Friday, December 1, 2023

WHAT IF YOU WERE KILLED, AND NOBODY NOTICED? - Harry Shultz Leamaster

People become involved with the website Findagrave.com for many different reasons.  Some to look at the gravesite of a famous actor or actress.  Others to try to find the interment sites of relatives or friends who lived and died far away.  As a historian I create Find a Grave Memorial pages as a way to remember departed friends and relatives.  After a memorial page is created, the person who created it can keep it, or transfer it to the Find a Grave administrators.  The pages transferred to the administrators then become available to be "adopted" by any Find a Grave member who might be interested in managing the memorial.  That is why my latest statistics show that I have created 21,848 memorial pages, but I manage 28,380 pages.  This means that I manage 6,532 pages that were created by someone else.

After I take over management of a page I did not create, I check all the information to make sure it is correct.  I recently took over management of 198 memorial pages for people interred at the Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles. Everyone has heard of Dr. Hubert Eaton's Forest Lawn Memorial Parks but few have ever heard of Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery.  Angelus-Rosedale is actually one of Los Angeles' oldest and largest cemeteries and one of the first cemeteries willing to inter anyone regardless of color, religion or ethnic background.  Originally named Rosedale Cemetery, it became Angelus-Rosedale when it was purchased in 1993 by the Angelus Funeral Home.  For the remainder of this article I will refer to the cemetery as "Rosedale."  If you have read any of my stories about Angeles Abbey Memorial Park in Compton, you will know how much I am interested in the cemeteries of Southern California.  

Unlike Angeles Abbey which I have never visited, I have been to Rosedale.  I went there one morning years ago to photograph the grave of Chinese-American star Anna May Wong for a friend:

Anna May Wong

The grave of Anna May Wong, her mother and her sister

Among the pages I "adopted" from Rosedale was one for a man named Harry Shultz Lemasters who was born May 28, 1892 and died October 18, 1916.  Other than that, the page originally created by Find a Grave member Richard Mayo did not contain any additional information.  So I started doing my own research using the websites I described in last month's blog article.  I first went to the Family Search site created and managed by the Mormon Church.  Due to the generosity of the current ownership of Rosedale, the LDS Church was able to scan and record all of the Ownership Records and Interment Records of Rosedale Cemetery going all the way back to its founding in 1884.  

From the Family Search website I was able to get a copy of Harry Lemasters' Death Certificate:


The Death Certificate shows that he died in El Paso, Texas from what appears to be  "Crushed Vertebra from Rail Road Cars Accident" on October 18, 1916.  A lucky break for me, I thought, (though not so lucky for Harry).  I was sure there would be an abundance of information about the train accident.  I used my newspapers.com subscription to access the El Paso, Texas Herald from October 18, 1916.  I presumed that the train wreck would be big news on Page One - but I was incorrect.  In fact, the only mention of the train accident at all was a small article way back on Page 16:



Note the Headline "Unknown Men Meet Death..." and the fact that only one of the men was identified, that being P. G. Burns.  Harry Lemasters was described with the statement "One of the men killed evidently was a Mason, it was said."  Not much of an epitaph.

The Death Certificate said that the body would be taken back to "Los Angeles" for burial.  That was it - I couldn't find anything else in any of the other newspapers about the train wreck.

Before we try to uncover more information about the untimely death of Harry Lemaster, let's see what else we can "dig up" about him.

Harry Shultz Lemaster was born May 28, 1892 in Topeka, Kansas.  His last name was sometimes spelled as "Leamaster," "Leamasters," "Lemasters," or even "LeMaster."  His birthplace has been listed as Topeka, Kansas, but in other places as Bakersfield, California.  His parents were Elmer G. Lemaster (1864-1917) and Laura C. Shultz (1867-1961).

Harry's father, Elmer Grant Lemaster was born May 18, 1865 in Ohio.  His mother Laura C. Shultz was born May 26, 1867 in Pennsylvania.  They married in 1888 in Pennsylvania.  Elmer Lemaster was a Teamster by trade.

Elmer and Laura were blessed with three children: Frank Roland (or Rolland) (1889-1969), Harry Shultz (1892-1916), and Mildred Violet/Mrs. Frank M. Massa (1897-1965).

Harry makes his first appearance in the 1895 Kansas State Census.  The Lemaster family was living in Ward 2 of Topeka, Kansas.  The family consisted of  E.G. (30 years old), Laura (27), Frank (5), and Harry (3).  Elmer reported his occupation as "Laborer."

Young Harry is mentioned in this blurb from the Abilene (KS) Weekly Chronicle and the Dickson County News dated October 12, 1900:

Harry's next appearance is in the 1900 US Census.  The family is living at 460 Reno Avenue in Topeka, Kansas.  That address no longer exists, nor does Reno Avenue in Topeka.  The family consisted of:  Elmer G. (36 years old), Laura (33), Frank R. (10), Harry (8), and Mildred V. (2).  Elmer and Laura said they had been married for twelve years, and Laura reported she had given birth to three children - all of whom were still alive in 1900.  Elmer said he was a Teamster, that they rented their home, and that it was a house, not a farm.  Frank and Harry were listed as "In School" and both Elmer and Laura could read, write, and speak English.

The 1910 US Census shows that the family has relocated to 169 Umatilla Street in Denver, Colorado.  That number no longer exists on Umatilla Street.  They are now calling themselves the "Le Master" family.  The family consisted of: Elmer G. (45 years old), Laura C. (42), Harry S. (17), Mildred V. (12), Minnie E. Shultz, a sister-in-law (38), and Lodger Joseph J. Duffy (49).  Elmer listed his occupation as "Check Clerk at the Union Depot."  Elmer and Laura said they had been married twenty-two years, and Laura again reported having given birth to three children, all of whom were still living in 1910.

Harry S. Lemaster married Marylu Lightfoot (1897-1975) on September 16, 1915 in Santa Ana, California.  The groom was twenty-three; the bride was eighteen.

Marylu Lightfoot was born April 1, 1897 in Pittsburg, Missouri to William Alexander Lightfoot (1853-1928) and Alice Caroline Lawrence (1858-1928).  Marylu's father was also a Teamster like Harry's father. Marylu was one of five children born to William and Alice Lightfoot.

By 1916 the Lemaster clan had relocated again - this time to sunny Southern California.  Here is an entry for them in the 1916 Los Angeles City Directory:


I don't know why Harry's mother is not listed.  She's still alive - she didn't die until 1961.  Elmer is now a Foreman for the Salt Lake and Los Angeles Railroad.  

The family is living at 3615 Stephenson Avenue which is now called 3615 Whittier Boulevard:

3615 Whittier Boulevard, LA

Harry and his parents registered to vote in 1916, but none of them would declare a Party affiliation:


The occupation for Harry was listed as "crpt lyr,"  I originally thought that stood for "corporate lawyer," but there was never any indication that Harry Lemaster was an attorney.  Looking at it again, I figured it must stand for "carpet layer," a more appropriate occupation for Harry.    

This brings us to the date of the train accident that took Harry's life, October 18, 1916.  I am shocked that I was not able to find any additional information about a train accident that wrecked fourteen train cars and took the lives of two people.   Other than the short article from the El Paso Herald I was unable to find any additional information about what happened.  There are numerous sites on the internet concerning train accidents - from Wikipedia "List of American Railroad Accidents" to the US government site "Railroad Accident Reports" from the National Archives.  Even in the one account of the accident that I was able to uncover, poor Harry Lemaster's name is not even mentioned.      

His Death Certificate said he died at the "Hotel Dieu" in El Paso.  I was curious as to why his injured (or possibly dead already) body was taken to a hotel.  Actually that is a bit of a misnomer.  The full name of the "Hotel Dieu" was the "Hotel Dieu Hospital" which was run by the Daughters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary:   


In 1892 nuns bought the site and with $60,000 borrowed from the Motherhouse, and three Daughters of Charity started building Hotel Dieu in 1893. It was the first general hospital in El Paso. There was no electricity and lighting was done by gas. Heat was provided by wood fires. In need for more trained personnel, the sisters also started a nursing school connected with the Hotel Dieu in 1898.  The hotel/hospital served the residents of El Paso until 1987 when it was sold and ultimately razed. 

The Death Certificate further indicates that Harry's body would be shipped to "Los Angeles, Calif." for burial or removal. As I mentioned at the start of this article I took over management of almost 200 Find a Grave memorial pages for graves in the Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles.  Among these was a Memorial Page for "Harry Shultz Leamasters."  I started checking the information that the page creator Richard Mayo added to the page when he created it.  I was unable to review any of the information with Richard Mayo because he had passed away in 2018.  Primarily I would have liked to have asked him where he got the information that Harry Leamasters was interred at Rosedale Cemetery.  In checking the Ownership Books and Interment Books for Rosedale, neither the name of "Harry Leamasters" nor any of its alternate spellings shows up.

After doing further research I found that Harry S. Lemaster is actually buried in the Los Angeles Odd Fellows Cemetery at 3640 Whittier Boulevard which turns out to be right across the street from the Lemaster home at 3615 Whittier Boulevard.

Photo courtesy of Find a Grave Volunteer saltmarsh


Despite the many trips I have made to Southern California cemeteries, I have never been to the Los Angeles Odd Fellows Cemetery.  I was wondering about it, so I asked two "cemetery friends" and here's what they said:

"Re Odd Fellows, I didn't even really know it existed before I started doing Find a Grave 3 years ago, it's tucked away in an inconspicuous area of the city. It's peaceful and they're still doing interments so it has some life and there are always decorations around. It's probably overlooked a lot because the much larger Catholic and Jewish cemeteries are just down the street. I like it because it has some of the oldest burials, along with Rosedale and Evergreen, and is better kept up than either of those."

And the other person I asked:  "One of L.A.'s worst."

Well, you can't please everyone.  I'll have to check it out for myself the next time I am in LA.

Poor Harry Lemaster - a man who lived for twenty-four years, had a job, married, loved and was loved, disappears almost without a trace.  As I have stated many times in this blog, it exists so that these people will not be forgotten.  Harry S. Lemaster, you are not forgotten.

May he rest in peace.

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The rest of the story:

Harry's widow, Marylu Lightfoot Lemaster remarried on July 13, 1923 to Doran Henry Cox.  He died in 1957, she died in 1975.  they are both interred at Forest Lawn Glendale.   

Photo courtesy of Find a Grave Volunteer Jane Hatch

Photo courtesy of Find a Grave Volunteer Jane Hatch

Harry's father, Elmer G. Lemaster died on April 1, 1917 at the age of fifty-one.  His Death Certificate listed his Cause of Death as "Operated on Nov 27 for gastric ulcer.  Later developed pulmonary tuberculosis, from which he died."

Elmer Lemaster is buried beside his son Harry in the LA Odd Fellows Cemetery:

Photo courtesy of Find a Grave Volunteer saltmarsh 

 
Harry's mother Laura Shultz Lemaster remarried on November 26, 1920 to F. Morris Gordon.  She died February 20, 1961 in Los Angeles at the age of ninety-three.  I was unable to find her Cause of Death or where/if she was interred.  

See you next month.        

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

WHO WAS D.M.P. Davis?

I love it when I am contacted by family members of the people I feature in this blog.  They often say, "You found out things about my own family that I didn't even know.  Where do you find all of the information you use when writing your stories?"  The answer is very simple:  The Internet.  Specifically I use the following websites (some are free and some are not):

1.  Ancestry.com

2.  FamilySearch.org

3.  Newspapers.com

4.  Findagrave.com

99% of the material I use to write my stories comes from these four sites.  Of course, it's not all there on page one - I have to dig (and sometimes dig and dig and dig) to get the information I need to put the story together.  So as I write this month's article I am also going to tell you where I found each piece of the story.     

Sunday, October 1, 2023 was a beautiful Fall day in Chicago.  Where is the best place to enjoy a beautiful Fall day in Chicago?  Rosehill Cemetery, of course.  I spent Sunday afternoon at Rosehill filling Find a Grave photo requests.  In Section D of Rosehill I was able to locate and fulfill a request to photograph the tombstone of Lena (Lana) Root (1845-1888):

After I took that photo I did what I always do:  look around and see if there are any interesting or unusual tombstones in the immediate vicinity.  Not too far from Lena/Lana Root I spied this tombstone:


This appears to be the tombstone of someone named D.M.P. Davis and Julia A. Davis.  Illegible or unreadable tombstones are always a challenge as we try to recover what time and the elements have worn away.  Davis is a common name which can make finding the correct one difficult, but D.M.P. Davis is just rare enough that I should be able to find him. The first place I looked was Find A Grave.  No D.M.P. Davis or Julia Davis in Rosehill on Find a Grave.

Then I went to Family Search which is a wonderful free site run by the Mormon Church.  We know that Mormons are among the best genealogists because tracing their ancestry is a tenet of their religion in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.  First I checked to see if someone had already done a Family Tree for D.M.P. Davis and Julia.  My query returned 3,066,924 records but not a tree I was looking for.

One record did pop up, however that looked interesting:




So I clicked on Daniel M. P. Davis KLRZ-NBG and here is the tree for Daniel Davis and Julia Ann Davis:


Well, that was a big help - not.  You could barely call it a "tree" because it only had Daniel and Julia on it.  But I did have one record:  Daniel M.P. Davis and Julia Ann Hoffman were married in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on January 22, 1840.  I decided to take these "facts" and see if ancestry.com could provide any additional information.

The next thing I did was create a Family Tree on ancestry.com for Daniel M.P. Davis and his wife Julia Ann Hoffman.  I find that plugging people into a tree make them easier to keep track of and then it allows ancestry to put those "shaking leaves" next to the person when they find a possible clue.  Putting these people in a tree also makes it easier to see the relationship of each person in the tree to the others in the tree.  Maybe years ago I could have kept track in my head but those days are long gone.

Right away ancestry told me that there was a "David M. Parker Davis" who was born September 16, 1808 in New Hampshire and who died in Chicago on October 8, 1878.  Let's see if those match up with the portions of the tombstone we can read:



Looks like we have a match for David M. Parker Davis and his wife Julia Ann Hoffman.  So let's see what other information we can "dig up" about them.

Without knowing the names of either David's or Julia's parents, searching for them in census records would be fruitless.  The first "Official" record I found for either David or Julia was their marriage record.  According to the Wisconsin, U.S., Marriage Records, 1820-2004,  Daniel M. P. Davis married Julia Ann Hoffman on January 22, 1840 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin Territory.  (Wisconsin didn't become a state until 1848.)  They were married by a judge, Timothy Wainwright in Milwaukee.  


But I seem to have encountered a problem.  Is the man's name "Daniel M.P. Davis" as the marriage record says or is it "David M. P. Davis" as the ancestry record says?  Let's take a closer look at that marriage record:



Is the first name Daniel or David?  It looks like Daniel to me.  I know they don't teach cursive handwriting in the schools anymore and here is a good example of why that is.  One man's Daniel is another man's David.  

At this point I decided to broaden my search and look for any records for either a Daniel M. P. Davis or David M. P. Davis.  Or could it be possible that there was both a Daniel M.P. Davis and a David M. P. Davis?  Brothers, perhaps?  As we uncover more records hopefully the correct first name will become apparent.

The next record that popped up on ancestry.com was the 1860 US Census.  I have written numerous times in the past about the fallibility of census records.  One could tell the census taker anything they wanted to without having to back anything up with proof.  Census records are useful, but you must always look at them with a jaundiced eye.

The 1860 US Census as presented on ancestry.com finds a Davis family living in Cook County, Illinois, New Trier Township, "Wynetka" Post Office.  The census taker visited the Davis family on July 17, 1860.  The family consisted of:  D. M. Davis (51 years old), Julia (51), and John Chamberlain (19).  D. M. Davis said he was a "Horse Dealer" by trade, no occupation was listed for Julia, and John Chamberlain was a "Laborer."  Davis said he born in Massachusetts, Julia in New York and Chamberlain in Ireland.  Davis said he owned Real Estate worth $10,000,00 ($370,000 in today's funds) and personalty of $2,000.00 ($74,000 in today's funds).

No closer to determining if the one we are looking for was Daniel or David.  Let's see what other records we can find.

I went back to Family Search.  The only family tree record they show for D. M. P. Davis is the two-person family tree referenced above.  Looking at other records, they show an 1840 US Census record for a "David P. M. Davis" in Grafton, Rensselaer County, New York.  The record shows a family of seven people.  Of the males: (1) under the age of 5, (1) between 5 and 10, (2) between 10 and 15, (1) between 30 and 40.  Of the females: (1) between 10 and 15, and (1) between 20 and 30.  Is this "our" Davis family?  Unlikely.  Remember, D. M. P. Davis married Julia Hoffman in 1840 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  The only male of marriageable age in this census is David P. M. Davis and he is presumably already married and the father of five children.  Unfortunately the earlier US Censuses did not go into the details that later censuses did - they were mostly used just to count the number of people.  This 1840 census record was the only record for David M. P. Davis showing up on Family Search, so it's back to ancestry.com to see what they show.

Ancestry.com was able to provide us with additional records that proved useful.  The 1870 US Census finds the Davis family living in Evanston, Cook County, Illinois.  The Census Taker came by on June 14, 1870.  The family consisted of:  David (61 years old),  Julia (60), and Domestic Servant Bridget Bulger (22).  David said he was born In New Hampshire, Julia in New York and Bridget Bulger in  Illinois, although Bridget said both of her parents were "foreign-born."  This time around, David listed his occupation as "Speculator," Julia was "Keeping House" although at first glance I thought it said "Keeping Horses," and Bridget was, as indicated, a "Domestic Servant."  David reported Real Estate assets of $40,000.00 ($937,000 in today's funds) and personalty of $10,000.00 ($244,000 in today's funds).  There was no 1870 record for a Daniel M. P. Davis so I think it is pretty safe to say that Davis' first name was "David."   

Just to confuse matters even more, according to the Chicago Tribune from April 2, 1873. "Parker" Davis was appointed a Justice of the Peace: 


Apparently to his friends he used the name "Parker" instead of "David."

David M. Parker Davis died on October 8, 1878.  Here is his Obituary from the Evanston Index newspaper from October 12, 1878:


As his obituary indicated, David was buried in Rosehill Cemetery.



David M. P. Davis was dead by the time the 1880 US Census took place, but his widow Julia was not.  The 1880 US Census showed Julia Davis living in the "Village of Evanston."  The census taker was the well-known Evanstonian Philo P. Judson, and it took place on June 19, 1880.  Julia was listed as a "Cousin" of the Head of Household who was O. H. Willis.  The family consisted of O.H. Willis (71 years old) a "Retired Merchant," wife Ann Willis (58), sons H. O. Willis (30) a "Merchant Clerk," and Edmond J. (21) a "Clerk."  Also listed were Doti Fitsmorris (19) a "Servant." and Julia A. Davis (69).  There was a space on the census form for "Sick" and Julia indicated she suffered from "Hay Fever."

Ancestry.com has an extensive collection of Evanston Directories - unfortunately they don't start until 1882 so David does not appear.  Julia Davis, however appears in the 1882 Evanston Directory:


Julia A. Davis, the widow of David P. lived in a house on the East Side of Ridge South of Noyes.

She shows up in the 1883 Evanston Directory as the widow of "Parker" Davis:


Mrs. Parker Davis, lives in a house on the East Side of Ridge Avenue at North Leon Avenue.

The last time she appeared was in the 1884 Evanston Directory:


Davis, Julia A, widow of Parker, lives in a house on the East Side of Ridge Avenue North of Foster.

Julia Ann Hoffman Davis died in Rushford, Minnesota on October 29, 1885.  

Here is her Obituary from the Evanston Index from July 29, 1885:



DIED.
     At Rushford, Minn. October 29, 1885.  Mrs. Julia A., wife of the late Parker Davis, of Evanston, Illinois.
     Funeral services to-day at 1 o'clock p.m. at Rose Hill.      

Evanston Index July 29, 1885



Also from the Chicago Inter Ocean October 31,:







She was buried next to her husband in Section D of Rosehill:


Julia A., wife of
D. M. P. DAVIS
Born (Illegible)
Died Oct 29, 1885


That wraps up everything we were able to "dig up" about David M. P. Davis and his wife Julia Ann Hoffman Davis.  Since they did not have any children, and we were not able to uncover any of their other relatives, we were limited in the information we were able to find.  On the positive side, we were able to (mostly) decipher the tombstone and learn a little about two Evanstonians from days gone by.  As mentioned before, the main purpose of this blog is to see that people lost in the mists of time are not forgotten, and we accomplished that for Mr. and Mrs. Davis.

David M. Parker Davis and Julia Ann Hoffman Davis - two of the thousands of occupants of Rosehill Cemetery - may they rest in peace.



Sunday, October 1, 2023

DIED TO SAVE - Earl Strom and Christina Strom Howe

I started this blog on September 20, 2011.  It came about as an offshoot of my work for the website Find a Grave.  I started out just filling requests for grave photos.  Then over time I started photographing any graves I thought were of interest and posted them to the Find a Grave page if there was one, or created a page if there was not.  Under the heading for Under Every Tombstone I wrote, "There is a story under every tombstone."  

Readers of this blog know how much I love Chicago's Rosehill Cemetery.  As a historian, the preservation of the past is very important to me.  I am particularly happy whenever I look around Rosehill, because I see history everywhere.  Like many cemeteries, Rosehill is the final resting place for all kinds of people - the famous and the infamous, politicians and also just plain folks.

Every once in a while I literally stumble over a tombstone that brings a story to light, like the day I stumbled on the side by side graves of Earl Strom and Christina Strom Howe in Section 116:



First I saw his:


Then I saw hers:  



Before we look into the tragic accident that killed Earl and Christina, let's see what we can find out about them.  We'll start with Christina since she was older.

Christina Marie Strom was born in Chicago, Illinois on October 22, 1872.  Her parents were Per Elfström Larsson who Americanized his name to "Peter Strom" (1834-1916), and Anna Elisabeth Jacobsdotter Olsson (1832-1906).  Peter and Anna were married in 1855 in Sweden.  They came to the US in 1870.

Peter and Anna were blessed with nine children.  They are: Peter August (1857-1891), Carl Johan (1860-1864), Erik (1862-1863), Erik's twin sister Mathilda (1862-1893), Oscar (1865-1920), Karolina Wilhelmina (1867-1916), Annie Louisa (1869-1924), Christina Marie (1872-1913) and Elizabeth Marie "Daisy" (1875-1891).  The first seven were born in Sweden; the two youngest in Illinois.  Peter Strom was a carpenter by trade.

Christina makes her first appearance in the 1880 US Census.  The family was living in the "Village of Evanston Lying in Town of New Trier."  The family consisted of:  Peter (45 years old), Anna (46), "Oskar" (15), Anna (10), "Seno" (8), and Eliza (5).  The children, except for Eliza, were all at school.  Anna could both read and write; Peter could only write.  All of the children could both read and write.

The 1882 Directory for Evanston, Illinois shows Peter Strom, carpenter, living at "Brown's subdivision near Central Av."

The 1890 US Census for this area is of course, lost.  But there is good news to report - on November 26, 1891, Christina Strom married Mr. Francis Marion Howe (1866-1938) in Evanston.  The bride was nineteen; the groom was twenty-five.  

Francis Marion Howe was born May 5, 1866 in Essex, Illinois, the son of William Harrison Howe (1821-1901) and Cordelia Sophia Partridge (1837-1920).  Francis Howe was a clerk in the offices of the Chicago and Alton Railroad.  Francis and Christina were blessed with five daughters:  Elizabeth Marie "Daisy"/Mrs. Thomas Amore (1893-1978), Eva Gladys/also Mrs. Thomas Amore (1895-1959), Frances Christina/Mrs. Albert Cowan (1896-1969), Lucille Caroline/Mrs. Axel Henriksen (1904-1974), and Leota Louise/Mrs. Louis Brickse (1908-1968).  

The 1900 US Census shows the Strom/Howe family living in Evanston Township, Illinois.  The family consisted of:  Francis (34 years old), Christina (27), Daisy (6), Eva (5), and Frances (3).  Francis said he was a Carpenter in a Factory.  They rented their home, and Francis and Christina could both read and write.

The 1910 US Census finds the "Hoy" family living at 5139 W. Ainsley (sic) Street in Chicago:

5139 W. Ainslie Street, Chicago

The family consisted of :  Francis "Hoy" (43 years old), Kristine (37), "Lizie" (15), Eva (15), Francis (13),  "Luclay"(6), and "Leola" (15/12).  Also living with the family was father-in-law Peter Strom (75), and nephew Charles Bors (22).  Francis said his occupation was "Manager" of a "Lodge Rail."  Francis and Kristine had been married for 18 years; it was the first marriage for both.  Kristine had given birth to 5 children; all were still alive in 1910.   All of the children except the baby attended school and could both read and write.  
      

Now we will take a look at the other victim of the drowning tragedy, Christina Strom Howe's nephew, Earl Strom.

Earl Oscar Strom was born in Evanston, Illinois on November 12, 1895 to Oscar Strom (1856-1920) and Emily Charlotte Johnson (1864-1951). 






Oscar Strom came to the US from Sweden in 1879; Emily came to the US from Sweden in 1887. 
Oscar and Emily had been married in September 24, 1892 in Illinois. In addition to Earl, Oscar and Emily had four daughters:  Vivian/Mrs. Raymond Oetzel (1894-1987), Florence Helen/Mrs. Albert Meeker (1898-1975), Theolinda/Mrs. James Torbet (1904-1990) and Mabel Vivian/Mrs. Alonzo Mosley, Jr. (1906-1968).  Oscar Strom was a Cement Mason by trade.  

Earl's father Oscar was the brother of Christina Strom Howe, making her Earl's aunt.   

Other than his birth certificate, Earl Strom makes his first appearance in the 1900 US Census.  The Strom family is living on Bryant Avenue in Gross Pointe Village, New Trier Township.  The family consists of:  Oscar (35 years old), Emily (37). Vivian (5), Earl (4), and Florence (2).  Oscar and Emily said they had been married for seven years.  Emily said she had given birth to three children, and all three were still alive in 1900.  Oscar reported his occupation as "Laborer."  Oscar said he came to the US in 1870; Emily in 1887.  Oscar was a Naturalized Citizen.  Oscar could read and write; Emily could not.  All the family could speak English.  They rented their home on Bryant Avenue.       

The 1910 US Census shows the Strom family living on Ridge Avenue in Gross Point Village, New Trier Township.  The family consists of:  Oscar (45 years old), Emily (46), Vivian (15), Earl (14), Florence (11), Lina (5), and Mable (4).  Oscar and Emily said they had been married for seventeen years, and that it was the first marriage for both.  Emily said she had given birth to five children, and all were still alive in 1910. 

That brings us to that fateful day of  July 20, 1913 when Christina and Earl were to lose their lives.

The Chicago Inter-Ocean newspaper on July 21 reported that a total of five people had drowned in Chicago in a "Raging Lake."  "High Waves and Undertow Take Heavy Toll of Life Among Sunday Crowds at Beach." 

 



There was a dual wake and funeral for Christina Marie (nee Strom) Howe, and her nephew, Earl Oscar Strom on June 21-23, 1913 inside the May Chapel, at Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago, IL.  Here is a photo from that wake.  You will note the two flower covered caskets standing side by side:

Photo courtesy Steven J. Brickse

















   

Here is a closeup of the two caskets:

 



They were buried side-by-side in Section 116 of Rosehill Cemetery:


Earl Strom




Christina Strom Howe



Oscar Strom and Christina Strom Howe - each gave their life trying to save another.  May they rest in peace.


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What about Eva Howe - the relative they were trying to save?  In 1918 she married Thomas Francis Amore, a mechanic and stationary engineer.  They had four daughters.  Eva Howe Amore died October 29, 1959 at the age of sixty-four.  

Eva Howe Amore


Christina's husband and Eva's father, Francis Marion Howe remarried twice.  First to Harriet A. Birdsall (1864-1923) on July 27, 1921.  

The second remarriage was to Nellie Maecs (1904-1977) on Christmas Day, 1936.    

Francis Marion Howe died April 13, 1938 in Chicago.  He was seventy-two years old.  here is his Death Notice from the Chicago Tribune of  April 14, 1938:



He was cremated at Acacia Park Cemetery in Chicago, and then his ashes were buried May 20, 1938 at rt.-top-corner of footstone of his father, William Harrison Howe at the Oakwood Cemetery in Braidwood, Illinois. 

Friday, September 1, 2023

CATHOLIC PRIEST MURDERED IN RECTORY FOR ALTAR WINE - Fr. Florian Chodniewicz

This headline was published in the Catholic Advance Newspaper (Wichita, Kansas) from the Chicago Wire Services on February 18, 1922:


The newspaper reported the story of the murder of a Catholic priest, the Rev. Florian Chodniewicz in his rectory by someone supposedly looking for a stash of altar wine Fr. Chodniewicz was said to have kept in the rectory basement.

Before we look further in to the murder and aftermath, let's see what else we can "dig up" about Fr. Chodniewicz (pronounced "Hodnevich").

Florian (sometimes spelled "Floryan" of "Florjan") M. Chodniewicz was born May 3, 1861 in the area referred to in those days as "Russia/Poland to Wincenti Chodniewicz and Ludwika Juszczyk.  Wincenti and Ludwika were blessed with eleven children.  They are:  Florian M. (1861-1922),  Franciszka Wiktoria (1864-????), Edward Joseph (1866-1916), Antonina/Mrs. Wincenty Siewierski (1871-????), Apolonia Florentyna (1873-????), Marjanna (1875-????), Katarzyna/Mrs. Wincenty Bednarski (1876-1934), Lucja (1878-????), Pawel (1881-1949), Emilja (1882-????), and Regina (1884-1885).  Wincenti Chodniewicz was a pig farmer by trade.  

Florian Chodniewicz came to the United States through the Port of New York on May 21, 1889 when he was twenty-eight years old.  He was ordained to the Catholic priesthood in Detroit in 1889 by the Rt. Rev. J. S. Foley:

Bishop John S. Foley

When Bishop Foley was assigned to head up the Detroit Archdiocese in 1888 it was said that Detroit was an impossible assignment.  This was mainly due to the many ethnicities that composed the Catholic population.  The early settlers of Detroit had been French; these were followed, at different intervals, by Belgians, Germans, Poles, Slavs, and Italians.  Things were so bad among the Polish Catholics in Detroit that a group of them broke away from Rome with disastrous results several years before Foley was sent there.  Through the grace of his diplomacy, Bishop Foley was able to heal the Polish schism shortly after his arrival in Detroit. 

Here is a photo of a young Fr. Chodniewicz, about the time of his Ordination:

Father Florian Chodniewicz

After ordination, Fr. Chodniewicz's first assignment was as Assistant Pastor of St. Josaphat's Church in Detroit.

St. Josaphat's Catholic Church, Detroit

In 1893 he became Pastor of St. Albertus Church in Detroit:

St. Albertus Catholic Church, Detroit

I was not able to ascertain exactly why Fr. Chodniewicz left Detroit and became incardinated in Chicago.  It may have been because of the huge population of Poles in Chicago.  They used to say there were more Poles in Chicago than there were in Warsaw.  Whatever the reason, on May 20, 1900 he was appointed Pastor of St. Columba's Church at 13305 S. Green Bay Avenue in the Hegewisch neighborhood of Chicago.  At that time, St. Columba's was the southern-most parish in the City of Chicago.      

St. Columba's Church at the time of Fr. Chodniewicz

The parishioners were mostly Polish with a small number of non-Polish parishioners.

The census-taker for the 1900 US Census came to Fr. Chodniewicz on June 4, 1900.  As you can imagine, the Anglo census taker, Dorsey E. Collins had trouble understanding the Polish-speaking Fr. Chodniewicz.  The Rectory for the parish was at 13309 Avenue O in Chicago.  The census taker reported Fr's name as "Rev. F. Choderwitz."  Fr. Chodniewicz said he was born in May of 1854, making him 46 years old.  He was, of course, Single.    He was born in Poland, as were his parents.  He came to the United States in 1890, and had been here for 10 years.  He said he was a Naturalized citizen, but he actually was not naturalized until 1906.  He could read, write and speak English.  He lived in a house, and did not own it.  In addition to Fr. Chodniewicz, there was a housekeeper, Otilioj Lieske, from Germany who was thirty-two years old.  Both Father and the housekeeper were employed for all twelve previous months.

In 1905 Archbishop Edward Quigley gave permission to Fr. Chodniewicz to build a new church for the Polish-speaking people in Hegewisch.  The church he built was a frame church, 90 by 40 feet.  The cost of the church was $10,000.00  ($350,000 in today's funds).  Fr. Chodniewicz was appointed First Pastor of the new "St. Florian's Church" on October 22, 1905 and the little congregation of English-speaking people left at St. Columba's was handed over to the care of the Carmelites of St. Cyril College who appointed Fr. Lawrence Diether, O.C.C. as Fr. Chodniewicz' replacement.  About 100 families and 200 single men or men who had left their families in Poland became the first parishioners of St. Florian's.  It is not noted whether Fr. Florian Chodniewicz picked the name for the new parish himself or not. 

On September 25, 1906, Florian Chodniewicz became an American citizen:

Note that his naturalization records show Fr. Chodniewicz' Date of Birth as May 3, 1861.  I don't know where the 1900 US Census taker got the date of May, 1854.  

In 1907 Archbishop Quigley gave permission for Fr. Chodniewicz to build a school for the parish.  The school was brick, three stories, 78 by 58 feet, Roman style. Eight Classrooms upstairs, and on the first floor a parish hall.  The cost of the school building was $35,000.00 ($1,132,388 in today's funds).  The school was opened in 1908.  Four Franciscan nuns took care of about 200 children.  Year after year the number of children grew larger and by 1920 nine nuns looked after five hundred children all by themselves.  In those days in the Catholic schools there were no "teachers' aides" or "teaching assistants."   

The 1910 US Census shows Florian Chodniewicz still living at 13142 S. Erie Street in Chicago.  He said he was forty-eight years old and Single.  He said he was born in Russia-Poland as were his parents.  He said he came to the United States in 1887 (it was 1889) and that he was a Naturalized Citizen.  He said that he lived in a house, and that he owned it free and clear.  He said he could speak, read and write English and that his occupation was "Pastor" of a "Catholic Church."

His housekeeper Othilia Leske was still with him.  She was now forty-six years old.  

In 1913 Fr. Chodniewicz was given permission to build a pressed-brick rectory.  It was about this time that the parish had grown so much that it was decided to give Fr. Chodniewicz an assistant, the first of which was Fr. F. Tyrcha.

In 1920 a book was put together that gave the history and current status of each parish in the Archdiocese of Chicago.  St. Florian's reported that it had four men's societies with a total of 300 members.  The societies belonged to either the Polish National Alliance or the Polish Roman Catholic Union and in addition to spiritual support, also provided a cash benefit upon the death of one of its members.

There were two women's societies with 200 members and have the same purpose as the men's societies - to provide spiritual and financial benefits to the members.  

Fr. Chodniewicz put a value on St. Florian's of $69,000.00 ($1.041 million today).  Not bad for a parish that was only fifteen years old.  These were the glory days of the Archdiocese of Chicago - churches were being built, not closed.

St. Florian's in 1920


   

The 1920 US Census shows Florian Chodniewicz living at 13145 S. Houston Avenue in Chicago.  He said he was fifty-eight years old and Single.  He said he had immigrated in 1890 (correct) and became a Naturalized Citizen in 1908 (it was 1906).  He could read and write English, but he was born in Poland and his Mother Tongue was Polish.  He listed his occupation as "Pastor, St. Florian's Church."

Fr. Chodniewicz' former housekeeper was no longer with him.  She was replaced by Stephana Lichota, age 20, from Poland.  Also living in the rectory was the janitor of the school, Charles Majewski (age 30), also from Poland.  Unfortunately this was the last US Census Fr. Chodniewicz would be alive to participate in.

According to newspaper accounts of the time, Fr. Chodniewicz was upstairs in his room in the rectory late in the afternoon of Friday January 27, 1922.  He heard a noise coming from the basement and went downstairs to investigate.  Opening the door to the basement he saw a man who then shot Fr. Chodniewicz in the leg and back.  Father Chodniewicz fell down the stairs and the burglar escaped.  Profusely bleeding, Fr. Chodniewicz dragged himself to the base of the stairs but then lost consciousness.  

Upon hearing gunshots, the housekeeper, janitor and several parishioners who were in the church ran to the rectory to investigate, and found Fr. Chodniewicz at the foot of the stairs in a pool of his own blood.  They immediately called in Dr. John Czachorski who administered first aid to Father Chodniewicz who was then transported still alive to St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital.  Once at the hospital, they attempted to stabilize him and prep him for surgery the next morning to repair the damage from the bullets.  Unfortunately he had lost too much blood, and passed away about 8 p.m.  

The Polish newspaper Dziennik Chicagoski told the story in their edition of January 28, 1922.  In addition to the facts related above, they reported that the Last Sacraments were administered to Fr. Chodniewicz by Fr. Tomasz Bona, chaplain of St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital, Fr. Stanislaw Dabrowiak from Bridgeport and Fr. Henryk Piepenkotter from Hammond, Indiana, all friends of Fr. Chodniewicz.:



Why would someone break into a rectory late on a Friday afternoon?  There were no large sums of money there - the Sunday collection money had long been taken away and deposited in the bank.  The rumor was that Fr. Chodniewicz had a large amount of altar wine stored in the basement of the rectory, and that was what the crook was after.  Prohibition which had started in 1920 was in full swing by early 1922 and a large stash of wine would be a big temptation to anyone looking for liquor.  

The Requiem Funeral Mass was held Wednesday, February 1, 1922.  The celebrant was the Most Rev. Edward Hoban, then an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Chicago.

Bishop Edward Hoban

Fr. Chodniewicz was buried in Holy Cross Cemetery, Calumet City, Illinois, on February 1, 1922 in the St. Michael Section, Block K, S 1/2 of Lot 36.  

Of course the flush-with-the-ground marker had sunk and was almost completely obliterated by the grass that had grown over it.  Luckily I was able to locate and dig out Fr. Chodniewicz' grave.  




The Chicago Police Department assured the public that they would catch the murderer of Fr. Chodniewicz "in a matter of days."  In fact, newspapers reported an arrest in the case as reported in the Rock Island Argus of May 26, 1922:



But there was not enough evidence to take to a trial, so the couple was ultimately released.  The fact is, the trail went cold and time passed as the hope lessened that there would ever be justice for Fr. Florian Chodniewicz.

1922 passed into 1923 with nothing new on the case.  1923 passed into 1924 and it became more and more apparent that the murder would never be solved.  Finally, in March of 1924, a break in the case from the Chicago Tribune of March 3, 1924:
 



Fr. Chodniewicz died without ever having made a formal Last Will and Testament.  On February 4, 1922 John A. Czachorski and Leo F. Sankey wrote down what they said was his Last Will and Testament which he "made by word of mouth" in their presence at his home lying on his deathbed on January 27, 1922.  This must have taken place while they were making arrangements to transport Fr. Chodniewicz to the hospital after he was shot.  Here are Fr. Chodniewicz' final wishes as reported by the two witnesses:

FLORIAN CHODNIEWICZ
WILL.

                    LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT of Rev. Father FLORIAN CHODNIEWICZ, of Chicago, Illinois, made by word of mouth and in contemplation of death and during his last illness while the said Florian Chodniewicz, now deceased, lay on his death bed, dying from the effect of gun shot wounds to his person.  The said Florian Chodniewicz, by word of mouth and in our presence and at his home in the City of Chicago on the 27th day of January, A.D. 1922 made the following disposition of his property;

                    I request that the Rev. Father Henry Piepenkotter act as executor of this, my last will and testament and take care of and look after the disposition of my property.

                   I further request and direct that he pay all my just debts and funeral expenses out of my said estate and also out of my said estate he pay to the Saint Florian Roman Catholic Parish of Hegewisch, of which I am the pastor, the sum of Six Thousand ($6,000.00) Dollars, being money belonging to said Parish now in my possession as its Pastor; I further give to the said Parish the piano I now have in my home and I further give to the said parish any and all title and interest which I may have in or to the Parish House or Rectory. (Note 1)

                    I further give to the said Parish all the plots or parcels of land that I may own or have an interest in that are situated in the block bounded by Houston and Baltimore Avenues, 131st Street and 132nd Street in the City of Chicago, being the block on which the church, school, and rectory now stands.

                    I desire to give to the Rev. Father Henry Piepenkotter, in trust, the sum of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) for the purpose of having Holy Masses said for the repose of my soul and in addition, I further direct that he have 200 Masses said for my personal intentions.  

                   I further desire to give to my two nephews, now students at school, all my books and library.

                  I further desire to give to my sister, Mrs. Bednarska, of #13146 Houston Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, all the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, including all the shares of stock I may own in the Manhattan Lumber Company, and any and all monies, securities or mortgages I may have with the firm of Kramer and O'Connor, and all other monies, notes, mortgages or other securities, and all other property, both real and personal that I may own or possess.  (Note 2)

                The foregoing was reduced to writing and signed by us in the presence or each other as witnesses to the last will and testament as made by word of mouth by the said testator on the 27th day of January, A.D. 1922 and signed by us this 4th day of February, A. D. 1922.

                                                                                        (s) John A. Czachorski.

                                                                                        (s)  Leo F. Sankey.

             We the undersigned, hereby certify that the above and foregoing will was committed to writing and signed by the above named witnesses in our presence this 4th day of February, A.D. 1922, the same being within ten days after the death of the said testator.

                                                                                         (s)  Ignatius T. Fleming.

                                                                                         (s)  Leo Fleming.    

Nuncupative -
Will proved and admitted to record in open Court, this 24th day of July, A.D. 1923.

                                                                                        (s) Ray Sesler
                                                                                             Acting Probate Judge 

STATE OF ILLINOIS,    )
                                      ) SS
County of Cook.         )

In the Probate Court of Cook County, proved and admitted to record in open Court this 24th Day of July, A.D. 1923.

                                                                                   (s)  John F. Devine
                                                                                         Clerk.

Filed - February 6th, 1922, John F. Devine, Clerk.

 
(Note 1):  In those days it was not unusual for a Roman Catholic pastor to have one bank account into which he deposited parish funds and his own personal funds.  If he needed money to pay a bill or for his personal expenses he withdrew money from the co-mingled funds.  This was not illegal, but the pastor was supposed to report any funds he withdrew from the account for personal expenses as Income and pay Income Tax on them.  This was still the custom into the 1980s in Chicago where the late John Cardinal Cody deposited his personal funds into the Holy Name Cathedral bank account and withdrew them as needed.

(Note 2):  There are two types of priests in the Roman Catholic Church.  There are what are called "Order" priests who belong to a Religious Order such as Dominicans, Jesuits, Carmelites, etc.  The other type of priest is a "Diocesan" priest who does not belong to an Order, he is an employee of the diocese in which he serves.  Order priests typically take vows of Poverty, Chastity and Obedience, so they do not own anything themselves - no money or material possessions.  Diocesan priests do not take a vow of Poverty and are permitted to have possessions including a car, cash, securities, etc.  Fr. Chodniewicz was a Diocesan priest so he was permitted to own the stock, securities, mortgages or cash he referred to in his will.

So, what happened to Fr. Chodniewicz' confessed killer, Edward Frenenski?  First I checked newspapers.com.  Other than a report that he had been booked for the killing, there were no further mentions of Edward Frenenski in any of the hundreds of newspapers covered by newspapers.com.  Then while working on another article I ran across a reference to a searchable database called "Homicide in Chicago 1870-1930"  (http://homicide.northwestern.edu/database/)  If you check the database for Florian Chodniewicz here is what you'll find:

DATE OF OFFENSE:  JANUARY 27, 1922

    Victim Name:  Chodniewicz, Rev. F. M.

    Defendant Name:  Majewski, Charles

    Address:  13145 Houston ave.

    Case Number:  5858

 Case Description:  Chodniewicz, Rev. F. M. - Age 60  Fatally shot in his home, 13145 Houston Av., by an unidentified burglar who escaped.  8 Dist.

    5/26/22 Charles Majewski arrested

    9/21/22  Nolle Prossed - Hayes

   On 3/3/24 one Edward Frenenski arrested for Ly and Con Game.  He "confessed" this murder but was not booked on that charge.  


I was unable to uncover anything more about what (if anything) happened to Edward Frenenski, the confessed murderer of Fr. Chodniewicz.

I was also unable to find out anything further about Frenenski's former girlfriend who turned him in, Mrs. Mary Zimbinski.

Father Florian Chodniewicz - one of thousands of Catholic priests who came from native lands around the world to the great melting pot of the United States to minister to the spiritual needs of the faithful.  His life was taken for a purported stash of altar wine by a fellow countryman who hated all Catholic Priests.

May Fr. Chodniewicz rest in peace.