Friday, December 18, 2020

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Henry W. Miller - Bishop Post, G.A.R.


The name "Henry Miller" was very popular in this area during the time of our subject's life. In the 1860 Defiance County census alone, six Henry Millers could be found!  But through clues in our soldier's obituary, in sibling names, dates, and other details, this William Henry Miller could stand apart from the rest as a Union Army veteran and member of the G.A.R., Bishop Post.

 Born and raised in Defiance County, Henry was born on November 13, 1847, to his parents, another Henry Miller and Mary Knoll.  In the 1860 census, he was 12 years old living with his siblings: George, 10; Caroline, 8; Ellen 5; and Frank,2. Sarah Miller, 16, was also there, but labeled as a servant, so it remains unknown if this was an older sister.


Soon after he turned 16, he enlisted in the Army as a private in the 38th Regiment, Company G, Ohio O.V.I.  In January, 1864, the 38th Ohio was home on furlough for a month.  Many of those men reenlisted and Henry became a new enlistee, signing up for three years duty on January 29, 1864.  By May, the unit had reached Georgia to join Sherman's Atlanta campaign.  They fought in all the major battles of that campaign, and later headed with Sherman to the Carolinas campaign.  The end of the war came, and Henry and the 38th traveled to the Grand Review in Washington, D.C. to celebrate.  In Cleveland, he officially mustered out and headed home, having been discharged on July 12, 1865.

Pension Card
 Henry's obituary noted that his father was a soldier and was killed in the South, so Henry, enlisted to take his place, probably partly out of patriotism and partly out of respect for his father.

 By the 1870 census, Henry, at 22, and his brother George, 20, supported the household.  Henry was a day laborer and George was a machinist at the Defiance Machine Works.  Their mother, Mary, 46, lived in the household, along with siblings, Ella, 14, and Frank, 12.

On Christmas Eve, 1873, Henry Miller married Ellen Heatley in Defiance, Ohio.



The Holgate Pike was the location for their home in 1880. William H. Miller, 32, worked as an engineer in the Defiance Machine Works.  He and Ellen, 30, had no children. A Defiance newspaper, on January 18, 1896, reported that Ellen Miller had two small tumors removed from her shoulder, but they grew back and she feared another operation. In 1896, Ellen passed away, perhaps because of an illness related to those tumors.  An obituary could not be located.



The 1900 census enumerator found Henry living alone at his home at 410 North Clinton.  Henry, 52, widowed, was a stationary engineer at the machine works.
However, he married again on December 17, 1908, to Mrs. Hester (Esther) Minsel, widow of Andrew J Minsel, who died in 1905.  The two settled into Henry's home at 410 North Clinton where they lived until their deaths.  Henry worked until in his seventies at the Defiance Machine Works.  Hester had four children by her first husband, and three of those were living.  

Hester's obituary, from the Defiance Crescent-News, August 1, 1926:


"DEATH CLAIMS MRS. MILLER

Long Resident of Defiance Succumbs at Age 77

Death claimed Mrs. Hester Miller, wife of Henry Miller, at their home, 410 North Clinton street, Wednesday afternoon at 12:15 after eight months with carcinoma.  She was 77 years old.

She is survived by her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Ella Dull of Cleveland, and a son, Earl Minsel of Mansfield, and a son, Bert Minsel died last September, and another died in childhood.  Two sisters and brothers also survive, Mrs. Frank Sapp, Perry Street, Defiance, and Mrs. L. Whitney, North Richland township and Frank VanDusen of Hillsdale, Mich.

She had lived in and around Defiance practically all her life, coming here from eastern Ohio with her parents when a small child.  She was a member of the Women's Relief Corps.

Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. central standard time at the late home, and at 2:30 at Independence church, with burial in Independence cemetery.  Rev. R. B. Foster will officiate."

So, in the 1930 census, Henry, 82, lived at his old home, retired, but eventually, he moved in with his niece nearby.  He passed away on September 22, 1935, one of the last of the veterans of the Civil War living in Defiance.

His obituary from the Defiance Crescent-News, September 23, 1935:

"W. HENRY MILLER, 87, WHO MARCHED WITH SHERMAN TO SEA, SUCCUMBS

With the death of W. Henry Miller, who marched with Sherman to the sea, the roster of Civil War veterans living in Defiance today had been reduced to two.

Mr. Miller, affectionately known to his many friends as 'Bid,' passed away at 4:30 p.m. Sunday at the home of a niece, Mrs. Robert Toland, 416 North Clinton Street.  Death followed a stroke of paralysis. Despite his 87 years, he had been in fairly good health until last Friday when he was compelled to go to bed.

RITES TO BE TUESDAY.
Funeral services will be held at 2:30 Tuesday from the Mansfield funeral home, where the body has been taken, with Dr. B.F. Hofer, pastor of Zion's Lutheran church, officiating. Herbert E. Anderson post will conduct the American Legion ritualistic service.  Burial will be in Riverside Cemetery.

John Myers and L. P. Rife, who live in Defiance, are the remaining members of Bishop Post of the G.A.R.   Fred Grossenberger of near Junction and J. S. Palmer of Napoleon are also listed as members of Defiance post.

Mr. Miller was born in West High street, Nov. 13, 1847.  He was a son of Henry Miller of Bucyrus and Mary Knoll of Baden, Germany, who came to Defiance shortly after their marriage.

SERVED WITH HIS FATHER.
In 1863, when Mr. Miller was 16 years old, he secured admission to the Union forces and served with his father.  The elder Mr. Miller died in the south when he contracted fever.  His son continued his service until the close of the war.

Shortly after he entered the army, Mr. Miller was wounded in a brisk engagement and was transferred to serve as an officer's aide.  It was in this capacity that he accompanied Sherman to the sea.

CANAL BOAT ENGINEER
When Mr. Miller returned from the war, he farmed for a short time before securing employment as an engineer on a canal boat plying between Defiance and Detroit.  Later, he was an engineer at the Defiance Machine Works for more than 40 years before he retired.

After his return from the war, Mr. Miller was married to Ellen Heatley of north of Defiance. Following his first wife's death, Mr. Miller was remarried on December 17, 1908 to Hester Minsel of Independence.  When Mrs. Minsel died nine years ago, Mr. Miller went to live in the home of his niece, Mrs. Toland, whose home adjoined to the Miller residence.  With the exception of numerous nephews and nieces, Mr. Miller has no immediate relatives."

Riverside Cemetery
(This is part of a series on Civil War veterans of Defiance County who were part of the G.A.R., Bishop Post, that headquartered in the city.  Formed in 1879, the post was named after a local man, Captain William Bishop, Company D, 100th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Army who died as a result of wounds received in battle.  The veterans' photos are part of a composite photo of members that has survived.  If you have other information or corrections to add to the soldiers' stories, please add to the comments!)

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

 

It's membership time for the Defiance County

Genealogical Society!  As a reminder, if you had a 2020

paid membership, we are granting an extension through

2021 in thanks for being patient as we wait out this

pandemic.  

BUT, we also welcome NEW members for next year 

when we can hopefully meet again!  Just $15 for a single membership and

$18 for a family, which includes a subscription to our quarterly newsletter.

Here is the link to the application form in either Word or PDF -

 http://defiancecountygenealogy.org/join.html

Hope you can join us! 

 

By the way, with your library card number, you can now use www.newspaperarchives at home.  What a wonderful gift from the library to our community of researchers.  Thank you!

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Defiance County Pioneers - Joseph Kerr, Sr. and Barbara Jane Dowell Kerr Obituaries

JOSEPH KERR, SR.
1820 - 1902

"Joseph Kerr was born in Chester county, Pa., Sept. 10, 1820.  He came to Holmes county, Ohio in 1812.  Having learned the tailoring trade, he began his business life there, working at his trade until 1857, when he moved to Hicksville, where he has resided since.
For many years he was actively engaged in business life here and closely identified with the public interests and welfare of the place.  Oct. 9, 1845, he was married to Miss Jane Dowell.  To this union was born three sons and two daughters, all of whom survive him, except the youngest daughter who died in 1864 at the age of 7 years.

For several years the deceased has not enjoyed good health, but he was not of a murmuring disposition and bore his afflictions with more than ordinary courage.  He was a man of resolute will and indomitable courage and when once convinced that a thing was right, was not easily turned from his conviction.

Many years ago, he united with the M. E. church, and since coming to Hicksville, identified himself with the church here, but for reasons best known to himself, was never received into full membership.  He was a firm believer in Christianity and found pleasure in supporting the church.  The ground upon which the new M. E. church stands in Hicksville was donated by him for this purpose.  In former years he was actively engaged in temperance work and moral reforms of the town and was a citizen respected and loved by all.  He will be much missed.  the wife and children have the deepest sympathy from a host of friends.

He departed this life March 30, 1902, aged 81 years, 6 mos. and 20 days.  The funeral services were conducted in the M. E. church by Rev. F. W. Stanton on Tuesday afternoon, attended by a large concourse of people."
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
BARBARA JANE DOWELL KERR
1827 - 1904

"Barbara Jane Dowell, daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth Dowell, was born in Holmes county, O., Sept. 18, 1827.  She was married to Joseph Kerr, Oct. 9, 1845.  Twelve or thirteen years after their marriage, they moved to Hicksville, O. where she died Dec. 1, 1904, aged 77 years, 2 months and 19 days.

Mrs. Kerr was one of eleven children, only four of whom survive her.  Her parents are also gone.  The living brothers and sisters are William Dowell, of Ligonier, Ind., too feeble to be at the funeral; Mrs. Hester Bevington, of Chicago, Ill., also not able to be present; Thorton Dowell and Mrs. Mary A. Shellenburger, both of Hicksville.

Mrs. Kerr was the mother of four children.  One of these, Laura, died after a few hours illness, June 29, 1864, at the tender age of 7 years.  The next loss was that of the husband and father, who died March 30, 1902.  This was a year of more bereavement, for in August, Thomas Kerr, and in December, Joseph Kerr, Jr., passed away, leaving the mother and their own families desolate.
The living children are Mrs. Alice Crook, now in Denver, Colo., not able to be present, and Fillmore Kerr, of Toledo, O. who with wife and three children were present, as was also Mr. Ed. Crook, of Denver.  Other near relatives to attend the funeral were Mrs. Thomas Kerr, of Toledo, and Mrs. Joseph Kerr, Jr and two sons, Paul and Dewitt.  All the grandchildren, save Reed Kerr, of Toledo; Joe Kerr of Logan and Leonard Crook, of Cleveland, were permitted to attend.

Aunt Jane Kerr, as many called her, was for many years a professing Christian, having united with the church in girlhood.  She was somewhat diffident in her profession, but remained true to the end.

She was at the church service the Sunday preceding her death.  One of the hymns sung that morning was 'Come until me when shadows darkly gather, When the sad heart is weary and distressed.'  This hymn has comforted many and it found its way to the heart of Mother Kerr and many others in the congregation.  She remained for class meeting, speaking briefly of hopes and purposes.  Little did we dream that that service and testimony were to be her last.  She had felt however, that perhaps her stay here was soon to end.  

Last summer, knowing that her daughter, Mrs. Crook, was soon to go to the distant west to stay for some time, Mother Kerr went to Lakeside to have one more visit with Alice.  After her return, she expressed regret that there had not been more opportunity to be alone with her.  For, said she, 'I feel that I may never see her again.'  Her premonition came true, for never again are they permitted on earth to see each other.  Her illness was so brief that few even of her near neighbors knew it.

Her death came almost with the suddenness of the lightning flash, Wednesday evening at 6 o'clock..  (Her) funeral was in the M. E. church Saturday at 2 p.m. after which the body was laid to rest in Forest Home cemetery."

Source: Obituaries: Pioneers of Northwest Ohio, Volume I.  Carma Rowe Estate, Johnson Memorial Library.  No date. Page 22. 
Copies available at the Defiance Public Library and the Sherwood and Hicksville branches.

Friday, October 16, 2020

John Young - G.A.R, Bishop Post

Just before the War Between the States broke out, John Young lived with his mother, Jane, 52, and his brother, Joseph, 15, in Mark Township.  They farmed acreage worth $1000, according to the census, and had but $100 in personal wealth, although John claimed he also had $80 of his own.

 On November 21, 1861, John enlisted into Company K, 68th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry for a three year term.  He fought in Tennessee, and eventually the group entered the siege of Vicksburg from May 18 - July 4, 1862.  It was most likely there that he was wounded or taken by disease because on July 8, 1862, he was discharged due to a surgeon's certificate of disability.  

(In 1890 when the veterans were enumerated for their census, John had lost his discharge papers and so no information is given about him there.)

 

 


 Born in Pennsylvania on August 24, 1844, he married Louisa Beavers on August 14, 1867, according to Williams County, Ohio, records.  The daughter of Jeremiah Beavers, Louisa was born on January 24, 1850.  By the 1870 census, they were settled in Bryan, with their young son, Charles, 11 months.  John worked as a cabinet maker.  Three more children - Cory (dtr.), Frank, and an unnamed daughter, 2 months - were enumerated in 1880, still in Bryan. 


Sometime after 1880 and before 1890, the family moved to Defiance where they were enumerated on the 1900 census as living at 102 Main Street.  John, 56, tended a machine, while Louise, 50, had the company of Erma Morse, 20, a single daughter, and Hannan Nore (or Nore Hannan), 10, a granddaughter.  Their house was rented in Ward 4. (His obituary noted that they moved to Defiance in 1881.)

The relationship with Nore was confusing because in 1910, John and Louisa lived at 903 Ottawa Street in Defiance, and Nore Young, 21, was listed as a daughter.  Louisa stated that she had had 4 children, but only two were living.  So was Nore the child of one of Louisa's deceased children?  A good research job for the Young family!  John, at 66, worked as a machinist at the wagon factory, and they lived in a mortgaged home.

By 1920, John had retired and they were back to renting a home at 903 Ayersville Avenue, Defiance.  John was 75, and he would live until March 9, 1929.  He was buried on March 11 at Riverside Cemetery.

His obituary appeared in the Defiance Crescent-News on March 9, 1929 on page 1.

"G.A.R. MEMBER DIES, AGE 83.

FUNERAL OF JOHN YOUNG WILL BE MONDAY IN MANSFIELD FUNERAL HOME.

John Young, 83, Civil War veteran and member of Bishop Post of the Grand Army of the Republic, died today at 6 a.m. at his home, 903 Ayersville Avenue.  Mr. Young had been a resident of Defiance since 1881 when he came here from Pennsylvania... He leaves a widow and a son, Charles Young.  Mr. Youg served in Company K, 68th Regiment of Ohio Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War.  Besides being a member of the Bishop Post, he was a member of the I.O.O.F. Lodge."

The funeral was held with the members of Bishop Post conducting their ceremonies.  Cars were sent to pick up Civil War veterans who wanted to attend the service.  Rev.Donald Lane, pastor of the First Baptist Church was the officiant. 



Their last living child, Charles died before his mother, on March 5, 1932.  He was sixty-two years old and he had lived with his mother since John's death.  Charles had been sick with Bright's Disease and then had a stroke that ended his life. His only survivor was his mother.

Louisa Young passed away on May 10, 1934. The Defiance Crescent-News reported on May 11, 1934: 

"MRS. YOUNG, 84, TAKEN BY DEATH

RITES WILL BE SATURDAY AT MORRIS BROTHERS FUNERAL HOME.

Mrs. Louisa Young, 84, widow of John Young, a Civil War veteran, who resided at 1003 Ottawa Avenue, died at the home of Mrs. Herman Baumer, 903 Ottawa Avenue, a neighbor who had been caring for her.  She had been sick for seven days with pneumonia.

The body has been removed to Morris Brothers Funeral Home, 1204 Jefferson Avenue where friends may call and where services will be conducted Saturday at 3 p.m.  Rev. Albert Stevenson, pastor of the First Baptist Church, will officiate and burial will be made in Riverside Cemetery.

Mrs. Young was born in Bryan on January 24, 1850, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Beavers.  Mr. and Mrs. Young were married in 1866. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Lavina Slosser, Flint, Mich., and Mrs. S. Duel, LosAngelos, Calif, and three brothers, William and Edgar Beavers, Butler, Ind., and Frank Beavers, Flint, Mich." 

 

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

William Horsey Obituary



From the scrapbook of Doris E. Marckel Bates, Defiance, Ohio

Date on the cover – March the 11, 1906

A collection of newspaper articles about the folks of Defiance County, Ohio, all undated and with no source named.




WILLIAM HORSEY AND WILLIAM FRONK

“WILLIAM HORSEY KILLED, WILLIAM FRONK KICKED BY HORSE.

Saturday afternoon about 4 o’clock as Wm. Horsey, 44 years of age, arrived at the Aspacher mill with a load of logs, he unloosed the chains binding them and passing to the side of the wagon where the skids were located, in some manner at present unknown, was struck by one of the descending logs, knocked down so that he lay with his neck on a 4 x 4 hickory axle, and a second log rolling down struck him on the other side of the head, crushing it in a horrible manner.   
 
Geo. Scott and Albert Relyea who were at work near by ran to his assistance and medical aid was called but after lingering for six hours, he passed away.
Mr. Horsey was a son of Stephen Horsey, living 2 ½ miles west of this city and has been employed as a teamster by Aspacher & Co. for about seven years.  He was not married and is survived by his father and mother, one sister and five brothers.

The funeral will be held at the home Tuesday morning at 9:30 o’clock.  Interment in Brunersburg cemetery.”




“FUNERAL OF WM. HORSEY

At the home of his parents a few miles west of the city Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. occurred the funeral services of William Horsey who was crushed to death Saturday afternoon at the Ashbacher saw mill.  The services were conducted by Rev. B. F. Slagle and were largely attended. The pall bearers were: E. W. Gearing, Albert Relyea, Geo. Scott, Wes. Lang, Wm. Brown, and Jesse Hilliard. The Brunersburg cemetery was made the last resting place of the deceased.”