent.appendChild(e);
return e;
}
function createTiddlyButton(theParent,theText,theTooltip,theAction,theClass,theId,theAccessKey,attribs)
{
var theButton = document.createElement("a");
if(theAction) {
theButton.onclick = theAction;
theButton.setAttribute("href","javascript:;");
}
if(theTooltip)
theButton.setAttribute("title",theTooltip);
if(theText)
theButton.appendChild(document.createTextNode(theText));
if(theClass)
theButton.className = theClass;
else
theButton.className = "button";
if(theId)
theButton.id = theId;
if(attribs){
for(var n in attribs){
e.setAttribute(n,attribs[n]);
}
}
if(theParent)
theParent.appendChild(theButton);
if(theAccessKey)
theButton.setAttribute("accessKey",theAccessKey);
return theButton;
}
config.macros.notes={
cancelWarning: "Are you sure you want to abandon changes to your notes for '%0'?",
editLabel: "edit notes",
editTitle: "double click to edit",
saveLabel: "save notes",
saveTitle: "double click to save",
cancelLabel: "cancel",
heading: "Notes",
suffix: "Notes",
tag: "Notes",
saveNotes: function(ev){
e = ev? ev : window.event;
var theTarget = resolveTarget(e);
if (theTarget.nodeName.toLowerCase() == "textarea")
return false;
var title = story.findContainingTiddler(theTarget).getAttribute("tiddler");
story.setDirty(title,false);
var box = document.getElementById("notesContainer"+title);
var textarea = document.getElementById("notesTextArea"+title);
if(textarea.getAttribute("oldText")!=textarea.value && !hasClass(theTarget,"cancelNotesButton")){
var suffix = box.getAttribute("suffix");
var t = store.getTiddler(title+"-"+suffix);
store.saveTiddler(title+"-"+suffix,title+"-"+suffix,textarea.value,config.options.txtUserName,new Date(),t?t.tags:box.getAttribute("tag"),t?t.fields:{});
}
story.refreshTiddler(title,1,true);
autoSaveChanges(true);
return false;
},
editNotes: function(box,tiddler){
removeChildren(box);
story.setDirty(tiddler,true);
box.title = this.saveTitle;
box.ondblclick = this.saveNotes;
createTiddlyButton(box,this.cancelLabel,this.cancelLabel,this.saveNotes,"cancelNotesButton");
createTiddlyButton(box,this.saveLabel,this.saveLabel,this.saveNotes,"saveNotesButton");
wikify("!!"+box.getAttribute("heading")+"\n",box);
addClass(box,"editor");
var wrapper1 = createTiddlyElement(null,"fieldset",null,"fieldsetFix");
var wrapper2 = createTiddlyElement(wrapper1,"div");
var e = createTiddlyElement(wrapper2,"textarea","notesTextArea"+tiddler);
var v = store.getValue(tiddler+"-"+box.getAttribute("suffix"),"text");
if(!v)
v = config.options.chkPrefillNotes? store.getValue(tiddler,"text"):'';
e.value = v;
e.setAttribute("oldText",v);
var rows = 10;
var lines = v.match(/\n/mg);
var maxLines = Math.max(parseInt(config.options.txtMaxEditRows),5);
if(lines != null && lines.length > rows)
rows = lines.length + 5;
rows = Math.min(rows,maxLines);
e.setAttribute("rows",rows);
box.appendChild(wrapper1);
},
editNotesButtonOnclick: function(e){
var title = story.findContainingTiddler(this).getAttribute("tiddler");
var box = document.getElementById("notesContainer"+title);
config.macros.notes.editNotes(box,title);
return false;
},
ondblclick : function(ev){
e = ev? ev : window.event;
var theTarget = resolveTarget(e);
var title = story.findContainingTiddler(theTarget).getAttribute("tiddler");
var box = document.getElementById("notesContainer"+title);
config.macros.notes.editNotes(box,title);
e.cancelBubble = true;
if(e.stopPropagation) e.stopPropagation();
return false;
},
handler : function(place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler){
params = paramString.parseParams("anon",null,true,false,false);
var heading = getParam(params,"heading",this.heading);
var tag = getParam(params,"tag",this.tag);
var suffix = getParam(params,"suffix",this.suffix);
var box = createTiddlyElement(place,"div","notesContainer"+tiddler.title,"TiddlerNotes",null,{"source":tiddler.title,params:paramString,heading:heading,tag:tag,suffix:suffix});
createTiddlyButton(box,this.editLabel,this.editLabel,this.editNotesButtonOnclick,"editNotesButton");
wikify("!!"+heading+"\n",box);
box.title=this.editTitle;
box.ondblclick = this.ondblclick;
wikify("<<tiddler [["+tiddler.title+"-"+suffix+"]]>>",box);
}
};
Story.prototype.old_notes_closeTiddler = Story.prototype.closeTiddler;
Story.prototype.closeTiddler = function(title,animate,unused){
if(story.isDirty(title)) {
if(!confirm(config.macros.notes.cancelWarning.format([title])))
return false;
}
return this.old_notes_closeTiddler.apply(this,arguments);
}
setStylesheet(".TiddlerNotes {\n"+ " background:#eee;\n"+ " border:1px solid #ccc;\n"+ " padding:10px;\n"+ " margin:15px;\n"+ "}\n"+ "\n"+ ".cancelNotesButton,.editNotesButton, .saveNotesButton {\n"+ " float:right;\n"+ " border:1px solid #ccc;\n"+ " padding:2px 5px;\n"+ "}\n"+ "\n"+ ".saveNotesButton{\n"+ " margin-right:0.5em;\n"+ "}\n"+ "\n"+ ".TiddlerNotes.editor textarea{\n"+ " border:1px solid #ccc;\n"+ "}","NotesPluginStyles");
//!END-PLUGIN-CODE
// %/
!Inline Formatting /% DEBUG: buggy (-> monospaced) %/
|!Option|!Syntax|!Output|
|bold font|{{{''bold''}}}|''bold''|
|italic type|{{{//italic//}}}|//italic//|
|underlined text|{{{__underlined__}}}|__underlined__|
|strikethrough text|{{{--strikethrough--}}}|--strikethrough--|
|superscript text|{{{^^super^^script}}}|^^super^^script|
|subscript text|{{{~~sub~~script}}}|~~sub~~script|
|highlighted text|{{{@@highlighted@@}}}|@@highlighted@@|
|preformatted text|{{{{{{preformatted}}}}}}|{{{preformatted}}}|
!Block Elements
!!Headings
{{{
!Heading 1
!!Heading 2
!!!Heading 3
!!!!Heading 4
!!!!!Heading 5
}}}
<<<
!Heading 1
!!Heading 2
!!!Heading 3
!!!!Heading 4
!!!!!Heading 5
<<<
!!Lists
{{{
* unordered list, level 1
** unordered list, level 2
*** unordered list, level 3
# ordered list, level 1
## ordered list, level 2
### unordered list, level 3
; definition list, term
: definition list, description
}}}
<<<
* unordered list, level 1
** unordered list, level 2
*** unordered list, level 3
# ordered list, level 1
## ordered list, level 2
### unordered list, level 3
; definition list, term
: definition list, description
<<<
!!Blockquotes /% DEBUG: hack %/
{{{
> blockquote, level 1
>> blockquote, level 2
>>> blockquote, level 3
<<<
blockquote
<<<
}}}
<<<
> blockquote, level 1
>> blockquote, level 2
>>> blockquote, level 3
> blockquote
<<<
!!Preformatted Text /% DEBUG: hack %/
{{{
{{{
preformatted (e.g. code)
}}}
}}}
<<<
{{{
preformatted (e.g. code)
}}}
<<<
!!Tables
{{{
|CssClass|k
|!heading column 1|!heading column 2|
|row 1, column 1|row 1, column 2|
|row 2, column 1|row 2, column 2|
|>|COLSPAN|
|ROWSPAN| … |
|~| … |
|CssProperty:value;…| … |
|caption|c
}}}
''Annotation:''
* The {{{>}}} marker creates a "colspan", causing the current cell to merge with the one to the right.
* The {{{~}}} marker creates a "rowspan", causing the current cell to merge with the one above.
<<<
|CssClass|k
|!heading column 1|!heading column 2|
|row 1, column 1|row 1, column 2|
|row 2, column 1|row 2, column 2|
|>|COLSPAN|
|ROWSPAN| … |
|~| … |
|CssProperty:value;…| … |
|caption|c
<<<
!!Images /% DEBUG: to do %/
{{{[[TiddlyWiki.com|http://www.tiddlywiki.com/#EmbeddedImages]]}}}
cf. [[TiddlyWiki.com|http://www.tiddlywiki.com/#EmbeddedImages]]
{{{
[img[title|filename]]
[img[filename]]
[img[title|filename][link]]
[img[filename][link]]
}}}
{{{ - }}}
{{{
[>img[title|filename]]
[<img[title|filename]]
> = An embedded image shifted to the right side and word wrapped
< = An embedded image shifted to the left side and word wrapped
}}}
!Hyperlinks
* [[WikiWords|WikiWord]] are automatically transformed to hyperlinks to the respective tiddler
** the automatic transformation can be suppressed by preceding the respective WikiWord with a tilde ({{{~}}}): {{{~WikiWord}}}
* [[PrettyLinks]] are enclosed in square brackets and contain the desired tiddler name: {{{[[tiddler name]]}}}
** optionally, a custom title or description can be added, separated by a pipe character ({{{|}}}): {{{[[title|target]]}}}<br>'''N.B.:''' In this case, the target can also be any website (i.e. URL).
!CSS Custom Styling
* {{{@@CssProperty:value;CssProperty:value;…@@}}}<br>''N.B.:'' CSS color definitions should use lowercase letters to prevent the inadvertent creation of WikiWords.
* {{{{{customCssClass{…}}}}}} /% DEBUG: buggy %/
* raw HTML can be inserted by enclosing the respective code in HTML tags: {{{<html> … </html>}}}
!!Inline Styles
Apply CSS properties inline:
{{{
@@color:#4bbbbb;Some random text@@
}}}
Displays as:
@@color:#4bbbbb;Some random text@@
!!CSS classes
CSS classes can be applied to text blocks or runs. This form creates an HTML {{{<span>}}}:
{{{
{{customClassName{Some random text}}}
}}}
Displays as:
{{customClassName{Some random text}}}
This form generates an HTML {{{<div>}}}:
{{{
{{customClassName{
Some random text
}}}
}}}
Displays as:
{{customClassName{
Some random text
}}}
!Special Markers
* {{{<br>}}} forces a manual line break
* {{{----}}} creates a horizontal ruler
* [[HTML entities|http://www.tiddlywiki.com/#HtmlEntities]]
* {{{<<macroName>>}}} calls the respective [[macro|Macros]]
* To hide text within a tiddler so that it is not displayed, it can be wrapped in {{{/%}}} and {{{%/}}}.<br/>This can be a useful trick for hiding drafts or annotating complex markup.
* To prevent wiki markup from taking effect for a particular section, that section can be enclosed in three double quotes: e.g. {{{"""WikiWord"""}}}.
/***
|''Name:''|TiddlersBarPlugin|
|''Description:''|A bar to switch between tiddlers through tabs (like browser tabs bar).|
|''Version:''|1.2.5|
|''Date:''|Jan 18,2008|
|''Source:''|http://visualtw.ouvaton.org/VisualTW.html|
|''Author:''|Pascal Collin|
|''License:''|[[BSD open source license|License]]|
|''~CoreVersion:''|2.1.0|
|''Browser:''|Firefox 2.0; InternetExplorer 6.0, others|
!Demos
On [[homepage|http://visualtw.ouvaton.org/VisualTW.html]], open several tiddlers to use the tabs bar.
!Installation
#import this tiddler from [[homepage|http://visualtw.ouvaton.org/VisualTW.html]] (tagged as systemConfig)
#save and reload
#''if you're using a custom [[PageTemplate]]'', add {{{<div id='tiddlersBar' refresh='none' ondblclick='config.macros.tiddlersBar.onTiddlersBarAction(event)'></div>}}} before {{{<div id='tiddlerDisplay'></div>}}}
#optionally, adjust StyleSheetTiddlersBar
!Tips
*Doubleclick on the tiddlers bar (where there is no tab) create a new tiddler.
*Tabs include a button to close {{{x}}} or save {{{!}}} their tiddler.
*By default, click on the current tab close all others tiddlers.
!Configuration options
<<option chkDisableTabsBar>> Disable the tabs bar (to print, by example).
<<option chkHideTabsBarWhenSingleTab >> Automatically hide the tabs bar when only one tiddler is displayed.
<<option txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton>> ''selected'' tab command button.
<<option txtPreviousTabKey>> previous tab access key.
<<option txtNextTabKey>> next tab access key.
!Code
***/
//{{{
config.options.chkDisableTabsBar = config.options.chkDisableTabsBar ? config.options.chkDisableTabsBar : false;
config.options.chkHideTabsBarWhenSingleTab = config.options.chkHideTabsBarWhenSingleTab ? config.options.chkHideTabsBarWhenSingleTab : false;
config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton = config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton ? config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton : "closeOthers";
config.options.txtPreviousTabKey = config.options.txtPreviousTabKey ? config.options.txtPreviousTabKey : "";
config.options.txtNextTabKey = config.options.txtNextTabKey ? config.options.txtNextTabKey : "";
config.macros.tiddlersBar = {
tooltip : "see ",
tooltipClose : "click here to close this tab",
tooltipSave : "click here to save this tab",
promptRename : "Enter tiddler new name",
currentTiddler : "",
previousState : false,
previousKey : config.options.txtPreviousTabKey,
nextKey : config.options.txtNextTabKey,
tabsAnimationSource : null, //use document.getElementById("tiddlerDisplay") if you need animation on tab switching.
handler: function(place,macroName,params) {
var previous = null;
if (config.macros.tiddlersBar.isShown())
story.forEachTiddler(function(title,e){
if (title==config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler){
var d = createTiddlyElement(null,"span",null,"tab tabSelected");
config.macros.tiddlersBar.createActiveTabButton(d,title);
if (previous && config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousKey) previous.setAttribute("accessKey",config.macros.tiddlersBar.nextKey);
previous = "active";
}
else {
var d = createTiddlyElement(place,"span",null,"tab tabUnselected");
var btn = createTiddlyButton(d,title,config.macros.tiddlersBar.tooltip + title,config.macros.tiddlersBar.onSelectTab);
btn.setAttribute("tiddler", title);
if (previous=="active" && config.macros.tiddlersBar.nextKey) btn.setAttribute("accessKey",config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousKey);
previous=btn;
}
var isDirty =story.isDirty(title);
var c = createTiddlyButton(d,isDirty ?"!":"x",isDirty?config.macros.tiddlersBar.tooltipSave:config.macros.tiddlersBar.tooltipClose, isDirty ? config.macros.tiddlersBar.onTabSave : config.macros.tiddlersBar.onTabClose,"tabButton");
c.setAttribute("tiddler", title);
if (place.childNodes) {
place.insertBefore(document.createTextNode(" "),place.firstChild); // to allow break line here when many tiddlers are open
place.insertBefore(d,place.firstChild);
}
else place.appendChild(d);
})
},
refresh: function(place,params){
removeChildren(place);
config.macros.tiddlersBar.handler(place,"tiddlersBar",params);
if (config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousState!=config.macros.tiddlersBar.isShown()) {
story.refreshAllTiddlers();
if (config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousState) story.forEachTiddler(function(t,e){e.style.display="";});
config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousState = !config.macros.tiddlersBar.previousState;
}
},
isShown : function(){
if (config.options.chkDisableTabsBar) return false;
if (!config.options.chkHideTabsBarWhenSingleTab) return true;
var cpt=0;
story.forEachTiddler(function(){cpt++});
return (cpt>1);
},
selectNextTab : function(){ //used when the current tab is closed (to select another tab)
var previous="";
story.forEachTiddler(function(title){
if (!config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler) {
story.displayTiddler(null,title);
return;
}
if (title==config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler) {
if (previous) {
story.displayTiddler(null,previous);
return;
}
else config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler=""; // so next tab will be selected
}
else previous=title;
});
},
onSelectTab : function(e){
var t = this.getAttribute("tiddler");
if (t) story.displayTiddler(null,t);
return false;
},
onTabClose : function(e){
var t = this.getAttribute("tiddler");
if (t) {
if(story.hasChanges(t) && !readOnly) {
if(!confirm(config.commands.cancelTiddler.warning.format([t])))
return false;
}
story.closeTiddler(t);
}
return false;
},
onTabSave : function(e) {
var t = this.getAttribute("tiddler");
if (!e) e=window.event;
if (t) config.commands.saveTiddler.handler(e,null,t);
return false;
},
onSelectedTabButtonClick : function(event,src,title) {
var t = this.getAttribute("tiddler");
if (!event) event=window.event;
if (t && config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton && config.commands[config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton])
config.commands[config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton].handler(event, src, t);
return false;
},
onTiddlersBarAction: function(event) {
var source = event.target ? event.target.id : event.srcElement.id; // FF uses target and IE uses srcElement;
if (source=="tiddlersBar") story.displayTiddler(null,'New Tiddler',DEFAULT_EDIT_TEMPLATE,false,null,null);
},
createActiveTabButton : function(place,title) {
if (config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton && config.commands[config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton]) {
var btn = createTiddlyButton(place, title, config.commands[config.options.txtSelectedTiddlerTabButton].tooltip ,config.macros.tiddlersBar.onSelectedTabButtonClick);
btn.setAttribute("tiddler", title);
}
else
createTiddlyText(place,title);
}
}
story.coreCloseTiddler = story.coreCloseTiddler? story.coreCloseTiddler : story.closeTiddler;
story.coreDisplayTiddler = story.coreDisplayTiddler ? story.coreDisplayTiddler : story.displayTiddler;
story.closeTiddler = function(title,animate,unused) {
if (title==config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler)
config.macros.tiddlersBar.selectNextTab();
story.coreCloseTiddler(title,false,unused); //disable animation to get it closed before calling tiddlersBar.refresh
var e=document.getElementById("tiddlersBar");
if (e) config.macros.tiddlersBar.refresh(e,null);
}
story.displayTiddler = function(srcElement,tiddler,template,animate,unused,customFields,toggle){
story.coreDisplayTiddler(config.macros.tiddlersBar.tabsAnimationSource,tiddler,template,animate,unused,customFields,toggle);
var title = (tiddler instanceof Tiddler)? tiddler.title : tiddler;
if (config.macros.tiddlersBar.isShown()) {
story.forEachTiddler(function(t,e){
if (t!=title) e.style.display="none";
else e.style.display="";
})
config.macros.tiddlersBar.currentTiddler=title;
}
var e=document.getElementById("tiddlersBar");
if (e) config.macros.tiddlersBar.refresh(e,null);
}
var coreRefreshPageTemplate = coreRefreshPageTemplate ? coreRefreshPageTemplate : refreshPageTemplate;
refreshPageTemplate = function(title) {
coreRefreshPageTemplate(title);
if (config.macros.tiddlersBar) config.macros.tiddlersBar.refresh(document.getElementById("tiddlersBar"));
}
ensureVisible=function (e) {return 0} //disable bottom scrolling (not useful now)
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar = "/*{{{*/\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar += "#tiddlersBar .button {border:0}\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar += "#tiddlersBar .tab {white-space:nowrap}\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar += "#tiddlersBar {padding : 1em 0.5em 2px 0.5em}\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar += ".tabUnselected .tabButton, .tabSelected .tabButton {padding : 0 2px 0 2px; margin: 0 0 0 4px;}\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar += ".tiddler, .tabContents {border:1px [[ColorPalette::TertiaryPale]] solid;}\n";
config.shadowTiddlers.StyleSheetTiddlersBar +="/*}}}*/";
store.addNotification("StyleSheetTiddlersBar", refreshStyles);
config.refreshers.none = function(){return true;}
config.shadowTiddlers.PageTemplate=config.shadowTiddlers.PageTemplate.replace(/<div id='tiddlerDisplay'><\/div>/m,"<div id='tiddlersBar' refresh='none' ondblclick='config.macros.tiddlersBar.onTiddlersBarAction(event)'></div>\n<div id='tiddlerDisplay'></div>");
//}}}
config.macros.toggleSideBar={};
config.macros.toggleSideBar.settings={
styleHide : "#sidebar { display: none;}\n"+"#contentWrapper #displayArea { margin-right: 1em;}\n"+"",
styleShow : " ",
arrow1: "«",
arrow2: "»"
};
config.macros.toggleSideBar.handler=function (place,macroName,params,wikifier,paramString,tiddler)
{
var tooltip= params[1]||'toggle sidebar';
var mode = (params[2] && params[2]=="hide")? "hide":"show";
var arrow = (mode == "hide")? this.settings.arrow1:this.settings.arrow2;
var label= (params[0]&¶ms[0]!='.')?params[0]+" "+arrow:arrow;
var theBtn = createTiddlyButton(place,label,tooltip,this.onToggleSideBar,"button HideSideBarButton");
if (mode == "hide")
{
(document.getElementById("sidebar")).setAttribute("toggle","hide");
setStylesheet(this.settings.styleHide,"ToggleSideBarStyles");
}
};
config.macros.toggleSideBar.onToggleSideBar = function(){
var sidebar = document.getElementById("sidebar");
var settings = config.macros.toggleSideBar.settings;
if (sidebar.getAttribute("toggle")=='hide')
{
setStylesheet(settings.styleShow,"ToggleSideBarStyles");
sidebar.setAttribute("toggle","show");
this.firstChild.data= (this.firstChild.data).replace(settings.arrow1,settings.arrow2);
}
else
{
setStylesheet(settings.styleHide,"ToggleSideBarStyles");
sidebar.setAttribute("toggle","hide");
this.firstChild.data= (this.firstChild.data).replace(settings.arrow2,settings.arrow1);
}
return false;
}
setStylesheet(".HideSideBarButton .button {font-weight:bold; padding: 0 5px;}\n","ToggleSideBarButtonStyles");
<<showtoc>>
[>img[Alvin and Eliza (Van Voorhis) Smith|images/alvinelizavanvoorhissmith-tn.jpg][images/alvinelizavanvoorhissmith.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
I remember my great grandmother Jessie Smith Bogan because she lived until 20 July 1957 after I graduated from high school in May. Her mother was Eliza (Van Voorhis) Smith, my great, great grandmother. The Van Voorhis line of the family has been in North America longer than any other line of our ancestry. Eliza passed away in 1926 when my father was only nine year old and he never mentioned whether he remembered her. See [[Van Voorhis Pedigree]] for the line of succession.
!!From the Netherlands to New Amsterdam
[>img[Location of Van Voorhees in Flatlands, N.Y.|maps/voorhies_flatlands-tn.gif]]
The Van Voorhis (formerly Van Voorhees) name is Dutch and came from the Hees, Netherlands in 1660 to settle in New Amsterdam (the present New York City). A commemorative marker in what is now Brooklyn reads:
>//"Steven Coerten, born 1600, migrated with his family in 1660 for the manor of Voor-hees, Province of Drenthe, the Netherlands, to the village of Amesfoort, now Flatlands, Long Island, and settled near this site. He served his church as Deacon and Elder, and the community as a magistrate, patentee in the Nicills Charter of 1667."//
As a result of this , the Van Voorhis branch of the family has a long, interesting history in New York City, Fishkill NY, Western Pennsylvania, and finally Crawford County Ohio. Its Genealogy has been extensively researched and there is a Van Voorhees Association whose webpage is at [[http://www.vanvoorhees.org/|http://www.vanvoorhees.org/]]. The Van Voorhees are the largest Dutch family in North America.
Steven Coerte Van Voorhees was born in Hees, Drenthe Netherlands in about 1600 and lived until about 1684 to be buried in what is now Flatlands, Kings Co, New York. In 1660, at the age of 60 years, he brought his family to New Netherlands ((New Netherlands was a commercial effort in North America by the Dutch West Indies Company. The province was created by Dutch government and the DWIC began settlement by 1624)) and settled in Amesfoot on Long Island. The ship he came on was the "De Bonte Koe" that left 15 April 1660. On the passenger list he is listed as Steven Coerte and he is from Hees. The Voor in Dutch means "before" and he lived in front of Hees. He was appointed magistrate of Amesfoot in 1664 and was a member of the Dutch Reformed Church, Kings County, New York, in 1670.
He purchased from Cornelis Dicken Hoogland about 20 acres of land
*9 morgens ((A morgen is the area that an oxen can plow in a morning (morgen in German) It varied in size but was about 2/3 acre)) cornland (6 acres)
*7 morgens woodland (5 acres)
*10 morgens 'plain' land (7 acres)
* 5 morgens salt meadow (3 acres) plus
*brewery and equipment for 3000 guilders
His son, Coert Stevense, was about 22 years old when they arrived in New Amsterdam. Coert met and married Marretje Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven ```The Van Kouwenhoven family (commonly called Conovers) is very well researched Genealogically by David Kipp Conover and you can see the story on his webpages: http://www.conovergenealogy.com/conover-p/index.htm Marretje Gerretje's grandfather was Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven who was one of the first settlers of New Amsterdam. see Footnote 4.``` in about 1663 in the Dutch Reformed Church there. ```Coert Stevenes was the son of Aeltje Wessels, Steven's first wife who had died in the Netherlands. Stevens second wife was Willemtje Roelofs Seuberinge by which he has two more children, Lucas Stevense and Jan Stevense. Lucas has a daughter, Annetie Lucasse, who marries William Willemse Van Kouwenhoven, son of Willem Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven and Jannetije Pieterse Monfoort. Willemse Van Kouwenhoven was the grandson of Gerret Wolfersen Van Kouwenhoven and great grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven. An existing 13-by-18-inch document, written in ink in Dutch, confirms the purchase of the land in the Flatlands section of Brooklyn from the Indians by Wolfert Gerritsz van Couwenhoven and Andries Hudde. This oldest know deed of land in North America, signed by Dutch Colonial Gov. Wouter von Twiller at "Eylandt Manhatans" on June 6, 1636, confirms the purchase of 3,600 acres from the Lenape Indians. The land is known as Keskachauge, and constitutes a large portion of present day Brooklyn. Wolfert immigrated abt 1624 - 1625 to New Amsterdam and was one of the first settlers.```
The families in New Amsterdam tended to be large. Coert Stevense had nine children with Cornelius Coerte being the direct ancestor. Cornelius married Annetje Rapalje and had five children with the son Daniel being my ancestor. We do not know when or where Cornelius died but Daniel was born in 1701 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, NY. In September of 1664 the British had temporarily taken over the colony only to lose it the next year then gain it back permanently in 1674. Around 1678, the Van Voorhees family moved north to Oyster Bay. ``` Oyster bay (Nassau Co) in about 45 km northeast of Flatlands, King Co. (Amesfoot) on Long Island. Amesfoot: Beginning in 1636, a handful of New Amsterdam residents bought large tracts of farmland in an area of western Long Island in which the soil was unusually fertile. Eleven years later, there were enough residents to warrant naming the place as a town. New Amersfoort recalled the city of Amersfoort, near Utrecht, in the Netherlands. By 1654, the town was sizable enough to have magistrates, militia officers, and of course taverns. The following year the neighboring town of Midwout, which was building a church for the use of all area residents, was forced to ask the council of New Netherland to order the citizens of New Amersfoort to help cut and haul timber for the church. By 1656, the residents had taken on more responsibility for their religious welfare: they joined with Midwout in petitioning that the residents of Breuckelen help them pay for a minister for the church. Oysterbay used to be the western boundary of New Amsterdam next to where the New Englanders settled on Long Island. ```
!!The Rapaljes Ancestors
Daniel Van Voorhees married Femmetje Bennet in 1724 and her mother was Femmetje Rapalje, a first cousin of Annetje Rapalje, Daniel's mother. Femmetje and Annetje Rapalje had as their grandfather, Joris Jansen Rapalje. Joris was born in 1604 in northern France ( in Valenciennes, Hainault) during a period when this region was occupied by Spain. His French surname was Raparelllet and this became Rapalje, the Dutch version, when he lived in Walloonia, Flanders, now part of Belgium.
Joris immigrated to North America in 1624, the same year he married Catalyntie Trico```Trico is also a 'Dutchification' of Catalyntie's French surname, Tricault``` in Amsterdam, Netherlands. The Rapelje's lived up the Hudson River at Fort Orange (now Albany) for two years before moving into lower Manhattan shortly after the island was 'purchased from the Indians'. They were one of the first families to settle in New Amsterdam. Their first child, Sarah, was the first child of European parents to be born in New Netherlands. In 1643 son Jeronemus (Femmetje Rapelje's father) was born and in 1650 son Daniel (Annetje Rapelje's father) was born. The Rapelje's raised a total of eleven children. Up until about 1654 the family operated a tap-house near the Fort Amsterdam. New Amsterdam became a major Alantic port in the 1650's. Joris had acquired several properties on Manhattan and he and his wife moved to a farm in Brooklyn, located where the Brooklyn Naval Yard is now. Joris died about 1665 and Catalyntie continued to live on the farm, passing away in 1689. By that time she had 150 in her family. Today it is estimated that over a million people can claim to be descendents of Joris Jansen Rapalje and our family is included.
[img[Manhattan Island looking north - 1664 painting by Vingboons|images/NewAmsterdam1664.jpg]]
!!The Move to Dutchess County, NY
[>img[Van Voorhees Homes in New York|maps/vanvoorhees_NY-tn.gif][maps/vanvoorhees_NY.gif]]<<imagebox>>
It is Daniel's sixth child of nine, also named Daniel, who moved out of the New York City area. In 1764 he was in Fishkill, NY to be married to his first wife Sarah Britt and see his first child was born. He was a seaman and joined the rebels in the Revolutionary war. In 1780 he was in Rancocas Creek, New Jersey 19 km from Philadelphia. Back in Dutchess County, NY his first wife died in 1777 leaving two children, Samuel Newton and Sarah. In this period Daniel became Captain Daniel VanVoohis. ```Daniel Van Voorhis is mentioned in a History of Washington County, PA "He was a seafaring man, following navigation most of his life; he was master of several merchant ships of which he was part owner. During the revolution he was taken prisoner three different times by the British, and each time suffering a total loss of his vessel. During an engagement one time a stanchion of the vessel against which he was leaning was carried away by a cannon ball. With two other captains as prisoners, he was taken to some Spanish island for safe keeping, from the dangers of which they escaped only to be recaptured." Presumably he did his seafaring while living in Oyster Bay. Daniel was also in the Revolutionary War in Hopkins Regiment of NY Militia in 1778 when he is 40 years old.``` A second marriage to Mary Newton from 1780 to 1789 produced four more children and by this time they were living in Carroll Township of Washington County in western Pennsylvania. They moved there in 1786 but Mary died in 1789 and Daniel married Nancy Meyers in 1791 and had two more children. He lead a pioneering life in western Pennsylvania and died in 1819 at the age of 80 being buried in Carroll Twp, Washington Co. His third wife lived until 1840 and a small villiage in the county is named VanVoorhis.
It is Daniels first son, Samuel Newton, born in Dutchess Co, NY in 1774 and raised by grandparents who eventually moved to Crawford County in Ohio with his family. He married Sarah Meyers (note same surname as his father's third wife!) in Duchess Co, NY in 1800 and lived there for about 10 years before moving to western Pennsylvania at Charleroi, Wasthington county near where his father lived until 1819. In 1821, after 10 years in Pennsylvania, Samuel obtained property in Whetstone township, Crawford County, OH and moved his family there.
!!The Other Line of Van Voorhees
Samuel's mother, Sarah was also a Van Voorhees and descended from Steven Coerten Van Voorhees. Samuel was only 3 years old, and sister Sarah was born the year their mother died, presumably giving birth to Sarah. Samuel and his sister were raised by their grandparents, Coert and Catherin (Filkin) Van Voorhees. Coerte was the son of Johannes Coerte Van Voorhees who had moved from Flatlands in New York City to Ducthess County. Samuel lived in Dutchess County, NY until he was 36 years old when he left to live in Washington County, PA ``` In the History of Washington County, PA a biography mentions Samuel ".. Samuel, who was for a long time a successful merchant of New York city, about the beginning of this century came to this county, and lived for a short time in a cabin near where the Black Diamond Coal Works are now situated, and afterwards removed to Bucyrus, Ohio, where he died a few years ago at an advanced age.``` .
Johannes Coerte Van Voorhees ```Johannes was married to Barbara Van Dyck whose grandfather, Jan Thomasse Van Dyck, was one of the first settlers of New Amsterdam. He arrived in North America in 1652 and settled in New Utrecht.```and was the brother of Cornelius Coerte Van Voorhees (Captain Daniel's grandfather) and purchased 2790 acres there in a narrow strip running to the east of the Hudson River just north of Fishkill. Johanne's oldest Son, Coert, was born in 1706 and married Catherina Filkin in 1727. They had ten children, the ninth of which was Sarah born in 1746.
[<img[Land of Johanne Van Voorhees in Duchess County, N.Y.|maps/fishkill_vanvoorhees_property-tn.jpg][maps/fishkill_vanvoorhees_property.jpg]]<<imagebox>>
Sarah Van Voorhees had married Francis Brett ```Francis Brett (or Britt) was the son of Roger and Catherina (Rombout) Brett. Roger was accidentally killed in 1716 when the boom of the ship he was on swept him into the Hudson River and he drown. This sets Francis' age to near 50 when he married Sarah Van Voorhees. His first wife had died, his eight children would have left the home before then and his mother died the year he married Sarah. He was less than 55 when he died leaving Sarah a widow in her early twenties. Catherina was a land wealthy woman, since she never married after her husband's death and she was the heir to huge land patent granted her father Francis Rombout. He was in a partnership with Stephanus Van Cortlandt and Jacobus Kip, who married the widow of Gulian Verplanck later on, obtained a patent from the Duke of York in 1665, covering the whole territory lying between the Fishkill and Wappinger creeks, and running eastward on lines parallel with these creeks "four hours going in the woods," (to use the quaint but not definite language of their patent). It was Verplanck that sold nearly 3000 acres to Johanne Coert Van Voorhees when he moved to the Fishkill area. ``` in 1764 when she was only 18. Five years later Sarah Brett was widowed and married her third cousin from Oyster Bay, Daniel Van Voorhees . Unfortunately, she died at age 31 after she had her second child in 1777.
Coerte Van Voorhees (Sarah's father) provided generously in his will (1782) for his grand-children, Samuel and Sarah. He left a 150 acres of farm next to his daughter Mary's and the proceeds from it for their upbringing and education. Their father, Daniel, had previously left for the Revolutionary war and apparently did not have any further contact with his first two children. Coerte Van died in 1785 and his grandchildren were well provided for. ```Coerte's fathers will left him a good share of the Van Voorhees property in Duchess County. Quoting from the will: " ...I give and bequeath unto my well and beloved son, Court Van Voorhis, the sum of five pounds to be raised and levied out of my personal estate, wherewith I do exclude and bar him from any other further claim as being my eldest son and heir-in-law...... I give, devise, and bequeath all my Real Estate whatsoever and wheresoever, in the manner following, that is to say: one equal quarter part unto my aforesaid son, Court, and unto his heirs and assigns forever: ..."```
Samuel's sister Sarah followed her mother's pattern and married a cousin, John Van Voorhees (b:1768) ```He was a first cousin, the son of John Van Voorhees, Sarah's uncle - both had the common grand parents of Daniel and Femmetje (Bennet) Van Voorhees``` The couple were married in 1797 in the Dutch Reformed Church in Fishkill, NY and in the next 21 years have ten children, three boys and seven girls. The three boys were named Daniel, Samuel and William.
!!The Move Westward into Pennsylvania and Ohio
Samuel Newton was raised in Fishkill, Dutchess county along the Hudson River and married Sarah Meyers there in 1800 when he was 26 years old. Ten years later he moved his family to Charleroi, PA in Washington County on the Mongehela River. His father had been in that area but died in 1819. Shortly after that, in 1821, Samuel moves on to Whetstone township in Crawford County, OH to become one of the pioneers in that area. He purchased 80 acres on the 16th February 1822 "East half of the South East quarter of section twenty one, in township three, South of the base line, of Range seventeen, in the District of Delaware and State of Ohio,.." ```This property is shown as being owned by Samuel's son Isaac in Whetstone Township in the 1855 Atlas of Crawford County (note: this is surrounded by the property of John Campbell) ```.
Samuel's second Son, William Roe, ```Note: Several Van Voorhees and Van Voorhis families used the name William Roe and one of them (born 1737 in Fishkill, NY) was a Major in the infantry during the war of 1812. He is the only Major William Roe Van Voorhis. He is a 2nd cousin once removed from the William Roe in Ohio. To add to the confusion, Major William Roe Van Voorhees names one of his sons William Roe.``` was born (1803) back in Duchess County, NY, and a teen ager when they arrive in Ohio. There he met and married Hanna Jones and started a family in 1824. They had six children by 1836 when the family moved to Michigan (maybe to be with Hanna's parents who are in Wayne County, MI). Hanna died in 1841 and William moved back to Crawford County where he soon married Almeda Johnson (1842). Almeda had recently been widowed by the death of her husband, Benjamin Warder, in 1840. Almeda had two children from her previous marriage and added ten children more to the large Van Voorhis family. Four of the children were added within two years when she has a set of twins in both 1855 and in 1857. The new family remained in Crawford County, Ohio until 1860 when they moved to Woods County, Ohio for 17 years. They return to Crawford Count in 1877 to stay for the rest of their lives. Both parents lived to be over ninety years old. William Roe ~VanVoorhis died in 1893 while Almeda lived until 1910.
Almeda's fourth Van Voorhis child and third girl was Eliza born in 1848 in Morrow County Ohio (??? why ???). In 1869 Eliza married Alvin Oliver Smith, from a nearby farm south of North Robinson, Ohio. Alvin was a farmer and Eliza has eight children over the next 14 years. [<em>See the picture of Alvin and Eliza Smith at the top </em>] Here the genealogy merges with the Smiths and Bogans. Jessie May Smith marries William Edgar Bogan in 1893.
!!!Footnotes
The first Van Voorhees in North America was Steven Coertes Van Voorhees (1600-1684) born in Hees, Drenthe, Netherlands and emigrated to New Amsterdam (New Amesfoot) in 1660 and purchase property there. His son Coert Stevense Van Voorhees and others of his family came with him. He is in the pedigree chart twice because 2nd cousins Daniel and Sarah Van Voorhees marry and have the son Samuel Newton.
The earliest ancestor to arrive in North America was Joris Jansen Papalje (or Rapalje) (1572-1665) who arrived in New Amsterdam from France in 1623. He was at Fort Orange (Albany, NY) for awhile then settled in the Brooklyn area of New Amsterdam to be an inn keeper and eventually a magistrate in Brooklyn were he retired. He purchased land (335 acres) in Brooklyn from the 'Indians' and was granted a patent for the land by the Governor. Two of his sons, Daniel and Jeronemus are in the pedigree chart below.
Note: 3gp = great-great-grandparent
|8gp| Coert Stevense Van Voorhees<br> 1638-1699<br>b: Hess, Drenthe, Netherlands | Marretje Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven | Daniel Jorise Papalje^^2^^<br>1650-1725<br>New Amsterdam |Sarah Klock<br>1654-1731<br>New Amsterdam |Adrian Bennet<br>1637-1704 | Angenietje Van Dyck^^3^^<br>1644-1711 |Jeronemus Joris Papalje^^2^^<br>b:1643<br>Brooklyn | Anna Dennyse<br>Brooklyn | Coert Stevense Van Voorhees<br> 1638-1699<br>b: Hess, Drenthe, Netherlands | Marretje Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven | Archias Van Dyck^^3^^<br>1649-1707 | Jannetie Lamberts |
|7gp|>| Cornelius Coerte Van Voorhees<br>1678-?<br>b:Oyster Bay, LI, NY |>| Annetje Papalje<br>1681-? |>| Jan Adrianse Bennet |>| Femetje Papalje |>| Johanne Coert Van Voorhees<br>1683-1757<br>b:Flatlands, LI, NY |>| Barbara Van Dyck<br>b:1680's |>| Henry Filkin |>| Catherine Vonck |>| - |>| - |>| - |>| - |>| - |>| - |>| - |>| - |
|6gp|>|>|>| Daniel Van Voorhees<br>1701-?<br>b:Oyster Bay, NY |>|>|>| Femmetji Bennet<br>1706-? |>|>|>| Coert Van Voorhees<br>1706-1785<br>b:Dutchess Co, NY |>|>|>| Catherin Filkin<br>Kings Co, NY<br>1707-1777 |>|>|>| - |>|>|>| - |>|>|>| - |>|>|>| - |>|>|>|
|5gp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Capt Daniel Van Voorhis^^1^^<br>Oyster Bay, NY<br>1738-1819 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Sarah Van Voorhees^^1^^<br>1746-1777<br>b:Dutchess Co, NY |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| ? Myers<br> |>|>|>|>|>|>|>| ? |
|4gp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Samuel Newton Van Voorhis<br>b: Duchess Co, NY<br>1774-1857 |>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| Sally Myers<br>b: Duchess Co, NY<br>1784-1848 |
|3gp|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>|>| William Roe Van Voorhis<br>b:Dutchess Co, NY<br>1803-1893 |
''Note 1:'' Capt Daniel Van Voorhees and Sarah Van Voorhees had the same great grand parents on their father's side and are 2nd cousins.
''Note 2:'' The father of both Jeronemus and Daniel Rapelje was Joris Jansen Rapalje born in 1604 in Spain occupied Netherlands and was one of the first settlers to New Amsterdam, arriving in 1623 and living first at Fort Orange (Albany, NY).
''Note 3:'' Angenietje and Achias Van Dyck are sister and brother whose parents were Jan Thomasse and Tryntje Archias (Haegan) Van Dyck. The family arrived in New Amsterdam from Amsterdam in 1652.
The Table below summarizes the events in the Van Voorhees / Van Voorhis family in a chronological manner.
//Note: VV is used to indicate the name Van Voorhees / Van Voorhis//
| Year | Event | Comment |h
| abt 1600 | Coert Steven Van Vorhees born Hees, Drethe, Netherlands | - |
| 1609 | - | Henry Hudson explored the mouth of the Hudson River |
| 1620 | - | Pilgrims heading for the Hudson River stop at Cape Cod and do not get any farther |
| 1621 | - | Dutch West Indian Company is formed |
| 1624 | - | New Amsterdam becomes capital<br> of New Netherlands in the America <br>First official settlement of the area starts |
| 1638 | son Coert Stevense born in Hees | - |
| 1660 | Coert Steven Van Voorhees immigrates to New Amsterdam<br> with his family including Coert Stevense <br> Stats a brewing business in Flatlands | - |
| abt 1664 | son, Coert, marries Marretze Van Kouwenhoven in New Amsterdam | Four British frigates sail into NY Harbour and force the surrender of New Amsterdam and start the Second ~Dutch-Anglo war. |
| 1667 | - | Treaty of Breda ends the war but New York stays British |
| 1673 | - | In July the Dutch retake New York in the Third ~Dutch-Anglo War - rename it New Orange |
| 1674 | - | In November the Dutch relinquish New Orange to the British and it reverts to New York |
| 1678 | Cornelius Coerte born in Flatlands (6th child and 3rd son) | - |
| 1683 | Johanne Coerte born in Flatlands (8th child and 4th son) | - |
| 1691 | Coert Stevense buys the real estate of John Tilton in Gravesend | - |
| abt1696 | Cornelius married Annetje Papalje<br>(Her grandfather, Joris Jansen Papalje, was one of the first settlers of New Amsterdam in 1623) | |
| 1697 | - | Lower Nine Partners patent granted an area about 9 miles wide and 7 miles along the Hudson River in Dutchess County to nine families |
| 1699 | Coert S VV died and passed property in Brooklyn to son Albert | - |
| 1701 | Daniel Van Voorhees born to Cornelius and Annetje in Oyster Bay, Long Island | - |
| 1703 | Johannes Van Voorhees married Barbara Van Dyck in Duchess County, NY | - |
| 1706 | Coert Van Voorhees born to Johannes and Barbara VV <br> their second child but first son | - |
| 1724 | Daniel married Femmetje Bennett (whose mother is Femetje Papalje) | - |
| 1730 | Johannes purchased 2790 acres from Philip Verplank along the Hudson River near Fishkill in the Rombout Patent | |
| 1727 | Coert VV married Catherin Filkin (daughter of Henry Filkin one of the partners in the Nine Partners Patent of land) | |
| 1738 | Son Daniel VV born to Daniel and Femmetje VV in Oyster Bay <br> fifth child and fourth son | |
| 1746 | Sarah VV born to Coert and Catherine in Fishkill <br>ninth of ten children and seventh daughter | |
| 1754<br>1763 | - | French and Indian War<br>or Seven Year War |
| 1757 | Johannes Coerte VV died and leaves 1/4 of his real estate to Coert | - |
| 1764 | Sarah VV married widower Francis Brett (age abt 50)<br> Son of Roger Brett and Catherine Rombout who had the huge Rombout Grant in Dutchess County, NY | - |
| 1769 | Widowed Sarah Brett remarried to Cousin Daniel VV | - |
| 1774 | Son Samuel Newton is born to Sarah and Daniel VV | - |
| 1776 | Daniel VV leaves to fight for colonies<br>joins Capt. John W. Van Benshoten's company, Col. Roswell Hopkins 6th Regiment | American Revolution begins |
| 1777 | Daughter Sarah born to Sara and Daniel but Sarah dies | - |
| 1782 | Grandfather Coert's will leaves 150 acres for income for raising grandchildren Samuel and Sarah<br>The property is near Pleasant Valley, Dutchess Co, NY | - |
| 1780 | Daniel married Mary Newton and they live in Racocas, NY | - |
| 1783 | - | End of the American Revolution |
| 1785 | Daniel and Mary VV move to Pigeon Creek, Carroll Twp, Washington Co, PA | - |
| 1788 | Daniel VV buys two lots of land along Pigeon Creek of 374 and 158 acres | - |
| 1789<br>1791 | Mary Newton VV died in Nov<br>Capt. Daniel VV married Nancy Myer | - |
| 1800 | 22 June Samuel Newton married Sarah Myers of Dutchess Co, NY | - |
| 1801<br>1803<br>1809 | Daniel born<br> William Roe born<br>Charles Edward born to Samuel and Sarah VV | Ohio becomes a State |
| aft1810 | Samuel and family moves to Charloi, Washington County, PA near where Daniel is living in Carroll Twp<br> | - |
| 1812-1814 | Susan ~VanVoorhis born 1812 | War with Britian |
| 1816 | Sally Ann ~VanVoorhis born | - |
| 1819 | Capt. Daniel VV died in February near Hazelkirk, PA | JNA Bogen died in Carlisle, PA |
| 1821 | - | Disberry Johnson (with young Almeda) moved to Crawford County from Harrison County, Ohio |
| 1822 | Samuel buys 80 Acres in Whetstone Twp, Crawford Co, OH | - |
| 1824 | William Roe VV married Hanna Jones of Wayne Co, MI | - |
| 1836-1841 | William Roe VV family in Michigan<br>family have seven children (1827-1936) | Joseph Smith moved from Perry Co, PA to Crawford Co, OH |
| 1841 | Hanna (Jones) VV died, and family returns to Ohio | - |
| 1842 | William Roe VV married Almeda Johnson in Crawford Co, OH | - |
| 1848 | In July Eliza Van Voorhis is born to William Roe and Almeda in Morrow County Ohio<br> She is the fourth child and third daughter | John Henry Bogen and family moved from Marion County to Whetstone township, Crawford County |
| 1861-1865 | - | The US Civil War |
| 1869 | Eliza married Alvin Oliver Smith in Crawford County Ohio | - |
<<notes heading:"Work Needed in Tiddlers">>
!!V 3.2 (created 5 Mar 2012)
*Added TiddlersBarPlugin so tabs show presence of tiddlers and the text does not stretch down the page
*Started using the 'showtoc' macro to show table of contents of tiddlers with subheadings.
*Added this section to keep track of versions and give a history of the Wiki development. Information on previous version will be sketchy.
!!V 3.1 (created July 2011)
*Between July 2011 and March 2012 a lot of material and structure was created.
*Added PageTemplate that put the Main Menu at the top.
*This version had many of the Plugins added such as footnotes, lightbox, collapsible sidebar, etc
!!V 2.5 (created July 2011)
*A short lived version
!!V 2.0 (created May 2011)
!!V 1.0 (First version 2011)
*This one established the initial structure of the Wiki using TiddlyWiki.
* Eliminate all the "missing" Wikiwords created in text of Tiddlers
* Timelines for short sections of the families would also be instructive - perhaps as a graphics
* Plan to make this wiki as all inclusive of information as possible - perhaps need better organizing
* Make a VanVoorhis Chronology
* Make a Kunkel Chronology
* Make a category for Other families eg. Baerchirchers, Cralls, McKanna with interesting stories
* Find a way to list tiddlers using two or more tags
* Map - Families Sites in Ohio (outside Crawford Co)
* Map - Townships of Crawford County
* Check that the necessary Pedigree Charts are done for all families
* Check that the necessary Descendency Charts are done for the major families
*Use the Tag to separate the type of content:
**Chronology
**Notes (//information on the wiki and its use//)
**Maps
**Facts (//miscellaneous information not in story format//)
*Do Not Use 'The' at the begining of a title - just so it is not alphabatized according to 'T'
Leota Jane Reber Bogan was born to Verda Kehrer in union with Russell Volkmer on 7 February 1919. Russell did not marry Verda but left Crawford County, Ohio soon after the incident. In 1920, he was in Toledo, Ohio, living with his brother Clemence and working on the Railroad and by 1930 was in Coldwater, Michigan with a wife and two children.
[>img[Russell Volkmer (on left) with Carl Kehrer (right) - about 1918|images\carl_kehrerrussell_volkmer.jpg]]
The first ancestor Volkmer in North America was Christian Volkmer who arrived in June of 1852 with his family from Schwarzburg Lovdresh in Germany. ```Lewis Volkmer was born in 1851 and in the US Census indicates he was born in Ohio. This is before the arrival of his parents to North America.``` He obtained citizenship in 1856 and settled in Lykens Twp of Crawford Co, OH with the occupation of a shoemaker. Three children Olivert, Charles, and Lewis had been born in Germany, while two girls Amelia and Emma were born in Ohio after they arrived. Marioh de (unknown surname), Christian's first wife, died in 1868 and he remarried in 1882 to Nancy Houpt from Chatfield Twp. By this time Christian was over 57 years old and had no more children. Both of Christian's wives are buried in Brokensword cemetery but Christian's burial is not recorded in any of Crawford County cemeteries.
Only the son, Lewis Volkmer, stayed in Crawford Co, OH and the rest of the family seemed to have moved elsewhere. ```The cemetery records of Crawford County have none of the other children of Christian.``` Lewis, born in 1851, became a Stone Mason and lived in Brokensword on the boundary of Holmes and Lykens Townships. In 1871, he married Catherine Seibert, daughter of Peter Seibert, an early pioneer to Crawford County from Bavaria. Her mother was Catherine Weaversmith who was born in Ohio. Lewis and Catherine's first son was John C. born in 1878. Other children were a daughter, Emma, and two other sons, Hoadly and Roy (b: 1889) . Catherine died sometime before 1893 and Lewis remarried to Emma Nachbar in 1893. The latter had one daughter Ruth born in 1898.
John Volkmer, is Leota's grandfather. He was a day laborer before becoming a farmer in Lykens Twp by 1920. In 1898 John married Mary E. Laipply also of Brokensword. ```Mary's brother Frederick Simon Laipply married John Volkmer's sister Emma. Mary's parents were Simeon Laipply and Matilda Bauer both of Lyken's Township of Crawford County, Ohio. The Laipply grandparents were John Laipply and Susan Meyer while the Bauer grandparents were Adam Bauer and Katheryn Baker.``` They had seven children (four boys and three girls) between 1899 and 1914. The second son was Russell Volkmer born in 1900. Two of the daughters died young (ages 1 and 9 years) but all the sons lived to maturity.
Russell Volkmer was a friend of Samuel Kehrer's sons, Carl (b:1895) and Calvin (b: 1903). Many of the pictures from about 1918 show Russell with the Kehrers (one photo is included here). It is probably in this manner that Russell and Verda knew each other and in 1919 Verda gave birth to Russell's child, Leota (surname given as Kehrer on the birth certificate). Russell did not marry Verda and in 1920 was working in Toledo on the railroad with his brother Clemence.
In February 1922 Russell J. Volkmer and Stella A. Grohke had a daughter, Shirley, who was stillborn and buried in the Brokensword Cemetery. Russell and Stella were married in 1922 and by 1930 had two young sons, Russell Jr (b:1925) and Arland (b: 1926). ```Not from Marriage record - this date come from the US census.``` They were in Coldwater, Mi, and Russell worked as an Auto Mechanic. He remained in Coldwater raised his family and passed away in 1970.
Russell Jr. died in 1991 while his brother, Arland died in 2006 both in Coldwater Michigan. These were Leota's two half-brothers that she never knew.
!!Welcome to the Bogan and Related Families Wiki
[>img[Leota Kehrer on Whetstone Farm|images/Leota@farm.jpg]]This wiki format is being used to display information on my families in a 'readable' and linked form.
Hopefully, it will be a user friendly resource from which you can access information about your ancestors OR other related interesting ancestors.
*Use the __Main Menu__ above in the header.
**Each of these also have drop-down multiple links to related articles
**Note: The [Sidebar] selection in the Main Menu will toggle the right sidebar Visible/Hidden.
*Use the __tags and links__ on the right sidebar to select from types of content, they are:
**stories
**pedigree
**descendants
**maps
**facts
There are also five tags for the major family divisions based on my great-grandparent's families.
**Bogan and Pfahler on my Dad's side and
**Kehrer, Reber, and Volkmer (the latter two being my mothers blood father's parents)
*Use the ((Wiki Words(A title of a tiddler that gives a hypertext link to the article))) (highlighted) to jump between various writings and charts
* Use the __Search Box__ (on the right in the header)
If you are looking for someone or place just enter it in the search box to the upper-left and hit enter. All the 'Tiddlers' (sections) containing that name will be shown in this column.
!!!!Suggested Reading Order
If you want to get an overall view of the families the following are some suggested pages to start reading.
*[[Families]] provides an overview of the major families in a pedigree format. There are links on this page to other pages with more detailed pedigrees. These will show the relationship between families.
*[[Locations]] lists several pages that show where families came from in Europe and Eastern United States. Two of them concentrate just on the Bogan family [[Bogan Family Home Locations]] and [[JNA Bogen in Frederick, MD]].
!!Navigating this Wiki
[>img[images/tiddler_menu.gif]]When you select a page to read (called a 'tiddler' in this wiki) - it is inserted above the current one and as you select other tiddlers they are stacked above each other. The navigation is done by closing tiddlers. That is done in the menu at the upper left of the tiddler itself. There is one such menu on all tiddlers. Some may not be as shown in the example to the right.
//Note: The forward and back arrows on the browser will not get you back and forth to different tiddlers.//
!!Genealogy Included
Some genealogies find ancestors of themselves or their parents and some find the descendents of one of a person's ancestors. I started with the Bogan family (in about 2004) since that is my surname and found my pedigree of Bogans but I soon did the same for my mother's family, the Rebers and Kehrers. It is artificial to only follow the paternal side of ones family since ones biological (genetics) are equally contributed to by both parents (or grandparents). Eventually, I was searching for all families in my pedigree. I have even investigated branch families that are not directly related to me. The result is a large collection of ancestors some dating back to the 16th century.
The investigation of ancestors showed that my parents and I are descended from mostly German families. There is one family from the Netherlands and one from Scotland and possibly a couple from England. The family names and origins along with the dates of immigration to North America are shown on the [[Origins]] page.
Almost all the facts on my ancestors have been put in a database using the software Legacy and that has been distributed to a couple of Internet Genealogical Sites
#Rootsweb World Connect data base called bopfreke at [[http://www.rootsweb.com|http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bopfreke]]
#My Genealogy Webpage - [[http://www.bogan.ca/ancestors|http://www.bogan.ca/ancestors]]
#Family Stories Page on my Website - [[http://www.bogan.ca/stories|http://www.bogan.ca/stories]] - from which much of the story material came.
>The major research sources are listed in [[Research Resources]] but the reader is refered to the database for the families (Legacy and Gedcom files) given in the above websites.
!!Version
This document is an html file called 'bogans_wiki_v3.2.html' and is viewable in any browser. It is self contained except for the graphics.
Graphics and supplementary documents for this document are held in subdirectories named 'files', 'maps' and 'images'. These hold all the pictures and maps for the 'tiddlers'.
Most recent revision dated: //14 Mar 2012 by Larry Bogan// See the tiddler [[Versions History and Notes]] for more details on the development of this document.
The following articles provide general information about this database of families and the research needed to collect all the informations
<<tagging Facts>>