Tombstone Tuesday–Adam J. Pflueger

Adam J. Pflueger, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio.

Adam J. Pflueger, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio.

This is the tombstone of Adam J. Pflueger, located in row 11 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Schumm, Van Wert County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

Adam J.
Pflueger
1862-1919
PFLUEGER

According to the records of Zion Lutheran Church, Schumm, Adam Jakob Pflüger was born 10 May 1862 to Michael and Catharine [Brandt] Pflüger. Adam was baptized 25 May 1862 at the church with Adam Büchner and Jakob Bienz as sponsors. Adam’s parents were born in Württemberg and Adam was born in Ohio.

Adam is my first cousin three times removed. Maria Barbara Pflüger, my second (and third!) great-grandmother and the wife of Ludwig Schumm, was Adam’s aunt.

Adam married Anna Regina Pifer/Pfeiffer in about 1893. They had the following children: Otto, Frieda, Georg, Della and Eva Viola. They also had a son that was stillborn or died the same day he was born, 20 May 1911. That was also the same day his mother Anna died. Surprisingly, Adam’s death was not recorded in the church records.

In 1900 Adam and Annie “Pfluegar” and their children were living in Willshire Township. Adam was a farmer and he and Annie had been married 7 years. In the household were Adam, (37), Annie (29), children Fredaricka (5), Otto (2) and George (9/12), plus Adam’s father Michael (76, widowed). The census indicated that Michael was born in Germany and immigrated in 1829. [1]

Obituary:

Adam Pflueger Met Death In Tragic Manner Friday
The people of this community had scarcely recovered from the shock of the tragic death of Lafayette Herle when news came that Adam Pflueger, a well-known resident of Willshire township, of the Schumm neighborhood, had been instantly killed in much the same manner—that of his team running away. In some manner throwing him from the engine wagon to which he had his team hitched, and under an 1,800 pound horse so that when the horse fell upon him the life was crushed out of him instantly.

Mr. Pflueger had gone to the Geo. Alspaugh farm at Abanaka to do some hauling on the oil lease, when the accident occurred, but as he was alone at the time, the exact circumstances surrounding the fatality likely never will be known, other than as to its fatal termination.

Mr. Pflueger had been a resident of the community for many years, and was aged about 52 years.  Mrs. Pflueger preceded him in death several years ago, and there are five children who survive: Mrs. Freda Putnam of Ohio City; Otto, Della and Viola, all at home.

Funeral services were held Monday, conducted by Rev. George Meyer of the Schumm Lutheran church, with interment in the church cemetery, and was attended by a large concourse of people. [2]

According to Adam’s death record he was born 17 May 1861, which does not agree with his baptism record. The death certificate indicates that he was a farmer and that his death was accidental, caused by a horse falling on the abdominal region of his body. [3]

Adam Jacob Pflueger death certificate, Van Wert County, Ohio, 1919.

Adam Jacob Pflueger death certificate, Van Wert County, Ohio, 1919.

We hear about farm tractor accidents today but I never really thought about accidents with teams of horses. Farming was as dangerous then as it is today.

I had not heard of Abanaka, although Joe knows where it is and has even worked there. Abanaka, aka Belden and Abanaka Station, is a little village in Section 24 of Willshire Township. It is a couple miles northeast of Schumm on Glenmore Road, laid out by John Brown in 1879 along the TD & BRR, later the Nickle Plate Railroad. The first house was built by Samuel Beldon, who also opened the first store. [4]

 

[1] “United States Census, 1900,” index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MMXJ-8ML : accessed 27 Jan 2013), Adam Pflueger, ED 97 Willshire Township Willshire village, Van Wert, Ohio, United States; citing sheet 9B, family 199, dwelling 185, NARA microfilm publication T623, FHL microfilm 1241329.

[2] The Willshire Herald, Willshire Ohio, 1 August 1919, p. 1.

[3] “Ohio, Deaths, 1908-1953,” index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X82K-83R : accessed 28 Jan 2013), Adam Jacob Pflueger, 25 Jul 1919; citing Willshie, Van Wert, Ohio, reference fn 45850; FHL microfilm 1984824.

[4] History of Van Wert and Mercer Counties, Ohio (1882; reprint, Mt. Vernon, Indiana: Windmill Publications, Inc., 1991), 241.

 

Remembering the Blizzard of 1978

Today is the 35th anniversary of The Great Blizzard of 1978. A storm we will never forget.

They say it wasn’t just a blizzard back in ‘78. It was a severe blizzard. The National Weather Service defines a “severe blizzard” as a storm with winds of 45 miles per hour or greater; a great density of falling or blowing snow; and temperatures of 10 degrees or less. That pretty much sums it up. It was the worst winter storm in Ohio’s history. And we lived through it.

Front walk of my parents' home after the Blizzard of 1978.

Front walk of my parents’ home after the Blizzard of 1978.

We had been our new house less than a year when the blizzard hit. A winter storm was predicted but I don’t think anyone thought it would be the blizzard of the century. As Joe and I were driving home from work that Wednesday evening, January 25th, it was raining and not all that cold. But that changed quickly.

We made it home safely but it quickly became hazardous for those who were still out. The barometric pressure dropped to a record low. The temperature dropped drastically to around zero. And the wind blew fiercely. There were white out conditions and the roads became impassable in a very short time. It turned treacherous quicker than anyone could imagine and some people were stranded.

The wind blew and howled all night and the snow kept coming down. Joe actually thought he would go into work at GTE that Thursday morning but once we looked outside we knew we weren’t going anywhere. The 50-60 mph winds, with gusts over 100 mph, blew around the snow we had received overnight. It was still snowing and blowing. Nope, we weren’t going anywhere for some time.

When the winds finally calmed down on Friday we went outside. They said we received a foot of snow but there was at least 2-3 feet of snow everywhere, with drifts even higher. Some drifts extended all the way up to the spouting on the house. It was a hard crusty snow and we could walk right on top of it without sinking in.

We were one of the fortunate homes that had power throughout the blizzard and the days after. We were in good shape here. We had plenty of food and the power to cook it. My parents weren’t so lucky. They were without power for several days. They burned papers and catalogs in their fireplace and used a kerosene heater to keep warm. I believe that my dad purchased his generator after that storm. At least both our homes still had phone service and we called each other regularly.

On Saturday, day three of being snowbound, our day’s activity consisted of looking out our window with binoculars, watching a couple pay loaders open up Frahm Pike. It was a slow job for them. They opened up our road on Sunday. Then Joe and I walked out to the end of our 200 foot driveway with shovels, intending to shovel out our driveway. Seriously? Who could shovel that deep crusty wall of snow with a mere shovel?

We were grateful when the late Roger Hawk drove by on his large tractor with a snow thrower attached. He saw that we were not making much progress, pulled into our driveway and had it opened up in just a few minutes. Thank you Roger! Now Joe would be able to get out and go to work on Monday and start repairing and restoring phone service. He had no idea what lay ahead for him.

Back walk at my parents' home after the Blizzard of 1978.

Back sidewalk at my parents’ home after the Blizzard of 1978.

Joe has never since worked as much overtime as he did in the weeks after the blizzard. Those were long cold days and he worked late into the night. The main problem was fixing the phone pedestals along the side of the roads that the snowplows had plowed off.

When the sheriff finally lifted the county driving ban it was time for me to go back to work. And I got to see firsthand the condition of the roads. They were a solid sheet of bumpy ice and it was like driving down a big old washboard. I still remember what must have been at least a 4 inch drop-off near the Hometown Nursing Home on Myers Road in Celina. It was like dropping down a step, to a lower level of the road. It was a slow and tedious commute to and from St. Marys and it took weeks to get rid of the ice on the roads.

In 1978 we had an International Scout (4 wheel drive–Joe’s vehicle) and a Ford Mustang (rear wheel drive–my vehicle). Of course the Scout was the vehicle of choice after the blizzard. Joe insisted that I drove the Scout to work since I had farther to go. That left him with the Mustang. He could make it to and from Celina with the Mustang but navigating our driveway was the problem. He couldn’t get down the driveway with the Mustang’s rear wheel drive. But he is resourceful and he devised a plan. He would put chains on the Mustang’s tires in order to drive out to the road. Then he would take the chains off and drive on to Celina. On the way home he would stop at the end of the driveway, put the chains back on and drive up to the garage. That whole routine got old real fast and I felt more than a little guilty driving off to work in Scout every day, leaving him with the Mustang and chains.

Our back roads were one lane only. Driving on them was like going down a snow hallway with walls higher than our vehicle. It was an eerie feeling driving on those confined roads and we hoped that we would not meet another vehicle coming from the opposite direction.

Back of my parents home, Blizzard of 1978.

Back of my parents home, Blizzard of 1978.

Many people have more exciting stories to tell about the 1978 blizzard than I do. People with snow mobiles and four-wheel drive trucks stepped forward to transport doctors and nurses and people in need of medical care to hospitals. Others rescued stranded people and delivered food and medicine. Road crews spent endless hours clearing roads and utility workers worked many long days restoring power and telephone service. The Ohio National Guard was even called in to help out. We remember and thank all of those volunteers.

I did not take any photos after the blizzard but I have included a few photos that my dad took at their home.

Here are a couple articles if you want to read more about the Blizzard of 1978: 1978 Ohio Statewide Blizzard  and  Wikipedia, Great Blizzard of 1978.

 

Tombstone Tuesday–G. Wesley & Minnie A. Kallenberger

G. Wesley & Minnie A. Kallenberger, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio.

G. Wesley & Minnie A. Kallenberger, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio.

This is the tombstone of G. Wesley and Minnie A. Kallenberger, located in row 9 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

KALLENBERGER
G. Wesley
1906-1992
Minnie A.
1906-1943

 Obituaries:

Mother of Three Died Tuesday Forenoon
Funeral services will be held at 2:30 o’clock (EST) this Thursday afternoon from the Zion Lutheran church at Chattanooga, for Mrs. Wesley Kallenberger, with interment in the church cemetery.

Mrs. Minnie Arbada Johnson Kallenberger died at the home of her father, Rev. W. Frank Johnson, seven miles east of Berne at 9:50 o’clock Tuesday morning. She was 36 years of age.

Surviving are the husband and three children: Jean Lavon, Max Ivan and Donald Lee; the father, Rev. Frank Johnson; four brothers: Ivan Johnson of Chattanooga; Herbert, Peru; Arley, Ft. Wayne; Harley, Berne, and two sisters, Mrs. Gail Sausman, South Rend, and Mrs. Frank Wise, Rochester, Indiana.  [1]

 

Minnie, Wesley, Max, Jean Lavon & Don Kallenberger.

Minnie, Wesley, Max, Jean Lavon & Don Kallenberger.

George Kallenberger
George Wesley “Wes” Kallenberger, 85, 425 Grant St., Decatur, Ind., died at 10:15 a.m. Monday in Adams County Memorial Hospital, Decatur, Ind., where he had been a patient since Dec. 31. He had been ill for the past eight years.

Born in Arcanum May 4, 1906, he was the son of Michael and Margaret (Miller) Kallenberger. He was married Nov. 18, 1934, to Minnie Johnson, who died Feb. 16, 1943; on Feb. 1 1947, he married Alice Lucille Stager Clark, who survives.

Also surviving are two sons, Max Kallenberger, Lancaster, Calif., and Donald Sausaman, Chicago; two daughters, Mrs. Bill J. (Jean Lavon) Ross and Mrs. William (JoAnn) Karbach, both of Decatur, two step-sons David “Nellie” Clark, Decatur, and Ralph Stager, Lima; a foster brother, John Kallenberger, Willshire; and 11 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by a foster sister, Ardella Hamrick, and a half-brother, Ralph Grove.

Mr. Kallenberger retired from Central Soya in 1971 after 33 years of service, and he was a former employee of Wayne Novelty. He also was a World War II veteran, serving in the South Pacific Theater in the Navy Seabees, and a member of Zion Lutheran Church, Decatur, and Adams Post 43 of the American Legion.

Services will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at the church, the Rev. Donald W. Biester officiating. Burial will be in Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, with complete graveside military services by the American Legion.

Friends may call 2-5 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at Zwick-Sefton & Jahn Funeral Home, Decatur, and after 9 a.m. Thursday in the church.

Memorial contributions may be directed to the church. [2]

Wes Kallenberger and my dad were first cousins and I think they knew each other fairly well. My dad had several photos of Wes and his family and I have included a couple of them here.

Wesley Kallenberger

Wesley Kallenberger

Minnie died leaving three young children during the time our country was in the middle of WWII. Wes was drafted and served in the Seabees while relatives took care of their children.

Wesley Kallenberger & children.

Wesley Kallenberger & children.

 

 

[1] The Willshire Herald, Willshire, Ohio, 18 Feb 1943, p. 1.

[2] The Daily Standard, Celina, Ohio, 14 January 1992, p. 3

 

Wild Cat School Souvenir Booklet

Wild Cat School Souvenir Booklet, Mercer County, Ohio, 1897-1898.

Wild Cat School Souvenir Booklet, Mercer County, Ohio, 1897-1898.

Among some old items from the Chattanooga area that my dad gave me is the School Souvenir Booklet of Jacob M. Miller. The booklet was given to Jacob during the 1897-1898 school year by his teacher, John H. Kable.

Wild Cat School was located on the southeast corner of State Routes 49 and 707, a mile north of Chattanooga. Jacob Miller Jr. (1885-1913) was my granduncle, the son of Jacob and Christina (Rueck) Miller.

Jacob’s booklet consists of three embossed 3 x 5” cards tied together by a string in the upper left. I have seen similar School Souvenir Booklets on the Internet but most are from the early 1900s. This is one of the oldest I have seen and it is in remarkably good condition.

Cover:

Wild Cat School
District Number 9
Mercer County, Ohio
1897-1898
Presented by John H. Kable, Teacher
To: Jacob M. Miller
Jacob Becher, Director

Card #2:

Remarks to Scholars.

Rem. I.  It is the urgent request of you teacher that his scholars who receive these souvenirs shall be henceforth during their school years to come, obedient scholars to their teachers and parents, and to show to them at all times possible and at all places where they may meet them, a due honor and respect, –“Honor they Father and they Mother.”

Rem. II.  You shall at all times apply yourself to you studies with the best of your powers and of mind and body.

Rem. III.  Be ready at the beginning of each school term to go to the beginning, attend each day, and be at its closing session.

Rem. IV.  Obey your teacher in beginning the study of different subjects, and as soon as possible study all the common school studies, and any other you desire or have time for.

Rev. V.  Be careful in the use of your language in the recitation.

Rem. VI.  Be kind to your schoolmates wherever you see them, and remember that good order is loved by all.

Rev. VII.  Attend as many Educational Meetings or Societies as you may have opportunity, and use good manners at these places. Always be ready to take part in such meetings.

Rem. VIII.  Urge your parents to visit your school and teacher.

Rem. IX.  Be sure to use and treat all teachers as good as you have treated me, whose name is annexed hereto, for nothing injures you except your own acts.

Rem. X.  Always try to do right, for to do wrong is going into crime and its reward is punishment.  JOHN H. KABLE, Teacher.

Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, card 2.      Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, Card 2.

The names of 52 pupils are listed on card #3:

Eddie A. Leininger, Willie Bausser, Henry L. Leininger, John Miller, Samuel Eichler, George E. Miller, John H. Leistner, James M. Sapp, Albert L. Foreman, Iven Brush, Charlie Ireland, Clarence W. Brunstetter, Joe E. Brush, Ollie Detro, Burt A. Ireland, Ethel S. Detro, Ida K. Becher, Iva M. Becher, Anna K. Baker, Mary K. Bausser, Amandah M. Brush, Minnie C. Becher, Rosy Trissel, Blanche B. Brunstetter, Sylvia L. Brunstetter, Caroline Baker.

Elmer C. Baker, Willie O. Baker, Eddie Becher, Howard Kuhn, Stanley R. Landfair, John Slusser, Charlie Slusser, Charlie D. Bower, Noah J. Huston, Charlie F. Huston, Jessie F. Huston, John H. Becher, Jacob M. Miller, Elmer G. Huston, Clara Baker, Lora M. Landfair, Mollie C. Rettic, Mary M. Leistner, Edney F. Landfair, Mary A. Eichler, Anna E. Leistner, Norah M. Sapp, Mittie F. Sapp, Ola M. Detro, Bertha, V. Ireland, Pearl  A. Ireland.

Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, Card 3.

Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, Card 3.

Back of card #3:

Let the road be rough and dreary,
And its end far out of sight;
Foot it bravely—strong or weary;
Trust in God, and do the right.

 When the golden sun is setting,
And your heart from care is free,
When o’er a thousand things you’re thinking,
Will you sometimes think of me.
Your Teacher, John H. Kable.

Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, back of Card 3.

Wild Cat Souvenir Booklet, back of Card 3.

The teacher gave some good advice to his students as well as letting them know what he expected from them.

Jacob would have been about 12 years old when this book was given to him. His brother John, also one of the students, would have been about 8 years old.

Below is an undated photo of Wildcat School showing 61 students and their teacher. It is one of the few photos that I have that shows the school.

Wild Cat School, Mercer County, Ohio. Undated photo.

Wild Cat School, Mercer County, Ohio. Undated photo.

Of interest to me is that Jacob’s name was written Jacob M. Miller on the front of the booklet. I have never seen his middle name recorded on any document and I do not know what the “M” stood for. I wonder what his middle name was…

 

 

 

 

Tombstone Tuesday–Christian Hartzog

Christian Hartzog, Hileman/Smith/Hartzog/Alspaugh Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio. (Karen's Chatt)

Christian Hartzog, Hileman/Smith/Hartzog/Alspaugh Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio. (Karen’s Chatt)

This is the tombstone of Christian Hartzog, located in row 2 of Hileman/Smith/Hartzog/Alspaugh Cemetery, Willshire Township, Van Wert County, Ohio.  The marker is inscribed:

Christian Hartzog
Died
Oct. 8, 1874
Aged
75 y, 10 m, 10 d

Christian’s date of birth was 28 November 1798, as calculated from his tombstone. According to census enumerations he was born in Pennsylvania.

Christian was most likely the husband of Katherine and father of Caroline Hardzog, whose tombstones were recently featured here on Karen’s Chatt. Katherine and Caroline are both buried at Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Schumm.

This biography of Christian’s son was in the Black Creek Township section of an old Mercer County history: Benj. F. Hartzog, a son of Christian and Catharine Lintemoot Hartzog, was born in Fairfield County, Ohio, in 1836. He was brought by his parents to this county in 1840[1]

Christian “Hardsock” and his family were living in Black Creek, Mercer County, Ohio in 1840. Eleven were enumerated in the household. [2]   

Christian’s first wife Katherine (Lintemoot) died in 1843, according to her tombstone. Christian married Elizabeth King on 29 October 1847 in Mercer County, Ohio. [3]

Christian Hartzog

Christian Hartzog

In 1850 Christian and Elizabeth “Hartsoy” were living in Dublin Township, Mercer County: Christian (49, born in Penn), Eliz (37, Oh), Amasa (18, Oh), Noah (15, Oh), Andrew (14, Oh), Elmira (12, Oh), Martha (7, Oh), Wm (3, Oh). [4] They were living just a few houses from my great-great-grandfather, Friedrich Schinnerer.

By 1860 the Hartzog family was living in Black Creek Township with their post office as Shanesville [aka Rockford]. The family consisted of Christian, Elizabeth, William, Zacharia and Harriett. [5] 

In 1870 Christian, Elizabeth and Harriet were still living in Black Creek Township.  [6]

Hileman/Smith/Hartzog/Alspaugh Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio.

Hileman/Smith/Hartzog/Alspaugh Cemetery, Van Wert County, Ohio.

I broke my first rule of tombstone photography when we stopped at this cemetery on the way home from Decatur last Friday afternoon. It was a little past 5:00 and the sun was very low in the sky. I got a decent photo of the Christian’s tombstone but it would have been better if I had been there a few hours earlier when the sun was shining directly on the face of the stone. There is also a reddish hue on photographs taken that time of day.

This cemetery is a couple miles east of Willshire on route 81 and about a mile straight south of Zion Schumm’s cemetery, at the end of a t-road. I have been by this rundown cemetery many times but had never stopped. We were having our January thaw  in Ohio that day and the ground was soft and muddy. There was no driveway or place to park so Joe parked at the stop sign while I ran across the highway to the cemetery. Luckily there wasn’t much traffic there that day.

Hartsock Road is a little to the East of this cemetery.

 Photos taken January 2013.

 

[1] R. Sutton & Co., History of Van Wert and Mercer Counties, Ohio (1882; reprint, Mt. Vernon, Indiana: Windmill Publication, Inc., 1991), 422.

[2] 1840 U.S. census, Mercer County, Ohio, Black Creek Township, p. 84, line 10, Christian Hartsock; digital image by subscription, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 13 January 2013); Family History Library Film No. 0020172, from National Archives Microfilm M704, roll 413.

[3] Transcribed Mercer County Marriage Records Book ABC: 276, Probate Records Department, Courthouse, Celina, Ohio.

[4] 1850 U.S. census, Mercer County, Ohio, Dublin Township, p. 276A, line 1, family #7, Christian Hartsoy; digital image by subscription, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 6 January 2013); from National Archives Microfilm M432, roll 710.

[5]  1860 U.S. census, Mercer County, Ohio, Black Creek Township, p. 322, line 10, dwelling 468, family 473, Christian Hartzog; digital image by subscription, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 6 January 2013); Family History Library Film No. 805009, from National Archives Microfilm M653, roll 1009.

[6] 1870 U.S. census, Mercer County, Ohio, Black Creek Township, p. 20B, line 31, dwelling 30, family 30, Christian Hardzog; digital image by subscription, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 13 January 2013); Family History Library Film No. 552742, from National Archives Microfilm M593, roll 1243.