Goldsby Alaska Bennett, Center Public School Teacher, 1905

A few months ago I wrote about Joe’s great-uncle, Goldsby “Alaska” Bennett, who was enumerated as a schoolteacher in Black Creek Township and in Franklin Township, Mercer County, in 1900. [1] He was enumerated twice in that census, which is rather unusual.

Goldsby “Alaska” Bennett

Alaska taught a few more years in Mercer County. I recently got a copy of the 1905 Souvenir book for Center Public School, Franklin Township, Mercer County, where Alaska Bennett was the teacher. There is a nice photo of Alaska on the front.

1905 Souvenir Book, Center Public School, Franklin Township, G.A. Bennett, teacher.

Whoever wrote his name on the front apparently used the abbreviated version of Alaska.

1905 Souvenir Book, Center Public School, Franklin Township, G.A. Bennett, teacher.

Written inside:

Center
Public School
Special District
Franklin Twp, Mercer County, Ohio
G.A. Bennett, Teacher

Pupils
Nellie Clevenger
Lizzie Clevenger
Ethel Frank
Lulu Preston
Mabe Ballinger
Blanche Harrison
Mabel Harrison
Edith Mosier
Eunice Kittle
Lura Frank
Cecil Frank
Clarence Frank
Carl Miller
Paul Miller
Ray Snider
Louis Kittle
Dale Sheeley
James Goodnick
Harry Servis
Bessie Goodnick
Elsie Sheeley
Clifford Gray
Lewis Newland
Hazzle Clevenger
Flavilla Frank
Alta Lyons
Elma Hole
Electra Ballinger
Caroline Harrison
Mirtie Mosier
Jessie Kittle
Cecil Kittle
Earl Frank
Worley Frank
Lawrence Frank
Park Miller
Harold Snider
William Kittle
Frank Kittle
Earl Sheeley
Forest Ballinger
Charles Servis
Flossie Harrison
Albert Harrison
Leroy Newland
Willie Newland

School Board
Irvin Hole
Philip Servis
H.B. Bennett
J.W. Harrison
John Lyons

One of the School Board members was H.B. Bennett, Alaska’s father.

Alaska didn’t have to go far to teach at Center School. Center School was on the edge of his father Henry Brandenburg’s land, northeast of Montezuma. Henry had some nice lake-shore property.

Center School and Henry B Bennett land, 1900 map, Franklin Township, Mercer County, Ohio.

Goldsby “Alaska” Bennett was born in Mercer County on 27 November 1878, the fourth child, the second son of Henry Brandenburg and Sarah Maria (Milligan) Bennett. He grew up near Montezuma, became a teacher and taught for several terms.

Alaska Bennett married Ida Ellen Monroe (1883-1967) on 27 March 1910 in Mercer County and they moved to a farm in Paulding County, Ohio. There he farmed, served as the school board clerk, and was a founder of the Oakwood Telephone Company and the Oakwood Oil Company.

Alaska Bennett died on his 75th birthday, 27 November 1953. His widow Ida died 13 December 1967.

Alaska Bennett had the following siblings:
Nevada B. Bennett (1865-1925), married John J. Beauchamp
Dakota T. Bennett (1868-1936), married Anna Manning
Minnesota Bennett (1873-1953), married James Austin Drumm
Arizona Landon Bennett (1881-1961), married Orla Yancy
Delaware Samuel Bennett (1884-1937), married Mattie Evelyn Yeaton
Vermont H. Bennett (1886-1964), married Lura Vivian Monroe; married Mattie Evelyn (Yeaton) Bennett

[1] Goldsby Alaska Bennett, Black Creek Teacher in 1900 , Karen’s Chatt, 6 Oct 2023.

Tombstone Tuesday-Forrest M. & Elvira L. (Baker) Ripley

Ripley, Forrest & Elvira (Baker), Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio (2011 photo by Karen)

This is the tombstone of Forrest M. and Elvira L. (Baker) Ripley, located in row 1 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

RIPLEY
Elvira L.
1897-1932
Forrest M.
1896-1969

Forrest Malcolm Ripley was born 29 Aug 1896 in Blue Creek Township, Adams County, Indiana, the son of Malcolm Alonzo (1866-1953) and Lillie (Hopf) (1866-1925) Ripley. Forrest’s parents were both born in Mercer County, Ohio, and his mother’s family attended Zion Chatt, where she was baptized on 24 June 1866.

The Malcolm Ripley family in 1900: Malcolm, 33; Lily P, 34; Earl F, 5; Forrest M, 3; Fay, 10 months; and Benford Ripley, 27, brother. Malcolm Ripley was a farmer. [1] By 1910 the Ripley family had grown to include Leland, born in 1904, and Dorothy, born in 1907.

Forrest M. Ripley married Elvira L. Baker at Zion Lutheran Church, Chatt, on 1 Jan 1919. Witnesses to their marriage were Earl Ripley and Luetta L. Baker.

Elvira Lorena Baker was born in Black Creek Township, Mercer County, Ohio, on 12 July 1897, the daughter of Theodore W. (1875-1932) and Mary H. (Bollenbacher) (1875-1961) Baker. 

The Theodore Baker family in 1900: Theodore, 24; Mary, 25; Alvera [Elvira], 2; Leona, 1; and Marie, 4 months. All family members were born in Ohio and Theodore was a farmer. [2] By 1910 the Baker family had grown to include daughter Luetta, born in 1902.

Elvira was confirmed at Zion Chatt on 9 April 1911.

By 1919 the Baker sisters were getting married and leaving home. Elvira married Forrest Ripley in 1919. Her sister Leona married Homer Carr on 14 March 1920, and sister Mary married Oscar F. Schaadt on 14 October 1920.

In 1920, newlyweds Forrest, 23, and Elvira Ripley, 22, resided with Forrest’s parents on Willshire Pike, in Blue Creek Township, Adams County, Indiana. Malcom Ripley’s family in 1920: Malcolm, 53; Lillie, 53; Earl, 24; Fay, 20; Leland, 15; and Dorothy, 12. The census indicates that Malcolm and Lillie were born in Ohio and their children were born in Indiana. Malcolm was a farmer and Forrest was the farm manager. [3]   

Two sons were born to Forrest and Elvira Ripley during the next few years, Laverne, in 1921, and Carl in 1925. Both sons were born in Ohio, so they probably moved to Ohio between 1920-1921.

Forrest Ripley was baptized at Zion Chatt on 25 March 1923.

Forrest’s mother, Lillie Pauline (Hopf) Ripley, died from cancer on 2 Feb 1925, age 58 years. She was buried on the 4th and her funeral in Union Church, Adams County, Indiana, although her burial information is recorded in Zion Chatt’s records. She was survived by her husband, 3 sons, 2 daughters, 5 sisters, and 1 brother. 

In 1930 Forrest and Elvira and their 2 sons, Laverne, 8, and Carl, 4, lived in Black Creek Township, Mercer County, on what was called Baker Pike. [4]

Elvira (Baker) Ripley died in Decatur, Indiana, 30 July 1932, at age 35, from a bowel obstruction. She was buried on 1 August, with S.S. Egger in charge of the funeral arrangements. Her death certificate indicates that she was buried in the Chattanooga Mausoleum. [5]

Ripley, Elvira (Baker), Chattanooga Mausoleum (2017 photo by Karen)

Elvira was survived by her husband, 2 young sons, her parents, and 3 sisters.

1932 continued to be a tragic year for the Theodore Baker family. Elvira’s sister Luetta Louisa Baker, age 30, died 24 October 1932 and the father Theodore William Baker died 14 December 1932.

Elvira’s father, mother, and sister Luetta are also interred in the Chattanooga Mausoleum.

Widower Forrest Ripley married Helen Laffin on 2 December 1933 at Zion Lutheran Church, married by Rev. Carl Yahl. Helen, age 27, was the daughter of Elza and Florence (Davis) Laffin and was born in Liberty Township on 26 September 1906. She was not previously married. [6]

The Forrest Ripley family in 1940: Forrest, 43, head; Helen P, 33, wife; Laverne, 18, son; and Carl, 14, son. [7]

Forrest and Helen apparently divorced and Forrest married widow Ercie Lucille (Butler) Hower on 27 December 1943 in Indiana. Ercie was born in Tipton County, Indiana, on 16 Feb 1896, the daughter of Jesse M. (1863-1903) and Tempie (Thrailkill) (1875-1963) Butler and she lived in Decatur. [8] Ercie’s first husband Frech C. Hower died in 1938.

Forrest and Ercie lived on 707, west of 49, near the Indiana State Line. Ercie joined the congregation of Zion Lutheran, Chatt, on 15 April 1945. By 1950 Forrest’s two sons had left home and Forrest and Ercie lived by themselves, , along with Walter E. Thatcher, 15, as their farm hand. 

Forrest Malcolm Ripley died of a heart attack at his Black Creek Township home on 2 January 1969, aged 72 years. He was buried on the 5th. He was survived by his wife Ercie, 2 sons, 1 stepson, 2 step-daughters, 1 brother, 1 sister, and 3 grandchildren. His obituary:

Forrest [Ripley], 72, Rt. 1, passed away at 9 a.m., at his home after a coronary attack.

He was the son of Malcolm and Lily (Hopf) Ripley. He married twice. His first wife was Elvira Baker, who preceded him in death. On Dec 28, 1944, he married Ercie Hower, who survived him.

Also surviving were two sons, LaVern and Carl, both Rockford; a stepson, Frech Hower, New Haven, IN; two stepdaughters, Betty Kline, Sarasota, Fl, and Mrs. Donald House, Linton, IN; a brother, Earl, Napoleon; two sisters, Faye (Joseph) Rolley, Redwood Valley, CA, and Dorothy (Earl) McBride, Rockford; and three grandchildren. Deceased is a brother, Leland.

He raced horses for several years, and was a member of the Western Ohio Colt Racing Assoc. and the U.S. National Trotting Assoc. He also was a member of Zion Lutheran Church, Lodge 667, F&AM of Willshire and Chapter 25, Order of the Eastern Star of Willshire.

Funeral services were in the Ketcham-Ripley Funeral Home, with Rev. Ralph Hershberger officiating.
[9]

Forrest’s widow Ercie married Rev. Herman Reinking in 1971 and he passed away in 1973. Ercie Lucille (Butler) Hower Ripley Reinking died 8 February 1994 at the Lutheran Home, Allen County, Indiana.

I remember Forrest and Ercie Ripley attending church at Zion Chatt and attending the Farm Council Meetings. The house they lived in on 707 was moved to Sipe Road some years ago.

Forrest and Elvira (Baker) Ripley had the following children:
LaVerne Theodore Ripley (1921-1992), married Rilla Putman
Carl Malcolm Ripley (1925-1990), married Lucille Ketcham

[1] 1900 U.S. Census, Indiana, Adams, Blue Creek, ED 1, p. 10, dwelling 189, family 196, Malcolm C [sic] Ripley; Ancestry.com.

[2] 1900 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Black Creek, ED 74, p.9, dwelling & family 196, Dore W Baker; Ancestry.com.

[3] 1920 U.S. Census, Indiana, Adams, Blue Creek, ED 1, p.6A, dwelling 118, family 118, Forrest Ripley; Ancestry.com. The Malcolm Ripley was family no. 117.   

[4] 1930 U.S. Census, Ohio,  Mercer, Black Creek, ED 1, p.7B, dwelling & family 165, Forest [sic] M Ripley; Ancestry.com.  

[5] Indiana Archives and Records Administration, Indianapolis, IN, Indiana Death Certificates, 1932, roll 7, Elvira Ripley, 30 Jul 1932; Ancestry.com.

[6] Ohio, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1774-1993, Mercer Marriages, Vol. 14, p. 147, Forrest M Ripley & Helen Laffin, 2 Dec 1933; Ancestry.com.

[7] 1940 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Black Creek, ED 54-1, p.8B, household 174, Forrest M Ripley; Ancestry.com.

[8] Indiana, U.S., Marriages, 1810-2001, Forrest M. Ripley & Ercie Hower, 27 December 1943; Ancestry.com.

[9] Forrest M. Ripley Find a Grave memorial no. 39739608, from The Lima News, Lima, Ohio, 3 Jan 1969; FindaGrave.com.

Some Chattanooga Residents

Some residents of Chatt from days gone by.

Jack August

 

Carl Schroeder

 

Anna (Huffman) Bollenbacher

 

Theodore Leininger

Ivan Johnson

 

Bruno Betzel

Tombstone Tuesday-J.R. “Rudy” & Henrietta (Warrick) Strabel

J.R. "Rudy" & Henrietta (Warrick) Strabel, Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. (2011 photo by Karen)This is the tombstone of J.R. “Rudy” and Henrietta (Warrick) Strabel, located in row 10 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:

STRABEL
Henrietta
1904-1971
J.R.
1897-1984

Johann Rudolph “Rudy” Strabel was born in Liberty Township, Mercer County, Ohio, on 22 July 1897, the son of Peter (1869-1957) and Louise (Fisher) (1870-1953) Strabel. He was baptized at Zion Lutheran Church, Chatt, by Rev. August Affeld on 22 August 1897, with Johann Strabel and Carolina Fischer serving as his baptismal sponsors. He was confirmed at Zion Chatt on 9 April 1911.

As far as I remember, he was always called Rudy and I will use that name in this writing.

This is a photo of Rudy with his Confirmation Class in 1911. Rudy is one of the few individuals in the photo who is specifically identified. Rudy Strabel, Row 3, far left. [1]

1911 Confirmation Class with Rev. Haas, Zion Lutheran Church, Chattanooga, Mercer County, Ohio.

Rudy Strabel, 1911 Confirmation, Zion Lutheran, Chattanooga

Rudy Strabel was the oldest child of Peter and Louise Strabel. He grew up in Liberty Township with his siblings, Leona, George Albert, Marcella Magdalene, Opal Victoria, and Carl William “Charles.“ The family attended Zion Chatt and all their children were baptized there.

The Peter Strabel family in 1920: Peter, 50; Louisa, 49, Rudolph, 22; Albert, 15; Marcella, 13; Opal, 10; and Charles, 3. [2] By 1930 siblings Rudy, Opal, and Charles lived with their parents in Liberty Township.

Rudy Strabel married Henrietta Warrick in Mercer County on 28 November 1935, married by Rev. Koenig.

Henrietta Warrick was born in Black Creek Township on 31 March 1904, the oldest child of Frank H. (1879-1956) and Zell Bertha (Hinton) (1881-1920) Warrick. [3]

The Frank H. Warrick family in 1910: Frank H, 31; Zella B, 29; Henrietta, 6; Rosa I, 4; and Doris R, 2. All family members were born in Ohio and the father Frank was a farmer. [4]

By 1920 the Frank Warrick family had moved to Hopewell Township, Mercer County, and the family included several more children: Henrietta, 16; Rhoa, 14; Doris, 12; Marcella, 10; William, 8; Wilson, 3; and Betty, 1. [5]

In 1930 Henrietta, 26, and her sister Betty, 11, lived with their widowed maternal grandmother Ida C. Hinton, 68, on West Livingston Street in Celina. Henrietta worked as an inspector in a furniture factory. [6]

After their marriage in 1935, Rudy and Henrietta moved to Liberty Township, where Rudy farmed. Henrietta was baptized at Zion Chatt on 9 April 1939 by Rev. Carl Yahl. They resided in Liberty Township in 1950 as well. [7]

Henrietta (Warrick) Strabel died from complications of a stroke in Berne, Indiana, on 17 June 1971, at age 67. She was buried on the 18th. Her obituary:

Henrietta Strabel dies in Berne
Mrs. Henrietta Strabel, 67, of Celina, O., Route 1, died Tuesday night at the Berne Nursing Home. A daughter of Frank and Bertha (Hinton) Warrick, she was born March 31, 1904. Mrs. Strabel was a member of the Zion Lutheran Church at Chattanooga, O.

Surviving are her husband, R. J. Strabel; four sisters, Mrs. Rhoa Tricker of Monroe, Mrs. Doris Kuhn of Coldwater, O., Mrs. Marcella Imes of Osakis, Minn., and Mrs. Betty Mundhenk of Centerville, O; and two brothers, Hollis Warrick of Detroit, and Wilson Warrick of Celina.

Rites will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Vale and Stein Funeral Home in Celina, with Rev. Ralph Hershberger officiating. Burial will be in Zion Lutheran Cemetery at Chattanooga. Friends may call at the funeral home after 2 p.m. today.
[8]

Widower John Rudolph/Rudy Strabel died in Celina on 19 March 1984, age 86, following a heart attack while driving a car. He was buried on the 22nd.

Rudy and Henrietta did not have any children.

[1] 1911 Zion Chatt Confirmation Photo: Row 1) Ed Strabel, far left. Row 2) Clarence Becher, far left; Carrie Becher last girl far right. Row 3) Rudolf Strabel far left; Rev. Haas. Remaining individuals in photo, order unknown: Gertrude Haas, Lizzie Kuehm, Bertha Huffman, Klara Huffman, Frieda Kessler, Clara Bender, Elvira Baker, Hulda Andrews, Mary Andrews, Carl Berron, Heinrich Kuehm, Louis Brandt, Raymond Becher, Albert Becher, Wilhelm Berger, Omar Heffner, Otto Allmandinger.

[2] 1920 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, ED 140, p.9B, dwelling 178, family 192, Peter Strabel; Ancestry.com.

[3] Ohio, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1774-1993, Mercer County, Vol. 14, p.291, John Rudolph and Henrietta Warrick, 28 Nov 1935; Ancestry.com.  

[4] 1910 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Black Creek, Ed 107, p.6B, dwelling 134, family 135, Frank H Warick [sic]; Ancestry.com.

[5] 1920 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Hopewell, ED 135, p.7A, dwelling 132, family 140, Frank H Warrick; Ancestry.com.

[6] 1930 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Celina, ED 17, p.1B, dwelling and family 19, Ida B Hinton; Ancestry.com.  

[7] 1940 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, ED 54-22, p.8A, household 148, Rudolph Strabel; Ancestry.com.

[8] Henrietta Strabel Obituary, Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Indiana, 17 June 1971; FindaGrave.com.

Merkles and Heffners of Chatt

Today, a few more Merkle and Heffner photos, courtesy of Doug Roebuck.

A few weeks ago I wrote about the children of Joseph and Lucinda (Kantner) Merkle.

Joseph Merkle (1835-1901), born in Germany, and in 1860 married Lucinda Kantner (1843-1919). Joseph and Lucinda Merkle moved from Auglaize County to Chattanooga about 1872. Joseph worked as a blacksmith in Chatt and Lucinda ran a boarding house there. Their family attended Zion Lutheran Church in Chatt.

One of their nine children, Anna Merkle (1867-1935), married Fred Heffner (1861-1918) at Zion Chatt in 1885. Fred was the son of George and Sophia (Martin) Heffner.

Anna (Merkle) Heffner, wife of Fred Heffner. Photo courtesy of Doug Roebuck.

Fred Heffner resided in Chatt most of his life and ran a saloon there for several years. They had nine children: George “Rudolph,” Albert Conrad, Emma Elizabeth (m. Jacob A. Bauer), Walter Herbert, Fredrich Oscar ”Brownie”, Maria Helena, Roman Edward, Verla “Marguerite” (m. William “Curt” Roebuck), and Vernon Hugo “Cy.” Fred and Anna Heffner are buried in Zion Chatt’s cemetery, and a number of their family as well. 

Here is a photo of the Fred and Anna (Merkle) Heffner family:

Fred Heffner family. Front: Marguerite, Fredrick, Vernon, Anna, Emma. Back: Roman, Rudolph, Herbert, Albert, Oscar.

Below is a four generation photo of Lucinda (Kantner) Merkle, her daughter Anna (Merkle) Heffner (1867-1935), Anna’s daughter Emma (Heffner) Bauer (1890-1938), and Emma’s daughter Mildred (Bauer) Fisher (1908-2001).

Merkle, Heffner, Bauer, Fisher 4 generation photo. Photo courtesy of Doug Roebuck.

Fred and Anna (Merkle) Heffner’s son Vernon Hugo “Cy” (1905-1987) married Carmella Bury (1911-1978). In 1980, widower Cy Heffner married Mary Wilma (Zeigler) Lewis (1909-2000). Cy and Carmella are buried in Zion Chatt’s cemetery.

Vernon “Cy” Heffner & wife Carmella Bury. Photo of courtesy of Doug Roebuck.

Cy Heffner and his brother Oscar “Brownie” (1896-1956) ran a filling station/auto repair business in Mendon. Cy ran the filling station for 25 years and also owned and trained standard breed horses. He was known for his patience, knowledge, strict training schedule, and dedication, training at Spring Garden Ranch, Florida, and Greenville and Celina, Ohio. His most successful horse was the pacer Rocky Win and his most prestigious win was at the Ohio State Fair in 1957.

Cy’s brother Brownie Heffner was a veteran of WWI and married Lillian Kinkley in 1921 and later married Dorothy Evelyn Patton in 1946. Brownie is buried in Zion Chatt’s cemetery.

Below is a photo of Cy Heffner and his sister Verla “Marguerite” Heffner (1902-1970). Marguerite was married to William “Curt” Roebuck (1899-1975).

Cy Heffner and his sister Marguerite (Heffner) Roebuck. Photo courtesy of Doug Roebuck.

Again, thanks to Doug Roebuck for sharing his family photos and information.