Rob's Genealogy

Lewis and Regenhardt lines of Southeast Missouri and Related Families

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901 Absolam Parker Robinson was born 16 NOV 1857 place unknown to parents unknown; this information is shown on his death certificate. 22 March 1878 he married Jospehine Parks who died 12 August 1900. After Josephine's death he married Mary Davis (maiden name unknown). Absolam died 17 June 1936 in Doniphan, Ripley Co., MO while visiting his son Delbert Robinson. His occupation was sewing machine salesman. Absolam's residency was Des Arc, Iron Co., MO. Absolam and Josephine are both buried in Mountain View Cemetery at Des Arc.

Family legend says Absolam did have at least one brother, the parents of the brothers died young. The boys were split up and raised by different families. One of the brothers may have been named Alex or an Uncle may have been Alex. When Absolam and a brother were very, very young lads they were chopping wood and one accidently chopped the heel off the other. The two met as adults and thought they knew each other. One asked the other to remove his shoe (believe the right shoe) and the man's heel was missing. The men then recognized each other as brothers.

-Absolam Robinson biography courtesy Kurt Hamm on ancestry.com 
Robinson, Absolam Parker (55473094)
 
902 absolute@avangate.com Jones, Shedrick J. Jr (30837876)
 
903 Abstracted Obituary -
The Register-News, Mt. Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois, Undated:
SMOOT, Robert Kenneth, 88 (includes photo), of Mt Vernon d. 13 July 2000 at home; b. 8 Feb 1912 in Tower Grove; s/o Walter H. SMOOT & Grace McHENRY; m/1 Vera REED in 1934, she d. 1973; md Wilma R. DONELSON SMITH 31 Dec 1975, she survives; surv. by sons Kerry SMOOT and Bob SMOOT; grandchildren, Robbie, Tony, Lee, Kevin, Karah and Shane SMOOT; great-granddaughter, Hayley SMOOT; stepsons, Richard SMITH and wife Aldona, and Deon SMITH and wife Shirley; stepdaughter, Caroline KELLY; stepgrandchildren (named); step-great grandchildren (named); sister, Mildred HINTON; preceded in death by parents, 1st wife; 4 brothers; 2 sisters; burial Mt. Vernon Memorial Gardens Cem. 
Smoot, Robert Kenneth (96528750)
 
904 abt 1848
Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio, United States

Residence
1860
Age: 12
Independence, Cuyahoga, Ohio, United States

Marriage to Rebecca Isabelle Castile
8 May 1879

Age: 31
Iron, Iron, Missouri, United States

Residence
1880
Age: 32
Union, Iron, Missouri, United States

Residence
1910
Age: 62
Union, Iron, Missouri

Residence
1920
Age: 72
Union, Iron, Missouri

Death
1935
11 Feb
Age: 87
Iron, Iron, Missouri, United States 
Lotz, Adolphus G (91573124)
 
905 Acacia Lawn, Gate 17, Section 3, Lot 2459, Grave 3 Poe, Virginia (84074700)
 
906 accident - electrocution Ische, Paul Marvin Louis (39743575)
 
907 According to 1880 census - Henry and Fredericke Scheppelmann had the following children:
Albert age 13; Edward age 10; William age 9;
Henry age 6; Frieda age 2 and Bertha 6 Mo.
 
Scheppelmann, Heinrich "Henry" (64242456)
 
908 Acording to his obit, they had a total of 12 children. 2 may have died young - I have found no record of them.
 
Hilkerbaumer, Gottlieb H. (53036239)
 
909 ADAM McNEELY
(Son of David)
Adam married Lattice Kilpatrick daughter of John and Elizabeth McKnight Kilpatrick, Sister of William and Elizabeth.

Adam had the following will:
In the name of God amen. I ADAM McNEELY of the County of Iredell and Sate of North Carolina being in perfect health of body and mind do make this and publish this my last will
and testament in the manner following.

I give and bequeath unto LATTICE my wife her living on the plantation which I now live and give her my Negro Fanny her horse and saddle and all the household and kitchen furniture to be divided amongst my children as she may think proper and give her the use of all my Negro during her life and then to be
divided as follows;

To my SON DAVID I give and devise all that part of land on which he now lives and third of my Negro boy Perry at the death of his mother.

To my SON JOHN I give and devise all that part or parcel of land on which he now lives and the third of my Negro Perry at the death of his mother.

To my SON JAMES I give and devise all that part or parcel of land on which he now lives and the third part of my Negro boy Perry at the death of to his mother, to be valued by my three Sons above mentioned and one of them to keep him and not put him out of the family.

To my SON ZEKIEL (Ezekial mm) I give and devise my plantation known by Neils land joining my Son JAMES and his horse and Saddle and bridle two cows and his share of the plows and plow gears. I give him my black girl Mriah and Hiram my black boy at the death at of his mother.

To my SON HEZEKIAH I give and bequeath the plantation on which he now lives waggon and gears and cloth , his share of the plows and plow gears with all the horses and cattle on the place and I give him my black woman Sol and my boy Sam by him paying my grandson ADAM ALBERT ten dollars he comes of age. My Smith tools to be left where they are for the use of all my children.

I do hereby appoint my two sons DAVID AND JOHN McNEELY to be my executors of this my last will and testament revoking all former wills and testaments.

I witness whereof I have hereunto set my had and seal this fourth day of December in the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and twenty Eight.

Signed Sealed published and delivered to be my last will and signed in the presence of us
s/David Kilpatrick,
Jabes(SP?) N. Kilpatrick Jurat.
s/Adam McNeely seal.
Book page 85 Iredell County, NC.


Children of Adam and Lattice Kilpatrick McNeely are: Lattice, Nancy, Polly, David, John, James, Ezekial and Hezekiah.


- courtesy McNeelys of Northwest Missouri by Maurice McNeely pg 57-58.
 
McNeely, Adam (45065537)
 
910 Add Photo
Aune Wesa

Birth 1902
Death 1912
Burial Menahga City Cemetery Wadena County, Minnesota, USA
Plot Orig, Blk 3, Lot 17, Gv 6

Memorial ID 185405465  
Wesa, Anne (80829104)
 
911 Address

Delivered at the Funeral of William Regenhardt

April 9,1903

Psalm 112, 6.:
"The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance."


When William Regenhardt drew his last breath at half past ten o'clock last Tuesday morning, a good man, a prominent and distinguished citizen, a highly esteemed and valuable member of the Lutheran Church, the honored head of a family, and the cherished friend of many of his fellow-men passed form time into eternity. In his demise a long and useful career on earth has reached its end. Large is the number of those who lament his death. It includes not only his faithful spouse, children, grandchildren andother near of kin; it includes also a large circle of personal friends, business associates and a host of men who formerly or of late were in the employ of the deceased; it includes our whole city and county; it includes the members of the Lutheran church in this city of which the deceased was an old member and a faithful officer for many years. Among the member of mourners is also his pastor who loved and esteemed the deceased very highly as a precious child of God by faith in Christ Jesus. I venture to say that there is no one present in this large assembly who is not sorry that the deceased has left us; we would all gladly have kept him in our midst for a few years longer at least.
But the time of his departure was come, and his soul, in peace with God and man, passed into another, a better and brighter world. Our loss is his gain. It devolves on us to bring his earthly remains to their last resting place on earth. I deem it a privilege to officiate at his funeral and to pay this tribute of love and respect to his memory. For he was one of "the righteous" of whom our text speaks, saying that they "shall be in everlasting remembrance".
"The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance", says the Psalmist. Who are the righteous? Righteousness may be considered under two heads, as righteousness before men and as righteousness before God. The two must not be confounded. The one belongs to the province of nature, the other to the province of grace. The one is a very desirable thing in the sphere of civil life, the other is an important factor in the sphere of spiritual life. The one is the result of our own endeavors under divine providence, the other is the righteousness of Christ appropriated by faith.
In the first place, there is such a thing as civil righteousness or virtuousness. It consists of leading an outwardly honorable and virtuous life before our fellow-citizens. Civil virtues render a man righteous in the eyes of his fellow-men. Such civil righteousness cannot be recommended and praised too highly in this life. Law-abiding citizens, faithful husbands, men that are upright and honest in word and deed and reliable in their dealings, are a great boon to any community, are the mainstay and support, the pillars and sustainers of family, society, and state. God himself demands such virtues and rewards them in this life with temporal blessings. It is mainly this righteousness of which the Book of Proverbs (chap. 14, 34) is speaking when it says, "Righteousness exalteth a nation; but sin is a reproach to any people." By divine providence honesty is still the best policy, and virtue finds its reward.
Of such civil righteousness our departed friend and fellow-citizen was a glorious type. Born, cradled and reared in Germany, in a village of the Duchy of Brunswick, he came to this country in 1849 at the age of twenty-one and since October of that year has been without interruption a resident citizen of Cape Girardeau. Being one of its oldest, he was at the same time one of its best citizens. He was a man who, as to the virtues which go together to constitute good citizenship, far excelled many and would bear comparison with any. He was plain, economical, and temperate in his habits; fair and considerate toward his fellow-men; conservative in his opinions; charitable in his judgments; slow to speak, but when he did speak, every word full of marrow andto the point. He was of a kind and tender-hearted disposition; to refuse a favor asked for was to him well nigh an impossibility. He was a peaceful neighbor, having a strong dislike against quarreling. He was kind and generous to those who were in his employ. He was a man whom everybody knew and everybody loved. For these reasons he was a very valuable citizen; but he was also a prominent citizen. Taking a lively interest in public affairs very early, he was soon called upon to play a prominent partin the public life of our city and county. More than twenty-five years he was a member of our City Council, and from 1861 till recently he was Chairman of the Republican County Committee. In politics he detested everything which savored of corruption and bribery. In business he was successful; by duit of industry and good management he, by the blessing of the Almighty, prospered in almost everything he undertook. He was connected with a number of business enterprises, and everywhere he won and retained the regard and esteem of his associates. Take him all in all, he was a venerable old gentleman, a citizen who deserved to be highly respected by his fellow-men, a citizen of a kind which every community needs and no community can well afford to lose, His death signifies a loss to our city, and he will always be remembered as one who has been a good, honorable, valuable and prominent citizen of Cape Girardeau.
But he was still more. He was also a Christian, who stood high in the estimation of his fellow-Christians, whose memory will be cherished in the church of which he was an active member for many years, and whose departure has inflicted a loss which will be felt by his fellow-Lutherans for years to come. He took a lively interest in the affairs of the church, was a regular attendant at the public worship and at the lord's table; for twenty years and longer he was member of the Board of Trustees, president of the congregation and chairman at its regular monthly meetings, placing his remarkable ability for conducting a public meeting, his experience, his soundness of judgment, his conservative advice, his extensive influence and other gifts at the disposal of his church. His services were at all times valuable and were highly appreciated. His memory will ever be blessed among us.
But there is still another righteousness which is of far greater value for time and eternity than the one that we have hitherto been speaking of. That is the righteousness which is available in the sight of God. It is the righteousness of Christ which is procured for all men and is imparted of all believers. Civil virtues and Christian graces may render a man righteous in the eyes of his fellow-men and fellow-Christians, but will never justify him before God. And why not? God demands perfect obedience to his law, not only in some outward things, but in desires, thoughts, words, and deeds. Outward conformity to the divine law does not satisfy him, but he looks at the heart and will have us to be pure in heart, holy and without any evil lust, fearinghim and loving him above all things; and all our thoughts and words and deeds are to proceed from such fear and love of God. And he that offends against the divine law in a single point is guilty of all. And since no man can keep them, no man is justified before God by the Jew or Gentile, Pharisee or Publican, have sinned and came short of the glory of God, that in the sight of God we are all as an unclean thing and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags. All mankind is by nature under the wrath of God and deserving of eternal damnation, and hence sorely in need of a Savior, who is righteous himself and whose righteousness may be imparted to sinners. Such a Savior has made his appearance. It is Jesus Christ, True God and true man, who perfectly fulfilled the law in our stead and suffered the penalties of our sins, and by his holy precious blood and by his innocent suffering and death gained for us forgiveness of sins or the righteousness which is valid before God. By the work of redemption which Christ performed in the days of his flesh such righteousness has procured, and in the gospel it is offered to all sinners, and all that believe the gospel and thus accept
this righteousness of Christ actually become partakers of the same and are justified before God. To live up to the so-called Golden Rule is indeed our duty, but since we all come short of fulfilling it perfectly we can not be saved thereby, and if we areto receive for forgiveness of sins and be justified before God, it must be not by our works, but by the grace of God, for Christ's sake, through faith. And in this and in no other way was our departed friend justified before God, and in this and in no other way did he want to be righteous in God's sight. He knew and acknowledged that in spite of his civil virtuousness and Christian conversation he was a sinner deserving divine wrath and eternal condemnation. But he also knew and recognized his Savior Jesus Christ and firmly believed that there was salvation for men in nothing save the grace of God and the merits of Christ. Thus he was righteous before God, and was of the number of "the righteous" who "shall be in everlasting remembrance", who shall not have believed in vain, but who, when they die, are, according to the soul, at once present with Christ and, after the last day, shall be with Christ, body and soul, and live with him in eternal joy and glory. And thus he faced death calmly and serenely, trusting not in his own righteousness, but in the righteousness of his Savior; and his trust has not deceived him. He has entered the realms of everlasting bliss; for "blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth." (Rev. 14, 13.) He is wearing the crown of glory, according to the divine promise, "Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life". (Rev. 2, 10.)
May the memory of William Regenhardt ever remain green among us. May his life and his faith be an example to us prompting us to follow in his foot-steps, striving to be good and useful men and women, and, above all, seeking the kingdom of God and his righteousness. And may we all die the death of righteous, and may our last end be like his. Amen.

 
Regenhardt, Christian Wilhelm (65020753)
 
912 Adopted by Vernon Lewis March 1949. Neal, Rita Joyce (8801968)
 
913 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, Nicholas (84106989)
 
914 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, Mary (41275428)
 
915 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, Samuel (20216790)
 
916 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, Katherine Elizabeth (84341374)
 
917 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, John (54703361)
 
918 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, John (28136064)
 
919 after 1863 - part of West Virginia Woodfin, Thomas (58527676)
 
920 After his escape from the Fulton, Missouri Asylum, on Wed 16 Aug 1893, he moved to Amarillo, Texas and changed his name to Charles Henry Smilth.

https://s1.sos.mo.gov/records/archives/archivesdb/msp/Detail.aspx?id=17013


Offender Information Register Number 10724
Name Munciford Underwood - Offender
Sex Male
Race White
Age/Approx. Year of Birth 24/1869
Nativity Missouri
Trade Farmer

Offense Information Offense Manslaughter, 2nd degree
Location of Court Iron
Sentence Five (5) years from April 29, 1893
Term of Court April 1893
When Received 5/4/1893
Full Time Sentence Expiration 4/29/1898
Date of Discharge 8/3/1893
Discharge Notes Sentence suspended and sent to asylum at Fulton by Gov. Wm. J. Stowe

Location Reel S221
Volume S
Page 107 
Underwood, Munceford C. (70493632)
 
921 After his escape from the Fulton, Missouri Asylum, he moved to Amarillo, Texas and changed his name to Charlles Henry Smilth.
 
Family: Munceford C. Underwood / Sarah Evelyn Vermillion (F37855094)
 
922 After marrying Wilma Harrison in 1986, it seems they could not find the right place to live.

Between 1985 until his death in 1996, they moved to retirement coumunities in the Southern California cities of Hemet, Escondido, San Marcos, and finally at 5580 Aztec Dr, Apt 108 in La Mesa. 
Regenhardt, Edward Taft Werner (59873466)
 
923 After the deaths of Benjamin and Oma, their children were raised by Benjamin's brothers and sister as follows:

Per the 1870 and 1880 Censuses:

Nancy and William "Punkin" - raised by William and Abigail Lewis.

Daniel and Martha Mary "Polly" - raised by Andrew and Angeline Lewis

Naoma "Omy" - raised by Elizabeth Lewis Jackson and her husband Thomas Jackson.

Another daughter, Kizzy, was not in the 1870 Census, and married Andrew Ruble in 1877.

 
Family: Benjamin Lewis / Naoma Huett (F70647206)
 
924 Age 1 year,6 months and 13 days

Children of John & Jane Jackson 
Jackson, Andrew (26543620)
 
925 age 10 days Trickey, Octa C. (53810802)
 
926 age 11 days Trickey, Octa C. (53810802)
 
927 Age 19 years, 2 months and 12 days

Daughter of John & Jane Jackson

Wife of B.Rose 
Jackson, Elizabeth (48972279)
 
928 age 2 in 1920 Census Ruddy, Melba Rose (27549267)
 
929 Age 25 yrs 6 months on grave marker Mann, Christopher Edward (18462146)
 
930 Age 25 yrs 6 months on grave marker Mann, Christopher Edward (18462146)
 
931 Age 4 years, 3 months and 22 days

Children of John & Jane Jackson 
Jackson, Evaline (27483565)
 
932 age 52 yr 8 mo Jackson, Thomas (46803098)
 
933 age 58 Bloom, Lauran Eldon (5717215)
 
934 age 59 Rist, Otto (69999738)
 
935 Age 60 on Marrige License to Robert Miller 9 Nov 1958 Long, Ethel Mildred (36282195)
 
936 age 81 at death Rist, Dr. Walter (23127422)
 
937 Age 89.


Sister of Esther Theresa Smith & the late Emily Hesemann Hausenfratz & Luella Hesemann Huebner; beloved daughter of the late William & Louise Boedecker Hesemann; beloved aunt of Norma Huebner Leuthauser & the late Charles Edward (Linda) Huebner & great-aunt of Cynthia (Richard) Leuthauser Arnell, Mark S. & Chris A. (Jennifer) Leuthauser; great-great-aunt of Monica, Kayla, Eric, Kristen, Emily, Katie & Ryan; beloved cousin & friend to many, including Scott & Barbara Caringer; & especially Sandie & Dale Barger who loved & cared for her in so many ways. 
Hesemann, Rose Virginia (74795611)
 
938 Age is 26 on Ship Passenger List May 1910 Leimbach, Paul (13523437)
 
939 aged 9 months on grave marker McNeely, George W. (86548224)
 
940 Aged 9 years on grave marker McNeely, Robert L. (23512384)
 
941 Airman 1st Class US Air Force - Korea Lewis, Wayne (23179714)
 
942 Aisne-Marne American Cemetery and Memorial Wesa, Arthur John (88570835)
 
943 AKA McClanahan Cemetery on findagrave.com Miller, Edna Evelyn (36652415)
 
944 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Living / Constance McNamera (F46844023)
 
945 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (92414732)
 
946 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (92414732)
 
947 Alena McCord - Mitchell Fleming History


MITCHELL FLEMING


by Alenia McCord

He was born in April 1761 in Kent County Delaware, but very early in life moved to Rowan County, N.C. near the Coddle Creek church, with his parents. There he enlisted in Captain Craig's Company in 1777, age 16 years (Colonel Francis Lock's North Carolina Regiment) and was in an engagement at Caney Island on the Savannah River. He enlisted in 1782 and served as a private in Capt. James Stevenson's Company, Colonel Isaac's North Carolina Regiment. Later his eldest daughter married Capt. Stevenson's son James. (Pay receipts are listed in North Carolina records).
He married Agnes Kennedy 27 Jan 1784, in Rowan County, N.C. They lived from that time until 1819 in Mecklenberg County (became Cabarrus about 1786) on the land he inherited from his father, George Fleming. In 1819 he went by wagon train with a large colony from the area of the Coddle Creek Church to Cape County, MO. There he purchased a section of land in Shawnee and Apple Creek townships for which he paid $1.25 an acre. He received patents for all this in 1821 and 1823. Agness Kennedy Fleming died in 1821, and in 1824 he married Jane Stevenson, who was a maiden sister of his son-in-law, James Stevenson. The marriage is recorded both in Perry County, MO and in Cabarrus County, N.C.
One thing about his land purchases: he came to Cape County very early, so he did not take his sections in one piece. He took it in eighty acre parts, and practically the entire 640 acres was in various creek bottoms, the best land at that time. As each daughter married he deeded his son-in-law and eighty acre tract, which was later willed to the daughter.
In 1832, when Congress passed a general pension law he received a pension for his Revolutionary War service on his application executed 22 Dec 1832 in Cape Girardeau County, MO.

Mitchell Fleming was a charter member, along with his entire family, of the Apple Creek Presbyterian Church and was the first ruling elder of the church, remaining in that position until the year before his death. He seemed to always been the heaviest contributor to the church. One time, when they were raising money to pay for their new building, he pledged his entire pension from the Revolution until the building was paid for.
Mitchell Fleming, two wives, daughter Margaret, son Hiram, his two wives and daughter are buried on a hill on his farm, now belonging to Marvin Richter, in Shawneetown Township, Cape Girardeau County, MO. On his tombstone, around the ball at the top are thirteen stars.

Mitchell Fleming - born 22 April 1761, died 18 April 1837.

Agnes Kennedy (1st wife, mother of children) - born 20 July 1760 in Chester County, PA, died 21 Sept 1821.

Jane Stevenson (2nd wife) - born 1776, died 2 May 1837,

Children:
1. Jane - born 11 Jan 1786. Married James Stevenson in NC.
died 16 April 1865, buried in Apple Creek Cemetery.
2. William - married Ginny Woodside in NC 1808, remained in NC.
3. Richard - Married Jean Wadington, 1814 in NC, remained in NC.
4. Margaret - Born 17 Feb 1791, died 15 August 1822, unmarried.
5. Mary - Born 26 Aug 1794. Married Benjamin Brown in 1824. Died 20 March 1864, Buried Apple Creek Cemetery.
6. Agnes - Born 23 Dec 1795. Married Robert S. McFarland
20 Dec 1821. Died 12 May 1865. Came to Bond County IL in 1837. Buried Bethel Cemetery.
7. Elizabeth - Born ? Married James B. Little, 1824. It is thought they moved to Texas.
8. Sarah - Born 18 Jan 1802, died 27 Sept 1879. Married Zenas N. Ross.
9. Hiram - Born 17 Aug 1804, died 22 Mar 1843. He was a merchant, had one of the first stores in Jackson. Married Jane Stevenson, born 1814, died 23 Dec 1837 (dau of John Stevenson) 10 Jan 1837. Married second Margaret ______ did not find a marriage record. All buried in the Fleming Cemetery.

-by Miss Alenia McCord
1716 West Jackson St.
Vandalia, IL 62471
24 Feb 1974
 
Fleming, Mitchel (71123758)
 
948 Alenia was the daughter of Nathanial & Elizabeth (McFarland) Dressor. She married John Wesley McCord 20 Sept 1871 in Bond County, IL. Dressor, Alenia (67352144)
 
949 Alice Alline Lewis (nee Regenhardt) passed away May 2, 2017.

Alice was born March 24, 1925 to Lois Alline (nee McNeely) and Ted R. Regenhardt in Cape Girardeau.

Her father was associated with his father and brothers in the Regenhardt Construction Company. The family moved every year or every other year following their highway construction jobs throughout Illinois and eastern Missouri.

Her grandfather, Edward Regenhardt, was the general contractor for the construction of Academic Hall, the main administration building of what is now Southeast Missouri State University and a Cape Girardeau landmark.

By the time she was high school age, her parents moved the family back to Cape permanently.

She attended Franklin School for the 9th grade, and Cape Central high school the next 3 years, and next attended Southeast Missouri State Teachers College, where she graduated with a B.S. degree in Secondary Education, specializing in Home Economics. Her first job was as a teacher in Lawrence, IL. The next year she worked in St. Louis County as an assistant home extension agent.

She married Freeman Lewis, owner of Wimpy's Drive In and Grocery on September 25, 1948. They joined Centenary Methodist Church later that year.

In 1969, Alice began work as an elementary Guidance Counselor for the Sikeston Public Schools.

In 1970, she went back to SEMO and worked on her master’s degree in elementary guidance counseling, accomplishing her goal in 1973, the same year her son Rob graduated from SEMO. She retired from her work in Sikeston after 20 years, in 1989.

She belonged to the Missouri State Teacher’s Association and was a charter member of the Professional Home Economists organization.

Active in the life of Centenary Methodist Church for 68 years, she served in several capacities: church secretary, nursery coordinator, church board of trustees, and various United Methodist Women offices.

She was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary and P.E.O.

Alice loved to read, play bridge and assemble jigsaw puzzles. She embroidered quilts for her grandchildren as well as creating needlepoint pictures and chair covers. A love of travel took her across the U.S. and one trip to Europe.

She is survived by her husband of 68 years, Freeman.

They have two sons, Rob (Diane) Lewis of San Antonio, Texas and Jon (Susan) Lewis of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Grandchildren Sarah (Thomas) Satterwhite, Angela (Justin) Morgan, and Stephen Lewis. Great-grandchildren Blake and Emily Satterwhite.

She is also survived by her brother Don (Linda) Regenhardt of Chevy Chase, MD; one cousin, Joe (Mary Alice) Regenhardt of Cape Girardeau; six nephews and eight nieces.

She was preceded in death by her parents, a brother Teddy and a sister Dee Ann, both when young children.


A visitation will be held Sunday, May 7th from 2 pm – 3 pm at Centenary United Methodist Church. The memorial service follows at 3 pm. Interment private.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be given to Centenary United Methodist Church, 300 N. Ellis St., Cape Girardeau, MO 63701.



 
Regenhardt, Alice Alline (59312866)
 
950 Alice Miller Nosbish, 95, of Cedar Rapids, passed away Tuesday, December 6, 2016, at the Woodlands in the Meth-Wick Community, Cedar Rapids.

Alice was born on October 14, 1921, in Jefferson, Iowa, the daughter of Don and Hattie Price. She was a graduate of Jefferson High School.

She was united in marriage to Lyndell Miller in 1941. They raised five children in Marion until they moved to Glendale, Arizona, in 1965, where they lived until Lyndell’s death in 1981.

After moving back to Iowa, Alice was married to Gerald Nosbish of Cedar Rapids in 1988. They enjoyed following their beloved Iowa Hawkeyes, the Cornell Rams, playing golf, and the fun time spent with their family, and friends.

Alice loved music, enjoyed singing with her church choirs, and was a member of the Sweet Adelines. She was an accomplished seamstress and enjoyed crafts of all kinds. She was loved for her quick wit and great sense of humor. Alice was admired for her positive attitude, and her ability to see the good in everything and everyone. She was a devoted mother and such a fun-loving grandmother.

She is survived by her children, Larry (Joannie) Miller of Bogalusa, Louisiana, Steve (Ruth) Miller of Mt. Vernon, Janis Skow of Cedar Rapids, Lynda Taube of Cedar Rapids, and Diann Groff of Centerville, Virginia; grandchildren, Chris Miller, Tim Miller, Savannah Miller, Sarah Miller Johnson, Matthew Miller, Jennifer Stickney Johnson, Tanner Stickney Colgrove, Ashley Stickney, Michael Groff and David Groff; and seventeen great grandchildren. She is also survived by her stepchildren, Mary Kay (Leon) Schnack of Port Orange, Florida, Debbie (Scott) Bradley of Cambridge, Minnesota, Jerry (Patty) Nosbish of Olathe, Kansas, Dan (Cathy) Nosbish of Cedar Rapids, and Suzie Otterbeck of Naples, Florida; step-grandchildren, Derek Schnack, Andy Schnack, Daron Bradley, Ben Bradley, Sarah Nosbish, Colleen Nosbish, Jeff Nosbish, Charlie Otterbeck, Margaret Otterbeck and Kathy Otterbeck; and seven step-great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her husbands, Lyndell Miller in 1981 and Gerald Nosbish in 2008; a brother; and three sisters.

Funeral services will be held at 1:00 p.m. Saturday, December 10, 2016, at Murdoch Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Marion, conducted by Pastor Lloyd Brockmeyer. The family will greet friends from 11:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. prior to the funeral service. Internment will take place at Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery, Cedar Rapids.

The family would like to thank the entire staff of the Meth-Wick Community for their loving and attentive care throughout her time with them.

Obituary & photo published by Murdoch Funeral Home & Cremation Center - Marion 
Price, Alice (53030241)
 
951 Aline (Nicholson) Lewis, 94, of Damascus, died Friday, May 9th, 2014. She was born in Damascus, Arkansas, on October 26, 1919, to the late Adam Guthery and Blanch (Lee) Nicholson; she was a long-time member of Church of Christ. For more than 30 years she and Jimmy owned and operated Jimmy Lewis Grocery in Damascus, Arkansas.

She is preceded in death by her husband of 76 years, James Carson Lewis; parents, and her brother, Earl Nicholson.

Survivors include two sons, James Lee and his wife Bonnie (Nixon) Lewis of Sarasota, FL, and Edward Earl and wife Jan( Bonds) Lewis of Little Rock, Arkansas; two grandchildren, James Alan and his wife Pamela (Stedina) Lewis of Bradenton, Florida, Janice Lee and her husband Billy George of North Carolina; four great-grandchildren, Whitney Lee Russell , Haleigh Elizabeth Russell, Kelsey Rose Russell, all of North Carolina and James Wyatt Lewis of Florida; and one great-great- grandson, Braylon Alexander Boone of North Carolina.

Services will be at Roller-McNutt Funeral Home in Greenbrier, AR (501)679-2575, Saturday, May 17, 2014, with the visitation at 12:00 Noon, and funeral services at 1:00 p.m. Interment will be at Spires Cemetery in Damascus, AR. 
Nicholson, Aline (95158136)
 
952 All Children listed on familysearch.org:

Rosanna Mead
1843–1912

Olive Maywood Mead
1864–Deceased

Syltanna Meade
1848–Deceased

William Riley Mead
1850–1919

Aaron William Mead
1852–1899

Lucinda Mead
1855–1929

Mary Polly Mead
1857–1929

John Mead
1859–1918

Abigail Mead
1862–1952

Levi Mead
1864–1940

Rev Isaac Mead
1868–1958

Amos Mead
1869–1906 
Johnson, Elizabeth Jane (26643904)
 
953 All Saints Church Family: Richard Howard / Ann Howard (F87501733)
 
954 Allen Coleman “Cokie” McSpadden, son of the late Roy Vern McSpadden (09/19/1898-10/25/1973) and Marian Rose Coleman-McSpadden (08/12/1902-05/06/1994), was born November 14, 1925 in Van Buren, Missouri and departed this life October 17, 2016, with his family by his side. He had attained the age of ninety years, eleven months and three days. On June 6, 1945, he was united in marriage to the love of his life, Mabel Eileen Long, in Van Buren, Missouri. To this union five children were born. Mabel preceded him in death on May 17, 2001. He was also preceded in death by one son, Ryan Coleman McSpadden 04/23/1988; his daughter, Leslie Ann McSpadden-Strong, 09/17/2004, and his brother, Robert Doles “Bob” McSpadden 09/19/2007. He is survived by three sons, Alan Wayne McSpadden (MaryAnn) of Poplar Bluff, Dennis Roy McSpadden (Betty) and Jeffrey Neal McSpadden (Dana) of Ellington; one sister, Marjorie Phillips of New Madrid; eleven grandchildren, Shelly McSpadden of St. Louis, Jennifer Norris (Patrick Kucera) of Fremont, Kara Cummings (Mark) of Poplar Bluff, Erik McSpadden (Farrah) and Amy Jackson (Pat) all of Van Buren, Jimmy McSpadden (Ashley) of New Madrid, Nicholas McSpadden (Tiffany) and Laura McSpadden all of Granite City, IL, Autumn McSpadden of Pennsylvania, Kourtney Green (Alan) of Leo, IN, and John McSpadden of New Orleans, LA; nineteen great-grandchildren and numerous nieces, nephews and other relatives and friends who mourn his passing. Cokie was of the sixth generation of the McSpadden family residing in Carter County, Missouri. He attended the Van Buren Schools, graduating high school in 1943. On 02/02/1944, he entered active service in the United States Army Air Corps, proudly serving his country in World War II as a tail gunner on a B17 Bomber called the Flying Dutchman. Cokie and his crew flew the 25 missions required and volunteered for ten additional missions. After the war, he attended Mortuary College in St. Louis, MO and returned to Van Buren to work for Leuckel Funeral Home, the formerly Croy Funeral Home. In 1951, he bought Leuckel Funeral Home and later bought Pewitt Funeral Home in Ellington. He also owned and operated the McSpadden Funeral Home in Ellsinore, MO and the ambulance service for Carter County. Cokie was the Carter County Coroner for over 30 years. He was instrumental in the establishment of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways in 1964, and served on the original park advisory committee. In the 1970’s he and several other businessmen of Van Buren built and established the Riverways Manor Nursing Home in Van Buren. He was also instrumental in establishing the Carter County Saving and Loan which met in the funeral home for the first four years of existence. Cokie was civic minded and served on numerous boards and organizations including the school board, and was a former member of the Masonic Lodge, Rotary, American Legion and VFW. He loved the outdoors and fishing and camping on Current River. He was an avid outdoorsman and enjoyed hunting duck, turkey, quail and deer. He also hunted elk in Colorado. He was an avid golfer and played numerous prestigious courses as he and Mabel traveled throughout the states. Cokie was a good man who was loved and respected by his family and his community.

Visitation: 6:00 p.m. Thursday, October 20, 2016 in the McSpadden Funeral Home in Van Buren, MO with funeral services beginning at 10:00 a.m. Friday, October 21, 2016 in the funeral home chapel. Rev. Jim Cooper will officiate assisted by Rev. Johnny Gipson. Burial will follow in the Poca Hollow-Dry Valley Cemetery, with Military Honors. In lieu of flowers, please make memorial donations to Lending a Hand Cancer Fund, P.O. Box 734 Van Buren, MO 63965. 
McSpadden, Allen Coleman (46335136)
 
955 Alpha Mae Buzzell Miller
Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) | 20 October 2005
Charleston SC United States
MILLER, Alpha Alpha Mae Buzzell Miller, 70, of St. Stephen, died Wednesday at a North Charleston hospital. The funeral will be at 11 a.m., Saturday, at Jamestown Baptist Church. Burial, directed by RUSSELL FUNERAL CHAPEL, will be in St. James United Methodist Church Cemetery. Mrs. Miller was born May 13, 1935, in Los Angeles, California, a daughter of John Daniel Buzzell and Lenora Grace Hayes Buzzell. She was a member of Jamestown Baptist Church. Surviving are her husband, Carl E. Miller of St. Stephen; daughter, Valerie M. Fry of Moncks Corner; two sons, William L. Freemire of James Island, Carl E. Miller of Virginia Beach, Va.; brother, James A. Buzzell of Anacortes, WA; sister, Lucille Milliken of Pryor, Montana; eight grandchildren; four great-grandchildren. Friends may call at RUSSELL FUNERAL CHAPEL, Moncks Corner, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Friday evening. Mrs. Miller was preceded in death by a son, Howard Freemire. Memorials may be made to Jamestown Baptist Church, P.O. Box 104, Jamestown, SC 29453. Visit our guestbook at www.charleston.net/deaths.

Copyright, 2005, The Post and Courier. All Rights Reserved. 
Buzzell, Alpha Mae (16042632)
 
956 Also Known As: A. M.; Ott

He graduated from Southeast Missouri State University. At the time of his father's death in 1920, he was an instructor in manual training in Santa Monica, California.
(References: Baptism record in The First Fifty Years; Trinity Lutheran Church; Cape Girardeau, MO; 1854-1904 compiled by Sandra Fluegge, Ruth Kasten, Cindy Raines and Betty Voss; information from family members; 1900 and 1910 Federal Census records for Cape Girardeau, Missouri; 1920 Federal Census for Los Angeles, California; Memorial on the life of William Henry Huters for the Session of the First Presbyterian Church by M. B. Oliver; California Death Index from Ancestry.com)

Compiled by:
Daniel S. Johnson
Durham, N.C.
November, 2009 
Huters, August Martin (4844414)
 
957 alt - Lunenburg County, VA Lax, Elizabeth (66849104)
 
958 Amarillo Globe-Times 8/18/1979

W. G. "Wink" Miller, 74, of 4108 Winchester, died yesterday.

Services will be at 2 p.m. today in First Baptist Church. Dr. Winfred Moore, pastor, will officiate. Burial will be in Llano Cemetery by N.S. Griggs & Sons Funeral Directors.

Mr. Miller, born in Des Arc, Mo., had lived in Amarillo 41 years. He and his wife, Marie Robinson, were married in 1927 in Ironton, Mo. He had been a realtor since 1946 and had been working for Odom Co. He was a member of First Baptist Church, Amarillo Board of Realtors, National Association of Realtors, and Texas Association of Realtors. He was a master mason of Amarillo Masonic Lodge 731, and a member of Amarillo Commandory No. 48 of Knights Templar and Khiva Temple of the Shrine.

Survivors include his wife; a daughter, Mrs, Betty Hobdy of Canadian, two brothers, Sam Miller of Jefferson, Iowa, and Posey Miller of Aimapolis, , Mo., three sisters, Mrs. Thomas McCormick of Piedmont, Mo., Mrs. E.W. Lovelace of Pilot Knob,'Mo:, and Mrs. Charles Dorsey of Farmington, Mo.; five grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Family requests memorials be to favorite charities.
 
Miller, Winfred George (43132480)
 
959 Among the thousands of Ulster Scots who migrated to Pennsylvania in the first half of the eighteenth century were those who formed two distinct settlements within the present limits of Bucks county, one on the banks of the Neshaminy in Warwick, Warrington and New Britain, and the other on the banks of the Tohickon in Plumstead, Tinicum and adjacent townships.

In the latter settlements were the Stewarts, Harts, Means, McGlaughlins, Pattersons, Armstrongs, Erwins, Davies and a host of others, more or less united by ties, consanguinity, and common interest, whose names are found on the earliest lists of military companies organized for the defense of the frontiers against their hereditary enemies, the French and their savage allies.

Among these early settlers on the Plumstead side of the Tohickon about 1735, was Samuel Hart and his family, consisting of wife and nine children, the eldest of whom, James, was born in the year 1717, and the second son William was probably three or more years younger.

Samuel Hart obtained a warrant of survey for 100 acres of land on March 9, 1737, and settled thereon. Ten years later in 1747 when the first clouds of war appeared on the horizon, companies were formed in the several townships for the defense oof the frontiers. The Plumstead company had for its captain the veteran Charles Stewart, lieutenant, James Hart, and ensign, William Hart, both of the latter being ancestors of the subjects of this sketch through the marriage of a grandson of the latter with a granddaughter of the former many years later.

Across the Tohickon in Tinicum the captain of the company was James McGlaughlin, who had married Mary, the eldest sister of the Hart brothers, and the lieutenant was James Davies, whose son William was a brother-in-law to them, all three having married daughters of William Means or Main, a neighbor and compatriot. Samuel Hart, the elder, died in April, 1750, devising his plantation to his sons James and William. His other children than the three above mentioned were: Joseph, John, Jean, who married Samuel Mathers and removed to North Carolina, Elinor, Samuel and Elizabeth.
********************
** Taken from http://pagenweb.org/~bucks/BIOS_DAVIS/hartjohn.html *******************
********************************************************* 
Hart, Samuel C. (83953333)
 
960 AMOS E. STEVENSON

Peoria Journal Star, The (IL) - Monday, August 5, 1991
ROANOKE _ Amos E. Stevenson, 70, of 608 Cemetery St., formerly of Spring Bay, died at 9:52 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3, 1991, at Eureka Hospital.

He was born March 12, 1921, in Greenfield, Mo., to Carl A. and Edna Hoover Stevenson.

He is survived by one brother, Carl B. of Phoenix, Ariz.; and Jack and Anita Will of Roanoke, with whom he made his home.

He worked 30 years at Caterpillar Inc. before retiring in 1982. Memorial services will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Roanoke United Methodist Church, the Rev. Wayne King officiating. There will be no visitation. Cremation rites have been accorded, and burial of ashes will be in Gram Cemetery in Conway, Mo.

Remmert Funeral Home in Roanoke is in charge of arrangements.

Memorials may be made to Roanoke United Methodist Church. 
Stevenson, Amos Eldon (13154236)
 
961 Amy Satterwhite, b. about 1781- 4, Amherst Co. VA. d. 12 July 1860, Houston Co., Texas. Some
researchers have Amy’s birth place as TN (TN did not exist until 1796). I found evidence that she was born in VA. Christened in Indian Territory, 10 Dec 1785 (Also known as the Territory South of the River Ohio) and m.
24 Aug 1799, John Hallmark in Knox County, TN, son of George Hallmark and Leannah Mynatt.
Notes: Amy and John Hallmark were members of a Church of Christ of County Line Association in Georgia that was founded by 7th gen: David Satterwhite, 21 Aug 1809. Only family members were part of this church, listed were: Amy and John Hallmark, Childs, Caldwell, Nall, and Obediah and Mary Green Satterwhite. In 1835 Amy and John Hallmark went from Harris County, Georgia to what later became Houston County, Texas to join with a brother George W. Hallmark and his sons that had gone to Texas earlier. The County Line Church
Association started in North Carolina and evolved into the Primitive Baptist Church.

- courtesy Dudley Marshalll Satterwhite
 
Satterwhite, Amy (39731998)
 
962 Amy was the daughter of Amos T. and Alpha Jane (Clodfelter) Trickey. She married John Frank Hager on March 8, 1923. They were the parents of one son, Kenneth Donald Hager. Amy had one step-daughter, Marjorie La Don Hager.  Trickey, Amy May (99589559)
 
963 An excerpt from an email from Betty Cunningham after a conversation she had with Charles Paul Cunningham not long before he died:

Name: William Henry Cunningham
Born 1852 in Magnet Indiana Died 1943
Son of James Cunningham and Jane Stiles (Styles) Cunningham
His father was in the Union Army. Mother died when he was 4. He was a cooper by trade (made barrels) he also floated his wares (along with his brother) down the Mississippi to New Orleans
The other information Charles read from a newspaper after Wm Henry died.
Wm Henry was married three times, remarried after each wife died. His first wife was Susan Figgins , they had a son, John. She died shortly after they were married of typhoid fever.
Then he married Marietta William Harp who had a daughter, Anne Everland. Together they had three children, Lara, Augustus (Gus) and Charles Henry.
His third marriage was to Augusta McNeely. They met in Cape County, MO in a town called Fruitland.
William married Augusta McNeely, daughter of George Wesley McNeely and Mary Mitchell, on 30 Sep 1900 in Cape Gir. County, MO. (Augusta McNeely was born on 16 Oct 1874 in Cape Gir. County, MO and died on 22 Dec 1963 in Chaffee, MO.)
Together the had Ester, Paul and Miriam.
William Henry was a circuit rider preacher (1884). He was ordained a Methodist Minister in 1886 in the St. Louis Conference. After retiring he still served as a supply preacher. He loved hunting, fishing and bird lore. He lived to be in his 90's and left a great heritage. In his old age he loved spending time with his children and grandchildren. 
Cunningham, William Henry (17899289)
 
964 ancestry.com

ddExcerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

ohn Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendantss were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marthy Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marthy was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marthy (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marthy Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 Marh 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marthy and other family members had died. The marriagedate was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father JOhn, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried inthe old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small privatre burying groun on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and motehr. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marthy had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him withthe rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marthy had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.) 
Howard, James M. (28279968)
 
965 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, James M. (28279968)
 
966 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, John (66800152)
 
967 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, Sarah Sally (72186384)
 
968 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, Franklin J. (86164272)
 
969 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, Hamilton (60321334)
 
970 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, Elizabeth (54193986)
 
971 ancestry.com

Excerpt from Howard Family History (provided by S. Howard)

John Howard and family lived in the Shawneetown area in Missouri. The marriage date of 1825 is an approximate date determined by appearance on US Census. It is possible they were married later in life since the first child was born when he was about 38 years old. John's father, Henry, died ca 1824 (will dated May 1824). The old homeplace near Jackson on Byrd's Creek was left to the oldest son, Zed. (The old "homeplace" is owned, 1992, by a descendant of Zed's, Howard Propst.) John would have been 36 years old. It appears that he lived at home and helped with the farm up until that time. Since John's descendants were not familiar with the descendants of Zed's, there may have been hard feelings after Henry's death. John left the Jackson area and movedto the Appleton/Shawneetown area, marrying Marty Hough. (Family tradition says she was part Indian. Marty was the daughter of Robert Hough.) John and Marty (Hough) had their first child when John was 38. John died January 25, 1862 and is buried in Apple Creek Township on Buck-Eye Creek across from a farm owned by _________, formerly owned by ______________. This land was owned by John Howard at the time of his death. [Note: At the present time, 1991, the stones in the small cemetery area have been piled up and a fence put around them. The rest of the field is cultivated.] Marty Hough was born 6 Feb 1799 in Georgia. A headstone in the small cemetery on Buck-Eye Creek says she died 26 March 1855 and that she was of Native American descent. Family lore also stated that she died of Tuberculosis and that other family members died in this manner as well. John Howard did marry again, in his late 60s, to Minerva Childers, approximately a year after Marty and other family members had died. The marriage date was 18 Feb 1856.

Children of Marty and John Howard:

Thomas P. Howard (b.1 Aug 1826, Cape Girardeau Co., MO or North Carolina. Unknown if he was married or had children.)

James M. Howard (B. 13 Nov 1827. The census record indicates he was born in NC but may be an error. John would have had to return to North Carolina after the death of his father, married there, thus his first children possibly being born there. James married Sarah Day, born 1845 according to 1860 census, and in 1860 census, lived in Dwelling #2298; his father John, lived in dwelling #2300. His children: Dr. William H. Howard, B. 26 Nov 1862, Cape Girardeau Co., MO. Other Children: Bennett, Nighton, William, Edward, Charles according to an 1880 census.

Franklin J. Howard (B. 17 Dec 1829, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; According to family notes, died of T.B., date unknown. Franklin is buried in the old homeplace cemetery but his date of death is unreadable.)

Elizabeth Howard (B. 4 April 1832, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek, next to her father and mother. She died 28 July 1855 of T.B.)

Sarah (Sally) Howard (B. 11 Feb 1831, Cape Girardeau Co., MO; Her grave is in the small private burying ground on Buck-Eye Creek next to her father and mother. She died 8 July 1855 according to the stone. Sarah Howard died of T.B. Note, that Sarah, Elizabeth died within 3 weeks of each other and that their mother, Marty had died only a short while before.)

Hamilton Howard (B. 1 March 1836. According to family notes, Hamilton died of T.B. Date of death unknown. (NOTE: Emerine said that Hamilton Howard owned horses and went "west." There is no tombstone to be found for him with the rest of the family.)

(Note: According to 1850 Census, John and Marty had another son, John F. Howard, b. 1831/34. It is not known what became of him.)

 
Howard, Thomas P. (25173936)
 
972 Ancestry.com and Ohio Department of Health. Ohio, Death Records, 1908-1932, 1938-2007 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010.  Abrams, Ulysses Cicero (48653158)
 
973 ancestry.com Missouri Death Records 1834 - 1910

 
Stevenson, John William (17988267)
 
974 ancestry.com:
England and Wales Christening Records 1530-1906 
Howard, Henry (4668574)
 
975 Ancestry.com. Missouri, Marriage Records, 1805-2002 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007.
Original data: Missouri Marriage Records. Jefferson City, MO, USA: Missouri State Archives. Microfilm. 
Family: Robert Lee Lewis, Jr. / Mary Elvira Pinkley (F25720516)
 
976 Andrew M. Casebolt
Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992
Name: Andrew M. Casebolt
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 29 Mar 1848
Event Place: Marion, Indiana, United States
Event Place (Original): Marion, Indiana, United States
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Esther Doughty
Spouse's Sex: Female

"Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XF8F-M47 : 13 January 2020), Andrew M. Casebolt, 1848.

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XF8F-M4Q 
Family: Andrew Montgomery Casebolt / Esther "Hattie" A. Montgomery (F20540796)
 
977 Andrew not listed as a Provost Marshal in this book:
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/847429-records-of-the-provost-marshall-general-s-bureau-1863-1866-list-of-civil-war-districts-in-the-states?viewer=1&offset=0#page=44&viewer=picture&o=search&n=0&q=grant 
Casebolt, Andrew Montgomery (26729568)
 
978 Andrew Sponik's first wife died 10 Apr 1944 - so Lillian's divorce happened after that date.
 
Family: Harvey Edward Heberer / Lillian Larson (F97821272)
 
979 Anna Lee Sutterfield was the daughter of Caroline (Fitts) and Calvin Lee Sutterfield. She is buried in the Arcadia Valley Memorial Cemetery in Ironton, Missouri.
(Information from her granddaughter, Carolyn Keathley McBurney, in June 1991)
 
Family: Clarence Ray Keathley / Anna Lee Sutterfield (F46000555)
 
980 Anna Louise Engelbrecht, widow of the late Dr. John Engelbrecht of Stonyhill, was born near Drake, August 10, 1867, and died at her home at Stonyhill, Saturday, November 23, at the age of 79 years, 3 months and 4 days.

The deceased was baptized August 30, 1867, at the St. James Evangelical church at Charlotte. She attended public school near her home and was confirmed on April 10, 1881.

She was united in marriage with Dr. John Engelbrecht on February 26, 1893. For a few months the young couple lived in Berger. In November 1893 they moved to Stonyhill, first living in the parsonage of the St. James Evangelical church. In 1897 they moved to their new home, where Mrs. Engelbrecht has lived every since. Dr. Engelbrecht died March 15, 1945.

Mrs. Engelbrecht enjoyed very good health the greater portion of her life. On September 7th of this year she suffered a paralytic stroke which paralyzed her right side and affected her speech. She had been bedfast and practically helpless ever since.

She was a quiet unassuming woman, always interested in the welfare of her family and friends. She was a faithful member of the St. James Evangelical church and Ladies Aid Society at Stonyhill and was always active in the work of the church.

She leaves to mourn her passing her five children: Mrs. Alwina Hesemann of Ellisville, MO; Theodore of near New Haven, MO; Mrs. Florence Blumer of Berger, MO; Erwin of Stonyhill and Mrs. Laura Kugel of near Stonyhill. She also leaves 12 grandchildren; 2 grandchildren by marriage, 2 great grandchildren and the following brothers and sisters: Herman Hilkerbaumer of Cook, NB; Henry and George Hilkerbaumer of near Drake, MO; Mrs. Hannah Brinkmann of Hope, MO, Mrs. Minnie Fleer of Stonyhill; Miss Frieda Hilkerbaumer of St. Charles, MO and a large number of other relatives and friends.

Besides her husband she was preceded in death by her son, Elmer and her daughter, Hilda.

Funeral services in charge of Rev. Herbert E. Kuhn were conducted in the home and in the St. James church, Tuesday afternoon. Interment was in the church cemetery. 
Hilkerbaumer, Anna Louise (31598720)
 
981 Annapolis Cemetery Lewis, Charles J. (92151158)
 
982 ANNAPOLIS WOMAN DIES SUDDENLY
RITES HELD SUNDAY FOR WIFE OF WARD MANAGER
It was a shock to citizens of Iron County to learn of the sudden death of Mrs. Ernest Brewer of Annapolis last Friday. She, with Mr. Brewer were on their way home at Annapolis to see their daughter, Arline, who was recuperating from an operation at the St. Mary's Hospital when she suddenly became ill. She passed away at the hospital a short time after her arrival there.
Ruth Lewis Brewer, daughter of the late Marion and Malinda Lewis, was born near Annapolis March 12, 1889 and passed away at the Ironton Hospital May 16, 1947 at the age of 58 years, two months and four days. She was united in marriage to Ernest Brewer onSeptember 2, 1902 and to this union nine children were born: Ina Mann, Arlene and Freddy Ray of Annapolis, Lowell of Hematite, Lovell and Bobby, of Herculaneum, Marion Lee, of St. Louis, and Edwin and Verna who preceded her in death.
She leaves to mourn her departure, her husband and seven children as above named and four grandchildren, two of whom made their home with the grandparents. E.A. and Elizabeth Terrell; two sisters, Ethel Ruble, of Des Arc, and Ollie Stevenson of Detroit, and many other relatives and friends.
She was converted and joined the Baptist Church in her early womanhood. She was a faithful and devoted CMristian and wife and mother to the end.
Funeral services were held at the Union Church in Annapolis Sunday afternoon with Rev. LaChance of the Nazarene Church in Charge. Burial was in the adjoining cemetery with White and Sons officiating.
Our sincere sympathy is offered to the sorrowing ones.
(THE MOUNTAIN ECHO newspaper ... Ironton, Iron County, Missouri ... May 23, 1947)
 
Lewis, Ruth (72692999)
 
983 Annapolis, MO March 7, 1925

Minervia Hale was born in Middle Tennessee, March 4, 1862, and came to Missouri in 1872.

She was married to Monroe Slusher in 1880, and to this union were born ten children, eight of whom are still living. Our dear mother died February 11, 1925 , at the age of 62 years, 11 months and 7 days.

She left three sons, five daughters, twenty grandchildren, two great grandchildren, two sisters, one brother and a host of friends to mourn her loss.

She was converted in 1878 and united with the church and lived a devoted Christian life until her death. She was one among the best Christian in Annapolis.
The procession that followed her to the church house gave evidence of how she was loved. The funeral was preached by Rev. J.W. Alcorn from first Corinthians 15 chapter and latter part of 54th verse: “Death is swallowed up in victory.” 
Hale, Minerva (91964202)
 
984 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (9514000)
 
985 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (65017547)
 
986 Anne Elizabeth Ruble was the child of Matthias Ruble born on c - - 1740 at Bavarin Germany
died at Armagh Twp Mifflin Co PA on - - 1817 and his ( 1st ) wife
Anna Mary Elizabeth Hoffman born on - - at _______________
died at Mifflin Co PA on a 8 - Jun - 1819 married on -
 
Hoffman, Anna Mary Elizabeth (665856)
 
987 Anne M. Chase, The Heritage of Iredell County, article 398, (Published By The Genealogical Society of lredell County. PO Box 946, Statesville, North Carolina 28677.).
83. Rowan County marriages 1753-1868. Compiled by Brent H. Holcomb. Gen. Pub. Co. lnc. 1981
 
Family: James McNeely / Elizabeth Kilpatrick (F85943148)
 
988 Anne Margrethe Elisabeth Seving
mentioned in the record of Caspar Henrich Engelbrecht
Name: Anne Margrethe Elisabeth Seving
Sex: Female
Husband: Friedrich Wilhelm Engelbrecht
Son: Caspar Henrich Engelbrecht
Other information in the record of Caspar Henrich Engelbrecht
from Germany Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898
Name:
Caspar Henrich Engelbrecht
Event Type:
Christening
Event Date:
6 Jan 1828
Event Place:
Oberjöllenbeck, Jöllenbeck, Bielefeld, Westfalen, Preußen, Deutschland
Event Place (Original):
Joellenbeck, Westfalen, Prussia
Sex:
Male
Father's Name:
Friedrich Wilhelm Engelbrecht
Mother's Name:
Anne Margrethe Elisabeth Seving

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N6M2-SB8 
Seving, Anne Margrethe Elisabeth (29123508)
 
989 Anton Schrader is Section H Grave 41 (and has a grave stone) along north side of sidewalk. Charlotte's grave should be next to Anton the north Wille, Johanne Dorothee Charlotte (97399320)
 
990 Anton Schrader is Section H Grave 41 (and has a grave stone) along north side of sidewalk. Charlotte's grave should be next to Anton the north Wille, Johanne Dorothee Charlotte (97399320)
 
991 Anton Sr. (b Weferlingen, Germany 30 Nov 1818 d 3 Apr 1870) and Johanna Behnert
Schrader (b 27 Jul 1821 Prussia d 3 Sept 1866) are presumed to be buried here also. He
was one of 4 founders of Trinity Lutheran Church. Parents of : Johanna b 5 Feb 1847
Weferlingen, Ger m Charles Muehlbach, Anton b 25 Dec 1848 Weferlingen d 1921 m
Friedrica Renne, Wilhelmina b 19 Aug 1851 Cape Girardeau d 29 Mar 1935 m Charles L
Hunze, Amanda b 7 Mar 1857 d 26 Sept 1925 never married, Henry b 1859 d 26 Sept
1924 never married, Ida b 20 Sept 1860 d 2 June 1914 never married, Anna Maria b 25
June 1862 m 1871 to Ernest Frederick Nolte b Bremerhaven 1842 d 25 Oct 1876. Anton
and Johanna lived in a little one story frame house on the East side of Lorimier street
just North of Good Hope that was torn down in the 1950's for senior housing.

Old Lorimier Cemetary by Cape Girardeau County Genealogical Society 1994. 
Schrader, Anton Heinrich Sr. (31901798)
 
992 Anvil was the fourth of six children of Solomon "Saul" and Mary Margaret (Carver) Hake. In about 1900 in Annapolis, Iron County, MO he married Mary Mae "Maud" Lewis the daughter of Andrew and Angeline "Line" (Jackson) Lewis.

Anvil and Maud had nine children:

1 Della Rose (James Ezra Brinkley)
2 Ada (Clarence Elmer "Pete" Ford)
3 Emmitt Walter (Delta Leora Catherine "Deltie" Walker)
4 Lorene (Eli Howard Harvey)
5 Lela Marie (Harve Logan Foster)
6 Mary Maglene (Gregor John Sindt)
7 Edward Jackson (Frances D. "Frannie" Harris)
8 Evelyn Louise (1 Chester Raymond "Chicken" Wheeler, 2 Howard Marcell "Kart" LaRue, 3 Mr. Beverlyn)
9 Silvin "Sid" (1 unknown, 2 Grace Shoemaker Arbuckle) 
Hake, Anvil Kenider (96105990)
 
993 Apple Creek church records pg 60 - ancestry.com Stevenson, Myrtle (23388368)
 
994 Apple Creek Church Records pg 60 - ancestry.com - listed as Leroy Stevenson
 
Stevenson, Hugh Roy (83568042)
 
995 Apple Creek Presbyterian Church Session Minutes pg. 61: Jennie McNeely submits letter of dismissal to join Fairview M.E. Church 14 Sep 1890. Stevenson, Jemima Jane (51006604)
 
996 Apple Creek Preysbyterian Church Session Record, list of original members 4 Mar 1821 pg 2: Jane Stephenson Stevenson, Jane Jean (10010623)
 
997 Apple Creek Preysbyterian Church Session Record first membership list 4 Mar 1821 pg 2: Hiram Fleming Fleming, Hiram (82394162)
 
998 Apple Creek Preysbyterian Church Session Record first membership list 4 Mar 1821 pg 2: Mitcal Fleming Fleming, Mitchel (71123758)
 
999 Apple Creek Preysbyterian Church Session Record first membership list 4 Mar 1821 pg 2: SEDY Fleming Fleming, Sadah (6055496)
 
1000 Appointed Postmaster Elmwood, Missouri 19 Feb 1851.

Source: County: Saline County, Missouri
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Appointments of U. S. Postmasters, 1832-1971 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Record of Appointment of Postmasters, 1832-1971. NARA Microfilm Publication, M841, 145 rolls. Records of the Post Office Department, Record Group Number 28. Washington, D.C.: National Archives. 
Woodfin, Moses (19308486)
 

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