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951 M. Martha Emmonds, 92, of Ford Cliff, died Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007, at the Armstrong County Memorial Hospital, East Franklin Township. Martha was born April 4, 1914, in Armstrong County, daughter of the late Harry Spang and Dora (Schrecengost) Spang. Martha was a very active member ot the Appleby Manor United Presbyterian Church, Ford City. She enjoyed gardening, working with flowers, baking, cooking, crocheting and fishing. Martha is survived by two daughters, Patricia (Robert) Helm, of Spring Valley, Calif., and Yvonne (Ronald) Temsik, of Red Feather Lake, Colo.; brother, Dale Spang, of Greenville; two sisters, Ina Shannon, of Sarver, and Lola Mohr, of Florida; six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. In addition to her parents, Martha was preceded in death by her husband, William R. Emmonds, who died Jan. 8, 1984; one son, William Edward Emmonds; six brothers, Floyd, Perry, Lewis, Clair, Kenneth and Delbert; and five sisters, Lucille Klingensmith, Dorothy Lasher, Luella Baker, Arlene Kovalovsky and Mildred Jordan. Friends will be received from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the WELCH FUNERAL HOME, 1032 Fourth Ave., Ford City. Additional visitation will be held from 1 to 2 p.m. Monday at Appleby Manor United Presbyterian Church, where services will follow at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Carletta Curley officiating. Interment will follow in Lawn Haven Burial Estates, Worthington. To write an online condolence, visit www.welchfh.com.

From: The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - Online, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Saturday, February 10, 2007
 
SPANG, Martha (I616)
 
952 MAGDALINE SCHMITH WEDS J.L. SPANG
Miss Magdaline Schmith, former well known Franklin young woman and J. L. Spang, of Boston, Mass., were married at a nuptial High Mass at St. Johns church, Indianapolis, Wednesday morning, June 20, at 8:30 o?clock. The ceremony was read by Monsignor F. L. Gavisk, pastor of the church. The couple were unattended and the marriage was witnessed by only the immediate families.
Following the marriage Mr. and Mrs. Spang left for Boston where they will visit Mr. Spang?s parents until the first of next week, when they will sail for Genoa, Italy, where they will make their future home. Mr. Spang holds a responsible position with Swift & Company, of Chicago and has been stationed in Italy for several years. He and Miss Schmith met while going to Europe on the same boat three years ago.
Mrs. Spang is a graduate of Franklin college and has been a teacher in the Michigan City schools for the past few years. Her father. .Joseph A. Schmith, is postmaster of the state prison at. Michigan City.

Franklin Franklin Democrat
Friday, June 22, 1928
Page 1 Column 2

****************
Former Resident Dies in Maryland
Services Held Monday For Mrs. Louis Spang

Word has been received of the death of Mrs. Louis Spang on June 27 in Salisbury Md. Mrs. Spang was Miss Magdalene Schmith, a former resident of Franklin. She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Schmith of Franklin and a sister of Philip A. Schmith of Tipton.
Mrs. Spang was stricken with a critical illness a few weeks ago and death followed. Funeral services were held Monday at 9 a.m. in a Salisbury Catholic church. The body was taken to Boston, Mass., for burial.
Born and reared in Franklin, Mrs. Spang graduated from the local high school and from Franklin College with the class of 1917. She was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. She was married in the St. John Catholic church in Indianapolis about 20 years ago. With Mr. Spang, a representative of the Standard Oil company, she went to Rome, Italy, to live. The couple returned to the States after a few years.
Surviving are the husband, and an only daughter, Barbara, of Salisbury and the brother. Philip A. Schmith of Tipton. Mr. and Mrs. Schmith and son, Joe, attended the funeral and burial services.

Franklin Evening Star
Wednesday, July 2, 1947
Page 8 Column 3 
SCHMITH, Magdaline (I583)
 
953 mailed 8/29/00
Allen County Public Library
Genealogy Dept
PO Box 2270
Ft Wayne, IN 46801-2270

To Whom It May Concern:

I am writing in regard to a notice I found in the PERSI Index about the Lester Tate-Gladys Durst Bible, 1887-1967 that you have in your holdings. I would like to know if there are any notations about Gladys' ancestry in her bible. Gladys was
my paternal grandmother's first cousin and my only known resource at this date of which I can use to find my grandmother's ancestry. If you have any other holdings pertaining to Gladys Durst Tate please advise me.

Enclosed please find a check for $7.50 to do the research requested. I will be more than happy to compensate you for any copying charges that may apply.

Thank you,

Dawn Aragon
813 E Robinson St
Carson City, NV 89701-4735
(775) 882-0311
dragonmother@earthlink.net 
DURST, Gladys (I932)
 
954 March 22, 2006 06:14 pm

? Thursa M. Berry
March 7, 1909 - March 21, 2006
FRANKLIN ? Thursa M. (McLary) Berry, 97, Franklin, died March 21, 2006 at Masonic Home, Franklin.
She was born March 7, 1909, in Anderson, and lived in the Anderson area most of her life, spending the last several years at the Masonic Home in Franklin. She was a graduate of Pendleton High School and Anderson Business College.
She was retired from the Anderson Credit Bureau. She was very involved with Madison County Humane Society.
She is survived by her nephew, David McLary of Ingalls; nieces, Kay Hackbarth of Crete, Ill., and Susan Johnson of Anderson; and a sister-in-law, Murph McLary of Orland Park, Ill.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Sammy Berry; parents, Robert J. and Ruby (Weidner) McLary; brothers, Maurice McLary and Herbert McLary; and a sister, Vivian Skinner.
A graveside service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Anderson Memorial Park Cemetery.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Madison County Humane Society.
Arrangements are being handled by Robert D. Loose Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel.
Online guestbook:
www.loosefuneralhomes.com
 
MCLARY, Thursa M. (I836)
 
955 March 7, 2009

Thomas J. G. Spang
The Salem News Tue May 11, 2010, 02:19 AM EDT

MANCHESTER ? Thomas J. G. Spang, an avid fly fisherman and outdoorsman, died at home in Manchester-by-the-Sea on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009.

Born in Chicago on Jan. 31, 1929, he moved with his family to Brookline in 1938. He attended Dexter School and Milton Academy ('47) where he later co-founded the Korean War Memorial Scholarship, given to a student from a developing country, in memory of his classmates who lost their lives. Milton made a lasting impression on him, fostering in him a love of writing and sports. Summers, Tom attended Camp Wabun, a canoeing and outdoor adventure camp in Canada, where he discovered his other lifelong love: the great outdoors. After graduating from Harvard ('51), he took a post at General Motors in the assembly line and training program before moving to France to work for the Paris Review. From there, he hitchhiked around the world as a stringer for the Boston Globe. His travels took him to many fascinating places from Laos to Tehran, where on one occasion he submitted a picturesque piece about the nightlife, describing in detail the belly dancers and sumptuous food. He promptly received a letter from the editor saying how much he enjoyed the article but because The Boston Globe was a family paper, he would not print it.

After his travels, Tom took a position with the Gillette Company in London, where he met his wife Caroline Anne Edward-Collins, and then with Morgan Guaranty Trust in New York, which sent him to Madrid, Spain. After three years in Madrid, he returned to New York with his wife, two daughters and 50 cases of his favorite Rioja. However, his travels left him with a wanderlust too strong for the constraints of a suit and tie, and he gave them up, first to try his hand at writing, while also working at the United Nations Development Programme, and then to begin his own business, Gametrails Limited. There he was able to combine his love of writing with his love of adventure. He spent many years exploring the world with Caroline and his many friends and clients, scouting for the best wing shooting, fly fishing and local eateries. He spent his summers at his camp in Quebec where he and Caroline, with their dogs at their sides, taught their three children how to use a .22 gauge rifle, paddle the J stroke, portage a canoe, and cast a fly. Tom's kindness, graciousness, humor and sense of adventure will be missed by all.

Tom is survived by his wife Caroline, daughters Charlotte and Vanessa, son Thomas, his grandchildren Peter, Benjamin, Alexander, Emily and Isabel, his brother Joseph Peter Spang III, and his dog Binti.
 
SPANG, Thomas J. G. (I43)
 
956 Margaret A. Janicka
Margaret A. Janicka, 86, of Butler passed away at 6:30 a.m. Sunday at the VNA Inpatient Hospice.
She was born Jan. 16, 1925, in Struthers, Ohio.
Mrs. Janicka was a graduate of Butler High School and attended secretarial school. She was a member of the Calvary United Presbyterian Church for over 60 years until its close. Then she attended the Trinity Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Janicka was a homemaker. In her earlier years, she worked for Dr. W. Leroy Eisler. She was a life member of the Butler Historical Society and the Butler Hospital Auxiliary. She liked to play golf and was a member of the Butler Country Club, the Ladies Duffers at Stoughton Acres, and the Armco Country Club.
Margaret liked to play cards, especially 500. She was a member of the Butler 44 club for over 65 years and played bridge in several groups. She liked to read, travel and play canasta with her neighbors.
Mrs. Janicka is survived by her husband, Stanley J. Janicka, who she married June 22, 1949; one daughter, Deborah Cumberland and her husband, Robin, of Ashtabula, Ohio; two grandchildren, Barton and Rachel Cumberland; one sister-in-law, Gertrude Klingensmith of Butler; a number of nieces and nephews; and the women who lovingly cared for her during the past year and a half.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Loyal B. Spang and May Bellis Spang and James Craigen and Mary Thomson Craigen, and one son, Loyal Daniel "Danny" Janicka.
JANICKA - Friends of Margaret A. Janicka, who passed away Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012, will be received from 10 to 11 a.m. Saturday at the Thompson-Miller Funeral Home, 124 E. North St., Butler. Funeral services will immediately follow at 11 a.m. with Pastor Richard Rowe, interim pastor at the Trinity Presbyterian Church, officiating. Interment will take place in the North Side Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Lifesteps, 383 New Castle Road, Butler, PA 16001 or VNA Inpatient Hospice, 115 Technology Drive, Butler, PA 16001.
Online condolences can be given at www.thompson-miller.com.

.Published in Butler Eagle from January 9 to January 12, 2012 Print | View Guest Book .Helpful Links
 
SPANG, Margaret (I1534)
 
957 Margaret may have married John Fisher. In "History of the Hain family", published on Ancestry.com, there is the following:
John Fisher, born Jan. 22, 1798; died Oct 24, 1828. He married Margaret Spang. Lived in
Hereford township.
John's parents were Henry Fischer and Susanna Ruth, daughter of Christian Ruth. Their oldest daughter, Mary Fisher, married Henry S. Spang, Margaret's brother. 
SPANG, Margaretha (I4011)
 
958 Marilyn A. Bagadinski Rinker
RINKER, Marilyn A. Bagadinski Marilyn A. Bagadinski Rinker died suddenly on Monday (May 11, 2009). She was born in Middletown, and graduated from Ona Wilcox School of Nursing in Middletown. She went on to pursue her BS Degree in Nursing and her MSN Double Degree in Nursing Administration and Patient and Family Education. She has held many positions in the course of her career. Her dedication and service to nursing spanned her entire adult life. She served as Nursing Director for Medicine and Cardiology at Fletcher Allen; Oncology Clinical Coordinator at The Vermont Regional Cancer Center; Nurse manager of a Medical Unit with an Oncology focus in Marlboro, MA; many years in Oncology as a Nurse Practitioner; Clinical Research Nurse and Oncology Educator in Vermont and Rhode Island; eight years as The Nursing Program Director at Norwich University; and Executive Director of the Vermont State Nurses' Association. Her awards and accomplishments were many, including Florence Nightingale award and the 2005 Nurse of the Year from the Vermont State Nurses' Association. Marilyn was also a devoted wife, mother, sister and grandmother. She was predeceased by her parents, Stephen and Harriet Bagadinski; husband, Robert and her brother, John. She leaves behind a legacy of love and devotion to her two sons, Robert and his wife Annette and Stephen and his wife Jen; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Mary Lou and Nick Pini, and Natalie and Gene Pucci; one sister-in-law, Kathy Bagadinski; six grandchildren: Woody, Clark, Ben, Anthony, Lee and Forrest; many nieces and nephews and a multitude of friends. Services will be held at the Portland Memorial Funeral Home at 231 Main St., Portland on Saturday, May 16, from 12 Noon-3 p.m. Donations may be made to the Vermont State Nurses'Association, 100 Dorsett Street, Suite 13, Burlington, VT 05403. To offer condolences see obituary on www.courant.com.
 
BAGADINSKI, Marilyn (I8066)
 
959 Mark died March 25,1989 in Delta Junction, Alaska where he was stationed with the army. He hit a patch of ice on the highway and overcorrected his car and skidded sideways down the highway where he hit another car and rolled several times. He died on his twenty-sixth birthday and left a wife Diane and two sons Gabrial Owen 4 and Marc Abrum McKinney Bennett 2. He was a special grandson and is greatly missed by his parents, grandparents,aunts,uncles and cousins. BENNETT, Mark Owen (I2252)
 
960 Marriage and children based on 1880 census for Middle Ward, Pottstown, Montgomery Co., PA
_____
JOSEPH SPANG, the well-known Pottstown brick manufacturer, residing at 104 South Charlotte street, in that borough, was born in York, Pennsylvania, August 6, 1839. He is the son of Jeremiah and Catharine (Fricker) Spang, both of whom were born in Pottstown. They had a family of five children- three sons and two daughters of whom three are now living: John, of Philadelphia; Joseph, of Pottstown; and Mary, widow of Mahlon Coller, also of Pottstown.

Jeremiah Spang (father) was a millstone-maker. He removed to York, Pennsylvania, living there a number of years, and then returned to Pottstown, where he resided until his death in 1876, in his sixty-fourth year. His wife died in 1887, aged nearly seventy-six years. He was a Lutheran in religious faith, and she was reared a Catholic.

Adam Spang (grandfather) was a native of Montgomery county and also a burr-maker. He was married three times and had seventeen children in all. He died at the age of upwards of seventy years.

Anthony Fricker (maternal grandfather) was born in New Hanover township, Montgomery county.

Joseph Spang lived in York until he had reached the age of eighteen years. He attended the public schools there, being reared partly upon the farm and partly in the town. He pursued the even tenor of ordinary life until the breaking out of the Rebellion in 1861, when he enlisted for the defense of the government in Company C, Fourth Pennsylvania Regiment, for three months, and at the expiration of his term, re-enlisted in Company A, Fifty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers. He enlisted a third time in the field and served to the end of the war. At first a private, he became successively corporal and sergeant. He was slightly wounded in the battle of Petersburg.

(Page 205)

Mr. Spang participated in the following engagements with the commands to which he belonged: in the seven days fighting before Richmond; in the battles of Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania Court House, Cold Harbor, Petersburg. He was in the hospital at York, Pennsylvania, and returned to his regiment when convalescent, and was afterwards engaged in the action of Hatcher's Run, South-Side Railroad, Farmsville, and Appomattox Court House.

After the war Sergeant Spang returned to Pottstown and engaged in the brick manufacturing business which he has conducted successfully ever since.

On December 26, 1865, he married Miss Emma H. Craver, daughter of William M. and Priscilla A. (Clayton) Craver. They have had four children: Anna Priscilla married Harry G. Rinehart, of Pottstown, and they have four children: Claude, Carl, Evalyn and Mildred. Ella May died in infancy. William H., a typewriter and stenographer, married Ella May Burk. Joseph died at the age of six months.

Mr. and Mrs. Spang are members of the Methodist Episcopal church and he is a church trustee. He is also a member of Richards Post, No. 595, Grand Army of the Republic, and of Encampment No. 22, Union Veteran Legion.

Politically Mr. Spang is a Republican, being an active worker in behalf of the interests of that party. He cast his first presidential vote for Abraham Lincoln in 1860. He served in the town council for a term of three years.

In 1891 he built an elegant home for himself, in which he now resides, and owns several other properties in Pottstown.

William M. Craver (Mrs. Spang's father) was born in Pennsylvania and her mother in Maryland. They had a family, of eight children, of whom seven are still living. Her father was a hatter in York. He died in 1876 at the age of fifty-nine years. His wife survived until 1887, when she died at the age of sixty-seven years. In religious faith both were members of the Lutheran denomination.

Daniel Craver (Mrs. Spang's grandfather) was a native of Pennsylvania and a hatter by trade. He was of German descent. His wife was Rebecca Neff. Both lived to be upwards of seventy years of age. They, had a family of six children. Mr. Craver's father was George Craver. Mrs. Spang's maternal grandfather was John Clayton. He was a native of Maryland, but his parents came from England. His wife was Harriet Houchman. He lost his life by accident in middle age, but his wife lived to be upwards of eighty. They had a family of three daughters. Mr. Spang's family are descendants of Michael Spang, who emigrated from Germany to this country about one hundred and fifty years ago.
______
Ellwood Roberts' Biographical Annals, 1904: Montgomery Co, PA
Vol I - Part 10: pp. 198 - 222.
Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Joe Patterson and Susan Walters.
 
SPANG, Joseph (I3051)
 
961 Marriage and son taken from LDS site, based on same year of birth and approximate location. Confirmed by SPANG, Jacob (I42)
 
962 MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED
Dodge, Robert L. and Sara F. Spang

Philadelphia Inquirer, October 23, 1895

LEFTWICH-DODGE - SPANG. October 26, by the Rev. Dr. Wood, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Germantown, Pa., Robert de Leftwich-Dodge, of New York, to Sara Frances, third daugher of teh late Frederich Spang, esq. of Reading, Pa. and Elizabeth, his wife.

New York Herald, October 27, 1895 
Family F499
 
963 MARRIAGE: Gottlieb is on his Marriage License (S026) to Elizabeth STIRM, Gottlob Frederick (I449)
 
964 MARRIED
SPANG - MARTIN - On the 30th ult, by the Rev. Dr. F W Kremer, Mr. Rudolph F Spang of Cornwall Township to Miss Lizzie Martin, of Heidelberg Township, Lebanon County.
 
Family F1398
 
965 married 14 Oct 1911 by E. Cramlet, Minister RALSTON, Franklin Leroy (I391)
 
966 Married 26 Aug 1891, records not found in Holmes Co. index. KING, Jacob Henry (I335)
 
967 Married by Rev. Thos. Rogers, on Thursday, November 10, 1887, at the residence of Hiram LaBoyteaux, Amos Wilkinson and Miss Cornelia C. LaBoyteaux. "New Castle Courier", Friday, November 18, 1887. Family F847
 
968 Married by Rev. Thos. Rogers, on Thursday, November 10, 1887, at the residence of Hiram LaBoyteaux, Amos Wilkinson and Miss Cornelia C. LaBoyteaux. "New Castle Courier", Friday, November 18, 1887. Family F848
 
969 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I236)
 
970 MARTHA LEES FEB. 18, 1938 - JUNE 16, 2006 SOCIAL WORKER, COUNSELOR : Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) - Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Deceased Name: MARTHA LEES FEB. 18, 1938 - JUNE 16, 2006 SOCIAL WORKER, COUNSELOR

People rarely spoke of Martha "Marty" Lees without using the word "caring."
Mrs. Lees, a longtime social worker and counselor from Ross, died in an automobile accident on Friday. She was 68.
In the mid-1980s, Mrs. Lees, her words tough but kind, changed the lives of young women when she worked as one of the first directors of counseling at Carlow University.
When she arrived, she greatly expanded services, creating an entire department, said her friend of 35 years, Martha Ezzel, a Carlow faculty member who once served as dean of students and who hired Mrs. Lees.
"She was perfect for the job. What you saw was her skill in working with young people. She was a guiding light."
Students stressed by academic rigor or beset by personal crises went to Mrs. Lee upset and confused. They left as friends.
The former Carlow president, Sister Grace Ann Geibel, said, "If I knew that a student was seeing Marty for counseling, I always sighed a sigh of relief, because I knew that the student was in good hands."
Mrs. Lees grew up on a farm near Lapel, Ind. She began her undergraduate studies at Ball State University in Indiana and finished at the University of Pittsburgh, eventually earning a master's in social work from Pitt.
She lived in Pittsburgh for 43 years and forged a career as a social worker and director of counseling and maintained a private counseling practice for many years.
At Carlow, she didn't know what 9 to 5 was, said Sister Geibel. She spent countless hours with students and "gave of her time over and above the rest of us."
She once paid the entire pre-school bill for the child of a single mother who could not. She also donated $500 for another single mom to travel to Ohio and back to care for a sick parent.
She is survived by her husband, Max G. Lees; three daughters, Minda J. Lees of Mount Kisco, N.Y., Melanie J. Lees and Melissa J. Lees of Salt Lake City; a son, Mark G. Lees of Allison Park; two brothers, Morris Hershberger of Lapel, Ind., and John Hershberger of Winchester, Ind.; and three grandchildren.
A memorial service will be held at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Hiland Presbyterian Church, 845 Perry Highway, Ross.
Donations may be made to the Women's Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh, Box 9024, Pittsburgh 15224.
Arrangements are by T.B. Devlin Funeral Home. 
HERSBERGER, Martha Jane (I5155)
 
971 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I7870)
 
972 Mary A. (Spang) Thompson, 70, of Hope, Michigan and Tarpon Springs, Florida went to be with her God March 8, 2008 after courageously battling cancer for several years.

The daughter of the late Daniel and Eleanor (Yahle) Spang was born April 4, 1937 in Dayton, Ohio where she was raised and educated. Mary entered the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, Reading, Ohio in 1955.

She earned a B.S. in Education from the University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio and a Masters Degree from Marygrove College, Detroit, Michigan. She was a teacher in parochial schools in Ohio and Illinois for more than fifteen years before leaving the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in 1973. She then taught in the Dayton Public Schools.

Mary met Blair Thompson in 1975 and they were married at St. Agnes Catholic Church, Dayton, Ohio in 1976. Mary was an active volunteer, played tennis, snow skied and loved to dance with Blair. She was blessed with a very loving heart, reaching out to many people and will be greatly missed by family and friends.

Mary was survived by her loving husband and best friend of 32 years, Blair; son, Robert (Sofia) Thompson of New Baltimore, Michigan; daughters, Diane (Tom) Ungrodt of Ann Arbor, Michigan and Connie Thompson of Birmingham, Michigan; 8 grandchildren; 1 great grandchild; brothers, David Spang of Dayton, Ohio and James (Peg) Spang of Charlevoix, Michigan; sisters, Dee (Don) Camby of Wilmington, Ohio and Kathleen (Richard) Hallert of Madera, California.

In addition to her parents, she was predeceased by her daughter, Jill Koinis.

Funeral: St. Agnes Catholic Church with the Reverend Father James Hast, OFM, Cap. as celebrant.

Interment: Greenwood Cemetery in Petoskey with Father Joe Graff.

Visitation will be at the Wilson MILLER Funeral Home, 4210 N. Saginaw Rd., Midland on Wednesday from 4 to 8 p.m. and at the church from 10 a.m. until time of mass. A Christian vigil service will be conducted at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be offered to St. Agnes Catholic Church or MidMichigan Home Care. Personal messages of support may be left for the family at www.wilson-miller.com.

Published in Midland Daily News from March 10 to March 11, 2008
 
SPANG, Mary A. (I1265)
 
973 Mary and her parents are listed as Speng in the LDS records but there is a clear match. SPANG, Mary (I106)
 
974 Mary Hunter..who married Robert Flynn of Wilmington, and second,....William Pusey of the same city. Mary apparently resided in New York, from James Spang
 
HUNTER, Mary (I2738)
 
975 Mary Ida does not show up in the 1880 census which was taken on June 19, 1880. It appears that she originally had the name Hattie and it was later changed. WILSON, Mary Ida (I330)
 
976 Mary may have been born 10/9/1876 HINSHAW, Mary Louise (I747)
 
977 Mary, was Caleb's second wife. Caleb's first wife's name was Elizabeth. They were married in 1739 and had two children, Lucretia and Jemima.
There is no information on Mary's maiden name or where she came from. 
Family F1039
 
978 Maryland Journal -- September 11, 1792

Married, on Thursday evening last, by the Rev. Mr. Kurtz, Mr. Charles Phile, to the amiable Miss Catharina Hersperger, both of this town. 
Family F1311
 
979 Maryland Sun -- January 23, 1891

Major T. T. Hersperger and Miss Helen Scholl, daughter of the late Dennis Scholl, were quietly married at the Reformed Church parsonage, Frederick City, last evening. The ceremony was performed by Rev. E. R. Eachbach, D.D. The groom is a well-known resident of Frederick. 
Family F1170
 
980 Mathias was too old to carry a gun in the Revolutionary War, but served his country by furnishing grain for the Army. Mathias took up 3000 acres of land during his time at Hagerstown, Maryland.
Source: 'One-From-Two', 20 January 1991, Melvin Otho Ridenour, p 12, 16, 29, 35, 40, 43, 57, 61, 101. Ancestral File 4.02, AFN 4RDS-X3. 'Ridenour Family 983-1900s', Boulder Genealogical Society Quarterly, May 1979, p 72. Melvin Otho Ridenour
Letter, 21 Jan 1995, p 2. 
REITENAUER, Mathias (I1168)
 
981 Maud is listed as Mrs. Maud Scovel Schell in the "Shetterly History". It is assumed her maiden name is Scovel. SCOVEL, Maud (I6992)
 
982 May 5, 1908 - Boston Journal
SPANG- In Sharon, May 3, Anna M., wife of Joseph P. Spang 
SCHULTE, Anna M. (I39)
 
983 May be an MD, married to Joshua Cohen and living in Conn. (see father's obit) VAN ZYLE, Cindy (I6635)
 
984 may have been 1911 per David A. Spang Family F34
 
985 May have been born 25 Jun 1740 in Lynn MA. MUZZY, Joseph (I3208)
 
986 May have been born 31 Jul 1576. DUDLEY, Thomas (I3107)
 
987 May have been born in County Meath, Ireland. DEXTER, John (I3259)
 
988 May have been born in Sudbury MA. MUZZY, Abigail (I3209)
 
989 May have been married to a Sigler and live in Lexington, S.C. (see father's obit) VAN ZYLE, Cathy (I6634)
 
990 May have immigrated to the United States on the ship Roscins, 10/22/1847 NEARY, Patrick (I2202)
 
991 may have married a Mr. Knapp. There is reference to "John Knapp and his mother, Hannah Spang, are both from Berks County, Pennsylvania." in "Biographical Records of Delaware and Randolph Counties, Indiana." SPANG, Hanna (I3700)
 
992 May have settled in Providence, RI BARR, David (I255)
 
993 MCDOWELL- SPANG - In London, at St. Martin's -in-the-Fields, on Monday morning, October 21, F. M. McDowell, esq. of New York to Miss S. Josephine Spang, eldest daughter of Charles F. Spang Esq. of Pittsburg, Pa.

New York Herald, November 7, 1861 
Family F153
 
994 Melvin Otho Ridenour does not list Mathias as child of Nicholas in most recent correspondence.
Source: 'One-From-Two', 20 January 1991, Melvin Otho Ridenour, p 61, 81. 'Genealogy of the Ridenour Family,' Ephraim Valintine Ridenour, 1910, p 17. Melvin Otho Ridenour Letter, 21 Jan 1995, p 2. 
REITENOUR, Mathias (I1061)
 
995 Mentioned in father's will but not in public release of estate papers, therefore suspect she died between 1765 and 1770. HUNTER, Barbara (I793)
 
996 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I945)
 
997 Meredith Leslie ?Bud? Hersberger, 83, Noblesville, passed away Sunday, March 13, 2011, at his winter home in Florida..

He was born on October 24, 1927, in Noblesville, Indiana to Bernard and Mae (Michaels) Hersberger..

He graduated from Walnut Grove High School in 1945..

Bud retired from Burton Heating and Plumbing Company in Rochester and he also farmed the family farm..

He was a member of the Midwest Field Trial Association; the Fort Recovery Ohio Field Trialers; the Operating Engineers Union Local 103; the Hamilton County Farm Bureau Coop; the Noblesville American Legion; and the Noblesville Masonic Lodge..

He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Mary Ellen (Cannon) Hersberger; three daughters, Linda (husband, Garry) Hodge of Chino Hills, CA, Connie (husband, Mike) Thomas of Cicero, and Jeannie (husband, Kelly) Simpson of Columbus; six grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; and two sisters..

He was preceded in death by his parents; and four sisters..

A memorial celebration will be held at 2:00 pm Saturday, April 2, 2011, at Scott E. Hersberger Funeral Home in Lapel with Pastor Mark Knapp officiating and friends will be offered a time to share their memories. Bud will be ultimately laid to rest on the family farm..

There will be an opportunity to visit following the service..

In lieu of flowers, the family would like friends to share their stories, pictures, or any memories of Bud to be compiled into a memory book. Please send them to: Linda Hodge, 15554 East 226th Street, Noblesville, Indiana 46060 or email to linda@linda-hodge.com. Or donations may also be made to the charity of the donor?s choice. 
HERSBERGER, Leslie (I3740)
 
998 Merrill "Pete" Shaul, 72, a retired Fisher Guide employee, died Mon day at his home in Clinton. A native of Hamilton County, he had lived in Lapel and Anderson before moving to Clinton several years ago. A 1933 graduate of Lapel Hight School, he was a member of UAW Local 663, Clinton Moose Lodge and Clinton Half-Century Club.

Survivors include his wife, Catherine (Harris); one son, Stephen Shaul of Noblesville; one daughter, Nancy Jack of Houston, Texas; three stepsons, Fred Reagin of Anderson, Mike Hummel of St. Paul, Minn., and Richard Hummel of Denver, Colo.; one step-daughter, Glenna Stephen of Clermont; one brother, Wallace Shaul of Lapel; two sisters, Mary Coverdale of Durbin and Martha Smith of Fishersburg; and several grandchildren, nieces and nephews.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday in Fisher Brothers Funeral Home in L apel. Burial will be in Brookside Cemetery, Lapel.
 
SHAUL, Merril Thomas (I9566)
 
999 Merrill C. Crowder

Oct. 22, 1919 - May 24, 2005

FRANKTON ? Merrill Clayton Crowder, 85, Frankton, died May 24, 2005, at St. Vincent Mercy Hospital, in Elwood.

He was born Oct. 22, 1919, in Anderson, Mo., the youngest of four children, both to John Kelly Crowder and Rena Eppard Crowder. His parents died shortly thereafter in the flu epidemic, as well as one of his brothers, and left him and his older brother and sister orphaned. They were taken in by his mother?s brother, Ossie Eppard and his wife Ida, and raised as their own. He married his childhood sweetheart, Polly Testerman, on Oct. 12, 1940. She preceded him in death on July 29, 1997. They had one son, Lawrence Kelly Crowder.

Clayton served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and moved to Anderson near the close of the war. He was always talented with his hands, whether he was whittling or building houses, including the log cabin just outside of Frankton where he lived at the time of his death.

In 1965 he went to work at Guide as a journeyman carpenter where he worked until his retirement 20 years later. He was associated with the Masonic Lodge and was the master of the Lapel Lodge in 1967. He was fun loving and always playing pranks and practical jokes on his friends. He was especially fond of making puzzles, rocking horses and all sorts of wooden toys for children. He was a devoted father, a grandfather of five, great-grandfather of 19 and great-great-grandfather of two.

He is survived by his son, Lawrence Crowder and daughter-in-law, Norma Turner Crowder of Frankton; a niece,

Catherine Stalker Gillespie; his grandchildren, Michael Kelly Crowder and wife Julie Closser Crowder of Park City, Utah, Todd Merrill Crowder and wife Becky Closser Crowder of Carmel, Linda Beth Chamberlain of Indianapolis, Shannon Turner Crowder of Minneapolis, Minn., and Libby Crowder Anderson and husband David S. Anderson of Frankton; all of his great-grandchildren; and countless friends.

Services will be conducted at 10 a.m. Friday at Harper & Dunnichay Funeral Home with his grandsons officiating. Burial will take place at a later date.

Visitation will be 4 to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home.
 
CROWDER, Merrill (I8289)
 
1000 Met the British at Lexington in 1775, and was two months with the Army at Bennington in 1777. MUZZY, John (I3202)
 

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