The Origins of Chattanooga, Ohio, part 2

Last week I wrote about the origins of Chattanooga, Ohio, aka Chatt to the locals.

Some of the landowners’ names on the early plat maps in that area are familiar names to us today, while others are not.

One land owner, Tobias Plants, spelled Plantz on the 1853 Liberty Township map, caught my interest. Plants purchased 80 acres on what is now the northeast corner of Chatt, the east corner of State Route 49 and Strable Road, described as the N½ of the NW¼ of Section 5, Liberty Township. He purchased the land on 12 September 1850 from Albert Cortelyou of Hamilton County, Ohio, for $200. [1]    

Tobias Plants and his wife Maria were enumerated in Liberty Township in 1850, 1860, and 1870. Tobias gave his occupation as grocer in the 1870 census and was likely one of Chatt’s first businessmen. Then they disappeared from the area.

1912 picture postcard of Chattanooga, Ohio.

Tobias Plants sold his 80 acres in Chatt to Jacob Deitsch for $3300 on 8 October 1870, witnessed by John Schlenker and Eli D. Plants. [2] Then Tobias and his family moved out of the area.

I wondered what happened to Tobias Plants, so I continued to research his family, with hopes of learning a little more about Chatt. You never know where you may find some new information, new information that may change previous assumptions.

Tobias Plants did something a little unusual. Most people migrated westward when they moved on, but Tobias moved eastward, to Crestline, Ohio. Crestline is roughly 40 miles west of Wooster, Wayne County, where Tobias was born. He and his wife Maria remained in Crestline the rest of their lives.

Tobias Plants died of paralysis in Crestline on 12 July 1888, aged 69 years. Information from his obituary:

Tobias Plants was born in Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio, 11 March 1820. In 1828 he moved to Ashland County with his father and remained with him until he was of age, then left to work as clerk in a mercantile establishment in Tennessee. He married Miss Mariah Neville on 6 June 1850 and that same day they moved to a farm in Mercer County. After twenty years, he tired of farming, sold out, and moved to Crestline in October 1870. He became a druggist and was a druggist until his death on 12 July 1888, a few days after having two strokes. He was survived by his wife and son William. [3]

Tobias’ widow Maria (Neville) Plants died in 1903 and her obituary was just as informative:

Mrs. Maria Plants died at the home of her sister, Mrs. Anna Carney, on Seltzer Street, on 3 March 1903. She was born in Beaver County, Pennsylvania on 3 March 1819. She married Tobias Plants on 6 June 1850, and shortly after that moved to Mercer County, Ohio, where they conducted a general store for 17 years. In 1870 they sold out and moved to Crestline, buying a drug store and continuing in that business until the death of Mr. Plants in 1888. Mrs. Plants was the mother of three children, all deceased. She was survived by two grandchildren, one brother, William Neville, and two sisters, Nancy Neville, and Anna Carney. [4]

Those two obituaries, from across the state, give a little information about Chatt.

From that information, I am rethinking how old Chatt really is. Maria Plants’ obituary indicates that they ran a general store, probably in Chatt, for 17 years, which would have been 1853-1870. That is much earlier than I speculated in last week’s post.  

There were small stores scattered about in rural areas so people would not have to travel far to get goods and supplies. Stores in locations such as Skeels Cross Roads, Hinton, Brehm, and Chatt.

I wonder what they called the village back then. Was it always called Chattanooga?

It is also very interesting to learn that Tobias Plants worked in a mercantile store in Tennessee before he married and moved to Mercer County. Where in Tennessee? Chattanooga, Tennessee?

Lots of conjecture and theories. We may never know. 

Here is a little timeline and some additional information about the Tobias Plant family:

1850 census, Liberty Township, enumerated 16 September 1850: Tobias Plants, 30, born in Ohio, Mariah, 31, born in Pennsylvania. Tobias was a farmer and his real estate was valued at $200. [5]

Three children were born to Tobias and Maria while they lived in the Chatt area. Two of their children are buried in Duck Creek Cemetery, north of Chatt, in Black Creek Township.

Daughter Ann E. Plants was born 2 August 1851 and died 24 August 1851, aged 22 days. She is buried in Duck Creek Cemetery. [6]

Son William A. Plants was born 22 November 1852. [7]

Son Francis Plants was born 29 Nov 1856. [8]

1860 census, Liberty Township, Skeels PO: Tobias Plants, 41; Maria, 42; William, 7; Marion F, 5. [9]

Tobias was a Liberty Township Justice of the Peace, beginning 6 October 1860, per the 1882 Mercer County History.

Son Francis Plants died 2 March 1864, age 7 years, 3 months, and 2 days. He is buried in Duck Creek Cemetery. [7] He was probably the Marion F. enumerated with the family in 1860, 

1870 census, Liberty Township: Tobias Plants, 50, grocer; Maria, 51, keeps house; Susan, 20, school teacher; William 17, attends school; and Jane, 14, attends school. All born in Ohio except Maria, who was born in Pennsylvania. [10] At this point I am not exactly sure who Susan and Jane were, but I have an idea.

Tobias sold his 80 acres in Liberty Township to Jacob Deitsch on 8 October 1870 and moved to Crestline, Ohio. [2]

1880 census, Crestline, Crawford County, Ohio, 470 Thoman Street: Tobias Plants, 60; Maria, 61; and William, 27. Tobias’ occupation was druggist. [11]

Tobias died 12 July 1888, age 68 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline.  [12]

Their son William died 5 December 1890, age 38 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline. [7]

The widow of Tobias Plants, Maria (Neville) Plants, died 3 March 1903, age 84 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline. [13]

People may live in an area for a while and then move away, and it is wonderful when they leave a trail that shows their contributions to the community.

There was another Plants who lived a few miles north of Chatt, in Black Creek Township. Was he related or connected to Tobias in some way? I am working on that…

Chattanooga, Ohio.

[1] Albert Cortelyou to Tobias Plants, Mercer County, Ohio, Deeds Vol. P:48, 12 Sep 1850; Mercer County courthouse.

[2] Tobias Plants to Jacob Deitsch, Mercer County, Ohio, Deeds Vol. 16:441, 8 Oct 1870; Mercer County courthouse.

[3] Death of Tobias Plants, obituary, Crestline Advocate, Crestline, Ohio, 20 Jul 1888; Newspapers.com.

[4] Mrs. Maria Plants obituary, Crestline Advocate, Crestline, Ohio, 12 Mar 1903, Newspapers.com.

[5] 1850 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, p.287B, dwelling 27, household 28, Tobras [sic] Plants; Ancestry.com.

[6] Ann E. Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 26808905, Duck Creek Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.

[7] William A. Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998965; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.

[8] Francis Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 26800209, Duck Creek Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.

[9] 1860 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, p.359, dwelling 1007, family 1012, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.

[10] 1870 U.S. Census, Liberty, Mercer, Ohio, p.149B, dwelling 124, family 112, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.  

[11] 1880 U.S. Census, Crestline, Crawford, Ohio, ED 103, p.468D, dwelling 470, family 503, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.

[12] Tobias Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998955; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.

[13] Maria Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998934; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.

Tombstone Tuesday-My Irish Roots

Yesterday I celebrated St. Patrick’s Day. A little. Although I am about 75% German, I believe I have a few Irish ancestors. Most of my ancestors were not O’Millers or O’Schumms.

But there is one side of my family, through my Grandma Miller, nee Brewster, that brings Hueys and Bryans into my family tree. I suspect that the Hueys had Irish origins and the Bryans may have had as well.

So, this past weekend was The Wearing of the Green for me.  

My 5th great-grandmother Hannah Huey (1773-1850), the daughter of James and Elizabeth Huey, married Christian Whiteman (1762-1827). Hannah was probably born in Pennsylvania and is buried in Cheshire Cemetery, Berlin Township, Delaware County, Ohio. Her remains were removed from Berlin Township House Cemetery to the current location around the 1940s.

Hannah (Huey) Whiteman, Cheshire Cemetery, Delaware County, Ohio. (2002 photo by Karen)

My 4th great-grandfather Peter Bryan (1796-1854) is buried in Pingry Cemetery, Bear Creek Township, Jay County, Indiana.

Peter Bryan, Died Aug 14, 1854, age 57y, 11m, 17d; Pingry Cemetery, Jay County, Indiana

Peter Bryan married Mary Huey (1799-1864), who is also buried in Pingry Cemetery. They were probably from Pennsylvania, too.

Mary, wife of Peter Bryan, Died 10 Nov 1864, Aged 64y, 10m, Pingry Cemetery, Jay County, Indiana (2001 photo)

The Hueys and Bryans intermarried, so there is some pedigree collapse in this branch, making fewer ancestors in my tree. For example, Mary Huey’s brother Isaac Huey (c1801-aft 1870), my 4th great-grandfather, married Mary Whiteman (c1810-1855), daughter of Christian Whiteman.

Yes, it is complicated.

Joe is much more Irish than I am, with ancestors named Milligan, Cain, Monroe, and Lee.

For the day after St. Patrick’s Day, here are a few Irish sayings and blessings:

May your troubles be less and your blessings be more,
And nothing but happiness come through your door.

If you’re lucky enough to be Irish, you’re lucky enough.

May you be in Heaven a full half hour before the devil knows you are dead.

May you live as long as you want, and never want as long as you live.

May the good Lord take a liking to you, but not too soon.

May the best day of your past be the worst day of your future.

May the road rise to meet you
May the wind be at your back
May the sun shine warm upon our face.
The rains fall soft upon your fields
And until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of His hand.

Happy belated St. Patrick’s Day.

The Origins of Chattanooga, Ohio

Chattanooga, Ohio, aka Chatt, is an unincorporated village in the northwest corner of Liberty Township, Mercer County, Ohio. It is the only village in Liberty Township and the adjacent Black Creek Township.

Chattanooga, Ohio.

Chatt lies between Sections 5 and 6, in Liberty Township. Black Creek Township lies to the north and Indiana is a mile to the west. Liberty Township was organized on 1 March 1841. Henry Robinson was reportedly the first settler in the township, settling in Section 31 in 1830.

The word Chattanooga is derived from a Creek Indian word meaning “rock rising to a point” or “bend in the river.” That word is probably more relevant to the other Chattanooga, the one down south. Was our Chattanooga named after that city in Tennessee?

Chatt is a one-road town. One state highway, State Route 49, runs right through town. There are no side streets and no traffic lights, just a couple speed signs to slow down traffic down. Strable Road borders Chatt to the north and Tama Road is at the southern end of town. Today there are about 30 houses in the little town.

When did Chattanooga, Ohio, originate? When did the wilderness and farmland turn into a little village?

To try to answer that question, I looked at several sources, mainly history books and maps.

The 1853 Mercer County plat map shows the Chatt area to be tilled farmland, trees, and meadow. There was a farmhouse or two, a cabin, and a barn. In 1853 State Route 49 was called Willshire to Recovery Road, and sometimes Recovery to Willshire Road. It probably depended on what part of the road you were on and where you were going. [1]  

In 1853, the northwest corner of Section 5, what would become the east side of Chatt, was 80 acres of farmland owned by Tobias Plants. His property was described as the N ½ of the NW ¼ and his 80 acres included 10 acres of cleaved plow land, 20 young trees, and some old buildings. [1]

Old buildings? One wonders how old those buildings were if they were considered old in 1853.

1853, Section 5, Liberty Twp, Mercer Co, Ohio

The 80 acres just south of him was owned by Jacob Deitsch, the S ½ of NW ¼. Deitsch’s 80 acres included 14 acres of cleared, plow land, 15 young trees, a house, and a new barn that was up, but not yet finished. Jacob Deitsch came to the township in 1840 with two other families, Philip Deitsch and Adam Bolenbaugh [sic]. [1] Although the land was a wilderness in 1840, there were already 4 cabins in the township. [2]

Across the road, on the west side of Willshire to Recovery Road, Frederick Baker owned 5 acres in the northeast corner of Section 6, described as the NE corner of the NE ¼. His land included 3 acres of cleared plow land and old unoccupied buildings. [1]

1853, Section 6, Liberty Twp, Mercer Co, Ohio

In 1853, just to the south of Baker, Peter Fisher owned 64.72 acres, the S pt E ½ of NE ¼ 64. His 64 acres included 30 acres of cleared land, 23 acres of plow land, and 7 acres of meadow, with 30 young trees, some bearing. He had a house and a double cabin. [1] Peter Fisher was an original land purchaser in Liberty Township, purchasing 78 acres in 1838, and was the first settler in Section 6. [2]

To the west of and adjacent to Baker’s land, was J.H. Chapman’s 9 acres. Chapman’s land was uncleared and there was no road to his property. Eventually Strable Road would go by that property, extending to the State Line. [1] I am not sure if there was a road going to the east of Willshire to Recovery Road at that time.

That farmland would eventually become Chattanooga. If there was anything there, such as a trading post, I speculate that it could have been on Peter Fisher’s property. Fisher reportedly had a house and a double cabin, while there were old unoccupied buildings on the lot north of him.   

Zion Lutheran church, located on the south end of Chatt, was established in 1855. Their earliest records give the church’s location as Liberty Township, not Chattanooga. That leads me to believe there was no village of Chattanooga in 1855. The first time their church records name Chattanooga as a place was in 1882.    

Just about everyone in Liberty Township in 1860 was a farmer. There was a cooper, carpenter, saddler, minister, some laborers, and a couple school teachers scattered throughout the township, but not really among the names associated with the Chatt area. Tobias Plants, who owned the property on the north end in 1853, was a farmer.

The 1870 census indicates that Tobias Plants, still at the north of what would become Chatt, was a grocer. Was Tobias Plants the first businessman in Chatt? [3]

According to the 1876 plat map of Liberty Township, Chattanooga was still farmland, with fairly large farms. J. Deitsch still owned the 80 acres on the northeast corner. G.J. Weinman owned 80 acres to the south of him and the Lutheran Church was on the southwest corner of his property. It is unclear who owned the northwest corner lot on the west side of the street, to the north. Immediately to the south of that lot, J. Shunk owned about 15 acres, and P. Fisher owned about 50 acres south of Shunk, all along what is now State Route 49. C. Heffner owned 80 acres to the west of those properties. [4]  

1876, Sections 5 & 6, Chatt area, Liberty Twp, Mercer County, Ohio

Dr. Benjamin Franklin Edgington, an early physician at Chatt, gives some good information about the town and his time there in the late 1870s:

The Huntington Herald, 6 April 1929, p.1.

…I needed money so badly that I decided to leave there [Geneva, Indiana] and go where people would pay promptly, so I jumped on my horse and rode over into Ohio to do a little prospecting for a location. I stopped in a village called Chattanooga, tied my horse and left my pill-pokes (saddlebags) on the horse while I would look around. I hadn’t a red cent in my pocket. I was simply destitute of funds. I was a total stranger to everybody, but people could look at the pill-pokes on the saddle and guess that I was a doctor. I found there was a resident doctor in the place but he imbibed liquor so freely that people told me they were afraid to take his medicine for fear he was drunk and might not know what he was doing.

A fortunate circumstance just then came to me. A man hunted me up and showed deep concern when he said he saw my pill-pokes on the horse and wondered if he could get me to call and prescribe for a man who had taken down with a high fever. I responded promptly and found the patient had malarial fever. I likewise learned that he was the leading merchant of the town and a man with strong influence. I put up at the hotel and remained to see what might happen. The fact that I was treating the merchant spread all over the neighborhood and I was soon as busy as I could be. When the merchant recovered he gave me a fine send-off to all who came to his store. I was soon on my feet in money matters and the result was I remained at Chattanooga several years…the first Mrs. Edgington [his wife] died at Chattanooga where the family was living at the time of her fatal illness. On February 13, 1879, occurred Dr. Edgington’s second marriage… [5]

Unfortunately, Dr. Edgington did not give the exact year they lived in Chatt or when his wife died, but he married a second time in February 1879. His first wife Eliza (Bobo) died about 1878, so it appears he was in Chatt a couple years around 1878. From the doctor’s account, Chatt was an actual village with a hotel, a merchant, and a doctor. Actually, two doctors after he came to town. It is also interesting that Chattanooga provided more paying patients than Geneva.

From that account, it appears that Chatt was a thriving community by the mid-late 1870s. The timeline from the next account differs:

Sutton’s 1882 History of Van Wert and Mercer Counties indicates that there was a place with the name of Chattanooga that was basically a trading post. That 1882 history, concerning Liberty Township, Mercer County: …There are no villages of note or size in this township, but a post-office, known as Skeel’s Cross Roads, serves as one convenience to the citizens. Chattanooga, in the northern part, furnishes something of the conveniences of a trading point. [2]

Conflicting information, but I tend to go with Dr. Edgington’s account. We know that his wife died there about 1878 and she is buried in Zion Lutheran Chatt’s graveyard. We don’t know who provided the information for the 1882 history book.

Another contradiction in Sutton’s 1882 history: Samuel Francis Kelley, of Chattanooga, was born at Zanesville, Ohio, Nov. 4, 1861, and came to this place in 1880, when he opened the restaurant and saloon in which he is now engaged… [2]

If, according to that account, Chatt had a restaurant and saloon in about 1880, it would have been more than just a trading point.

In addition, Chattanooga had a postmaster in 1882. Philip Hill was appointed postmaster of Chatt on 18 September 1882.

The 1888 Liberty Township plat map shows Chattanooga as a village, complete with a Post Office. Jacob Deitsch and [?] Zillinger owned the bulk of the land on the east side of Chatt and J. Schlenker, and Fred Betzel owned the bulk of the land on the west side of Chatt. [4]

1888 Map of Chatt

Some small lots were owned by others and had businesses on them. Rebecca Landfair owned land on the northeast edge of town, the former Plants property, and there was a handle factory in that area, probably about where the elevator used to be. A little south of there was the residence of Louise Cordier [?], the P. Hill residence, a shoe shop, and the F. Hartsog [sic] residence. J. Deitsch owned the farmland behind, to the east. [4]

On the west side of the street, to the north, was Wick & Byer’s and J. Schlenker. A little farther south was the store and post office. Then a couple more buildings, and the property of M.E. Kelley. Next was a store, then the property of P. W. Deitsch, possibly his home, the Betzel residence, the Jos. Merkle residence, and the F.O. Koonz residence. It appears Chatt was a mix of businesses and homes. Behind and west of all that, from north to south was farmland owned by Welsch & Miller, J. Schlenker, and Fred Betzel. [4]

The map may not include all the businesses that were in the town.

In conclusion, appears that Chatt was probably a trading point in about 1870, when Tobias Plants called himself a grocer but area was mostly farm land. The town continued to grow and by about 1875 there was a hotel, saloon, store, and a couple doctors. The village boomed when oil was discovered in the area in the late 1800s.

And I wonder, since it appears that Chatt started after the Civil War, if perhaps it was named after Chattanooga, Tennessee, where some Liberty Township men may have fought during the Civil War.

Something to think about…

[1] 1853 Plat Map of Mercer County, Ohio, Liberty Township.

[2] History of Van Wert and Mercer Counties, Ohio, Sutton, 1882, p.422-24.

[3] 1870 U.S. Census, Liberty, Mercer, Ohio, p.149B, dwelling 124, family 112, Lobius [sic] Plants; Ancestry.com.  

[4] Mercer County Chapter OGS, Mercer County, Ohio Combined 1888, 1900 Atlases and 1876 Map of Mercer County, Ohio, (Mt. Vernon, IN : Windmill Publication, Inc., 1999).

[5] The Huntington Herald, Huntington, Indiana, 6 April 1929, p.1 & 7, “Dr. Edgington Tells of Trials and Tribulations of Old Time Physicians,” Newspapers.com: accessed 1 Dec 2015.

Learning About Names

Onomastics: the science of names; the study of origins and forms of proper names.

Names are interesting, particularly when associated with genealogy and family history. Or if you simply wonder how, when, or where a name came from. I occasionally write about names, nicknames, and naming patterns, which may even give a few clues to identify our ancestors.

If you also enjoy learning about names, here are three books you will find interesting and helpful. Each offers different information about names, their origins, and their meanings.   

The Name IS The Game, Bockstruck

The first book is The Name IS the Game, Onomatology and the Genealogist, Lloyd de Witt Bockstruck, alias Niederbockstruck, FNGS, Genealogical Publishing Company, 2013.

Whether your ancestors were from Europe or from the colonies, this book will help you understand names and naming patterns. This 80-page book is interesting and easy to read, while learning about names at the same time. The author, from his family research and the research of others, gives numerous examples of all sorts of naming issues. A couple examples:

The author explains that Becker was the German form of Baker and both are identical when spoken in German.

Another item, about the practice of renaming children with same given name. The author points out that a name was not always reused because a child had died, but that some families used a name again even though the older child was still living. Two living children with the same given name in the same family. That may be something to consider and could be of great help and understanding when doing research in certain instances. 

And, in some instances in Germany, the husband took the wife’s surname.

The author covers a lot of information about names in this book and I enjoyed reading through it and learning, even though I was not looking for anything specific.

American Surnames, Smith

The second book is about surnames: American Surnames, Elsdon C. Smith, Genealogical Publishing Company, Fourth Printing 2003. 

In this 370-page book, the author goes into detail to explain several ways that surnames developed and came to be–from the father’s name, from occupation or office, from a description or action, from a place, or from none of those classifications. A whole chapter is devoted to describing each of those classifications, going back to European name origins.

The book includes a 40-page index of hundreds of surnames, with references to one or more of the above-mentioned chapters, giving the origins of those surnames.

German-American Names, Jones

The third book about names: German-American Names, 3rd Edition, George F. Jones, Genealogical Publishing Company, 2006.

The first 66 pages of this 354-page book, called the Introduction, explains the origins and roots of German given names and surnames. The author explains how names, including Christian names, began and evolved over time, by describing the same basic naming classifications mentioned in the previous book, occupation, location, father’s name, or description. The author also discusses the Americanization of German names. 

After the explanatory Introduction, the bulk of this book is an alphabetical list of numerous German-American names and their spelling variations, with cross-references, meanings, and origins.  

An example from the book, a surname that can also be a given name, with its spelling variations, cross-references, and meaning: Dederick, Dedrich, Dedrick, Dietrich, Diederich, Diedrich, Diedrichs, Dietrich, Dietrich, Dieterich, Diederich, Dietrichs, Diettrich, Dietrick. A reference back to the Introduction explains that Theodoric evolved into the name Dietrich. Diet meaning the folk and rich suggesting mastery or rule (folk + rule). Dietrich: the ruler of the folk.

An example from my family: Breuninger, with alternate spellings of Breun, Braeunig, Breuninger, Brauning, Brauninger, Brauning, Brauninger Braunigger. Braun meaning brown hair. Breuninger: having brown hair.

These books, as well as many other books about genealogy and family history, may be purchased from Genealogical.com.

 

Tombstone Tuesday-Theodore G. & Leona (Stetler) Schumm

Theodore G & Leona (Stetler) Schumm, Willshire Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio (2023 photo by Karen)

This is the tombstone of Theodore G. and Leona (Stetler) Schumm, located in Section 3, row 13 of Willshire Cemetery, Willshire, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

SCHUMM
Theodore G.
1898-1967
Leona
1906-1971

Theodore Gottlieb “Pete” Schumm was born in Van Wert County, Ohio, on 21 May 1898, the third and youngest child born to Henry (1844-1922) and Anna Magdalene “Lena” (Geisler) (1868-1946) Schumm. Henry and Anna Magdalene married in 1891. This was Henry’s second marriage and they had three sons, Louis, Herman, and Theodore. Henry’s first wife, Anna Rosina Schinnerer, died in 1890, leaving widower Henry with nine children.

The Henry Schumm family in 1900, when son Theodore was just 2 years old: Henry, 55; Lena, 32; John, 26; Mina, 23; Hannah, 22; Gustav, 18; William, 16; Tillie, 14; Joseph, 12; Louis, 8; Herman, 6; and Theodore, 2. That enumeration indicates that the father Henry was a farmer, that Henry and Magdalene were married nine years, and that three of their three children were living.  [1]  

By 1910 most of the Schumm children had left home and only the three youngest sons lived with their parents: Louis F, 18; Harmon [sic], 16; and Taylor [sic], 11. Son Herman was enumerated as Harmon, and Theodore was enumerated as Taylor. This enumeration also indicates that Henry and Lena had been married 19 years, that this was Henry’s second marriage and Magdalene’s first, and that three of their four children were living. [2] Was there a fourth child born to Henry and Magdalene, a child born and died between 1900-1910? A child who is unaccounted for? A fourth child is not included in Zion Schumm’s records or county birth and death searches.

Theodore Schumm registered for the WWI draft on 12 September 1918. He was 20 years old, born 21 May 1898, and described as slender, medium height, with brown eyes and hair. His occupation farming and Henry Schumm was given as his nearest relative. [3] 

Theodore Schumm WWI Draft Registrarion

By 1920, Theodore, 21, was the only one of Henry Schumm’s children who still lived at home and helped on the farm. [4]

Theodore Schumm married Leona Stetler on 25 December 1922, married by Zion Schumm’s Rev. Bienert. Leona was 17 years of age and her father Frank Stetler gave his consent for her to marry. [5]

Frank Stetler gives his permission for daughter Leona to marry Theodore Schumm, 1922

 

Marriage record of Theodore Schumm & Leona Stetler, 1922, Van Wert County, Ohio

Leona Stetler was born in Black Creek Township, Mercer County, Ohio, on 17 June 1906, the daughter of Frank (1867-1937) and Sarah E. (Rumple) (1867-1938) Stetler. Leona was the eighth of ten children.

The Frank Stetler family in 1910: Frank, 52; Sarah E, 42; Walter G, 16; Earl L, 14; Ralph, 12; Nellie V, 10; Savada, 8; Virgia M, 7; Mary J, 5; Leona, 3; Gertrude A, 1; and Conrad Rumple, uncle. The father Frank was a farmer. [6]  

In 1920, Leona, age 13, lived with her parents and four of her siblings on Walcott Street in Willshire. Her father Frank worked in the trucking business. [7] 

Theodore Schumm married Leona Stetler in 1922 and by 1930 they had three sons. In 1930 the family lived on Riley Street in Willshire, parents and sons Henry, 5, Frederick, 3, and William, 8 months. The father Theodore worked as a farm laborer. [8]

In 1940 the Theodore Schumm family of five lived in Willshire and Theodore worked as a mill man at a grain elevator. [9]

The Theodore Schumm family in 1950, living in the village of Willshire: Theodore G, 52, head; Leona, 43, wife; William L, 20, son, single; Frederick L, 23, son, married; Rose Mary J Schuman [sic], 17, daughter-in-law, married; Thomas A Schuman [sic], less than a year, born in July, grandson. Theodore worked as a machine operator in the electric motor manufacturing industry. [10]

Theodore Schumm died in Van Wert on 20 September 1967, aged 69 years.

THEODORE G. SCHUMM
WILLSHIRE — Theodore G. (Pete) Schumm, 69, of Willshire, died at 8:45 a.m. today in Van Wert County Hospital. He had been ill several years and had been a hospital patient nine days.

Born May 21, 1898, in Willshire Township, he was the son of Henry and Magdelena (Giessler) Schumm. He was married Dec. 25, 1922, to Leona Stetler.

Survivors include three sons, Henry L., Frederick L. and William L., all of Willshire; two brothers, Louis F. of Willshire, and Herman A. of Port Gibson, N. Y.; a half-sister, Mrs. Ernest (Matilda) Merkle of Ohio City; 17 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. [11]

Widow Leona (Stetler) Schumm died 19 June 1971 in Van Wert, at the age of 65.

LEONA SCHUMM
WILLSHIRE – Leona Schumm, 65, of Willshire, died at 5:06 p.m. Saturday in Van Wert County Hospital where she had been admitted a few hours earlier. Death was unexpected.

Born June 17, 1906, in Mercer County, she was the daughter of Frank and Sarah (Rumple) Stetler. She was an employee of The Dinner Bell Restaurant in Willshire for several years and was a member of the Zion Lutheran Church, Schumm, and its Ladies Aid Society. Mrs. Schumm was also a member of the Willshire American Legion Auxiliary.She was married to Theodore (Pete) Schumm on Dec. 25, 1922. He died Sept 20, 1967.

Survivors include three sons, Henry L. of Syracuse, Ind., and Frederick L. and William L., both of Willshire; four sisters, Mrs. Fred (Vada) Marbaugh of Rt. 1, Willshire, Mrs. Virgie Harman of Decatur, Mrs. Roy (Mary) Case of Willshire and Mrs. Gertrude Coil of Venedocia; 17 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. A sister and four brothers preceded her in death.

Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Zion Lutheran church, Schumm, with the Rev. Robert Schuler officiating. Burial will be in Willshire Cemetery. Friends may call at the Zwick Funeral Home, Decatur, after 7 p.m. today and until 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and at the church one hour prior to the services.

Theodore and Leona (Stetler) Schumm) had the following children:
Henry Leo Schumm (1924-2005), married Norma Jean Carr
Frederick Louis “Fritz” Schumm, married Rosemary Ilo Fisher
William Laverne “Bill” Schumm (1929-2013), married Dorothy Ellen Ketrow

[1] 1900 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 97, p.8, dwelling 170, family 183, Henry Schumm; Ancestry.com.  

[2] 1910 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 114, p.3A, dwelling & family 50, Henry Schumm; Ancestry.com.

[3] Ohio, Van Wert County, WWI Draft Registration, Theodre [sic] G Schumm; Ancestry.com.

[4] 1920 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 146, p.6A, dwelling 117, family 118, Henry Schumm; Ancestry.com.  

[5] Ohio, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1774-1993, Van Wert Marriages 1921-1935, p. 138, Theodore G Schumm & Leona G Stettler [sic], 25 Dec 1922; Ancestry.com.

[6] 1910 U.S. Census, Black Creek, Mercer, Ohio, ED 107, p.5B, dwelling & family 106, Frank Stetler; Ancestry.com.

[7] 1920 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 146, p.8A, dwelling 43, family 44, Frank Stettler [sic]; Ancestry.com.  

[8] 1930 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 22, p.1A, dwelling & family 5, Theadora Schummer [sic]; Ancestry.com. 

[9] 1940 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 81-26, p.2B, household 45, Theodore Schman [sic]; Ancestry.

[10] 1950 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 81-38, dwelling 154, Theodore G Schuman [sic]; Ancestry.com.

[11] Theodore G Schumm Find a Grave.com, memorial no. 58943177, Willshire Cemetery, citing the Times Bulletin, Van Wert, Ohio, 20 Sep 1967.

[12] Leona (Stetler) Schumm, Find a Grave.com, memorial no. 58942981, Willshire Cemetery, citing the Times Bulletin, Van Wert, Ohio, 21 June 1971.