Henry
A ROSE was born on 22 Nov 1871 in Laomi, Sangamon, IL. He
died about 1943 in Dallas, Dallas, TX. He was buried about 1943
in Forest Grove, Tanglewood, Lee, TX. Parents: John Dorcus [Dorsey] ROSE and Caroline BACK.
Hester Amelia (Ester) ROSE was born on 31 Jan 1842 in Mt.
Carmel, Illinois. She died on 15 May 1895 in Mt. Carmel,
Illinois. She was buried on 17 May 1895 in Rose Hill Cem,
Mt.Carmel, Wabash, IL. Parents: Charles
ROSE and Diana [Lake] PENSON [PENSTON].
Isabell J ROSE was born in 1862 in Laomi, Sangamon, IL. She
died before 1962 in Wilderville, Falls, TX. Parents: John Dorcus [Dorsey] ROSE and Caroline BACK.
Jack ROSE Parents: Harry E. ROSE
and Hardy WARREN.
James E. ROSE was born on 26 Jun 1899 in Lick Prairie
Precint, Wabash County Illinois. Parents: Richard
Tilton ROSE and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
He was married to Lela MCGUIRE on 13 Mar 1927. Children were: Betty ROSE.
John Dorcus [Dorsey] ROSE was born about 1836 in Mt. Carmel,
Illinois. He died on 16 Feb 1900 in Lick Prairie Precint, Wabash
County Illinois. He served in the military in Civil war Vet.
Parents: Charles ROSE and Diana [Lake] PENSON [PENSTON].
He was married to Caroline BACK on 13 Jun 1857 in Laom. Children were: George Washington ROSE, Charley R ROSE, Isabell J ROSE, Harvey C ROSE, David ROSE, Henry A ROSE, Ola ROSE, Anna Rose ROSE, Thomas Franklin ROSE.
Josephine Nora ROSE was born on 15 Aug 1890 in Friendsville,
Illinois. She died on 11 Nov 1973 in Mt.Carmel, Illinois Wabash
County. She was ill with coronary thrombosis cause of death on 11
Nov 1973 in Monticello Nursing Home. She was buried on 13 Nov
1973 in Highland Mem. Park Cemetary Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She had
Social Security Number 311-09-7946 D. She was in First Church of
God. This story was told to me by Charles Eddie Collins.
My wife Dorothy and I were living in Vincennes, IN., when we were
married. Probably a year or two afterward, we visited your
Grandmother and Grandfather [Josie & Tom], it's fairly late
in the evening and your grandmother insisted we stay overnight,
we did, but it was a little crowded. Dorothy and I slept in your
mother's room, your mother was maybe 13 or 14 so she slept on a
day cot which partically blocked the bedroom door.
The next morning Dorothy got up early and was talking to your
grandmother and I was still in bed. Your grandmother asked your
mother to get up, told her she was blocking the door. Ruby, I
guess was a sleepy head like myself, she didn't get up. While
Aunt Josie was still carrying on a conversation with Dorothy she
got a hair brush and used it on Ruby's behind without missing a
word in her conversation with Dorothy. The brush strokes were
pretty hard. Ruby came out of the cot alright! Your grandmother,
Aunt Josie was never provoked at all. Dorothy was surprised, she
had never seen anyone so calm while spanking someone.
Dorothy and I both really loved Aunt Josie and Uncle Tom.
Charles Eddie Collins Parents: Richard
Tilton ROSE and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
She was married to Jesse Thomas MCRAVEN on 4 Jul 1908. Children were: Gladys Marie MCRAVEN, Jessie Lela MCRAVEN, Bessie Elizabeth MCRAVEN, Bonnie Fern MCRAVEN, Joseph Lester MCRAVEN, Rubie Lea MCRAVEN, Billie Joan MCRAVEN, Eva Lucille MCRAVEN, Thomas Junior MCRAVEN.
Linda ROSE Parents: Walter F. ROSE
and Margaret KEEPES.
Lois ROSE Parents: Walter F. ROSE
and Margaret KEEPES.
Marjorie
ROSE. Parents: Walter F. ROSE and
Margaret KEEPES.
Melva
ROSE. Parents: Harry E. ROSE and Hardy WARREN.
Mildred
ROSE. Parents: Samuel Keagy ROSE
and Margaret HALBIG.
Minnie
ROSE was born on 29 Aug 1878 in Wabash Co., IL. She died on
15 May 1961 in Wabash Co., IL. Parents: Richard
Tilton ROSE and Dora GARD.
She was married to Lincoln Ephriam DEISHER on 28 Nov 1897. Children were: Sam DEISHER, Emma DEISHER, Lorena DEISHER, Mary DEISHER, Viola Reth DEISHER, Liola Ruth DEISHER, Irvin DEISHER, Rosa Maybell DEISHER, Hazel DEISHER, Melvin DEISHER.
Minnie Margaret ROSE was born on 13 Feb 1915 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She died on 9 Mar 1915 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. Parents: Samuel
Keagy ROSE and Margaret HALBIG.
Nellie E. ROSE was born on 9 Dec 1887 in Lick Prairie
Precint, Wabash County Illinois. Parents: Richard
Tilton ROSE and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
She was married to Clarence COLLINS on 13 Jan 1909. Children were: Rosa COLLINS , Bertha COLLINS, Charles Edward [Eddie] COLLINS.
Neva Fern ROSE was born on 12 Feb 1922. She died on 12 Apr
1923 in Wabash County Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She was buried on 12
Apr 1923 in Sandhill Cemetary Mt.Carmel, Ill. She was ill with
measles. Parents: Samuel Keagy ROSE
and Margaret HALBIG.
Ola ROSE was born on 28 Dec 1874 in Laomi, Sangamon, IL. She
died in 1974. Parents: John Dorcus
[Dorsey] ROSE and Caroline BACK.
Paul Ray ROSE was born on 9 Jun 1926 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. He died on 14 Sep 1926 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. Parents: William
ROSE and Rosa MADDOX.
Pauline Fay [blurred, could be wrong] ROSE Parents: William ROSE and Rosa
MADDOX.
Reuben Grant ROSE was born on 2 Nov 1901 in Lick Prairie
Precint, Wabash County Illinois. Parents: Richard
Tilton ROSE and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
He was married to Nellie Lorinia ROYER on 6 Jan 1919.
Reuben Grant ROSE was born on 20 Apr 1840 in Mt.Carmel,
Wabash, IL. He died on 16 Nov 1887 in Thayer, Missouri. [photo] Parents: Charles
ROSE and Diana [Lake] PENSON [PENSTON].
He was married to Mary RICE on 11 Mar 1859.
He was married to Martha NEALEY on 27 Oct 1866.
Richard ROSE was born in 1844 in Of Salem', New Jersey.
Parents: Charles ROSE and Diana [Lake] PENSON [PENSTON] .
Richard Tilton ROSE [photo of
Richard & Rebecca young] was born on 30 Mar 1857 in
Wabash County Mt.Carmel, Illinois. He died on 14 Aug 1917 in
Hoopston, Vermilion, Illinois. He died on 14 Sep 1917 in
Hoopston, Illinois. He was a died of accident on 14 Sep 1917 in
Iliff- Bruff Chemical Co. Hoopeston. He was buried in Sandhill
Cemetary Mt.Carmel, Ill. ROSE, R.T.
b. 30-mar-1863, d. 14-sep-1917, a. 53y 5m 15d
1910 covered wagon trip
Grandpa Rose had nieces and a nephew in Texas he wanted to visit.
They were children of Grandpa's brother Rueben. Rueben had died
in Thayer Mo. 11\16\1887 at the age of forty. His son Lewis, and
two daugthers, Mrs. Stinson and Mrs. Nunnally were in Texas.
Grandpa Rose had another brother Dorsch, John Dorcus born 1836
and married Caroline Back in Sangamon Co. Ill 6-13-1857 and died
in Walbash Co. Ill 2\16\1900, who lived in Indiana.
Grandpa had been married before he married Grandma and had a
daughter Minnie who lived with him. This Nephew Frank would visit
them and tease Minnie and then tell Grandpa to make him hug and
kiss her to make up. That was Grandpa's way to punish kids who
have been fighting. Grandpa had a married sister named Martin.
Grandpa's mother was Diana (Lake) Penson. Dr. Utter was a cousin
to Grandpa.
grandpa was a great one to take a notion to go places, and would
sell a cow to get the money to go on. He sold a cow to get the
money to go to Texas. Jesse Thomas McRaven sold a small place he
owned on third and sycamore in Mt.Carmel Ill to get money for
their fare.Later a Mrs. Papers lived there.
After Grandpa got to Texas he sent money for Grandma, the four
single boys, Harry, William, James, and Rueben, Aunt Nellie, Aunt
Maggie, and Uncle Sam to come to Texas. It was a two day trip on
a train. You got off at night and spent the night at a hotel.
Grandpa McRaven had his money in gold pieces. There were people
that were snooping around where they had their rooms, so they all
spent the night in one room. The next morning they all got back
on a local train which had frieght cars and only one or two
passenger cars, this caused it to take a long time to get to
Rosebud, Texas.
Grandpa met them at the station and took them out to the country
where his nieces and nephew lived. He had a small house and they
all stayed there. From there Grandpa moved out on Tom Killan's
farm. He had a small tennant house one room, shed bedroom, and
shed kitchen. This is where Sam and Maggie lived. Grandma and
Grandpa McRaven went on to New Mexico to visit Grandpa's sister
Leona Williams. They intended to stay there thinking they could
get a homestead, so they were not in Texas that first year.
Sam sharecropped for Mr. Killan, and cotton was the main crop.
This was in Mesquite Co. Sam and Maggie's daughter, Frances, was
a baby between three and four months old on the train trip there.
Sam put in his second year, then Grandma and Grandpa McRaven came
back to Texas.For the second year Grandpa Rose got a place in
Sand Co. and Grandma and Grandpa McRaven lived in a big house
with Sam and Maggie for a while. Grandpa Rose was 3/4ths of a
mile through the woods in another house. Then Sam and Maggie
moved to a house across from the woods on a public road. Beyond
the woods there was another house, made of logs that Grandma and
Grandpa McRaven lived in. It had one big room and a shed kitchen.
Their address was Regan, Tex. This is where Gladys Marie was born
8-15-1910. Sam didn't have water on his place so they dug a tile
well at McRaven's. This was small in diameter. They used a long
bucket, about 20 inches and 8 inches wide, with a valve at the
bottom. WWhen you let it down the valve would open up and fill
with water. As you raised it the valve would close. Grandpa
McRaven tried to clear some land there. Sam's main crop was
cotton, using one horse. Grandpa raised some cotton too. There
was a well at Grandpa Rose's, but the water tasted terrible,
probably a mineral taste.
Sam and Maggie had a dog, goat, heifer, and a pony. They didn't
have water so one night they brought all their animals to
Grandpa's and spent the night. They watered all their animals,
and the next night Grandpa would go spend the night at their
house. This went on all summer until the babies were born, Marie
and Walter.
On Grandpa Rose's ground there were some springs. He raised the
best garden, vegetables, tomatoes, and watermelon. He peddled his
vegetables in Marlin, Tex. , on the streets. This wasm't a big
town, but everything was rooming houses or hotels. This area had
mineral wells, and people came here for their health. These
people used greens a lot, but were not used to the vegetables
Grandpa raised. He had to send off for fresh seed.
Aunt Nellie had gone along to Texas, but she already knew
Clarence Collins, although they weren't married. After they got
to Texas the Collins family sent Aunt Nellie some money. One
evening she told the family she was spending the night with
cousins, but she didn't return the next day. She had returned to
Illinois and married Clarence Collins 1-13-1909. The summer of
the same year they both came out to Texas. While the rest of the
family was working hard chopping cotton, Nellie and Clarence
would walk to the mailbox, about 1/2 mile every day. One day they
didn't come back. They had gone back to Illinois without a word
to anyone.
Where the family lived that first year, the people were Bohemian,
and spoke with a different accent. When Grandpa Rose was selling
tomatoes, a lady came out pinching and bruising the tomatoes.
Then she would select different ones to buy. The next time she
was around he hid the tomatoes and told her he didn't have any.
While Grandpa Rose sold tomatoes and other vegetables, Grandpa
McRaven and Uncle Sam's only livelihood was cotton. After the
cotton crop was finished they were finished.
Grandma McRaven's first child Gladys Marie was born on her
bithday 8-15-1910. Aunt Maggie stayed with her and took care of
her. Four weeks later Maggie's son Walter was born 9-12-1910.
Walter was one month and two days old when the family started
back in three covered wagons.
Maggie and Grandma McRaven didn't recall exactly why the family
decided to go back. Grandpa Rose had a big wagon with side
boards. Grandpa McRaven and Uncle Sam each had a spring wagon,
not as big. When they went to Texas they had gotten wooden boxes
with rope handles to carry their baggage on the train. Aunt
Maggie had kept hers, so she was able to bring her dishes and
quilts back with her.. All their things went in the bottom of the
wagon bed, a cotton mattress was put over that. The cotton was in
little pieces, and you could stir it up like a feather bed.The
boys slept in the big wagon at night, and Grandma and Grandpa
Rose on the ground under the wagon, or in a tent. Grandpa Rose
would hunt for a camping spot before dark, so it would be by a
creek and they would have water. They did a little washing each
night, and Grandma Rose would cook soup beans all night so they
would have them for the next day. Sam helped with the cooking by
keeping the fire going. For breakfast they had corn pancakes and,
runny, muscatine grape jelly.In the big woods between Grandpa
Rose's and Uncle Sam's in Texas there were big grape vines with
big blue grapes on them. They looked delicious, but once you put
them in your mouth they had a certain Wang to them. Grandma Rose
must of known someway we were going back because she had made a
lot of jelly. She didn't have anything to make it gel so it was
runny. This is what they all used instead of syrup
Aunt Maggie got so hungry for a taste of someting else, and
although they had very little money, she asked Sam to get her
some bologna. He did, and she said it tasted so good.
Uncle Bill had brought along two dogs, and they were very sickly.
He had always liked dogs and had at least one. Sam's team was a
matching pair of strawberry Jennies. They had an extra jenny
jackass along, and he would bray and carry on. One of the boys
had to ride him, I believe it was Harry. Grandpa McRaven had a
mule team and a big horse. Big horses also pulled Grandpa Rose's
wagon. While they were traveling Grandma Rose would ride in the
back on a bed in Sam's wagon. She had a pair of new hightop shoes
loose on the top of the bed. Frances pasted the time away
stringing the laces in the shoes, just back and forth, hour after
hour, she wasn't yet three. While they rode Walter and Gladys
Marie slept. When they stopped for meals the babies cried and the
young mothers had to hold them. The boys couldn't understand why
they had to do chores instead of Grandma an Aunt Maggie. Aunt
Maggie didn't remember much of taking care of Frances on the trip
except Frances lacing and unlacing Grandma Rose's shoes.
They stopped along the way at a clay pit. The men worked there
for a couple of weeks or so. They came through Texarkana, Texas,
and Texarkana, Arkansas, but neither Grandma or Aunt Maggie could
remember where the clay pit was. Grandma said it was a brick
kiln.
They didn't have any road maps, so they tried to follow the
railroad. Grandpa Rose had made the trip several times by train.
He knew which direction to keep heading.. Grandpa Rose was a big
talker and would talk to everybody. There was quite a crowd of
people, three big men, four young boys, and some women. These
people gathered around to see who they were and where they were
going. Grandpa would quizz the people like he was trying to find
some farm or something. One man told him,"I don't want every
Tom, Dick, and Harry on my farm." They really laughed at
that one. After the man left, Grandpa Rose laughed and
said,"Here is Tom, Dick, and Harry."
When they came to Lewisville, Arkansas they stayed quite a
while.That is where Aunt Hardy lived. (Note; could this be Hardy
Warren, who married Harry, Grandma McRaven's brother?) Grandma
and Grandpa McRaven along with Aunt Maggie and Uncle Sam had a
little farm house in Lewisville, Arkansas. Grandpa Rose lived in
a big house. The tennent house had a fireplace in the big room,
and Maggie cooked in the fireplace with a dutch oven. Grandma and
Grandpa McRaven had the side room. Grandma probably came in and
cooked at the same fireplace. Sam stayed until January when
Maggie's Dad sent them money to come home on. They came by train.
The rest of them stayed longer. Grandma McRaven said it was nice
weather all the time they were in Lewisville. Maggie said that on
the train home Frances caught the measles from a sick child. They
went to their Grandfather Halbig's house on Oak street, and
Frances would cry for her train.
Sam and Maggie didn't get acquainted with Hardy's folks, but the
rest of them did. Grandma and Grandpa McRaven came home later by
train and lived on oak street right below Blair's house
somewhere. This is where Gladys Marie got sick and died
7-7-1911.She is burried at sandhill cemetary. Then Uncle Sam and
Grandpa McRaven moved to fourth street, Mrs. Long's house. They
each had half. That fall the rest of the Rose's drove the wagon
on through. Harry had married Hardy, and they all came to the
house on fourth street. Grandma McRaven commented that Aunt Hardy
had such long hair, they all had a fit over it.
After the folks got home they all moved to a big house on poplar
street called Hubley House, two story and long. Grandma McRaven
had a room upstairs, and so did Uncle Harry. And they all cooked
for themselves. Sam had a back bedroom and cooked with Grandma
Rose. Grandma Rose had the rest of the house. Grandma McRaven
remembered that Sam got a big Carbuncle under his arm while they
lived there. After he had gotten better, his father-in-law had
fattened some hogs, and had Sam come over to help butcher them.
This would have been 1-1912. Mr. Halbig, Sam's father-in-law,
worked in the switchyards. He never wore a cap. He always folded
a big handkerchief tthree-cornered and tied it around his ears in
winter. Then he wore a black hat. When a Sunday hat got old, he
took it for every day and got another one for Sunday. On February
21-1912, he walked down oak street to the railroad,which wasn't
far, went up the tracks, There was a big snow storm, and before
he got to the seventh street railroad crossing he was run over by
a switch engine. They said every bone in his body was broken.
They took his body to Walter's Funeral Home. They came and got
Sam and Maggie to see him. They had a building in the back where
they kept him until the funeral. After this got all straightened
up the family moved to Maggie's home on Oak street. Harry and
Hardy had a front bedroom. Grandma and Grandpa Rose, and the boys
went upstairs.Willie was a young man now so he slept in a little
back bedroom. This left the front room and kitchen for Aunt
Maggie and Uncle Sam. Grandma Rose cooked upstairs for the lot of
them. Later Aunt Nellie moved in with them, and lived in a little
smokehouse out back.
At this same time Grandma and Grandpa McRaven moved to a little
Hargrave house on Division street. Harry lived on the west side
of this house when Bud was born. After Maggie sold her place on
oak street in March of 1916, Sam and Maggie moved in a house on
Division street beside the Berkley house. They had a hog ready to
kill and someone had to take care of this hog.
In 1916 Sam and Magie, along with their children Frances and
Walter, took a train to Rector, Arkansas to visit Grandma and
Grandpa Rose. Grandma and Grandpa McRaven were already there.
TThat is where Aunt Bessie was born 12-1-1915. They just stayed a
couple of weeks and came back to move to third street next to
what was Uncle Jim's house. They lived there until after Wilma
was born 12-31-1916. The next summer Sam and Maggie moved to
where Mrs. Anderson lives.
On a Sunday in the the summer of 1917 in August, Uncle Will Rose
came, Grandpa Rose's brother, and they all gathered in Grandma
and Grandpa McRaven's yard to take the family
picture.This was at 925 west third street, Mt.Carmel, Ill.
Grandma and Grandpa McRaven lived there until Grandpa died
4-25-1969. It was some time after that, that Grandma went into a
nursing home. Grandma McRaven died 11-11-1973. They are both
burried at Highland Memorial Cemetary in Mt. Carmel, Ill.
Rosie and Willie stayed with Aunt Maggie when Wilma was born, and
9 months and 9 days after Wilma was born, William was born.
In September of 1917 Grandpa Rose went to Hoopston, Illinois
hunting a job in canning season. Maggie thought they had a corn
canning factory there. Maggie thought that is what his job was,
but the newspaper article said he had a different job. He had
written home that he had a job and he had worked one day. Every
place was full of people so he had rented something like a
smokehouse. He had to sleep on a cot. The landlady told them he
was out in front visiting with people, and a woman went to her
smokehouse and left the cellar door up. When Grandpa went in and
shut the door, he had about half a dozen steps and then fell
headlong down the steps. The woman hollored and went out there
and he was alive but soon died 9-14-1917. Sam went with Short's
in a hearse after him and saw where he roomed. His wife and
children believe he was robbed and murdered, because no money was
found on his body and he had just gotten paid. He was burried in
Sandhill Cemetary in Mt.Carmel,Ill.
When Sam and Maggie got married they went to Evansville, Ind. and
stayed three weeks. Sam got a job in a furniture store. Grandma
and Grandpa McRaven got married on the fourth of July after
Frances was born. Josie would take Tom over to help take care of
Frances. Frances would cry alot because Maggie didn't know how to
get her to nurse. Josie joked and said she did her courting while
sitting up with Frances. Grandma said she was married in the Free
Methodist Church which was small and across the street from where
it is now. Maggie said there were four cars in town when Frances
was born.
In Texas Maggie stayed with Josie when Gladys Marie was born, and
Josie stayed with Maggie when Walter was born. Gladys Marie would
cry alot, and Josie would walk the floor with her. Frances had a
real sick spell in June. She had a doll that had little teeth.
Grandma Rose always told them if they would feed a little of what
they were eating to the babies they wouldn't get colic. Frances
would see them and put food in her doll's mouth, and walk behind
her Aunt Josie, as she walked Gladys Marie.
August 15, 1972 Grandma McRaven was 82
Aunt Nellie said she was 83 but she was 84
Uncle Harry and Bud had birthdays August 3rd
Sam and daughter Ruby were born January 29th
Josie McRaven and Maggie Rose told this to Mildred Wells as they
remembered it. She took it down in shorthand, then typed it, July
12th,1972. Josie was 82 August 15th Maggie was 82 March 10th.
Both were living at the Shurtleff Lodge in Mt.Carmel, Ill
This has been revised somewhat by Ruth Ann Braselton,
granddaughter of Jesse Thomas an Josephine Nora McRaven.
Parents: Charles ROSE and Diana [Lake] PENSON [PENSTON].
He was married to Rebecca Jane DEISHER on 9 Dec 1882 in Mt.Carmel, Illinois Wabash County. Children were: Samuel Keagy ROSE, Nellie E. ROSE, Josephine Nora ROSE, Harry E. ROSE, William ROSE, James E. ROSE, Reuben Grant ROSE.
Children were: Minnie ROSE.
Ruby
Leona ROSE was born on 29 Jan 1913 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She died on 17 Feb 1914 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She was buried in Sandhill Cemetary
Mt.Carmel, Ill. Parents: Samuel Keagy
ROSE and Margaret HALBIG.
Samuel Keagy ROSE [photo of
Sam & Maggie] was born on 29 Jan 1885 in Lick
Prairie Precint, Wabash County Illinois. He died on 11 Sep 1962
in Wabash County Mt.Carmel, Illinois. He was buried in Highland
Mem. Park Cemetary Mt.Carmel, Illinois. Parents: Richard Tilton ROSE and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
He was married to Margaret HALBIG on 19 Mar 1906. He was married to Margaret HALBIG on 19 Mar 1907. Children were: Neva Fern ROSE, Walter F. ROSE, Francis ROSE, Wilma ROSE, Mildred ROSE, Ruby Leona ROSE, Minnie Margaret ROSE.
Thomas Franklin ROSE was born on 15 Oct 1879 in Rockdale,
Milam, TX. He died on 1 Nov 1959 in Poseyville, Posey, IN.
Parents: John Dorcus [Dorsey] ROSE
and Caroline BACK.
Walter F. ROSE was born on 12 Sep 1910 in Rosebud, Texas. He
died on 3 Nov 1983 in Wabash County Mt.Carmel, Illinois. He was
buried on 5 Nov 1983 in Highland Mem. Park Cemetary Mt.Carmel,
Illinois. Parents: Samuel Keagy ROSE
and Margaret HALBIG.
He was married to Margaret KEEPES in 1931. Children were: Lois ROSE, Marjorie ROSE, Barbara ROSE, Linda ROSE.
William 'Willie' ROSE [photo] was
born on 6 Feb 1895 in Lick Prairie Precint, Wabash County
Illinois. Parents: Richard Tilton ROSE
and Rebecca Jane DEISHER.
Children were: William Edward ROSE, Elsie May ROSE, Hazel Marie ROSE, Dorothy Lucille ROSE, Pauline Fay [blurred, could be wrong] ROSE, Paul Ray ROSE.
William
C [Bill] ROSE was born in 1854.[photo]
He died in 1934/35 in Vincennes, IN. Parents: Charles ROSE and Diana
[Lake] PENSON [PENSTON].
William Edward ROSE Parents: William
ROSE and Rosa MADDOX.
Wilma ROSE was born on 31 Dec 1916 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She died on 24 Nov 1979 in Wabash County
Mt.Carmel, Illinois. She was a Teacher [Practical Nursing] til
1977 in Chicago Public School System. She served in the military
in WWII US Army. She was a nurse in WWII US Army. She was Free
Methodist. Parents: Samuel Keagy ROSE
and Margaret HALBIG.
Christine
ROSENSTINGEL died in 1871 in Macon, Missouri.
Children were: [Anna] Marie Caroline WICKENCAMP.
Ann
ROSKY was born on 7 Nov 1922. She died on 3 Nov 1997.
She was married to Jeffry D. BAGWELL. Children were: Mary Ann BAGWELL.
Cynthiann ROSS
Children were: Mary WALLACE, Evan WALLACE, Franklin WALLACE, Margaret WALLACE, James WALLACE, William WALLACE, America WALLACE, Hiram David WALLACE, Sarah WALLACE, Martha WALLACE.
Elizabeth
ROSS.
Children were: William Arthur WALLACE .
George
ROSSITER.
He was married to Mae Elizabeth SCHAEFFER .
ROTHEACHTA Parents: MAON.
Children were: DEIN.
Abraham
D ROTHERMEL was born on 1 Jun 1780 in Richmond Township,
Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann
Peter H ROTHERMEL and Mary Magdalena
DREIBELBIS.
Anna Margaret ROTHERMEL was born on 28 Jan 1745 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann Peter ROTHERMEL and Sybilla HOCH.
Anna Margaretha ROTHERMEL was born on 12 Feb 1712 in
Hassloch, Germany. Parents: Johannes
Leonard ROTHERMEL and Sybilla
Magdalena ZIMMERMAN.
Barbara ROTHERMEL was born on 4 Jan 1755 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann Peter ROTHERMEL and Sybilla HOCH.
Catherine D. ROTHERMEL was born on 20 May 1771 in Richmond
Twp, Berks County, PA. She died on 14 Sep 1823 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Sources:
Abbrev: John Jacob Dreibelbis Family of America
Title: John Jacob Dreibelbis Family of America - pub. 1991
Author: Harvey C. Dreibelbis
Abbrev: Rothermel Families in America
Title: Rothermel Families in America, by Joseph A. Meiser Jr., co
1989
Parents: Johann Peter H ROTHERMEL
and Mary Magdalena DREIBELBIS.
Children were: John DEISHER , Abraham DEISHER, Peter DEISHER , Daniel DEISHER, Jacob DEISHER , Sarah [Sally] DEISHER, Daniel DEISHER, Cathryn [Catherine] DEISHER, Anna DEISHER, Catherine DEISHER, William DEISHER, Esther DEISHER.
Christian
Z ROTHERMEL was born on 24 Jan 1710 in Hassloch, Germany.
Parents: Johannes Leonard ROTHERMEL
and Sybilla Magdalena ZIMMERMAN.
Daniel D ROTHERMEL was born on 8 Apr 1770 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann Peter H ROTHERMEL and Mary Magdalena DREIBELBIS.
Daniel H ROTHERMEL was born on 21 Mar 1741 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann Peter ROTHERMEL and Sybilla HOCH.
Elizabeth ROTHERMEL was born about 1746 in Richmond Township,
Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann
Peter ROTHERMEL and Sybilla HOCH.
Esther ROTHERMEL was born on 31 May 1751 in Richmond
Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann Peter ROTHERMEL and Sybilla HOCH.
Hannah ROTHERMEL
Jacob
D ROTHERMEL was born on 13 Feb 1776 in Richmond Township,
Berks County, Pennsylvania. Parents: Johann
Peter H ROTHERMEL and Mary Magdalena
DREIBELBIS.
Johann Paul Z ROTHERMEL was born on 30 Dec 1718 in Hassloch,
Germany. Parents: Johannes Leonard
ROTHERMEL and Sybilla Magdalena
ZIMMERMAN.