[9494] [S14] "History and Genealogy of the Stonesifer Family of MD and PA"
_Maxwell OCHELTREE __+
|
_Clarence Eugene OCHELTREE _|
| (1873 - ....) m 1900 |
| |_Sarah E MOORE ______
|
_Clarence Eugene OCHELTREE _|
| (1873 - ....) |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Mary Ellen SIMMONS ________|
| m 1900 |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Willard Eugene OCHELTREE
| (1907 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| ____________________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|____________________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|____________________________|
|
|_____________________
[7083] [S24] Journal of Susannah Elizabeth Vandegrift
__
|
_James Fields PENNINGTON _|
| (1793 - 1876) m 1823 |
| |__
|
_Elijah Smith PENNINGTON _|
| (1830 - 1908) m 1850 |
| | __
| | |
| |_Sarah Ann SMITH _________|
| (1800 - 1885) m 1823 |
| |__
|
|
|--Columbus S. PENNINGTON
| (1851 - 1921)
| __
| |
| _Martin Kehrer BAKER _____|
| | |
| | |__
| |
|_Christina KEHRER (KERO) _|
(1830 - 1887) m 1850 |
| __
| |
|_Barabra BRUCKLACHER _____|
|
|__
[10504] [S185] Personal Notes Edith G. Harris
[10505] [S186] Pennington Research Association /John French File
[10503] [S81] Personal notes Marilyn Freeland
_John B PENNINGTON __+
| (1814 - 1860) m 1838
_James Mercer PENNINGTON _|
| (1839 - 1920) m 1864 |
| |_Ann Mercer _________
| (1820 - ....) m 1838
_Lawrence Hipple PENNINGTON _|
| (1866 - 1954) m 1895 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Mary L BROOKS ___________|
| (1838 - 1918) m 1864 |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Martin Beadenkopf PENNINGTON
| (1908 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| __________________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Emma WALKER ________________|
m 1895 |
| _____________________
| |
|__________________________|
|
|_____________________
[4378] [S153] "Delaware Bible Records"
[4379] Sara Pennington Evans owner
Mary QUIGLEY
Margaret QUIGLEY
Chester QUIGLEY
Ruth QUIGLEY
Jean QUIGLEY
Donald QUIGLEY
Julia QUIGLEY
Ellen Elizabeth QUIGLEY
_Christopher VANDEGRIFT ______________+
| (1781 - 1857) m 1804
_Leonard George VANDEGRIFT _|
| (1813 - 1896) m 1847 |
| |_Lydia ASPRIL widow of Elias Walraven_+
| (1778 - 1845) m 1804
_Abraham VANDEGRIFT lived in Montana 1929_|
| (1860 - 1932) m 1883 |
| | _John DILWORTH near Port Penn_________
| | |
| |_Hester E DILWORTH _________|
| (1818 - 1873) m 1847 |
| |_Anna (Priscilla) ____________________
|
|
|--Julia Cleaver VANDEGRIFT
| (1886 - ....)
| ______________________________________
| |
| _Isaac S CLEAVER ___________|
| | |
| | |______________________________________
| |
|_Emma G CLEAVER __________________________|
m 1883 |
| ______________________________________
| |
|_Mary A B __________________|
|
|______________________________________
[5917] go to live in Duluth Minn
[5918] [S24] Journal of Susannah Elizabeth Vandegrift
[15748] [S24] Journal of Susannah Elizabeth Vandegrift
_Titus VOSHELL _______+
| m 1799
_Obadiah VOSHELL (Indiana)_|
| (1801 - ....) m 1829 |
| |_Alice (Aley) BAILEY _
| m 1799
_Usual VOSHELL ______|
| (1834 - ....) m 1855|
| | ______________________
| | |
| |_Ann WILLIAMS _____________|
| (1814 - ....) m 1829 |
| |______________________
|
|
|--Louis Albert VOSHELL
| (1871 - 1952)
| ______________________
| |
| ___________________________|
| | |
| | |______________________
| |
|_Angline ____________|
(1839 - ....) m 1855|
| ______________________
| |
|___________________________|
|
|______________________
[15192]
from Lisa Lane
died of hardening of the arteries
Missouri census of 1900 (Volume 68, Sheet 9, Line 94) lists Louis A Voshell, born February 29, 1871 in Indiana. No reference was made to Usual or Angelina
On his birth certificate @ Butlerville, Indiana,Feb. 4 1871, Angelina is listed as having the last name Hall.
On his marriage certificate to Sara she is listed as Sadie Ingram (widow of Auburn Ingram since 1922);
Louis and Sara married March 11, 1930, Parkville, Missouri, but the marriage was registered in Levenworth, Kansas.
AKA-(also known as): VASHELL (on birth certificate mother listed as Angelina Hall) and on marriage certificate to Sara
CENSUS: The Missouri census of 1900 (Volume 68, Sheet 9, Line 94) lists Louis A Voshell, born February 29, 1871 in Indiana.
Louis was very proud of his French background and instilled that feeling in his daughters. During my
research I found that in France they would spell Voshell Vauchel. However, it appears that this family
traveled first to Holland and that might help explain the Dutch appearance for the spelling. This name is
spelled in a number of different ways during the many census records they show up in some of the
spellings include Voshell, Voshall, Vocial, Voschell, Voushell, and Wouchel. From a letter from Debbie Kyle
as told to her by her father, John, son of Sylvia, daughter of Louis and Dora Crowdes, his first wife. He
says Louis was known as an extremely hard worker, and must have been one tough dude! He lived for a
time near Braddyville, IA (on the MO-IA line in the Northwest corner), and had a drayage service (hauled
freight, etc. with a team of horses). Once, some young men were camping nearby, and one drowned.
Despite their best efforts, they could not retrieve the body. When they went back to town and told the tale,
Louis took his team to the river and brought up the body. Louis and his second wife, Winnie, di d not get on
well at all, so Louis moved her into town, and went back to the farm where he built a dugout and lived for a
time. (I don't know what the winters are like where you live, but in north Missouri, it takes somebody pretty
tough to withstand that!) When Louis died, one of his mom's brothers-in-laws came and asked Dad if he'd
drive out to Washington to the funereal with him (Dad had a good car). They were all set to go, but a bad
winter storm moved in and they didn't make the trip. Louis, , was previously married to Doris Crowdes and
had four children: Doris, Norma, Lasso, (killed in a rodeo accident), and Sylvia, (passed away at 42). . . .
Usual's wife, Angelina Lyons Rolls, Ralls, or Hall Voshell,1839 -1895, is buried at Mt. Hope Cemetary in
Lincoln Township, Nodaway County, Missouri near the old town of Dawsonville, (present-day Burlington
Junction. Also buried there is Louis Voshell's second wife, Winnie Friend Williams. (His first wife, Dora
Crowdes Voshell, is buried at nearby Possum Walk. Louis' brother Farris J. Voshell, 1874 - 1901, is buried
at Mt. Hope. Farris was crippled, and consequently died fairly young.) From LIFE AND DEATH IN
NODAWAY COUNTY 1890 - 1904 (A compliation of obituaries, marriages, and other events printed in the
Maryville Republican during that time) p. 184 Died, Sept. 19, 1900, Mrs. Louis Vashell, Lincoln Twp. (This
would be Dora Crowdes) p. 192 Died, Sept. 19, 1900, Mrs. Dora Voschell, East of Elmo, age 30 p. 60
Died, Dec. 5, 1896, Mrs. U.W. Voschell, at Dawson, of consumption (Nothing about Usual) From
LINCOLN TWP CEMETARIES, NODAWAY COUNTY, MISSOURI Mt. Hope Cemetary at Dawson: *Voshell,
Farris J. 1874-1901 *Voshell, Angelina Lyons 1839 - 1895 Lamar cemetary, (Possum Walk) *Lesso V.
Voshell, 1896-1916 (This was a son of Louis and Dora; he was a cowboy, and won a really fancy
saddle in a rodeo somewhere. Louis took it with him to Washington -- *Dora Crowdes Voshell, 1871-1900
(The following are Dora's family,) *George A. Crowdes, 1847-1929 (Dora's dad, an early settler of
Nodaway County) *Ann Bailey Crowdes 1852-1886 (Dora's mom, died young as did her daughter Dora,
and her daughter Sylvia) L. Evia Crowdes 1876-1893 Molly A. Crowdes 1874-1893 Robert Crowdes, son
of GA and NA, Sept. 18, 1881 2y, 9m, 9d From a letter from Marion Fine ..."I know Louis was a hard
worker, liked to move around and work for different people. When Dora was living my mom said, always
lots of people would come for hair cuts, to play cards and visit. They'd go to the river to swim, all except
my mother. She was afraid of water (probably got dumped in to learn to swim when real little.) After he
married Winnie it all stopped. Cards was against her religion, and she tried to rule everything he did. So it
was a very stormy marriage. Mama always knew when they were really mad for Winnie would get up and
get breakfast. If they weren't, Mama had to do it. She would go to town or where ever, leave mom in
charge. Norma and Ada would get out sewing machine to play with or try to cook up something and mama
couldn't do anything about it, only get the mess cleaned up before she got back. (Don't that sound like Eva
June.) (Norma's daughter, Marian's first cousin.) Winnie would have clothes for herself. Kids c ould make
do, so mama had it better after 14. I know Aunt Norma went to Lamar School. For her and Uncle Earl came
to reunion dinner when I was going to school. Didn't bring girls for they were at school. While Aunt Sylvia
was at home they (Louis and Winnie) lived for awhile where the Browning girls grew up and Delbert lived
until he passed away. Story: Aunt Sylvia got mad at "Mom" as she (Winnie) was always called, shut
herself in the little bedroom and stayed for about a month. When she finally got over her mad spell, Winnie
asked her what she ate. She said, No problem, I crawled out the window to go to the outhouse. Whenever
you were asleep I'd come out and eat, didn't you miss the food? So that tells how them kids could get by
with their mess. She made them do the work so she didn't notice there'd been an extra mess. . ." . . ."page
4, letter 2 Louis and Dora's boy, Lesso Van Voshell --died at 20 in 1916-- Went out west, came home sick.
Thought he had tuberculosis. Aunt Sylvia was at home. Winnie packed up and left so Sylvia and her dad
took care of him. Of course my mother and Norma had little kids by then. No one got TB from him. My mother
said Aunt Sylvia would pick up his glass and drink from it. (OK. Now Edward and Gerald said he just got
hurt too many times breaking horses. I don't think he was sick very long.) (Conjecture: What if Lesso had
broken ribs, couldn't breathe, thought he had TB?) Aunt Sy lvia packed up all of his stuff in a trunk and took
it to Mama's home to keep. They lived at Dawson neighborhood. She knew Winnie would be back. I know
there was a story about the saddle. Could have been all that she left Lou when she finally left him. (Lou
told one of his girls , I don't know who, that he was leaving when all the kids were on their own.) Sylvia
was married about 1921 (she wasn't married when Edward was born in 1920) Just Walter, Winnie's blind
son. They (Louis and Winnie) were living at or near Braddyville, Iowa. She wanted him to move to
Burlington Junction, Mo. so she could get Missouri pension for the Blind for Walter. Lou said that , he could
take care of the 3 of them himself, and that he wanted no welfare. So she moved out and took everything,
thinking he'd come to Burlington Junction. The relationship was over and they divorced in 1930.
[15193] [S254] Personal notes Lisa Lane
_Obadiah VOSHELL JR well doc fam_+
| (1727 - 1796) m 1786
_Daniel VOSHELL _____|
| (1780 - 1841) m 1809|
| |_Hannah IRONS 2nd wife___________+
| (.... - 1830) m 1786
_William D VOSHELL __|
| (1810 - 1898) m 1838|
| | _________________________________
| | |
| |_Rebecca DELANEY ____|
| (.... - 1867) m 1809|
| |_________________________________
|
|
|--William Henry VOSHELL
|
| _________________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_________________________________
| |
|_Harriet A HICKS ____|
(1817 - ....) m 1838|
| _________________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_________________________________
[2529] [S104] Probate DE Archives, Voshall, Daniel, 1841-1842
Copyright Ruth Stonesifer [Home] [Surname List]