Fisher Hardware 10th Anniversary & Dedicatory Celebration, 1947

Who doesn’t remember one of Chatt’s larger businesses, Fisher Hardware and Implement Store.

Bothers Luther and John Fisher owned and operated the hardware store which was also a John Deere sales and service center.

The business was established April 1937 and in April 1947 the brothers hosted a 10-year celebration along with the dedication of a new Quonset hut building that would house their store.

Chattanooga Store In New Building
One of Chattanooga’s leading business firms is now entering its new home. It is the Fisher Hardware and Implement Store, which made its modest start on April 20, 1937, and having grown by means of good service and merchandise now is installed in a large new building erected on the lot adjoining their former location. The formal opening will be Friday and Saturday, April 25 and 26.

The Fisher Hardware has enjoyed splendid support from Chattanooga and its trading area, and its proprietors are endeavoring to show their appreciation by erecting this new and bigger building in which to carry on their work. It gives the town and community one of the finest hardware and implement stores in this part of the country, which helps to make it one of the greatest rural communities in Northwestern Ohio.

The store carries a complete line of general hardware, electrical appliances, and farm equipment. It maintains one of the most complete service shops and they do all types of general farm repairing. With their new building they can now do a much better job of serving the customer. [1]  

This was a big event for Chatt and the Fisher brothers also ran a large ad in Celina’s Daily Standard.

The Daily Standard, 23 April 1947, p.3.

The Daily Standard, 23 April 1947, p.3. [2]

Their Quonset hut structure is still standing today.

Former Fisher Hardware, Chattanooga, Ohio. October 2008 Google Earth image. [3]

Former Fisher Hardware, Chattanooga, Ohio. October 2008 Google Earth image. [3]

I have had a photo of the Fisher brothers and their wives for years but I never knew when it was taken. Now I think it was probably taken at their 1947 celebration event. Mrs. Mildred (John) Fisher may look familiar because she was a school teacher and taught first grade at Willshire at one time.

Left to right: Luther & Gladys (Sapp) Fisher; Mildred (Bauer & John Fisher.

Left to right: Luther & Gladys (Sapp) Fisher; Mildred (Bauer) & John Fisher. Likely taken at their 10th anniversary, 1947.

I knew and still remember the men who once worked there: Alan Felver, Dean Hileman, Glen Miller, Edson Pierstorff, and Phil White. Alan, Glen, and Phil repaired the tractors.

Fisher Hardware & Implement Store, likely taken at their 10th anniversary, 1947.

Fisher Hardware & Implement Store, likely taken at their 10th anniversary, 1947.

At one time Luther’s son Jim and John’s son Carl owned and operated a John Deere implement store in Celina, too. That store was sold some time after Carl was killed in a car accident in 1963. Carl’s father John was the Mercer County treasurer at the time of Carl’s death. Jim ran the Chatt store with his father Luther after that.

Fisher Hardware was a very nice store and I remember going there with my parents. Fishers sold all the usual hardware-type items and tools as well as appliances. In fact, my  parents purchased their first refrigerator there in the early 1950s.

Fisher Hardware and Implement Store eventually closed when John Deere required its dealers to have larger areas to show and house their machinery that was for sale. Tony Salisbury purchased the Quonset hut building after the hardware closed.

The building and the memories still remain.

 

[1] The Willshire Herald, Willshire, Ohio, 24 April 1947, p.1.

[2] The Daily Standard, Celina, Ohio, 23 April 1947, p.3.

[3] Google Earth image, October 2008, accessed 20 August 2015.

Tombstone Tuesday–Nora A. (Fennig) Becher

Nora Becher, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

Nora A. Becher, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

This is the tombstone of Nora A. Becher, located in row 1 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

BECHER
Nora A. Wife of
Fred W. Becher
July 7, 1882-Sep 2, 1915
We’ll Meet Again

Nora Arminte Fennig was born 7 July 1882, the daughter of H.J. and Anna (Locker) Fennig. The family was from Washington Township, Mercer County, Ohio. [1]

Nora married Fred William Becher 7 September 1909, married by Rev. J.L. Marvin, New Corydon, Indiana, although their marriage license and return is in Mercer County. Fred Becher was the son of John F. and Friedericke (Mamber) Becher. [1]

After their marriage Fred and Nora lived along Brandt Pike in Blackcreek Township, where Fred farmed. [2]

Nora Becher died 2 Sep 1915, at the age of 33 years, 1 month, and 26 days. She was buried on the 5th and was survived by her husband Fred and their two children. She died of septicemia poison following the birth of their second child Werner LeRoy.

Fred and Nora Becher had the following children:
Clifford Cornelius (1911-1992)
Werner LeRoy (1915-1979) married Margery Mckitrick

Widower Fred Becher married widow Marie (Springer) Itskin on 14 October 1916 in Allen County, Indiana. They are buried row 9 of Zion’s cemetery.

 

[1] “Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2013,” database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 15 Aug 2015), Fred W. Becher and Nora A. Fennig, 7 Sep 1909; citing Mercer County, Ohio Marriages, Vol. 9, p.539, from FHL microfilm 914958.

[2] 1910 U.S. Census, Blackcreek, Mercer, Ohio, ED 107, p. 3A, dwelling & family 48, Fred W. Becher; FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 15 Aug 2015); from FHL microfilm 1375227, from NARA microfilm T624, roll 1214.

Amalia (Backhaus) Schumm (1859-1948)

This is another photo from what I call The German Collection, a group of family photos that sisters Edna and Viola Germann once had. I am in the process of scanning the collection and fortunately many of the photos are labeled.

This photo is labeled “Aunt Amelia Schumm, La Porte, Indiana.”

Amalia (Backhaus) Schumm (1859-1948). Photo taken about 1900.

Amalia (Backhaus) Schumm (1859-1948). Photo taken about 1900.

Amalia K. (Backhaus) Schumm, wife of George “Jacob” Schumm, was born 24 February 1859. She married Jacob Schumm on 14 October 1880, which was Jacob’s second marriage. His first wife, Carolina “Lena” G. (Kellerman), died in 1879 and is buried in La Porte, Indiana. [1]

Jacob and Amalia likely lived in LaPorte all their married life, until Jacob died on 11 February 1895. He is buried in Saint Johns Lutheran Cemetery there.

Amalia died 6 January 1948 and is also buried in Saint Johns Lutheran Cemetery. [2]

I am able to date some similar photos from The German Collection and this photo was probably taken about 1900.

Amalia would have actually been Edna and Viola’s grandaunt by marriage. Amalia’s husband Jacob was a brother to Edna and Viola’s grandfather J. Fredrick Schumm. Close enough. Their parents probably called her Aunt Amalia and the two sisters likely called her aunt, too. I know the same thing happened in my family.

Amalia and Jacob had the following children:
Gerhard William (1881-1959)
Otto Henry (1883-1981)
Hugo Julius (1885-1929)
Edwin (1886-1982)
Oswald Frederick (1889-1974)
Lorenz George (1891-1959)
Clara (1893-1992)
Wilhelm George (1895-1988)

 

[1] Find a Grave (www.findagrave.com : accessed 13 August 2015); Carolina G. Kellerman Schumm, memorial #96017088. Note: She is buried beside Jacob and they share the same monument.

[2] Find a Grave (www.findagrave.com : accessed 13 August 2015); Amalia K. Backhaus Schumm, memorial #96016949. Note: Her single marker indicates that she was the wife of Jacob G. Schumm.

Tombstone Tuesday–Eliza

Eliza, wife of Franklin Edo..., Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

Eliza, wife of Franklin Edo…, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

This is the tombstone of Eliza, located at the far end of row 1 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

ELIZA
Wife of
Franklin Edo [?]
Died
Aged
30 ys. 4 mo. 18 da.

Unfortunately, this stone is broken at a very important place, eradicating Eliza’s date of death. As if that isn’t enough, there is a chunk of stone missing, making the name of her husband only partially visible.

And the bad luck continues.

Some burials recorded in Zion’s records no longer have a corresponding tombstone in the cemetery. And there are a few tombstones in the cemetery for which there is no burial record. Eliza’s marker is one of the latter.

Comparing this tombstone to similar ones in the cemetery, it likely dates to between 1870 and 1885.

There is nothing in Zion Chatt’s records of an Eliza or an Elizabeth who was 30 years of age during that time period. There are few Franklins mentioned in Zion’s records but none of them seem work with this tombstone.

At Eliza’s young age, she may have died in childbirth.

Eliza, wife of Franklin, ages 30 years, 4 months, 18 days. Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

Eliza, wife of Franklin, aged 30 years, 4 months, 18 days. Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)

Eliza is buried between Andrew E. Leistner and Carrie W. Friedell, which may or may not mean anything.

Eliza’s husband’s first name was Franklin. The last name, or perhaps his middle name, begins with the letters EDO. Very few surnames in Zion’s records begin with an “E.” EDO could be the first three letters of his middle name if his surname was very short.

Who was Eliza? If only there were a few more clues on the tombstone.

I have looked through some Mercer County probate death records on FamilySearch.org. I have searched there for a marriage between a Franklin and Eliza. I have found nothing conclusive. Not even a good guess. It is like looking for a needle in a haystack.

And, they could have lived in Indiana since Chatt is nearly on the state line.

Who were these people? Who were Eliza and Franklin?

We may never know.

The 1948 Tornado

A few weeks ago John Vining posed an interesting question, wondering if a tornado touched down about three miles south of Willshire, in Mercer County, on 19 March 1948, before moving northeastward into Van Wert County. This tornado was part of a storm system that went through Ohio City, Landeck, and Columbus Grove, killing three people and doing a lot of damage.

The 1948 tornado is best known for the damage it caused northeast of Willshire, in Van Wert and Putnam Counties, but did it touch down before entering Van Wert County?

John’s dad once told him that three tornadoes, occurring in 1920, 1948, and 1965, followed nearly parallel paths from southwest to northeast, all of them touching down a few miles south of Willshire.

The 1920 tornado struck about four miles south of Willshire, near Duck Creek Cemetery. The 1965 tornado touched down about two miles south of Willshire, just south of the curves on 49. But we have not heard much about the 1948 tornado.

Quonset-hut style barn on former farm of John McGough, built to replace barn destroyed by a tornado in 1948. (2015 photo by Karen)

Quonset hut style barn on former farm of John McGough, built to replace barn destroyed by a tornado in 1948. (2015 photo by Karen)

John’s dad also told him that the Quonset hut-type barn on the John McGough farm on McGough Road was built as a replacement for their barn that was destroyed by the 1948 tornado. There is also a similar barn to the northeast, just south of the Wabash/Winkler Road intersection. Were these two barns built as a result of damage from the 1948 tornado?

Quonset hut barn near intersection of Winkler & Wabash Roads, probably built about the same time as the McGough barn, possibly to replace a barn demolished by the 1948 tornado. (2015 photo by Karen)

Quonset hut barn near intersection of Wabash & Winkler Roads, probably built about the same time as the McGough barn, possibly to replace a barn demolished by the 1948 tornado. (2015 photo by Karen)

The 1948 tornado was very destructive in Ohio City, Landeck, and Columbus Grove, taking three lives, and John also wondered if the tornado touched down in Mercer County before entering Van Wert County. John noted that it is a straight line between the areas where the tornado touched down–from Columbus Grove to Landeck, to Ohio City, and finally southwest to the Quonset-style barns south of Willshire.

John found no reference on the Internet that the 1948 tornado touched down in Mercer County before moving into Van Wert County.

He wondered, did the 1948 tornado touch down south of Willshire, in Mercer County, before moving to the northeast?

Yes! It appears that John’s interesting theory and observations are correct.

According to the 25 March 1948 account of the storm in The Willshire Herald, a tornado did destroy the John McGough barn. There was also quite a bit of storm damage to other properties in the area. I do not know if the second barn was built as a result of damage from the same storm. I do not know who lived there at that time.

The Willshire Herald, 25 March 1948, p.1.

The Willshire Herald, 25 March 1948, p.1.

Below is a transcription of the rather lengthy newspaper article from the front page of the 25 March 1948 Willshire Herald. There are several names I recognize in the article, some from the Chatt area.

Willshire Area Hard Hit By Friday’s Storm
Ohio City-Rockford Area Also Suffers
Here in Willshire it is difficult to realize that all about this community death and destruction rode the cyclonic storm of wind, rain, hail and lightning that drove through here shortly after 12:15 o’clock last Friday.

The storm came suddenly and in a rush. Some persons said they heard the roar of its approach 30 seconds before it struck. Mid-day became almost as dark as a moonless midnight. The wind came with a force that defied frustration.

Here in Willshire the visible effect was in the deluge of rain that came on as an iron curtain, and a majority of the towns-people feared a cyclone had struck. West, east, north and south of town more or less destruction was in evidence by the trees, buildings, telephone and power lines that were struck down.

At 12:15 Friday noon the electric clocks stopped. So did the refrigerator, cooling system, power and light current. That is the most it did to the immediate towns-people—without current for almost nine hours.

McGough Road, south of Willshire, in Mercer County, Ohio. (2015 photo by Karen)

McGough Road, south of Willshire, in Mercer County, Ohio. (2015 photo by Karen)

Nearby Area Hard-Hit
It was a different story in the country ‘round about, beginning only a mile or two out of town. One of the places hardest hit was the John McGough farm, where the barn and out-buildings were almost totally destroyed, the dwelling house unroofed, the interior being practically ruined for tenancy for the immediate present.

The McGough farm is located about three and one-half miles southeast of town.

The Homer Buchanan buildings were not neglected by the storm, and an end was torn off the machine shed portion of the John Kallenberger barn.

The barn on the old G.W. Fisher farm almost due south of town about three miles was just about wiped out, and the barn on the O.G. Dudgeon farm, formerly known as the John Musselman farm, was partly edged off its foundation, a 24×24 shed about wrecked, and doors ripped off the barn and shed.

At the Wm. Hamrick farm the barn was destroyed and two cattle and a hog killed. At the Winkler Bros. farms the barns were wrecked and the dwelling houses greatly damaged. The barn on the W.E. Spitler farm collapsed, the dwelling house damaged, and two head of cattle trapped and killed. This property is occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Fermin Wilson.

On south and east the barn on the Mel Stetler place was destroyed. Farther north the Kermit Stetler house and barn were badly damaged, as were the buildings on the Edgar Clouse farm a short distance north of Route 33.

The story of disaster locally could run on and on, as numerous minor mishaps occurred. Fortunate, indeed, that in our immediate sector no lives were lost, no one seriously injured.

Rockford and Ohio City Suffer
The story of destruction at Rockford and Ohio City and the area in between was one of unbelievable wreckage, with the Sharp canning factory buildings and equipment destroyed, entailing a loss of an estimated $200,000.

At Ohio City the Holland Mills sustained heavy damage and loss, the school building there had all the window glasses shattered, and throughout the town the damage was believed to have hit as least 80 percent of the properties. One claim is that the loss will approach the million-dollar mark.

Two Fatalities at Landeck
At Landeck, a community of two or three hundred persons, four miles south of Delphos, occurred the only tragedy recorded in this section of Ohio.

Two lads, assisting in decorating the altar of the Catholic church for Easter-tide services, were killed when the church building was rent in two and the falling walls of the steeple cut them down without chance of escape. They were Norbert Bonifas, 12, and Gerald Hill [sic] [1], 10, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bonifas and Mr. And Mrs. Linus Kill, respectively, both families of R.D. 1, Venedocia.

The air field and buildings near Van Wert were completely demolished, and of the 20 private planes kept there 14 were damaged to a greater or less degree.

Many of the children in the Ohio City-Liberty school building were injured by glass, none of them seriously.  

Insurance Claims Filed
Managers of insurance companies operating in Van Wert and Mercer counties in the districts affected, say that upwards of 2,000 claims had been filed up to Saturday night. Expert insurance men estimate the loss in the two counties in the neighborhood of $3,000,000, and that work of restoring buildings not wholly demolished will carry on through the summer because of lack in materials and workmen.

Lumber yards and roofing concerns had all available material cleaned out by Saturday night, and have since been flooded with requests for building and repair material and didn’t know where to turn to secure more.

Heavy Rains Over Week End
An incessant fall of rain throughout Sunday and well into the night increased the discomfort of the people, the waters reaching flood stage in many quarters. Thousands of acres of lowland along the St. Marys River were inundated.

At Wren Sunday night the business section of the town was under water, which flooded the lower floors of several of the business buildings.

Red Cross field workers have been on the ground, ready to give financial assistance where needed, and are standing by to lend a hand when called upon to do so.

Tony Baker Home Near Chattanooga Hit
Among the property damage done in the storm last Friday was the almost total destruction of the Tony Baker farm house and all the smaller outbuildings, granary, implement shed garage, etc.—located three-fourths of a mile directly east from Zion Lutheran church at the south end of Chattanooga. The farm barn was only slightly damaged.

The dwelling was a two-story, nine-room structure. A wing of two rooms and a porch that will be enclosed will be the habitat of the Baker family during the building of a new family home.

Mrs. Donald Schumm of this town is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Baker. She states that while her father carried insurance on the property, the loss will be at least 50 per cent greater, if not more, than the amount of the insurance.

Storm Held ‘High Carnival’ Here
The north and east sections of Willshire township were hit pretty hard in Friday’s storm.

The large hog barn and corn crib on the Harold Hurless farm were destroyed and several windows in the dwelling house and barn were blown in.

The hogs were uninjured, but the hayloader was demolished and a wagon damaged quite a bit.

A large brooder house on the Milo Sheets farm, housing a sow and six pigs, was turned upside-down but the animals were not injured. An implement shed was blown down here, but because of the heavy construction the tractor in the shed was not damaged.

At the home of Charles Ault, a former Willshire school teacher, the garage was blown down and his car was badly damaged.

Power Company and Men Deserve Real Credit
The Dayton Power and Light Co. has certainly made every possible effort to make up for the inconveniences and discomforts because of their current lines being put out of commission by last Friday’s storm that almost ruined their lines throughout this section.

Four crews have been at work practically from the minute the storm struck, operating under the direction of Wade Hoffman. They worked from both ends of the line and had the operation of four radio crews to assist in tracing line trouble with the least possible delay.

Rockford and Willshire were restored to limited service early the same night, but other distributing lines were got under control over Sunday so that the service is now just about normal.

Except for some unlooked for and unusual interference the work of restoration of service would all have been accomplished many hours earlier, and the company and their workmen are to be congratulated on the good work that has been done. [2]

Thanks, John, for the asking about this interesting piece of local history.

[1] His name was Jerald Kill.

[2] The Willshire Herald, 25 March 1948, p.1.