Notes

[NI00001] Some records state he was born abt 1607.

[NI00026] Resides 1904 in Detroit, Michigan. Joe was a graphic Artist & sign
painter.

[NI00047] Served in Company F in the 2nd Regiment of the Missouri Mounted Volunteers

[NI00060] No Children

[NI00071] Major in WW II.

[NI00084] Twin to Elizabeth Dodge.

[NI00092] Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
Replies: 5
Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
diane2619 (View posts) Posted: 22 Feb 2006 1:18AM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Dodge, Manning, McCumber, Ersdale, Lincoln
I am looking to connect with my Magby family line. My 3 gr grandmother was Catherine. And, although three names have been suggested as her possible last name, the most likely name is Magby. I would like to confirm this one way or another.

This is the information that I do have is as follows:
Catherine, (aka Katherine, Cate, or Kate) was born about1824 in Indiana, possibly Fort Wayne. She died 10 Oct 1894 in IL. Catherine married William Franklin Dodge. He was b. about 1819 in Pennsylvania; d. 11 Nov 1894.

William and Catherine/Katherine are located in the 1850 and 1860 census records. In 1850 they are in Whiteside, IL. Two lines above where they are listed in 1850 is a listing for a Lydia Magby, age 27, Sarah Magby age 4, Eben Dodge, age 20, Henrietta Dodge age 11, Eli Dodge age 12 and Rhoda Dodge age 2. There appears to be some relation to my William Dodge/ Catherine Magby line but have not made the connection.

The 1960 census shows William and Catherine in Mount Pleasant, Whiteside, IL. Lydia Magby is also listed in Mount Pleasant.

Children of William and Catherine:
Columbus 1844-1883
Elizebeth 1845-
J.M. or James Manning 1848-1885
Pardon M. (Pardon McCumber) 1850-1922
Ellen E. per 1860 census (my records show Elwin Ersdale 1853-?)
Sarah Dema aka Sarah Jo Dema 1855-?
Althea Alicia aka Adelia Alicia 1860-1934
Willie (William) Lincoln 1866-?

All the children were born in Lyndon, Whiteside County, IL.

I am interested in finding Catherine’s parents and/or siblings. Also, I have no ancestral information on William F. Dodge, aka William Franklin, W.F.
Thanks
Diane

[NI00096] Twin to Edward Dodge.

[NI00108] Half sister to Sarah Peak his second wife.

[NI00114] No issue

[NI00115] Catherine Magby's parents were James Magby born in Virginia in 1784. He married Elizabeth (I have yet to learn her last name) who was born in Kentucky in 1792. James died in Galena, Jo Daviess, Illinois 11 July 1855. His will can be found at the Jo Daviess Genealogy web site. Elizabeth died 10 May 1870 and is either buried in Jo Daviess, Illinois or in LaFayette County, Wisconsin. In addition to Catherine their other children were Narcissa who married George Love; Barbara who married Patrick Collagan; Artemisa who never married, Nicholas who married Hannah Graham; James who married Lydia B.Smith Dodge (Eben Dodge, etc. are her children by a first marriage to John B. Dodge); Mary Ann who married James Algar;Nancy who married a Murray; and Manning who I don't believe ever married. Catherine and William F. Dodge were divorced sometime after the 1860 census. I believe that I found her in 1870 and she is listed as divorced. William F. Dodge goes on to marry a Minerva Jane Jarvis Inskeep. She too must be divorced because her children are all Inskeep and her first husband, Joel Milton Jarvis remarries. He is a Methodist minister. Yet, both Minerva and Joel are buried in Vinton, Benton, Iowa. James and Elizabeth probably lived in Bureau County, Illinois in 1831-1833.


Related ResourcesWhiteside Surname Facts
Whiteside Surname Board


turn off links
Username
Password
Forgot Username/Password Sign In Subscribe
Help

Home Family Trees
Start a new tree Upload a GEDCOM Search
Search All Records Census & Voter Lists Birth, Marriage & Death Public Member Trees Military Immigration & Emigration Card Catalog Collaborate
Recent Member Connect Activity Message Boards Ancestry World Archives Project Member Connections Member Directory Public Profile Learning Center
Get Started Understanding Records Article Archives Webinars Help - FAQ Ancestry.com Blog DNA Publish Shop


Message Boards
You are here: Message Boards > Surnames > Magby > Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894

Names or Keywords
Advanced Search
All Boards Magby - Family History & Genealogy Message Board

Subject
Author
Posted Within
Anytime 1 Day 3 Days 1 Week 1 Month 6 Months 1 Year
Surnames
Use Soundex Message Type
All Bible Biography Birth Cemetery Census Death Deed Immigration Lookup Marriage Military Obituary Pension Query Will
Hide Advanced Search


Begin New Thread << Prev Thread | Next Thread >> Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
Change to Thread View Sort Oldest First Newest First
Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
diane2619 (View posts) Posted: 22 Feb 2006 1:18AM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Dodge, Manning, McCumber, Ersdale, Lincoln
I am looking to connect with my Magby family line. My 3 gr grandmother was Catherine. And, although three names have been suggested as her possible last name, the most likely name is Magby. I would like to confirm this one way or another.

This is the information that I do have is as follows:
Catherine, (aka Katherine, Cate, or Kate) was born about1824 in Indiana, possibly Fort Wayne. She died 10 Oct 1894 in IL. Catherine married William Franklin Dodge. He was b. about 1819 in Pennsylvania; d. 11 Nov 1894.

William and Catherine/Katherine are located in the 1850 and 1860 census records. In 1850 they are in Whiteside, IL. Two lines above where they are listed in 1850 is a listing for a Lydia Magby, age 27, Sarah Magby age 4, Eben Dodge, age 20, Henrietta Dodge age 11, Eli Dodge age 12 and Rhoda Dodge age 2. There appears to be some relation to my William Dodge/ Catherine Magby line but have not made the connection.

The 1960 census shows William and Catherine in Mount Pleasant, Whiteside, IL. Lydia Magby is also listed in Mount Pleasant.

Children of William and Catherine:
Columbus 1844-1883
Elizebeth 1845-
J.M. or James Manning 1848-1885
Pardon M. (Pardon McCumber) 1850-1922
Ellen E. per 1860 census (my records show Elwin Ersdale 1853-?)
Sarah Dema aka Sarah Jo Dema 1855-?
Althea Alicia aka Adelia Alicia 1860-1934
Willie (William) Lincoln 1866-?

All the children were born in Lyndon, Whiteside County, IL.

I am interested in finding Catherine’s parents and/or siblings. Also, I have no ancestral information on William F. Dodge, aka William Franklin, W.F.
Thanks
Diane
Reply Report Abuse Print
Re: Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
jgruenw1 (View posts) Posted: 4 Feb 2007 9:58PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Dodge, Love, Colligan, Collogan, Jarvis, Inskeep, Alger, Murray, Graham
Catherine Magby was born in Indiana to James and Elizabeth Magby (I don't know Elizabeth's maiden name) James was born in Virginia and Elizabeth in Kentucky. James was born in 1784 and died 11 July 1855 in Galena, Jo Daviess, Illinois. Elizabeth was born in 1792 and died in Galena 10 May 1870. The children of James and Elizabeth are
1. Narcissa Magby b. 1810, Kentucky and married George Love
2. Artemisa Magby b. 1812 Kentucky - she never married
3. Barbara Magby b. 21 Jan 1815 Kentucky and married Patrick Colligan (also found as Collogan)
4. Catherine Magby b. 1823 Indiana and married to William Fr. Dodge. In the 1880 census I found found Catherine Dodge who was divorced. Also, I found William F. Dodge in Davis County, married to Minerva Jane Jarvis who had been the wife of Joel Milton Inskeep. Minerva died 6 Sep 1900, in Vinton, Benton, Iowa. I'm not sure about William.
5. Mary Ann Magby b. 1824 in Wisconsin and married James Alger. They died in Wisconsin.
6. Nancy Magby b. 1825 in Jo Daviess, Illinois and married a man by the name of Murray.
7. Manning Magby b. 1834 in West Galena, Jo Daviess, Illinois. I can find no records of marriage.
8. Nicholas Graham b.1835 in West Galena, Jo Daviess, Illinois. He married Hannah Graham in West Galena and he died 29 Apr 1915 in Belmont, LaFayette, Wisconsin
9. Unknown (anyway to me)Magby who was the spouse of Lydia and the father of Sarah Elizabeth Magby. Sarah Elizabeth is mentioned in her grandfather's (James Magby) will. I hope this will help you and just toss it out if you already have the information. I would be glad of any information you might have regarding the Magby family. I am not a relative, but a close friend of Nicholas Magby's decendants.
Reply Report Abuse Print
Re: Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
jgruenw1 (View posts) Posted: 9 Feb 2007 1:21PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Dodge, Love, Colligan, Graham, Algar, Murray, Inskeep, Jarvis
Catherine Magby's parents were James Magby born in Virginia in 1784. He married Elizabeth (I have yet to learn her last name) who was born in Kentucky in 1792. James died in Galena, Jo Daviess, Illinois 11 July 1855. His will can be found at the Jo Daviess Genealogy web site. Elizabeth died 10 May 1870 and is either buried in Jo Daviess, Illinois or in LaFayette County, Wisconsin. In addition to Catherine their other children were Narcissa who married George Love; Barbara who married Patrick Collagan; Artemisa who never married, Nicholas who married Hannah Graham; James who married Lydia B.Smith Dodge (Eben Dodge, etc. are her children by a first marriage to John B. Dodge); Mary Ann who married James Algar;Nancy who married a Murray; and Manning who I don't believe ever married. Catherine and William F. Dodge were divorced sometime after the 1860 census. I believe that I found her in 1870 and she is listed as divorced. William F. Dodge goes on to marry a Minerva Jane Jarvis Inskeep. She too must be divorced because her children are all Inskeep and her first husband, Joel Milton Jarvis remarries. He is a Methodist minister. Yet, both Minerva and Joel are buried in Vinton, Benton, Iowa. James and Elizabeth probably lived in Bureau County, Illinois in 1831-1833.
Reply Report Abuse Print
Re: Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
jgruenw1 (View posts) Posted: 22 Feb 2007 6:37PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Magbee, Love, Colligan, Collogan, Algar, Murray, Smith, Dodge, Graham, Jarvis, Inskeep, Upton, McClintock
James Magbee/Magby b. 1784 in Virginia and died 11 July 1855 in West Galena, Jo Daviess County, Ill. and Elizabeth (last name unknown)b, 1792 in Kentucky and died 10 May 1870 in Galena, Jo Daviess, Ill. They had the following children:
Narcissa who married George Love
Barbara who married Patrick Colligan/Collogan
Mary Ann who married Frank Algar
Nancy who married Mr. Murray
Artemisa who never married
James who was married to Lydia B. Smith Dodge. Her first husband was John Dodge and I believe he was no relation to William F. The children in the census are her's from the first marriage. James and Lydia had only one child, Sarah Elizabeth and she was born about 1846. James was dead by the 1850 census. Sarah is mentioned in her grandfather James Magbee/Magby's will along with all of his other children.
Manning who never married
Nicholas who married Hannah Graham. They had a large family and still have descendants who live in Northwest Ill. and Southwest Wis.
I believe that Catherine was born 1823 in New Albany, Floyd, Indiana. She died 10 Oct 1894 in Morrison, Whiteside, Ill. She and William F. Dodge were divorced sometime after 1860 and I believe that he went to Davis County Iowa and married Minerva Jarvis Inskeep.
Catherine and William F. Dodge's son, Columbus,b.1844 was killed during the Civil War, 4 May 1862 and never married.
Charles b.1841 died 3 may 1852 in Morrison, Whiteside, Ill and I don't know if he was married.
Sarah b. 1855 married Charles Upton
Adelia b. 28 Mar 1860 Morrison, and d. 3 Feb 1934 in Sacramento, Calif. She was married to Oliver Perry Saylor
Pardon was born Aug 1850 and died 1922 in Hamilton, Butte, Calif. His wife's name was Minnie.
Elizabeth b. Feb 1845 married Freeman B. McClintock
James b. 1848 and died 1885 was married to Abbie L. Upton a sister to Charles Upton who married Sarah.
Ellen was born in 1853
William L. was born in 1866
All of the Children were born in Morrison, Whiteside, Ill.
If you go to the GenWeb site for Jo Daviess County, Ill you can find James Magbee/Magby's will. The reason I've used two spellings is that his tombstone reads Magbee, but the family used Magby. Hope this helps you.
Reply Report Abuse Print
Re: Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
jgruenw1 (View posts) Posted: 29 Sep 2007 9:39PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Magby, Dodge
This past summer I went to Jo Daviess county and looked at Manning Magby's estate records. He was a brother to Catherine and he died in Nov. 1870. He died without a will. There was a letter from Catherine and her lawyer in the records. In the letter she states that she does not need to have her husband sign for her share of the estate as she was in the process of divorcing him.
Also, Sarah Elizabeth Magby, daughter of Lydia is the son of James Magby, brother of Catherine, who died shortly after Sarah's birth. Lydia was married to a John Dodge, who I believe is no relation to William. Lydia's maiden name was Smith.
Hope this helps. If you know of Elizabeth Magby's maiden name I would certainly like to know it. Thanks

Reply Report Abuse Print
Re: Catherine MAGBY b. c1824 IN d. 1894 IL m. William Franklin DODGE b. c1819 PA d. 1894
calvinbandstra (View posts) Posted: 1 Feb 2009 8:25PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Smith, Bowen
Do you have any history on the Lydia B. Smith who first was married to the Dodge and then later to James Magby? Am looking for a Lydia Smith that was in the 1850 Clinton County, Ohio, census.

Thanks,

Calvin
calvinbandstra@iowatelecom.net

Reply Report Abuse Print

Change to Thread View Find a Board
Page Tools
Board Information
Request New Board | Community Guidelines | Board Help | Board FAQ | Send Feedback
Contact Us Ancestry.com Blog Affiliates Advertising PRIVACY POLICY Terms and Conditions
Visit Other Ancestry.com sites
Ancestry InternationalUnited States United Kingdom Canada Australia Deutschland Italia France Sverige ?? Other Ancestry.com Sites
Ancestry.com

Myfamily.com

Genealogy.com

Rootsweb.com

TGN.com

FamilyTreeMaker.com

Ancestrymagazine.com
XAncestry.com(c) 2009, Ancestry.com

[NI00123] Everett grew up on a small farm in West Virginia and worked on the farm or other farms in the area to help support the family. He went to College in New York City but graduated from the Univ. of West Virginia in 1931. He worked his way through college and had some help from Esso Petroleum working for them while going to school. After graduation he went to Baytown, Texas and then to Aruba, Netherlands West Indies to work for Esso there. He married Helen Volmer in 1934 just before Everett went to Aruba. She followed soon after and they raised their family in Aruba. They raise 3 sons and 1 daughter. Another daughter, Mary Deborah died soon after birth and is buried in Aruba. They lived in Aruba throughout World War II, were German submarines shelled the oil refinery and sank many oil tankers. They retired in 1968, settling in Florida and North Carolina before finally moving to Arlington Heights close to their son Denny

[NI00130] I hereby grant permission for you or any subsequent possessor to use the
attached files, unaltered, for the purpose of genealogical research.

Charles L. Dodge
P. O. Box 617
Gloucester, VA 23061
804-693-2402

P.S. I am sending some of the attachments by separate email, as my ISP
has a bandwidth

[NI00145] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 34
page 162

[p.162] Mrs. May Agnes Coe Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 33453
Born in Lenox, New York.
Wife of Richard Platt Dodge.
Descendant of David Coe, of Connecticut.
Daughter of Ralph Watson Coe and Anna Maria Cooper, his wife.
Granddaughter of Albert Ellinwood Coe and Mary Bridge, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of David Coe and Orra Ellinwood, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of David Coe, Jr. and Jerusha Miller, (1747-1808), his wife.
Gr.-gr.-gr.-granddaughter of David Coe and Hannah Camp, his wife.
David Coe, (1716-1808), served on the Committee to attend to the needs of the families of volunteers. He was born in Stratford, Conn., died in Middlefield.
Also Nos. 18309, 20628, 24536, 25572, 30439.

[NI00150] Mrs. Lucy Abernethy Wadhams Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 37536
Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Wife of Harger W. Dodge.
Descendant of John Evarts Stone.
Daughter of Edward A. Wadhams and Estelle Stone Bannard, his wife.
See No. 37535.

[NI00170] Killed in the Civil War

[NI00183] Catherine Darling was a mathematics professor at Hartwick Seminary in Oneonta, New York. Her grandson, Clarence I. Dodge Jr., voted for womenis suffrage because barely educated men, and new male citizens who were still learning the language and our culture, could vote but she n a well-educated and native citizen n could not. He did not think it fair.

[NI00196] I suspect his name is Silsbee Maynard Pendleton Jr.

[NI00207] Last govenor of the territory of Iowa.

Clarke, James (1812-1850) of Burlington, Des Moines County, Iowa.
Son-in-law of Henry Dodge. Born in Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pa.,
July 5,1812. Secretary of Iowa Territory, 1839-41; mayor of Burlington,
Iowa, 1844-45; delegate to Iowa state constitutional convention from Des
Moines County, 1844; Governor of Iowa Territory, 1845-46. Died in a
cholera epidemic, in Burlington, Des Moines County, Iowa, July 28,1850.
Interment at Aspen Grove Cemetery, Burlington, Iowa. Clarke County, Iowa
is named for him

[NI00301] Died of Cancer of the Jaw.
Passed away at the home of his sister Mrs. E. A Randle.

The Great Register of 1875 lists Eliphalet as registering #591 on August
22, 1866, at the age of 28. It states he resides in Arcata, was born in
the United States and gives his occupation as a farmer.

From Latest News Items From Arcata, in the Humboldt Standard, February
24, 1913: ...Eliphalet Dodge passed away at the home of his sister Mrs.
E. A. Randle, the cause of death being cancer from which he had suffered
for a Iong time. Deceased was a native of Illinois. He came here in the
50 s and was one of the early settlers...

The 1870 Census, Humboldt County, Eureka Township, page 276, shows
Eliphalet s occupation as stock raiser, owning real estate valued at
$2100. Charles Christian, age 35, born in Denmark, is shown as an
occupant at the same residence.

[NI00323] Taken from the Susie Baker Fountain collection, in an obituary for
Eliphalet Dodge, dated March 1, 1913, which is probably from the Arcata
Union, three married sisters of Eliza's are also listed. They are Mrs. D.
Campbell of Blue Lake, Mrs. Stouder of Oregon, and Mrs. Samuel Dodge of
Arcata. In additional handwritten notes, Susie identifies Mrs. D.
Campbell as Mrs. Duncan Campbell; Mrs. Stouder as Mary Stouder; and has
"Sandborn?" written in after Mrs. Samuel Dodge. ( I believe the "Samuel"
is an error by the paper. I have seen Sam Dodge used in archived news
articles and I think Sanborn might have used the nickname Sam. GV)

A news article from the Arcata Union, December 20, 1928 - MRS. RANDLE
PIONEER DES Mrs. Eliza A. Randle, 88, a resident of Humboldt county for
more than 60 years, died at her home near the Teachers College Wednesday.
She had been ill for several years. Deceased was a native of Illinois.
She crossed the plains in 1853 with her parents and settled in Oregon. In
1854 the family moved to San Joaquin valley and in 1865 moved to Humboldt
county, settling in what was known as Humboldt Clearing. For the last 40
years the deceased has lived in Arcata...Mrs. Randle was noted for her
kindness in caring for the sick during the pioneer days of Humboldt
county and will be kindly remembered by a number ofthe early settlers. n

Information on Eliza's death certificate indicates she came to California
about 1854.

More About ELIZA ALVTRA DODGE: Burial: December 15, 1928, Greenwood
Cemetery, Arcata, Humboldt County, California Cause of Death: senility

[NI00335] The Great Register of 1875 lists Charles as registering #619 on June 29,
1867 at the age of 25. It states he
resides in Arcata, was born in the United States and gives his occupation
as a farmer.

Mrs. E. A. Randle (Eliza) served as the informant on Charles' death
certificate. On the death certificate, his occupation is listed as farmer
and his mother's name is given as Susan Love. It also states he was
divorced at the time of his death.

At Greenwood Cemetery in Arcata there is a Frank Dodge buried next to
Charles. They are both buried in the same row and next to Lousia and
Myrtle.

Enlisted: 04 Jan 1864 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 2nd Regiment, California Infantry, Cos. C, H

[NI00359] ,

[NI00379] Note: Sarah Chrisman /Crisman/Crismon Is her married name. We believe
her maiden name is Carter, LDS records say her name was Sarah Hall.

[NI00390] The Great Register of Humboldt County 1892; #1300
Dodge, Abiel, Age: 36; Height: 5 8n; Complexion: Sandy, Eyes: Grey, Hair:
Brown; Born: Oregon;
Occupation: Laborer; Visible Marks or Scars: Scar on nose; Local
Residence: Janes; Date of
Registration: August 19, 1892; Post Office at Date of Registration: Arcata

[NI00401] Jeremiah P. B. Dodge, New York Enlisted: Unknown - Union Rank Induction: Lieutenant Colonel Rank Discharge: Lieutenant Colonel 5th Regiment, New York infantry regiment National Guard.

[NI00412] She died of consumption , Today known as tuberculosis.

[NI00431] Graduated from U. of Iowa School of Nursing. Worked in Baltimore, MD during the war years after she married Don Dodge, who was an FBI Agent in Baltimore at the time. She was a life long nurse

[NI00434] Sanborn accompanied his parents by boat around the horn of South America.
This was in 1890 from New
Castle Maine to either San Fransico or Eureka - 'The family did settle in
the Arcata Bottum area. Sanborn later
married here and raised a family. Many of his children remained in the
Eureka Arcata area.
Note: Sanborn Winchester Dodge is of the Richard Line. See John Branch
for Ancestry.

[NI00442] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 95
page 115

[p.115] Mrs. Louise Morse Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 94353
Born in Ogle County, Ill.
Wife of William Jordan Dodge.
Descendant of Joseph Morse, as follows:
1. Frank Eugene Morse (b. 1853) m. 1878 Ruth MacKenzie (b. 1862).
2. Elijah Russell Morse (1820-96) m. 1843 Almira M. Lowell (1820-1900).
3. Elijah Morse (1789-1841) m. 1811 Olive Herrick.
4. Joseph Morse m. 1784 Hannah Miller (d. 1844).
Joseph Morse (1751-1833) enlisted as private, 1777, in Captain Frothingham's company, Col. John Crane's regiment. He was born in Medway, Mass.; died in Brookfield, Vt.
Also No. 51118.

[NI00445] Thomas was a Soldier in the war of 1812.

[NI00446] Mary is listed in the 1880 cenus of Three Cabins, Humbolt County, CA as age
14, as a sister of Charles Dodge and as living with his family.

[NI00451] US Army World War II

[NI00468] The following notation is found in volume 103, page 24 of the Susie Baker
Fountain collection, "Feb 13, 1886 Roll of Honor. The following named
pupils were perfect in dept. during January, Chloe Dodge..."

[NI00470] CS1 US NAVY WORLD WAR II, KOREA, VIETNAM

[NI00471] She was born June 6, 1926 on Isleboro, a daughter of Ruth A. and Judson Dodge. After graduating from Isleboro High School, she spent many years in Rockland.

She married Armand J. Rust and moved to Shirley, Mass. After he died, she married Kenneth C. McDonald and they enjoyed 20 wonderful years together.

She worked for many years at the George Frost Company in Shirley, Mass., and the H.H. Scott Company in Maynard, Mass. After her retirement in 2004, she worked part time at Adesa Car Auction in Concord, Mass. She was a member of the Shirley Golden Ages.

She was predeceased by her husbands; a daughter, Linda Rust; two sisters, Dorothy Dyer and Mildred Steele; three brothers, Herbert, Judson Jr. and Oren Dodge; and two stepchildren, James McDonald and Marjorie Locke.

She is survived by two sons, Ronald Rust and his wife, Gail, of Shirley, Mass. and Stuart Rust and his wife, Christina, of Leominster, Mass.; a stepson, Kenneth McDonald, and his wife, Tina, of Shirley, Mass.; two sisters, Hattie Carlton of Shireley, Mass. and Mattie Barnes of Rockland; 10 grandchildren, Angela Drew, Tracy, Melissa and Shawn Rust, and Patrick and Ernie Westover, all of Shirley, Mass., Michael and Courtney Denning of Leominster, Mass., Adam Kapous of Braintree, Mass. and Christopher Locke of Rockland; seven great-grandchildren, MacKenzie, Madison and Morgan Drew, and Dawn, Matthew and Jacob McDonald, all of Shirley, Mass., and Anthony Rust of Leominster, Mass.; her beloved friend and pet, her cat, Minnie Me; several nieces, nephews, ìadoptedî grandchildren of the neighborhood; and extended family, and many wonderful friends and acquaintances over the years.

[NI00479] In a letter from Corinne Waldroop (Sept 18, 1958) to Elmer T. Randle she states "Mr. Randle (Thomas) was a miner for a time. Worked over in Jackson, Amador County,
California, before they settled in Arcata.

Great Register of Humboldt County,1875: Thomas Marion Randle, Age: 34, Born: United States, Occupation: Farmer, Residence: Atcata, Registered:
April 1866, #2044

Great Register of Humboldt County, October 7,1884, Thomas Marion Randle;
Age, 47; Born Illinois;

Occupation, farmer; Residence, Mad River; Re-registered,
August 31,1880; #3344.

The Great Register of Humboldt Coutny 1892;#4321

Randle, Thomas Marion, Age: 58; Height: 5' 11 "; Complexion: Dark; Eyes:
Grey; Hair: Grey; Born:Illionios; Occupation: Teamster; Local Residence: Arcata 2, Date of Registration: April 6, 1892; Post Office at Date of Registration: Arcata
Numerous front page articles from all three local (Arcata and Eureka) newspapers, spanning several days,

chronicle the accidental death of Thomas and his son Edward.

Cause of Death: accidental over-turning of the wagon in which he was riding

Marriage Notes for Eliza Dodge and Thomas Randle:

There are conflicting years given for the maniage of Thomas and Eliza.

[NI00484] ROCKLAND - Marie H. "Sis" Reed, 86, a lifelong Rockland resident, died Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2010, at Penobscot Bay Medical Center, Rockport, after a brief illness. Born May 16, 1924, in Rockland, she was the daughter of Lorenzo and Felicia Plantier Dodge. She was educated in local schools, and was a 1942 graduate of Rockland High School. Sis was first employed in the office of Van Baalen, Rockland. She married Carl S. Reed Jr., May 17, 1944, in Rockland. The couple made their home in Rockland, and after the birth of their sons, Sis became a devoted homemaker and mother. When her sons were older, in school and more self-sufficient, she returned to work. In 1955, she began work as secretary of public works for the city of Rockland. Later, and at the wooing of then Rockland city assessor, Osgood Gilbert, she moved to city hall, serving as assistant to the assessor until retiring in 1987. Shortly after her retirement, Sis adopted her first "traffic island" at the intersection of Upper Park Street and Payne Avenue, the first of several she would annually plant with beautiful flowers. She was often seen tending these beautification projects during the summer months, throughout her beloved Rockland. She was also instrumental in placement of flower baskets on street poles in the city. For more than 20 years, Sis served as a member of Rockland Parks Commission. She was honored in 1991 for her service by the people of Rockland naming the park at the entrance of the Rockland breakwater, Marie H. Reed Memorial Park. Sis always held a special affection and concern for animals. Her beloved shih tzu, Chloe, went to her eternal rest last Wednesday, the day before Sis entered the hospital. She was a longtime communicant of St. Bernard's Catholic Church, Rockland. In addition to her husband Carl, in 1996, Sis was predeceased by two brothers, Edward Dodge and Henry Dodge. She is survived by two sons, Dr. David A. Reed of Washington, DC, and Edward H. "Ted" Reed of Rockland; as well as many nieces and nephews. Friends and relatives are invited to visit 6-8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 19, at Burpee, Carpenter & Hutchins Funeral Home, 110 Limerock St., Rockland. A funeral service will be held 9 a.m. Saturday at St. Bernard's Catholic Church, 150 Broadway, Rockland. Interment will be afterward at Glen Cove Cemetery, Warrenton Avenue, Rockport.

[NI00490] Died as a result of an accident. A wagon in which he was riding
overturned his father thomas M arion Randle was wih him.

[NI00544] CHARLES H. SYLVIA

EDMUNDS -- Charles H. Sylvia, 66, died unexpectedly Tuesday afternoon at his home here. He was born at Edmunds, Jan. 25, 1903, the son of William H. and Lillian (Dodge) Sylvia. He was a graduate of the Dennysville High School and a graduate of Washington State Normal School in Machias. He had taught school for 38 years and for the past three years had been principal of the Edmunds School. He was a member of the IOOF of Pembroke; the Dennys River Grange; the Dennysville-Edmunds Congregational Church; the M.E.K.A. and was past president of the Dennys River Sportsmens Club. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Ruby (McGinnis) Sylvia; one son, Alton Sylvia of South Portland; one daughter, Mrs. Albert (Ann) Suddy of Veazie; two brothers, Harvey and Walter Sylvia, both of Edmunds; four grandsons; several nieces, nephews and cousins. Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. at the Dennysville-Edmunds Congregational Church, with the Rev. Ronald A. Chaffey of Eastport officiating. Burial will be in the Dennysville Cemetery. Friends may call at the Gardner Funeral Chapel in Machias, anytime after Wednesday noon

[NI00545] From the Susie Baker Fountain collection, (v. 13; p. 83) in reference to
an obituary, dated December
14, 1934, for her sister, Ernma, Vida is said to be from Phoenix, Arizona.

[NI00550] S1 USNRF in WWi

[NI00557] Samuel's middle initial may be H or R

[NI00563] Ste. Genevieve Herald
Ste. Genevieve, Mo.
Saturday, Nov. 24, 1883
HON. AUGUSTUS C. DODGE, DEAD
We learn with the deepest regret the death of Hon. A.C. Dodge of Burlington, Iowa, brother-in-law of Dr. C.S. HERTICH of this
place. Gen. Dodge was born on the place where Geo. SEXAUER's house now stands, in the year 1813, making him precisely 70 years of age at the date of his death, which occurred of the 20th inst., as reported by St. Louis papers.
With Gen. DODGE is buried the last representative of those honored and distinguished statesmen who were born and reared in old Ste. Genevieve and who so nobly and zealously watched her interests and represented her intelligence in Congress and elsewhere. Among those departed celebrities may be mentioned Lewis F. Lynn, U.S. Senator, Lewis V. Bogyu, U.S. Senator, Gen. A.C. Dodge, U.S. Senator, Conrad C. Ziegler, John Scott and many others of historical fame.
Gen. DODGE, the subject of our sketch, was elected a U.S. Senator from Iowa in 1839 and served four years, his father, Hon. Henry DODGE, representing Wisconsin as Senator from that state - an incident that had never occurred in Congress before, of father and son representing different states in the Senate at the same time. After his term in the Senate had expired, he was appointed Minister to Spain by President Buchanan and served in that honored position for eight years. He was the only Minister to Spain from the U.S., who acquired the Spanish language and made use of it in his diplomatic relations with the inhabitants of the country to which he was accredited.
Of late years, he had been suffering from a cancer, which indirectly hastened his death. We offer our deepest sympathy to his noble wife and family. His name will be cherished by our people, not alone for his distinguished career as a statesman, but for his noble qualities of mind and heart. He made no distinction between rich and poor, high and low; all were his friends alike.
Want of space forbids our going into further particulars and we will conclude our sketch by recalling the touching words of our immortal Longfellow, which in view of a well spent life full of good purposes and deeds become fraught with meaning: "Tell me not in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream."

Brief Biographical Sketch of Augustus Caesar Dodge
Augustus Caesar Dodge is one of the most notable of early Burlingtonians. The son of Henry Dodge and nephew of Lewis Fields Linn , he was born in St. Genevieve, Missouri in 1812. Largely self-educated, Augustus Caesar Dodge had the distinction of becoming the first U.S. Senator born west of the Mississippi as well as the first Senator from Iowa. Henry and Augustus Dodge are the only father and son to have served in the U. S. Senate concurrently.
At the age of 15, Augustus moved from Missouri to Galena, Illinois in 1827 where he was employed in various capacities in his father's lead mines. He served in the Black Hawk War of 1832 as well as other Indian wars. Meanwhile, his father Henry had been elevated to the rank of Colonel and, the in 1836 was appointed Governor of the Territory of Wisconsin which at that time included what is now Iowa. In 1837, when the Wisconsin Territorial capital wa temporarily moved from Belmont Wisconsin to Burlington Iowa, Augustus moved to Burlington.
His caeer was launched with appointment as registser of the land office in Burlington (1838-1840). This was a time when Iowa land was up for grabs and Augustus served in this capacity with fairness and efficiency. The position became a political springboard as he was elected as a Democratic Delegate to Congress where he served from 1840-1846. When Iowa became a state in 1846, he was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate where he remained until 1855. During these years, he was a leader in the movements for free homesteads and a transcontinental railroad.
In 1855, Augustus was appointed minister to the Court of Spain. Particularly notable here were his strenuous but unsuccessful efforts to secure Cuba for the United States. In 1859, he returned to Burlington where he became an unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Iowa.
Following this defeat, he went into political retirement. His time was spent lecturing at pioneer gatherings and political events, his opinions frequently being sought. In 1874 he interrupted his retirement to serve a term as Mayor of Burlington.
With 1883 marking the 50th Anniversary of the settlement of Flint Hills (Burlington), Augustus Caesar Dodge was Chairman of the Executive Committee as well as speaker for the massive June celebration. Five months later he passed away quietly at his 829 North Fifth Street home. Augustus Caeasr Dodge is buried near his father Henry at Aspen Grove Cemetery.

[NI00575] Real Name Moses Henry Dodge but went by Henry. Govenor of Wisconsin.

It is after Henry that fort Dodge, Iowa is named. He was the leader of
the first Dragoons. That first surveyed most of the Des Moines river
valley in central Iowa. He was also a senator from the new state of
Wisconsin. and its first governor.

Dodge, Henry (1782-1867) Half-brother of Lewis Fields Linn; father of
Augustus Caesar Dodge; father-in-law of James Clarke. Born near
Vincennes, Knox County, Ind., October 12, 1782. Democrat. General in the
U.S. Army during the War of 1812; delegate to Missouri state
constitutional convention from Ste. Genevieve County, 1820; member
Michigan territorial council 7th District, 1832-33; Governor of Wisconsin
Territory, 1836-41, 1845-48; Delegate to U.S. Congress from Wisconsin
Territory, 1841-45; U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, 1848-57. Died in
Burlington, Des Moines County, Iowa, June 19,1867. Interment at Aspen
Grove Cemetery, Burlington, Iowa. Dodge counties in Minn. and Wis., and
Henry County, Iowa, are named for him. See also: congressional biography.

[NI00598] LCDR US NAVY WORLD WAR II, KOREA

[NI00599] Notes for Daniel Dodge:
No issue. He was the inventor of machinery for the manufacture of horseshoe nails. Very few are aware of the great difficulties experienced by the first inventor of this wonderful machinery, and the great persistence, patience and energy exhibited by him in times of trial, when all condemned his scheme as impracticable and withdrew financial support. A sketch of the history of this invention and of the inventor may not be devoid of interest. Daniel Dodge came of a family possessed of great inventive powers. His great grandfather, John Dodge, was the inventor of cut nails with heads and certain tools for their manufacture. He was a blacksmith and hoe maker, and the invention came about in this way: After plating out the blade of the hoe as near to the desired form as convenient, they used to complete it by shearing from the edges any surplus of metal there might be. It occurred to the young man that some of these clippings, which were of a tapering form, might serve for nails if properly headed. He collected a few of them and headed them by griping them in a vise and upsetting the large end with a hammer. Finding they answered the purpose, he cut up other pieces of similar scrap and headed them in the same way. He then made a tool for the purpose of holding the shank more perfectly while being headed. Finding a ready demand for nails so made, he collected a quantity of old hoops and worked them up. The demand increasing, the business was increased and new facilities added for manufacturing the article, and new hoop iron purchased. The trade so commenced was followed, to some extent, by John Dodge's son and grandson. At a later date they of course used plates rolled expressly for the purpose, but they headed them by hand until the invention of Reed's improvement.
Previous to the age of 25, Daniel Dodge's educational advantages were mainly a few months' attendance at a county district school each year during his boyhood and two or three terms at an academy. From the age of 10 to 18 years his time was mostly divided between the labors of the farm and the business of ironing harness for horse collars. He then removed to New York State with his parents, and continued his labors as before, teaching school and studying at home. At the age of 25 he entered Madison University, at Hamilton, N. Y., but after two and a half years of study there was compelled by failing health to leave the institution. In the fall of 1848 he began what proved to be the principal labor of his life, the invention and construction of machinery for the manufacture of horseshoe nails.
Unable to apply himself to books, and having a taste for mechanical pursuits, he determined to select some subject affording exercise of the inventive faculties, and apply himself to the production of some mechanical improvement. In the search for such a subject his attention was soon attracted to the manufacture of horseshoe nails, as offering an open and inviting field. Such nails were at that time all made by hand, the process of making them was slow and laborious, and there was evidently room for improvement. He commenced on a very small scale. Having no money to invest in the enterprise, he proceeded to construct with his own hands a small model made wholly of iron and steel which could be operated by hand. This model would produce from lead and copper miniature nails of about one sixty-fourth the weight of an ordinary horseshoe nail, and with such facility and so perfect if form that it won the confidence of friends and enabled him to command the means to experiment on a larger scale. The plan of this first model was the result of considerable study, and was adopted, after a careful comparison of several conceivable plans, as the most feasible, and promising the most valuable results. In the spring of 1849 he began building a machine of full working proportions.
Several months were consumed in its construction, and much difficulty was encountered in the want of facilities for doing work with the perfect accuracy requisite. The machine when completed produced nails with the expected rapidity (about 100 per minute) and of satisfactory form and finish, but they were found to possess one fatal defect. The rapid absorption of heat by the machinery from the metal under operation had so cooled the points of the nails before completion that the quality of the metal near the points was found to be impaired by the continued action of the hammers upon it. With the machine, as constructed, this could only be remedied by running it with greater rapidity, but increased speed was found to increase the strain on certain parts beyond their capacity for endurance. Several months were spent in altering, improving and experimenting with this machine, not so much in hopes of making it a success as with a view to learning all that could be learned from it before attempting to construct another, and, what was equally important, convincing men who had means to invest that it would pay to build another.
Before this last point was reached, however, those who had furnished the means thus far became greatly discouraged and disinclined to prosecute further experiments. At this juncture a stranger passing through the town purchased a fractional interest in the machine and enabled Mr. Dodge to proceed far enough with the experiments to interest those with ampler means, when he re-purchased the fractional interest. A new machine was built, and then another and another; each an improvement on the other, but none proving profitable for permanent use. After a few months' use there pairs would become more and more frequent until it became necessary to abandon them. This result was due to the gradual crystallization resulting from the violence of the percussion of a hammer stroke sufficiently instantaneous to prevent undue absorption of heat from the point of the nail. After pursuing these experiments for nearly seven years, at a cost of many thousands of dollars, making many shifts to secure the necessary means, he determined to abandon entirely his original plan and adopt one radically different and entirely new. On this plan he built a machine early in 1856. This proved a comparative success. It overcame the great difficulty encountered in the former plans, but its capacity for production was comparatively small, and it required many subsequent addition, alteration and improvements to render it a complete success. It was not until 1862, and after a long series of expensive experiments, that he felt warranted in building a large number of these machines. From that time the machines were rapidly multiplied until more than 100 were in operation in his own country, and large numbers in Canada, England and various European states. His American patents bear dates June 22, 1852; June 3, 1856; Aug. 23, 1859; Aug. 30, 1859; Jan. 5, 1864, and Aug. 4, 1874. Unlike many inventors, Mr. Dodge, reaped the benefits of his invention.
By means of this useful invention Mr. Dodge acquired wealth. But he used it so generously that he was a blessing to all around him. He pitied the poor, and befriended particularly the industrious poor. He had himself been one of that class, and knew how they suffered. He gave also generously and constantly to large philanthropic and religious objects. Foreign missions, home
missions, the Bible cause, religious publications, all received his moneyed gifts. One of his last gifts was that of his elegant mansion and grounds in Keeseville, N.Y. which cost him over $20,000. This he gave to the American Baptist Publication Society, in whose large, beneficent and world-wide missionary operations he was a profound believer. Though this elegant home sold for far less than it originally cost, it was nevertheless and expression of his love for Christ, and the Publication Society's great and good work.
Intellectually, Mr. Dodge was a great thinker and an uncommon man. He was the author of a treatise on Law and Liberty, which handles some of the more intricate problems of psychology, metaphysics and theology in a masterly fashion. Above all else, he was a simple, child-like lover and server of Jesus Christ. Though hindered from becoming a settled pastor and preacher, he wrought in the spirit of one "called of God" throughout the whole of his long life. He was the main pillar and support of the little Baptist church of which he was for so many years a member and an office-bearer in Keeseville, and he was also the same wise counselor and worker in the Tabernacle Church of Albany, in whose fellowship he passed the last few years of his useful and beautiful Christian life. His home was charming, his hospitality was genial and abundant, his conversation abounded in wisdom and wit, and his reading and expositions of the Bible at the family altar, in the old-fashioned style, were a blessing to all who were permitted to be present.

[NI00601] The Great Register of 1875 lists Charles as registering #619 on June 29,
1867 at the age of 25. It states he
resides in Arcata, was born in the United States and gives his occupation
as a farmer.

Mrs. E. A. Randle (Eliza) served as the informant on Charles' death
certificate. On the death certificate, his occupation is listed as farmer
and his mother's name is given as Susan Love. It also states he was
divorced at the time of his death.

At Greenwood Cemetery in Arcata there is a Frank Dodge buried next to
Charles. They are both buried in the same row and next to Lousia and
Myrtle.

More About CHARLES DODGE:
Cause of Death: old age
Occupation: 1880, Farmer

[NI00612] Bayside, Humboldt County, California.
Notes for MYRTLE C DODGE:
Died at 12 years, 8 months, 16 days

More About MYRTLE C. DODGE: Burial: Greenwood Cemetery, Arcata, E~mboldt
County, California Cause of Death: uremia and convulsions.

[NI00646] Tec 5, US Army

William Baldwin Dodge, 85, of 300 Wayne Ridge Road, Waynesboro, died Sunday, Sept. 3, 2006, at Augusta Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

Mr. Dodge was born April 20, 1921, in Staunton, and was a son of the late Samuel Whitmore Dodge and Alice Augusta Albrecht Dodge.

He was an Army veteran of World War II, serving with medical units in the Pacific. He was a charter member of the Waynesboro Seventh-day Adventist Church, where he edited the church newsletter for a number of years.

Mr. Dodge was a former member and board member of the Waynesboro Kiwanis Club, Salvation Army Advisory Board, and Us Too. He retired from the Dupont Company in 1985 as Senior Chemist, Toxicology.

He was preceded in death by his wives, Edna Cook Dodge, and Margaret Wallace Dodge.

Survivors include a son, Dr. William B. Dodge III; a daughter, Mary Alice Sandridge; and four grandchildren.

Pastor Shane Anderson will conduct a memorial service 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9, at the Waynesboro Seventh-day Adventist Church. A private burial will be at Riverview Cemetery, Waynesboro, County, Virginia. # 59460910

[NI00651] She was employed as a nurseat the Vetrans AffairsMeeddidal Centerretiring in 1974. She was a member of the AARP the DAR and the Berkley West Virginia County Historical Society.

MARGARET DODGE

Margaret Melissa Dodge, 93, of Martinsburg RD 4, W. Va., and a former resident of Westernport, Md., died December 28, 1981 in City Hospital after an extended illness.

Born Oct. 16, 1888, in Hoyes, Md., she was the daughter of the late Ruben and Dora (Cuppett) Enlow. Her husband, Earle D. Dodge, died Jan. 1, 1978.

Mrs. Dodge and her husband resided in Westernport from 1919 to 1960 before moving to Martinsburg. She was a homemaker most of her life and attended schools in Garrett County. She also was a member of the Trinity United Methodist Church in Piedmont.

Surviving are a son, Ruben E. Dodge, Salisbury, a daughter, Margaret Adrienne Dodge, at home, and a sister, Mrs. Harriett Frazee, Hoyes.

The Republic, January 7, 1982

[D0752]

[NI00653] U.S. Army; Entered Service January 4, 1941. Discharged December 1, 1945. S tationed In A Variety of Locations Moving With The Troops From Landing On Utah Beach Through France, Belgium, Holland and Into Germany And Austria. Served With The Military Police, Had Multiple Duties In The Combat Zone Including Traffic Control And Bridge Guard; Guarded Vital Installations As Well As Temporary Duty Handling The Prisoners of War. Earned Many Honors And Decorations Including The Good Conduct Medal, Victory Medal, American Defense Service Medal, Army Of Occupation Ribbon, Among Others.

Reuben Earle Dodge, 80, of Salisbury, died Jan. 29, 1996, at Meyersdale Medical Center. Reuben Dodge was born Nov. 19, 1915, in Garrett County, Maryland. He was the son of the late Earle David and Margaret (Enlow) Dodge. He is survived by his wife of 57 years, the former Alma Blocher. Reuben was the manager and inventory stock auditor of the American Stores Company. For over 40 years. He was a member of the St. John's Lutheran Church and the Salisbury Lions Club. Friends were received Jan. 30 at the Newman Funeral Home in Salisbury. Services were conducted Jan. 31 at the funeral home, with Rev. David E. Fetter officiating. Interment, Salisbury Cemetery.

New Republic, February 1, 1996

[NI00687] on 11 may 1944 she enlisted in the Womens Army Corp.

[NI00719] Daniel Joseph Dodge, age 82 of Milford, beloved father and grandfather, passed away peacefully Friday, September 18, 2009 at Connecticut Hospice in Branford. He was predeceased by his loving wife, Jane Mitchum Dodge. Daniel was born on June 17, 1927 to the late Harry and Margaret Sheehan Dodge in Bridgeport, and attended Harding High School where he played football. He served his country in the Navy in the South Pacific as a Fireman First Class on the USS Stadfeld (DE-29) during World War II and was awarded the Victory Medal, the Asiatic Pacific Theater Medal, and the American Theater Medal. He was a member of the VFW Post #7788 and American Legion. He was a long time resident of Milford where he and his wife Jane owned the Fort Trumbull Bakery and Delicatessen, better known as 'The Pink Bakery.' Daniel worked for Borden's Dairy as a milkman leaving to start his own milk distribution business called Daniel J. Dodge Incorporated which he successfully ran until 2006. He was a Boy Scout Leader of Troop 12 at Meadowside School and was a Lieutenant in the Fort Trumbull Volunteer Fire Company #2. He took great pleasure maintaining his beautiful yard and most days could be seen on his tractor or working around the yard. He loved attending the country fairs in Connecticut and enjoyed woodcarving. Above all, he enjoyed spending time with his family. Daniel, or "Pop-pop" as his grandchildren called him, will be remembered most for his wonderful smile, good nature, and ready handshake. He is the beloved father of Jane Flynn and her husband, Kevin of Milford, and Patty Ambrose and her husband, John of West Haven. He is the beloved grandfather of five grand daughters, Jane Flynn Chiodo and her husband, Richard of Seattle Wash., Kelly Flynn DiGioia and her husband, Nicholas of Milford, Jackie Ambrose of Wallingford, Kari Flynn of Milford, and Katie Ambrose Koontz and her husband, John of West Haven. He is the loving great-grandfather of Joey DiGioia and Katie and Michael Chiodo.

[NI00736] He attended USC and was an army surgeon in WWI.

[NI00749] Far Rockawway, New York in Mar 1950

[NI00755] DODGE, ORVAL WILLIAM
SP5 US ARMY
DATE OF BIRTH: 05/15/1929
DATE OF DEATH: 11/28/2006
BURIED AT:KING CEMETERY
GORMAN RD OAKLAND, MD 21550

Orval W. Dodge died Tuesday Nov 28 2006 at Garrett County, Memorial Hospital in Oakland at age 77 years. Born May 15 1929 in Kingwood West Virginiaand son of the late Jacob F. Dodge and Elizabeth Teets. He worked as a carpenterfor Hawkinson Tread; the Paul Garber Construction Company where he helped build Big Bear Lake; and for Bufalo Coal Company. He was a US Army Veteran. He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth M. (King) Dodge; towo daughtes Patsy L. (Dodge) Shreve and Sandra K. (Dodge) Schmidt, both of oakland; one son , Gary W. Dodge, Terra Alta, West Virginia; two sistersGrace (Dodge) Whetsel of West Mifflin, Pennsylvania and Mary (Dodge) evans, of Bruceton Mills, West Virginia; one brother Gene Dodge, ast Fork, New York; 10 grandchildren and 3 great granddaughters.

[NI00760] Was known by Marie Marcelite Dodge.

[NI00785] Was known by "Christina" died 1 yr 10 mo 28 days per g. s.

[NI00826] John stayed in Aruba until the last two years of high school before going to school in the USA. He went to college at the University of Notre Dame, in Indiana. After graduation he married Nancy Mae Hoyle from Chicago. They had 3 girls.

[NI00831] Merle J. Dodge

Merle J. Dodge, age 86 of Westby and formerly of La Farge, died Saturday, November 8, 2003 at her home.

She was born on December 8, 1917 near Bloomingdale at her grandparents' home to Emo and Hilda (Pierce) Melvin. The family lived most of their lives in the La Farge area. She attended Fairview and Salem rural schools and La Farge High School. On April 7, 1940 she was united in marriage to Melville L. Dodge Sr. at the Melvin home. They made their home in the La Farge area from 1942 until 1993 when Merle moved to Westby to live with her daughter. Merle worked at the Vernon Memorial Hospital for 33 years besides helping on the farm, raising her family and working at the church.

She is survived by two children, Beverly R. Parker and Melville Dodge Jr.; five grandchildren, Dale W. (Heather) Dodge, Carl A. (Marsha) Parker, Teresa [Parker] (Vincent "Flip") Dvorak, Tracey [Dodge] (Robert) Smith, Sherri [Dodge] (Darren) Dagastino; nine great-grandchildren, Amanda Parker, Ashlee Parker, Leah Dagastino, Kristen Dagastino, Brandon Smith, Ashley Smith, Shelby Dodge, Rachelle Dodge, and Desirae Dodge; two brothers, Vernon (Ruth) Melvin and Virgil (Jean) Melvin; one sister, Lula (Buford) Frye; nieces, nephews, and special family, Tim and Kim Parker and children, Melissa, Brandon and Miranda.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by one brother, Earl; one son, Roger Dodge in 1987; and her husband, Melville Dodge in 1988.

[NI00834] The middle name of Sayer has no family ties. It was a name of his fathers civil war buddy. Born in Elkhart, Indiana. Moved to N.Y.C and worked in a law firm. Married Nora Belle Palmer, his secretary, also from Elkhart,Indiana in may 5, 1919. Their son, James Sayer Dodge, Jr. was born Nov.14,1920 in N.Y.C. They moved to Pittsburgh, Penn. He was Insurance Manager for Pittsburgh Glass Company Their daughter, Louise Palmer Dodge was born in Oakmont,Penn. March 25, 1926. James Sayer died in Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado. Dec.4,1950 Nora died in Colorado Springs, Co in Aug.13, 1977 Their ashes are in Evergreen Cemetery, Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado. They were Transferred frfom Grace Lawn Cemetery Jan 11, 1866.

[NI00845] Never Married.
Miss Bernice Dodge, one of the organizers and developers of Household's Money Management Program, died Tuesday, July 26 in Colorado Springs at the age of 82. Miss Dodge was born in Bristol, Indiana, June 1, 1884. She was graduated from Elkhart High
School in Elkhart, Indiana and from the University of Chicago. While doing further study at Teachers College, Columbia University, she served as assistant in the Department of Household Arts. Later she was associate professor of home economics at the behest of Mr. Burr Blackburn; she began as Home Economics Editor. When the
Department of Consumer Education was formally established in 1932, she became Editor-in-Chief, handling the many publications and films on money management produced by the department. Later, she was appointed Associate Director, serving under Mr. Blackburn. Meanwhile, the staff of the department was augmented by several talented writers and home economists, among them Leone Ann Heuer, a former student of Miss Dodge's at the University of Wisconsin, who was to succeed her and ultimately become director of what is now known as the Money Management Institute. Bernice Dodge retired from HFC in 1948, after which she moved to Colorado Springs into a home of her own. She had been active during her retirement years in the American Association of University Women, the Colorado Springs
Music Club and the Grace Episcopal Church.

The contributions made by Miss Dodge to the Corporation were singular and valuable - they are an integral part of Household's history. The enormous public and scholastic acceptance of the Money Management booklets has been due in large part to the integrity and quality she built into the earliest prototypes. We salute a gallant and well-liked lady.

[NI00847] He was secretary of the New York Export and Import County, ; Resided in
Elmhurst, New York

[NI00856] JIM DODGE OF NEW ZEALAND

What do Yukon bears and villagers at Glenorchy at the southern end of Lake Wakatipu have in common? A few of the former - and many of the latter - have encountered Jim Dodge.

At the age of 84, Dodge calls himself a prospector. He is a retired geologist-mining engineer who goes from one extreme of the world to the other - Yukon Territory in Canada in the northern summer, and in the southern summer, Glenorchy, 45 winding kilometers from Queenstown.

Dodge graduated as a mining engineer at the Missouri School of Mines in 1941 and started work on an Alaskan gold mine. Two years later, while working in Butte, Montana, he added geology to his repertoire, going on to gain his Masters degree at Stanford University and advancing his academic pursuits in Germany. Today, despite the passing decades, Dodge is still fluent in a language he rarely gets a chance to use.

His took in restoration work in Hiroshima at the end of World War II, working in Japan for three years with the American forces, then back on the mining trail working in the then Northern Rhodesia, Algeria and Mauritania.

Jim Dodge has found imporrtant barites, zink and gold properties and in the process he has had too confront wildlife of which he and other prospectors are wary -- bears.

In 2001 he was awarded Prospector of the Year by the Yukon Prospector's Association.

[NI00862] A son of Frederick and Catherine O'Connor Dodge.
On June 12, 1936 he married the former Charlotte Walsh.
Surviving Mr. Dodge besides his wife, are four daughters, Mrs. Jerome (Lois) Deuser, Sacramento, CA, Mrs. Richard (Constance)Smithgall, Clifton Springs, NY, Ms. Gail Dodge of Utica, Mrs. Kenneth (Catherine) Lance, Manchester, CT; three sons, Frederick J.,III of Utica, Howard M. of New Hartford, Richard M. of Utica; eight sisters, Beatrice Dodge, Cecelia Aliasso, Mary Bogan, Ruth Worden, Madeline Gregory, Carol Weiss, Florence Brooks, Betty Edwards; three brothers, Thomas, Marshall, Howard; 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild, Mr. Dodge was predeceased by two brothers, Joseph and William; also one sister, Doris. There are many nieces, nephews and cousins.

[NI00864] Utica Observer-Dispatch March 1983
Joseph P. Dodge, 72 of Utica died March 2, 1983 after a long illness. He was born Novermber 26, 1910 the son of Frederick and Catherine O'Conner Dodge and has resided here all his life. Surviving are a daughter and a son-in-law. Dolores and William Olivier; a son and daughter-in-law Donald and Margaret Dodge; nine sisters, Miss Beatrice Dodge, Mrs Louis Worden, Mrs. John (Mary) Bogan, Miss Doris Dodge, Mrs. Dennis (Madeline) Gregory, Mrs. William (Carol) Weisse, Mrs. Arthur (Florence) Brooks and Mrs. Robert (Betty Jane) Edwards; four brothers, Thomas, Marshall, Frederick and Howard; and one grandson. all of Utica. Interment in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Whitesboro.

[NI00867] living 2006 in Colorado., Springs

[NI00874] His name is changed to Arthur White in the 1920 US Census in Grenada, Powers County, Colorado

[NI00877] Sanford W. Dix
1923 - 2009 WHITINGHAM, VT Sanford W. Dix, 85, a lifelong resident of Whitingham, died early Thursday morning, Jan. 22, 2009, at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center in Bennington after a long battle with cancer. Sanford was born in Whitingham, Vt., on April 14, 1923, son of David and Carrie Pitcher Dix. He received his education in Whitingham schools, graduating from Whitingham High
School. Upon graduation Sanford enlisted in the Navy where he served his tour of duty in the Pacific during World War II. After being honorably discharged from the Navy Sanford went to work as a logger, then became a painter for the
Painters Union in Pittsfield, Mass. Sanford loved hunting and fishing. He enjoyed watching and feeding birds, which was evident by the many bird feeders around his home. He enjoyed his vegetable gardens, being with his Jack Russell
Terrier, Gidget, watching horesepulls and cherished time spent with his family. Sanford was a 63 year member of the American Legion, Cecil A. Davis Post 17 in Whitingham, the Whitingham Rod and Gun Club, the Painters Union, and was a
former Whitingham Town Selectman. Sanford leaves his wife of 61 years, the former Helen Dodge, of Whitingham, whom he married June 11, 1947, in Whitingham, his daughters, June Cromack-Tool, and her husband Robert Tool, of Readsboro, Susan Sullivan, and her husband Richard, of Franconia, N.H., and Linda Tarinelli, and her husband Charles, of Belgrade, Mo., his very special brother-in-law Ralph Dodge of Florida, Mass., his grandchildren, Carrie and Philip Cromack, Kathleen and Elizabeth Sullivan and Haley Tarinelli, his great grandchildren, Nicholas Rubino and Branden Rice and many nieces, nephews and cousins. FUNERAL NOTICE: Services for Sanford will be held Tuesday morning, Jan. 27, 2009 at 11 a.m. at the Community Church of Whitingham. The Rev. John Brigham will conduct the service. Interment will be held later in the spring in the
family lot in Sadawga Cemetery in Whitingham. Visiting hours will be held Monday evening, Jan. 26, 2009, from 6 to 8 p.m. at COVEY & ALLEN FUNERAL HOME 44 East
Main Street Wilmington, VT, when the family will be in attendance.

[NI00887] Dailey Review, Towanda, PA. Tues Apr 28, 1970

Bertha Dodge, 82 of RD 3 Bridge Street, Towanda died at the Bradford County home Monday morning having been failing in heealtth for some time.

She was Jan 18 1888 the daaughter off the late Harry and Decae Felton McCarroll of Lopez and attended Lopez school.

She is survived by her husband Bryant; a daughter, Doris (Dodge) Bennett of Glendora
California; 2 sons Harold of Towanda & Raymond of Mountain Lake; two sisters Mrs Esther McNeal of Wyalusing and Steklla Eberling of Sayre; Two brothers, Victor McCarroll of Colley and Charles McCaroll of Sayre; 25 grandchildren , several great grandchildren, nieces and nrphews.

[NI00891] Veteran of the US Navy serving in WW II.

HAROLD WALLACE DODGE, 89, of Towanda RR # died on Saturday evening, Jan. 15, 2005, at Memorial Hospital of Towanda. He was born on June 26, 1915, in Hollenback, Bradford County, a son of the late Bryant and Bertha McCarrol Dodge. Harold was a veteran of the U.S. Navy, having served during world War. II. He was a lifetime resident of Bradford County. In his spare time he enjoyed hunting, fishing and camping. He was a member of the V.F.W. in Towanda; American Legion Post No. 42 of Towanda; Bridge Street Hill Rod & Gun Club of Towanda; and Facet Enterprises U.A.W. of Elmira, N.Y. Prior to his retirement in 1978, he had been employed for 30 years at Facet Enterprises. He leaves surviving his wife, Eunice M. (Douglas) Dodge, at home: children, Ronald E. and Dorothy Dodge of Towanda; step-sons, Donald W. and Bonnie Smith of Lovelton, James E. and Peggy Smith of Sugar Run, and Harold D. and Patti Smith of Levittown; stepdaughters, Regina E. and Charles Long of Laceyville, Helen R. Smith of Nicholson, Pa., Carol J. Davis of Meshoppen, Donna M. and John Robinson of Meshoppen, Martha K. and Ira Robinson of Meshoppen, and Bonnie L. and Albert Vitonovetz of Laceyville; sister, Doris Jean Bennett of Florida; and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Raymond Dodge of Wyalusing; a sister, Ethel Root of Sayre; a stepson, Robert B. Smith; and a son, Reginald (Jack) Rowe. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2005, in the McHenry funeral Home, 106 Church St., Wyalusing, with the Rev. Richard Womer, pastor, officiating. Interment will follow in Bradford County Memorial Park, Luthers Mills. Full graveside military honors will be accorded by American Legion Post No. 42 of Towanda. Friends and family are invited to call on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2005 at McHenry Funeral Home in Wyalusing, from 10 a.m. until the time of the funeral. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the Towanda Ambulance Association in Mr. dodge’s memory. –Towanda Daily Star.

[NI00892] RAYMOND DANIEL. DODGE, 71 of Park Place, Wyalusing, formerly of Bridge Street Hill, Towanda RD 3 died Sunday morning July 9, 1989 at the Skilled Nursing Unit of Memorial Hospital following a courageous battle with cancer. Born July 23, 1917 in Sugar Rn, he was the son of the late Bryant and Bertha McCarroll Dodge. Raymond was well known for his story telling and his wonderful sense of humor. He will be missed very much by his family and many friends. Raymond spent his life in farming and working at sawmills. He loved nature and hunting. Surviving is his wife of 48 years, Bernice: four sons: Edward and Donald Dodge of Towanda, Bryan Dodge of Canton and Raymond Dodge Jr. of Wysox; four daughters: Mrs. Ernest (Karen) Schill of Burlington, Mrs. Herbert (Phyllis) Jennings of Sulphur Springs, Tex., Connie Dodge of Monroeton and Mrs. Keith (Kala) Swain of Wyalusing. Another daughter, Betty Joslyn predeceased him in 1976. Also surviving are 25 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren; a brother, Harold Dodge of Bridge Street Hill, Towanda RD 3; a sister, Mrs. Donald (Doris Jean) Bennett of Port Richie, FL; numerous nieces and nephews. A sister, Ethel Root predeceased him in 1967. A funeral and committal service will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home, 217 York Ave., Towanda with the Rev. Thomas A. Geiger, pastor of the Assembly of God Church officiating. Interment will be in Bradford County Memorial Park, Luthers Mills. The family will receive friends this evening from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home. Friends who wish may direct memorials to the American Cancer Society, 515 S. Main St., Athens, PA in Mr. Dodge’s memory. –Towanda Daily Review

[NI00894] MYRON WILSON ‘BILL’ PROOF of Wyalusing, Pa. passed away suddenly (Aug. 12, 1997) at his home at the age of 69. Bill was born on November 28, 1927 in Homets Ferry, Wyalusing Twp., the son of George and Dorothy Dodge Proof. He was a 1945 graduate of Wyalusing Valley High School and a US Army veteran serving during WWII During his life he worked in Wyalusing ACME Market for many years had had retired from the Cumberland Valley School District, after that he returned to the Wyalusing area. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Dodge Proof; a sister, Mrs. Evelyn Kerschner of Endicott, N.Y.; two brothers, Mr. Donald Proof of Springville, Pa. and Mr. Robert Proof of Wyalusing, Pa. and several nieces and nephews. Bill was predeceased by his father, George Proof on Feb. 25, 1992

[NI00918] Elinor (Young) Dodge, 92 of Manchester, beloved wife of Elliot B. Dodge Sr. and mother of the late Stephen M. Dodge, passed away peacefully on Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012, at home with her family at her side.

Elinor was born on Dec. 1, 1919, in Manchester, daughter of the late Marshall and Annie (Russell) Young and was a lifelong resident. She graduated from Manchester High School Class of 1938A and was a lifelong member of South United Methodist Church. After raising her family, Elinor retired as branch manager from the former Savings Bank of Manchester, where she worked for more than 20 years.

In addition to her husband, with whom she would have celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary on Nov. 7, 2012, Mrs. Dodge is survived by a son, Elliot B. Dodge Jr., and his wife, Lynn, of Marlborough; a daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Dodge of Vernon; a sister, Barbara King of Manchester; four grandchildren, Cathleen Dodge, Daniel Dodge, Kori Anniballi and husband, Robert, and Matthew Dodge; two great-grandsons, Edward and Michael Anniballi; and several nieces and nephews.

Her family would like to thank all the nurses and caregivers who helped her over the past few months.

Family services with burial in East Cemetery, Manchester, will be private. There are no calling hours.

[NI00923] Killed by car Accident near Crawfordsville indiana. 24 years, 5 months,
14 days.

[NI00945] Note Paul Bryron Wilson was adopted Paul Byron Geist.

[NI00956] Donald Wesley Wilson was adopted Donald Wesley Geist.

[NI00964] DODGE. Ernest H. Dodge, 82, of School Street, Avon, husband of Dorothy (Southey) Dodge died Wednesday, (September 17, 1997) at Care Manor in Farmington. He was born May 7, 1915 in Hartford, son of the late Harry and Alice (Vien) Dodge and had lived in Avon most of his life. Mr. Dodge was employed as an Quality Control Inspector at Hamilton Standard in Windsor Locks for 17 years prior to his retirement in 1980. He was a member and past master of the Village Masonic Lodge No. 29 AF & AM in Collinsville and the Schiller Lodge Order of Das Hermann Schon. Besides his wife he is survived by a son Ernest H. Dodge, Jr., of Avon and many nieces and nephews. Private graveside funeral service and burial will be in Village Cemetery, Collinsville wi th the Rev. Robert A. MacDonald officiating. There are no calling hours. Vincent Funeral Home, 120 Albany Turnpike, Canton has charge of arrangements. Memorial donations may be made to the Parkinson Disease Assoc. Ct. Chapter, 27 Allendale Dr. North H aven 06473 or to the Memorial United Methodist Church Memorial Fund, 867 West Avon Road, Avon 06001.

[NI00970] Died in infantcy.

[NI00972] MA Death Index
MA Death Index

[NI00973] year from tombstone
year from tombstone

[NI00980] Died of diptheria.

[NI00981] He served in thed US Air Force for 28 years in various locations worldwide.

[NI00982] Unmarried.

[NI00986] Per census records she immigrated to the US in 1907.

[NI00987] Herman S. Dodge, age 91, passed away peacefully Monday, (Jan. 28, 2013) after a brief illness. A long time resident of South Windsor, CT, Herman was born April 16, 1921 in Hartford, CT to Mildred Vein Dodge and H. Stuart Dodge. He was predeceased by his beloved wife of 54 years Lorraine Ann (Leavitt) Dodge who died in June of 1996. He was a 1939 graduate of Bulkely High School. In World War II he was with the US Navy in the South Pacific. When he was discharged in 1946 he began a career with the Southern NE Telephone Company that lasted for 36 years. He was a long time golfer and member of the Telephone Pioneers Club. He lived in East Hartford and Cape Cod returning to South Windsor in 1986. He is survived by a daughter Kathleen Montalbano and her husband Ben, a son Gary Dodge and his wife Tish, four granddaughters Gina, Andrea, Ingrid and Cara, great-grandchildren, five nephews, a niece Lynda Rogers and a "granddaughter" Katlyn Rogers. There will be a funeral service Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013 at 11 a.m. at the Rose Hill Funeral Home, 580 Elm St. Rocky Hill Ct. Calling hours are Monday, Feb. 4th from 6-8 p.m. For those who wish, the family suggests in lieu of flowers, memorial donations should be made to the charity of ones choice.

[NI00988] Death records say: child of widow Dodge.

[NI00989] Aged 14 years 4 months, 22 days

[NI00994] Unmarried.

[NI00995] MA Death Index
MA Death Index

[NI01001] Aged 54 years, 5 months, 19 days.

Portrait and Biographical Album of Iona and Montcalm Counties, Michigan, 1891


Peleg S. Dodge


The Stanton Clipper of which Mr. Dodge is proprietor and editor, has no superior in the towns of the State. It was established by our subject in 1879, and has grown in power and in worth from year to year. Its subscription list is now over eleven hundred, which gives it a circulation beyond the limits of Montcalm County, so that its influence is felt in many localities. Mr. Dodge possesses a logical mind, and his former life strengthened his habits of thought and his ability to express his ideas in such a way as to move others, so that his editorial quill wields a power beyond that of many editors.


Mr. Dodge was born in the Hoosier State in 1848, being a son of Charles and Melissa (Shaw) Dodge. His mother died when he was in his second year and he was bereft of his father when but six years old. They were natives respectively of New England and Bucks County, Pa., and the father was a blacksmith, and later a farmer. Although he had scarcely entered his teens when the Civil War began, young Dodge went into the army as a drummer in the Twentieth Ohio Infantry, Company B. After serving several months he was discharged in 1864. In June 1864 he re-enlisted as a drummer in Company A, One Hundred and Seventy-fourth Ohio Infantry, but he was mustered in as a private, and fought with the other boys in blue until the close of the war, receiving his discharge the last of July 1865. When his marital duties were over he took up the matter of educating himself, and during the few years following his discharge was a student in the University of Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind., Hillsdale (Mich.) College and the State University at Ann Arbor. He began reading law at Elkhart, Ind., in 1868, was admitted to the bar at Goshen, Ind., in 1869, and in 1872 received a diploma form the Department of Law at Ann Arbor, all expenses of his education being met by money saved from his army service and earned from time to time afterward.


Mr. Dodge came to Stanton that year, and gave his attention to his profession until 1879, when he founded the Clipper. He possesses an unusual amount of mechanical ingenuity, and it was under his personal supervision that the machinery for the Clipper office was built and set up. He is an inventor of printing presses, and has taken out several valuable patents on important improvements the manufacture of which he has recently commenced. In politics Mr. Dodge is a sound Democrat, and his paper gives voice to his opinions, and the theories and principles of the party.


In his home life Mr. Dodge is happily situated, having an intelligent and well-bred wife and a bright young daughter just advancing into maidenhood. Mrs. Dodge was formerly a resident of Three Rivers, St. Joseph County, and bore the maiden name of Helen J. Throp. She entered into the marriage relation August 6, 1873. The daughter, Chella R., was born November 12, 1876.

[NI01010] Norman Maxudian Dodge died February 14, 2015. He was 94 years old and preceded in death by his wife of 42 years, Joanna Franklin Dodge, his father, Laurence Shepard Dodge, and his mother, Vera Houssepian Dodge. Mr. Dodge was born in Charolotte, Michigan, but moved to France with his mother as an infant. Following his mother's death, Norman returned to America where he was reared by his father. Norman attended Michigan State College and later obtained his bachelors and masters degrees from Stanford University in International Diplomacy. Mr. Dodge was a scholar, historian, and avid stamp collector. But above all he was a kind and gentle soul devoted to the care of his wife. Mr. Dodge was a steadfast and loyal husband and always the consummate gentleman. Mr. Dodge served his country in the 1st Cavalry Division in the Asiatic Pacific Theater in WWII and saw the liberation of the Philippines. He went on to have a 36-year career at Ft. Bliss with the federal government. Mr. Dodge was a member of First Baptist Church, Mesilla Valley Stamp Club and the El Paso French Club. He will be dearly missed by his step-daughters Beth Weiser, Amy Richardson Stonelake and Margaret McCollum, and especially by his loving and devoted caregivers Maria Valadez, Melissa Valadez and Vanessa Monsivais who made his last years a peaceful and happy time for us all. A graveside memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, April 7, at Ft. Bliss Memorial Cemetery. Visitation for family and friends will be at Harding, Orr and McDaniel Funeral Home at 12:30 p.m. preceding the service -

[NI01025] Born as Paul Arthur Dpdge Jr.Changed his name in James Nils Dodge, Legaly.

[NI01033] Aged 45 years 10 months 23 days

[NI01079] Middle name of Thomas was stated on death certificate.

[NI01091] Unmarried.

[NI01092] She was widowed at time Josiah Married her so Wadley is her Married name.

[NI01096] She was a founder of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the wife of Confederate General Roger A. Pryor.

[NI01104] Note: Larue County now but this county was formed about 1843. Charles M. Dodge, Adel, Iowa; Enlisted: 23 Aug 1861 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 2nd Independent Battery, Iowa Light Artillery

Evening Nonpareil – Council Bluffs, Iowa – Wednesday, March 27, 1912

Civil War Veteran Dead

Griswold, Ia., March 27 -

Yesterday morning at 2 o’clock, Dr. Charles M. Dodge passed away at the age of 85 years.
Before the war he practiced at several different locations in Illinois and Iowa. When the Civil War broke out he enlisted as Sergeant of the Second Battery of the Fourth Iowa Regiment under Grenville M. Dodge.
After the war he once more practiced at several different locations in Iowa. Several years ago he went to California hoping to better his health, which had been falling rapidly. He returned to Griswold about a year ago, and has gradually grown weaker until his death yesterday.



The funeral will be held Friday morning at 10 o’clock.

[NI01114] He enlisted in the US Army on 28 July 1942 in Binghampton, Broome County, New York and was killed while in the service.

[NI01130] GRISWOLD AMERICAN, Griswold, Cass County, Iowa, Thursday, March 22, 1923, Vol. XLIII, No. 12, Front Page, Column 4
REAL PIONEER DIED FRIDAY
Mrs. Nancy Jane Dodge died at the home of her son, Ira, at Buffville, Kansas. Word was received in Griswold, Friday conveying the news of the death of Mrs. N. J. Dodge, for over forty years a resident of Griswold, but who, for the past couple of years has been making her home with her son, Ira and family at Buffville, Kansas.
Mrs. Dodge, while in failing health for the past year, retained her faculties to the end and it was her chief delight to visit during her wakeful hours with her granddaughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Babcock, who several months ago went to Buffville, Kansas to minister to her. Her last illness was of but short duration. She was taken ill with an attack of heart trouble and a physician was called who ministered to her. When he left she was resting easily and soon afterward went to sleep. The granddaughter noticed that she was breathing very lightly and soon she stopped breathing, death came to her as she slept.
Nancy Jane Rose, daughter of James and Elizabeth Rose, was born at Wilmington, Ohio, July 5, 1834, and died March 16th, 1923, aged 88 years, 8 months, and 4 days. When a child, her parents moved to Illinois. They resided at Danville, Galesburg, and later at Prairie City. It was there in the year 1854 that she was united in marriage to Dr. C. M. Dodge. To this union seven children were born. Five of these have passed on along with the father, who died in Griswold some ten years ago. The children are: Julius M., of Lawton, Oklahoma; Mrs. Elizabeth Andrews, deceased; Mrs. Harriet Woodruff, deceased; George Orion, deceased; Marie Emma, deceased; Charles Ira of Buffville, Kansas, and Catherine May, deceased.
About the year 1860 the family moved to Dallas county, Iowa, locating at Adel and later at Van Meter. At the outbreak of the Civil war the father enlisted as surgeon and served during the full time of the war. The little family had a hard time during these days. The mother labored hard to keep the children supplied with the necessities of life. Besides operating a millinery store she took pictures, using the old methods then in vogue and to this day are to be found specimens of the pictures she took.
Early in the year 1880 Mrs. Dodge came to Griswold and engaged in the millinery business. She continued this for forty-two years continuously, only giving up the work when her health became such that she was unable to look after the business. Then she went to Kansas and made her home with her son, Ira.
In her young days, she united with the Church of Christ and was an active member for years. When old age began to creep upon her she was not able to walk to the church and so she attended the Union church close by her home. She was also a member of the Ladies Circle of the G. A. R. and worked with the members in the many activities of that organization. Her's has been an active life.
She worked hard to assist her family and during the many years she resided in Griswold she met with the hardships of the early settlers. Her business was destroyed by fire in the year 1891, but she gathered together the few things that were left and in a short time was again in business in a new location. She had many friends who will mourn her death.
Besides the two sons, Julius and Ira, she leaves nine grandchildren and several great grandchildren, besides one brother, James Rose of Prairie City, Illinois, and many friends.
Her remains were brought to Griswold Tuesday afternoon and taken to the Union church. Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock, being conducted by the Rev. Chas. Mayne. The singing was by a male quartet and after the services the remains were taken to the Flint cemetery and laid away by the side of her husband and other members of the family who had passed on before.

[NI01139] 89, of Bruceton Mills, WV, died Friday, September 22, 2006, at the home of her daughter in Bowie, MD. The daughter of the late Joseph C. and Pearl Groves Feather, she was born August 31, 1917, in Cuzzart, WV.
She was a member of the Sugar Valley United Methodist Church.
Ruby is survived by a daughter and her spouse, Carolyn and Joseph Eberhard of Bowie, MD; a brother and his spouse, Glen and Jean Feather of Cuzzart; two grandchildren: Kimberly Jones of Waldorf, MD, and Joseph Eberhard, Jr. of Bowie, MD; eight great-grandchildren, and 1 great-great grandchild.
She was preceded in death by her husband, William (Bill) Dodge, November 12, 2000, and two brothers, Samuel and Otis Feather.

[NI01154] No record of J. O. ANDREWS or his wife dying or being buried in Sisseton,
SD based on a research in September 1997.

[NI01159] 1860 US Census - Cohoes, Albany County, New York
1870 US Census - Granville, Washingon County, New York
1880 US Census - Granville, Washington County, New York

[NI01179] State Death Certificates

George DODGE died 2 Jul 1910 in Boone County, IA Certificate
No. 01634

[NI01218] Obituary, Chester H. Dodge, Jr. 1932-2008 SOUTHAMPTON, MA - Chester H. Dodge, Jr. died Sunday, March 23, 2008 surround-ed by his family in his home. Born in Pittsfield, May 21, 1932, he was the son of the late Chester H. and J. Marie (Smith) Dodge, Sr. Chester grew up in Peru, MA where he attended local schools. He graduated from the former Dalton High School in 1949 and received his BS in Civil Engineering from Northeastern University in 1955 and was a Registered Professional Engineer. He worked in the area of dam construction and design and began his 32 year career with the Army Corps of Engineers. He then worked for the US Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service from which he retired in 1988. He was named the Engineer of the Year for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1987 and also in 1987 he was given a Certificate of Merit by the USDA for his work on flood damage. Chester was also a recipient of the American Legions Citizen of the Year in Southampton in 1980. Chester was a Life Member of the Globe Lodge of Masons, Hinsdale, MA; had been active in Southampton Little League and Boy Scouts; and had also been a member of the Southampton Lions Club. He loved the outdoors, particularly his land in Peru. He enjoyed fishing and hunting. He also enjoyed working with his lumber and sawmill operations as well as the Christmas Tree farm he had run for years. Chester is survived by his wife of 51 years, Audrey J. (Mowry) Dodge; his children, Scott Dodge of East Hampton, CT, Heather and her husband Col. Robert Gaudette of Newark, OH and Stephen and his wife Cheryl Dodge of Peru; and his four grandchildren, Candice and Jared Dodge and Robin and Rory Gaudette. A graveside service will be held at a time to be announced later this spring in the Ringville Cemetery, Worthington. .

[NI01230] Josiah was buried in a cem. 2 miles E of Berwick Illinois in Warren County,
at 66 years.Died Young, Unmarried.

[NI01231] Marriage Source: 763. Married 1 Jan 1879 at Wilmot Springs, by licence, by Rev. William E. HALL, Baptist at Melvern Square, Joseph A. MUMFORD, aged 32, bachelor, mill wright, resident of Avondale, born in Woodville, son of Charles D. and Elizabeth MUMFORD, carpenter, AND, Ella M. DODGE, aged 26, spinster, resident of and born in Wilmot Springs, daughter of John and Harriet DODGE, farmer. (Annapolis County Marriage Register 1879, page 108, no. 3) Joseph Alexander MUMFORD. Both Avondale and Woodville are in Kings Co. Bond dated 1 Jan 1879, cosigner: J. Albert DODGE of Spa Springs, Wilmot. (Annapolis County Marriage Bonds and Licences 1879, no. 3) Married 1 Jan 1879 by Rev. Wm. E. HALL, J.A. MUMFORD of Avondale, Hants County, AND, Ella M. DODGE, only daughter of Harriet and John DODGE, Esquire of Wilmot Springs. (The Christian Messenger, 8 Jan 1879) Married 1 Jan 1879, by Rev. Wm. E. HALL, Baptist, J.A. MUNFORD of Avondale, Hants County, AND, Miss Ella M. DODGE of Wilmot Springs. (Record Book of Rev. William Edward HALL, NSARM Film 10274)

[NI01254] He settled in Port Washington (then called Cows Bay) abt 1718 with hisbrother Tristram & and cousins Samuel & Jeremiah. Thomas built a housethat is still standing. About 1720 Cows bay changed the name to Port Washington after the area was visited by George Washington.

[NI01268] No Children..

[NI01298] He began his career in 1881 as a bookeeper in the employ of Winstone
Brothwers and was assigned to their railway construction work in
Wisconsin, Dakota, and Montana.. Three years later he was transferred to
the main office of the firm at Minneapolis. In 1828 he gave to the City
of Waupan, Wisconsin to be used as a park the land on which his boyhood
home stood. A boulder placed in the city park near its center bears a
bronze plate on which the insccription "Dodge Park." "From 1856 to 1865
te home of Revillo Chapman Dodge & Nancy Carrington Dodge: birthplace of
their sonn, who as a memorial to them dedicates it to public use 1928"

[NI01309] No Children.

The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 111
page 99

Mrs. Mattie Chapman Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 110314
Born in Burlington, N. Y.
Wife of L. L. Dodge.
Descendant of Abiel Cook, as follows:
1. Dorr Chapman (1851-83) m. 1873 Sarah Thompson (1854-97).
2. Ellis Thompson (b. 1824) m. 1853 Elzama Kelsey (1829-94).
3. Silas Kelsey (1801-70) m. 1821 Sally Cook (1801-68).
4. Abiel Cook m. Margaret Crego (1774-1825).
Abiel Cook (1763-1849) served as private, 1778-81, under Captains Barnes, Walker and Smith, Colonels Wessenfels, Sheldon and Waterbury, Connecticut troops. He applied for a pension, 1832, from Otsego County, N. Y., and his claim was allowed. He was born in New Fairfield, Conn.; died in Edmeston, N. Y.
Also No. 84102.

[NI01326] Tombstone says 1864-1931

[NI01351] SSDI
SSDI

[NI01352] Tombstone says 1887-1966

THE BOONE NEWS-REPUBLICAN, Boone, Iowa, Monday Evening, July 11, 1966,
Vol. LXXVIII, No. 161 & Vol. LVV, No 32, Page 2, Column 3
LOCAL DEATHS
FRED DODGE DIES JULY 9
Fred DODGE, 79, of 1528 Greene street, died Saturday at the Boone
County Hospital. He was a retired Chicago and North Western Railroad
switchman.
Survivors include his widow, Minnie; a son, Kenneth of Lincoln,
Neb.; a daughter, Mrs. Avis LONG of Burlington, Iowa; 6 grandchildren and
7 great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Tuesday, July 12 at 1 p.m. at the
Schroeder Funeral Home with Rev. J. Stanley SCHMIDT officiating. Burial
will be at the Linwood Park Cemetery.
The casket will be closed during and after the services.


THE BOONE NEWS-REPUBLICAN, Boone, Iowa, Thursday Evening, August 4, 1966,
Vol. LXXVIII, No. 182 and Vol. LVV, No. 253, Page 9, Column 7
OBITUARY
GEORGE FREDERICK DODGE
Funeral services for George Frederick DODGE were held at the
Schroeder Funeral Home, Boone, Iowa, Tuesday, July 12, 1966 with the Rev.
J. Stanley SCHMIDT, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in charge.
Pallbearers were Emmett ROE, John PAGE, Lyle MATTSON, Howard HUGHES,
Scott BOYD, and Ralph WRIGHT, members of the I.O.O.F. In charge of
flowers were Mrs. Dick NORTON and Mrs. Arthur HALL.
Burial was at the Linwood Park Cemetery.
George Frederick DODGE, son of George Oren and Rose L. DODGE was
born in Davenport, Iowa, March 29, 1887 and died at Boone, Iowa, July 9,
1966 at the age of 79 years, 3 months, and 10 days.
He was united in marriage to Minnie VAN DELDEN at Clinton, Iowa,
Dec. 23, 1909 and to this union two children were born.
Mr. DODGE resided in Davenport until 1892 and then moved to Boone,
Iowa, where he lived the remainder of his life. He was a switchman for
the Chicago and North Western Railroad.
He had been a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen for 55
years, and was also a member of the I.O.O.F. No. 492.
Mr. DODGE's hobby was gardening.
Survivors include his widow, Minnie; a son, Kenneth F. DODGE; a
daughter, Avis I. LONG, 6 grandchildren and 7 great-grandchildren.

[NI01377] THE BOONE NEWS-REPUBLICAN, Boone, Iowa, Friday Evening, November 8, 1974,
Vol. 109, No. 267, Page 2, Column 6
DEATHS
MINNIE DODGE
Minnie DODGE, 86, of Danville, died in Danville on Thursday,
November 7. She was born December 13, 1887 in Lyons, the daughter of
John and Frances (BAKER) VAN DELDEN.
Surviving are one son, Kenneth of Lincoln, Nebraska; one daughter
Mrs. Avis LONG of Burlington; six grandchildren and fourteen great
grandchildren.
She married Fred DODGE in 1909, and he preceded her in death on July
12, 1966.
Funeral services will be held Thursday, November 12 at 10 a.m. at
the Schroeder Funeral Home with Reverend Loren PARMON of the 1st
Presbyterian Church officiating. Burial will be in the Linwood Park
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Schroeder Funeral Home on Monday from 7 to 9
p.m.

[NI01386] ,

[NI01388] Never Married

[NI01390] Never Married

[NI01391] & Elizabeth Unknown

[NI01392] WWI Draft Registration
Guy Edwin Dodge
age 26
resides: Clio, Michigan
born 23 Sep 1892 at Thetford Twp.
occupation: farming
registered 05 Jun 1917 at Thetford, Genesee, Michigan.

[NI01393] I

[NI01394] Had 4 children.

[NI01396] Flint Journal, The (MI) - October 29, 1998
Deceased Name: DODGE
DODGE, Erwin G. - Age 81 of Mt. Morris died Tuesday, October 27, 1998 at McLaren Regional Medical Center. Family will receive friends and relatives at 1 PM, followed by a memorial service at 3 PM Friday, October 30, 1998 at Thetford United Methodist Church, 11394 N. Center Rd. in Clio, Rev. Mac Green officiating. In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to the family or the Thetford United Methodist Church Memorial Fund. Ernie was born on May 30, 1917 to Guy and Susie (Richards) Dodge, and lived in Thetford Township all his life where he farmed the Dodge Homestead for over 50 years. Ernie was a machinist at Buick and UAW Local 599 member for 30 years, life member of Mt. Morris Masonic Lodge Chapter 535, F&AM, and a member of the Thetford United Methodist Church. Ernie is survived by his devoted wife of 61 years Marguerite (Russell) of Mt. Morris; son, Richard and wife Lyn of Clio, Robert and wife Gale of Clio; daughter, Patti Boice and husband Tom of Nixa, Missouri; sister, Una Heidebreicht and husband Lloyd of Mt. Morris, Harriet Donovan and husband Ken of Genesee; sister-in-law, Dorothy Fortier and husband Asa of Mt. Morris, Florence Duncan of California. He was preceded in death by both his parents, son David and sister Elizabeth (Noe) and Dorothy (Kippe). Ernie dearly loved his grandchildren, Jason and David Dodge; Jennifer and Andrew Dodge, Bradley and Lucas Smith; Scott, Dylan and MK Kala Boice; and many nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends and neighbors.

[NI01401] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 116
page 160

Mrs. Alice M. Hills Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 115510
Born in Dallas County, Iowa.
Descendant of Reuben Hills, as follows:
1. George S. Hills (1823-1907) m. 1846 Minerva Hills (1829-1909).
2. Josiah Hills (1788-1875) m. 1815 Mehitable Peabody (1793-1868).
3. Reuben Hills m. 1778 Sarah Currier (1759-1835).
Reuben Hills (1752-1828) was engaged in the Battle of Bunker Hill in Capt. Hezekiah Hutchin's company, Col. James Reed's regiment. He was born in Chester, N. H.; died in Union, Maine.
Also No. 95904.

[NI01404] Flint Journal, The (MI) - March 6, 2003
Deceased Name: DODGE
DODGE, Marguerite L.- Much beloved mother, grandmother, sister, aunt and friend, died March 4, 2003 at Community Home Health and Hospice. Family will receive friends and relatives at 10:00 am followed by a memorial service Saturday March 8, 2003 at 11:00 am at the Thetford United Methodist Church, 11394 N. Center Road in Clio. Rev. Mac Green officiating. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Thetford United Methodist Church or Community Home Health and Hospice of Flint. Marguerite was born May 5, 1918 to Fred and Eulalia (Oviatt) Russell and lived in Thetford Township all of her adult life where she was a homemaker and helped farm the Dodge homestead for nearly 50 years with her husband Erwin. Marguerite was a life member of the Order of the Eastern Star #474 and the Thetford United Methodist Church. She worked as a school aide and bus driver for Mt. Morris Schools, was honored for serving on the school election board for 50 years and worked on Thetford Township elections for nearly as many years. Marguerite was preceded in death by her devoted husband of 61 years, Erwin Guy Dodge; both her parents, and infant son, David. She will be missed by son, Richard and wife Lyn of Clio, son Robert and wife Gale of Clio; daughter, Patti Dodge of California; her grandchildren, Jason Dodge and Michael Montgomery, David Dodge and Shannon, Jordan, Jennifer and Mike Bickford, Andrew and Brynel Dodge, and Bradley and Lucas Smith, whom she dearly loved; sister, Dorothy Fortier and husband Asa of Clio; sister, Florence Duncan of Califonia, and sisters and brothers-in-law, Una and Lloyd Heidebreicht and Harriet and Ken Donovan; special cousin, Myra Thomas; many nieces, nephews, cousins and dear friends, especially Diane, Tina, Pam and Wilma.

[NI01405] Henry Schrader & Elizabeth Unknown

[NI01425] See census notes for Charles M. DODGE.

[NI01436] Her Father was born in Salem England. ca. 1710. Her first name may be
spelled Anne or Anna.

[NI01455] buried in Plot: Section: 39 Plot: 153 Grave: 1

[NI01458] M. Frank Dodge, 88, of Roanoke, and formerly of Morris Plains, N.J., went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, June 19, 2013.

Frank's military service was from 1943 to 1947. His church membership was held at the Grandin Court Baptist Church. He served in the European Theater of Operations Mediterranean, was a Mason of the Cincinnati Lodge #3 in New Jersey for over 55 years, and was also a member of the Shrine.

Preceding him in death were his parents, George Johnson Dodge and Anna May (Storms) Dodge; wife of 62 years, Rosemary (Rose) Dodge; sister, Ida M. Bishoff; brothers, Horace L. Dodge, Eugene E. Dodge Sr., Henry K. Dodge, George Russell Dodge, and Philip L. Dodge Sr.; and grandson, Duane M. Perdue.

His surviving family includes his children, Deborah (Dee) Perdue and husband, Quince, Donald A. Dodge Sr. and wife, Cathy, David W. Dodge and wife, Mia, and Dawn D. Redden and husband, Dalton; 10 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends on Friday, June 21, 2013, from 6 to 8 p.m. in the John M. Oakey & Son Chapel in Salem. A Funeral Service will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, June 22, 2013, at the Salem Baptist Church with interment following at Sherwood Memorial Park. The Rev. Everett Kier will officiate.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in Frank's name to either the American Cancer Society, 2840 Electric Road, Roanoke, VA 24018; the Alzheimer's Association, 3959 Electric Road, Roanoke, VA 24018; the Salem Baptist Turbyfield Scholarship Fund, 103 North Broad Street, Salem, VA 24153; or a charity of choice.

[NI01461] Half sister to Anna Peak his first wife.

[NI01511] Some Records say First name is Zebulon.

[NI01535] Some records say 1837 some say 1838.

[NI01560] Died Young.

[NI01585] Gilbert faught in the Revolutionary way. He was a private from 15 April
177 to 14 January 1777 in the Company of Captain William Satterlee in Col.
Elmore's Battalion, also from 1 July 1780 to 9 December 1780 in the 5th
CT. Regiment, commanded by Col. Philip B. Bradly.
He moved from Colchester, CT to Wyoming Valley, PA.
In 1792 he moved to Asylum, Frenchtown, Bradford County, PA.
He was buried at Old Gordon Cemetery in Asylum on the Dodge Farm.

[NI01609] She and Larry have 4 Children

[NI01635] Wayland Register
Wayland, Steuben County, New York.
August 21, 1924

TWO SUDDEN DEATHS EARLY SUNDAY MORNING SHOCK WAYLAND PEOPLE

People of Wayland and vicinity were greatly shocked Sunday morning by the announcement of two sudden deaths that of Dr. William DeForest Gamble, well known dentist and much respected and loved resident of this village for many years, and Mrs. Gladys Walker Loveland.

The death of Dr. Gamble occurred at about 6:30 at his home on Lackawanna Street from an attack of acute indigestion. He retired Saturday night in apparently his usual health. He was taken ill about 4 o'clock and although medical aid was immediately summoned it was without avail and his death occurred about two hours later.

William D. Gamble was born in Dansville forth eight years ago, the son of David Gamble. He was a graduate of Dansville High School and the University of Buffalo. He established a dental office in the village twenty two years ago and had built up a wide and successful practice.

He was married to Miss Bertha Dodge of Warren, Penna. Feb. 14, 1907 who with one son survives him. He also leaves three sisters, Mrs. Jane O. Wilkins, Miss Minnie B. Gamble, and Mrs. W.C. Saunders of Rochester.

Dr. Gamble was a past master of Warren Patchin Lodge No 883-F &A.M., a member of Dansville Chapter of Corning Consistory and of Damascus Temple of Rochester. He had served as trustee of the village, was a charter member and vice president of the Wayland Rotary Club, a member of the Wayland Grange and also a trustee of the Methodist Church. He was greatly interested in the Boy Scouts movement and was a member of the court of honor and the Steuben County Council. Dr. Gamble was a man of high Christian character and ideals, a pleasing personality, always cheerful and smiling, and enjoyed the respect of a wide circle of friends. In fact, to know him was to love him. No resident of the village could be greater missed than will he.

The funeral was held at the Methodist Episcopal Church Wednesday afternoon at 2:30, Rev. C.H. Gall officiating, attended by the local Masonic and Eastern Star lodges, Rotary club, business men and Boy Scouts and a wide circle of sorrowing friends. The floral offerings were many and beautiful testifying to the esteem and regard in which he was held. Burial was in the local cemetery. Masonic services being carried out at the graveside.

Among those from out of town in attendance at the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. Leon Schwendler, James Gorham, Newton Gorham, Bert Gorham of Dansville; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gates, Mr. and Mrs. C.C. Merritt of Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac McNeilly of Lima; Mrs. Erbach, Samuel McNeilly, Mr. and Mrs. George Erbach of Mt. Morris; Mrs. Margaret O'Brien of Oneida; Mr. and Mrs. Robert McNeilly, Miss Catherine McNeilly, and Mrs. Bennett of Geneseo; Mrs. A. A Aldrich and daughter Emily, and son Robert and Mrs. Toby of Addison; Mr. and Mrs. George Baker of Binghamton; Mrs. Lyman of Bloomfield, N. Jer.; Mrs. Forhan of Orlando, Fla.; Mrs. Jaeger, Mr. and Mrs. James Marsden and son Edward of Rochester; besides a number of Dansville Rotary club and business men of that village.

[NI01645] Captain Thomas Pendleton (1718/19-1809). On 18 Mar 1742/42, “Caleb Pendelton, grandfather, and James Pendleton, father,” deeded to Thomas 300 acres of land in Westerly. Tradition says that Thomas was awhalerman, and that on one of his voyages to Greenland, he put in at Castine, where, excited by the beauty of the Penobscot Bay region, he determined to settle. He removed to what is now Isleboro, Maine, a few years before the Revolution, and when he had established himself there, he brought his entire family there, with the exception of his son Nathaniel, who followed later. At the first town hall meeting of Isleboro on 6 Apr 1789, he was elected surveyor of highways.

He was a master mariner, engaged in the whale fishery to Greenland, and on one of his voyages put in to Castine, where, excited by the beauty of Penobscot Bay, he determined to settle. In 1753, he sold his estate in Westerly, Rhode Island, for eleven hundred and thirty pounds, and in 1766 moved to Long Island, Maine, where he took up nine hundred acres. His whole family soon followed, and he settled them on his land on the island. His house was a few rods to the north-east of Dark Harbor. He took an active part in town affairs, and his name occurs often in town records. In person he was tall, with red hair and blue eyes. History of Islesborough, John P. Farrow, 1893, page 249

[NI01651] Carrie, you state she died in Denver Colorado

[NI01740] John Dodge III was never married, was a brittle diabetic, lost his leg several years before his death and it is buried in the Erie Cemetery. He worked with the Mayor or some sort of high official in County government for many many years. He lived at Mrs. BeBee's boarding house for 22 years.

[NI01751] He worked for the Bradford Oil Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange

[NI01783] email Loring.Dodge@bba05.mccombs.utexas.edu

[NI01816] Records state she was an orphand. She was also the director of the Budget under Dwight David Eisenhower.

[NI01830] Joseph attended Thirkhell Public School; Grosse Pointe Country Day
School; Detroit Univ., Harvard Cum Laud 1940, Wayne Unniv., Detroit, MI.
He was Curator, The Hyde Collectionat Glens Falls, New York fro
1942-1962. The next 10 years he was director , for the Cummer Galery of
Art , in Jaackonsville, FL and is an artist, Educator & Collector.

[NI01854] Joseph is a professor of Law, at the University of Texas at Austin.

[NI01866] EMPLOYED NORTHERN CANADA SALES 1955-1973
" STEETLEY INDUSTRIES 1973-1988
" GUILLEVIN INTN'L INC 1988-1989
HEART ATTACK MAY 3,`1989
Residence: July 1, 1975 - 99 Govt.Rd.E., Kirkland Lake, Ont.
Residence: July 1, 1964 - 4 Richelieu St., Noranda,P.Q.
Residence: 1958 - 3 Wishman St, Kirkland Lake, Ont.
Residence : 1956 - Algonquin Blvd, Timmins, Ont.
Residence : 1953 - Cartier St, Ottawa, Ont.
EMPLOYED NORTHERN CANADA SALES 1955-1973
" STEETLEY INDUSTRIES 1973-1988
" GUILLEVIN INTN'L INC 1988-1989
HEART ATTACK MAY 3,`1989
Residence: July 1, 1975 - 99 Govt.Rd.E., Kirkland Lake, Ont.
Residence: July 1, 1964 - 4 Richelieu St., Noranda,P.Q. Tel. 819-762-1922
Residence: 1958 - 3 Wishman St, Kirkland Lake, Ont.
Residence : 1956 - Algonquin Blvd, Timmins, Ont.
Residence : 1953 - Cartier St, Ottawa, Ont.

[NI01873] Marriage records stated her name was spelled Hannah Barniem.

[NI01885] Margaret M. Dressel, 83, of Yakima died Friday.
Mrs. Dressel was born in Eau Claire, Wis. She was a longtime resident of Yakima.
Survivors include her husband, Paul George Dressel, a daughter, Linda Mollett, and a son, Paul Dressel, all of Yakima; two brothers, La Verne Dodge of Eua Claire and Bill Dodge of South Dakota; eight grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Funeral will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Yakima Seventh-day Adventist Church. Burial will follow at West Hills Memorial Park.
Keith and Keith Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements.

[NI01887] Laverne 'Rocky' T. Dodge, 78, passed away peacefully at Dove Healthcare Nursing & Rehabilitation on May 23, 2006, surrounded by his family.

Vern was born to Thomas and Myrtle Dodge on April 21, 1928. He was one of seven children Florence, Betty, Margaret, Ervin, Elmer and Bill. He grew up in the Eau Claire area. While working at the Omaha Depot in Eau Claire, he met Grace Edgington who worked at the Sparley Cafe. They fell in love and were married on May 10, 1946, at the First Baptist Church in Eau Claire. They had three children Dennis, Jack and Diane. Vern worked as a welder at Phoenix Steel for 35 years and retired in 1992.

Vern enjoyed hunting, especially elk hunting, fishing for walleyes at the rock pile, trapping, camping and spending time with his grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Vern is survived by his wife of 60 years, Grace; two sons, Dennis (Gayle) of Ellsworth and Jack (Mary) of Elk Lake; and daughter, Diane (Brian) Brunelle of Washburn, Wis.; six grandchildren, Nathan, Ali, Jacob and Molly Dodge, Melissa and Karly Fordahl; five great-grandchildren, Elianna, Abbie, Olivia, Amelia and Valentine Dodge; brother, Bill (Ann) Dodge of Hill City, S.D.; and Pretty Boy his most amazing bird. He is also survived by his wonderful niece, Grace Johnson and her husband, Duane, whose love, concern and kindness upheld Grace and Vern throughout his illness.

Vern was preceded in death by his parents; two brothers, Elmer and Ervin; and three sisters, Florence Zurbuchen, Betty Gross and Margaret Dressel.

A most sincere thanks to Dr. Steve Weiss, his nurse Nancy Jevne, and all the staff at the Dove Healthcare Nursing & Rehabilitation-2nd floor for their caring and kindness during his short stay.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, May 26, 2006, at Lake St. United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Dr. E. Doyle Blanton officiating. Burial will be in Rest Haven Cemetery in the town of Washington.

[NI01895] Marriage took place in the Bonnell Home.
Harry and Edith moved to Williamsport from Erie in 1933. They were memb rs of the Christ Episcopal Church. Harry owned his own machine shop in Williamsport

[NI01906] In 1910 he is with wife Bertha & daughter Dorothy 5 in Twin Falls Idaho.
WW i Draft registeration in 1917 Portland, Multnomah, Oregon,
In 1920 he is in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon

[NI01928] 1920 Census Seattle King County, Washington

[NI01961] He was born March 10, 1899 in Hornby the son of the late Edwin H. and Martha A. Rodgers Dodge SR.

Ed was a 1918 graduate of Northside High School and attended Cornell University briefly. He was a dairy farmer, salesman for Atlantic State Gas and drove a school bus for the Corning -Painted Post School district. He was a member of the Corning-Painted Post Masonic Lodge #168 and the Painted Post Barbershopers.

He is survived by his daughter, Dorothy J. Leonard of Van Buren, Arkansas; a son, Paul E. Dodge of Ellettsville, Indiana; two grandchildren, four great grandchildren and 1 great great grandchild. His parents, wives, Dorothy C. Dodge in 1967 and Mildred P. Dodge in 1993 predeceased him.

Family and friends are invited to call at the Acly-Stover Funeral Home, 327 East Second Street, Corning on Thursday, September 21, 2000 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. A Masonic service will be held at 7:15 p.m. Funeral services will follow calling hours at 9:00 p.m with Rev. Robert Boell officiating. Interment will be in Hope Cemetery, Corning.

[NI02028] Margaret M. Welch 1936 - 2013 WEST SPRINGFIELD - Margaret "Peggy" M. (Dodge) Welch, 76, of Valley View Circle passed away April 18th at home surrounded by her family. She was born in Westfield on June 4th, 1936 to the late Norman and Rita (Eagan) Dodge. She spent her early years in the East Forest Park section of Springfield and moved to West Springfield in 1950. She was a graduate of West Springfield High School Class of 1954. Years ago Peggy worked at the West Springfield Town Hall in the Town Clerk's office, where she met her husband "Red". She served on the West Springfield Board of Registrars and was active in Democratic town politics for years. She was a communicant of St. Thomas the Apostle Church in West Springfield and was a member of their Women's Club. Peggy was an avid candlepin bowler and played for years in leagues at the former Elm Street Bowl and later at the Agawam Bowl. She especially enjoyed raising her family in the close-knit neighborhoods of Terry Road and Dorwin Drive in West Springfield. On April 18th, Peggy entered into eternal life to be reunited with her beloved late husband James C. "Red" Welch (2002) and cherished late son Christopher J. Welch (1979). She leaves her loving children; Ellen W. Flore and her husband William of Springfield, VT, John D. Welch and his wife Joan, Mary K. Welch, and James T. Welch and his wife Kara all of West Springfield. She was the caring grandmother of Blaine, Jessica, and Sarah Flore, Eric and Liam Welch, and Thomas and Christopher Welch. She was predeceased by her sister Audrey Menard. She also leaves several nieces and nephews and her canine companion Molly. The funeral will be 9AM Monday at the TOOMEY-O'BRIEN FUNERAL HOME, 1043 Westfield Street, West Spfld., followed at 10AM by a Liturgy of Christian Burial at St. Thomas Church. Burial will be at St. Thomas Cemetery. Calling hours are Sunday 4-7PM at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers donations in Peggy's memory may be made to the St. Thomas School Development Fund, 75 Pine Street, West Springfield, MA 01089 or the West Springfield Public Library Construction Fund, Park St. West Springfield, MA 01089.

.Published in The Republican from April 19 to April 21, 2013 Print ?|? View Guest Book .Helpful Links

[NI02050] Single, Never Married

[NI02060] Came to Oregon 23 SEP 1847 Corvallis

[NI02062] Stephen was a jeweler and later he sold optical goods.

[NI02063] They went to Troy, New York,. where engaged in the Mercantile business About 1864. He went to Lennox, Massachusetts for the benefit of the children. He he resumed his business until laid aside by sickness, which terminaed in consumption.

[NI02065] Lived with her grandparents until she was of age, then came to Vermont and lived at John Belden's at Rupert Corner ; mar Wm J. Dodge Aug 30 1843 at Experience Barrows, in Dorset Hollow. Harriet died of cancer in the stomach. Dau of Joseph Weaver & Prudence Bangs

[NI02079] Father is William Manley Kellog b. 1810 VT and Mother is Dolly F arwe ll b 1810 VT.

[NI02091] Bershire Evening Eagle July 14, 1947 Pittsfield Massachusetts Obituary
Word was received here today of the death of Roy Howard Dodge, 59, widely known tax consultant, who died May 31 at Bellingham, Wash. Mr. Dodge was born in Lenox, son of the late William H. Dodge of Dalton. Mr. Dodge attended Dartmouth University and was a Navy flier in World War I. He has been tax consultant for the Nortern Pacific Railraod, the Am erican Bankers Association, the Idaho Bankers Association and the Idaho Le gislature. He was the state tax commissioner in Washington, and later moved to Bellingham, Washington where he was the chief assessor for the Whatcom County.
Surviving are two sons, William Steward Dodge of San Francisco, CA a nd Robert Gray Dodge a student of University of Washington in Seattle, WA ., a daugher Mrs. Virginia Liniger of Seattle: five grandchildren, and four sisters Miss Dora Dodge of Worcester, Mrs. Jabez Jenks, Mrs. Leon Yeaw of Amesbury and Mrs. Harry Swarbrick of Allston.

[NI02098] Robert Gray Dodge Sr. graduated in 1942 from the University of Idaho with a BS in business and from the University of Denver with a MS in Government Management. From 1943-1945 her served in the Navy aboard the U.S.S. Engstrom, an escort ship for combatant auxiliary ships. He trained at Pearl Harbor in early 1945. He graduated from the University of Washington Law School in 1947

Obituary
-Robert Dodge dies; helped draft state Constitution, Charter
Attorney Robert Gray Dodge, a lifelong advocate of political liberty for the people who helped frame the 1968 state Constitution and Honolulu City Charter, died Friday at Castle Memorial Hospital. He was 63. His ashes will be scattered at sea from his boats, Fiasco. In private servies today.
Mr. Dodge lived at 225 Queen St, and was in private legal practice at the time of his death. He was a native of Seattle, Wash., earned degrees in law and government management and came to Hawaii in 1947.
Over the years he was "chief Senate attorney, consultant to the Hawaii Statehood Commission to both City Charter Commissions and to the 1950 Constitutional Convention and a delegate to the 1968 Convention.
He left government service in 1950 to form a law office with Ernest Kai, but he was appointed chairman of the territorial salary stanardization board the following year. He was a member of the Democratic Central Committee and chairman of the Platform Committee in 1954. In 1956 he was a member of the National Platform Committee and was the party's state vice chairman from 1957 to 1958. He was vice chairman of the commission that wrote the 1959 Revised City Charter and of the Charter Review Commission in 1971.
Mr. Dodge led successful efforts for a recount of the ballots in the 1960 presidential election that won Hawaii for John F. Kennedy after the first count was won by Richard M. Nixon.
He served on a Civil Service Commission and the National Municpal League over the years. He is survived by four children, Susan of Alaska, William of Washington, Robert G. II of California and Mrs. Robert M. (Jill A.) Ellis of Honolulu.
He was an unsucessful candidate for mayor in 1960 and 1964 and for last year's Con Con. "I believe that people have the intelligence and capacity to govern themselves and the only limitation I would place on complete self government would be those powers delegated by the people to others" he once wrote. "Maybe I could urge you to become active in politics" he urged a friend on another occasion. "Everybody should!"
A respected authority on government structure and powers in Hawaii, he was a longtime advocate of home rule for the counties of Hawaii and was one of the original supporters of a statte land use law.
He was a research associate of the Legislative Reference Bureau in the years soon after his arrival here and returned to the bureau on several occasions, most recently last year.
ROBERT DODGE
Robert Dodge, who died Friday at age 63, was a talented man who made significant contributions to Hawaii's political development in the years before and after Statehood.
Attorney Dodge was hardly an unknown or unsung figure here in the 1950's and 60's and early 70's when he was most active. He was an unsuccessful Democratic candidate for mayor in 1960 and 1964. Many news stories reported on his views and activities.
But he was best known as an expert on the political process rather than as a politican. That has a certain irony because Dodge was a bright and personable man who would have served well in elective office, as he did in Democratic Party positions and appointive roles in government.
"Certainly he will be best remembered as an expert in the constituional process whose services were outstanding on two City Charter Commissions and in the state Consitutional Conventions of 1950 and 1968. His experience would have been highly valuable in last summer's Con Con but he lost in a bid for election.
Over the years Bob Dodge stood for many things, including home rule for the counties and more citizen participation. But above all he stood for integrity and fairness, standards that at times led him to take positions not popular with leading political figues and other interests. One did not always have to agree with his position on public matters to respect his viewpoint. His opinions on public matters were often sought.
In a quarter century of service, then, Bob Dodge gained the reputation as more than just a respected authority on government structure and power in Hawaii. He was a person many of us liked and respected for trying to adapt government to omankind's better qualities and vice versa.

[NI02101] In 1920 Census Madeline E. Dodge is living with her Grandparent s William H. Dodge & Lizzie Dodge.

[NI02111] Note this line is tested DNA Tristram

[NI02115] Entered the war of 1812 at age 21.

[NI02116] Served in the Civil War, Enlisted: 26 July1862 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 143rd Regiment, New York Infantry Cos. A & K died Feb 2st 1864. buried at National Cemetery, Stone's river in Murfreesboro, Tenenesee.

[NI02117] died as infant.

[NI02125] Company F 2nd NewYork Infantry, Civil War

[NI02208] David left Aruba for his last two years of high school and went to the University of Notre Dame. He settled in Connecticut right away and is still living there. He and his second wife, Edna, live in Guilford, Connecticut. Dave, from a previous marriage, has a son, Darrell, who lives in Florida and a daughter, Beth, who lives in Connecticut.

[NI02211] She finished high school in Aruba and went to Rosary College just outside of Chicago. She went to Florida to live with her mother and dad and start her career. She still lives in Florida and has two daughters and a son. Her son, Michael, lives close by and one daughter, Carol, lives in Denver, CO., and the other, Teresa, lives in Norfolk, VA.

[NI02212] Stephen left Aruba for a couple of years of high school in Plymouth, MA. He then got an associates degree from the Milwaukee School of Engineering and settled in the Milwaukee area. He lives with his wife, Celia, in the suburbs of Milwaukee and they have two sons, Brian, living with his wife lives in Texas and Samuel, living close to home

[NI02237] LANCASTER -- Albert D. Dodge, of Lancaster died August 14, 2013 at River Terrace Kindred Healthcare in Lancaster. He was born in Bar Harbor Maine August 14, 1924 son of the late Albert L. and Gladys (Sullivan) Dodge and was the husband of the late Kil Soo Lee.

He was educated in Maine and was a graduate of the schools, he also worked in the Bath Iron Works. He later enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1943 serving as a Corporal till the end of WWII serving in the South Pacific.

He then enlisted in the United States Army in 1946 with the 867th Artillery in Alaska where they defended the Air Bases, later he was transferred to Heidelberg, Germany for 3 years then the United States Military Academy at West Point. Later, Fort Eustis VA, Fort Campbell KY. then Korea where he met his future wife Kil Soo Lee to whom he was married for 39 years prior to her death in 2004. He retired from the military January 1, 1967 at Fort Devens as a Sergeant. Serving a total 3 ½ years U.S. Marine Corps and 22 ½ years United States Army.

He later worked at Colonial Press in Clinton, Digital Equipment in Maynard, George Frost Co. in Shirley.

He also was a member of North East Harbor Lodge AF& AM # 208, Honorary Member Alt Heidelberg # 821 Germany, Senaca Consistory Mason Frankfort, Germany, Aahmes Temple Shrine, Oakland CA. and the American Legion Post of Lancaster. He was also a past member of St. Andrews Church in Ayer.

He is survived by several nieces and nephews and many close friends. He was also the brother of the late Shirley Greene.

DODGE -- of Lancaster August 14, 2013. Albert D. Dodge. A Funeral
Service will be held 11A.M. Tues., August 20, 2013 at St. Andrew's
Episcopal Church, 7 Faulkner St., Ayer. Burial to follow in Westlawn
Cemetery Littleton, MA. Please see www.badgerfuneral.com.
Published in Nashoba Publishing on Aug. 23, 2013

[NI02273] Professional Musician

[NI02294] Some times he was called George,

[NI02309] Some records say b. 1681. For his descendants see p. 79 et seq.
Settled at Cow Neck (Port Washington), Long Island, about 1718. Wife
Elizabeth, sons Jeremiah and Samuel, dau. Deborah and grandson Samuel,
son of his son Wilkie (deceased), named in a will dated New York City, N
23 May, 1761, proved 1761.

[NI02319] Died young.Anna married Benjamin Ray of Deerfield, MA

Possible spelling of Ray: Original Rhea

Rhea
Rea
RayDied young

[NI02321] Secretery I.O.O.F.

[NI02333] SOme call her Mary, and some call her Polly

[NI02385] the popular proprietor of the Dodge House, the leading hotel of West Unity,, Sidney derives from Tristram Dodge. Sidney P. Dodge was born in Lafarge Township, Medina County, Ohio, on the 17th of November, 1851, and is the son of Joel Palmer Dodge, who was born in Cortland County, N.Y., on
the 8th of November, 1820, being a son of Joel Dodge, who was born in Colchester, Connecticut, in 1784, while the same town was the birth place of his wife, whose maiden name was Hannah Cutler and whose year of nativity was 1787 (sic; Hannah was born in Stoughton, Norfolk County,
MA). At the age of thirteen, Joel Dodge accompanied his parents on their removal to Bennington, Vt., where he was reared to manhood and where his marriage was solemnized.

He removed thence to Cortland County, N.Y., where he remained until 1839, when he came with his family to Ohio and located in Wayne (sic; Medina) County, and in 1853 he came to Williams County, locating at Williams Center, where he died in September, 1863, his wife having passed away in 1858. He was engaged in farming after coming to Ohio and was a man of integrity and honor. He was the son of Benjamin and Tabitha Dodge, both of whom passed the closing years of their lives in Cortland County, N.Y.

Hannah (Cutler) Dodge was the daughter of Zachariah and Prudence (Drake) Cutler, who passed their entire lives in New England. Joel Palmer Dodge was educated in the common schools of Cortland County, N.Y., and accompanied his parents on their removal to Ohio. In Seville, Medina County, this state, October 17, 1843, he married Miss Mary Ann Vincent, who was born in Cortland County, N.Y., October 13, 1820, being a daughter
of John J. and Mary (Daniels) Vincent, both of whom were born in New England, the former on the 9th of February, 1792 and the latter on the 10th of October, 1796, and both passed the closing days of their lives in Lagrange, Lorain County, O., having come to this state in pioneer days. They became the parents of eight children, of whom five are yet living.

Joel P .Dodge came to Williams County in 1853, locating in Williams Center, in April of that year .Here he followed his trade, that of blacksmith, for many years. In 1884 he removed to Nemaha County, Neb., and on the 5th of June, 1888, he located in West Unity, in the old Ohio county where he so long had made his home, and here he still lives, being now retired from active labors. His devoted wife passed away April 13,1905, having been a member of the Baptist church, with which he also was formerly identified, now holding membership in the Christian church. He is a Democrat in politics and is affiliated with Superior Lodge No.179, Free and Accepted masons, and Northwest Chapter No .45, Royal Arch Masons. Joel P. and Mary A. (Vincent) Dodge became the parents of five children: Emma Jane, Mary Elizabeth, Sidney Palmer,Ida(deceased in infancy), and Clara Eliza. Sidney P. Dodge was about two years of age at the time of his parents' removal to Williams County, and he was reared and educated in Williams Center, where he fully availed himself of the advantages of the public schools, while he learned the blacksmith trade under the effective direction of his father, becoming a skilled artisan. He followed his trade until 1878, when he engaged in the sawmilling business at Williams Center, following this line of enterprise until 1888, on June 5th of which year he came to West Unity and engaged in the hotel business.

On the year of the following August his building and contents of the same were practically entirely destroyed by fire, and he then erected his present substantial and attractive hotel building ,known as the Dodge House, which he has since conducted most successfully, this being the best and most popular hotel in the town catering to a representative patronage, while the genial host and his wife have a legion of friends among the travelling public as well as locally.

In politics, Mr. Dodge maintains an independent attitude, and he is public-spirited and progressive, ever ready to lend his aid inevery worthy movement for the general good of the community. He served one year as a member of the village council of WestUnity. He is affiliated with the Superior Lodge, No.179, of the Free and Accepted Masons at West Unity; Northwest Chapter, No. 45, Royal Arch Masons, at Bryan; Defiance Commandery, No .30,Knights Templar, at Defiance; Zenobia Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, in Toledo; and Unity Lodge, No. 158, Order of the Eastern Star in West Unity, of which last organization his wife and daughter are also members. In May,1899, Mr. Dodge became a member and musician in the First Division, Second Battalion of the Ohio Naval Reserve, and still retains his membership in the same.

December 4, 1873, Mr .Dodge was united in marriage to Miss Joanna
A. Cratsenberg, who was born near Pope's Mills, St. Lawrence
County, N.Y., January 2, 1855, being a daughter of Abram and Hannah
(Breckenridge) Cratsenberg, who came from her native county to
Williams County, O. about 1867. Here the mother died in
October, 1878, and the father in September of the following year.
They had four children of whom only two are living - Frank, who
resides in Columbus, O., and Mrs. Dodge. Mr Cratsenberg was a
saddler by trade, and followed this vocation many years, later
being engaged in farming. In 1863 he enlisted in Company A,
Fourteenth New York Heavy Artillery, with which he served until the
close of the Civil War.

Mr. and Mrs. Dodge became the parents of four children: Roy is now a
conductor on the Hocking Valley Railroad; Maud remains at the parental
home; the third child died in infancy; and Sidney died at the age of two
and one-half years.

[NI02394] Daniel built a mill on willow creek , which was called the Pine Ridge
Dodge Mill, near the Butternut School House. He gave or sold the mill to
his son Theodore after he married Emilia Cannan

[NI02398] Twin to Lorenzo.

[NI02399] Twin to Laura.

[NI02401] Drowned while bathing.

[NI02417] He was a school Teacher & close student of Chemistry

[NI02444] For further information see "A Dodge family" by Hill.

[NI02445]

[NI02456] Died at 56 Years.

[NI02457] Born in Keesville New York, moved to Schenectady as a boy and resided there for 45 years

[NI02468] Theron Royal Woodward in his book he published in 1904 said the name was Willaby King See Pg. 112 & 113. Linda Veenstra says the name is to bespelled Willabee

[NI02473] In 1844 the William Dodges left Jefferson County, New York and went to Dane County, Wisconsin.

[NI02474] Some say Elisha J. Dodge.

[NI02484] Cyrus N. Dodge in 1855 census.

[NI02485] Some Records have this name as Horace Frederick Dodge.

[NI02486] Some spell the name Melessa.

[NI02491] From an article about George Dodge (son of William King Dodge) in the Historyof Dane County, Wisconsin --
"His parents were William King and Mary Ann (Hubbard) Dodge, the former of whom was born in Block Island (Rhode Island) the date of his birth being November 7, 1797, while the mother was born of New York, March 9, 1800.
They were married in Jefferson County, New York, and lived there for a number of years afterward, the father's occupation being that of a father. In 1844 they migrated to Wisconsin, locating first in Jefferson county, the place of settlement being on Rock River, but 1847 they changed their abode to Waukeska County, and two years later came to Dane county and established a home onone hundred and exity acres of forest land that they preempted from the government by soldiers' land warrant."

[NI02494] Enlisted as a private from Canterbury, Connecticut, February 1777, under Captain Ephraim Lyons, in 1778 under Captain Button, in 1779 under Colonel Hezekiah Lewis. Total service eleven months. removed in 1788 to Hardin County, Kentucky and established a public house near Elixabethtown. He was a Revolutionary pensioner, and his wife drew a pension after his death. Instead of being slave holders, they employed hired black servants. He was a worker in leather.She was a woman of great strength of body and mind, and was famous as a reader, writer, and expounder of the Scriptures. They were Baptists. She studied and worked much at night, and as a result lost her sight and was totally blind for twenty years before her death. They had only one child, John Winchester.

[NI02500] Thomas Dodge, Civil War soldier and a pioneer of Dunn County, now passed away, was born in the state of New York, of New England parents, in July 1837.
In 1854 as a youth of 17 he came with them to Dane County, Wisconsin. He had a fair practical edvcation, having attended school in his native state. On Sept. 25, 1857, he married Sophronia Knapp of Dane County and they began domestic life and the making of a home. In 1861 the breaking out of the Civil War convulsed the country, and Mr. Dodge on October 1, that year, enlisted in Company K, 14th Regiment of Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, with which organization he served until July 26, 1862, when he was mustered out at Stamburg, Tenn., on account of disability. On his return home he and his wife came to Dunn County and settled in Section 6, town of Grant, on a tract of 160 acres of partly improved land, which in time through hard work he made into a good farm, grubbing and developing the land and erecting buildings as conditions demanded or permitted. He was a member of the Farmers' Alliance, recognizing in union an important method of advance for the agriculturist. He also belonged to the Methodist Episcopal Church and embraced the cause of prohibition, joining that political party. After a steady and useful life he died Sept. 6, 1908. His wife Sophronia died Oct. 30, 1918.
They were the parents of five children, namely: Nellie, born July 1, 1860, now Mrs. Myron Doolittle of Saskatchewan, Canada; Rhoda, born Aug. 22, 1864, in the town of Grant, who is now Mrs. Emit P. Madison of Colfax; Harvey W., born July 27, 1876, who married Mabel Cutting and resides in Saskatchewan, Canada; Thomas, born July 11, 1862, who died in June, 1873; and Bertha, born June 19, 1869, who died in June, 1890.

Curtiss-Wedge, F.; Jones, Geo. O. (ed.) / History of Dunn County, Wisconsin; (1925)

[NI02501] Abner Hubbard Dodge, worthy citizen and highly respected member of the G.A.R., answered the final roll call Monday afternoon, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Jess Parker of Lakeport. While in feeble years, Mr. Dodge has enjoyed fairly good health and was down town several days prior to his death. He was a native of Jefferson County, New York, and was 83 years, 2 (?) month and 3 days of age.Mr. Dodge has resided in the county almost 11 years. During his residence here he made many admiring friends and associates. He was proud of his service in the ranks of the civil war and was well versed on all topics of the war from the beginning to the end. As a young man he enlisted July 23, 1862, in Company H of the Wisconsin Volunteers and served as a corporal. He was discharged for disability the following year and upon regaining his health, reenlisting the second time, the latter enlistment being with the 40th Regiment of Wisconsin, serving as a sargeant. He was a member of the Eagle Post, G.A.R., Wisconsin.Mr. Dodge came to California 14 years ago and settled at Hayward. Three years later he moved to Lakeport where he has since resided. About four years ago, his wife, Mary Helen Dodge, passed away in this city.He is survived by seven children, Mrs. Martha Corbet, Mrs. Grace Dilger, Mrs. Jessie Parker, all of Lakeport; Dwight A. Dodge of Richmond; George of Spokane, Washington; Otis K. and Herbert Dodge of Eau Claire, Wisconsin.The funeral services were held yesterday afternoon at the Methodist Church at 2 o'clock and were conducted by Rev. Grenfelt of that church.William Morris, a comrade in the G.A.R. spoke briefly of the enlistment and patriotism of the departed member of the ranks. Only several months ago, Mr. Morris offered a prayer at a birthday party given the aged and now departed comrade.The interment took place at the Hartley Cemetery.

[NI02503] DEATH OF Mary Helen Young Lake County Bee, November 20, 1919

Another Lakeport home has been visited by the grim reaper, Death, and made desolate by the loss of a kind and loving wife and mother.Mrs. Mary Helen Dodge, wife of Abner Hubbard Dodge, died at Burke's Sanitarium last Friday and was laid to rest in Hartley cemetery yesterday afternoon, the funeral being held from the Methodist church and conducted by Rev. L. W. Hendrickson.Mrs. Dodge was born in Wisconsin in 1847. She was taken sick about two years ago and has been gradually failing since that time. She was taken to Burke's Sanitarium about three weeks ago. Little hope was held out for her recovery and death came as a relief to her suffering. She is survived by her husband and several children--Mrs. Martha Corbett, who was with her mother when the end came; Misses Jess and Grace Dodge of Lakeport and Dwight Dodge of Richmond.The sorrowing family has the sympathy of a large cicrcle of friends.

[NI02506] According to Jan Martin John Winchester died 30 Aug 1859. Morgantown, IN.

[NI02511] died at 16yrs.

[NI02513] Some Records have a middle initial of "O".

[NI02518] He served as Lieutenant in the Revolutionary War for Connecticut

Married. 1st Nancy Hunter. He was divorced from her and removed to upper Louisiana. On a trip to New Orleans he stopped at Baton Rouge and m. 2d Miss Lewis, sister of Seth Lewis, judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana. Rev. Wm. Slater says: "He m. 3d Mrs. Catherine Guion, daughter of Rev. Ichabod Camp." The country on the west side of the Mississippi River, together with New Orleans, was ceded by the king of France to the king of Spain, by treaty of November 3d, 1762. The first Spanish commandant at St Louis arrived there November 29th, 1770. The transfer of government did not change the manners, customs or language of the people, which continued to be French. About 1790 Americans began to find their way over the river, attracted by offers of land from the Spanish government; many also having a presentiment that the country would eventually fall into the hands of the United States. They were the vanguard of that movement which has since spread American institutions to the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.
Among the earliest of these adventures was Israel Dodge, then a young man of thirty years. Israel Dodge at the age of fifteen, had gone on a slaver to the coast of Africa: at seventeen joined the Connecticut troops in the army of the Revolution, enlisted as a Private, served as second lieutenant in Webbs Company and was wounded at Brandywine, served at the extreme outposts of Fort Jefferson and Kaskaskia on the Mississippi River, and afterwards shared the exposures and perils of the "dark and bloody ground" in the settlement of Kentucky. He occupied grants of land at New Bourbon, near St. Genevieve, that were made to him by the Spanish government. Before 1800 he had opened a large farm, built mills, distilleries, and breweries, and carried on a prosperous trade, as was certified by the commandant at New Bourbon. Lieutenant-Governor Delassus, in the concession of December 11 th, 1800, called him "one of the most ancient inhabitants of the country" (Am. State Papers, Public Lands, Vol. VIII, p. 49).
Upon the purchase of Louisiana by the United States, he was present at St. Louis to greet the stars and stripes as they were unfurled in that city March 10th, 1804. The same year, October 1st, he was appointed sheriff of the Louisiana." His son Henry acted as deputy, and was appointed sheriff after the death of his father in 1806. When Israel Dodge joined in the western emigration of the period, he fell in with the Hunter family. In the record book of Col. John Todd, county lieutenant of Illinois, by appointment of Governor Patrick Henry, which is in possession of the Chicago Historical Society, the name of Israel Dodge appears as acting under the military authority of his brother John Dodge, at Kaskaskia, under date of April 29, 1782. Subsequently, the family established their home at Spring Station, near Louisville; afterwards at Bardstown.
At Bardstown. Osrae; Dodge built the first stone house, which was used as a tavern. Here his second child was born, named Nancy for her mother. Israel Dodge was a man of restless enterprise, eager for the chances that fortune threw in his way. About 1790 he left his family and removed to upper Louisiana, attracted by the liberal policy of Spain in offering lands to settlers. He located at New Bourbon, just below St. Genevieve.
Nancy Ann Hunter was the youngest child of Joseph Hunter and Mollie Homes, his wife who came from Ireland and settled near Carlisle, Pa. Nancy was born in Carlisle about 1789. The family removed to the land where the town of Washington, Pa. now stands. They subsequently removed to the neighborhood of Louisville, Ky., some of them going to Kaskaskia. On one occasion when the Indians had beleaguered the settlement, a favorite cow and calf strayed outside the gate, Nancy Ann Hunter ran out into the open space, and taking up the calf brought it within the enclosure, the cow following, while the arrows of the savages whistled by and cut her clothing, herself unharmed. After her marriage to Israel Dodge they removed to Kaskaskia, and in 1782, while on the way to visit her parents in Kentucky, her son Henry was born at Post Vincennes, Ind., under the roof of Moses and Ann Henry. This son was the first American child born in what now constitutes the state of Indiana.
The earlier white inhabitants were Canadian French. Moses Henry was a gunsmith for the Indians. A few days after the birth of the child an Indian chief came in and attempted to dash out its brains. The mother plead for the life of her first-born, and Moses Henry prevailed upon the chief to allow the child to live, as they would soon go on their journey. In gratitude to her benefactor, Mrs. Dodge gave his full name to the child, which he retained until he was grown, when he adopted the single
name Henry.
While still a young child, her son Henry was taken captive by the Indians but returned unharmed. Five of his uncles fell under the Indian hatchet, and the mother, sister and brother of Mrs. Dodge were killed and scalped by the Indians.
Her second husband was Assel Linn, son of the brave William Linn, who performed an adventurous trip to New Orleans at the opening of the Revolutionary War and brought up a supply of gunpowder for the defense of the frontier; afterwards served with Col. Clark at the capture of Kaskaskia, in 1778, and lost his life in a conflict with Indians, near Louisville, in 1781. When a boy of twelve, Assel was carried off a captive with three other lads by Shawnee Indians, and escaped by killing or maiming two old Indians who had been left as their guard while the young Indians of the band were gone away on a hunt. The children of
Mr. and Mrs. Assel Linn that survived to maturity were Mary Ann Linn, b. Nov. 24, 1793, m. Jos. McArthur, and Dr. Lewis Fields Linn, b. Nov. 5, 1795, near Louisville, Ky., d. Oct. 3, 1843, St. Genevieve, Mo. They were early deprived of both their parents (the father dying when Dr. Lewis F. Linn was eleven
years old), and in the vicissitudes of after years clung to their half-brother, Henry Dodge, as their counselor and guide having joined him at St. Genevieve. Their mother proves to have been the only woman in the land to whose name attaches the distinction of having two of her sons become
senators of the United States; Dr. Lewis F. Linn having been senator from Missouri, 1833-1843; Henry Dodge, senator from Wisconsin, 1848-1857. Her grandson, Augustus C. Dodge, was a senator from Iowa, 1848-1855.
At on period, 1841-1843, all three of these descendants of Nancy Ann Hunter sat together in the Capitol. Senator Lewis F. Linn m. July 1, 1818, Elizabeth Relfe, daughter of John Relfe of Virginia.

[NI02526] 1-Child

[NI02528] Edwin Tunnicliff was a Ships Captain an later a policeman of Marysville, Washington during its early days and distinuished himself by his bravery on several occasions. He left Marysville, and went into business at Fort Douglas way up in the cold North, and by his enterprise in mercantile pursuit, has established several stores and run a number of pack trains, and has succeeded in accumulating a large fortune. It is the design of Mr Dodge to settle in California.

[NI02533] In watertown Library we found a child Winfred Dodge b. 17 Apr 1873
residing in Cape Vincent.

[NI02537] 2-Children

[NI02539] Married and had Family.

[NI02542] Unmarried.

[NI02544] She was one daughter of eight children to Abner Hubbard and Mary Helen (Moon) Dodge. She married Richard Corbett of Ireland yet he only survived for about 2 years after the marriage leaving no children, yet she enjoyed all she met. She was survived by sisters Grace Dilger and Jess Parker, and brothers Otis and George of Seattle Washington and Dwight of Richmon

[NI02553] Died at 7yrs,2mos,17ds.

[NI02554] Will dated 13 Feb 1752, he is called of "Flushing, Queens County, on Nassu
Island, now called Long Island, New York. His father Samuel, brother
Samuel, and wife Mary, Executors. He was buried in the Quaker Burial
ground at Cow Neck, (Port Washington) , Log Island New York. He married
Mary b. 1725 who d. 23 Jul 1796. dau of Thomas Hunt of Hunt's Point,
Westchester County, New York.

[NI02562] '''Obituary''' Dunn County News May 29, 1891 Page 5

Dodge - At Minneapolis, Minn. May 21, 1891, of typhoid fever. Bertha, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dodge, aged 22 years.

The deceased was born in the town of Grant where she resided unit a short time previous to her death. She was an estimable young lady who was idolized by all her friends. Her sudden death was a terrible shock to the entire community. Her heart-broken parents have the deep sympathy of all their friends in their deep sorrow. The funeral sermon was preached by Rev. Mr. Conway of Chippewa Falls.

[NI02570] 3-Children

[NI02580] 4-Children

[NI02589] Private in the Civil War Company D . 12th Rhode Island Infantry. Died at
Harewood Hospital, Washington, DC.

[NI02622] Married in Cornwallis, Twp., kings County, NS.

[NI02645] Birth: Sep. 27, 1822
Nova Scotia, CanadaDeath: unknown
Arena
Iowa County
Wisconsin, USA


Gardner Dodge (27 Sep 1822 - ?) was born in Horton Twp, Kings co. Nova Scotia.
His wife Lucinda Cox,also from Nova Scotia, is buried in Arena, Iowa co., Wisconsin.

They belong to a group of families who came from Nova Scotia. They lived throughout Dane and Iowa Counties and beyond. Gardner and Lucinda lived in Arena and no doubt saw such relatives as William Allen Ward (1804-1883), & Wm's 2nd wife Margaret McKenzie Ward (1826-1913)- they shared grandparents in Nova Scotia and the same cemetery.


Gardner's maternal Gr-grandparents were William Allen Ward (1750-1844) & Elizabeth Grant (1752-1841), both from in Yorkshire, buried in Horton, Nova Scotia.

Jacob Dodge, his father, married twice. There is a question whether wife 1. Susannah Ward c.1795-1822) or wife 2. Olive Schofield (1800 - ) is the mother of Gardner (1822 -).

In any case. these two women are already related to each other - Aunt & niece.
Jacob's 2nd wife, Olivia Schofield's mother was Hannah Ward Schofield. Hannah Ward Schofield was the sister of Susannah Ward Dodge, Jacob Dodge's 1st wife. Both the 'Ward' women had the same Ward parents.

Ward grandparents (parents of Susannah & Hannah Ward)
William Allen Ward (1750-1844) & Elizabeth Grant (1752-1841)

Scholfield grandparents of Gardner
Nathan Schofield (1764-1856) & Hannah Ward [1774-WFT Est. 1819-1859] were Olive Schofield's parents.

Dodge grandparents
Gardner Dodge (1762-1808) & Mrs. Dodge.

Gardner Dodge's parents:
Jacob Dodge of Horton, Nova Scotia, (1791 -) married twice:
1st - (1812)to Susannah Ward (c. 1795-1822), of Beach [Beech] Hill, Kings co., Nova Scotia
2nd - (m.d.?) to Olive Schofield (1800 - )


Gardner Dodge (27 Sep 1822- ) married Lucinda Cox (1826-)

[NI02665] When Enoch Dodge was born on November 13, 1833, in Granville Ferry, Canada, his father, Enoch, was 35 and his mother, Catherine, was 28. He married Arabella Martha WILSON and they had one son and one daughter together between 1862 and 1870. He then married Henrietta Amelia Davies on September 26, 1887, in Bridgetown, Canada. He died on March 5, 1905, in Bridgetown, Canada, at the age of 71, and was buried there

[NI02676] Died at age 84 approx. In his house in 1745 prayer-meeting were held
that resulted in the formation of the first Baptist church in New York
City. The Reverand John Pyne was pastor until his death in 1750. They
hired a rigging loft in William Street in 1753, and bought a lot in John
Street in 1760.

[NI02680] 1-Child

[NI02681] Unmarried.

[NI02683] Unmarried.

[NI02691] 4-Children

[NI02702] 2-Children

[NI02707] 1900 US Census - Newton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
1910 US Census - Waltham, Middlesex County, Massachusetts

[NI02716] Never Married

[NI02717] Res in Kitchner, Ontario, Canada

[NI02718] Never Married

[NI02724] 2-Children

[NI02727] He was one of the wealthiest citizens of Kentville.

[NI02730] This may not be the correct William Henry Dodge as listed in the church
records.

[NI02734] Duncanson Geanology has birthdate as 3/6/1819.

[NI02736] Dunncanson' s Genealogy has birth date as 6 mar 1919.

Sarah was maarried Novemberr 7 18838

[NI02737] Farmed First in Horton, Nova Scotia. He emigrated to Winona MN. about
1856.

[NI02757] Clarence E. Cutler, about 70, died Sunday at his home in Tujunga, Cal. A
resident of Jasper county for many years, he was married to the former
Laura Dodge, sister of James Dodge of Newton. She survives him. He is
also survived by two brothers, Harry of Des Moines and Warren of Detroit,
Minn.

Funeral plans are pending but will be in charge of the Morgan Loehr
funeral home. The body will arrive here Wednesday. ~ The Newton Daily
News, March 9, 1953
__________
Cutler Funeral Is Set for Thursday

Funeral services for Clarence E. Cutler will be Thursday at 2 p.m. in the
Morgan-Loehr funeral home with Rev. W. W. Johnson of the United
Presbyterian church officiating.

Pallbearers will be Floyd Hard, Evertt Smith, Ray Swihart, Jay Brokaw, J.
G. Wormley and David Wormley. Mrs. Ray Swihart and Mrs. Harold McConkey
will be in charge of flowers. Marion Welle will be soloist accompanied by
Mrs. Lois Stanton.

Burial will be in Sugar Grove cemetery. ~ The Newton Daily News, March
11, 1953

[NI02763] Occupation Master Mariner. Living on the Pacific Coast (Seattle, Washington in 1905, 1910, 1920, 1930 (Census)

[NI02769] Lowell Courier Citizen, Lowell, MA, Wednesday, 23 November 1938:

OBITUARY: CHARLES H. DODGE

Charles Henry Dodge died Monday at the Gifford Hospital. Born June
28, 1867 in Nova Scotia, he was the son of John Thomas and Harriet
Roderick
Dodge. His residence was at 514 Middlesex Street. The body was removed
to the White & Roy Mortuary at 236 Westford Street.

[NI02781] Had a ship building business in Mill Creek, Nova Scotia

[NI02782] Samuel was trained as a ships carpenter in Nova Scotia. He along with his brother Charles worked on the building of "The Harvest Queen", a 2044 ton barque built in Kinsport, Nova Scotia in 1887 designed by Ebenezer Cox of Kingsport. After his marriage, Samuel moved to Wellesley, MA and established a very successful building business. He was instrumental in building many of the public buildings in Needham, MA. including the town hall, the public library, several schools, and many private residences. He was assisted in this by his son Harry Dodge. He died when a chimney fell on him, while working on a roof in the town of Wellesley during a terrible winter storm on 4 January 1913.

[NI02786] Therone Royal Woodward say in 1904 that Marie married Israel in Batton
Rouge, Louisiana.

[NI02792] She was also known as Nellie.

[NI02794]
Dodge Orlando D 1842 1918
======

On Sunday at his home near Millens Bay, occurred the death of Orlando D. Dodge, one of Cape Vincent's oldest and most
highly respected citizens. Orlando D. Dodge, who was seventy-six years of age, was the son of David D. and Louisa (Barrett) Dodge. He was born in the town of Cape Vincent and had always resided upon the homestead farm, which was purchased and cleared by his father. Mr. Dodge was a man of sterling
integrity, and merited the esteem of the people of Cape Vincent gnerally all of whom will sympathize With his family in their great bereavement. He is survived by one son, Roy D.
Dodge, of Millens Bay, and three daughters, Miss Glenada L. Dodge, of Millens Bay, Mrs Winnifred E. Butts, of Clayton, and Mrs Floy E. Craig, of Chicago, Il. Also one sister, Mrs.
Seeley, of Kingston. Interment was made in the Riverside cemetary

Cape Vincent eagle., November 07, 1918,

[NI02798] In 1745, prayer meetings which resulted in the formation of the first
Baptist churchin New York City were held in this house. Last name spelled
Vanderbilt in book.
The New York Gen. and Biog. Record, Vol. 23, p. 17, says that Margaret
Vanderbilt Dodge was descended from Aert from Bilt, a village in
Utrecht, whose son, Jan Aertsen, emigrated to America as early as 1650.
Married 1st Anneken Hendricks, from Bergen, Norway; m. 2d Dierber
Cornelis; m. 3d Magdelina Hanse, widow. Jacob Jansen Vanderbilt, a child
by the second wife, m. Aug. 13, 1687, Margaretje, dau. of Derick Janse
Vandervliet, widow of Andries Onderdonck, and dau. of Dirk, who was a son
of Jan, probably from Vliet in South of Holland, and emigrated from Waal,
Netherlands, 1660. Jacob and Margaret (Vandervliet) Vanderbilt had Jan
of Hempstead and Flatbush, who m. Margaret -----------, and had Margaret
Vanderbilt, who m. Jeremiah Dodge.

[NI02799] Israel F. Dodge, Missouri Enlisted: Unknown - Union Rank Induction: Sergeant
Rank Discharge: Private 6th Regiment, Missouri Infantry, Cos. B & C.

[NI02811] Served in company D of the 3rd Regiment of the Mounted Missouri Volunteers under Capt. G. deKorponay

[NI02813] Proprietor St. Lawrence Hotel in Cape Vincent,Jefferson County, New York

[NI02844] May be Florence Irvine.

[NI02861] Died Young, Unmarried.

[NI02872] She is also know as Bonnie.

[NI02874] Moved in 1995 to Dover Delaware.

[NI02875] June Dodge is her maried name her maiden name is unknown.

[NI02885] This is the Civil War soldier who was killed in 1864 from wounds
recieved at the battle of the Wilderness , March 23, 1864 is listed in
family bible as death date and the Army lists 1 July 1864. He was known
on the battlefield as Henderson N. Dodge.

[NI02920] Lost at Sea

[NI02922] Enlisted in the Maine 2nd Battery, 1st Battalion Maine Light Artillery on 3 Nov 1861. Mustered out on 09 Apr 1862

Engagements:
1st Battalion, Maine Light Artillery mustered in December 18, 1861. Moved to Lowell, Mass., December 19, and duty there till February, 1862. Moved to Boston February 2, & there embarked on Steamer "Idaho" for Ship Island, Miss., February 8,1862 arriving there.

•Cross Keys, VA - July 8, 1862
The Battle of Cross Keys was fought on June 8, 1862, in Rockingham County, Virginia, as part of Confederate Army Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's campaign through the Shenandoah Valley during the American Civil War. Together, the battles of Cross Keys and Port Republic the following day were the decisive victories in Jackson's Valley Campaign, forcing the Union armies to retreat and leaving Jackson free to reinforce Gen. Robert E. Lee for the Seven Days Battles outside Richmond, Virginia.

•Cedar Mountain, MD - August 9, 1862
The Battle of Cedar Mountain, also known as Slaughter's Mountain or Cedar Run, took place on August 9, 1862, in Culpeper County, Virginia, as part of the American Civil War. Union forces under Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks attacked Confederate forces under Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson near Cedar Mountain as the Confederates marched on Culpeper Court House to forestall a Union advance into central Virginia. After nearly being driven from the field in the early part of the battle, a Confederate counterattack broke the Union lines resulting in a Confederate victory. The battle was the first combat of the Northern Virginia Campaign.

•Second Bull Run, VA - August 29, 1862
The Second Battle of Bull Run or Second Manassas was fought August 28–30, 1862[1] in Prince William County, Virginia, as part of the American Civil War. It was the culmination of an offensive campaign waged by Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia against Union Maj. Gen. John Pope's Army of Virginia, and a battle of much larger scale and numbers than the First Battle of Bull Run (or First Manassas) fought on July 21, 1861 on the same ground.

Following a wide-ranging flanking march, Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson captured the Union supply depot at Manassas Junction, threatening Pope's line of communications with Washington, D.C. Withdrawing a few miles to the northwest, Jackson took up defensive positions on Stony Ridge. On August 28, 1862, Jackson attacked a Union column just east of Gainesville, at Brawner's Farm, resulting in a stalemate. On that same day, the wing of Lee's army commanded by Maj. Gen. James Longstreet broke through light Union resistance in the Battle of Thoroughfare Gap and approached the battlefield.

Pope became convinced that he had trapped Jackson and concentrated the bulk of his army against him. On August 29, Pope launched a series of assaults against Jackson's position along an unfinished railroad grade. The attacks were repulsed with heavy casualties on both sides. At noon, Longstreet arrived on the field from Thoroughfare Gap and took position on Jackson's right flank. On August 30, Pope renewed his attacks, seemingly unaware that Longstreet was on the field. When massed Confederate artillery devastated a Union assault by Maj. Gen. Fitz John Porter's V Corps, Longstreet's wing of 25,000 men in five divisions counterattacked in the largest simultaneous mass assault of the war.[4] The Union left flank was crushed and the army was driven back to Bull Run. Only an effective Union rear guard action prevented a replay of the First Manassas defeat. Pope's retreat to Centreville was nonetheless precipitous.

Pvt. Elbridge was mustered out of the Union Army on the 3rd of April 1862 just one month before the Battle of Chancellorsville which at that time was the bloodiest day of the Civil War.

[NI02924] Served in Union Army. Where he was killed in the battle of Vicksburg. According to his brother Joel in a letter to his Father, Israel his broother died from disease suffered in the Civil War.

[NI02932] Died Young.

[NI02937] Raised Family in port Arthur, Ontario (Thunder Bay)

[NI02941] Died young.

[NI02950] Bill graduated from Yale University in 1986, where he sang baritone with
the Whiffenpoofs, and from Yale Law School in 1991. He taught English in
Tianjin, China from 1987 to 1988 and served as a law clerk to Justice
Harry Blackmun, U.S. Supreme Court, from 1992 to 1993. Since 1995, he has
been a professor at the University of California, Hastings College of the
Law.

[NI02953] Found Dead in Bed.

[NI02959] Twin to Henrietta M. Dodge.

[NI02963] Twin to R. Lewis Dodge.

[NI02970] From Deer Isle

[NI02976] Tues. 7/20/99 met parents at Country Cupboard. Kerstetters drove them
up. We had breakfast. Dad wanted to go up on the hill and see the
river and back in the country where he hunted. That afternoon mom
called and said dad was going to be admitted to the hospital. I went
down and drove them in and he was having a coughing attack. Thurs.
7/22/99 I went down and Dr. Alexander met with me and mom. He told us
dad didn't have long, a matter of months, probably no more than 3
months. They started him on some new medicines and a morphine inhaler.
That helped surpress the coughing. Fri 7/23/99 mom called and said he
was looking pretty good. Sat. 7/24/99 Leslie and I went over to Penn
State picked up Steve and drove to Harrisburg to see dad in the
hospital. It was a surprise for him. We went up to Williamsport and
then took Steve back to Penn State. Mon. 7/26/99 I went down and I
brought dad home from the hospital. He didn't seem to bad. Hosspess
came. Tues & Wed mom said he did ok at home was eatting and hadn't had
to take the morphine.

[NI02981] Note tombstone Reads Feila Pendleton Dodge.
Fields P. Dodge, Serial Number: 2725706; Birth Place: Islesboro, Maine; Birth Date: 03 Nov 1893; Residence: Islesboro; Comment: Ind: Belfast, Waldo County, May 28 1918. Private. Org: 151 Dep Brig to June 15/18; CompanyM 302 Inf to Oct. 15 1918; CompanyC 366 Inf to disch. Eng: Meuse-Argonne; Defensive Sector. Overseas: July 5 1918 to Apr. 24 1919. Hon disch on demob: May 17, 1919.

[NI02983] He graduated from Haverford College in 1951 and Harvard Business School
in 1957. He served in the U.S. Navy from 1951 to 1955 and in the Peace
Corp from 1962 to 1964. He worked for Matson Navigation Company and
Weyerhaeuser before purchasing Cal Cedar Homes, where he worked until
retirement.

John Lanphere Dodge III John passed away from complications from Parkinson's disease at home in Mill Valley on June 23, 2012, surrounded by his family. He was born in Orangeburg, New York on January 6, 1930. John graduated from Haverford College, where he was a member of the sailing team and co-captain of the wrestling team. He served three years as a Lieutenant (Junior Grade) on the destroyer USS Hickox and was a veteran of the Korean conflict. After graduating from Harvard Business School in 1957, John moved to San Francisco and joined Matson on the eve of containerization. From 1962 to 1964 he served with the Peace Corps as a country director in Liberia and Nigeria where he met and married a fellow volunteer. They had three children. John continued to work in transportation for Matson, Weyerhaeuser, and as an independent transportation and business consultant until he and a partner bought Cal-Cedar Homes and North Bay Wood in Sebastopol, which John continued to run until retirement. John met his second wife Peg Dueringer in 1978. John and Peg loved to travel. When he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease he made a list of places he wanted to go. Trekking, bicycling, rafting, sailing, and touring took them all over the world, including China, Nepal, Bhutan, Peru, India, and Europe. Their last expedition together was to Antarctica. He enjoyed driving and working on classic cars; his 1949 MG TC, "Sir Cedric", still resides in the garage in Mill Valley. John also loved to spend time with friends and family at their property in Cloverdale, pruning, trying to get his old army jeep to run, playing horseshoes, and sipping cocktails on the sun deck. John is survived by his wife Peg, his children Lisa, Elizabeth, and Bill, his son-in-law Albert Orozco and daughter-in-law Liz O'Brien, and his four grandchildren Tris Dodge, Anthony Dodge, Josh Orozco, and Melia Orozco. Donations in John's memory may be made to the Parkinson's Institute, Hospice By The Bay, or your favorite charity .

[NI02984] Vital Records of Islesboro have his niddle initial as 'F' . some records say it is AN ERROR and should be an E.

[NI02985] Some records say marriage is 9 Mar 1961.

[NI02986] Served as a private in Capt Thomas Wheeler's company in the Revolution.
A Baptist Minister.
In 1788 he moved to Kentucky, and settled on Nolin Creek about three miles from the present town of Hoginville (Hogdensville), where his son Jerial was born soon after their arrival. In Feb., 1794, he visited his brother Israel at St. Genevieve, Missouri, and went over to the Illinois country and baptized four persons in Fountain Creek, the first instance of the ordinance of baptism being administered by a Protestant in that region.

[NI02988] George W. Dodge, Serial Number: 2756109; Birth Place: Islesboro, Maine; Birth Date: 15 Oct 1890; Residence: Islesboro; Comment: Ind: Belfast, Waldo County, July 29 1918. Pvt 1st cl Aug. 23, 1918. Org: G & F Company331 to disch. Overseas service: None. Hon disch on demob: Jan. 8, 1919.

[NI02990] WWI Draft card say 28 Jan 1895.

[NI03005] Elizabeth graduated from the University of California at Irvine in 1992,
Summa Cum Laude, with a degree in English Literature. Her avocations are
music, travel, literature, and photography. She studies voice and has
sung professionally with several local bands. Since 1999, she has
volunteered her time for Big Brothers/Big Sisters. She has worked for
E*TRADE FINANCIAL, designing and product managing software, since 1998.

[NI03011] Died at approx age 4 years.

[NI03022] Went west to Victoria Brittish, Columbia

[NI03028] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 34
page 301

Mrs. Lucretia Yeaman Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 33827
Born in Calhoun, Kentucky.
Wife of Adiel S. Doge.
Descendant of Lieut. Thomas Helm.
Daughter of William Pope Yeaman, D. D., and S. Eliza Shackelford, his wife.
Granddaughter of Stephen M. Yeaman and Lucretia Helm, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of George Helm and Rebecca La Rue, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Thomas Helm and Jane Pope, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Benjamin Pope.
Thomas Helm, (1731-1816), was lieutenant in the Third Virginia regiment under Col. Thomas Marshall. He resigned [p.301] 1777 on account of wounds received in battle. He was born in Prince William County, Virginia; died in Hardin County, Ky.
Also No. 12293.

[NI03046] Harry was a professional builder and contractor in Needham MA. He built many of the town buildings there (library, several schools, town hall and many private residences.)

[NI03047] "He was a liberal Baptist minister and strong proponent of religious
disestablishment. He began his career in Hampton, Connecticut in 1788,
moving to Southington, Berlin, and Middletown, before becoming pastor of
the Baptist church in Lebanon, Connecticut, where he served from 1805 to
1814. He was an early supporter of Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party
and co-authored a 1801 letter to Jefferson on behalf of the Danbury
Baptist Association. Jefferson's reply to this letter included the "wall
of separation" metaphor that later became an important part of American
constitutional law. He later served as pastor of the First Baptist Church
of New London, Connecticut, but became a Universalist sometime around
1820, which subjected him to persecution from his former associates. By
1825, he had moved to New York, New York, where he continued to preach.
He was reportedly a tall, fine-looking man, with a keen sense of humor, a
prodigious memory for the Bible, and a fine singing voice."
Some record his death as 4 June 1843.

[NI03050] He was president and owner of Bell & County, maker of Bell-Ans tablets for
indigestion, in Orangeburg, New York. A well-known owner and trainer of
trotters, he drove his own horses at Saratoga, Roosevelt, and Yonkers.

[NI03072] Joe graduated from the University of Miami. He served in the Marine
Corps during World War II and the Air Force during the Korean War.
Following his father's death in 1965, he took over as president of Bell &
Company in Orangeburg, New York, a manufacturer of Bell-Ans tablets for
indigestion. When the company folded in 1972, he concentrated on real
estate. He served as chairman of the Orangetown Republican Committee
from 1982 to 1984. An amateur race car driver, he died in a racing
accident at Lime Rock Park in Lakeville, Connecticut.

[NI03105] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 23
page 170

Mrs. Fanny Stanton Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 22487
Born in Stonington, Connecticut.
Wife of John L. Dodge, Jr.
Descendant of Jasper Latham, of Connecticut.
Daughter of Charles H. Cottrell and Georgia A. Crary, his wife.
Granddaughter of George Burrows Crary and Catherine Burrows Latham, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Caleb Latham and Rhoda Burrows, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Jasper Latham.
Jasper Latham, (1753-1835), was placed on the pension roll of New London county, 1831, for service of matross and private in ths Connecticut Continental Line.
Also No. 10352.

[NI03110] He was an excellent mathematician, a self-educated man. While in New York, he was appointed head clerk in the general post office, under President Washington, and served until the seat of government was moved to Philadelphia. In 1817, he moved his family to Ohio

[NI03121] He had 10 children.

From the Boone's Creek Minute Book of 1834

Dodge's Excommunication

May the 26, 1834

Jerial Dodge said at Elizabeth Elises that Andrew Taylor was too
respectable a liar and of too long standing to be heard by him, Dodge, but
when he got through with Taylor there was some more respectable liars he
would handle. He made use of this language or words to the same import or
meaning. Sister Humphries said the testamony she gave to the church
concerning Dodge was part of the language used in her house on the 26th of
Aprile 1834. This language was used at night by J. Dodge.

The case presented by the Elders for consideration that Jerial Dodge indulges in speaking reapoachful of James Miller and his band and he also said that when he got through with Taylor he would show what Miller and his band had been about. And also saying in the presence of sister Humphries that if he had a dog named James he would kill it and that if miller came here the church would be broke up. And after considering the wickedness of Evil Speaking or Reviling against Brethering in good standing when he should not speak Evil of no man. The church then unanimously agreed they would not respect him as a brother nor eat with him from being specially
instructed by Paul in I Corinthians 5 letter 11 verse. And they hope theBoons Creek church agree with them in the same. June 21, 1834.

Ira Howard, Clk.

July 19, 1834

Jerial, son of Josiah Dodge and his wife Zerviah Willes, was born 1788, at the family homestead on Nolin Creek in Hardin County (near present-day Hodgenville, Larue County), Kentucky.

Like this father before him, Jerial became a Baptist minister, one of the earliest proponents of New Testament Christianity in East Tennessee. At age 16, Jerial was minister of the tiny South Fork of the No-Linn Baptist Church. In 1804, he attended the Russell's Creek Association meeting as a delegate from his church. He reported that they had ten members. By 1815, they had grown to a membership of forty-five. The No-Linn Church was associated with the Separate Baptists.

In 1815, Jerial married Elizabeth "Eliza" Washington Spotswood. The young couple moved to Washington County, in Southwestern Virginia. Marriage records from that county, dated July 4, 1816 and October 24, 1819, carry the signature of Jerial Dodge.

From there, Jerial and Elizabeth moved to Blountville, Sullivan County, Tennessee, in 1820. Jerial brought his faith with him and began teaching his new neighbors. He helped to organize a congregation at Concord (later Weaver's) Church in Sullivan County, in the early 1820's. Here too Jerial bought property, and Jerial and Elizabeth began their family, eventually totaling a large family of ten children. In 1826, Jerial and Elizabeth moved their family to Washington County, Tennessee, where Jerial purchased seventy-eight and one-half acres of land, on Little Sinking Creek, west of the Old Stage Road. Later, in 1841, Jerial purchased four-hundred-twenty acres lying in both Washington and Sullivan counties, paying $2,671.36. His home occupied an historic site in the state near the famous beech tree on which Daniel Boone carved his immortal line: "D. Boon cilled a Bar on tree in the year 1760." Jerial built a swing on one of the tree's great branches, and all the neighborhood children enjoyed playing there. During this period of time, Jerial supported himself by farming and his special trade of bell making (it was reported that Jerial could imitate the tone of any bell with his voice). "The Joneboro Whig", dated November 17, 1841, advertised a stock of bells at Jerial Dodge's Shop, 8 miles N. E. of Jonesborough near the Stage Road leading to Blountville. The molds for his bells were dug into the ground near a stream on his farm. In addition to his farm and bell shop, Jerial operated a ferry on the Holston River, and he continued to preached at every opportunity.

Jerial died 1843, at age fifty-five, in Missouri, where he had gone on a prospecting trip. His death was attributed to smallpox. His remains were buried in an unmarked grave unknown to his family. The Washington County Tennessee inventory of his estate in 1847 listed 900 unfinished bells, shop tools and valuable books.

[NI03123] Captain Walter F. Dodge took charge of one of the coasting vessels in early life, when he amassed considerable property, owning in a large number of the coasting vessels. He left off going to sea and went into trade, and at the age of thirty-five was thought by many to be wealthy. He removed to Boston, and there meeting with adverse fortune, he commenced to go to sea once more. He was taken by the Confederate cruisers, his vessel burnt, and he carried to Richmond, everything taken from him, even his watch, and left to go home the best way he could.
History of Islesborough, John P. Farrow, 1893, page 126-7.

[NI03135] In 1870 census Joshua is in Winchester, Middlesex, Massachusetts with his family. His 9 year old son is with his grandfather Joshua Dodge in Islesboro, Maine.

[NI03139] Joe served as Vice Chairman of the Rockland County, New York Republican
Committee from 1990 to 1994, and as Campaign Manager for Congressman
Benjamin Gilman in 1992. In 1999, he founded ExecuTours, a relocation
consulting business in Orangeburg, New York.

[NI03140] Jeffers is a sound and recording Enginer.

[NI03159] Ira was a Private in the Connecticut militia serving in the Wallingford-New Haven Company under Captain Bunnell. in the Revolutionary War. In 1790 he was in Watertown (later Plymouth), Litchfield CT, 1800 census Plymouth CT., 1810 census Plymouth Ct, Between Nov 1816, and May 1818 moved to Genesee County, New York

[NI03160] Name may be Corliss or Curtis, Dodge Family not quite sure.

[NI03162] 78 11 14days

[NI03164] Died of Yellow fever bur in secret in Amity St. Churchyard by Brothers
John & Jeremiah.

[NI03170] Corporal in the revolutionary war.

[NI03223] Died Young

[NI03232] Private on the Mass Line, Per the DAR Centenial Edition. Drownee

[NI03237] Warren is her married name as she first marred Benjamin Sherman

[NI03240] Charlie was known to be a quiet, unassuming, and generous man. He was a
popular and well-known member of the business community in Mystic,
Connecticut, where he managed the Cottrell Lumber Company for a number of
years. He had branched out into the ready-made home industry and was
building up a fine name for himself when he died of illness while
visiting relatives in Staten Island, New York.

[NI03246] Moses Dodge, Colchester, Connecticut; served from 10 April to 30 November 1759 in Lt. Col. Spencer's Company, 2nd Regiment, commanded by Col. Whiting.From Rolls of Connecticut Men in the French and Indian War, 1755-1762 Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, Vols. 9 and 10. Reprinted for the Clearfield Company by the Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, Maryland, 1997 The brother of Amos Dodge, John Dodge and NathanDodge who also served. Sons of David Britain Dodge and Rebecca Yeomans.

[NI03276] By the 1880 Census Elizabeth was a Widow

[NI03286] Twin to Theodore W. Dodge.

[NI03289] The jewelry industry in Providence had its origins in the late eighteenth
century in the enterprises of two men, Seril Dodge, who was the first
jeweler to open a shop in Providence, and his nephew, Nehemiah Dodge, who
developed an early process for rolled plated gold. From these small
beginnings Providence developed into the center of jewelry manufacturing
in the United States in the late nineteenth century, a position which it
has continued to hold.

The elder Dodge was in business in Providence by August 1784,
manufacturing watches, clocks and gold and silver jewelry. Dodge
prospered, sharing in the town's success as a center of maritime trade,
and he was soon sharing the local market with several other jewelers. In
1794, just about the time that Seril Dodge retired, Nehemiah Dodge opened
his own shop for the manufacture of 18k gold jewelry. Before long, he
abandoned this traditional craft and became the first manufacturer of
rolled plated gold. The method which he developed, perhaps with
techniques learned from his uncle, consisted of uniting a thin sheet of
gold to a thicker sheet of copper with silver solder, and then hammering
it and rolling it to the desired thickness. Dodge sold his plated gold to
other goldsmiths and thus became the first "manufacturing jeweler." As
such, he instituted two trends that would continue to characterize the
Providence jewelry industry: the production of jewelry in the lower price
ranges; and the specialization and innovation in the technology of
jewelry manufacture.

[NI03290] Died soon.

[NI03298] See the reunion & history Of Pompey Pg 297.

[NI03303] David obtained his education in the "Dodge Schoolhouse", just east of the family settlement.
Teacher, in 1835 started meetings for the Catrholic Church.

[NI03307] Some spell the name Mercy.

[NI03313] Education: University of Washington
Occupation: Civil Engineer, City of Seattle
A veteran of WWI, PFC US Army, stationed at Ft. Lewis, WA

[NI03317] Bill was a Lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He was on the
race committee of the Larchmont Yacht Club, Larchmont, New York, during
the 1930s and raced to Bermuda, Nassau, Cuba, and Halifax on numerous
occasions. He managed the Cottrell Lumber Company in Mystic, Connecticut
from 1936 to 1988. He has raised Montadale sheep on his Mystic property
since 1944.

Mystic - William "Bill" Brunson Dodge Sr., 101, passed away on July 12, 2012, at The William W. Backus Hospital in Norwich.

Bill was was born on June 21, 1911, in Mystic, the son of Jenny (Brunson) Dodge and Charles Cottrell Dodge.

He was predeceased by his wife, Mary Elizabeth (Connor) Dodge and his youngest daughter, Georgiana Cottrell Dodge.

He is survived by his oldest daughter, Juliet Miller Dodge of Lancaster, Pa.; and his son, William Brunson Dodge Jr. "Brunson" and his wife, Elaine, of Gales Ferry. He is also survived by Brunson's daughter, Christina Abigail "Nina" Dodge and her husband, Matthew Leibowitz, of Encinitas, Calif.; and by Georgiana's son, Jesse William Dodge of Providence.

Bill was educated in local schools and pursued a lifelong passion for sailing. He was for many years the head of his family's company, The Cottrell Lumber Co., which was located at the site of the Mystic River Park. He was a member of many clubs, sailing organizations, and civic groups, a list of which would take up many column inches. It suffices to say, there was not a flat surface in the Dodge house that did not have at least one of Bill's trophies on it, and that his wallet held so many membership cards there was hardly room for lunch money.

Calling hours will be held beginning at 10 a.m on Thursday, July 19, 2012, in the library of the Mystic Congregational Church. A memorial service will follow at 11 a.m. at the church. Burial at the family plot in Elm Grove Cemetery will follow the service for those who care to attend.

The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, contributions in Bill's name be made to a youth sailing program of your choice or to the Friends of the Eastern Connecticut Symphony Orchestra (ECSO), 289 State St., New London, CT 06320.

The Dinoto Funeral Home, Mystic, is assisting the family.

[NI03319] Oliver Dodge, son of Jonathan Dodge and Mercy Williams, was born on 2 Sep 1745 at Colchester, New London Co., Connecticut.

He was a Revolutionary soldier having enlisted Aug. 20, 1777, in the company of Capt. Asa Price, Col. Danforth Keyes's regiment of Danvers, Mass.; discharged June 3, 1778. In 1785 he removed from New London, Conn., to Wyalusing, where he remained until 1788, when he moved to Terrytown, settling on a 600-acre tract, known for more than a century as the "Dodge farm." He moved into a dilapidated log house (probably built by the Budds, 1774), which before winter was supplanted by a comfortable log dwelling in which he lived until his death. He was a man of prominence and activity in the early history of the county. From his rank in the old militia, he was generally known as "Major Dodge." He died January 31, 1802, and is buried in the Terrytown Cemetery, Terry Township. The cemetery had the name Dodgetown cemetery at one time. His memorial has a biography and links to those of family members.[1]

Mr. Dodge married first, Sarah Williams of New London, Conn., March 19, 1767; she died May 1, 1773.

For a second wife, Mr. Dodge married, November 1, 1773, Abigail, daughter of Jonathan and Rachel Otis Harris of Colchester, Conn. Abigail Harris, born December 22, 1748, "was an energetic, thorough-going woman of unusual business capabilities. Her husband was the owner of a number of rights under Connecticut title, and his death having occurred just prior to the 17 townships being confirmed, left the task of securing the land title upon her. In the management of the estate, she exhibited great prudence and foresight, the business of which frequently compelled her to go to Wilkes-Barre, a distance of 65 miles, always on horse-back and frequently alone. She died July 16, 1837, at Terrytown.[2]

He was one of 5 men with the name of Dodge to Fight in Revolutionary War at Bunker Hill. In 1785 he emigrated from Connecticut to Wyalusing, were he remained untill 1788 when he removed to Terrytown, settling on a 600-acre tract, known for more than a centuury as the Dodge Farm. He was a man of prominence and activity in the early history of the country. From his rank in the militia he was generally known as Major Dodge. He married twice. His place of death, was also known as Dodge town, Dodge town was from 600 acres track once known as the Old Dodge Farm at Terrytown, He also owned 400 acres on the east side of the river in Homets Ferry, Major Dodge,s settiment was once known as {Dodgetown} in the early days of Pennsylvania. In the management of her husbands estate, Mrs Dodge exhibited great prudence and forsight. the business of which frequently compelled her go to Wilkes-Barre, a distance of sixty-file miles, always on horseback and frequently alone. In 1806 while making one of these trips it became very dark in the daytime. In passing a school house she found the teacher and children crying., thinking the world was coming to an end. She stopped and pacified them by explaining that the darkness was only an eclipse of the sun, and would soon pass away. Note as of the year 1900 only 2 grandsons of Oliver Dodge remain in the Terrytown vicinity a J. E. Dodge, & Davis Dimock Dodge.

He was a Revolutionary War Solider. He fought at Bunker Hill. He enlisted on 20 August 1777 and served in Col. Asa Prince's Company of Col. Danforth Keyes' Regiment of Danvers, Mass. He was honorably discharged 3 Jun. 1778. He moved from Colchester, CT. to Terrytown, PA.

OLD DODGE FARM CEMETERY REMOVED TO TERRYTOWN,VILLAGE OF HORTONS CORNERS TERRY TWP.{AFTER 1870} BRADFORD CO.,PA.

[NI03322] I interviewed my father, Ronald Bruce Dodge, who was drafted into the U.S. Army on July 29, 1944. He had been working at the Seattle Power and Light plant in Snoqualmie, Washington. He had tried to enlist in the Navy with his six brothers, but was turned down because of color-blindness. (I have recorded it in the first person as he told it to me.)

"I completed basic training at Camp Gordon Johnson in Florida and went overseas in December from Oakland, California abord the Madsden line's Hawaiian Shipper which had been contracted as a troop carrier to the Army. There were about 2,000 troops in the hold and a Navy gun crew manning four guns. The crossing took 47 days. We used a staggering course because we were unescorted to Hellandia, New guinea. Laid in there about two weeks waiting for an escort as there was a pack of Japanese subs outside the harbor waiting for us.

The ship's crew was against the troops and would paint lines on the deck saying we could not cross those lines when we were allowed on deck. We could get water to fill our canteens twice a day then they would turn off the valves. They ran out of food and we were eating crackers and cheese.

Finally we fell into a convoy and went to the Philippines. We unloaded at Layte where we spent another two weeks before we were transferred to the island of Bagacaya which was about one city block wide and two city blocks long.

My unit was the 64th Harbourmasters and we were supposed to operate and maintain landing craft, port vessels, and a marine repair facility. However, when we shipped out we were put on a troop carrier and all our tools and organizational equipment were loaded on another ship. We never saw the other ship again. We were sixty men. We had nothing but our duffle bags and ourselves to work with and some ten and one and K rations.

We were told if we could get any of the boats running that were in the naval salvage area we could have them. Most of the vessels were landing craft (LCMs) which had quit running and were abandoned, beached and half in and half out of the water.

We went over there with nothing but our bare hands. We pulled our boots off and dove down into the engine compartments and felt around with our hands and found some wrenches. We closed the seacocks and pumped the boats out with pumps the Navy supplied.

The vessels had two each 671 Grey marine engines, 225 horsepower. We scoured the tanks, cleaned the engines and filters, drained the crankcases, and turned them over with batteries from the Navy. We got 12 of them running the first day and in less than 24 hours we had them all repaired and running.

We were changing shafts and propellers with the tide until we decided too many were getting damaged. Then we started changing them by holding our breath and diving down. So I came up with the idea of using a gas mask with a long hose. Dick Gilbert would sit on the bake of the LCM and blow in the hose and believe it or not it would work until he would start laughing. I could hear him and would come up and cuss him. So we finally make an air compressor unit out of a paint sprayer our supply sergeant requisitioned. That solved our problem. I threw my wrench at many a barracuda (and retrieved it). We used to blow the propellers off the shafts with primer cord.

We had a very resourceful supply sergeant and every day he would make a round of the engineer's yard, Seabees, and the Navy. I made him a list of the things we needed. When the engineers unloaded some big timbers we tied them together and rafted them to our island where we built maintenance docks and operations. We made pontoon docks from drums. We even made off with a two ton icemaking machins: it had a gasoline engine driven compressor. We made all our buildings and docks.

The Army port operations had been run by Australians and they were ready to pull out. The next thing I knew I was assigned as first assistant engineer on a 76 foot harbor tug. We got on and the Australians took their duffle and got right off. My chief engineer was a lieutenant by the name of Beard who had never been on a boat before and didn't even know what an engine room looked like. The skipper was the same way, but he had an enlisted first mate (we were all privates) who had been on a tug on the Mississippi before. He was good.

I found out where the fuel tanks were, figured out how to pump air (it had an air starting engine), craked it up and it ran. I sutdied the books until I knew it well. The engine was a direct drive desel, 1500 horsepower, 15 revolutions per minute. We towed barges in the harbor and between the islands.

But I finally decided I had to get off that tug because the water was killing me. It had a 450 gallon fresh water tank which Lt Beard would doctor with lots of chlorine. The only way he would let me go was if I found a replacement who knew as much as I did about the engine. Now we got extra rations and food on that tug. We had our own cook and galley crew so there no details. So what I did was to ask around until I found out who was the most unhappy person on the island. Then I coached him about three hours on the engine. He managed to convince the lieutenant and I got my duffle and got off.

Then I went back into maintenance. My outfit had fitted out our own salvage LCM and built a crane on it. We did all of the marine maintenance for the 45th Transportation Battalion and before I left we took over the Sam Houston ATS repair ship and the Seabee base on Sama. We had built two 250 foot dry docks, one 100 foot floating crane, and several large and medium-sized docks.

I got my return orders on Christmas Day in 1945. We came back on the aircraft carrier bon Homme richard. As we went out to the ship on a pontoon barge we had made several of us were given slips of paper with the letters CPO. As they called out names the troops had to climb the sides on cargo nets with their duffles on their backs. We started getting anxious as they never called our names. Then a cargo pallet was lowered and all the rest of us got on it. A steward told us to follow him. What CPO ments was chief petty officer and we were treated that was all the way back home. We had white sheets on our beds and ate in the petty officers mess with linen, silver urns, good food, and served by stewards, Rode back home in style.

I spend two weeks in the relocation center and got out on January 26, 1946. (I remember he came home with a red mustache. I was six years old.)

I believe the war was completely necessary. We had to retalitate after Pearl Harbor was bombed. It was a damn rough time, but it was necesary."

I hope you didn't mind wading through this story, but I wanted to get it down in print and thought I could also use it as an assignment. Maybe this is where they got the idea for McHale's Navy.

Written by Esther L. Hamerdigner (daughter to R B Dodge)

4/23/86

[NI03323] Compiler of this info for four generations. P.O. Box 480 Seal Rock OR
97376-0480

[NI03328] Jack was born and raised in Mystic, Connecticut. He attended Dartmouth College and served in the Navy during World War II. He graduated from Dickinson College in 1948, and the University of Missouri School of Journalism in 1949. Jack and Olivia moved to Battle Ground, Washington in 1949, and were co-publishers of the Reflector from 1950 to 1980. Jack helped incorporate the town in 1951 and served on the town council for 13 years. He enjoyed many years with the Kiwanis and Chamber of Commerce, and he and Olivia were voted Citizens of the Year in 1978. Jack was an active member of the Battle Ground Community Methodist Church for 50 years.

[NI03339] He attended Loomis Prep School in Windsor, Connecticut. He earned dual
degrees in English and History at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York,
and used his English skills and writing abilities in the book publishing
business.

[NI03353] He signs his WW I draft card as Eli Miton Dodge.

[NI03385] Twin to Charles Frederick Thompson.

[NI03386] Twin to John Franklin Thompson.

[NI03395] On April 25, 1813, troops left from Sacket's Harbor under the
command of General Z.M. Pike for the capture of York. The attack was
successful, but Pike was wounded and killed in the conflict. It is not
clear how George Dodge died, but it was likely not from battle. Possibly
sickness, or he may have been executed as a deserter.
Following the death of her husband, Sally connected with James Anderson
of Cincinnatus, and obtained custody of George, Harriet, Sally and
Polly. Jarvis requested that he be allowed to live with his uncle Elisha
Dodge of Solon. Erastus removed to Henderson.

[NI03409] Longtime Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan, resident, John Franklin "Jack" Dodge Jr., 81, passed away at home Aug. 1, 2008.

He was survived by his beloved wife, Marian Heilman Dodge. He was the beloved father of Michael (Mary Ann), Steven (Susan), Peter (Patty), John (Claudia) and Susan Regina; and grandfather of Alex (Katy), Nick and Colin, James and Kathryn, and Kaitlin and Diana.

Born in New Brighton, Pa., Mr. Dodge graduated from the Phillips Exeter Academy in 1945 and the University of Michigan in 1950. He became a UAW business representative and a Democratic delegate to state and national conventions.

He then graduated from the University of Michigan Law School (Coif) in 1955. In 1957, he was appointed assistant secretary of state and later, deputy secretary of state for the State of Michigan.

In 1961 Mr. Dodge became an assistant prosecutor for the City of Detroit. During the 1960s, he served as chairman of the 14th Congressional Democratic District. At that time, he settled into private practice, concentrating in the area of corporate and labor law. He became one of the original incorporators and directors of the Physicians Insurance Company of Michigan.

In later years, he and his wife traveled extensively and spent their years divided between Lake Huron and the Gulf of Mexico, with Grosse Pointe always as their home base.

Throughout his life, Mr. Dodge remained an ardent student of politics, history and philosophy, but his greatest delight was in family and friends. His was a life of service, both personal and professional.

A private memorial service was planned at the family cemetery in Pennsylvania.

[NI03414] Served in the US Navy USS Wadworth. Renown Carvings of Waterfowl, has
numerous awards. Living in Cortland, New York in 2001

DODGE, John E.
87, of Cortland, died Thursday, November 27, 2008. John was predeceased by his wife of 36 years, Mary Elizabeth (Flegal) Dodge, and by Phyllis Shaw with whom he enjoyed mutual companionship for many years after his wife's passing. John was born January 12, 1921 in Elmira, New York, the son of Joseph and Tuie Dodge. John worked as a mechanical engineer at Remington Rand in Elmira, NY until 1972 and then with Smith Corona in Cortland until he retired in 1983. He holds a number of typewriter design patents. John was an outstanding athlete excelling in boxing and wrestling at Southside High School in Elmira, NY. He enjoyed many sports including basketball, softball, golf, and bowling. He helped develop the youth recreation programs in Southport, NY and was active in coaching for many years. John fought for his country during World War II in the South Pacific as a crew member of the USS Wadsworth, Destroyer DD516. He was incredibly proud of that service and became lifelong friends of those with whom he served. He was an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed hunting and fishing. He developed a passion for decorative decoy carving. He was well-known within the US for his expertise and won many competitions including numerous national and world championships. He had a great love for his family and had many friends. His home was always open to all. John is survived by his four children, Donna Burnett, Tom Dodge, Ted Dodge, and Carol Whitcombe. He had eight grandchildren, Traci Didier, Brian Burnett, Jill Dodge, Mike Dodge, Taryn Trimmer, Trena Dodge, Ryan Nitti, and Chad Nitti. He also had five great-grandchildren. Friends and relatives are invited to attend a Celebration of Life service on Saturday, December 6, 2008, at 11:00 a.m. at Wright-Beard Funeral Home, 9 Lincoln Ave., Cortland, NY. Burial with Military Honors will be at Woodlawn Cemetery in Elmira, NY at 2:30 p.m. A viewing will be held Friday, December 5, 2008, from 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. at the funeral home. Anyone wishing to make a contribution in John's name is asked to consider Lime Hollow Nature Center, 338 McLean Rd., Cortland, NY 13045.

Published in Star-Gazette on December 3, 2008
Contributed by: Patti Sanders Feb 21, 2012

[NI03418] Served in the Merchant Marines and US Army. Was School Teacher &
Principal at Holland Patent, New York presently living in Latham, New York.
LATHAM - Charles Frederick "Fritz" Dodge, 88, of Latham and South Padre Is land, Texas, died Saturday, January 17, 2015 at the Stratton VA Medical Center in Albany. Born in Elmira, N.Y., he was the son of the late Joseph E. and Tuie A. Fleming Dodge. He was a graduate of Sodus High School. During World War II, he entered the Merchant Marine and spent his 17th birthday in Algiers, Africa. He later served with the US Army, Navy and Coast Guard. Upon returning home, he attended Syracuse University and graduated from Oswego State College. He was a principal at Barneveld Elementary School in the Holland Patent School District and also taught at Craig Elementary School in Niskayuna and in the Albany City School District. He later was a vocational teacher for the NYS Department of Corrections at Greene Correctional Facility and for the Glenmont Job Corps. He was a member of the Masons with a Royal Arch Degree, the Colonie Lodge of Elks, Azuza Stamp Club, a Boy Scoutmaster and a member of the 23rd Street Presbyterian Church in Watervliet. He enjoyed wood working, bird carving, stamp and coin collecting, puzzles, sailing, learning languages and was a season ticket holder for the Tri-City Valleycats. He was involved in the outreach to sailors at the Port of Albany being fluent in many languages and also taught Spanish in Texas. He was a Boston Red Sox fan and loved his rescue dog, Tika. He was predeceased by his first wife, Esther Ann Miller Dodge who died in 1994. Interment will follow in the Gerald BH Solomon Saratoga National Cemetery.

[NI03420] Living in Hammondsport, New York 2006

[NI03448] Survived the sinking of the Titanic. He killed himself 7 years after the Titanic sinking, because of people accusing him of living while so many others died. Committed Suicide.

Dr. Dodge is 60 years of age. He is a graduate of the medical department of the University of California. He entered political life for the first time in 1898, when he was elected supervisor. He was active in politics during the regime of Mayor James D. Phelan. Two years later Dr. Dodge was elected assessor, holding the position for four successive terms, when he retired to become vice president of the Anglo-London and Paris National Bank in April, 1913.
Dr. Dodge, his wife and their son, Washington Dodge, were on the White Star liner Titanic when she struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic off the Newfoundland banks in April, 1912. In the excitement that followed the crash, Mrs. Dodge and their son, who was then five years old, were placed in a lifeboat on the starboard side, while Dr. Dodge manned an oar in a lifeboat on the port side.
When the giant vessel broke in two and sank, Dr. Dodge believed that his wife and son had been lost. It was not until he was picked up by the steamship Carpathia on the following morning that he learned that his wife and son had been rescued and were passengers on the same vessel, having been picked up only a few hours before he was rescued.
Dr. Dodge, upon the advice of his physician, Dr. John Gallwey, was to have gone to Santa Barbara this morning for his health.
Besides his wife, Dr. Dodge has three children, Harry Dodge, who is in the import business in San Francisco; Washington Dodge, Jr., and Miss Vieda Dodge.

[NI03449] She first married Charles H. Shepherd, Divorced and brought 2 children to he marriage with Henry Washington Dodge.

[NI03462] Olivia Louise Doner, born 23 Apr 1920 in her parents' two-room adobe house at Pretty Prairie near Walsh, CO. Died circa 2001 After she lost her sight, Grandma Nancy Edmondson Corrie lived with her daughter Grace and her family. Olivia remembers reading to her, especially the Methodist magazine since Nancy had three Methodist minister sons and wanted to hear every word about the church. Olivia remembers coming home from school as a little girl and trying out some dance steps she had learned. Her grandmother could hear her moving around and asked her what she was doing. When Olivia answered that she was dancing, Her grandmother was horrified and launched into a long lecture on the evils of dancing. During the 1930s, the dust storms were particularly devastating to southeast Colorado. During those "Dust Bowl" days there was a period when the Doners mostly lived off of wheat--they had boiled wheat for breakfast and often for other meals too. It was just about all they had to eat for a long time. After a serious bout of the measles. Olivia developed dust pneumonia and she and her mother and brother Glenn went east to live in Yates Center, KS with Nan's sister Jennie Edmondson Bideau, (third daughter of Wiley and Sarah Edmondson), until Olivia was better and the dust storms lessened. Olivia attended North Manchester College in Indiana because her father's sister, Alice Doner, was Dean of Women there. Olivia lived with her aunt Alice and another single teacher, a Miss Dresher (also a relative). Alice was very strict but she and Miss Dresher got along well. Olivia cooked and kept house for the two "old maids" in exchange for her board and room. During her second year of college, Olivia's father, Oll, died unexpectedly and Olivia finished the year at Manchester and then transferred to Colorado State Teachers College in Greely, CO. She majored in English and minored in Spanish. She worked in Sterling and sent a small amount of money to her aunt Alice each month to repay her for the money she had lent Olivia for her tuition. She worked at Manitou Springs, CO and then went to Miami, Florida to work reading Spanish letters coming into the country from Cuba to make sure they did not contain espionage information. Olivia lived in a boarding house filled with young single people and there met John Holt (Jack) Dodge, born 10 Sep 1912, died 18 Dec 1999. After two years of duty in Europe and the Mediterranean theaters of War, Jack was working at a Naval Base in Miami. After his discharge from the navy, Jack attended college in Pennsylvania and Columbia Missouri; he and Olivia were married 26 Dec 1945 in Springfield, CO. Both Jack and Olivia had heard about the Pacific Northwest and when they read about a couple of small newspapers for sale in the
state of Washington they bought a Jeep station wagon packed their belongings and, their 6 month old baby daughter and 2 1/2 year old son and camped across the U.S. until they came to Battle Ground where they bought a weekly newspaper and settled down; they became co-publishers; Olivia's mother Grace lived with her during the final years of her life; Jack Dodge, 87, died of heart failure at home in Battle Ground. .

Jack and Olivia's children, (1) Charles Cottrell, (2) Joan Elizabeth, (3) Susan Elaine, (4) Janet Grace.

[NI03472] Bertha Anderson's father was Ernst Anderson, born July 28, 1875 in Sweden and died August 19, 1949 in Seattle, WA. Her mother was Margareta Anderson, born July 28, 1875 in Sweden and died November 9, 1953 in Seattle, WA. Ernst Anderson was a millwright, who immigrated his family from Sweden to America in approximately 1905. Mr. Anderson built his family house within the Swedish Ballard District of Seattle, WA. He also built a house next door for the newlyweds, Harold and Bertha Dodge, where they raised their family. The family sold the house in about 1985. Secretary to the Chief Engineer at Seattle City Light.

[NI03474] Dr. Harold 'Hal' Tracy Dodge was a world renowned cardiologist that was awarded the James B. Herrick Award in 1987 by the American Heart Association. This award honors physicians whose scientific achievements have contributed profoundly to the advancement and practice of clinical cardiology

[NI03475] A veteran of Korean War, US Army, stationed at Letterman Hospital, in the Presidio of San Francisco, CA

[NI03486] Was Sheriff of Shohomish County, WA, Responsible for Getting a Helicopter assigned to Sheriff's Dept for Search and Rescue Purposes. He was in the US Navy in WW II
rank GM1.

Robert Bob M. Dodge left this earth peacefully with his family by his side at Bethany Providence in Everett, Feb. 1, 2007.
He was born in Seattle, Wash., Feb. 28, 1924, to Cliff and Jean Dodge.
After serving in the Navy on the U.S.S. Kalinin Bay during WWII, he returned home to Seattle. Bob married Jean Dustin on May 1, 1947. They celebrated 59 years of marriage that brought them four children, 12 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Following in his fathers footsteps, he joined the Seattle Police Department in 1951. Bob retired after 26 years to become the Sheriff of Snohomish County in 1977 and served as Sheriff until 1987. He loved family gatherings and spending summers at their Mission Beach home, boating, crabbing, beachcombing and fishing. He made a difference in our lives and leaves us enriched by having him as a husband, father, father-in-law and grandfather.
Bob is survived by his wife, Jean; daughters, Linda Williams (Dale), Robin Lang (Van) and Cheryl Hardesty (Ken); and son, Bob Dodge (Lori); 12 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
The family would like to express to the staff at Bethany a heartfelt thanks for their warm and loving care this past year and a half and to Hospice for their support and care.
Bob was a member of West Seattle-Service Lodge, Scottish Rite Temple, Nile Shiners, Royal Order Jesters, Seattle Police Drill Team, Seattle Police Guild, Snohomish County Law Enforcement Retirees Association and St. Annes church, where he took an interest in Tribal life.
A celebration of Bobs life was held at 11 a.m., Saturday, Feb. 10, 2007, at St Annes Church, Tulalip, Wash. A reception followed at Best Western Hotel/Bella Rosa Restaraunt.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to your charity of choice.

[NI03497] DODGE -- James D. Jr., in loving memory of James D. Dodge, Jr., loving husband, son, brother, son-in-law, brother-in-law, and friend.

Born in San Diego August 27, 1947 and a 26 year resident of Antelope Valley. Jim was a dedicated high school teacher, photographer, artist, musician, computer enthusiast, and Charger fan.

He passed away May 9, 1999 after a lengthy battle with complications from juvenile-onset diabetes.

Jim was the loving husband and best friend of Anne Dodge, son of Helen Wenz and James D. Dodge (deceased), stepson of Gordon Wenz, brother of Jerilyn Lagus, son-in-law of James and Mary Easterly, brother-in-law to Steve Easterly and Peter Lagus, and beloved friend to Wendy and many others

[NI03499] Carol Lucille Wyatt was adopted by the Frank and Mildred Pace at Age 8.

[NI03505] He marched from Colchester, Connecticut on the Lexington alarm April, 1775. Served 22 days. Enlisted July 15, 1775, in 8th Company., 8th Regiment Discharged Dec. 17, 1775. He is called of East Haddam, when he enlisted Jan 1, 1777,in Capt. Ely's County, 1st Regt. Conn. Line, which was reorganized by Col.Jedediah Huntington in Jan. 1777, and participated in the Battle of Germantown, wintered at Valley Forge, and was in the Battle of Monmouth.Daniel Dodge walked home after the Monmouth fight. The births of thechildren are from Col. Rec., but for other information concerning his descendants thanks are due to his granddaughter, Miss S. Josephine Smith of Salem, Conn.

[NI03515] Adopted by Marshall

[NI03517] Died Young.

[NI03534] Commander in US Navy in WW II and Korea

[NI03537] No issue.

[NI03557] James Henry Dodge. The following is kindly furnished me by Mr. Abell: ?James H. Dodge was born in Verona, Oneida County, N.Y. Entered third term freshman in the spring of 1849. After graduating he went to the Milwaukee University of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the fall of 1852, as professor of mathematics. Married Elizabeth Crampton, daughter of Jonathan Crampton of that place in the summer of 1859; went to Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in November 1859, establishing a law office in partnership with his classmate, James E. Abell; remained there about a year when he returned to Milwaukee, going into partnership with his father-in-law as insurance agents; went into the military service of the United States in 1861 as First Lieutenant of one of the Wisconsin batteries and was mustered out in 1865; was afterwards appointed by President Grant one of the Pension Examiners in the Department of the Interior at Washington, D..C., residing there and at other points where the exigencies of the service required him to be. He remained in this at service almost continuously from that time until his death in 1899, at an invalid hospital in Danville, Illinois, from a complication of diseases. His first wife died some years since, leaving four children all grown and still living. He married again but had no issue of this marriage. His widow resides in Washington, D.C

[NI03564] WILLIAM S. DODGE
Rome Sentinel April 20, 1893
VERONA, April 20 -- William S. Dodge, one of the oldest and most prominent residents of this village, died at 1 a.m. today, after a few days of illness of dysentery. He was 76 years of age. He leaves one son, Rev. James W. A. Dodge of New York city and a daughter, Mrs. Ferguson of Utica. The deceased has for years lived in the house where he died. He was a leading member of the M. E. Church and was a man of great integrity.

Rome Semi-Weekly Saturday April 22, 1893
William S. Dodge, long a resident of this town, died at his home near this village at one o'clock Thursday morning in his 76th year. Mr. Dodge came to the town of Verona from Dutchess County when a boy and has always lived in this vicinity, his avocation that of a framer. He was widely known and universally respected. Mr. Dodge was interested in nearly every local enterprise and gave it his earnest support. In no place will he be more greatly missed that in the M. E. Church, where he has long been a prominent and active member. Mr. Dodge's wife died some 12 or more years ago, and he is survived only by two children, Rev. James Dodge pastor of the Chelsea M.. E Church in New York, and Helen, wife of Rev. J. V. Ferguson, of Utica; also two brothers, Philander, of Normall, Ill, and J. Wardell, who resides here. The funeral will be held at the M. E. Church, Monday, at 2 p.m.

[NI03565] Rome Sentinel Oct 22, 1937
HELEN MARY DODGE FERGUSON
GANNA PHI BETA FOUNDER EXPIRES
Mrs. Helen Mary Dodge Ferguson, Native of Verona, Was 87
Utica Oct 22 -- Mrs. Helen Mary Dodge Ferguson, Verona native, widow of the Rev. J. V. Ferguson and the last of the four founders of the Gamma Phi Beta Sorority, died at her home, 1504 Genesee St., yesterday, She was 87 years old.
She was a daughter of William S. and Margaret Armitage Dodge and attended Cazenovia Seminary, Wellesley College and Syracuse University.
While at Syracuse, she was one of the four founders of Gamma Phi Beta Sorority and for many years was a member of the alumnae chapter of the organization. Her husband died in 1905.
Mrs. Ferguson had journeyed through Europe, Egypt and the Holy Land.
She leaves three cousins, B. J. Dodge and Mrs. Carrie Dodge Jackson, Verona and James O. Dodge, Los Angeles.
Mrs. Ferguson was a member of the Methodist Church and held many offices in the Northern New York Conference. She was the first corresponding secretary of the Conference Women's Home Missionary society organized in 1887. She had served as a president of the Interdemoninational Union of Utica and was a member of the Associated Collegiate Alumnae and Oneida Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Funeral services will be held at 2;30 p.m. Saturday at the Gordon Funeral Home, Utica. Burial will be in Verona Cemetery.

[NI03568] Rem to Illinois. then to Califorina because he is in 1896 Voters Registrtioni in 1896 in Orange California

[NI03571] Pastor of first Presbytterian Church in Jacksonville Florida in 1906.

[NI03579] Enlisted in the Revolution at 16 and was a Ensign in the 4th New York Continentals. Was at the battle of Saratoga, member of Society of the Cincinnati, and collector of the port of Baltimore Maryland.

Was the chief engineer (1793-94) of the conversion of Fort Whetstone into a federal facility which became Ft. McHenry. Fort McHenery is now a national monument. It was the defense of Ft. McHenry during the battle of Baltimore that inspired Francis Scott Keye to Write the "Star bangled Banner."

[NI03588] Twin to Rinaldo J. Dodge.

[NI03619] He was a Justice of the Peace. He and Lucy Jane Dodge had no children.

[NI03620] Killed by a falling tree near Osceola, Mills

[NI03624] Also known as Nanthan.

[NI03661] September 21, 1790, widow Ruth Worden given power of admintratrix in Northampton (Massachusetts) Probate Records (vol. xvi p. 216 and vol. xvii p. 249). The inventory of his estate is given in Northampton Probate Records, pages 99 and 100.

[NI03698] No issue.

[NI03748] Some records say b. Colchester 10/2/1770. Judah Dodge, Sr., in 1812, journeyed from Vermont State, to the E. O. Smith place on the post road in Ohio, and there engaged in agricultural pursuits. He was a Justice of the Peace, and afterward removed to Jerome Township, where he died in May, 1856

[NI03784] Twin to Jacob Dodge

[NI03797] Twin to Tabitha

[NI03811] Twin to Encora Dodge.

[NI03812] Twin to Hyrum Dodge died young.

[NI03871] Private in Captain Joseph Walker's Company of the 3rd Regiment of the Connecticut Line (light infantry) from 1 May 1781 through 31 Dec 1781; Reuben re-enlisted on November 29th of that year for three years or the duration of the War. Muster rolls show that they were still serving in Dec 1782 and Jan 1783. Seth and Reuben participated in the siege of Yorktown, including the seizure of Redoubt No. 10. Both returned home after the War.

[NI03883] Some records state b. 7/22/1765. Private in Captain Joseph Walker's Company of the 3rd Regiment of the Connecticut Line (light infantry) from 1 May through 31 Dec 1781; Seth re-enlisted on November 29th of that year for three years or the duration of the War. Muster rolls show that they were still serving in Dec 1782 and Jan 1783. Seth and Reuben participated in the siege of Yorktown, including the seizure of Redoubt No. 10. Both returned home after the War.

[NI03895] One record states that her father was Benjamin.

[NI03899] On January 12, 1880, the Vangard of a large group of settlers arrived in Pima County, Utah These families would almost double the population of Pima. The first to arrive consisted of Thomas Ransom, his wife Mary (Mame) Dodge Ransom, Peter McBride, his wife Ruth Burns McBride and two sons, Frank and Howard, Arthur Newell and Family, and Abraham Boswell, whose wife Hannah Dodge Boswell, was not along at that time. After looking the valley over, Tom and Mame Ransom returned to Forest Dale to help others move in and bring in their cattle. Abraham Boswell returned to Toquerville, Utah, for his wife and family, and also others still in Tosponded with the lot he was to build upon. There was undoubtedly some trading because one whole block fell to four of the Dodge family. Thomas Ransom (a son-in-law of Seth Dodge) first home was where Vance Marshall lives now. He took up land for farming to the north and west, somewhere to the east of where the Mack farm was later. At that time there was no water available, so he and the Dodges commenced a canal for irrigation purposes. This was named the Dodge canal as the Dodge men supplied most of the labor. Tom and Mame had no children of their own. There were however, always young people living in their home. Verda Stowe and Frank Balland, left orphans as children, were given a home by the (Continued on page 4) querville. They all met in Forest Dale, then made up a large wagon train to go on to the Gila Valley. Those making up this train were, Seth Dodge, his two wives with a large number of teenage boys and girls, another son-in-law William Ransom, his wife Permelia Dodge Ransom, Nells Joseph Roseberry, his wife Lucretia and family, Samuel Green, his wife Lucinda and family. Seth George Dodge & Lovina Braden Dodge With this influx of new settlers, a town meeting was called where it was resolved to grant these new families all the rights and privileges as those arriving earlier, so the lot numbers were again placed in a hat and each head of family drew a number that corre-interested in finding more information on Hannah Dodge, 1642, daughter of William Dodge. She married (1) Samuel Porter, 1 child, John b. 1658. Samuel died 1660. She m. (2) Thomas Woodberry 12/2/1661. We cannot find anymore information about her or her son John. Can anyone help? Laurie Paradee-Armijo, 77A Cedar, Route 2, Santa Fe, NM 87505, E-MAIL: LAman688@AOL.COM is looking for information on Elisa Ann Dodge m. (1)Charles Dow,(2)Otis Pollard Balch Sept. 13, 1859 in Johnson, VT. Solomon Dodge b.8/13/1747 She also was looking for information on Sarah Dodge, b.6/1752, d.3/16/1822.daughter of Deacon Solomon Dodge. She married Robert Balch, 11-28-1769 and they had 13 children. Moses Balch b.10/7/1777 who married Abigail Dodge (310 - Vol. 2,-JTD) was one of them. His 2nd wife was Sally Willis. They had 4 sons. JTD Dodge does not carry her line. Laurie found this info. through the internet. Does anyone have any more info. on this line? ohn Simion Dodge & Lenora McRay Holladay Dodge John Simion Dodge, was born September 27, 1859 in Beaver, Utah to Seth George and Mariah Jane Davidson Dodge. John came to Pima with the rest of the Dodge family in 1880. He married Lenora McRay Holladay September 13, 1882. Lenora or Nora as she was always called, was the daughter of Thomas Wiley and Ann Hotton Matthews Holladay. She was born November 19, 1867 in Santaquin, Utah, She, with her parents came to Pima a short time before her marriage. John was a cattleman, and he and his brother Delos, were building up a ranch south of Pima, running their cattle in the foothills of Mt. Graham. To help finance the ranch, John took a government contract to carry mail and passengers from Willcox to Ft. Thomas by way of Ft. Grant. The road at that time went from Ft. Grant over the west end of Mt. Graham, then to Cedar Springs, down little Cottonwood Canyon and on to Ft. Thomas. Using Cedar Springs as a halfway station, John would drive to Willcox then back to Cedar Springs. From Cedar Springs, his younger brother Joshua Thomas would then take the run to Ft. Thomas and back. Nora lived at Cedar Springs with her first two children, Alva and John, returning to Pima for the birth of their third child Eva. With the end of the mail contract, John and Nora moved back to their ranch southwest of Pima. It was there John died September 28, 1890 leaving Nora and the three small children. (to be continued) Ransoms, where they grew to adulthood. Myrtle Ransom Golf and Lavina Dodge lived there much of the time. Thomas Rasmussen was the last to live in their home. Tom lives where the Ransoms had a home after moving back from Oregon. William John Ransom and wife Permelia Dodge Ransom were also with the large group arriving in May 1880. William Ransom was living in Toquerville, Utah, when he was called to work on the St. George Temple.

[NI03908] Served in Revoluttionary War as a private for Connecticut.

Applied for Revolutionary Soldiers pension Sept 13, 1820.

Lived with son Russell when he died.

[NI03917] She was later adopted as a Dodge by her step father.

[NI03919] per 1900 Census Frank is divorced.

[NI03920] Trustum Dodge, one of this country's well-known pioneers passed away athis home in Oneida, Delaware County, Iowa Friday evening, Dec. 29,1905. The subject of this sketch was the son of Phoebe and John Dodge and was born in eastern Canada Feb. 27, 1822, being at the time of his death 83 years and 10 months of age . The life history of this man is an exceedingly interesting one. Though born in Canada, many states have known him as a resident, and; he had seen some of the large cities grow from a few crude buildings. In his early manhood his home was in Vermont and afterward in Illinois, when he was married Nov. 27,1851 to Adeline Harvey. In 1853 they moved to Volga City, Iowa, and in; 1857 to southern Minnesota making that locality their home for 11 years when in 1869 he engaged in farming near Colesburg. In 1876 they made a trip by wagon to Texas where they lived until 1883. When they again moved to Colesburg. The past 23 years have been spent in Delaware and Clayton counties with the exception of about 6 years spent in western Iowa. Three years ago they purchased a home in Oneida which one Christmas day the scene of a family reunion of all of the family living in this part of the state. Although in failing health for some time, Mr.Dodge was not bedfast, and the morning of his death seemed to find him in his usual health in fact, seemingly better than for days before. He was under the care of Dr. Thomas of Greeley and was thought to be much better and his sudden death from heart failure came as a shock to his family and friends. He was a powerful man when young and possessed of a strong mind\ and although at an advanced age was not disposed to give up his interest in work. Those who knew him best found him honest in business and a good friend, ever ready to help those in distress. He leaves to mourn his wife, his faithful companion for 54 years, a brother in Wisconsin, 10 children, 44 grandchildren, and 18 great grandchildren.

[NI03923] She was a widow.

[NI03929] Unmarried

[NI03932] One source states that she was born 26 June 1775.

[NI03941] Died Young.

[NI03984] Reuben was the fifth child born to Nathaniel Morgan and Annie Duritha Hadden Dodge. He was born four months after his father's death. Reuben married Agnes Jones and together they had eight children. Elmer Leslie, Ruby Amelia, William Lester, Harry Raymond, Hattie Mabel, Ralph Glen, George Arthur and Chester Roy. Reuben's name is mis-spelled on head-stone, also correct birth year is 1873. Reuben worked as a miner at the Geyser mine before his marriage, he probably traveled through Lehi where he met Agnes, who's parents owned and operated the Lehi Hotel. Reuben was in a mining accident at the Geyser mine, where he received serious injuries. His children remembers his occupation was that of a blacksmith.
Reuben and Agnes' marriage was strained. Out of deep love and respect for them and the hardships they and their children indured, I will not give details. Reuben and Agnes stayed together to the end, they must have loved each other.
Reuben died in 1916, leaving Agnes with little ones that she could not financially support. The four youngest children were placed in the Salt Lake County Orphans Home and Day Nursery on 2 July 1918. Hattie, Glen and George were sent to live with several different families. They were used for free labor really. Chester was said to be adopted, however there are no records to indicate that is the case, in any event he is a missing person. Agnes was devastated over the loss of her baby Chester and longed to get her little ones back with her, she never did, She died in 1926 from a crippling arthritic condition, and I might add; most likely from stress. George Arthur Dodge is my father, he had a great love for his parents. He didn't remember his father at all, but remembered his mother as a sweet and kind person, very fragile and bedridden.
Although, Reuben and Agnes' lives ended on a tragic note, I believe they must have shared some good times together. Update: July 14 2017 through Ancestry DNA we have found Reuben and Agnes' grandson, Chester's son, missing for almost a century, I will update as we gather information.

[NI03985] I have two spellings for this Durithia Haddon is other spelling

[NI04010] Drowned in 1849 during gold rush while bathing.

[NI04041] He settled at Oyster Bay, Long Island, where he died. 1763; m. at St. George's Church, Hempstead, Jan 13, 1726, Sarah Hawxhurst of Oyster Bay, daughter of William Hawxhurst (Christopher, Samson, b. 1571, Christopher).

The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Vol. 32, p. 175, has an article on the Hawxhurst family by Robert B. Miller, stating that the parents of Tristram, who m. Sarah Hawxhurst, were Tristram and Dorcas Dodge. This seems in error. Children name in will (order not known): 1.Stephen b. Oyster Bay, L. I. , about 1748 d. Wilmot, N.S. June 6,1808
2. Daniel, had a son, Daniel, who d. N. Y. City about 1814 without issue.
This branch believed to be extinct.
3. Freelove, m. Townsend Parish, Dec. 9, 1861.
4. Sarah d. Unmarried
5. Anne d. unmarried

Page 352.--In the name of God, on ye 27 day of February, 1779. I,TRUSTRUM DODGE, of ye township of Oyster Bay, Queens County, Island of Nassau. I leave to my loving wife, Sarah Dodge, the use and profits of my house and lands and all that is comprehended under real estate during her life. After her decease half of my lands, buildings, etc., to my son Daniel,and the other half to my son Stephen. My moveable estate to rest in the hands of my wife for her life, and after her decease to my daughter, Sarah Dodge, one feather bed and proper covering for the same; to my daughter,
Freelove Parish, wife of Townsend Parish, half of the residue of my moveable estate, and the other half to my two daughters, Sarah Dodge andAnne Dodge, equally divided. I ordain my wife Sarah and my sons, Daniel and Stephen Dodge, executors.

(Signed) TRISTRAM DODGE.
Witnesses, Thomas Smith, yeoman; Freelove Smith, Elizabeth Smith. Proved, Queens County, January 15, 1785. Confirmed, New York, January 20, 1785.

[NI04054] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 78
page 237

Mrs. Alice Merrill Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 77621
Born in Etna, N. Y.
Wife of Ira Dodge.
Descendant of James Tuttle.
Daughter of Luke Tuttle Merrill (1811-93) and Almira Dunham (1819-90), his wife, m. 1836.
Granddaughter of Levi Merrill and Amanda Tuttle, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of James Tuttle and Lovica Wolcott, his wife.
James Tuttle enlisted, 1776, and served as private in Captain Montague's company, Colonel Howe's regiment, Massachusetts Line. He was born, 1760, in Coventry, Conn.; died in Bolton, N. Y.

[NI04091] He was a noted astronomer, and captain in New York line during the Revolution and Keeper of the Almshouse. Served as lieutenant when taken prisoner at Fort Montgomery, 1777, and commanded a company at the close of the war. He was an original member of the Cincinnati.
He was a man of literary tastes, and author of various poems of merit. In 1779 he was a member of the legislature from Dutchess County, New York, and at that time wrote the following. which was read in the House.



THE POLITICAL SENTIMENTS OF THE AUTHOR, 1779

Hark ! Hard! the trumpet sounds - The din of War is alarms
Over seas and solid grounds, Do call us all to arms.
Who for King George do stand, Their honors soon will shine,
Their ruin is at hand, Who with the Congress join.
The acts of Parliament, In them I much delight,
I hate their curst intent, Who for the Congress fight.
Who non-resistance hold, They have my hand and heart,
May they for slaves be sold, Who act a Whiggish part.
The Tories of the day, They are my daily toast,
They soon shall sneak away, Who independence boast.
The Congress of the States, I hate with all my heart,
Blessing upon them waits, WhoeiÈr take Britainis part.
To General Washington Confusion and dishonor,
May numbers daily run, To Britainis royal banner.
On Mansfield, North and Bute May daily blessings pour
Confusion and dispute, On Congress evermore.
To North, that British Lord May honors still be done,
I wish a block or cord, To General Washington.

Samuel Dodge, (1730-1807), served as captain of militia and represented Dutchess county in the Legislature. He was an original member of the Cincinnati. He became a distinguished scientist and the manuscript of his calculations of the solar eclipse for one hundred years, is still in the family. His sons Samuel and Henry served as officers.

[NI04110] DODGE, Carl William - 83, New Minas, passed away peacefully at home with his family by his side on Tuesday, April 3, 2007. Born in Kitchener, Ont., he was a son of the late Harold and Effie (Schunamon) Dodge. In his earlier years, he was employed as a mechanic with A.V. Roe (Avro) Canada in Ontario and retired as a custodian with Horton District High School. Carl was also an avid auto mechanic. He is survived by his wife of 62 years, the former Pauline Keddy; daughters, Juanita and Carolyn, both of New Minas; son, Stan (Carol), Wolfville; sister, Dorothy Pelley, Trenton; brother, Basil (Jean), New Minas; special grandson, Stewart, and special great-granddaughter, Stephanie, both of New Minas; many other grandchildren and great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by grandchildren, Dauwayne Dexter and Susan Dexter. He was also predeceased by his faithful dog, Buddy. Visitation will be held from 7-9 p.m. today in White Family Funeral Home, Kentville. A graveside funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, April 25, in Jaw Bone Corner Cemetery, Canard, Rev. June Keddy officiating. Family flowers only, by request. Donations in memory may be made to the Annapolis Valley Victorian Order of Nurses. A special thank you to Murray Dexter and Marty Dodge for their help and support over the years. Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to White Family Funeral Home, Kentville. On-line inquiries may be directed to: www.whitefamilyfuneralhome.com

[NI04111] He was a draftsman to the U.S. Senate and was a surveyor by profession

[NI04118] Died in the Insane Asylum at Ukia, California.

[NI04132] JOHN WILBUR DODGE, ex-Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce at Seattle, was born at Waterloo, now Burtin, Wisconsin, July 29, 1856. John secured an academic education in the schools of Lancaster, graduating in 1875. During the winter following he was engrossing clerk of the Senate of Wisconsin. He then went to Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania, to visit relatives, and while there was induced to accept a clerical position in the office of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and thus becoming interested in railroad matters he decided to learn the business, and to begin at the foot of the ladder. He gave up his position, entered the freight-house, and with a hand-truck began shifting goods, gradually ascending the scale through the offices of assistant freight agent, freight agent, ticket agent and general freight department. In 1880 Mr. Dodge accepted the position of clerk to the division superintendent of the Illinois Central Railroad, with headquarters at Centralia, Illinois. Removing in 1881 to Cairo, in 1882 he was made assistant agent in charge of that station, the third in importance on the entire system. In 1883 he was appointed traveling agent, with entire charge of the station, which was a prominent transfer point, connecting with four other roads. In this work he employed a force of 150 men, the position being one of great responsibility. In 1887 he was promoted to the position of chief clerk to the general superintendent, with headquarters at Chicago, and there remained until 1891, when, upon the organization of the Chamber of Commerce of Seattle, Mr. Dodge was offered the position of secretary, and to enter upon the duties of that office he arrived in Seattle in April of the same year. He gave his entire time and attention to the up-building of that organization, whose influence has already been felt in commercial and municipal affairs. Mr. Dodge resigned his position as Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce April 15, 1893, to engage in the hotel business at Seattle, having effected a long-time lease of the Hotel Northern, one of the leading and most popular hostelries in the city. The house is most conveniently located, affording ready access to the principal business portions of the city, being located on Front street, between Washington street and Yesler avenue. Mr. Dodge was married, at Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania, in 1879, to Miss Mary E. McMullen, of the same city. To them six children have been born: Marguerite, Mary, Roccy, Elizabeth, Jeremiah E. and John Wilbur, Jr. Mr. Dodge has built a handsome home on Queen Anne hill, and is thoroughly interested in advancing the prosperity of Seattle.

[NI04147] Unmarried

[NI04163] He was the builder of the USF Constelation.

[NI04189] Maybe Sara Touse

[NI04198] Lieut.

[NI04214] Angus attended Burritt College in Tennessee and Missouri State College in Columbia, Missouri for one year. He graduated valedectorian from Burritt College on 3 July 1858. He graduated from Cumberland University in Tennessee law school in 1860.
He helped build the Mo. Ks. and Tx. Railroad. He was President of the 1st National Bank in Clinton, Missouri. He was a trustee of William Jewell College and Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.

[NI04220] In 1900 Raymond was in the 1900 Census in Sandy River, WV.

Raymond Vincent Dodge married Rebecca Payne of McDowell County, WV. They
moved from Hagerstown, MD to Martinsville, VA in 1929, where he worked
until retirement, for the American Furniture Company, according to his
obituary. He is buried in Roanoke, VA
Obituary Martinsville Bulletin, Martinsville, VA 12/31/1963

[NI04233] Charles was a contractor and some of the large mansions in Sands Point
for prominent people such as the Guggenheims. He was active in the
Nassau Republican Party for many years.

[NI04237] In his early years he worked for his dad Charles T. Dodge as a
Contractor, on Long Island. He Later went to work as roaadway engineer
for Nassau County, Long Island. He was involved in the building of many
of Long Islands raads. He was active in the Republican Party. Dad died
in Port Washington and both he and his wife are buried here

[NI04244] Died in infancy.

[NI04260] Served in WW I

After the war he was a laborer. He work on Hoover Dam (Boulder Dam). While water was at the first stages or levels of the dam he slipped and fell. Thanks to a sturdy hose rapped about his waist he was able to be rescued.

[NI04265] Capt. US Army World War II

[NI04271] Some records have his second name as lester

[NI04274] Mrs. Bohlier has record of descendants.

[NI04283] Twin to Lucile Helen Dodge

[NI04284] Twin to Golda Augusta Dodge.

[NI04312] Mrs. Bohlier has records of Descendants

[NI04334] No issue.

[NI04335] Sources:
Type: Death Record
Title: DODGE, Susan - Wife of James R. Dodge
Date: Died 28 Sep 1882 - Age 74 years
Place: Dobson, Surry County, NC
Location: North Carolina Death Records
Type: Census
Title: Index to Online Census Images
Place: USA, North Carolina, Surry County; South Division
Date: 1850
Location:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/surry/census/1850/0229a.gif
Page: 229A
Type: Web Site
Author: U.S. Census Bureau
Title: NC State and County Quick Facts
URL: http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/maps/north_carolina_map.html
Text: Ancestry.com, comp. North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741-1868.
[database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000. Original data: State of
North Carolina. An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina
State Archives. Raleigh, NC: North Carolina Division of Archives and
History, 1977.

[NI04337] Served in the Civil War. At the Start of the Civil war Richard Dodge served most of the war as a mustering and distribution officer for the state of Pennsylvania; however, he also served five months in that same post for the state of Maryland, from October 1, 1862 until February 28, 1863. Most people wouldn't think that of interest--but the change in his assignment occurred sixteen days after the Battle of South Mountain/Boonsboro, MD, in which five regiments of North Carolina troops guarding three mountain passes took on a much larger Union force which was attempting to attack General Lee's forces before they could regroup at Sharpsburg. The North Carolina troops suffered an estimated 40% casualties--among them were probably many of Richard Dodge's childhood friends, as well as his brother-in-law, Captain Chalmers Lanier Glenn.

Richard had regular promotion thru the ranks to Coloniel in the Army. He was a West Point graduate, Col. in the US. Army was stationed at Sacket's Harbor. Dodge Ave.named for him.

1861 Senior Provost Marshal of the State of Pennsylvania
1863 Asst Inspector General 4th Army Corps
1864 promoted to Major in the 12th Infantry Regiment.
On 31 Sep 1866 he was transfered to the 30th Infantry Regiment.
On 15 March 1869 he was transferred again to the 3rd Infantry Regiment.
29 Oct 1873 he was promoted to Lieut. Colonel and transferred to the 22nd Infantry Regiment at Fort Whipple AZ.
1880 made an aide-de-camp to Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman.
1882 promoted to full Colonel and assigned to 11th Infantry Regiment in Dakota.
1887 11th Infantry Regiment was moved to Madison Barracks.
He retired from the Army in 1891.
Buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Washington, DC

[NI04346] This information supplied by Joyce Daemicke Peterson

[NI04347] Death Certificate for Elizabeth L. West gives her age as 57 year s 8,
months and 28 days. She lived in Illinois for 54 years . She was,
buried in Rantoul, IL on 23 April 1908. Cause of d eath was given as,
apoplexy. (hemorrhage in brain.), , Her addre ss at time of death was 987
St. Louis Ave., Chicago, IL.

[NI04350] Jeremiah Dodge
He served in the War of 1812 as a Sergeant in the 2 Reg't New York State Artillery,
Captain Daniel Baehr's Company. He was 31 in 1812.

[NI04355] Early in her childhood Marie reared and trained in the Christian Faith at home and at the Church of England in Canada, She united with that church. After coming to Dawson County, Nebraska, she attended the Evangelical Church for a while and later transferred her membership to the Methodist Episcopal church. In the fall of 1880, Mary Cole came with her parents to this community. Here in Plum Creek, later named Lexington she married William Oliver Dodge. Here she made and kept many friends. In the lives of her children she was the front runner of the Christ seeking always to lead them to Christ and the Christian way of life.
Mary Dodge died March 16th, 1933 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Everett Lobdell in the east ward. Funeral services were held at the Emerson Funeral Home Saturday afternoon. Interment at Mt. Hope Cemetery.
Lexington Clipper: 3/22/1933
Obituary
Mary Isabelle Cole Dodge was born in Iona, Ontario, Canada on the thirteenth day of March in the year 1865. She was one in a family of three daughters and five sons. Three of her brothers and one sister
preceded her in death. Her sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Mills, of Lexington, receding her by less than a month.
Early in her girlhood, Mary Isabelle Cole, reared and trained in the Christian faith by both her home and the Church of England in Canada, united with that church. All her life she sought to live the Christian
life. After coming to Dawson county, Nebraska, she attended the Evangelical church for a while and later transferred her membership to the Methodist Episcopal church where her membership remained until her death. In the fall of 1880, Mary Cole came with her parents to this community, here at Plum Creek, later named Lexington, she married William O. Dodge on April 24th, 1881. To this union ten sons and three daughters were born. Five sons await their mother in the better land. Mrs. Dodge has been in failing health for a number of years and during the last year, she has been a constant sufferer. The angel of death cane to relieve her March 16, 1933. She had attained the age of 68 years less
fourteen days. Mrs. Dodge was a faithful wife, a loving, patient mother and a neighbor and friend much beloved. She spent the major portion of her life in this community. Here she made and kept many friends. In the lives of her children, she was the fore-runner of the Christ, seeking always to lead them to the Christ and the Christian way of life. No one can compute the total value of her influence for righteousness during her years. Mary Isabelle Cole Dodge is survived by five sons and three daughters. They are William Dodge, of Colo., Mrs. S.L. Richardson of Ft. Collins, Colo., Evert Dodge, North Platte, Nebr., and Hugh, Ernest,and Chester Dodge, Mrs. Alvah Gordan and Mrs. Everett Lobdell, all of Lexington. Two brothers, Douglas Cole, Los Angeles, Calif., and John H. Cole of Lexington, and one sister, Crilla Cole of Lexington survive their sister. A number of grandchildren and five great grand children along with a large circle of friends and neighbors will greatly miss Mother Dodge.
Funeral services occured Saturday afternoon at 2:00 in the funeral
chapel. Rev. Louis ??, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church,
officiated. Music arranged by Mrs. Vera Olsson. The body was laid to
rest in the Mt. Hope Cemetery.

Lexington Clipper, March 23, 1933

[NI04359] The 1870 Census shows Sarah age 48 living in Rantoul, IL with James, K Dodge, her husband.

[NI04363] Date per Cemetery Records of Harvey County Kansas Volume 2 Halstead, Township, Halstead Cemetery. Compiled by Micki Crozier. , , According to newspaper accounts, Eli Dodge was drowned about a mile, above the mill dam at Halstead. This was in about nine feet of water., It was supposed that he had suffered a cramp from the heat of the, day.

[NI04366] Also known as Willie.

[NI04367] It is stated in the 1998 book that his wife was a heavy drinker and that he escaped to the sea.

[NI04368] Information per Richard Douglas Thompson, his great-grandson.

[NI04371] Information per D.W. Thompson family bible., 1880 US Census

[NI04372] Information per D. W. Thompson family bible., 1880 US Census

[NI04373] Information per D. W. Thompson family bible, 880 U.S. Census

[NI04374] 1880 U.S. Census, , Information per D. W. Thompson family bible

[NI04375] 1880 U.S. Census, , Information per D. W. Thompson family bible.

[NI04376] 1880 U.S. Census, Information per D. W. Thompson family bible

[NI04377] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 60
page 111

Miss R. Marguerite Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 59329
Born in Mauch Chunk, Pa.
Descendant of Col. Samuel Ashley and of Lieut. Samuel Ashley, Jr.
Daughter of John Wilber Dodge and Mary McMullen, his wife.
Granddaughter of Jeremiah E. Dodge and Rachel Matilda Ashley, his 2nd wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Charles Ashley and Roccena Goss, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Samuel Ashley, Jr., and Lydia Doolittle, his wife.
Gr-gr-gr-granddaughter of Samuel Ashley and Eunice Doolittle, his wife.
Samuel Ashley (1720-92) was a member of the Committee of Safety, 1775, and colonel of the 13th regiment, 1777. He was born in Northfield, Mass.; died in Claremont, N. H.
Samuel Ashley, Jr. (1747-1820), served as lieutenant of a company from Claremont, N. H., under Col. Benjamin Kellogg. He was born in Northfield, Mass.; died in Springville, Pa.
Also No. 51689.

[NI04378] 1880 U. S. Census

[NI04388] Son of William Morgan Oliver Dodge and Mary Isabelle Cole. He married Mabel Miller in Dawson County, Nebraska on January 1, 1910 (Volume 6, page 156). In the 1910 census he is a farmer in Dawson County living with his parents and wife. In the January 7, 1920 census he is a house painter living with his wife, children and brother Ernest, in Fort Collins ward 4. He died just 5 days after the census at age 31.

Children: Alice; Eva and William Niles.

He is buried in the same plot as Miles Moras Payne; Harold Payne; Lydia A. (Gordon) Payne Manske and Velta (Miller) Plummer.
________________________________________

Patty Hudson shared the following obituary:

Published in the Fort Collins Courier (Fort Collins, Larimer County, Colorado on
Tuesday, January 13, 1920, on page 1 on the front page section:

DEATH COMES SUDDENLY
TO JAMES A. DODGE
[WWI Draft registration card shows his correct middle name: Arlington. The middle initial "R" given in his obit must be an error]

Death came very suddenly to James R. Dodge, at the family home, 417 Cowan street at 1:45 Monday morning. Mr. Dodge with his wife and three children came here a month ago from Nebraska, seeking the benefit of this climate. Death was caused from spinal meningitis. The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon from Balmer's Undertaking parlors, Dr. Robert II. Forrester in charge.

[NI04404] He hung himself by a rope in his barn at age 73.

[NI04406] The undertaker was Guy Stewart of Champaign, IL. His license wa s #,
2173.

[NI04410] He served WW I - US Army

[NI04415] US Civil War, Captain Union Army (New York)

[NI04432] Obituary

Dawson County Pioneer, Friday, April 4, 1919

At the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Oliver Dodge, in Grant precinct,
on Thursday, April 1, 1919, Raymond Dodge, aged 16 years, 10 months, 29
days.
the funeral was held Wednesday afternoon, the srevices being conducted at
Mt. Hope Church by Rev. Mr. Largent, following which the remains were
interred in the church cemetery.

[NI04463] Served in the Revolution, enlisted July 10, 1777, discharged Aug 12, 1777, under Col. Elisha Porter and Capt. Phillips. He also enlisted in 16 Apr 1781 for three years, Under Col. David Wells, & Capt Jerimah Wells, going to West Point in May of 1781, and discharged there Dec 1783.

He was a great swimmer.

Carpenter in Rome New York in 1815

His pension papers say his wife was Huldah and occupation was farmer. In 1790, he was in Conway MA census. He also wen to Whitingham VT where Charles? was for an undetermined period. In 1807 he and Huldah joined the Baptist Church in Cazenovia in Madison Co New York.
This information from Warner Ch 12 p 2.

According to Warner ch 2 p 3: The third Dodge of Whitingham VT of interest
here is Amos Dodge, Jr. Even though the names of his children are not known censes seem to show there were some. In Whitingham deeds, v 2...Know yethat I Amos Dodge of Whitingham VT for 100 pounds lawful money sell to SamuelLovett, land there: Beginning at a stake and stones; thence running N 8 rods to a stake and stones; then running W 30 rods to a stake and stones; thence S 8 rods to a stake and stones; thence E to first mentioned corner. Dated 1 Mar 1788. Signed by Amos only but witnesses were Samuel Buttler and Huldah Dodge. Why the wife signed as a witness is unknown to me. Amos was a Rateable there nin 1785 to 1788 inclusive. He is not seen in vital records." Also Amos Dodge was in Conway MA when the 1790 census was taken with one male under 16, one over 16 and tree females. His ear mark is a square Cropp of the left Ear and two slits in the end of the Right D. Signed by Richard B Root, Jr.

Per Warner, his pension papers from the Rev. War says he was a Private in the Mass.
Lines, Chenango County, New York, $8.00 per month from 14 April 1818. [wouldn't this be
another war than the Revolution?] Hannah Dodge of Hancock, Berkshire County, MA
says that he went into service in 1780/1 - per Warner.
In Abstracts of Rev. War Pension Files, p. 991 vol.1, "Dodge, Amos, S43516, MA Line, sol. enl. at Shelburne in Hampshire County, MA, appl. 18 Apr 1818 Oneida County, New York; in 1820 sol. was aged 62, a resident of Bainbridge in Chenango County, New York with a wife
Huldah, aged 61.

[NI04481] Charles J Dodge (Tristram, William, Samuel, Jeremiah, Jeremiah, Jeremiah, James)
Civil War Union, 132 New York Infantry.
Enlisted as a Sergeant on 22 May 1862 at the age of 21 in New York.
Discharged Company C, 132nd Infantry Regiment New York on 25 May 1865 in Salisbury, NC.

[NI04486] Buried at Three Mile Bay Cemetery, Clayton, New York,
Jefferson County formed from Oneida County on March 28,1805.
Anson eventually lived on or near homesteaded farm which was homesteaded
in 1847.
1820 census- Anson lived in Harrisburg, Lewis County, New York?
1830 census- Anson lived in Rutland, Jefferson County, New York?
1840 census- Anson lived in Champion, Jefferson County, New York?
1850 census- Anson lived in Clayton, Jefferson County, New York?
Vetran of the War of 1812.

[NI04487] Solders & Sailers states that Abimael was in Able Dinsmore's Co. as a Pvt., Col. Ruggles Woodbridge Regiment. Enlisted Aug 1777, discharged 29 Nov 1777; Served 3 mos, 22 days travel included, with northern army, reported 185 miles from home.
There is some contention that he died this location possibly in 1809-1810.
Some notes say he was in Canadaiga New York in 1817. and was killed by a log falling on him while working in the woods.

[NI04506] Twin to Olive

[NI04508] Was Conductor for Long Island Railroad.

[NI04524] Some records say Nov. 04, 1849.

[NI04525] Unmarried.

[NI04541] Unmarried

[NI04542] Itierant minature painter.

[NI04547] Was in the military telegraph service in the civil war.

[NI04559] Edwin Lattuce was adopted by Stephen Clay Dodge. Edwin's natural father
was J. S. Lattuce.

[NI04564] Died young.

[NI04582] Unmarried.

[NI04599] Veteran of War of 1812-129th Reg, Per Woodward: at age 15 his guardian was Sylvanus Cobb of Conway.

In Grantee Index of Deeds, Ontario County, New York a Stephen R. Dodge is listed in 1815 with Grantor Elizjah Phillips, Liber 22 Pg 295.- probably not Stephen Henry D.

The Methodist Episcopal Church of Cazenovia. In the early part of the present century Cazenovia was visited and ministered to by circuit preachers. In 1816 the Cortland circuit was formed and Cazenovia was included in it. Rev. William Cameron was the preacher and that year formed a small class in the village, consisting mostly of young people, who were zealous and united. In 1817, Elisha Bibbins and George Peck were the preachers on this circuit, and the latter describes the church in Cazenovia in that year as consisting of "John Rowland, his wife and two daughters Grace and Hannah; Eunice Parsons, subsequently extensively known as the devoted 'Sister Cobb,' * * *; Stephen Dodge and his sister, Luany Martin, Dolly Codwell, with a few others whom we cannot now name, together with some half a dozen who lived out of the village, * * * Mr. Rowland owned the old grist-mill on the outlet, and was a man of some means; the remainder of the class were poor, a majority of them single persons

[NI04602] He authored Robert Dodge And His Descendants published in 1886, He died in n his home in Rockville Centre, no issue. He was born in New York city, Dec. 15, 1820; son of Robert and Eliza P. (Fowler) Dodge; grandson of Samuel Dodge, and a descendant of Tristram Dodge of Block Island. He was graduated from the University of the city of New York in 1840 and was admitted to the New York bar in 1842, practising in New York city. He was elected a life member of the New York historical society and a member of the Literary union, Nuremburg, Bavaria. He was married, May 16, 1867, to Martha A., daughter of Charles Roe. His publications include: Sketches and Reviews (1850); Memorials of Columbus (1851); Ottoman Empire and its Polity (1860); Recollectious of England (1879); Tristram Dodge and His Descendants in the United States (1886). He died in Rockville Center, L.I., N.Y., June 1, 1899.

[NI04605] Fought in the war of 1812. Was a Private in Capt Henry W. Snyders Company in the New York Milirtary.
Enlisted Sep 8 1814 discharged Dec 8 1814.

[NI04611] In the CT VR's her last name is spelled Hull.

[NI04613] A sketch of the journey of Captain John A. Dodge and his Company, the Willard Guard, of Auburn, New York, on their 1857 invitation to the White House for the inauguration ceremonies for President James A. Buchanan.

The Willard Guard, under the command of Captain John A. Dodge, left Auburn on Friday, Feb. 27th. The Company arrived at Canandaigua about 5pm and held a magnificent parade in the village. After a ride on the cars, the Company were received at Harrisburgh, PA., by the National Guard. In the evening, the Company serenaded Governor Pollock, who came out and eloquently addressed them for half an hour. The Company then proceeded to the residence of Ex-Governor Porter and serenaded him.

Remaining in Harrisburgh on Sunday, the Company attended services at the Methodist Episcopal Church in full Army dress.

While at Harrisburgh, a fire broke out in the hotel in which the Company was stopping, which, for a time, seriously endangered the safety of the hotel and its guests. The flames were speedily quenched by Capt. Dodge’s Company and before the alarm had spread, the cause of serious danger had been averted.

From Harrisburgh, the Company proceeded to Baltimore, left the cars and marched through the streets of the City. Following the liberal courtesies of the City, the Company returned to the cars for their trip to Washington.

The Willard Guard arrived in Washington on March 3, receiving a huge welcome while marching to the residence of N.Y. Senator William H. Seward. At the Seward residence, awaiting the Willard Guard were Secretary of State, Hon. C. Morgan, Col. Chas. W. Pomeroy, Maj. Wm. E. McMaster and many other invited prominent guests. Mrs. Seward received the Corps in her mansion, and furnished a handsome collation, which was duly appreciated. After doing ample justice to the splendid collation provided by Mrs. Seward, the Guard took up their line of March to the Willard Hotel, where they were received by Colonel E. B. Morgan in a speech of much power and eloquence. In consequence of the immense crowd of people, Orderly Sergeant Shapcott was ordered by Captain Dodge, in command, to advance to the front and center of the company, for the purpose of allowing all present, if possible, to hear. During the Orderly’s reply, the omnibuses and carriages halted and comparative stillness prevailed among the immense crowd present, and at the close of his remarks, deafening cheers for the Willard Guard, of Auburn, New York, spontaneously burst forth.

After sundown, the Guards were invited to visit the National Observatory, to survey the heavens through one of the best instruments in the world and before retiring for the evening, the omnibuses deposited them at the Capital. There they visited the Senate and House of Representatives and after surveying members of both branches of the National Legislature, returned to their quarters, highly delighted with the days excursion.

The next morning, March 4, 1857, Inauguration Day, the city was alive with smiling faces and happy greeting. Members of Congress, Soldiers, Marching bands, Veterans, Floats and Citizens were being assigned staging positions. The post assigned to the Willard Guard was one of distinction, forming a part of the first battalion.

The line of March was through Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capital. Every inch of ground of this beautiful Avenue was occupied. The public and private houses, from the ground floor to the roof of the higher buildings seem like one living mass of humanity.

The procession arrived in front of the Capital, where the ceremonies of the inauguration were performed with imposing grandeur. The oath of office was administered by Chief Justice Roger Taney on the East Portico of the Capitol.

The booming of the cannons announced the closing of the ceremony and the Willard Guard took up their line of March for the parade that preceded the events. That evening, the Guard attended the inaugural ball held in a specially built hall on Judiciary Square.

After partaking of a Capital dinner, the Guard, by invitation, visited the Smithsonian Institute and the Washington monument, that noble structure of art, yet incomplete.

The following morning, Capt. Dodge received a card of introduction to the Navy Yard, where they were received with more consideration than they anticipated.

At dinner, Capt. Dodge, received an invitation from Hon. S. A. Douglas, of Illinois to visit his residence. As the Guard were about to begin their line of March, another invitation was received by Capt. Dodge from President James Buchanan asking for the Guard to pay him a visit at the White House at 6 p.m.

At 4 o’clock, the Willard Guard halted in front of the residence of Senator Douglas. He came to the front of his dwelling and after a beautiful speech, insisted the Guard partake in his hospitalities. The Guard accepted, and soon after, Senator Douglas thanked them for the visit paid him and his family.

The Guard then took up their march for the White House, where they arrived a few minutes after six. The Company were marched into the spacious hall, and in the few minutes advanced to the reception room, proceeded by Major W. E. McMaster who first introduced Captain John A. Dodge to the President. Captain Dodge introduced the other offices and men under his command. As they passed around the room, the President greeted each member of the Company with a hearty shake of the hand.

At about 7p.m. The Guard proceeded down Pennsylvania Avenue and halted in front of the residence of J. N. Knapp, Esq., late of Auburn. He spoke on behalf of his lady, and by her request, invited the Guard to partake of the hospitalities of their home. While the Guard were at the Knapp residence, the city of Auburn was toasted. Hon. E. B. Morgan was called out and made an appropriate speech.

On the return of the Guard to their quarters, the Company halted in front of the residence of Major General Burnett of New York City, where the Company were received in an eloquent speech by the General. The Company gave him a salute and proceeded to their quarters.

At 6 a.m. Friday, March 6, the Willard Guard left the City of Washington in the cars for their trip home. While traveling over the mountains in Pennsylvania, the last coach developed problems and the Guard was delayed for several hours. This delay caused the Guard to miss the connecting cars at Williamsport and Elmira and special cars were put in service.

During the delay, special services was given to the Willard Guard and both Cities were treated to parades, the shouts and cheers continued until the Company was back on the cars and heading home.

After an absence of eight days, the Willard Guard arrived in Auburn by the mail train at 9 p.m., and were met by the cheers and shouts of many friends at the Depot.

[NI04617] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 21
page 200

Miss Mary Flagler Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 20568
Born in Auburn, New York.
Descendant of Maj. Samuel Clark, of New York.
Daughter of Col. John A. Dodge and Parthenia J. Stevenson, his wife.
Granddaughter of William C. Stevenson and Sophia Clark, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Jehiel Clark and Parthenia Olmstead, his first wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Samuel Clark and Elizabeth Fowler, his wife, m. 1763.
Samuel Clark, (1741-1823), signed the Association Pledge, 1775, as did his father, Jehiel, and his brothers James, Daniel, Louis and Jehiel, Jr. He served as lieutenant, captain and [p.200] major, and these commissions are in the family. He was born in Westchester county; died in Saratoga county.
Also Nos. 3712, 6511, 7221, 9999, 14519, 19469.

[NI04619] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 26
page 151

Miss Elizabeth Helen Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 25417
Born in Auburn, New York.
Descendant of Judge Samuel Clark, of New York.
Daughter of Col. John Augustus Dodge and Parthenia Jane Stevenson, his wife.
Granddaughter of William Clifton Stevenson and Sophia Clark, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Jehiel Clark and Parthenia Olmsted, his 1st wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Samuel Clark and Elizabeth Fowler (1744-1818), his wife.
Samuel Clark, (1741-1823), signed the Association Pledge, 1775, as did his father and brothers. He served as lieutenant, captain and major in the Revolution and these commissions are in the family. He was born in Westchester; died in Saratoga County, N. Y.
Also Nos. 3712, 6511, 7221, 9999, 14519, 19469, 20568.
View this Text in the Context of its Original Pag

[NI04621] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 21
page 201

Mrs. Cornelia Dodge Stevens.
DAR ID Number: 20572
Born in Auburn, New York.
Wife of John Bright Stevens.
Descendant of Maj. Samuel Clark, of New York.
Daughter of Col. John A. Dodge and Parthenia J. Stevenson, his wife.
See No. 20568.

[NI04629] Died at 27 yr,1m,7d in service to his country, Civil WAR.

[NI04640] David E. Dodge Family Research
David E. Dodge was my Great-Great Grandmother Lorena C. Dodge Chapman's father. The following write-up about him appears in the Bent & Wilson History of Whiteside County (Illinois) 1877:
David E. Dodge is a native of Poughkeepsie, Dutchess county, New York and in the spring of 1856 came to Fulton from Syracuse, New York, and made Fulton his home ever since. He was a merchant in Fulton for a long time, and then retired, but commenced business again about two years ago, his present store being on the corner of Cherry and River streets. He was a Trustee and Street Commissioner during the time Fulton was a village, and after it became a city was Alderman in 1859 and '60, and again in 1868 and '69. In 1863 he was Mayor of the city. He has also held township offices at various times, and in 1874 was elected Coroner of the county.
Bent-Wilson, 1877, Pg 190.

[NI04662] Ida Bacon was first married to Richard Phillip Latham on 26 Dec 1854 and together they had three Children. When Richard died in 1862 she remarried Henry William Dodge.

[NI04671] Became freeman in 1728.

[NI04686] Birth in Mineola Hospital
Agricultural Reasearch-Cornell Univ. United States Navy 1945-1946 + 1951-1952

[NI04688] Born in Meneola Hospital

Rebecca Paulding Dodge, a longtime resident of Greenlawn, died Sept. 27. She was 86.

Born in Huntington Hospital to Anges (Rathbun) and Hiram Paulding III, she went on to graduate from Huntington High School. She would later attend Cazenovia College in Cazenovia, N.Y. and Simmon College, in Boston, Mass. where she earned a degree in library science.

From there, she married John Everett Dodge in 1952 and the couple started its family in Greenlawn where it worked a family farm until she began working for the Huntington Public Library system at the Station Branch. She remained there until 1975 when she and her husband made the move to Riverhead. In 1982, though, they moved back to Greenlawn and she then worked for Harborfields Public Library until she retired.

A longtime member of the Greenlawn Presbyterian Church in Greenlawn – she was an active deacon – she devoted many years to the memorial committee where members of the Congregation said, “Rebecca was always willing to give a helping hand with whatever she could possibly do.”
She was also an excellent baker, her family added.

Along with her husband, she is survived by her children David and his wife Nancy; and William and his wife Kimberly; her grandchildren Scott; Alison; Grant; Jamieson; and Kristine; and great-grandchildren Tyler; and Lucille.

Arrangements were held by Brueggemann Funeral Home in East Northport in September. A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. on Nov. 28 for her at the Greenlawn Presbyterian Church.

[NI04693] Rachel Birch Dodge claimed the widows pension on 15 Sep 1916.

[NI04696] Grant is currently in the Army as a Military Police Officer, Staff Sergeant E-6 and has served in Iraq in support of Operation Iraq Freedom from June 2006-June 2007.

[NI04704] In Civil War.

[NI04707] Brother of William Henry, In Civil War - GAR Post #365 Enlisted as a Private on 22 August 1862 at the age of 21. Enlisted in Company F, 15th Engineers Regiment New York on 23 Aug 1862.
Received a disability discharge from Company F, 15th Engineers Regiment New York on 3 Mar 1863 at Baltimore, MD.

[NI04710] Corp.in Col. Latimers Regiment 24 Aug 1777. Was in the Revolution., W.17730.

[NI04723] Obit
Michael Bilow, one of the oldest and most respected citizens, whose death had been anticipated for months past, died Teusdaypm, Oct 19, 1886. He was in the 70th year of his age, having been born June 1, 1817 in Winchester, Canada. He removed with his family to Waddington, New York and in 1841, purchased a farm on the North Gouverneur Road, where he spent the remainder of his life. Gouverneur, New York

[NI04736] Ist Lieut in US Army Spanish American War.

[NI04741] Resides 1900 in St. Louis, MO. unmarried.

[NI04742] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 120
page 50

Mrs. Elizabeth Dodge Crockett Speer.
DAR ID Number: 119151
Born in Cairo, Ill.
Descendant of Col. Samuel Ashley and of Lieut. Samuel Ashley, Jr., as follows:
1. John Wilber Dodge (b. 1856) m. 1879 Mary McMullen (b. 1855).
2. Jeremiah E. Dodge (1809-77) m. 2nd Rachel Matilda Ashley (1822-97).
3. Charles Ashley m. Rocena Goss.
4. Samuel Ashley, Jr., m. Lydia Doolittle.
5. Samuel Ashley m. Eunice Doolittle.
Samuel Ashley (1720-92) was a member of the Committee of Safety, 1775, and colonel of the 13th regiment, 1777. He was born in Northfield, Mass.; died in Claremont, N. H.
Samuel Ashley, Jr. (1747-1820), was lieutenant of a company from Claremont. He was born in Northfield, Mass.; died in Springfield, Pa.
Also No. 82368.

[NI04748] Twin to Robert Sherwood Dodge.

[NI04755] Bayville was settled on lands acquired by Thomas Barton and Dr. Hezekiah Dodge in 1826. Barton was the first settler. Dodge and his wife, Grenville, arrived from the state of Georgia later in the same year. She was the daughter of a southern planter. Dr. Dodge was the first physician and surgeon to establish his practice in that section of Pike county.
Dr. Hezekiah Dodge was born in New York state, October 28,1794. He emigrated to the state of Georgia, where he married the daughter of a southern planter. Later, about the year 1826, he moved to Illinois and settled in the pioneer settlement on Bay Creek at the present site of the bridge, one and one-half miles southeast of Pleasant Hill. He was probably the first physician and surgeon to locate in this section of
Pike county. Dr. Dodge died February 28, 1873 and is buried, in Dodge Cemetery on the banks of Bay Creek north of the bridge. The stone marking his resting place is in the view of travelers as they pass along the bluff road.

Chapter 182 Jess M. Thompson's Pike County IL History
DR. HEZEKIAH DODGE, whose name is so intimately associated with early Bayville and the Barton and Collard families, was born near Pompey, New York, received a good education, studied medicine and was graduated from a New York City institution. He was a son of Ezra and Mary (Foote) Dodge, natives of Ireland and Wales respectively, both of whom died in the Empire State. He located for practice of his profession in Sweet Springs, Virginia, but afterwards removed to Augusta, Georgia, where he remained six years. There he married Grenville Haynes, native of Botetourt county, Virginia, and daughter of Joseph and Jane Haynes, he a native of England, she of Ireland. The Haynes family had located on a Georgia plantation, near the town of Augusta. In October, 1825 (or 1826) Dr. Dodge came to Illinois, traveling in a wagon and bringing with him four slaves whom he disposed of at Edwardsville, where he located for a short time, coming thence to the location on Bay Creek in what is now Pleasant Hill township, in the fall of 1826 (or 1827). One record indicates that he located at Edwardsville in October, 1826, and came to Pleasant Hill township a year later, October, 1827. The Dodges, as noted in a preceding chapter, came to the Bay Creek country close upon the heels of Thomas and Rebecca (Holland) Barton (parents of John J. Collard's wife), who had removed from Kentucky to Missouri & came thence to Pleasant Hill township in the spring or summer of 1826, crossing the Mississippi river on a raft. Mrs. Dodge was a native of the same Virginia settlement that nurtured Thomas Barton and Rebecca Holland. Grimshaw, the historian, describes Dr. Dodge of old Bayville as one of the most remarkable figures of early Pike county days, a "fit subject for a painter." He was "long, lean and lank," and particularly in a crowd and at court time he was the observed of all. He figured in one of the most noted lawsuits of early times. He charged one Zumwalt, a rival early-day miller on Bay Creek, with the destruction of his mill-dam at Bayville. Zumwalt was said to have remarked while at the home of his son-in-law on the night of the destruction of Dodge's dam: "Just now the muskrats are working on old Dodge's dam." Alpheus Wheeler, the tall, ungainly Highland lawyer who was considered such an oddity in the Illinois legislature to which he was elected from Pike county in 1838 and 1840, during this trial delivered one of those forensic outbursts that are numbered among the classics of the Pike county bar. Said he, assailing the character of the prosecuting witness, Dr. Dodge: "Dr. Dodge are a man so devoid of truth that when he speaks the truth he are griped." John Jay Ross, another attorney of that day, laughed so uproariously at Wheeler's outburst that the latter turned upon him and, bringing down his long arm with a majestic sweep, shouted: "I wish I had a tater, I would throw it down your throat."

PLEASANT HILL DOCTORS
No review of Pleasant Hill history would be complete without mention being made of those guardians of health and life in the community, the Doctors. This community has been very fortunate in the many worthy men who represented that profession and have so capably looked after the sick and afflicted in this community.
Dr. Hezekiah Dodge was born in New York state, October 28,1794. He emigrated to the state of Georgia, where he married the daughter of a southern planter. Later, about the year 1826, he moved to Illinois and settled in the pioneer settlement on Bay Creek at the present site of the bridge, one and one-half miles southeast of
Pleasant Hill. He was probably the first physician and surgeon to locate in this section of Pike county. Dr. Dodge died February 28,
1873 and is buried in Dodge Cemetery on the banks of Bay Creek north of the bridge. The stone marking his resting place is in the view of travelers as they pass along the bluff road.

[NI04758] Graduate of Hamilton College, OH 1826 and was known as a Mathamatical
Wizard and noted Engineer& builder of the Ohio Canals.
Sebried Dodge was born at Plymouth, Litchfield County, Connecticut, January 28, 1796. He attained his early education in the "Dodge's Schoolhouse" near his home and shortly after the opening of the famous Pompey Academy began his studies under Ely Burchard, the first principal. In September, 1813 Rev. Joshua Leonard, a well-known character of old Pompey, took over as instructor of the Academy and under him Dodge finished his preparation for College work. In recording the history or the Academy the "Pompey ReUnion Book" states: " It must suffice to say that the Academy left its stamp on almost all those who have gone forth from this town. Those who were here fitted for college gained high honors in the institutions of the land. Here Seabred Dodge became the great mathematician and engineer that he was." p. 154. He attended Union College at Schenectady, New York and graduated with an A.B. Degree in 1819.
In his remarks at the Pompey ReUnion of June 29, 1871, Luther R. Marsh recalled Dodge: " And Seabred Dodge, the giant of our town-physical and intellectual- whom I have seen toss a barrel as a plaything, its hoops and staves tumbling together in their fall, and of whom I remember to have heard Joshua Leonard say - no small praise to those who knew the men- ' his attainments in mathematics are superior to those of Dr. Aiken, Priest Barrows and myself, all combined." P. 55-6.
He returned to Pompey and studied law with Daniel Gott, the famous lawyer and leading figure of Pompey Hill. He then removed to Lockport, N.Y. and practiced law for a period of two years. Being located at Lockport in those years he was able to witness the construction of the great system of locks on the Erie Canal which gave the place its name. With his natural inclination toward mechanics and engineering he studied the work of the canal builders with great interest. He soon was to abandon the practice of law forever in favor of the exciting field of canal engineering.
His obituary records: " Early in the year 1825, Col. Dodge removed to Ohio and took charge of the construction of the Ohio Canal at this place (Akron) and subsequently on the Licking summit." He then worked on the Wabash and Erie Canal near Maumee, Ohio, until he was appointed to the position of Chief Engineer of the western division of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal on May 21, 1835. This canal was designed to link the State of Pennsylvania with the great Ohio and Erie system with its access to both Lake Erie and the Ohio River. In time the State of Ohio was to nearly bankrupt itself in its attempt to build a thousand miles of aqueous highways. The "History of Akron and Summit County" by S.A. Lane, 1892, p 71-75 narrates the period under consideration: "The Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal Company was organized at Newcastle May 21, 1835 with Judge Leicaster King as a director and as the secretary; Col. Sebried Dodge (after owner of the Dodge farm three miles west of Akron) being named Chief Engineer. On the eastern division, the first trip from Beaver to Warren was made by the packet "Ontario" May 23, 1839 quite a jollification taking place on its arrival; among the impromptu toasts offered and responded to, by Judge Leicaster King and Col. Sebried Dodge, to whom the public is much indebted for the early completion of this part of the P.& O. Canal, in which they have done the company great justice and themselves much credit.at a meeting of the Board of Directors, at Warren January 18, 1840 it was resolved to celebrate the completion of the work all along the line and a committee of arrangements was appointed consisting of Judge Leicaster King, The Hon. David Todd, Jonathan Sloane, Esq. and Col. Seibreid Dodge." Dodge was president of the Board of Canal Commissioners of the State of Ohio in 1838. In referring to his work on the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal his obituary adds: "This work he prosecuted with so much vigor, skill and economy, that he completed it for less than its estimated cost, not withstanding the embarrassed condition of the company, and the unusual pecuniary difficulties under which he labored. While engaged upon this canal, he was elected a member of the Board of Public Works and President of the Board. After the completion of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal, he was invited to take charge of the Susquehanna and Tide Water Canal lying partly in Pennsylvania and partly in Maryland. His arduous and excessive labors had gradually undermined his health, so that he had scarcely entered upon the discharge of his new duties to which he had been called before his constitution was completely prostrated. As soon as practicable, he returned to Ohio, retired to his farm in this township and sought, by devoting his time and attention to Agricultural pursuits, to alleviate the force of his disease. Col. Dodge was a man of good social qualities; of powerful, vigorous, well cultivated intellect, of great energy of character and eminent as a civil engineer and in this capacity he has written his own history with an ineffable hand upon the Public Works of Ohio, his adopted state." (Summit Beacon, Akron, Ohio, April 11, 1850). J. Roy Dodge

[NI04760] In a handwritten note to Bruce Hoover Damewood, (ca 1957), Cornelia Laswell Damewood noted some Damewood-Laswell-Dodge genealogy which was annotated by Bruce and his mother, Elizabeth Hoover Damewood. Although it is not at all clear, Elizabeth wrote in 'Commodore Dodge' and 'Sarah Hendrickson mother' straddling 'Francis Dodge, born Ill. about 1830'. A xeroxed copy of this note is in the Damewood Information File. Reference note in Druid Damewood Shiflett Hardman's family memorabilia: Ezra, 6th child of marriage of John Dodge and Miss Black ca. 1750 was a 'stock raiser and farmer in Pike County, Ill.' Evidently the note missed a generation; the Ezra referred to must be Ezra's father. Ezra is listed in the 1850 Pleasant Hill, Pike County, Illinois census (page 322) at age 49 with wife Sarah; daughter Mary, age 18, born in New York; and sons Holland and Charles, 13 and 7 respectively, born in Illinois. Thus Ezra must have brought his family to Illinois between1832 and 1837. According to Jess M. Thompson, in 'Pike County History,' a series of reprints from 1935 to 1939 in the 'Pike County Republican' newspaper, Pittsfield, Illinois, page 470, Ezra was one of the founding fathers of Fairfield (now Pleasant Hill) in 1836. Other founding fathers were Eli and Charles Hubbard and John McMullin. Thompson states (page 510-511) that Ezra was a brother of Dr. Hezekiah Dodge and that Ezra died in 1865. Among Ezra's children were: Holland, Francis, Charles Henry, Seabred, Sarah, Helen and Mrs. Ephraim I. (Mary Cornelia) Bennett. Thompson further states that the Dodges came from Pompey, New York, the parents being Ezra Dodge and Mary Foote, natives of Ireland and Wales respectively.
Census: 07 NOV 1850 Township 7 S 4 W, Pike, IL
Note: Age 49, b. New York, farmer

[NI04761] Theron Royal Woodward called her Sarah Armena Hendricks.

[NI04778] Died as an infant

[NI04781] Some record this name as Marietta.

[NI04782] Recent records say her name was Diana

[NI04786] The judge was educated in the old Pompey Academy, at Pompey Hill, until at the age of 16 he was sent to St. John's College, New York City, where he was graduated in 1849. He spent the next two years working on his father's farm, and then begun the study of law with Victory Birdseye of Pompey. In the fall of 1852 he came to Perrysburg, wood County, and finished his preparation for the bar in the office of Spink and Murray. After his admission in 1855, he went into partnership with James Murray, Mr. Spink having died, and continued to practice with him until Mister Murray was elected Attorney General of Ohio, in 1859. Our subject then formed a partnership with the late James R. Tyler, which lasted until 1869. Afterword he had as a partner, for a short time, Edson Goit, of Bowling Green, now deceased, and later was associated in the practice of law with Jasher Pillars. In 1877 he was elected judge of the Court of Common Pleas. He was on the bench for 10 years, making an enviable record for judicial ability, and on his retirement in 1888 he resumed his law practice, taking as a partner John W. Canary.

In 1857 Judge Dodge married Sarah Wilkison, who was born December 20, 1837. Of their two children, the eldest, Mary, born in 1860, married Ernest G. Miller, and went to Creede, Colorado, where she died December 12, 1893, leaving two children, Hobart and Mary D., who now live with our subject. Frederick D., our subject's son, is the general agent for Bloch Bros. Tobacco Company, of Wheeling, West Virginia. Judge died is an influential member of the Democratic Party, and has been a leader in many progressive movements in the community.

[NI04789] She decided to devote her life to the church. She became Sister Maria of the Sisters of Charity at Mt. St Vincent. She was Treasurer and Historian of the order.

[NI04791] Edna worked for all the stock brokers in LA as a bookkeeper and retired
at 74.

[NI04800] He is the author of an excellant chart of the Block Island Dodges shown
in Robert Dodge's work.

[NI04818] Twin to Augusta Clementina.

[NI04823] Twin to Henrietta Lenora.

[NI04827] Stephen was a jeweler and later he sold optical goods.

[NI04835] Reside in 1904 Woonsocket, SD

[NI04845] Res 1904 in LeSueur, MN
Educated in public schools Bloominton Wisconsin; Univ New York City Medical
college1886 He has been engaged in the of his profession in Le Sueur.
Hee was president of the Farmers State Bank; member of the AMA

[NI04865] Diedde from Measels.

[NI04872] Unmarried

[NI04874] Jeannette Ruth Dodge was born on September 3, 1930, in Portland, Oregon the daughter of William and Ruth Foster. As a young child Jeannette lived briefly in Portland before moving to Oregon City with her family, where she was raised and educated. Jeannette attended Oregon City High School, graduating in 1949. She attended Stephens College in Columbia, MO for two years. As an adult she resided in the metropolitan area including West Linn and later Oak Grove. Jeannette worked for several area insurance firms as a clerk during her more than 20-year career including Cole, Clark, Cunningham; AllState Insurance and others. She also worked at Clackamas County Elder and Senior Care Programs from 1990 to 2001. She loved spending time with her family and many friends, enjoyed cats, reading, eating dessert and visiting the Oregon Coast. Jeannette died on August 4 in Portland at the age of 77. She is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Steven E. and Sherri Dodge, and son, William H. Dodge all of Portland; Her daughter, Sandra L. Dodge of Renton, Washington; Her granddaughter, Ashleigh Brooks of Beaverton, Oregon; Her sister, Mary Lou McGrath of San Mateo, California; and her niece, Kymn McGrath of Turlock, California. Jeannette was preceded in death by parents William P. and Ruth E. Foster and by her nephew Kevin McGrath.

[NI04877] Some records say the name is Pullen. Some give a birth date of 26 APR
1689.

[NI04891] Died in infancy.

[NI04948] Also noted as Abigail Groves?

[NI04952] Note: in the History of Isleboro Pg 249., incorrectly gives Dorcas' father as Tristram Dodge.

[NI04962] Wounded in the battle of the Wilderness and Taken Prisoner. Died Sept 20, 1864 in Andersonvile Prison Camp.

Chauncey B. Dodge, a soldier in the Union army, killed July 16, 1862 in t he Civil War. He was married to Sarah Mills. He was 31 yrs. when he di ed and he left two sons; Chauncey L. Dodge, and Edwin Dodge.

Rapahanock Station
November 16 /63

Dear Mother

I received Jims letter dated the 8 last week i havent/

------------cant read one line ----------

/get it. if you havent sent the gloves you may keep them till you send the box. be shure and send me some jams of all kind and some dried aples. I want Pa to get me a Pair of boots made to order double soles and taped with good leather. be shure and send some butter and a little cheese send some frid cake and some ginger bread and two good Jack knives and some ink and pens. send me a loaf of bread cake dont send to much cheas. send a little two guart pail full of butter. the pail I want two cook in. send me the boyld eggs and a few dried curants and such other things as y ou are a mind to.

we was Payed off Saturday. I got $45 and will send $40 home for Pa to you r. this fall I recd to get my picture taken but could not.

tell mother that she must not wory abut me I will sty and take good ca re of my self. when I came to rackers island they took off my vest and ke pt it. now I have got to the regiment they tell ma that they had no rig ht to do it. enclosed I will send $10. there is no chance to express mon ey now so I will send $10 in each letter till you get the $40. I havent be en sick since I have ben here.

John French the one that come for the black smith son is dead. he droped d own dead on the march. he had been crasy for a short time before. rite so on and tell all the news.

in haste Chauncy Co E 76th New York Volunteers

This letter was transcribed by B. Conrad Bush, 1940 Reading Road, West Fal ls, New York, 14170; e-mail Bushresear@aol.com; from original letters found at t he National Archive, Washington, DC.

[NI04983] Cause of death listed as Catarrh of Bladder".

[NI04985] Cause of death listed as "Debility".

[NI04988] 1.Abbrev: Descendants of John TRIPP
Title: Descendants of John TRIPP
Author: Margaret Buckridge Bock
Publication: http://home.frognet.net/~bobt/Bock/index.html
E-mail: ctbucky@juno.com
Date: 28 Oct 2002
2.Abbrev: Desc. of James Tripp & his 3 wives
Title: Desc. of James Tripp & his 3 wives
Author: Charlou Dolan
Publication: E-mail: charlou@mchsi.com
Date: 4 Jun 2004

[NI04990] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Premature Birth".

[NI04994] Cause of death listed as "Debility".

[NI04995] [uuu.FTW]

[NI04997] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Fever".

[NI04999] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Phthisis".

[NI05001] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05002] Cause of death listed as "General Paresis". Living with son,
George W and family at the time of the 1880 Census.

[NI05003] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as Exhaustion of heart and Abdominal Dropsy".
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as Exhaustion of heart and Abdominal =

[NI05009] Cause of death listed as "Amyotrophicloteral ----". Listed with
father in the 1885 RI Census. Also listed as "Widowed". Listed
with William P and Addie May Dodge in 1925. Living next door to
Ralph E Dodge and family in 1925.

[NI05015] Newport County, RI Births from Death Records has birth date as Apr 1858

[NI05017] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with son, Lester and wife in 1915. Age listed as 65 at that
time.
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Listed with son, Lester and wife in 1915. Age listed as 65 at =

[NI05019] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Fever".

[Tristram.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Fever".

Newport County, RI Births from Death Records has birth listed as July =
1855[Tristram2.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Fever".

[NI05020] Listed alone at age 70 in the 1915 RI census. Cause of death listed
as "Pneumonia Lobar". Welcome Jr and family listed as living with
Welcome Sr and Cornelia at the time of the 1875 RI Census.
[Littlefield.FTW]

[NI05026] Listed with son, Burnal and family in 1915. Age listed as 75 at that time

[NI05031] Listed as "Burton E" in 1915. Listed as "Burton E" in 1925. Listed
as "Burton E." in 1936.

[NI05033] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05035] Per Tombstone in Islesborogh, Maine d. 9/21/1848 at 18 yr, 3 mo, 25 dy.

[NI05038] She legally changed her last name to Beaubeau

[NI05041] Served in WW I

[NI05046] Age listed as 57 in 1915.
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 57 in 1915.
[Tristram.FTW]

Age listed as 57 in 1915.
[Tristram2.FTW]

Age listed as 57 in 1915.

[NI05048] Age listed as 5 in 1915.

[NI05052] Viven was buried at sea, with a marker in the Island Cemetery, New Shoreham, Newport County, Rhode Island.

[NI05075] Birth is stated to be Aug 14, 1774 on Tombstone

[NI05085] Edrie and Willis Dodge on their wedding day, April 3, 1955.
Edrie J. Dodge, whose friendship and leadership helped sustain the Block Island community for decades, died Saturday evening, Sept. 24, in her home on Sunset Hill. She was 73, and had lived in the house off High Street her entire life.

Hundreds of relatives and friends, from island and mainland, thronged the funeral service Wednesday afternoon that was shifted from her own Harbor Baptist Church to the larger St. Andrewis Catholic Church. It was a poignant and sometimes tearful ceremony, fraught with sadness for the loss of a valued friend and joyfulness for a life well lived.

As the long funeral procession wound its way to the Island Cemetery, the flag at the American Legion Post #36 was lowered, and the historic USS Block Island ships bell tolled. On a sunny hillside, under a brilliant blue sky, a host of mourners ringed the grave as the final psalms and prayers were recited, and one of the islandis own was laid to rest.

A link with history

Edrie was known, across all generations and segments of the community, as just Edrie. She was a connecting link between the island past and present, between the hard times and the good times, between natives and newcomers and summer folk, a hub of the island wheel. As one observer put it, She was the island den motheri of which she actually was when her son was in the Cub Scouts.

She was a leader in many island organizations, a vigorous worker in many causes, an organizer and a doer. But her central role in the community was due not so much to what she did but what she was: a person with a big heart, a loving concern for others, and an engaging feistiness, an open and honest trustworthiness.

She was known to a generation of children as the person who dished out the food in the school cafeteria. She was known to legions as the master of the post office with a sharp rebuke to those who called her postmistress.

She was known in the Block Island Economic Development Foundation, at Harbor Baptist Church, in the Legion Auxiliary, in a dozen roles she pushed and prodded to help the people and the island. She had known hard times and she was always trying to do something to help others, said Diane Bean, a friend of many years, now living in Wakefield.

Edrie was of that generation that no matter how hard they had to work, they always found timei to do what had to be done in the community, said Town Manager Nancy Dodge.

All these themes were sounded in the memorial service. It opened with music: Carrie Todd at the piano, flautist Debbie Howarth, violinist Heather Russo, soprano Barbara Temple and tenor Luis Montoya-Velez. The hymns, picked by Edrie, were simple and joyous. The Block Island Ecumenical Choir, of which Edrie was a founding member and faithful soprano, sang one of her favorites, the Canon of Praise.

In eulogies, Rev. Pat Harrison and Rev. Tony Pappas, current and former pastors of Harbor Baptist Church, respectively, offered vignettes, some that drew a laugh, which illustrated many sides of Edrieis character. But above all, they stressed, she was a believer. Jesus was her daily companion, Rev. Pappas said.

Then it was time to share memories. From Lorraine Cyr, the audience learned of Edrieis shopping habits and care for animals. Mary Donnelly revealed that years ago Edrie had organized the Stitch & Bitch Club. Eleanor Garrett described her high school softball skills (good hit, slow run). Stories were told, laughter resounded.

And in a final, heart-touching moment, Bean, a former director of the choir, sang Only Make Believe, from Showboat, a song with special meaning o Edrie's first date with Willis Dodge was to see the film at the Empire Theatre.

The couple had celebrated their 50th anniversary last April with a ceremony at the church and a reception at the Manisses that, all agreed, was one of the happiest island events of recent memory.

Edrie's illness had been diagnosed only in early July. After a period of mainland trips and treatments, in and out of the hospital, she asked to go home. The Block Island Rescue Squad made a special trip to Rhode Island Hospital Thursday, Sept. 22, to carry her tenderly back to the house where she was born. There she passed away in the company of family and close friends.

Depths of the Depression

Edrie was born in 1932, the daughter of Charlie S. and Annie P. (Pickles) Hall. It was the depths of the Depression, a time when island families survived by growing their own food, canning and butchering and fishing, with little cash income. Her father was a fisherman.

Her stories about those times cast light on what she was, said David Weissman, a next-door neighbor from his teenage years onward. There were times, she told me, when her father shipped fish to the mainland and instead of getting a check he would get a receipt; the sale wouldn't cover the cost of the ice and shipping. He lost his boat in the Hurricane of 38, and he had a heart attack; to make ends meet, she said, her mother rented out their bedrooms in the summer and Edrie and her mother slept on the living room chairs.

At a Heritage Dinner at the Harbor Church a few years ago, Edrie reminisced about the 1938 hurricane, the mother of all storms in southern New England memory. The chimney of the house fell down, and she crawled through the wind on hands and knees to a neighboris house, she said. She remembered looking into the wreckage of a house and seeing a teacup sitting unscathed in the open basement, Bean recalled.

At another Heritage Dinner devoted to memories of World War II, Edrie described the wardenis scoldings if so much as a sliver of light escaped the blackout curtains, because for a lurking U-boat the light might silhouette a ship leaving Narragansett Bay. In fact, she noted, a U-boat blew up a munitions ship offshore and the explosion shook the house. Chillingly, she told of once looking offshore and seeing the swastika on the sail of a submarine.

She also told about a tense ferry trip to Newport. The way I heard it, Weissman said, the captain turned to her remember, she was just a slip of a girl o and said, Don't tell anybody; thereis a U-boat under us. IÌ It seems that when the chain that stretched across the bay had been lowered for the ferry, a submarine was believed to have followed it into the bay. The ferry and its passengers were sequestered in the Newport naval base during the hunt so no word could reach Germany that a sub had been captured, or perhaps surrendered; the end of the story was unclear.

No money for school

The island went into a sharp decline during the war: people left to join the armed services or take jobs in defense plants, island hotels closed, travel restrictions hampered the fishing.

Edrie had entered the new school the original section of the present school soon after it opened, and graduated from high school there in 1949. She wanted to go to pharmacy school but there was no money; her mother was running the cafeteria at the school so she went to work there and finally took it over, said Willis. The kids of that day still talk about the meals they could get for 22 or 23 cents, roast beef and things like that, all cooked from scratch.

One of those kids was Willis Dodge himself, who was a little behind Edrie in school. We began courting when she wanted to see Showboat and didn't have the 50 cents so she went with me. But we didn't rush into it; we saw each other for four or five years, he said.

When the Korean War draft came, Willis enlisted in the Navy one of the island tales is how a bus driver was stricken and Willis took over the driving in order to get home for his wedding, which took place in what was then the Primitive Methodist Church at Center and Old Town roads, more recently a bed and breakfast.

We were real poor; we had three gardens and Edrie canned bushels of stuff and a lot of chicken and tuna at 5 cents a pound, tuna wasn't worth selling, he recalled.

Edrie cooked school lunches until 1968, when she moved to the post office, then at Bridgegate Square. In 1984 she became the postmaster, serving until 1991.

For the past decade or so, she ran a small bed and breakfast out of her home.

At the post office she would often be asked by visitors how islanders spend the lonely winters. Edrie had a ready answer, laughed Rev. Pappas. She told them, We knit seaweed.

Hospitable home

What some islanders actually did on winter evenings was to get together at Edrie and Willis' house for dinner and an evening of games. She had the gift of hospitality, said Pastor Pat. You never knew who you might meet at Edrie's table; it was so much fun, Bean said.

On a larger scale, Edrie for years managed the autumn Roll Call dinner at Harbor Church, a gargantuan enterprise that seems to engage half the island in preparing turkey dinners to serve to the other half of the island. One year she was called away by the terminal illness of her former daughter-in-law so her neighbor, Neva Flaherty, then proprietor of the Bellevue House, took over. iA had her notebook and it was all there, how many turkeys and squash and everything, right down to the number of pots and pans that had to be borrowed and from whom,i said Flaherty, who now lives in Brewster.

Edrie went to the Harbor Baptist Church after the Methodist Church closed. At various times she was superintendent of the Sunday School, chairperson of the deacons, a charter member of the Philippians 4 Club, a Bible study group member. iShe had a clear vision of her faith and of the mission of the church; that was a great comfort and inspiration to her,i said Pastor Pat.

For the SSB (Sunday School Builders), Edrie organized the craft fairs and the annual quilt project that raises significant funds for charity and church causes. She assigned island scenes to a core of needleworkers, sorted through her trove of materials, nudged the workers along, iGot your square done yet?i sheid ask. iShe had a few she knew were kinda slow and without telling anybody she would assign extras so there would be enough squares at the end,i Willis recalled. Then Edrie would schedule the summer sidewalk display of the handsome product and the sale of raffle tickets.

Edrie had a little problem with Rev. Pappas on that point. iA was uncomfortable with the idea of the church sponsoring a raffle,i he said. iBut they went ahead anyway. Edrie pointed out that the SSB was independent and anyway, the money would be used for good causes so whatis your problem, Pappas?i

iThat was Edrie. She was open and honest; you never doubted where she stood. And she worked tirelessly to make good things happen, for the church and for the island,i he said.

Setting the example

Edrie was a founding member of BIED and a vice president with responsibility for selecting applicants for the affordable housing that BIED developed. i>drie would hold their hands and walk them through the process,i said Gerry Pierce, BIED president. iBut more than that, she was always pushing and prodding, asking what more we could do. She had a big heart; she gave lots of love and she was loved by many.i

As a long-time member of the Legion Auxiliary and for the last 10 years as its vigorous president, Edrie managed the poppy sales, the bingo games, the penny socials, to raise funds to support those who had served and those now in service. iShe led by example,i said Dan Millea, commander of the post.

Edrie was also a past matron of the O.E.S. and a past president of the Fire Department Auxiliary. She loved music, and particularly show tunes, Bean said, and she was an enthusiastic participant in the chorus lines and acts of the Extravaganza! shows that the choir presented in past summers.

Survivors besides her husband Willis include her son Charlie S. Dodge of Chatham, Mass., four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

[NI05091] Listed as "Stillborn".

[NI05092] Listed as Malformation".

[NI05098] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05102] Listed as "Drowned" in the 1880 Census.

[NI05103] Cause of death listed as "Cancer of Stomach, Heart Failure".

[NI05105] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Nephritis".

[NI05108] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".
[Tristram.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".
[Tristram2.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".

[NI05112] [uuu.FTW]

Listed s "Junietta" in 1925.

[NI05113] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Pneumonia".

[NI05114] [uuu.FTW]

Living alone next door to Bethany and Laura May Hooper in 1925.
Listed as Informant on brother, William's return of death.

[NI05116] Drowned in Yellowstone being in an Engineering party of the Northern
Pacific Railway.

[NI05117] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pulmonary Tuberculosis, Tachycardia".

[NI05121] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Disease of Prostate, Operation Shock".

[NI05122] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with father, husband and son in 1915.

[NI05123] Cause of death listed as "Typhoid Fever".

[NI05125] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Sally A Dodge" age 85 in 1915.

[NI05126] [uuu.FTW]

Living with grandmother, Elizabeth Dodge at the time of the 1865 RI
State Census. Listed with mother in 1915. Age listed as 67.

[NI05128] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Aortic ?----".

[NI05129] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with daughter, Mary and family in 1925. Age listed as 79.
Cause of death listed as "Old Age (Senile Debility)".

[NI05130] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Arteriosclerosis".

[NI05131] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05132] Cause of death listed as "Valvular Disease of Heart, Asthenia and
Exhaustion".
[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Valvular Disease of Heart, Asthenia and
Exhaustion".

[NI05134] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Debility".

[NI05135] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05137] Living next door to mother, Emeline E in 1925.

[NI05140] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Arterio Sclerosis + Chronic Valvular
Heart Disease".

[NI05141] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Senility and Acute Congestion of Lungs".

[NI05142] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 63 in 1915. Cause of death listed as "General
Anasarca, Fatty Degeneration of Heart with dilatation".

[NI05145] Cause of death listed as "Brights Disease".

[NI05147] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Marasmus".

[NI05151] Cause of death listed as "Croup".

[NI05152] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Malignant Fever, Typhoid Pneumonia".

[NI05153] Cause of death listed as "Premature Labor".

[NI05155] Cause of death listed as "Organic Heart Disease".

[NI05156] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Arteriosclerosis".

[NI05159] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Marasmus".

[NI05163] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Neuritis and Convulsions".

[NI05164] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia".

[NI05165] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Drowning".

[NI05166] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with son, Norman and wife in 1915. Age listed as 54.
Living on Old Town Road in New Shoreham at time of death. Son, Norman
listed as informant on death certificate.

[NI05168] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Malnutrition".

[NI05169] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "P-----, Idiopathic".

[NI05176] Cause of death listed as "Influenza".

[NI05178] Age listed as 39 in 1915. Listed with mother and husband at that time.

[NI05179] Age listed as 38 in 1915.

[NI05184] Living with daughter, Addie and husband in 1925. Listed as being afflicted by "Old Age" in 1936.

[NI05185] Cause of death listed as "Diptheria".

[NI05186] Died Young.

[NI05187] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Membranous Croup".

[NI05188] Listed as 57 in 1925. Living with daughter Nina and family at the
time of the 1925 RI Census.
[Littlefield.FTW]

[NI05190] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Endocarditis".

[NI05191] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Nervous Shock and Congestive Fever".

[NI05192] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Drowning".

[NI05201] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Premature Infant".

[NI05203] Age listed as 58 in 1915.

[NI05204] In 1900 Census in Saandy River Mc Dowell County, WV recorded birth Dec 1895.

[NI05205] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05207] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 40 in 1915.
Listed as Informant on mother's return of death. married name
listed as "Dodge".
Living on Dodge Street in New Shoreham at time of death.

[NI05208] Listed as "C. Elizabeth" in 1915.

[NI05211] Listed as "Ralph E Jr" in 1915.
Listed as Informant on father's death certificate in 1934.

[NI05212] Listed as Informant on father's death certificate.

[NI05213] Listed as "Elmer C. DODGE" in 1925.

[NI05214] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 29 in 1915.

[NI05217] Age listed as 1 in 1915.

[NI05220] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 27 in 1915.

[NI05221] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 31 in 1915.

[NI05223] Age listed as 9 in 1915.

[NI05228] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Gladys D" in 1915. Age listed as 26.

[NI05229] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with parents in 1915.

[NI05231] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 26 in 1915.

[NI05237] [uuu.FTW]

Living with parents and listed as "Widow" at the time of the 1875
RI Census.

[NI05240] Cause of death listed as "Acute Phthisis".

[NI05241] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05244] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Stillborn".

[NI05245] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death Listed as "Abcess of the Liver".

[NI05246] Cause of death listed as "Enteritis Convulsions".

[NI05248] Cause of death listed as "Hydrocephalus, Convulsions".

[NI05250] Age listed as 29 in 1915.

[NI05254] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 45 in 1925.

[NI05256] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as having "Scarlet Fever at the time of the 1880 Census.
Divorced from Edith Gould at time of death.

[NI05265] Age listed as 31 in 1915.

[NI05266] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with parents in 1915 at age 29.

[NI05270] [uuu.FTW]

Married to a Mr ROSE in 1936

[NI05277] [uuu.FTW]

Living next door to mother and sister in 1915.

[NI05280] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05281] [uuu.FTW]

Residing at 1373 Smith Street in North Providence at time of death.
Died in St Joseph's Hospital. Army Veteran of WW II. 32nd Degree
Masonof the Atlantic Lodge.

[NI05283] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 8 in 1915.

[NI05284] Left Colchester, Connecticut in 1761 and settled in Horton.
The 1770 census for Horton, show David Dodge with
2 men, 4 boys, 1 woman, 1 girl, total 8, all of American origin, all
Protestants.

[NI05286] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 8 months in 1915. Listed as C.Spencer in 1936.

[NI05288] Wilbur Elwin Dodge passed away on April 3, 2017 in the Block Island home that he loved and in which he was born 93 years ago. Elwin cherished the island and enjoyed recounting his many stories about its history.

As a young boy, he hiked the unpaved roads and the land that had been cleared for farming. During his lifetime, he witnessed the advent of plumbing, electricity and automobiles. Among his fondest memories were times spent as a boy fishing the Block Island waters with his father and grandfathers. As an adult, he continued the Dodge family way of life, sharing his love of fishing with his daughters and grandchildren. Elwin especially loved swordfishing and was proud to serve as Striker. His memories and stories recounted the devastating hurricane of 1938 that destroyed the island's fishing fleet, and he told of the fires that claimed the Mansion and Ocean View hotels. He remembered well the frigid temperatures of winters past: the ice floes off the island and cars driving on the frozen harbor.

When World War II broke out, Elwin proudly served his country in the Merchant Marine, sailing with American Export Lines both during and after the war. He later came ashore, but continued in the maritime industry, working for a stevedoring company based in the Port of New York and Norfolk, Virginia. Though he worked the next 45 years off-island, he visited his family and island friends as frequently as possible. In retirement, Elwin finally came home to stay. He could often be seen walking his dogs through the fields and along the winding dirt roads, admiring the beauty and nature of the island that has always been his home and place of solace.

Block Island has lost one of her best and most dear native sons. He will long be remembered, loved, and missed by his family and friends.

Elwin was born to Gretchen and Linus Dodge on ----July 10, 1923 and was predeceased by his loving wife Ruth, his daughter Marsha and brother Evan. Elwin is survived by his daughter Allison Dodge, his grandchildren Hunter and Scott Barto, his nephew George Dodge and his wife Nancy, his niece Betsy DeMaggio and her husband Don, as well as their children and grandchildren.

A graveside service will be held on a later date.

[NI05290] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 22 in 1915. Age listed as 33 in 1925.

[NI05306] Age listed as 13 in 1915. Listed with parents in 1925.

[NI05307] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 36 in 1915.

[NI05309] Jerusha Lay Dodge, relict of the late Hon. Edwin Dodge, departed this life at the family residence in Gouverneur on Wednesday morning, March 7th. The deceased was born in Lyme Conn, on the 25th day of May, 1803 and was consequently in her eightieth year. She was a daughter of William E. Sterling, deceased, formerly of Gouverneur. On the 31st day of December 1829, she was united in marriage to the lamented Edwin Dodge, who passed away on the 15th day of November, 1877, and whose name is still fresh in the minds of many of the earlier settlers in this vicinity, who owe much of their success to his generous dealings as land agent.

The family of Judge and Mrs. Dodge consisted of two daughters and two sons. The first born, named Emma Sterling, a most amiable, intellectual young lady died on the 13th day of November 1853 at the age of twenty two years.

There is left three children, Wm Robert, Maria, wife of John Lansing, Esq, and Edwin Gardner. It would be difficult, in searching out the history of the happiest homes in the land, to find a family in all the relations of life as husband and wife, parent, daughter and son, brother and sister - with higher instincts, more tender affection or more highly esteemed by the world outside. The mutual trust and confidence between the family has always been so complete that it might well be said that they were of one heart and one mind.

Mrs. Dodge has been a member of the Presbyterian church from her girlhood and joined the society in Gouverneur by letter, immediately upon her removal to this place. The distinguishing traits of the character of Mrs. Dodge were her generous charities to the poor, her warm-hearted tender affections, devotion to home, and her earnest solicitation for the welfare of those of her surroundings

[NI05314] She was a charter member of Annaval Chapter No. 31 Order of Eastern Star. Marguerite taught school in a one room schoolhouse, was employed with Maritime Telephone & Telegraph, and along with her husband, Murray, they kept books for several businesses in the area. They also operated a poultry farm selling eggs in Wilmot. She is survived by her sons, Ron, Wilmot; John (Irene), Victoria, B.C.; brother, Reg Marshall, Halifax; grandchildren, Kirk (Karen) Dodge and Brien Dodge, both of Wilmot; Leroy Dodge, Montreal; David Dodge, Vancouver; Carol Ann Dodge, Victoria, B.C.; great-grandchildren, Stacey Dodge (Matt Asbury), Cold Lake, Alta.; Kimberly Dodge (Alan Bent), Middleton; Dana Dodge (Sarah Young) and Trevor Dodge, both of Halifax, and great great-granddaughter, Trinity Asbury, Cold Lake, Alta. She was predeceased by her husband, Murray; brother, Ernest; sisters, Belle and Louise.

[NI05318] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 17 in 1915.

[NI05319] Age listed as 49 in 1915.
Usual residence listed as Green Lane in Jamestown, RI. Living at Dorrys
Cove Road at time of death.
Sister, Anna Catherine Rose is listed as Informant on death certificate.
[uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 49 in 1915.
Usual residence listed as Green Lane in Jamestown, RI. Living at Dorrys
Cove Road at time of death.
Sister, Anna Catherine Rose is listed as Informant on death certificate.

[NI05321] Unmarried.

[NI05322] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 15 in 1915.

[NI05323] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with mother at age 14 in 1915.

[NI05328] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Paralysis".

[NI05333] William Robert DODGE was born on 16 Jun 1834 in Gouverneur, St. Lawrence, New York. He died on 30 Oct 1900 in Gouverneur, St. Lawrence, New York. William R. Dodge entered into a partnership with C. H. Russell, in a pony express line between Watertown and Ogdensburg, N. Y., which was later sold to the R., W. & O. Railroad Company. For twenty years he operated a tannery at Harrisville, in the Adirondacks, as partner in the firm of Beach and Dodge. He returned to Gouverneur in 1873 and some time later formed a partnership with John Webb, and engaged in iron ore mining in the Rossie mines. He was appointed by President Cleveland postmaster at Gouverneur in 1885, which office he held four years. At the time of his death he was vice-president of the Gouverneur Wood Pulp County, of the U. S. Talc County, and of the Empire Marble County, and a director of the Bank of Gouverneur.

Parents: Edwin DODGE and Jerusha Lay STERLING.
Spouse: Martha Jane NOYES. William Robert DODGE and Martha Jane NOYES were married on 5 Sep 1866.

[NI05339] Living in Elmwood RI in 1865.

[NI05341] Cause of death listed as "Old Age and Heart Failure".

[NI05342] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Fatigue, Convulsions".

[NI05344] Cause of death listed as "Paralysis".

[NI05345] Some people call him Nathan. Recorded as Nathan in 1904 by Theron Royal
Woodward.

[NI05350] Newport County, RI Births from Death Records has birth date as Nov =

[NI05351] Livng with parents at the time of the 1875 RI Census. Husband not listed with her.

[NI05354] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as " Tumor of Brain". Living with brother,
Nathan C at the time of the 1875 RI census.

[NI05355] Cause of death listed as "General Paresis".

[NI05357] Cause of death listed as "Chronic Nephritis".

[NI05358] Unmarried.

Mr. Dodge was born August 1, 1839, at the Dodge homestead where he died, and was the younger son of the late Judge Dodge. When a young man he was clerk in the store of his uncle, the late William E. Sterling, after which he spent several years in the railroad office at Watertown, and at St. Louis Missouri, where he was connected with the quartermaster's department. From there he returned to Gouverneur, where he has since made his home. He was connected with important business interests in this vicinity, particularly in the line of real estate, succeeding upon the death of his father to the load agency of the Mutual Life Insurance company; he also became the owner by purchase of the Theodocias O. Fowler estate, including an interest in many farms in the town of Fowler and vicinity. He thus had business relations with a large number of our farmers, with whom he was honorable and upright in his dealings. In 1864 he entered the hardware business in partnership with A. B. Cutting, and afterwards was a partner with the late E. F Beardslee in the milling business new owned by Howard & McAllaster. By inheritance and business ventures Mr. acquired what in this section of the country is considered a large fortune.

Edwin Gardner Dodge died at his home in the village of Gouverneur at 9:30 a. m. today, of paralysis, aged about 47 years. Mr. Dodge was a brother of Mrs. John Lansing, of this city, and W. Robert Dodge, postmaster at Gouverneur. He resided in Watertown when a young man, and at the age of 25 years removed to Gouverneur, where he has since made his home. About eighteen months ago Mr. Dodge suffered a stroke of paralysis. He so far recovered, however, that he was able to be around, though his health was very poor. A few weeks ago he suffered a second shock, which ultimately caused his death. Mr. Dodge was prominent and active in politics in his town. He was a life-long democrat, and steadily upheld the principles of his party. In business he was upright and honorable, having the respect of all with whom he came in contact
Died. Dodge. In Gouverneur, October 28, 1887, of apoplexy, Edwin Gardiner Dodge, aged 48 years, 2 months, 27 days.

[NI05361] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

[NI05363] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".

[NI05364] Listed as "Molly" age 85 in 1915. Listed with son, David and
family at that time.

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage, Old Age".

[NI05365] Listed as "Talbot W" age 54 in 1915.

[NI05366] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia".

[NI05367] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Spasms and Convulsions".

[NI05368] Listed as "Uriah B" on death register. Cause of death listed as
"Whooping Cough and Convulsions".

[NI05369] Listed as "J. Trueman" in 1915.

[NI05372] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Listed as " Earle W" in 1915. Listed as "Earl W" age 33 in 1925.
Living with parents and brother, Joshua at that time.

[NI05378] Newport County, RI Births from Death records lists birth date as Aug.

[NI05379] Cause of death listed as "Rheumatism and Paralysis".

[NI05383] Unmarried.

[NI05393] Obituary

Lexington Clipper, January 19, 1956, Thursday

Mrs. James Hudson Died Last Friday

Mrs. James Hudson, 69, died Friday after an illness of many years.
Funeral services were held Monday, January 16, at the Pfeifer-Newman
Funeral Home with Evangelist Dale Williamson officiating.
May Angie Hudson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Miller, was born at
Minneola, Iowa, November 23, 1886, and died Friday, January 13, 1956, at
the Platte Valley Care Home in Lexington, at the age of 69 years, 1
month, 2 weeks and 6 days.
On December 20, 1906, she was first married to John Dodge at Ottumwa,
Iowa. To this union were born nine children, eight of whom survive her.
They are: daughters, Maxine Sellberg, McPherson, Kan.; Irene Wildt,
Venonia, Ore.; Eileen Wildt, Portland, Ore.; and sons, John, Scapoose,
Ore.; Millard, Lexington, NE ; Gilbert, Deer Island, Ore.; Melvin,
Minatare, NE; Bill, Pleasant Hill, Missouri. One child died in infancy.
Mr. Dodge passed away in October, 1930.
On June 12, 1939, she was married to James Hudson at Lexington.
Besides her children and husband, she is survived by three sisters, Elsie
M. McCarroll, Custer, Montana; Glayds M. Curry, Batavia, Iowa; Beulah
McCullough, St. Louis, Missouri; two brothers, Guy Miller, Ottumwa, Iowa;
and Cecil Miller, Ottumwa, Iowa; six step-children, Hazel Regouby,
Lexington; Ethel Rhoadarmer, Gibbon; Opal Moore, Denver, Colo.; Fred,
Reed and Jasper Hudson, Lexington, NE She is also survived by 24
grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, besides nephews, nieces and
a host of friends. May Hudson was baptized into Christ October 9, 1955
and maintained her hope and faith firm in Christ until her death.
Pallbearers were Jim Dodge, Keith Dodge, Jasper Hudson, Melvin Dodge,
Bill Dodge and Fred Hudson.
Burial was in Greenwood Cemetery, Lexington, Dawson County, NE.

[NI05407] "after her husband's death, returned to Colchester, [Connecticut] with
two of her sons, David and Asa"

[NI05408] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 46
page 381

Mrs. Anna Bowne Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 45906
Born in Gouverneur, N. Y.
Wife of Robert Griffin Dodge.
Descendant of Cornelius Whitney.
Daughter of Charles Hicks Bowne and Mary E. Whitney, his wife.
Granddaughter of Oliver C. Whitney and Lois Crossman, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Mathias Whitney and Betsy Barnes, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Cornelius Whitney and Elizabeth Mary Barnes, his 2nd wife.
Cornelius Whitney (1749-1833) served as a private in the Connecticut line and was at the battle of Bunker Hill. He was born in Killingly, Conn.; died in Mexico, N. Y.
Also Nos. 26493, 28359.

[NI05414] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pulmonary Phthisis".

[NI05432] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 109
page 101

Mrs. Katharine Noyes Dodge Gill.
DAR ID Number: 108339
Born in Gouverneur, N. Y.
Wife of John L. Gill.
Descendant of Lieut. Robert Ely, as follows:
[p.101] 1. William Robert Dodge (1834-1900) m. 1866 Jane Noyes (1841-1911).
2. Edwin Dodge (1801-77) m. 1829 Jerusha L. Sterling (1803-83).
3. William Sterling (1768-1827) m. 1794 Jerusha Ely (1773-1839).
4. Robert Ely m. Jerusha Lay.
Robert Ely (1741-1828) served as lieutenant in the 1st company, 7th regiment, Connecticut militia, at the Tryon invasion. He was born and died in Saybrook, Conn.
Also No. 80090.

[NI05433] Birth;Death; LFNL, Vol 2, #2, p. 28.

[NI05445] He became a Physician and an authority on nervous dieases. He became insane and spent many years in institutions for the insane. He never married.

Dr. Clinton Alden Dodge was a noted expert on Spinal Cord Disease and was lived with his mother Mary (Barker) Dodge in Cambridge Massachusetts in 1898 at that time he was 41 years old. On Feb.15,1898 while in Washington D.C. he walked into police headquarters and asked them to find his note book he lost in the Avenue hotel. He further said in a dignified manner. "I am Dr. Clinton Alden Dodge. If you want to know who I am just go to the Capital and ask there...."

From his behavior within the police station and his aimless wondering around the capital the police then asked him where he was stopping in Washington, and his reply was nowhere. He was then taken to see Dr, Ramsey who pronounced him insane.

Sadly, he would struggled with mental illness the rest of his life he would spend his last few years at the Norristown State Hospital located outside the city of Philadelphia in Norristown, Pennsylvania. He died from arteries capillary fibers disease with exhaustion from mental disease duration 19 years. He was cremated at Chelten Hills Crematory and his ashes were sent Brooklyn, New Yor

The Pokeepsie Evening Enterprise, Pokeepsie, N.Y., September 02, 1908
DR. DODGE, WHO CREATED A SENSATION AT KINGSTON, FOUGHT WITH MOTHER FOR A DOLL AT GREENWICH AND IS TAKEN IN CHARGED BY POLICE
Representing himself as Anthony Comstock, Dr. Clinton A. Dodge, has been traveling throughout the country and ordering the suppression of pictures, postcards, etc., even when these were not in any sense objectionable.
He was discharged from the psychiatric ward of Bellevue Hospital, but a short time ago, and during the summer, appeared on two occasions is Kingston. In that city, he ordered pictures removed from display windows and created much excitement.
His identity was not questioned, and his orders were followed. Before leaving, however, he called on Captain B. B. Hornbeck, and gave his real name.
He has now appeared at Greenwich, Connecticut, where he had a violent quarrel with his mother over the possession of a doll. He was placed under restraint at the instance of his mother and will probably be committed to a sanatorium.
On May 7 last, Dr. Dodge who is said to be an expert on spinal diseases, was committed temporary to the psychiatric ward in Bellevue Hospital in New York City, for observation. He has set fire to his bedding in his room, at 260 W. 131st St., Manhattan, where he was stopping temporary.

[NI05485] Resides Waverly, New York in 1904

[NI05489] No Issue.

[NI05507] Unmarried

[NI05510] Unmarried

[NI05512] No Issue.

[NI05524] Theron was a Life Member of the New England Historic Genealogic Society, Charter Member of the Illinois Society of the American Revolution, & Charter Member of the Society of the War of 1812 in the State ofIllinois. Occupation was publisher of newspapers and books.

[NI05529] Had a strike

[NI05535] Unmarried

[NI05556] No Issue

[NI05585] Emigrated to Ontario Canada in 1907.

[NI05587] Died Young.

[NI05591] Henderson is her married name.

[NI05593] No Children

[NI05654] Died of Yellow fever bur in secret in Amity St. Churchyard by Brothers
John & Jeremiah.

[NI05668] died 23 Aug 1858 at 4 yrs 3 mos, 16 days.

[NI05675] Heavy Truck mechanic for Riccelli ENens Olympic Champion & the past year
winner his father.

[NI05677] Raised Sheepin the 1980's for wool, food, & breed stock.
Now does beadwoork in 2002. born St. Mary's Hospital,

[NI05678] Served in the US Army 18 th 1940's & 1950's.

[NI05683] Moved to Syacuse, New York in 1957 and became a US citizen on 23 Nov 1964.
Owner of Food equipment sales and repair companysince 1971.
Also works on dirt modified race car on weekends for fun.

[NI05684] Costume Designer researcher. Also acts in local Dinner Theater,

[NI05693] Web page Designer, Videographer, and Sound Engineer

[NI05698] Providence Patriot; Date: 1819-12-08; Vol: 1; Iss: 98; Page: [2];

Drowned, on the evening of the 7th ultimo, off Block-Island, Mr. Nehemiah Dodge, Jun. son of Mr. Nehemiah Dodge, of this town. He fell from the foretopsail yard of the ship Governor Tompkins, of this port, on her voyage to Wilmington (NC)

He had on that day entered upon his 18th year of his age. Being active and enterprising, he had chosen the life of a mariner, and gave promise of becoming a valuable citizen.

In the enjoyment of health, the morning of his birthday opening fair and promising many years tocome, with anticipation of again meeting parents and friens, he left the domestic circle; but at evening's close, the messenger of death summoned him to another world, leaving to his friends the sad rememberence, that his parting adieu was indeed to them his last, his long farewell, and the certainty, that they shall never meet again, until that day when the earth and the sea shall give up their dead."

[NI05702] In 1850 US Census in Cascade , Kent County, MI, Abimael Dodge is living his daughter and her family.

[NI05705] Never Married. Fdrom 1868 till his death in 1896 he owned his fathers farm, "The Old Place".

[NI05709] Normalee Uhler, 82, of Lexington, Nebraska, died Monday, January 18, 2010, at Park Avenue Estates in Lexington. She was born July 30, 1927, at Lexington, Nebraska to Hugh Alonzo and Esther Kathryn (Mosher) Dodge.

Normalee was a 1945 graduate of Lexington High School. She was united in marriage to Leroy W. "Roy" Uhler in February, 1950 at the United Methodist Church in Lexington. The couple moved to Ogallala in 1950, where they owned and operated Uhler Sand & Gravel. They owned the company until Leroy's health declined in 1970. In 1987, following Leroy's death, Normalee returned to Lexington to be near family and friends.

She resided at Park Avenue Estates since 2005.

Normalee had many interests; including, antiques, collecting Red Wing Crockery, bells, reading and doing puzzles. She was a wonderful seamstress and enjoyed visiting with her family. Normalee so enjoyed her faithful companion, Buffy.

She was a member of the First United Methodist Church.

Survivors include one daughter: Kathryn Joan Uhler & Terry Harimon of Kelso, Washington

Two brothers: Roy & Mimi Dodge of Desert Hot Springs, California

Roger & Bernita Dodge of Penn Valley, California

Two sisters: Marjorie & Bill Hatting of Lexington, Nebraska

Virginia Cumpston of Lexington, Nebraska

Two grandchildren: Joni Kathryn (Chad) Cowan of Gering, Nebraska

McKenna Wynn Jessen & fiance' Nate James and his children, Taylor & Shayleigh all of Scottsbluff, Nebraska

Three great-grandchildren: Dillon & Madison Hrasky and Briana Kathryn Cowan

Normalee was preceded in death by her parents and husband, Leroy "Roy" Uhler.

It was Normalee's wishes that her body be cremated.

Family links:
Parents:
Hugh Alonzo Dodge (1894 - 1969)
Esther Kathryn Mosher Dodge (1898 - 1987)

Spouse:
Leroy W Uhler (1909 - 1985)


Burial:
Fort McPherson National Cemetery
Maxwell
Lincoln County
Nebraska, USA

[NI05712] Fought in the Revoluntionary war.Date of birth questionable!

Ref: Revolutionary Soldier Records?

[NI05722] Cause of death listed as "Old Age".

[NI05729] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Senility". Living with son, James A and
family at the time of the 1880 census.

[NI05731] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage". Living with
daughter Hannah C and son-in-law Otis P MOTT at the time of the
1880 census.

[NI05732] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Epilepsy".

[NI05733] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Paralysis".

[NI05734] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05735] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death lsited as "Heart Disease".

[NI05737] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Rheumatism". Listed as "Helpless" in
the 1865 RI Census.

[NI05739] They lived in Chariton County, MO

[NI05740] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Old Age". Listed as living with Son
Edwin B at the time of the 1865 RI State Census.

[NI05741] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "General Paresis". Living with daughter,
Basheba and family at the time of the 1880 Census. Edwin and
daughters living with brother, Edwin B at the time of the 1865 RI
State Census. Living with brother, Edwin and wife at the time of
the 1875 RI Census.
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "General Paresis". Living with =

[NI05744] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cystitis".

[NI05748] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Otitus Media Acute, Nephritis Chronic".
Living with husband, daughter in father-in-laws house at the time
of the 1875 RI census.

[NI05749] Cause of death listed as "Arterio Sclerosis with Gastro intestinal
Complications". Living with father, William at the time of the
1875 RI Census.

[NI05750] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Scarlet Fever".

[NI05754] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with Hamilton and Phebe was Oscar Ball age 15 a farm laboroer
at the time of the 1885 RI Census. Age listed as 66 in 1915.
Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Hemorrhage".

[NI05755] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Phthisis Pulmonaris".

[NI05756] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Probably Heart".

[NI05757] [uuu.FTW]

[NI05760] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Endocarditis Chronic".

[NI05761] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as "Boarder" with John G Sheffield and family at the time of
the 1875 RI Census.Age listed as 46 in 1915. Listed with son,
Clarence and family in 1925.

[NI05767] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Old Age".

[NI05768] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Strangury and General Dropsy".

[NI05772] John and Caroline Rose as a "Boarder" at the time of the 1875 RI
Census. Listed as an "Invalid". Living with mother, Hannah and
listed as an "Invalid" at the time of the 1865 RI Census. Nicknamed
"Suffering Katie".

[NI05775] Note: records burned in New London, Connecticut in 6 Sep 1781 by Benedict Arnold.
Freeman, July, 1670 in Block Island. October 1, 1720, Israel Dodge of New London, late of Block Island, sold land located in Block Island, formerly belonging to his father Tristram, to his brothers John, Tristram and William of Block Island. He was on a farm in North Parish (Montville), New London, Connecticut, in 1694.

In 1705, the Queen's Court reported him settled there on Indian Fields. As the New London records were burned by Benedict Arnold, September 6, 1781, it is difficult to give dates concerning his family. Baptisms by Reverend James Hillhouse, Second Congregational Church of North Parish, supply the following names of Israel's children and grandchildren. He appears to have disposed of all his real estate before his death. In 1707 he bought land in Montville of Samuel Rogers.
In 1719 he and wife Hannah gave his son John part of this land. In 1725 John sells some land to his brother Israel for L40. Israel Sr. gave some of this land to son Samuel, "all of his own farm except improved part," latter to fall to Samuel when Israel Sr. and wife die. In 1722 Israel gave some of this Montville land to son Thomas, "near John's portion," deed made out at Norwich.
In 1724 Israel gave son Israel more of this land. In 1730 Samuel Dodge sells land in Montville "where Israel Dodge now lives" (probably brother Israel) to Gideon Comstock for L 42, and this was doubtless after the death of his father and mother when the homestead had fallen to him, "said land beginning at the highway that goes to Colchester."

[NI05777] Fought in the Civil War for two Years.

[NI05784] Cause of death listed as "Gastric Ulcer and Hemorrhage".

[NI05785] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Ascites".

[NI05786] [uuu.FTW]

Living on Dorrys Cove Road in New Shoreham at time of death. Informant
listed as Mrs Eliza Willis (Foster Daughter).

[NI05788] [uuu.FTW]

Possible daughter of John R Dodge and Peggy Littlefield. Listed
with son, Ezkial L and wife in 1915. Cause of death listed as
"Cerebral Hemorrhage (Apoplexy)".

[NI05791] WATERLOO -- Joann Caroline Dodge, 76, of 427 Cornwall Ave., died Saturday, May 5, 2001, at Covenant Medical Center of natural causes.
She was born Dec. 16, 1924, in Herrick, S.D., daughter of Arthur O. and Elizabeth C. Scheinost. She married John W. Dodge on Sept. 20, 1947, in Chicago.
Mrs. Dodge was a 1946 graduate of St. Xavier's College and Mercy Hospital School of Nursing, Chicago, and worked as a registered nurse.
Survived by: her husband; a son, John W. Jr. of Waterloo; a daughter, Elizabeth A. Dodge of DeSoto; and three grandsons and a great-grandson.
Preceded in death by: a sister and a brother.
Services: 11 a.m. Thursday at St. Edward's Catholic Church, with burial in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Friends may call from 3 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Hagarty-Waychoff-Grarup Funeral Service on West Ridgeway, where there will be a 4 p.m. rosary and a 7 p.m. vigil service.
Memorials: may be directed to Columbus High School or the church.

[NI05795] Listed with daughter, Jennie and husband in 1915. Age listed as 65.
Cause of death listed as "Choleliciptitis".

[NI05798] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 49 in 1915.

[NI05799] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cancer of the Uterus".

[NI05800] [uuu.FTW]

Living with parents at the time of the 1875 Census. Age given as
23 years. Listed as married, but no wife listed. Cause of death
listed as "Valvular Heart disease, Cerebral Hemorrhage".
[Tristram.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Living with parents at the time of the 1875 Census. Age given as
23 years. Listed as married, but no wife listed. Cause of death
listed as "Valvular Heart disease, Cerebral Hemorrhage".
[Tristram2.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Living with parents at the time of the 1875 Census. Age given as
23 years. Listed as married, but no wife listed. Cause of death
listed as "Valvular Heart disease, Cerebral Hemorrhage".

[NI05801] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia".
[Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "".
[Tristram.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia".
[Tristram2.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia".

[NI05804] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as living with Jonathan S Ball as a "Boarder" at the time
of the 1875 RI Census. Age listed as 52 in 1915.
Living on Old Town Road at time of death.

[NI05805] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Septicaemia, Infection of hand. Wounded on
finger with fish bone - accident".

[NI05806] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 47 in 1915. Age listed as 58 in 1925.

[NI05807] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as not being able to read or write at the time of the 1875
RI Census. Listed as "Julius" age 53 in 1915. Age listed as 66 in
1925.
Cause of death listed as "Mitral and Aortic Insufficiency General
Anasarca".

[NI05809] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Morbid Development of Teeth".

[NI05816] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Pneumonia". Living with parents at the
time of the 1875 RI Census. Age given as 27 years.

[NI05817] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Rheumatic Fever and Endocarditis".
Living with parents at the time of the 1875 RI census. Age given as
31 years.

[NI05818] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Paralysis". Working as a "Farm Laborer"
in Middletown RI at the time of the 1865 RI Census. Age given as
19 years.

[NI05819] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Found dead in bed. Probable causes -
Senile debility- and feeble heart- probable cardiac lesion".

[NI05830] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as informant in father-in -law's return of death.

[NI05832] [uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Paralysis".

[NI05841] [uuu.FTW]

Living with mother and step-father, Hamilton Ball at the time of
the 1875 RI Census.

[NI05846] [uuu.FTW]

Living with brother, Ezekial and family in 1925. Age is listed as
54.Listed as Informant on mother's return of death.

[NI05850] [uuu.FTW]

Listed as informant on wife's death certificate in 1940.

[NI05853] [uuu.FTW]

Listed with parents and husband in 1915. Date of birth listed as 31
Aug 1882 on 1936 RI Census.
Living on Ocean Ave. in New Shoreham at time of death.

[NI05865] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 42 in 1915.

[NI05867] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 51
page 413

Mrs. Helen M. Dodge Ferguson.
DAR ID Number: 50922
Born in Verona, N. Y.
Wife of Rev. J. V. Ferguson.
Descendant of Capt. Samuel Dodge and of Capt. Henry Dodge.
Daughter of William Seward Dodge and Margaret Elizabeth Armitage, his wife.
Granddaughter of James Dodge and Electa Seward, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Henry Dodge and Sarah Rosecrans, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Samuel Dodge and Helen Amerman, his wife.
Samuel Dodge (1730-1807), served as lieutenant when taken prisoner at Fort Montgomery, 1777, and commanded a company at the close of the war. He was an original member of the Cincinnati. He became a distinguished scientist. His sons, Samuel, Henry and Richard, served as officers.
Henry Dodge (1756-1820), served as sergeant, 1775, and as lieutenant, 1776, in Col. Lewis Dubois Continental regiment. He commanded a company in Col. Frederick Weisenfel's regiment of Levies, 1781. He died in Poughkeepsie.
Also No. 14565.

[NI05876] Diedin US Service WW II

[NI05878] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 17 in 1915.

[NI05880] Enlisted in 6 Feb 1942
Enlistment State:Massachusetts
Enlistment City:Fort Devens
Branch:Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Branch Code:Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Grade:Private
Grade Code:Private
Term of Enlistment:Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law
Component:Selectees (Enlisted Men)

[NI05887] Cemetery stone spells her name Mehetabel.

[NI05892] SGT, US ARMY

[NI05894] [uuu.FTW]

Age listed as 50 in 1915. Listed as "Hattie M" in 1915.

[NI05900] Died aged 40;

[NI05921] Buried Old Cemetary, New Shoreham, RI

[NI05922] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "LaGrippe". Living with brother, Aaron at
the time of the 1870 Census. First wife "Rozilla" who was born
in 1810-09 Jan 1830. Second wife Mary P born 14 Feb 1817 23 Feb
1879.

[NI05923] [uuu.FTW]

[Dodge.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Suicide by gunshot - Wound upper section
of left side of chest".

[NI05930] Living with parents at time of the 1875 RI census. Listed as "Widowed".

[NI05940] Mentioned in will of Maxson and Polly Chase dated 1859.

He spent his boyhood days on Block Island. He followed the water the
most of
his life, in fishing and on coasting vessels. He removed from Block
Island to
Westerly and engaged in farming at Clark's Corners and on the Bliven
farm, but
for the last fifteen years of his life he worked in a quarry. He died of
heart disease at the quarry.

[NI05952] Master Sergeant in U.S. Airforce during WW II.

[NI05954] Clinton's birth and death dates are recorded on his tombstone.in Creescent heights Cemetery, Pleasant hill, Illinois.

[NI05963] Charles is listed with parents and siblings in the 1850 Pleasant Hill, Pike County, Illinois census, age 7, born in Illinois. In the 1870 census, page 362, he is listed as a farm hand in a household with his grandmother, Sarah A. Dodge and Seva and Holly (Holland) Bennett. Records of the administration of the estate of Charles' brother Holland in the Pike County Courthouse, Pittsfield, Illinois, contain receipts Charles signed for his share of the estate and also a share for the heirs of Mary Bennett, his sister. Evidently Charles became the guardian of the three children when Mary died sometime prior to 1874 when the shares were distributed. By 1883 Charles had left Pike County, as an advertisement for the sale of his grandmother's property in the 'Pike County Democrat' listed him as a nonresident. J. Roy Dodge says Charles and wife Matty lived in Pleasant Hill, later moving to LaGrange, Arkansas, where he is buried.
Census: 07 NOV 1850 Township 7 S 4 W, Pike, IL
Note: Age 7, b. Ill

[NI05978] Unmarried.

[NI05992] Mentioned in will of Maxson and Polly Chase dated 1859.

[NI05999] He resided in Danielson, Connecticutt.

[NI06008] He died in childhood.

[NI06009] She died in infancy.

[NI06023] Imbecile

[NI06035] No Issue.

[NI06057] No Issue

[NI06076] He died 9 days after his youngest child, Holland, was born.

[NI06077] J. Roy Dodge says Homer was a prominent dentist in Chicago, and is believed to have been unmarried

[NI06108] Living 1804 St . Paul Minnesota.

[NI06136] Compiler of this Dodge Branch of Genealogy

[NI06145] deaf & Dumb;

[NI06159] Died at Antietam, in Civil War.

[NI06187] Joel Edward Dodge, 55, of Bradt Rd., Cato, passed away at home on Saturday, November 3, 2012. Family and friends may call noon to 2 p.m. Wednesday, November 7, at Keysor Funeral Service, 11362 South St., Cato, where a funeral service will follow at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Monumental Grove Cemetery, Meridian. For those wishing, memorials may be made to Hospice of the Finger Lakes, 1130 Corporate Dr., Auburn, NY 13021. Joel was born March 9, 1957, in Syracuse, a son to R. Edward and Helen Wicks Dodge. He was an avid musician, enjoying guitars and drums, and a master dart player, where he was the envy of his friends. He also enjoyed boating, camping and was a longtime fan of the Rolling Stones. He is survived by his life partner, James Hurd of Cato; father, Edward (Karen) Dodge; stepfather, Richard Marshall (mother, Helen predeceased); brothers, Jeffrey and Ed (Amy) Dodge; sister, Lisa Beth Dodge; stepbrothers, David (Doreen) Marshall, Scott, Christopher and Joseph (Lori) Marshall; and several nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles. Published in Syracuse Post Standard on November 3, 2012

[NI06214] He graduated from New York University Medical College in 1845 and practiced medicine for 55 years, mostly in Groton, Connecticut. He sailed for California on February 8, 1849 from Greenport, New York on the ship Sabina as a member of the Southampton and California Mining and Trading Company, rounded Cape Horn, and arrived in San Francisco Bay on August 9, 1849. During the Civil War, he served as assistant surgeon and then surgeon of the Fifty-First New York State Volunteers (Shepard Rifles) from December 2, 1861 to October 6, 1862, shortly after Antietam. He
reenlisted and served as surgeon of the Sixteenth New York Volunteer Heavy Artillery from July 6, 1863 to August 21, 1865. In 1872, he served as surgeon for the Oroya Railroad Co. over the Andes Mountains in South America.

[NI06220] He began as a drug store clerk in Groton, Connecticut and in 1897 founded
Bell & County, the maker of Bell-Ans tablets for indigestion. He began
breeding and driving harness racing horses around 1900. He was regarded
as a leading breeder and trainer of 2:05 trotters and was inducted into
the Harness Racing Hall of Fame. He maintained Hollyrood Farm near
Lexington, Kentucky, and winter quarters near Grovetown, Georgia.He began
as a drug store clerk in Groton, Connecticut and in 1897 founded Bell &
County, the maker of Bell-Ans tablets for indigestion. He began breeding and
driving harness racing horses around 1900. He was regarded as a leading
breeder and trainer of 2:05 trotters and was inducted into the Harness
Racing Hall of Fame. He maintained Hollyrood Farm near Lexington,
Kentucky, and winter quarters near Grovetown, Georgia.

JOHN L. DODGE 1958 [1866-1940]
Born in Groton, CT, in 1866, Dodge became interested in trotting horses after graduation from college. Successful in the pharmaceutical business, he helped build the Harlem River Speedway and later bought Hollyrood Farm in Lexington, KY, where he bred top horses for years. Dodge was an excellent
amateur driver and trainer and often raced his own stable. He bred Periscope, 2:01 1/2, Hollyrood Phyllis, Hollyrood Portia and Hollyrood Susan, to name a few. He retired from racing in 1932, but came back later with Hollyrood Dennis, 2:01 1/4. He retired to Hollyrood Farm and died April 7, 1940 at his winter home in Grovetown, GA at the age of 74.

[NI06224] Simon was an early Settler of Iseborough, Maine, and the information of his descendants was taken from The History of Isleborough. His house was near "The Gully", east side belows Hewes Point. His estate was divided between his sons Joshua & Noah, later owned by Alvin Warren.

[NI06227] Birth date determined from Tombstone d. 44 years, 1mo, 1 day

[NI06237] Rev. Dr. Joseph S. Dodge Dies at 87
STAMFORD, Conn., April 13 - 1921 The Rev. Dr. Joseph Smith Dodge, Jr., who was both a retired Dentist and a retired Universalist Clergyman, died here today after a long illness, at the age of 87. He was born in New York City, and received the degrees of B, A, and M.D. from Columbia, afterward serving for eighteen months in a hospital. Then he studied dentistry and practiced it in Stamford until 1914. During the Civil War he was ordained in the Universalist ministry and became pastor of the Universalist Church here, serving until 1875 without salary.

[NI06245] 11 Mar 1889 is the date of birrh given in Theron Royal Woodward, Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge, Lanward Publishing County, in Chicago,Illinois, 1904, T. R. W. Pg. 53. However on his WW I Draft Regisration Card and also on his WW II Draft Registration Card ant his tombstone The date 26 Sep 1888.

[NI06254] Henry Nehemiah Dodge, M.D. Grad. New York College of Physicians and Surgeons and Columbia College; author, poet, and possessor of very distinguished literary and progessional abilities. Henry Nehemiah Dodge (1843-1937) was a poet, author, and dentist. He attended Columbian and Hamilton colleges and graduated in 1868 for the College of Physicians and Surgeons. He graduated from the Philadelphia Dental College (now part of Temple University) three years later. Then he began to practice dentistry with his father and brother in New York City. Dr. Dodge founded the Morristown Free Dental Clinic and donated parkland. He published four volumes of work and wrote lyric and historical verse. He also received honorary degrees from St. Lawrence University, Tufts College, and Akron University.


Columbia Alumni News 29 (September 24, 1937) P 16

He Is A Man -- My Brother

By Henry Nehemiah Dodge

What man soe'er I chance to see --
Amazing thought -- is kin to me,
And if a man, my brother.

What though in silken raiment fine
His form be clad, while naked mine;
He is a man, my brother.

What though with flashing chariot wheel
He spurn my cry, nor pity feel;
He is a man, my brother.

What though he sit in regal state
And for an empire legislate,
He is a man, my brother.

What though he grovel at my feet,
Spurned by the rabble of the street;
He is a man, my brother.

What though his hand with crime be red,
His heart a stone, his conscience dead;
He is a man, my brother.

And when we pass upon the street,
It is my brother that I meet;
Alas, alas, my brother!

[NI06257] 1930 US Census Monticello, Johnson, KS

[NI06274] ALVAN Dodge, M. D., and farmer is a native of Buffalo, Erie County, N. Y., born in 1840. In 1859 he commenced reading medicine with Dr. Campbell, of Mount Morris, Livingston County, attending the Michigan University in 1861, and graduated from the New York City College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1865. From there he entered the United States Navy as Acting Assistant Surgeon. He resigned his position there and next opened practice in Hannibal, Mo. He then returned to Erie County, N. Y., and went to practicing which he continued until 1880, when he came to Bourbon County, Kan., locating on his farm where is now located the village-site of Marmaton, taking forty acres from the quarter section. Besides his practice he is tending a fine farm, using the most progressive ideas and going into thoroughbred horses, and having improvements to the amount of $5,000 on the home farm. In 1877 he married, now living on one of the finest places in Marmaton Township.

[NI06275] Leonard Dodge was educated in the public schools, at Clarence Academy and
the Genessee Wesleyan Seminary at Lima, N. Y. After leaving school he
learned the milling business in the Old Erie Mills at Black Rock, where
he remained 4 years. In 1864 he went to Williamsville and engaged in
milling, continuing until his mill was burned in 1894. In 1872 Mr. Dodge
removed to Buffalo, where he engaged in the wholesale provision trade,
carrying on this business and his Williamsville milling enterprise. In
1885, he relinquished his provision business to devote himself to grain
and elevator interests. In 1886 the Frontier Elevator was built by a
stock company of which Mr. Dodge became secretary, treasurer and General
Manager; offices which he held continuously ever since. In 1907, he was
elected president of the Western Elevator Association. Since 1896 he has
served as trustee of the Western Savings Bank, and has been its Vice
President since 1901. He is one of the charter members of the
Commonwealth Trust Company, of which he was for several years a trustee.

Mr. Dodge's connection with the Buffalo Board of Trade began in 1864. As
a member of the old Merchants Exchange he done such valuable work that
when, in 1903 that body became the Chamber of Commerce, he was elected
its first President. In the movement of improving the canals he was one
of the most efficient workers and it was during Mr. Dodge's term of
office that the act for the improvement of the canal system was passed.
As a member of the Charter Revision Committee [or Commissionothe author
had "Comm."], he gave many months of gratuitous service for the benefit
of the City of Buffalo.

A lifelong Democrat, Mr. Dodge has with one exception never accepted any
political office. In 1869 he was elected Supervisor of the town of
Amherst, and served 4 years, being Chairman of the Board of Supervisors
[of Erie County] in 1871.

Since 1865 Mr. Dodge has been a Mason and a member of Hiram Lodge.
Currently, he is a 32nd degree Mason and a member of Buffalo Consistory.
He is also affiliated with Buffalo Chapter No. 71, Royal Arch Mason;
Buffalo Council, R. & S. M; Lake Erie Commandery, Knights Templar; and
Ismailia Temple. For many years he has been a member of the Y. M. A.

September 20, 1876, Mr. Dodge again married, his second wife being Emilie
P., daughter of the late Col. Richard Flach of Buffalo.

[NI06281] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 15
page 282

Mrs. Emma Jessie Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 14759
Born in Florida.
Wife of James Philander Dodge.
Descendant of Col. John Smith, of Virginia.
Daughter of William Townsend Adams and Sarah Jaquelin Murdoch, his wife.
Granddaughter of John Smith Murdoch and Emma Wallace, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of George William Murdoch and E. Jaquelin Smith, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of John Smith and Anna Bull, his wife (1760-1831).
John Smith, (1750-1836), was appointed county lieutenant, 1777, by Gov. Patrick Henry. He had charge of raising and equipping troops and guarded the Hessian prisoners captured at Trenton. He was born in Middlesex county, was granted a colonel's pension, 1832, and when he died in Frederick county, held the rank of general

[NI06289] Alive at 90 in 2007

[NI06296] Never Married

[NI06297] Wilson Rogers Dodge was the only child born to Clarence Bevan Dodge and Lydia Ellen Rogers Dodge of Saint Augustine, Florida on January 9, 1931.

He passed on from this life on March 12, 2011, lovingly attended at home by his wife Joann, as were his wishes following his battle with cancer.

Wilson was raised by his parents in Saint Augustine. As a boy he sang in the Episcopal choir, and first learned to love flying when he worked as a crop duster there.

He graduated from Ketterlinus High School in 1949, married in 1950 and started his family with Betty Hall, deceased. They raised four children. Later he was married and divorced, to Donna Cherry.

He served proudly for twenty-six years, as an enlisted officer in the Marine Corps, assigned abroad in Korea, Japan and Vietnam.

A retired Major, he moved to Salt Lake in 1982 and began working at the Federal Reserve Bank, from which he also later retired. He met Joann Crowley in 1985, later married in 1987 with whom he shared the remainder of his life and love.

Wilson became a member of the LDS Church. He was also a Master Mason and Lifetime Member in Good Standing, Free and Accepted Masons of Florida, Ashlar Lodge 98 of Saint Augustine.

He loved sailing, and for several years enjoyed taking his boat out on the Great Salt Lake. He enjoyed college football and was a little league baseball coach. He liked archery, horses, camping, and fishing and was an avid student of military and religious history. He also loved his boxer dogs, of which there were many over the span of his family life.

Wilson is survived by his wife, Joann; children, Robin Wilder, FL; Colleen Dodge, Ellsworth, ME; Wilson Dodge, Jr. (Robin), Dayton, OH; Guy Dodge (Kelsey), Anchorage, AK; Deborah Ryan, Salt Lake; Jim Abeyta (Dawn), CO; Gayleen Hicks (Ed), MO; Lisa Montoya (Quen); Brenda Brown (Layne); Marlene Ibarra; John Snider, all of Salt Lake; also, thirty-seven grandchildren, and fifteen great-grandchildren.
No viewing was requested.
Full military graveside honors will be conducted at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 19, 2011 at Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 South Highland Drive (1495 East), East Millcreek, UT.
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune on March 17, 2011.

[NI06305] Unmarried

[NI06316] Allison worked at many kinds of jobs ending up spending 20 years with
General Dynamics, of Pomona California. Firt as a typiat, then
draftsman, then a technical illustrator A, doing illustrated training
manuals and drawing missles on the computer. Also became an excellant
landscape oil painter selling well.

[NI06317] In 1830 she was married. and living in Weathersfield, New York

[NI06328] Unmarried

[NI06331] Went away and returned in 1884 after 45year absence.

[NI06342] He was a merchant and Manuufacturer for 26 years

[NI06367] Joined the Airforce in 1942. Fought in WW II.

[NI06397] Ira went to California at age 17 during the 1849 California gold rush. He returned a few years later, purchased a large tract of land at Chemung Center, erected a sawmill, hauling lumber by mule trains to Waverly. This timber was used in building many early homes and buildings. Also he shipped lumber via the Chemung canal to points in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. He married Alice Merrill of Candor N. Y. and moved to Waverly in 1870 becoming one of the enterprising citizens of the community, building dwellings also building blocks on Broad Street.

[NI06401] He was killed in 1886 while building a massive stone mill at Spencer lake.

[NI06455] Unmarked Grave,

[NI06456] Jim grew up in Lexington, NE. He dropped out of school while in junior
high to help out at home. In the 1980's, he went back to school and got
his GED. He married Patricia Smith and they moved to Ca after about 6
years of marriage. He has always welded. He worked with his Dad,
Millard, and several places in Ca including Pacific Gas and Electric.
They moved back to NE in 1970 and he owned and operated his own welding
and machine shop in Ansley, NE. When Pat got really sick, they sold the
shop and traveled the States. After she died, he worked for Chicago
Bridge and Iron in Southern California and also in Jamaica. He came back
to NE and met Lorna Drake and they were married on Nov. 23, 1991. He's
retired now and they live at Republican City in southern Nebraska, near
Harlan Co. Lake/ Dam.

[NI06500] 1840: Leray, Jefferson, New York
1850: Norway, Herkimer, New York living with Jefferson Tillinghast.
1860:
1870:
1880:

[NI06528] Some Records spell her name Emily.

[NI06540] Sarah's nickname was Peggy.

[NI06542] Died when bucked from a horse into a river.

[NI06550] Will: Between July 11- August 20, 1806 New Shoreham Probate =

[NI06551] Jeremiah E.Dodge, was a native of New York, descended from Puritan stock, who emigrated from England to New England soon after the Pilgrim settlement. The ancestors of Mr. Dodge have chiefly followed the medical and legal professions, and following the same line Jeremiah E. secured an academic education, then entered the Harvard law school, which was directed by Chief Justice Story as professor of law. After graduating in 1831 Mr. Dodge went to Tecumseh, Michigan, and was appointed Postmaster, that being the distributing point for mails of the entire Northwest, of which at that time little was known beyond Minnesota and Wisconsin. With the breaking out of the Black Hawk war Mr. Dodge raised a company of men and went to the front, where he was engaged through the conflict. After peace was declared he and his friend, Daniel B. Burt, went, in 1833, to Wisconsin, and, locating in Grant county, founded the town of Waterloo, and built one of the first flour and grist mills in Wisconsin. Mr. Burt attended to the mill, while Mr. Dodge followed the practice of law. After the death of Mr. Burt the name of the town was changed to Burtin, thus commemorating the honored name. Mr. Dodge was married, in Waterloo, to Miss Matilda Ashley, a native of New Hampshire, also of Puritan ancestry. Mr. Dodge was the first Adjutant-General of the Territory of Wisconsin. He served several terms in the Legislature, was a member of the Historical Society and a man of prominence in all general affairs. In 1861 he removed his family to Lancaster, Grant county, for the higher education of his children, and, retiring from practice, purchased a little farm, and there passed the remaining years of his life.

[NI06557] 1850: Norway, Herkimer County, New York

[NI06569] Leander was a carpenter by trade and while engaged in his work hew had
tHe misfortune to fall from a staging and break his leg. Before his
recovery, while convalescing he attended a funeral of a friend who had
died of typhoid fever. Leander contracted the disease from exposure and
in his weakend condition, unable to withstand the added strain on his
syystem did not survive the shock and passed away most untimely; a young
man of unusual promise.

[NI06570] Alvin like most of our ancestors had little chance for schooling. Life was hard, incessant struggle for bread alone, and called mostly for physical efort with little chance for mental development and recreation. Alvin left home when about 10 years of age; his first venture being at Newport, R.I. where he engaged one Seth Bateman near
Brentons reed. Bateman was a Batchelor owned a large farm well stocked and had many hands employed and was looked upon as a rich man for his time.

[NI06577] Some records say Sophia's last name was Christman.

[NI06579] probably the Cyrus Dodge on the 1820 Philadelphia, New York census

according to Hough, Cyrus, a village innkeeper in Philadelphia, was
killed by a cannon explosion during 4th of July festivities. The cannon
was overcharged, and filled with stones and grass.

[NI06607] Some note her middle name is Linda.

[NI06638] REV. CHEESEMAN FILKIN DODGE was a medical doctor for a number of years before becoming a Universalist minister. His family photo album has a news clipping announcing the marriage of The Rev. C.F. Dodge, pastor of the Universalist Society in Gibson, Susquehanna County, PA, to Miss Catharine H. Darling of Butternut, Otsego County, New York, officiated by the Rev. J.T. Goodrich on September 4, (no year given; unsure of the spelling of her name.)

For a time, Rev. Dodge was a circuit rider in the Western states. He was known to keep only the fastest horses. One day while on circuit, a man with whom he was staying divulged to him, only because he was clergy, that he should leave very early the next day because Jesse James intended to waylay him out on the prairie and steal his team of horses. As he hurried toward town the next morning, he saw a group of riders in the distance, gaining on him. The Reverend raced into town, drove directly to the livery, sold his team and was heading to the train station as the James gang rode up to the barn. This is the familyis favorite story about him. He eventually settled back to New York State.

[NI06658] Seril Dodge came to Providence, RI in 1784 after serving an apprenticeship with Thomas Harland of Norwich, Connecticut, one of the important figures in Connecticut clockmaking.

Seril chose to build his house next to the new meetinghouse of the Charitable Baptist Society, which was built on land occupied by the descendants of THomas Angell. The lane that passed through the Angell property, just north of the meeting house was known as Angell's Lane. In the 19th century, it was known as Angell Street, with the exception of the 1st block, which due to an error in reading of a survey legend, was called Thomas Street.

It is typical in size to many wood frame houses built at that time, but is unique in the elegance and extraordinary detail of its interior finish work. It was one of the first buildings in Rhode Island to be recorded by the federal Historical American Buildings Survey. Recent research into the history of the building now reveals the reasons for the inconguity of this elaborate, large-scale detailing in a middling Providence residence and illustrates the way in which architecture was used as a statement of social distinction.

The two houses built by Seril Dodge are next to each other. The first Seril Dodge House was built by Seril between 1786 and 1789 on land owned by Moses Brown. In 1789, after the house was finished, Moses Brown sold the land under it to Seril. The deed states "the House Lot being the same whereon said Dodge has built a Dwelling House in which he now lives." It was designed with a central hallway flanked by two rooms on each side and with two interior chimneys, one on each side of the hall. Most houses built during this time had the one central chimney, but Seril laid his house out according to a newer style in which separate chimney stacks permittd individual fireplaces to be built in each side of the rooms and allowed daylight and fresh air to pass thelength of the house through an open central hall. Seril's house was 2 1/2 stories high and measured 36 by 29 feet.

Because Seril was an artisan and shop keeper, he may have only been able to afford a house of this size, but soon his prospects must have imporved for in 1790, he purchased the 2nd of Moses Brown's building lots on Angell's Lane and began construction of a three-story, brink-clad house for his growing family.

The next year he vacated the first house and sold the building and the land back to Moses Brown in whose family it would remain for the next 116 years. In the east parlor, now on the bridge floor level, Hope Brown was married to Thomas Poynton Ives in 1792.

This house was raised one story in 1906 for use by Adams Market and extensive alterations at that time eliminated the original chimneys and fireplaces but many original fixtures remain. The building was bought by the Art Club in 1919. Extensive renovations were completed in 1990, which included the restoration of the two original fireplace mantels bequeathed to the Club by Mrs. John Carter Brown Washburn.

The second Seril Dodge House was possibly the very first brick veneer structure in Providence, RI. It is a three story structure and was built in 1790. In 1799, it was purchased by Moses Brown for his son Obadiah. It has been known for a long time as the Obadiah Brown brick house. It was leased to the Art Club in 1866 and was deeded to the Art Club in 1906.

[NI06667] He was a school teacher before coming to Corning, New York & Harbor Creek, PA

John Dodge Obituary, Erie Gazette, August 29, 1844: Died at his residence in Harborcreek, Erie County, Pa, on the 26th inst., Mr. John Dodge, in the 63rd year of his age, after an illness of nearly five week s, in which he exhibited the patience, cheerless, and resignation, which well agreed with the life he had lived., and the Christian character he had supported.

Shortly before his death he sent for the trustees of the Prebyterian meeting house near to his dwelling, and obtained their consent that the Rev. Mr. Crawford should be allowed to preach his funeral sermon therein. When very near his end, he called his household about him, and took a last leave of them one by one. This he did in perfect composure, and with the chee fulness begotten by the hope that the separation but brief, and that the ir re-union would be effected in a world where death and sorrow came not.

In all his relations of husband, father, friend, and citizen, Mr. D. was faithful, affectionate, conscientious, and benevolent, and the deep interest manifested by the public at his funeral testified their high appreciati on of his excellences, and the loss which his decease has occasioned.

For many years a firm and zealous Universalist in life, he r ___? in death the sincerity of his conviction and the adequacy thereof to support nd solice the spirit in the hour of his departure.

[NI06678] This Martha Ann Dodge is a descendant of Richard Dodge from Beverly Esssex County, MA. This is a Richard Dodge line that ties to a Tristram Dodge line.

[NI06680] Single.

[NI06697] [Allfams.FTW]


The family of Joy Ward is located in the1850 census of RichlandTwp.,
Kalamazoo County, MI., on p.160b, line 9 thru 16, as folllows:

Dwell. Family NAME AGE SEX COL. OCCUP. VALUE
PL.BR.
2292 2708 Ward, Joy 49 M W Farmer 300
Conn.
" , Pricilla 48 F W N.Y.
" , Ambrose 24 M W Laborer N.Y.
" , Charles J. 23 M W " N.Y.
" , John 19 M W " N.Y.
" , Esther 17 F W N.Y.
" , Mary J. 9 F W N.Y.
" , George 5 M W MI.
=========================

Joy Ward married Priscilla Hopkins who was rumored to have been related
to passengers on the Mayflower. Family legend has it that Joy Ward was
a leader of a musical band. Information garnered from military records of
those who served in the Michigan forces did indicate that a Joy Ward was
a musician in the fife and drum corps during the French and Indian Wars,
but this Joy Ward was killed at an early age but this might be the
connection the family is remembering.

The Joy Ward family data was located in the 1860 Federal cencus of
Kalamazoo, Kalamazoo County, Michigan, reel T-6, roll 144, page 161L. The
Joy Ward's lived in Kalamazoo, Richland Township, Kalamazoo Co.,
Michigan, removing there before the 1850 Michigan census. They were not
listed in the earlier 1840 Michigan cencus. All of Joy Ward's children
were born in New York except for the last, George W. Ward, who was born
in Michigan.

Family legend has Joy Ward having two brothers. No sisters were
mentioned from the Ward family legend. The family memories indicates that
one brother was an Orin Ward, Sr., and probably emigrated to New York
City (or state) from Connecticutt or Vermont. But Michigan census
records show that Joy Ward was born in Connecticutt. Orin Ward, Sr.,
operated a business with his brother, Ezra (or Elizar) Ward which was
called E.& O. Ward in New York in the 1880's.

In the continued investigation of the Ward family, it has been indicated
that the father of Joy Ward was most likely Ambrose Ward. A Marguerite
Ireland of Vestal, New York, sent an E mail to myself and stated the
following information to which she was privy to from her own records of
her branch of the Ward family.

She stated that she was just beginning her own genealogical investigation
and had found information which I had sent in which was at an exact
parrell with mine. I had listed, erroniously from information garnered
from the "Kindred Konnections" site on the internet, the data on a Joy
Ward and Anna White which had some of the same children as her records.
My list started with an Amy Ward, b.179?, and ended with Elizure Ward, b.
December 28, 1816.

She said that the first two children (Amy and ??) might be the children
of Joy Ward and Anna White, but that the other children listed were the
children of her great-great-grandfather, Ambrose Ward, b.October 8, 1775
and Erutha Dodge, b.September 9, 1780. The list of children and birth
dates which I had found at Kindred Konnections was an exact match to the
information found in her own grandfather's family bible. She stated that
Ambrose and Erutha were married on November 30, 1800 in Connecticutt and
that they had moved, sometime in the early 1800's to the village of
Gilbertsville in the Butternut Township, in Otsego County, New York.

It seems that her great-great-grandfather, Lucerne Ward, was the brother
of our Joy Ward and lived near the village of Undilla and, although a
school teacher at some time, had also produced on his farm butter which
was sent to New York City by rail to be sold thru a commission house
owned by Orrin and Elizure Ward. She also said that Elizure never
married but after the commission house folded in about 1890, he retuned
to Otsego County where he died. She said that she had his obituary if I
wanted a copy. She said that there were five children from the Ambrose
and Erutha union and that if this lineage is mine, I must be related to
either Joy Ward, Clement Ward or Meigs Ward since she was related to
Lucerne and that Elizure never married.

As can be seen by this information, there is a great likelyhood that
Marguerite and I are related, especically with the coincidental match of
the family's connecttion with "E. & O. Wards" and the fact that my
records show that the original progeniator of this Ward family probably
lived in Connecticutt.
______________________________

[NI06700] [Allfams.FTW]


Information for possible identification of the father of Joy Ward

Records from Kalamazoo, Michigan Census of 1850 show that Joy Ward was
living there with his wife, Priscilla (Hopkins) Ward and most of his
children; Ambrose, age 26, Charles, age 23, John, age 19, Esther, age 17,
Mary Jane, age 9, and George W., age 5. Fanny had already died at the
age of 11 years. Apparently, Mary, the oldest had Married and left the
family and was not living with them. These records indicate that George
W. was the only child which was born in Michigan. The other children are
all listed as being born in New York or maybe New Jersey (the printing is
hard to read.) This record also shows Joy Ward being born in Connecticutt
and his wife, Priscilla as being born in New York or New Jersey. These
records are located on the 1850 Michigan Census, T-6, Roll 144, page
116-L.

The 1810 Census for Connecticutt, in the county of Middlesex, Billings
Township, page 333, shows a Mr. Joy Ward, possibly Joy Ward's father was
living in Connecticutt with a family of 13. It shows a husband and wife
between the ages of 26 and 45. It shows one boy between the age of 10
and 16. It shows three other boys between the ages of 6 and 10. It
shows two girls between the ages of 16 and 26. It shows two girls
between the ages of 10 and 16. It shows two girls under the age of ten.
These people may not have all been his children. Cousins or other
relatives living with him may have been the reason for such a large
amount of people listed with this family. Some of them might also have
been hired hands or indentured servants.

Our Joy Ward is said to have had two brothers, Orin and Ezra (or
Elizar). Joy Ward was born in Connecticutt on November 30, 1801. The
family legend states that Orin and Ezra (Elizar), went to New York and
went into business together in a firm that they called "E. & O. Ward".
The family legend only speaks of these three boys with no mention of
females. If the Joy Ward mentioned here in the 1810 Census is Joy Ward's
father, then the other children might not have survived childhood or
already married and left the home. Since Joy Ward's wife, Priscilla was
born in New York, he probably went to New York later, possibly with his
father, and joined his brothers where he met and married and his children
were born. Since there is no other Joy Ward listed in the 1810 Census
for Connecticutt, this is most likely Joy Ward's father.

By the time of the 1820 Census, Joy Ward is no longer listed. Did he
die, or did he simply move out of Connecticutt, possibly to New York to
join his sons? If he did die his widow would still be listed in the 1820
Census. There were four females listed in Middlesex County, Middlesex
Township as head of the household. One of them might be his widow.
They are:
Bela Ward, Middlesex County, page 479, Middlesex Tp.
Hannah Ward, " " " 479 " "
Martia Ward, " " " 481 " "
Rosanna Ward, " " " 466 " "

Other Possibilities:

The 1830 Census of Connecticutt does show an Elijah Ward from
Middlesex County, Middlesex Tp., page 016.
The 1840 Census of Connecticutt also shows the same Elijah Ward,
Middlesex County, Middlesex Tp., page 356.
The 1840 Census of Connecticutt also shows an Orrin Ward of Tolland
County, Tolland Tp., page 011,
The 1850 Census of Connecticutt shows an Elijah Ward Hartford Co.,
E.Windsor Tp., page 065.
The 1850 Census of Connecticutt shows an Orren Ward, Tolland Co.,
Tolland Tp., page 012.
--------
Since none of the later Censuses of Connecticutt in 1820, 1830, 1840 or
1850 identify any Joy Ward, and since two of the boys went to New York
and into business and since Joy Ward, the father of George W. Ward, was
married to a lady named Priscilla Hopkins, it follows that the Joy Ward
of Connecticutt might have followed his sons to New York.
--------
The 1810 Census of New York shows no Joy Ward, no Orin Ward or any Ezra
Ward.
-------
The 1820 Census, of New York shows a Joy Ward in Genesee County, Bergen Tp.,
page 041.
--------
The 1830 Census of New York lists two people named Joy Ward.
Joy Ward, Green County, Windham Tp., page 007.
Joy Ward, Genesee County, Bergen Tp., page 383.
-------
The 1830 Census of New York lists an Orrin Ward, Tioga County, Tioga Tp.,
page 264.
-------
The 1830 Census of New York lists two people named Ezra Ward.
Ezra (Elizar) Ward, Onondaga County, Elbridge Tp., page 089.
Ezra (Elizar) Ward, Oneida County, Lee Tp., page 372.
---------
The 1830 Census of New York lists three people named Elijah Ward.
Elijah Ward, New York County, New York 10th Dist., page 051.
Elijah Ward, West County, Greenburg Tp., page 017.
Elijah Ward, Dutchess County, Poughkee Tp., page 364.
-----------
The 1840 Census for New York shows more promise, it lists:
Joy Ward in Otsego County, Butternut Tp., page 205.
Orin D. Ward, New York County, New York Tp., page 033.
Ezra Ward, New York County, New York Tp., page 073.

This Joy Ward of the 1840 New York Census is a family of two parents,
both aged between 40 & 50, one female under 5 years, one male under 10
years, one female under 10 years, one male between 15 & 20 Years. The
chronology in this family is right since this Joy Ward in question had
all but two of his children before 1840. The family must have moved to
Michigan soon after the 1840 Census. The Orin D. Ward and the Ezra Ward
are also located in this census in New York as the family legend requires.
---------
The 1850 Census for New York lists no Joy Ward or Ezra Ward but has
two people named Orin Ward.
Orrin Ward, Genesee County, Bethany Tp., page 123.
Orrin Ward, St.Lawrence County, St.Lawrence Tp., page 343.
----
Apparently, between 1840 and 1850, Joy Ward left for Michigan, Ezra Ward
either died or removed from New York and Orrin Ward continued to live in
New York in either Genesse Co. or St.Lawrence County, New York.
=================================================================

In the continued investigation of the Ward family, it has been indicated
that the father of Joy Ward was most likely Ambrose Ward. A Marguerite
Ireland of Vestal, New York, sent an Email to myself and stated the
following information to which she was privy to from her own records of
her branch of the Ward family.
She stated that she was just beginning her own genealogical investigation
and had found information which I had sent in which was at an exact
parrell with mine. I had listed, erroniously from information garnered
from the "Kindred Konnections" site on the internet, the data on a Joy
Ward and Anna White which had some of the same children as her records.
My list started with an Amy Ward, b.179?, and ended with Elizure Ward, b.
December 28, 1816.
She said that the first two children (Amy and ??) might be the children
of Joy Ward and Anna White, but that the other children listed were the
children of her great-great-grandfather, Ambrose Ward, b.October 8, 1775
and Erutha Dodge, b.September 9, 1780. The list of children and birth
dates which I had found at Kindred Konnections was an exact match to the
information found in her own grandfather's family bible. She stated that
Ambrose and Erutha were married on November 30, 1800 in Connecticutt and
that they had moved, sometime in the early 1800's to the village of
Gilbertsville in the Butternut Township, in Otsego County, New York.
It seems that her great-great-grandfather was Lucerne Ward who lived near
the village of Undilla and, although a school teacher at some time, had
also produced on his farm butter which was sent to New Yory City by rail
to be sold thru a commission house owned by Orrin and Elizure Ward. She
also said that Elizure never married but after the commission house
folded in about 1890, h retuned to Otsego County where he died. She said
that she had his obituary if I wanted a copy. She said that there were
five children from the Ambrose and Erutha union and that if this lineage
is mine, I must be related to either Joy Ward, Clement Ward or Meigs Ward
since she was related to Lucerne and that Elizure never married.
As can be seen by this information, there is a great possibility that we
are related, especically with the coincidental match of the family's
connecttion with "E. & O. Wards."
My records show that the original progeniator of this Ward family
probably lived in Connecticutt. The family legend of our Joy Ward said
that he had two brothers. No sisters were mentioned in the Ward family
legend. We know that our Joy Ward moved to Michigan. The legend
indicates that his brother, Orin Ward, Sr., probably emigrated to New
York City (or state) from Connecticutt or Vermont with his brother Ezra
(or Elizar) Ward. The Vermont connection is not very likely since
Michigan records show that Joy Ward was born in Connecticutt. Nearly all
of his children were born in New York, therefore, the whole family must
have relocated in New York before Joy Ward moved to Michigan.
The most probable Ward connection in Connecticutt which meets the family
legend's criteria is found in the 1840 cencus. It shows a man with the
name of Orrin Ward was living in Connecticutt with three children of his
own and two other people. One of these was Esther Whipple, aged 39 and
another was Eva Rogers, aged 16. The Rogers girl might possibly be an
ancestor of Laura Altie "Ann" Rogers, who later became the wife of George
W. Ward in 1872. It has been rumored that Orrin Ward, Sr., operated a
business with his brother, Ezra (or Elizar) Ward which was called the
"E.& O. Ward, Company" in New York in the 1880's.
-----------------------

[NI06703] Taken from the Woodville cemetery in Waseca County, MN.

NAME Sect. B/Date D/Date Township County
WARD, RUTH JOY H 01/06/1899 03/21/1995 Woodville Waseca

This Ruth Joy Ward was a Veteran who served as a private in the
U.S. Army during WW II. He/She was buried next to the plot containing
Charles & Josephine Leuthold. Could have somehow been related.
================

Subject: On the trail of Erutha
Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 11:59:27 -0500 (EST)
From: marguerite748@webtv.net (marguerite ireland)
To: Lward1@kscable.com

Hi Lee

I have been giving our problem of Erutha some though this past week and
did some checking in the Ancestry census index. I have come up with
a POSSIBLE family for Erutha.

In 1790 our Ambrose Sr. was listed as living in Branford New Haven Co.
Ct. The right no of males and females in the family. He is NOT in the
1800 New Haven census index, But there ia an Ambrose Ward Living in
Litchfield CO. CT, town not given. In the 1810 index there is an
Ambrose Ward and an Ambrose Ward Jr. living in Plymouth, Litchfield Co.
CT. I have not seen the figures for these households, but feel they are
our Ambroses. If you get to a library that has censuses before I do.
you may want to check that out.

Also in the 1800 index in Litchfield Co. and in the 1810 index for
Plymouth Litchfield Co. is listed an Ira Dodge.
I like this family as a POSSIBILTY because of where they lived and the
fact that Erutha had a grandson named Ira.
So far have found nothing on this Ira Dodge.

What do you think?

Margy
++++++++++

Lee

Yes I found that Ira Ward and Mary Curtiss and then I looked on Dodge
family Ass. page and they have vitals on Dodges from the Bourber vital
stat of CT. Ira and Mary had a daughter Ruth b. Sept 1. 1799 We have a
birth date of Sept 1, 1780 for Erutha. I have a request in to the Dodge
Family Ass. for information on the family. Maybe you were right and we
should have been looking for Ruth all along. This probably is the Ira
Dodge that is in Plymouth in 1800 as Ira and Mary had other children
there in the 1790's
Will let you know what I hear from the Dodge people.

Margy

++++++++++

Lee

I have just a minute Sorry should have written Sept 1, 1779 NOT 1799.

According to censuses that I have looked at all the children of Erutha
and Ambrose said they were born in CT. I think that Elizur's obit
stated that the family moved to Otsego Co. soon after his birth. I know
they were in Laurens, Otsego in the 1820 and 1830 Censuses and in
Butternuts in 1840.

I got to go. but will back on line later this evening.

Margie

++++++
marguerite ireland wrote:

Okay Lee I will try to explain it this way.

1. We have no proof that Ambrose and Erutha lived in Killingworth. I
think people assumed that their children were born there because the
Wards had been there since day one.

2. We do know that they were in Plymouth from the census records.

3. I believe that all the children put down CT as birth place on 1850
census except
Meigs who said Madison Co. New York

4. Ambrose Ward does not appear on the Otsego Co. census until 1820 when
he is living in Laurens. He does not appear in Butternuts
(Gilbertsville) until 1840 census.

5. In Elizur Ward's obit it stated that "his father Ambrose emigrated to
Otsego County, early in his son Elizur's life"

>From this I have concluded that the children born before Meigs were
born in Plymouth CT and possible all of them were.

The fact that Meigs gave Madison Co. as his birth place bothers me as it
does not fit in. It is possible that he was mistaken or also that the
family came earlier to New York and returned to CT and then came back again
when Lois Ward and her husband Elijah Gilbert came, I do feel that
these two families came together and settled in Laurans.

Let me know if this makes sense.

Margy
+++++++++++
Lee
Our Joy Ward is said to have had two brothers, Orin and Ezra (or
Elizar). Joy Ward was born in Connecticutt on November 30, 1801. The
family legend states that Orin and Ezra (Elizar), went to New York and
went into business together in a firm that they called "E. & O. Ward".
The family legend only speaks of these three boys with no mention of
females. If the Joy Ward mentioned here in the 1810 Census is Joy Ward's
father, then the other children might not have survived childhood or
already married and left the home. Since Joy Ward's wife, Priscilla was
born in New York, he probably went to New York later, possibly with his
father, and joined his brothers where he met and married and his children
were born. Since there is no other Joy Ward listed in the 1810 Census
for Connecticutt, this is most likely Joy Ward's father.

By the time of the 1820 Census, Joy Ward is no longer listed. Did he
die, or did he simply move out of Connecticutt, possibly to New York to
join his sons? If he did die his widow would still be listed in the 1820
Census. There were four females listed in Middlesex County, Middlesex
Township as head of the household. One of them might be his widow.
They are:
Bela Ward, Middlesex County, page 479, Middlesex Tp.
Hannah Ward, " " " 479 " "
Martia Ward, " " " 481 " "
Rosanna Ward, " " " 466 " "

Other Possibilities:

The 1830 Census of Connecticutt does show an Elijah Ward from
Middlesex County, Middlesex Tp., page 016.
The 1840 Census of Connecticutt also shows the same Elijah Ward,
Middlesex County, Middlesex Tp., page 356.
The 1840 Census of Connecticutt also shows an Orrin Ward of Tolland
County, Tolland Tp., page 011,
The 1850 Census of Connecticutt shows an Elijah Ward Hartford Co.,
E.Windsor Tp., page 065.
The 1850 Census of Connecticutt shows an Orren Ward, Tolland Co.,
Tolland Tp., page 012.
--------
Since none of the later Censuses of Connecticutt in 1820, 1830, 1840 or
1850 identify any Joy Ward, and since two of the boys went to New York
and into business and since Joy Ward, the father of George W. Ward, was
married to a lady named Priscilla Hopkins, it follows that the Joy Ward
of Connecticutt might have followed his sons to New York.
--------
The 1810 Census of New York shows no Joy Ward, no Orin Ward or any Ezra
Ward.
-------
The 1820 Census, of New York shows a Joy Ward in Genesee County, Bergen Tp.,
page 041.
--------
The 1830 Census of New York lists two people named Joy Ward.
Joy Ward, Green County, Windham Tp., page 007.
Joy Ward, Genesee County, Bergen Tp., page 383.
-------
The 1830 Census of New York lists an Orrin Ward, Tioga County, Tioga Tp.,
page 264.
-------
The 1830 Census of New York lists two people named Ezra Ward.
Ezra (Elizar) Ward, Onondaga County, Elbridge Tp., page 089.
Ezra (Elizar) Ward, Oneida County, Lee Tp., page 372.
---------
The 1830 Census of New York lists three people named Elijah Ward.
Elijah Ward, New York County, New York 10th Dist., page 051.
Elijah Ward, West County, Greenburg Tp., page 017.
Elijah Ward, Dutchess County, Poughkee Tp., page 364.
-----------
The 1840 Census for New York shows more promise, it lists:
Joy Ward in Otsego County, Butternut Tp., page 205.
Orin D. Ward, New York County, New York Tp., page 033.
Ezra Ward, New York County, New York Tp., page 073.

This Joy Ward of the 1840 New York Census is a family of two parents,
both aged between 40 & 50, one female under 5 years, one male under 10
years, one female under 10 years, one male between 15 & 20 Years. The
chronology in this family is right since this Joy Ward in question had
all but two of his children before 1840. The family must have moved to
Michigan soon after the 1840 Census. The Orin D. Ward and the Ezra Ward
are also located in this census in New York as the family legend requires.
---------
The 1850 Census for New York lists no Joy Ward or Ezra Ward but has
two people named Orin Ward.
Orrin Ward, Genesee County, Bethany Tp., page 123.
Orrin Ward, St.Lawrence County, St.Lawrence Tp., page 343.
----
Apparently, between 1840 and 1850, Joy Ward left for Michigan, Ezra Ward
either died or removed from New York and Orrin Ward continued to live in
New York in either Genesse Co. or St.Lawrence County, New York.
=================================================================

In the continued investigation of the Ward family, it has been indicated
that the father of Joy Ward was most likely Ambrose Ward. A Marguerite
Ireland of Vestal, New York, sent an Email to myself and stated the
following information to which she was privy to from her own records of
her branch of the Ward family.
She stated that she was just beginning her own genealogical investigation
and had found information which I had sent in which was at an exact
parrell with mine. I had listed, erroniously from information garnered
from the "Kindred Konnections" site on the internet, the data on a Joy
Ward and Anna White which had some of the same children as her records.
My list started with an Amy Ward, b.179?, and ended with Elizure Ward, b.
December 28, 1816.
She said that the first two children (Amy and ??) might be the children
of Joy Ward and Anna White, but that the other children listed were the
children of her great-great-grandfather, Ambrose Ward, b.October 8, 1775
and Erutha Dodge, b.September 9, 1780. The list of children and birth
dates which I had found at Kindred Konnections was an exact match to the
information found in her own grandfather's family bible. She stated that
Ambrose and Erutha were married on November 30, 1800 in Connecticutt and
that they had moved, sometime in the early 1800's to the village of
Gilbertsville in the Butternut Township, in Otsego County, New York.
It seems that her great-great-grandfather was Lucerne Ward who lived near
the village of Undilla and, although a school teacher at some time, had
also produced on his farm butter which was sent to New Yory City by rail
to be sold thru a commission house owned by Orrin and Elizure Ward. She
also said that Elizure never married but after the commission house
folded in about 1890, h retuned to Otsego County where he died. She said
that she had his obituary if I wanted a copy. She said that there were
five children from the Ambrose and Erutha union and that if this lineage
is mine, I must be related to either Joy Ward, Clement Ward or Meigs Ward
since she was related to Lucerne and that Elizure never married.
As can be seen by this information, there is a great possibility that we
are related, especically with the coincidental match of the family's
connecttion with "E. & O. Wards."
My records show that the original progeniator of this Ward family
probably lived in Connecticutt. The family legend of our Joy Ward said
that he had two brothers. No sisters were mentioned in the Ward family
legend. We know that our Joy Ward moved to Michigan. The legend
indicates that his brother, Orin Ward, Sr., probably emigrated to New
York City (or state) from Connecticutt or Vermont with his brother Ezra
(or Elizar) Ward. The Vermont connection is not very likely since
Michigan records show that Joy Ward was born in Connecticutt. Nearly all
of his children were born in New York, therefore, the whole family must
have relocated in New York before Joy Ward moved to Michigan.
The most probable Ward connection in Connecticutt which meets the family
legend's criteria is found in the 1840 cencus. It shows a man with the
name of Orrin Ward was living in Connecticutt with three children of his
own and two other people. One of these was Esther Whipple, aged 39 and
another was Eva Rogers, aged 16. The Rogers girl might possibly be an
ancestor of Laura Altie "Ann" Rogers, who later became the wife of George
W. Ward in 1872. It has been rumored that Orrin Ward, Sr., operated a
business with his brother, Ezra (or Elizar) Ward which was called the
"E.& O. Ward, Company" in New York in the 1880's.
-----------------------

[NI06705] [Allfams.FTW]


Jason Hopkins, born in Gilbertsville, Otsego County, N.Y., might possibly
have lived in Greene County, N.Y., after 1830 where the last five or six of
his children could have been born before removing to Michigan and/or
later Wisconsin.

NAME STATE COUNTY TOWNSHIP PAGE CENSUS
HOPKINS, JASON New York Greene Windham 107 1830

========
Hopkins families in Racine County, WI. in 1850:

NAME STATE COUNTY LOCATION PAGE CENSUS
Hopkins, Timothy M. WI RACINE RACINE CITY 048 1850
Hopkins, Jason WI RACINE RACINE CITY 065 1850
Hopkins, Edward WI RACINE YORKVILLE 137 1850
========

======================

Subject: Re: Jason Hopkins query
Date: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 18:24:40 EDT
From: DavGrav@aol.com
To: Lward1@kscable.com

Kansas Genie,

I can't dispute you any of your suspicions. Nor do I have any proof. I
have
not researched the Jason Hopkins/Fanny Ward marriage that I have as
parents
of Eveline Hopkins md. to Nathan King Albee. I got the names (no dates or
places) of Jason and Fanny out of the book Albee Family Records by Robert
A.
Albee, published in Washington DC in 1920. The pages concerning the
Adolphus Albee/Polly King marriage along with their descendants were sent
to
me by a Fred Harmon seven years ago. At that time I believe Fred lived in
Kansas, I lost his address a few years back when I made a move and have
not
been in contact with him since.

Marietta King, (b. 1853, d. 1930, dau of Alvin J & Susan) married to
Robert
Graves are my great grandparents. And yes, she was 21 years his junior.
She
was a granddaughter to Allen King & Regina Thompson. Now Allen and
Regina's
oldest child was named Marietta, b. 1812, d. 1886, and she was married to
Sylvanus Bates. Allen, Regina and dau Marietta Bates are buried in New York,
while
Alvin, Susan and their dau Marietta Graves are buried in IL. Also, Allen
and
Polly (mentioned above) were siblings.

Still confused ? I'm getting confused just typing this, hehehehe.

Robert and Marietta's dau, Alice Graves (my grand aunt) did the research
on
the Kings before she died in 1952. She got as far back as Nathan King,
Allen's father. I picked up where she left off. The only thing she left
behind was a 5 generation (1753-1940s) handwritten family tree (boxes and
lines) in pencil on at least 20 sheets of paper. Boy, was that a task
getting all that information on the computer.

Dave Graves
Charlotte, NC
davgrav@aol.com

[NI06709] [Allfams.FTW]


Directory Search Results

Search Terms: ELIZUR (5), WARD (296)

Database: New York City Directory, 1869 & also 1890

Combined Matches: 1

Ward Elizur, produce, 279 Washington, h N. J.
-----------------------------

Directory Search Results

Search Terms: ELIZUR (2), WARD (90)

Database: Jersey City, New Jersey Directory, 1889-90

Combined Matches: 1
NAME Occupation Bus. Add. Residence Comments Page
Ward, Elizur grocer -- 330 Bergen Ave. E &
O Ward 576
----------------------

Census Search Results

Search Terms: ELIZUR (188), WARD (1178)

Database: Connecticut Census, 1790-1890

Combined Matches: 1

NAME County State Page Township Record Type year Database ID#
WARD, ELIZUR Middlesex CT 072 Chester Federal CT 1860
CT36817522
-----------------------

[NI06715] [Allfams.FTW]

No Issue


Lee,

You are right Elizur did marry Melissa Somers in 1844. According to
his obit, she was from his neighborhood in the town of Butternuts. She
died in 1878 when they were living in South Orange or in Jersey City in
the state of N.J. and was buried in the Episcipal churchyard cemetery in
Gilbertsville.
Gilbertsville is a village located in the town of Butternuts and the town
of Butternuts is located in the county of Otsego. Buternuts is not a town
as you think of a town with streets, businesses and houses in one place.
Instead it is a collection of small villages each with their own
government. Our system of towns and villages can be confusing.
Elizur and Melissa had no children. After her death, her sister kept
house for Elizur until the NYC business failed 1890. After all the
assets had been liquidized and creditors paid, there was VERY LITTLE
left. Elizur ended up living with the family of Melissa's brother A. B.
Somers in Oneonta, a city in Otsego County, New York. He is buried with Melissa
in Gilbertsville.

Margy

[NI06717] Henrieta maiden name maybe Kline.

[NI06744] Died at 5 5ears of age from Diptheria he with the older 3hree children died in infancy and are buried in the Wittenburg Cemetery.

[NI06758] Died aged 16 unmarried.

[NI06777] No Issue.

[NI06848] "Gideon was born in Westerly, Rhode island. He died on Deer Island. He
was a master mariner, and records say he was the first man to command a
vessel to the West Indies. Gideon removed to Deer Island about 1795.
Loyalist records show that he received a grant on Deer Island. However,
he did not receive the land, since there are petitions of 1804 and 1812
in which he requests land. Gideon later resided on the western side of
Deer Island, on a headland now called Davidson Head. Gideon's wife,
Matilda, was the daughter of Sylvinia Thomas and John Gilkey of Illsboro
, Me. Son John (b. 1792)
served in the War of 1812 for the U.S."

He left no Will:

Gideon, according to Barto, was married twice. His first marriage, to
Eunice
Getchel, produced a son Gideon who died at sea, unmarried; a daughter
Berilla who married twice (Joshua Dodge, and then Capt. John Bracy). His
second marriage, to Matilda Gilkey (d. 1855), produced James Gilkey,
Sylvania, Matilda, John, Lanatia, Elizabeth, Isaac Gilky, Margaret, Mary,
Susan Grace, Charles Thomas, and Jane.

Yes, Gideon was the son of Thomas Pendleton (1718/19-abt.1809) and Dorcas
Dodge (1722-1796) married Oct. 21, 1743. Thomas (son of James, son of
Caleb, son of James, son of Major Brian) was a master mariner who
"engaged in whaling off of Greenland."

Gideon appears on the 1790 census of Hancock County Maine. There was 1
male under 16 and 3 females living in the household, along with 1 male
over 16 (Gideon). Other Pendleton households in Hancock County could
have been Gideon's father, Thomas, and brothers Samuel, Joshua, Thomas,
Jr., and Nathaniel. There was a John Gilkey, who could have been
Gideon's father-in-law or other in-law.

Gideon is not listed on the 1800 census of Ilesborough, Hancock Co.
Maine, so he is presumed to have moved to Deer Island, New Brunswick by
that time.

Gideon Pendleton's name appears on the 1776 Rhode Island Regimental Roll
of Capt. Tompham's Regiment.

Gideon moved from Westerly, Rhode Island to Islesboro, Maine, where he was
among the early settlers. He lived there until he was between forty and
fifty years old. He was a master mariner, and records say he was the
first man to command a vessel to the West Indies. On the return from one
of his voyages he brought home two pounds of tea, a great luxury at that
time, and as he neglected to declare the goods he came into collision
with the U.S. Customs Collector at Castine (Maine, near Ilesboro).
Tradition says that the government's action in this matter seemed so
petty to Capt. Pendleton that he decided to remove to New Brunswick,
where his brother Stephen had already settled. It was May 4, 1791 when
Gideon and his wife, Matilda, sold Lot 7, with dwelling house thereon, to
John Pendleton; however, it was some years afterwards he moved with his
family to Deer Island, where the rest of his long life was spent. His
descendants are very numerous and furnished more soldiers to the Union
army in the Civil War than those of any other Pendleton of his
generation.

Loyalist records show that he received a grant on Deer Island. However,
he did not receive the land, since there are petitions of 1804 and 1812
in which he requests land. Gideon later resided on the western side of
Deer Island, on a headland now called Davidson Head. Gideon's wife,
Matilda, was the daughter of Sylvinia Thomas and John Gilkey of Islesboro
, Me.

He left no Will:

[NI06854] His house was where the house of the late Captain Elisha K. Pendleton now stands in Islesboro, Maine. When the war of the revolution commenced, Stephen was serving in the British Navy, under Capt. Hendy, and was retained three years. He got his discharge by taking oath of parole, and then returned to Islesboro, where he found employment shipping wood to Cape Cod from Pendleton's Cove. He was six feet one inch high, and weighed two hundred pounds; was noted for his great muscular ability. After the war he was employed by the British to assist Capt. Hendy in surveying the line between Maine and New Brunswick, Nova Scotia. He purchased eight hundred acres near St. Andrews. He was living in New Brunswick when the War of 1812 commenced. He then returned to his home in Islesboro, joined an American privateer, and was in several engagements; taken prisoner, paroled, and returned to Islesboro, where he lived until 1827. He took an active part in all that helped to build up the town, more especially in building the roads. He was a member of the Baptist church.
History of Islesborough, John P. Farrow, 1893, page 252-3.

[NI06855] Emmigrated to the United States to Boston, Massachusetts

[NI06878] PFC 33 Division Military Police CO World War 1

[NI06891] Mrs. Annie L. Dodge Hoyt.
DAR ID Number: 18585
Born in Providence, Rhode Island.
Widow of Albert Pierce Hoyt.
Descendant of Lieut. Nathaniel Heath and of Sergt. George Salisbury, of Rhode Island.
Daughter of Jared Currington Dodge and Olive Paine Salisbury, his wife.
Granddaughter of George Washington Salisbury and Sarah Elizabeth Heath Barnes, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Nathaniel Heath and Rebecca Brown, his wife; George Salisbury and Abigail Salisbury, his wife.
Nathaniel Heath, (1745-1829), was lieutenant of a company of artillery under Capt. Samuel Bosworth, 1776. He was born and died in Barrington.
George Salisbury, (1736-1818), served under different commands [p.215] as home guard from Barrington, where he passed his life. His wife knit stockings for the guard and was a pensioner at the age of one hundred.
Also No. 15291.

[NI06894] Abraham M Dodge ,
Residence: Hazel Green, Wisconsin
Enlistment Date: 12 Sep 1861
Side Served: Union
State Served: Wisconsin
Service Record: Enlisted as a Corporal on 12 September 1861
Enlisted in Company F, 10th Infantry Regiment Wisconsin on 12 September 1861.
Killed Company F, 10th Infantry Regiment Wisconsin on 08 October 1862 in Perryville, KY

[NI06896] Bio from a Free Baptist Cyclopedia, pub. 1889, by Burgess and Ward.

BIO:
"Rev. Edward E. Dodge, brother of Rev. Asa Dodge, was born in New Hampshire in 1794. Converted in 1812, he was baptized by Rev. Joshua Quinby, and united with the Free Baptist church at Lisbon, N.H. He soon after began to conduct meetings. About 1819 he removed to Dryden N.Y., near the head of Lake Cayuga, and united heartily with Rev. John Gould, the only Free Baptist preacher in the great state, in breaking to the people the bread of life.
In 1821, after two years of successful labor, he attended the Vermont Yearly Meeting held at Turnbridge, and was there ordained.
He returned to labor with Gould and to organize churches at Berkshire, Candor, aand Owego, and Choconut in Pennsylvania. On May 27, 1820, they met in conference and organized the Owego Quarterly Meeting, consisting then of an isolated band of one hundred and sixty brethren. He was untiring in his labors in the revival of 1825 in that region. Sustained richly in his sickness, he died surrounded by friends at his home in Warren, Bradford Co. PA, May 4, 1837, age 43 years."

[NI06903] Aaron was 67yrs, 1mo, 1da old when he died

[NI06910] Some people spell the first name Filena.

Mrs Philena Dodge Hill dies at Gaines at the home ofher daughter, Mrs. Harry Dewey on 15 Feb 1932 at 12:15 PM.
Mrs. Hill had been a great sufferer and an invallis for the past 15 Years. Her suffering was borne with great paatienceand always a cheery smile. Loved by all who knew her an ideal mother and home maker.

[NI06919] Mrs. Emma Ette Dodge Barrett.
DAR ID Number: 56337
Born in Deerfield, Mass.
Wife of Charles Smith Barrett.
Descendant of Lieut. Isaac Toby, Sergt. Ariel Nims, and Col. George Williams.
[p.117] Daughter of Alonzo Toby Dodge and Martha Matilda Bartlett, his wife.
Granddaughter of Hiram Dodge and Ruth Emeline Toby, his wife; Franklin Bartlett and Esther Cooley Anderson, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Williams Toby and Zilpha Hall, his wife; Luther Bartlett and Anna Nims, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Isaac Toby and Lydia or Dorothy Williams, his wife; Ariel Nims and Anna Brewer, his wife.
Gr-gr-gr-granddaughter of George Williams and Sarah Hodges, his wife.
Isaac Toby (1749-1845) was appointed lieutenant in a company of men detached from militia to reinforce the Continental Army, 1779; also served in Capt. Jotham Houghton's company, Col. Samuel Denny's regiment. He was born in Berkeley; died in Hawley, Mass.

[NI06923] Joyce is the compiler for all this line. Her address is :
Lot 79
203 W. Main Rd.
Conneaut, OH 44030-2050

[NI06927] Justice of the Peace in 1880.

[NI06928] m1860 > Pennsylvania > TIOGA > MIDDLEBURG
Series: M653 Roll: 1187 Page: 493
Wellsboro PO
DODGE Asa 30 laborer New York
Sally 29 New York
Edgar 5, Philena 2, both b PA

1870 > Pennsylvania > TIOGA > DELMAR TWP
Series: M593 Roll: 1456 Page: 155
DODGE 40 Asa Farmer New York
Sally 39 New York
Edgar L 15, Philena 12, Ada 5, all b PA

1880 Shippen, Tioga, Pennsylvania
Film Number T9-1198 Page Number 217D
DODGE Asa 50 clergyman New York NH NJ
Sally 49 New York New York New York
Edgar 8, Philena 21, Ada 15, all b PA
PETERSON Henry fatherinlaw 82 New York New York New York

[NI06930] Service: Joel Dodge enlisted October 1, 1777 in Capt. William Latham's Col. Ledyard's regiment. Joined the army at Fort Grooten, Conn. and was stationed there until his discharge April 1, 1778. Served as an
artillerist, Conn. Militia.Veteran's Administration, Washington, DC, S. C. 15099

According to pension file: was a resident of Hebron, Tolland County, CT at enlistment. After the war relocated to Williamstown, Berkshire, MA, then to (White Creek Twp.) Washington County, New York

Dodge Gen. by T.R. Woodward Pg. 132

Remarks: Joel Dodge and his wife are buried in the village cemetery
at Evans Mills, town of LeRay, Jefferson County, N.Y. Their children were
Harriet, b. 1793, m. Ira Manley and had Caroline who married Robert
Kanady. Harriet died in 1863. Tryphora, b. 1795, m. Stephen Sloan, she
d. in Newport in 1885, aged 90 years. Her son Edward died in Evans
Mills. Cyrus, b. 1797, died in Lewis Co. in 1827 (sic., 1829,
Philadelphia, New York). Fanny, b. 1799, m. Stephen Hawkins. She died in
Russia, N.Y. 1873. Lydia, b. 1802, m. Jefferson Tillinghast, d. in
Norway, N.Y. Mary, b. 1804, m. 1st Lyman Root, 2nd Mr. Hill and died in
1886. Clark b. 1813 (sic. 1808), d. in Great Bend, N.Y. in 1882 leaving
a wife and two daughters.

Note: The 1840 Census of Pensioners, published Washington, DC,
1841
lists Joel Dodge, age 79, Town of LeRay, Jefferson County, N.Y. living with
Clark
Dodge.

1790: Williamstown, Berkshire County, MA
1800: White Creek, Washington County, New York 11110-20100-00
1810: Newport, Herkimer County, New York?
1820: Le Ray, Jefferson County, New York
1830: Living with Clark
1840: Living with Clark

[NI06947] Adopted by Robert Edgar Dodge.

[NI06950] Adopted by Robert Edgar Dodge.

[NI06967] A Revolutionary Hero.

He was 2nd lieutenant in 2nd Continental Regt. from Dutchess Co. New York under (Col. DuBois) and served until close of war.

Date: Monday, November 2, 1795
Paper: American Minerva (New York, NY)
Volume: II, Issue: 570, Page: 3

Died, on Tuesday evening last, Mr. SAMUEL DODGE, son of Mr. Samuel Dodge, master of the poor house. His death was occasioned by running a splinter into his thumb, soon after which he was seized with the lock-jaw; and expired immediately.

[NI06983] Twin to Coury.

[NI06984] Twin to Jessa.

[NI06991] In Tristram Dodge and his descendants Samuels date of death is given on Pg 96 as 1841. on p. 124 as 1846 and on Pg 125 as 1826.

[NI07006] Died at the age of 86 years.

Died, at Springfield, Ill., on Dec. 19th, 1876, in the 86th year of her age, Mrs. Jane Day Dodge, consort of the late Col. Henry S. Dodge. Mrs. Dodge was the daughter of Dr. John Varick, of New York City, and grand-daughter of Theodorus Van Wyck, of Holland, and thus related to the families of VanWycks, Cortlandts and Van Rensalears on the Hudson river.

She was born in Hackensack, N. J., in 1790, was married to Col. Dodge in 1813. They removed, in 1817, from New York City to Kaskaskia, Ill. Here they resided seven years. As early settlers ih that State, and living among French and Indians, they experienced many vicissitudes of trial. In 1824 they returned to Brooklyn, New York, where, in 1826, Col. Dodge died. In 1831, Mrs. Dodge left for New Haven, Conn., for the education of her children. Then in 1839 she removed to Springfield, Ill., and took up her abode with her daughter, Mrs. H. K. Edwards, wife of Hon. B. S. Edwards, with whom she continued to reside till her death.

Mrs. Dodge enjoyed the advantages of faithful religious training by her parents, who were members of the Dutch Reformed Church; was thoroughly indoctrinated in the "Heidelberg" catechism, the confession of faith of that church, and early became a member. Residing, as she did for a while, in the family of her relative, the late Dr. J. M. Mason, her mind and heart were richly cultured by contact with that eminent servant of God. At the early period in which she resided at the West, it was seldom that the preaching of the "word" was heard. And when a missionary appeared, his appearance was hailed with joy by the few American families of the place, and the opportunity was gladly improved by Christian parents to have their children given to God in baptism. Upon her return from the West, she became a member of the Presbyterian Church, in the city of Brooklyn, under the care of the Rev. Joseph Sandford. Shortly after, she sat under the ministry of the collegiate pastors of the North and Middle Dutch Reformed Churches, in New York City. She became a member of the North Congregational Church, and finally, at Springfield, Ill., connected herself with the Presbyterian Church, under the care of the Rev. Dr. Hale.

Mrs. Dodge belonged to a generation of whom none survive. She possessed an uncommon vigor of intellect. Her mind was richly furnished from the best sources of English literature, both prose and poetical, of the last century. Though over four-score, she continued the practice commenced in her early youth, to take manuscript notes of the best sentiments of the best authors, and these would she happily employ in her conversations, "to point a moral or adorn a tale." Her sprightliness and vivacity, which were remarkable, continued unabated to the last year of her life. And yet, more than all, and best of all, she was a conscientious and earnest Christian. Her daily season and place of prayer were sacredly observed. Her closet often witnessed to the tears of humble penitence and the cries of fervent prayer. As the weight of advancing years brought labor and sorrow, she sighed for rest - she sought that rest where alone it could be found. She found that rest on the bosom of her Savior and her God. She died suddenly but quietly.

Her surviving children are Rev. I. V. Dodge, Rev. R. V. Dodge and Helen K Edwards, wife of Hon. B. S. Edwards. IL State Journal, Springfield, IL 12-22-1876

[NI07008] 1850: Newport, Herkimer, New York

[NI07021] Died at 22 yr 3m.

[NI07029] Served in WW II, US ARMY PFC.

[NI07030] She was an excellant woman beloved by all who knew her.

She had no children.

[NI07043] Returned to Springfield, Illinois in 1840 on a stagecoach and lived with
Ninian Wirt Edwards.
Mary Ann Todd was also living there at the time prior to her marriage to
Abraham Lincoln.

She developed a very close friendship bond with Mary Todd and
witnessed her marriage to Abraham Lincoln. The friendship continued till
the end of her life.

Members of the Second Presbyterian Church

June 26, 1843, purchased a large home off of Fourth, north of Union
Street, it became a showplace, and was donated to the Springfield Art
Association. Now known as Edwards Place.

[NI07052] 1850: LeRay, Jefferson, New York

[NI07055] Richard was a close friend of Abraham Lincoln, It was Lincoln who introduced the young Lady who was to become his wife. Richard & Lincoln remaied friends through out Lincoln's Life. He was a well to do Presbyterian Minister. He served in the Civil War as VA Hospital chaplin 31 MAY 1862 and discharged 26 fEB 1863.

[NI07067] He was 1st Lieutenant in Col. DuBois' 2nd Continental regiment, Dutchess County. In 1780 was adjutant of 5th Regiment and served with Clinton's regiment in Canada.

Some records say Fishkill, Dutchess County, New York
Burial Notes taken from " Old Gravestones of Dutchess County, New York"
Nineteen Thousand Inscriptions, Collected and Edited by J. Wilson Poucher, M.D. and Helen Wilkinson Reynolds, Collections of the Dutchess County Historical Society, Volume II, Poughkeepsie, New York 1924, Pg . 376

[NI07079] Some records say Fishkill, Duchess County, New York Most Rosecrans/Rosekrans people started out in New York City...moved to Fishkill, when the British kicked the Dutch out of New York City.. Then moved up to the Albany area, around 1790-1800. What Sara Rosecrans was doing in Verona, Oneida County around 1756, when she was born, I find curious...Most of the Rosecrans/Rosekrans people would have been in Duchess County and Fishkill area around that time

[NI07083] Harold G. Dodge of Warren died unexpectedly Dec. 20, 2004, at Miles Memorial Hospital in Damariscotta.

He was born June 6, 1933, the son of Lord Earl and Lillian (Yattaw) Dodge. He served in the Navy during the Korean War, aboard the USS Timbalier.

For many years he resided in West Rockport, where he worked as an electrician for several electrical contractors.

Harold was a self-taught talented musician, playing guitar, trumpet, piano and harmonica. His love was his guitar, which he taught his daughter, Chelsey, stepson Rick, and granddaughter, Melonie, to play.

Harold followed the Blue Grass festivals throughout the state, making many friends.

After he retired, he began using his woodworking skills and renovated several homes for friends and family. He was a self-taught computer whizz, enjoying his computer friends online and playing cards.

Harold was a lover of the outdoors and enjoyed hunting and fishing.

He was predeceased by his parents, a brother Earl and his only sister, Virginia Scott.

He is survived by brothers Leroy and Charles of West Rockport and Ronnie of Lincolnville. He is survived by his longtime companion, Pam (Bickford) Vanorse; four daughters, Mrs. Tony (Deborah) Guay of Old Town, Mrs. Davis (Pamela) Schultz of Appleton, Mrs. Tom (Jeanine) Roach of McKinney, Texas, and Chelsey of Swanville; stepdaughter, Shelli Rogers, of Norridgewock; stepsons Rick Rogers of Warren and Bill Damon and wife, Jenn, of Madison; nine grandchildren, Tracy of Londonderry, N.H., Larry and Shane Robbins of South Thomaston, Nathan Schultz of Appleton, Isaac Koenig of Union, and Melonie, Billy Jr., Sabrina and Cody Damon, whom he adored, of Madison; three great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.

[NI07092] He was a faith Healer.

[NI07096] In 1850, Martha is shown at 4 years of age with her father in Norway, Herkimer County, New York

[NI07102] Ohio Deaths, 1908-1944 and 1958-2002 Record
about John W Dodge
Name: John W Dodge
Birth Date: Est. 1883

Gender: Male
Race: White

Residence City: Portsmouth
Residence County: Scioto
Residence State: Ohio
Residence Country: United States

Death Date: 16 Apr 1966
City of Death: Portsmouth
County of Death: Scioto
Certificate: 31283
Age at Death: 83
Certifier: Physician
Autopsy: Yes, used for certification

Marital Status: Widowed

[NI07103] Burial Notes taken from " Old Gravestones of Dutchess County, New York"
Nineteen Thousand Inscriptions, Collected and Edited by J. Wilson Poucher, M.D. and Helen Wilkinson Reynolds, Collections of the Dutchess County Historical Society, Volume II, Poughkeepsie, New York 1924, Pg. 376

[NI07105] Possibly the Samuel in Cleveland in 1900 with wife jett? and children henry and janet

[NI07114] Could have been b. in Maine

[NI07119] 1850: LeRay, Jefferson County, New York

[NI07124] He was born Charles H. Welcomb.

[NI07133] Served in the US navy during the Civil War as acting master, mate, and acting Ensign. At the time of his death he had been commander of an ocean Steamship of the American S. S. No. for a number of years.

[NI07134] Secretary of the Bilerica Historical Society.
The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 11
page 31

Miss Martha A. Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 10074
Born in Massachusetts.
Descendant of Timothy Wilkins, Corp. Timothy Wilkins, Jr., and Sergt, Calvin Stevens, of Massachusetts.
Daughter of George H. Dodge and Martha A. Dodge, his wife.
Granddaughter of David Dodge and Mary Stevens, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Calvin Stevens and Esther Wilkins, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Timothy Wilkins, Jr., and Mary Chamberlain, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Timothy Wilkins and Anna Smith, his wife.
Calvin Stevens, 1775, served in Capt. Adam Wheeler's company, Col. Thomas Nixon's regiment. He was a survivor of the battle of Bunker Hill when the monument was laid in 1825. He died at Mount Vernon, N. H., in 1833, aged eighty.
Timothy Wilkins, 1775, served on the Committee of Safety of Hillsborough. He died in 1791, aged eighty-two.
Timothy Wilkins, Jr., was a private at Ticonderoga and corporal at the Rhode Island Alarm. He died at Carlisle, Mass., in 1820, aged eighty-eight.

[NI07140] Birth Date based on death at 6yrs, 7mos per Attleborough, Ma vital records

[NI07170] Committed Suicide.

[NI07172] He was Phi Beta Kappa at Rutgers University, New B runswick, New Jersey.
He became Chairman Of the Mathamatics & Astronomy Departments at Rutgers,
University.

[NI07173] Leroy L. Dodge

Went to be with his Savior, Nov. 21, 2012 in Palm Desert, Ca. Born Dec. 29, 1922 in Lexington, NE. Roy served his country proudly in WWII as a naval radioman/ gunner in a dive bomber and torpedo bomber airplanes. After the war he met the love of his life, Mimi Sherman. They were married Oct. of 1947. They raised their 3 boys in Lexington, NE until 1959, he then moved his family to San Bernardino, Ca. His career was in retail sales management. After he left Lucky's/Gemco he started a new career for the bank of CA as a courier. He retired at the young age of 81. He was a faithful man of prayer and served in many capacities in his church. He enjoyed many potlucks and fellowships with his Sunday school class at Emanuel Baptist. Roy had a great sense of humor and love to tell a great story. One of his favorite things to do was going on motorcycle rides with his sons and friends. He was very gifted with his hands and could fix just about anything. He was loved by his friends and neighbors. He was preceded in death by his daughter Debbie. He is survived by his wife of 65 years Mimi, and their 3 sons Jim and Beckie Dodge, Kevin and Leslie Dodge, and Kim and Ladonna Dodge. 7 grandchildren and many great grandchildren. His brother Roger and Bernita Dodge, his sister Marjorie and Bill Hatting and many nieces and nephews. We are thankful to God that he blessed us with such a Godly man. We will miss you and see you soon. John 3:16. Graveside service will be held at Riverside National Cemetery, section 2 on Dec. 7th at 12:15, Officiated by Pastor Rob Zinn of Emanuel Baptist Church. Published in San Bernardino Sun on December 4, 2012.

[NI07183] Died Young during WW II.

[NI07188]
Captain Ronald L. Dodge USMC, Retired
Captain Ronald L. Dodge died at 6:00 p.m. on March 13, 2012 at Cascadian Place Senior Living Homes in Everett, WA. He was born to Will R. and Effie Dodge on March 19, 1924 in Forks, WA. He graduated from Forks High School and Western Washington University.
Captain R.L. Dodge had an active career in the United States Marine Corps that spanned thirty-five years. He served in World War Two, the Korean, as well as the Viet Nam Wars.
His hobbies were woodcarving and making people laugh. Captain Dodge was a member of the Everett Eagles and Club 170, as well as the Everett Elk's Lodge #479 where he enjoyed holiday roles as Santa Claus.
Ron is survived by a daughter, Rona Dodge Krehl (Steve), of Idaho; and a son, Mick Dodge, of the Hoh River, Washington; grandchildren, Emily and Ben (Sarah); as well as great-grandsons, Ivan and Liam.
He leaves his step-children, Lynn Spinks of South Carolina, Sharon Weninger (Dennis) and Rebecca Elledge (Rick) both of Marysville, Washington. He is survived by step-grand-children, Jay and Randi (Martin and Laura), Jami Lentz and Cheri Singer (Sharon and Dennis), Heather and Kyle (Rebecca and Rick); as well as the great-grandchildren, Justin, Hunter, Remington, Taylor, Jacob and Trey.
He was preceded in death by wife, Peggy June Wills Dodge, mother to Rona and Mick; wife, Leigh Dodge, mother to Lynn; wife, Beth Marie Dodge, mother to Sharon, Rebecca, and Martin Steven Weninger; his father and mother, Will R. and Effie Dodge; sister, Betty Dodge Damon (Joe); and stepson, Martin Steven Weninger (Laura).
Ron will be deeply missed. Arrangements are entrusted to Solie Funeral Home in Everett, WA.
Private tributes will be held with family and friends. There will be a reception at the Elks' Lodge #479, 2802 Hoyt Ave, #100, in Everett, WA on May 19, 2012. According to Ron's wishes, his crematory ashes will be run to the summit of Mount Olympus in Washington State in August of 2012 by his Son, Mick Dodge.
In lieu of flowers please make donations in the name of Captain Ronald L. Dodge, USMC, to: Everett Elk's Lodge #479, 2802 Hoyt Ave. #100, Everett, Washington, 98201.
Ron's family wishes to extend its sincerest appreciation to the staff of Cascadian Place Senior Living in Everett, Washington; and to its residents who were Ron's caring daily companions.

[NI07189] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records.

[NI07202] Household Record 1880 United States Census

Household:

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupat ion Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Byron Marshall DODGE Self M Male W 57 MA Labore r MA MA
Sarah DODGE Wife M Female W 45 MA Keeps Hou
Harriet DODGE Dau S Female W 19 New York At Home M A MA
Cora DODGE Dau S Female W 12 New York At Home MA M A


---------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
Source Information:
Census Place Kingsbury, Washington, New York
Family History Library Film 1254942
NA Film Number T9-0942
Page Number 351D

[NI07203] A Civil War Vetram. In B company 51st Mass Infantry Volunteers Enlisted 8 Aug 1862, Age 29 as a Private and Mustered out on 27 July 1863.

He moved To Baltimore Mariland with his wife and 3 daughters

[NI07206] Virginia Elaine Cumpston, 91, of Lexington, Nebraska, with her family by her bedside, peacefully left this life and entered an eternal life in Heaven with her Lord Jesus Christ on Tuesday, October 9, 2012, at the Plum Creek Care Center in Lexington.

Virginia (Dodge) Cumpston was born August 30, 1921, at Darr, Nebraska to Hugh and Esther (Mosher) Dodge.

Virginia graduated from Lexington Senior High in 1939. She was united in marriage to Francis Cumpston on May 29, 1940. They lived in the Lexington area all of their lives.

Besides being a homemaker, wife, mother and grandmother, she worked at Monroe's in Cozad for a time, and worked many years for Reach Electronics from where she retired.

She loved spending time with her grandchildren, going to Bible studies, reading her Bible, playing cards with friends, and crocheting. She was proud of her 50-year membership pin from the United Methodist Church.

Virginia is survived by her sons and spouses: Dennis and Bett Cumpston of Grand Island, NE; Richard and Lori Cumpston of Lexington, NE; also included are her grandchildren and spouses, Joshua and Allene Cumpston of Central City, NE; and Jill and Joe Sandmeier of Aurora, NE; surviving great-grandchildren are Katie, Trevor, Tyler Cumpston and Jacob Sandmeier.

She is also survived by sister and brother-in-law, Marjorie and Bill Hatting of Lexington, NE; brothers and sisters-in-law, Leroy and Mimi Dodge of Desert Hot Springs, CA, Roger and Bernita Dodge of Penn Valley, CA; brothers and sisters-in-law, Leonard and Phyllis Cumpston, Luther Miller, Barbara Cumpston, Janice Cumpston, and numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Virginia was preceded in death by her parents, her husband of 64 years, Francis Cumpston, one grandchild, great-granddaughter, Alyssa Sandmeier, sister and brother-in-law, Normalee and Roy Uhler, brothers-in-law, Don, Jim, Harold Cumpston, and sisters-in-law, Wanda Miller, Lavonne Howat, Virginia Brixius and Naomi Prato.

Funeral Services will be Monday, October 15, 2012, at 10:30 a.m. at First United Methodist Church in Lexington with Reverend Tess Hufford officiating. It was Virginia's wishes that her casket be closed.

Burial will be in the Robb Cemetery south of Lexington.

Visitation with family present will be Sunday, October 14, 2012, from 2-4 p.m. at the Reynolds-Love Funeral Home in Lexington.

Memorials are suggested to the Alyssa Sandmeier Foundation at alyssasandmeierfoundation.com.

Reynolds-Love Funeral Home in Lexington is in charge of arrangements. Please forward online condolences to the family through: reynoldslovefuneralhome.com.

[NI07212] Born Widden Memoral Hospital in Everett, MA.

[NI07215] Born St. Johns Hospital, Lowell, MA

[NI07226] Mary E. Mapes Dodge -Author most widely know for Han Brinker or The Silver Skates. Also being the editor of "St. Nicholas Magazine" for children during the late 1800's and the early 1900's. She not only exposed children to her own writing, she introduced them to Mark Twain and others. She was able to raise a family and edit a major magazine without a husband (William Dodge). A woman well ahead of her time.

[NI07238] Founder of the Link Belt Company of Nicetown, PA. Inventor of the folding theater seat, the wire hat rack for under the folding theater seat, the self measuring medicine bottle.

[NI07264] Un Married

[NI07284] Shadrack is buried with his Mother Mary Cole Dodge & his Brother Raymond
O. Dodge

[NI07291] THE VILLAGES — Donald M. Dodge Jr., 75, died Tuesday, March 2, 2010.

Mr. Dodge was born in Queens, N.Y., and moved to The Villages from Greenwood Lake, N.Y., in 1999. He retired from Bell Atlantic after 35 years of service; attended Church on the Square, The Villages; was a U.S. Army veteran; and his hobbies were racquetball, pickleball, water skiing, boating, and sailing.

Survivors include his wife, Dorothy M.; daughters Joan Green, McLean, Va., Canece Curry, San Diego, Calif.; sons James Dodge, Medfield, Mass., Darryl Curry, Branchville, N.J.; sisters Beverly Bennett, Huntington, N.Y., Lynn Mazza, Neponset, N.Y., Nancy Webb, The Villages; and four

grandchildren.

[NI07295] Obituary

Dawson County Herald, Monday, June 23, 1969

Funeral Conducted

Rites for Hugh A. Dodge, 74, were conducted June 16th in Reynolds-Love
Chapel with Phillip Olsen, pastor of the Frist Christian church,
officiating. Interment was in the Robb Cemetery, rural Lexington.
Pallbearers were Lester Phillips, R.T. Hanson, Alvin Wiley, George L.
Martin, Merlin Longsine, and George Maloney.
Mr. Dodge, a life-time Lexington resident, died Thursday in the local
hospital.
Survivors are his wife; three daughters, Mrs. Francis Cumpston, and Mrs.
Bill Hatting, both of Lexington and Mrs. Roy Uhler of Ogallala; two sons,
LeRoy of San Bernardino, Calif., and Roger of Campbell, Calif.; sisters,
Mrs. Minnie Gordan of Lexington and Mrs. Ella Fair of Portland, Ore.;
brother, Chester Dodge of Torrington, Wyo.; and 10 grandchildren.
Attending the rites fron a distance were Roger Dodge, Campbell, Ca.;
LeRoy Dodge, San Bernardino, Ca.; Mr. and Mrs. R.T. Dodge, Denver,
Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Mosher, Bloomfield, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Dodge and daughter, Torrington, Wyo.; Mrs. Kenneth Thomas, Clyde, Kan.;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Uhler and Kathy, Mrs. Rose Dodge, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Dodge, Jr., and family, Mrs. Larry Nelson, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Dodge,
Callaway.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Dodge, Omaha; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Taylor, Elm Creek;
Mrs. Nellie Waller and Lee Norall, Overton; Mrs. Katie Cumpston and
Mrs. Harol Miller, Gothenberg; Mr. and Mrs. James Sherman, Sutherland;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hanson and family, North Platte; Mr. and Mrs. David
Uhler, Hershey; Mrs. Allen Walker, Cozad.

[NI07296] Twin to Fredrick Franklin Dodge.

[NI07298] Twin to Lydia.

[NI07301] Littlefield.FTW

[NI07308] See Littlefield.FTW listed in the RIC Census as Deaf Dumb and a little
pauper.

[NI07311] in Mont Clair, Essex, NJ in 1880 Census

[NI07330] Jasper was a veteran of the Civil War. He enlisted in the 2nd R.I. Infantry, Company H, on June 5, 1861 at age 17. He was wounded at the battle of Bull Run and discharged. He re-enlisted in Troop F, R.I. Cavalry in October 1961. He was wounded and taken prisoner at Hartwood Picket Line in February 1862. He was taken to Libby Prison where he stayed for seven months until he escaped and managed to make his way to
the Naval College at Annapolis. He re-enlisted at Greene Barracks and served in the Signal Corps for the duration of the war.

[NI07371] Patricia Louise (Smith) Dodge, formerly of Ansley, Nebraska, died
November 6, 1988, In Spokane, Washington, after fighting cancer for 14
years.

Patricia was born on December 22, 1932, in Broken Bow, Nebraska, to
Harold and Alice (Cooley) Smith. She graduated from Lexington High
School and on April 26, 1950, was united in marriage to Jim Roger Dodge
of Lexington, Nebraska. Shortly after their marriage, they moved to
Sacramento, California, where they lived for 12 years. They later moved
to Ansley, Nebraska and operated a welding and machine shop. For the
last several years, they have lived in several communities in California
and Washington and had moved to Clarkson, Washington one month ago.

Patricia is survived by her husband, Jim Dodge of Clarkson, WA; two
daughters, Patrice Wade of Sacramento, CA. and Nancy Holland of Beach
Bluff, TN; one son, Doug Dodge of Guernsey, WY; her parents, Harold and
Alice Smith of Spokane, WA; her mother-in-law, Mrs. Cloreada (Dodge)
Bowden of Lexington, NE; two sisters, Mary Jane Slippy of Spokane, WA.,
and Shirley Clouse of Everett, WA; seven grandchildren, nieces, nephews,
and a host of friends. She was preceded in death by two sons and three
brothers. .

Funeral services were held Friday, Nov. 11, 1988, at the Church of Christ
in Lexington, Nebraska, with the Rev. Merle Pope officiating. Music for
the service was provided by Joanne Gaston and Karen Pope. Pallbearers
included Vernon Welliver, Calvin Hukill, Dick Bowman, Shane Dodge, Craig
Welliver and Jeremy Wade. Cole Wayne Welliver was an Honorary
pallbearer. Burial was at the Greenwood Cemetery at Lexington. Govier
Brothers Mortuary of Broken Bow was in charge of the arrangements.

[NI07376] In 1900 She had 11 Children only 8 were living.

[NI07392] Patrice lives in Kearney, Nebraska. She has lived in California most of her life and Tennessee for about 4 years. She attended college in
Sacramento, worked at the newspapers there, The Sacramento Union and The Sacramento Bee besides several side jobs to supplement. She moved toJackson, TN in 1990 and worked at the Jackson Sun newspaper. She became ill and went on disablity and moved to Kearney, Ne. She sews quilts andclothing for people and home schools her great nephew, Ashton. She has 2 children and 9 grandchildren.

She was born Aug. 22, 1952, in Lexington to Jim and Patricia (Smith) Dodge.Survivors include her son, Jeremy of Jackson, Tenn.; daughter, Amy Vath of Jackson; her father of Republican City; brother, Doug Dodge of Guernsey, Wyo.; sister, Nancy Holland of Kearney; and eight grandchildren. all of whom live in Tennessee.

[NI07393] Never Married.

[NI07394] Never married.

[NI07403] Doug has worked for Burlington Railroad for the last 20+ years. He lives in Guernsey, WY. He's been married 3 times and has 2 sons. He's a welder which he learned from his dad, Jim. He also likes to restore old cars, trucks and Harleys.

[NI07405] 1870 Census he is a Seaman
1880 Census he is a Assistant Light house Keeper

[NI07414] Nancy lives in Kearney, Ne with her husband, Bob and their grandson,
Ashton, and grand daughter, Jayla. She works at the Good Samaritain
Hospital in the cath lab. She does heart caths. Bob works at the
surgery center as a surgical tech. They have 3 kids, Bobi who is moving
From TN to NE this month(Feb. 2004), Jacob, who is in the Air Force
stationed in Germany and Luke who is a college student at York college in
York, NE. She was a stay at home mom until they moved to TN in the late
1980's. She then went to college and became a radiology tech and later
went back to school to work in the cath lab in the hospital in Jackson,
TN. They moved back to NE in the late 1990's.

[NI07420] Never Married

[NI07432] Never Married living in June 1900 in Montclair, Essex County, New Jersey with her Grandson William Harland.

[NI07455] Jeremy lives in Jackson, TN and works for a trucking company welding
trailers. He has one daughter who lives in Sacramento, CA. and one who
lives in Orlando, FL.

[NI07466] Note: Carter Vath adopted Megan when she was 4 years old.

[NI07467] Title: 1850 U.S. Census:Clayton Jefferson County, New York;
Page: 459; 19-Sep-1850;
Text: John Allen

Title 1860 U.S. Census:Clayton Jefferson County, New York
Page: 58; 22-Aug-1860;
Text: John Allen

Title 1870 U.S. Census Lorraine Jefferson County, New York


Title 1880 U.S. Census:Lorraine Jefferson County, New York
Page: 58; 7 & 8-Jun-1880; Farmer
Text: John Allen

[NI07470] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records. Unmarried

[NI07483] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records. Unmarried

[NI07489] Some Records have Helen born 15 Oct 1899, Boston, Suffolk County, MA..according to marriage bond in Kingston, NH she stated at time of Marriage she was born in Dorchester, MA, but Vital Records of Dorchester Mass does not record this.

[NI07490] Information obtained from Bonnie Dodge Heinberger

[NI07491] On Death obituary of His Father his name was spelled Gearld.

[NI07493] Lucille Mudrich, the first woman chef instructor at the Culinary Institute of America, passed away at Stonehedge Nursing Home in Rome, NY on January 15, 2009 at the age of 90.

She is survived by two daughters: Carol Ann and husband Guido (Guy) Fanfarillo, Rome, and Elaine Mudrich and her feline family, also of Rome, and two sons: Phillip Mudrich and wife Laura, Stafford, VA and Robert Mudrich, Daleville, AL. She is also survived by three sisters and their husbands: Freda and John Conley, St. Petersburg FL; Ila Rose and Kenneth Walls, Mount Pleasant, SC; and Joan and Arthur Stillinger, Riva, MD. She has six grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren.

Lucille was predeceased by her brother Carol Roy Dodge and three husbands, Harvey Sheets, Alfred Mudrich, and Leonard Mahavik.

She was born on March 19, 1918 in Terra Alta, West Virginia and was the eldest daughter of Albert and Verna Dodge. A graduate of West Virginia University, she later acquired several Bachelors and Masters degrees in diverse fields at other institutions.

She began her professional life as an English and music teacher. While raising four children, she had a home bakery and catering service. She returned to the teaching profession as an instructor of early childhood education, introductory psychology, and gourmet cooking, leading ultimately to her appointment at the Culinary Institute of America.

A musician in her own right, Lucille was frequently a soprano soloist and sang with many choral groups. In addition to many concerts, she and her husband, Alfred Mudrich, formed a vocal ensemble called the Lyric Choraleers. She also played the cello in several symphony orchestras.

Throughout the Hudson Valley she was known as "Lucy Bridge." The game of bridge was her passion. She reached the ACBL level of Regional Master and was frequently found playing, directing or teaching bridge to new enthusiasts.

Somehow, in her "spare time," she learned and excelled in ballroom dancing, ultimately filling her shelves with trophies.

Lucille enjoyed many things throughout her life. Among her favorites were playing bridge and going dancing, classical music, watching Seventh Heaven and Golden Girls on television, the color blue, going to McDonalds and ordering a "hamburger well-done with no onions," enjoying a walk with the man in her life, driving her Subaru, eating frozen Snicker bars, and sipping cups of tea.

"I love life, and I want to live! To drink of life’s fullness, take all it can give…every moment must count!"

[NI07494] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records. Unmarried

[NI07506] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records.

[NI07510] Twin of Theodore Dodge,

[NI07511] Twin of Thomas Dodge.

[NI07513] Posmaster in Elmira, New York

[NI07530] Birthdate came from Dutch Reformed Church Records. Fought in the war of 1812. Corp in Captain G. Burlings Company. Enlisted sep 2 1814 aand discharged Dec 3 1814.

[NI07555] No Issue.

[NI07558] LUBEC - Mary T. Dodge, 87, died Feb. 9, 2001, at a Lubec health-care facility. She was born in Lubec, Feb. 12, 1913, the daughter of Fred and Lillian (Fielder) Tyler. She was a member of the Congregational Christian Church and the Ladies Social Union of Lubec, the Lubec Women's Club and Friends of the Library. Mary and her husband, Malcolm, owned and operated Dodge's Store for 50 years. She was predeceased by a daughter and two granddaughters in 1960, Ellen Dodge Weiss, Mary Ellen Weiss and Catherine Weiss; and a grandson, Todd Mulholland in 1967. She was also predeceased by her husband of 50 years, Malcolm Dodge in 1982. Surviving are one daughter, Linda Doran of Lubec; two grandchildren, Shawn Mulholland of Lubec and Kim Mulholland of Brighton, Mass. Funeral services will be held at the Congregational Christian Church, Lubec, 2 p.m. Wednesday with the Rev. Edwin Randall officiating. Friends may call at the church one hour prior to service time. Burial will follow in Corey Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, friends may make donations to the Congregational Christian Church or the Lubec Library. Funeral arrangements are by the Scott-Wilson Funeral Home of Calais and Lubec.

[NI07564] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 69
page 86

Mrs. Catherine Dodge W. Titsworth.
DAR ID Number: 68241
Born in New York, N. Y.
Wife of William Titsworth.
Descendant of Capt. Samuel Dodge and of Capt. Henry Dodge, of New York.
Daughter of Henry Dodge Wardell and Charlotte Dodge, his wife.
Granddaughter of John Wardell and Catherine Dodge, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Henry Dodge and Sarah Rosecrans, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Samuel Dodge and Helena Amerman, his wife, m. 1753.
[p.86] Samuel Dodge (1730-1807) served as lieutenant when taken prisoner at Fort Montgomery, 1777, and commanded a company at the close of the war. He was an orignial member of the Cincinnati. He became a distinguished scientist. His sons, Samuel, Henry, and Richard, served as officers. He was born on Long Island; died in Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Henry Dodge (1756-1820) served as sergeant, 1775, and as lieutenant, 1776, in Col. Lewis Dubois' Continental regiment. He commanded a company in Col. Frederick Weisenfel's regiment of Levies, 1781. He was born in New York; died in Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Also No. 14565

[NI07586] Shane and his wife Live in Evansville, WY, right next to Casper, WY. They
both work at the Wal Mart store. Tara has 4 girls from her first
marriage.

[NI07597] Daniel is stationed in San Diego in the US Navy. He's been on the USS
Constellation in the Gulf War for the last 4 years. The ship was retired
this last Nov. 2003 so he's on land now. He's re-enlisted for another 5
years.

[NI07599] Dean works for Burlington Northern Railroad in Texas
Dean was born in the army hospital at Fort Hood Army Base.

[NI07620] A doctor in Broken Bow Nebraska.

[NI07627] Lives in CA 2004 and is going to college to get her Masters in psycology

[NI07630] Dawson Co. Herald, Feb. 22, 1982

Millard D. Dodge Died at Kearney

Millard D. Dodge, 71, a life-long resident of Lexington, died Tuesday,
Feb. 16, 1982, at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney where he had
been hospitalized since Jan. 29. He was hospitalized earlier in
Lexington at Tri-County Hospital.
Services were held Friday, Feb. 19, at Frist Christian Church in
Lexington with Pastor George Keebler officiating. Interment was in
Greenwood Cemetery.
Pallbearers were grandsons, Don and Dick Bowman, Craig Welliver, Douglas
Dodge, Troy Hukill, Robert Holland, Tom Anderson, and Randy Shoemate.
Honorary pallbearers were Cole Welliver, Steve Dodge, Larry Dodge, Walter
Pierce, Bill Bowden and Gene Ourada.
He was born May 5, 1910, at Lexington to John and May(Miller) Dodge, the
third of nine children. He was married to Cloreada Selk in Norton,
Kansas in 1927 and to this union five children were born. He owned and
operated a welding and machine shop for a number of years and later
worked at Monroe Auto County, in Cozad for 14 yrs. before retiring in 1975.
He is survived by his wife, Cloreada, Lexington; three daughters, Mrs.
Vernon (Elleanor) Welliver, Lexington, Mrs. C.L. (Sharolyn) Hukill,
Clovis, New Mexico, and Mrs. Richard (Arlyn) Bowman, Dewitt, Iowa; two
sons, Keith Dodge, Cozad, Jim Dodge, Ansley; three sisters, Maxine
Sellberg, McPherson, KS, Irene Frum, Eugene, OR, and Eileen Wildt, OR;
four brothers, John Dodge, Scapoose, OR, Gilbert Dodge, Rainier, OR,
Melvin Dodge, Minatare, NE, Bill Dodge, Peculiar, MO.; 13 grandchildren
and 18 great-grandchildren.
Preceeding him in death were his parents, an infant sister and two
grandsons. see listing under John F. and May's children. This is the
infant buried with John.
Millard lost his leg in the spring of 1940

[NI07633] Recieved her 4 year degree in Lincoln, Nebraska at the University of Nebraska.
She's attending UCLA 2004 to become a lawyer.

[NI07634] In 2004 Resides in Lincoln, Nebraska.

[NI07641] Cloreada was named by gypsies who were living on their land when she was
born.

She always liked to sing and listen to music, playing the organ, playing
cards and visiting with friends and relatives.

Cloreada L. Bowden

Cloreada L. (Dodge) Bowden, 85, of Lexington, died Wednesday, December
24, 1997.
She was born May 1, 1912 at Lexington to Henry and Hazel (Sowl(Soul))
Selk.
On Nov, 5, 1927, she was united in marriage to Millard Dodge, until his
death in 1982. To this union of 55 years, five children were born.
In 1982, she was united in marriage to William Bowden, until his death in
1994.
Cloreada lived in her own home in Lexington until December of 1996 when
she resided at the Elwood Care Center until the time of her death.
Among her hobbies and interests were music and fishing and she was an
avid antique collector. She was a member of the First Christian Church
in Lexington.
She is survived by all five of her children: Elleanor Welliver of
Lexington, Keith and Ardith Dodge of Cozad, Jim and Lorna Dodge of
Kearney, Sherry and Von Hukill of Clovis, N. Mexico, and Arlyn and Dick
Bowman of Dewitt, Iowa; one sister, Betty and Jack Adams of Clovis,
California; two brothers, Donald Selk of Joshua Tree, California and
Ralph and Lavinia Selk of Lexington; 15 grandchildren, 22
great-grandchildren and numerous great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death, besides her two husbands, by two sisters, two
brothers and two grandchildren, dying in infancy.
Services were held Monday, December 29, 1997, at 2 p.m., at the Frist
Christian Church in Lexington with Pastor Tom Reynolds officiating.
Burial was in the Greenwood Cemetery.
Memorials are suggested to the Lexington volunteer Fire Department and
Rescue Unit.
Reynolds-Love was in charge of arrangements.

[NI07675] Born in a coverd wagon in Sep 26 1865 in the Blue Mountains of Oregon.
She first married first Charles Quick, he died. Then she married Joseph
M. Davidson, And finally she married Freeman Ernest Dodge.

[NI07678] BM2 US COAST GUARD WORLD WAR II
Ernest married on May 6 1929, They had no children.

[NI07683] In 1918 he is a Printer in Renton, Washington.

[NI07722] Word was received from Syracuse of the death of Milton Elisha. Schell on April 12. He was a former resident here. Mr. Schell was born at Cape Vincent and lived just west of Mexico on what is known as the Ames farm on the top of Evarts Hill. The house has since burned and the farm is now part of the County Home Farm. Mr. Schell lived there about 20 years ago. He leaves besides his wife, Ida Grimshaw Schell, an invalid son, Robert, both of Syracuse and a daughter, Mrs. Olive Strickland, of New Woodstock. Mrs. Walter Burdick of Mexico is a niece of Mr. Schell.

[NI07736] Is an Ordained Minister

[NI07738] Buried in St Lawrence Cemetery, Cape Vincent, Jefferson County, New York

[NI07739] Some record say date of birth is 24 Mar 1763.

[NI07740] Buried at St Lawrence Cemetery, Cape Vincent, Jefferson County, New York

[NI07742] Newspaper clipping says born Oct 8, 1879 Also SS records show same date.
Buried at St. Lawerence Cemetery, Cape Vincent, New York

[NI07744] GAR
Died of heart attack (hiccoughs) after bout with pneumonia and grip

[NI07751] Some record record the death as 26 Jun 1864. and b. as 12 Dec 1767.

[NI07759] Born April 22, 1926, in Watertown, the son of Burton C. and Nina E. Thompson Dodge, he
graduated from Clayton High School.

He married Alice V. Kershner on May 1, 1949 in Hagerstown, Md. She died on Jan. 6, 2003.

Mr. Dodge entered the United States Army Air Force on Aug. 3, 1946. He received the Army of Occupation Medal, the World War II Victory Medal and the European African Middle Eastern Ribbon. He served with the 1100th Base Flight Squadron and was honorably discharged as a staff sergeant on Aug. 2, 1949. Prior to his time in the Army Air Force, he served in the Army for 1 year and two months.

He worked for the New York Airbrake, Watertown, as a machinist for 10 years. He then took over the family farm on County Route 9 in Clayton.

Mr. Dodge was a member of the New Life Christian Church.

He is survived by his two brothers and their wives, Forrest B. and Faith Dodge, Orlando, Fla., and Paul A. and Sharon Dodge, Spokane, Wa.; and his nieces, nephews, and cousins.

His four sons died before him, Gary B., June 2, 1974, Mark A., Oct. 24, 1976, Dale A., June 29, 1986, and a male infant on Nov. 6, 1964.

[NI07765] Some records spell the name Harvey.

[NI07766] Died of heart attack.
Buried at North Watertown cemetery.

[NI07767] Married in Methodist Church. Also noted spelling to be Mereand.

[NI07768] Buried Rural Cemetery, Adams, Jefferson County, New York

[NI07770] Buried in Depauville cemetery.

[NI07771] Also seen as Perle

[NI07787] Some Records say b. Lowville, Lewis County, New York

[NI07792] Died in train accident near Syracuse or Rochester New York
He was a railroad employee at Bridgeport.

[NI07804] Jack' father was a close friend of Abraham Lincoln, It was Lincoln who
introduced the young Lady wh was to become Jack's Mother

[NI07808] Famous miniature portrait artist, over 1000 paintings documented. His portraits of President Jackson, Henry Clay, Henry Bergh, and others
are widely known. John Wood Dodge, portraitist and photographer, was born in New York City,the son of a goldsmith and watchmaker and his Canadian-born wife. Dodge was apprenticed to a sign painter, under whom he began to copy, then paint, original miniatures. When his apprenticeship ended, he rented a studio. During the winter of 1826-27, he studied at the National Academy
of Design. He exhibited there from 1830 to 1838, and was elected an associate member in 1832. His exhibition piece was a portrait of his cousin, Mary Louise Dodge, whom he had married on December 13, 1831.

Dodge's account book begins in 1828. His standard price for a miniature was $11.50. By 1831 it had risen to $25, and a few years later, with his increasing fame, reached $75. In 1838 he left for the South, primarily for health reasons, but also to find an area with fewer competitors. For the next two years, he spent most of the winters in Huntsville, Alabama.In May 1840 he arrived in Nashville, where he worked until 1861. He also made frequent trips to other southern cities to paint and exhibit his work.

In 1842 and 1843 Dodge did life portraits of Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay. The pictures enjoyed an extensive sale in print form. In 1845 he bought a large orchard in Pomona, Tennessee. In order to pay for it, Dodge executed a series of large dioramas, which he exhibited with illumination at Nashville, Memphis, New Orleans, Louisville, New York, and Hartford. After 1850 Dodge spent more time at his "fruit ranch" in
Pomona and worked in Nashville during the winters. Increasingly, photography impaired his business, and tinting photographs became an important part of his operation.

A Unionist, Dodge left Tennessee in 1861 and arrived in New York destitute. He did an ink drawing of George Washington which he intended as a correction of Gilbert Stuart's standard image; it sold reasonably well. In May 1865 he had a sitting from President Andrew Johnson, and there a silting portrait sold well in photographic form.

About 1869 Dodge moved to Chicago, where he produced mostly photographs, large oil portraits, and still lifes. In 1874-75 he was vice-president of the local academy. In 1889 he returned to Pomona, where he worked in various media until shortly before his death of pneumonia on December 15, 1893, at age eighty-six.

[NI07820] In newspaper clipping that Nina Dodge had states that he was from Stevens
Point, Wisconsin.

[NI07822] Mrs. Janette A. Dodge Sheley, 88, who died at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Rohn, Bloomfield, N.J., last Saturday, will be held at the Cummings Funeral Home in this
village at 2 Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs. Sheley, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Francis Dodge, was the widow of Charles O. Sheley of Clayton and was a native of this town. Her husband died 29 years ago and she had since resided at 321 Merrick St., Clayton. About six
weeks ago, however, she went to visit her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Rohn, in Bloomfield, N.J., and died there after an illness of about three weeks. She had spent the most of her married life on a farm in the town of Clayton.
She was a member of the Clayton Methodist Church, of the Clayton chapter, O.E.S., and of the Clayton Grange.
Mrs. Sheley is survived by her daughter, Mrs. W. L. (Doris) Rohn; two grandchildren, Janette Kopple, Schenectady, and Charles L. Rohn, Bloomfield, N.J., and by one great-grandchild, Suzanne Kopple.

[NI07834] Died in the Service Car Accident. US ARMY

[NI07835] Died in US Navy in Vietnam.

[NI07836] Buried at St. Lawrence Corners Cemetery

[NI07839]
-



Lou Ann Hager shows Nathan born 1736. There is a Nathan Dodge, son of
David and Rebecca Dodge born July 14, 1736 in Colchester County. There
is also a Nathan Dodge born at Beverly, Mass in April 7, 1731 born to
Nathan Dodge and Mary Patch. Both these are recorded to have married
Abigail Graves of Colchester, Conn. Oct. 10, 1755. It would be more
logical that the Nathan born in Colchester county was this Nathan except
the records I found at the Library stated that the Nathan of Beverly,
Mass moved to Conn around the time he married and that he married Abigail
Graves. However note the age difference. Lou Ann's only 7 years younger.

There is also a John C. Graves of Buffalo New York who states that Nathan of
Beverly married Abigail Graves.

1/31/99 Looks like Nathan of Colchester is the father of Amasa, son of
David Britain Dodge, son of John Dodge, son of Tristam Dodge of Block
Island. I asked John Nanney to send me his GEDCOM file.

Nathan Dodge, Colchester, Connecticut; served from 10 April to 30 November 1759 in Lt. Col. Spencer's Company, 2nd Regiment, commanded by Col. Whiting.
From Rolls of Connecticut Men in the French and Indian War, 1755-1762 Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, Vols. 9 and 10. Reprinted for the Clearfield Company by the Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, Maryland, 1997
The brother of Amos Dodge, Moses Dodge and John Dodge who also served. Sons of David Britain Dodge and Rebecca Yeomans.

[NI07857] Died after being married only one month to Phoebe.
Riverboat Captain.

[NI07865] No Issue

[NI07869] No Issue

[NI07876] Some records spell the name Isabel.

[NI07906] Carolyn is the manager of the Deli in the Kroeger grocery store in
Jackson, TN. She has two children from a previous marriage, Shawn and
Brandi.

[NI07926] No issue.

[NI07930] Some Records have that he died in Cape Vincent Twp., Jefferson County, New
York.

Neil J. Dodge Sr., 71, Plank Road, died Friday afternoon at the House of the Good Samaritan, Watertown, where he had been admitted Thursday following a cerebral hemorrhage.

Born Sept. 27, 1921, in the town of Clayton, a son of Neil J. and Hazel Brill Dodge Sr., he attended local schools and served in the Army during World War II. He was discharged from the Army in 1946. On May 16, 1946, he married Betty J. Timmerman in the parsonage of the LaFargeville Methodist Church. Mr. Dodge owned and operated a dairy farm and was employed by Frink Sno-Plow of Clayton for 25 years, retiring in 1983. He was a member of American Legion Post 1788.

Surviving are his wife, Betty, Edwards; four sons, Ronald, Philadelphia, Pa., Neil Jr., at home, Craig, LaFargeville, and Steven, Ledyard, Conn.; three daughters, Mrs. Al (Judy) Gotham, LaFargeville, Sherri Dodge, Hammond, and Mrs. John (Cathy) Czerwinski, Watertown; several grandchildren, and two brothers, Paul, St. Petersburg, Fla., and Jack, East Line Road, Clayton.

A sister, Dorothy Carter, died before him. A daughter, Donna LaBow, died in 1984. A son, Allen, died in 1969, and another son, Eugene, died in 1975.


The funeral will be at 11 a.m. Monday at the Frederick Bros. Funeral Home, Theresa, with the Rev. Mark Pierce, United Methodist Church minister of LaFargeville, officiating. A military graveside service will be held at Grove Cemetery. Calling hours will be 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Memorial donations may be made to the LaFargeville Rescue Squad.

[NI07934] Unmarried.

[NI07936] Portland Press Herald, Friday, September 22, 2000 Marjorie Louise Dodge, 75
ROCKPORT — Marjorie Louise Brodis Dodge, 75, wife of the late Capt. Henry L. Dodge, died Sept. 21, 2000, at Penobscot Bay Medical Center.
She was born here, a daughter of Bert L. and MarjorieStevens Brodis, and was a 1943 graduate of Rockport High School. She married Capt. Dodge in Rockland. He died June 3, 1987.

Mrs. Dodge lived her entire life on her family's homestead here. She was a librarian at Rockport Public Library for more than 30 years until her retirement in 1992. She was an active member of John Street United Methodist Church in Camden, and served on many committees, including the building committee and Ladies' Fellowship. Mrs. Dodge also was an organist at the former Rockport United Methodist Church, and was a member of the church choir. She was an avid gardener. Rockport's 1992-93 town report was dedicated to Mrs. Dodge, her family said. A son, Christopher H. Dodge, died in 1969. Surviving are a son, Daniel S. Dodge of Rockport; two daughters, Mrs. Kevin (Laurie Dodge) Knauer of Hyde- ville, Vt., and Catherine Dodge Twadelle of Martha's Vineyard, Mass.; her sister, Theresa Jameson of Warren; and four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Visiting hours will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday at JohnStreet United Methodist Church, 98 John St., Camden where a funeral will be at 2 p.m. Sunday. The Revs.
Linda Campbell-Marshall and Mark Monson Alley will officiate. Burial will follow in Sea View Cemetery.

Arrangements are by Laite and Pratt Funeral Home,

Camden.

[NI07938] John had his left arm cut off at the shoulder and he was an excellant shooter. He used to travel up to 40 miles away to go to trap shoots to win a turkey but he was so good a shot that the people wouldn't let him enter because he always won (with one arm!). He did all his own chores and harnessed up the team to plow also. His shotgun was given to his
grandson, Jim, Millard's son.

John Frederick Dodge was born near Lexington, Nebraska, September 1883. He grew to manhood in this community. After many months of severe suffering, the summons came and he passed to his reward October 30, 1930 at the age of 47 years, one month and four days. On December 20, 1906, he married May Miller. To this union nine children were born, eight of whom survive. He was a good husband and a kind father. Those who survie and mourn his departure are his faithful wife, Mrs. May Dodge, his children, John Jr., Millard, Gilbert, Melvin, Maxine, Irene, Eileen, and Billie. His aged mother, two grandchildren, three sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Richeson, Mrs. Minnie Gordon and Mrs. Ella Lobdell: five brothers, William, Hugh, Ernest, Evert and Chester. Besides these, thereare many other relatives and a host of friends. Funeral services wereheld at the Emerson Funeral Home, November 1, 1930. Interment was madeat the Mt. Hope Cemetery.

Lexington Clipper: 11/3/1930

[NI07949] Freda m (Dodge) Conley, 88, formerly of St. Petersburg, Fla., Berkeley Springs, W. Va., and Vienna, W. Va., died Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011, at Rutherford Manor, Davidsonville, Md. She was born in Terra Alta, W. Va., on Feb. 20, 1922, to the late Albert and Verna M. Groves Dodge. She was a graduate of WVU with BS and MS degrees in Education. Beloved by her students to this day, she retired from teaching in 1984 after 40 years as an educator in Berkeley Springs, and Hancock, Md. schools. She was a member of the Berkeley Chapter #77, Order of the Eastern Star, and a dual member of the Vienna Chapter #151. She was past president and 50-year member of the Berkeley Springs Federated Women's Club, and also a member of the Vienna Women's Club. Always proud of her West Virginia heritage, she was past president and member of the West Virginia State Society in St. Petersburg. From 1999 to 2008, Freda and her husband John divided their time between Vienna, and St. Petersburg, participating actively in both Christ United Methodist Church in St. Petersburg and St. John United Methodist Church in Vienna. She was preceded in death by her husband of 66 years, John Hughes Conley in 2009. She is survived by her daughter, Dr. Joyce Conley, of Annapolis, Md. and son, John David Conley, of Vienna. A memorial service will be conducted Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011, at 12:30 p.m. in the chapel of Christ United Methodist Church, 467 First Avenue North, St. Petersburg, Fla. Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice of the Chesapeake, 445 Defense Highway, Annapolis, MD 21401.

[NI07970] They remained on the Homestead Upper Newport .

[NI07973] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 29
page 238

[p.238] Mrs. Candace M. Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 28649
Born in Lowville, New York.
Widow of Frank Dodge.
Descendant of Ephraim Bliss, Jr., of Massachusetts.
Daughter of Simon Brown and Laura Bliss Smith, his wife.
Granddaughter of Daniel Smith (1761-1826) and Mary Bliss (1763-1842), his wife, m. 1785.
Gr.-granddaughter of Ephraim Bliss, Jr. (1726-1804) and Sarah Read, (1737-84), his second wife, m. 1760.
See No. 28237.

[NI07997] His Naturalization papers state his birth as Jan 9, 1868. According to California State Librrary Records He was born in

[NI08002] Died young at 6 months.

[NI08016] HM3 US Navy in WW II, Korea.

[NI08040] They had a farm home at Ashdale. Oliver Dodge also operated a blacksmith shop at Ashdale, Upper Newport, Nova Scotia. This couple are buried in Maplewood Cemetery, Windsor, Nova Scotia.

[NI08053] Amasa Dodge Chapman, born in Colchester, Connecticut on November 11, 1796. He spent his life mostly as a farmer, but during his young manhood, he was a teacher. He graduated at Bacon's Academy in Connecticut in 1816 and went to Genesee County, New York with his father. In 1835 he was commissioned Captain of militia by the Governor of that state. He moved to Michigan in 1837 and settled on a farm in Oakland Co. This farm he cultivated until the spring of 1855, when he moved to Cumberland County, Kentucky, remaining there four and a half years and then returning to Oakland County, where he died December 4, 1882. He was greatly interested in the education of the young, and for twenty-one consecutive years was Moderator in his school district. He was the father of nine children by Hannah L. Hunt, whose family went to New York from Vermont. Six of their children were: Joseph, George, and Ichabod, in Oakland Co.; Albert, an attache of Representative Hall, in Lansing; Edgar C.,in Pontaic; and Charles H. who was born April 9, 1855.

[NI08057] His Schooner, SALLY, with two guns and 10 men,
was commissioned with a Letter of Marque to attack British shipping. The
schooner, commanded by Captain Joseph Dodge, was commandeered in 1777 for
use as a victualler ship by the Continental Army. Wait was among the
signers of a petition on May 10, 1774 asking permission to build a
meeting house at Long Point to be used for public worship and to conduct
a lottery to raise the needed money. On September 20, 1778, Wait was
listed as a "prize master" on the VENUS, a British ship captured by the
American privateer EAGLE and sent to Boston. Wait was an officer on the
EAGLE at this time. He settled in Troy, New York about 1789 and later by
October 6, 1794 moved to Lansingsburgh, New York. He owned a boarding
house and tavern. He was in partnership with his nephew, Amos Rathbun,
Jr. They chartered boats for fishing trips on the Hudson and into the
Alantic. He was also in partnership with Amos Rathbun and William
Willard opening a store to sell medicine and drugs. He owned two lots
(500 acres) in Clinton County, New York which he sold in 1800. It was
located near Lake Champlain and the mouth of the Schargee River. He died
in Jew Jersey where he had gone to live with his son, William Palmer
Rathbone.

His obituary reads: "In a little while, the
last of the patriots of the Revolution will be gathered to their fathers'
one after another is called home, daily reducing the number of the
emancipators of our country. Died in Franklin Township, N.J. on the 4th
instant at the residence of his son, William P. Rathbone, Esq., Wait
Rathbone of Lansingburgh, in the 86th year of his age. Captain Rathbone
was born in Stonington, Conneticut,
was an early patriot of the revolution, and actively engaged in the
cause of his country in the great conflict. For the last fifty years of
his life, he has been a devoted, zealous soilder of Christ, embracing
every opportunity of doing good to his fellow creatures. He died beloved
and esteemed by all who knew him."

NOTE: He was born Wait Rathbun and, about 1812,
changed the spelling of his surname to Rathbone.

[NI08058] Ichabod Chapman was born about 1758 probably in Colchester, New London County, Connecticut and fought in the American army during the Revolutionary War. As a civilian, he was a farmer. He apparently lived in Woodbridge, Colchester, New London County, Connecticut at the time of the 1790 US Census. According to the June 8, 1805 Colchester town records Ichabod Chapman, Jr. took the mark "which was Stephen Buckwith viz. a crop the underside of each ear."

In 1818 he moved to Genesee County, New York, near Batavia, and started a new farm. He died there about 1830, at the age of eighty-five years.

[NI08064] Unmarried.

[NI08085] Baptised as an adult in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New London, Connecticut, by Rev. Jas. Hillhouse
Caulkin's History of New London (Connecticut), page 32, says he was of the North Parish when he enlisted in the French War in the expedition against Cape Breton, March 1744-5. Following their defeat by the British in 1713, and the loss of New Foundland and Nova Scotia, the French desired to defend their fortunes in Canada against further English incursions. France therefore spent millions in gold to build the "impregnable fortress" of Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island at the mouth of the St. Lawrence. This fortress menaced the New England fisheries and the Governor of Massachusetts Bay conceived a siege to capture the great Bastion. An army of New England militia made an amphibious landing in April, 1745 near Louisbourg. Israel embarked in this army from New London on April 13, 1745, serving in the command of General Roger Wolcott. Samuel Eliot Morrison, in his History of the American People, Page 158, relates the episode: (the forces) "established a beachhead out of reach of the 150 gunned French fortress and conducted the campaign in a spirit of rustic frolic, defying both military discipline and principles of strategy. The Troops captured an outlaying battery from the rear, dragged artillery through supposedly impassable swamps, chased French cannonballs to shoot them back from their own guns and went fishing when they felt like it. But. the net effect of their pluck and enterprise was to discourage and confuse the French commander of Louisbourg that on June 16, 1745 he surrendered both town and fortress." Three days after the surrender, on June 19 word was received in New London that Israel had fallen victim to disease. "Having 'listed in the king's service to go to war," he made his will March 16, 1744. Will filed Aug 13, 1745. He bequeathed to wife Rachel lands etc., while she remains his widow and to his children, mentioning the girls in the following order as "first daughter," "second daughter," etc., and calls his son Ezra his "old son," and Nehemiah his "young son."

[NI08088] Unmarried.

[NI08094] age 75 at death

[NI08120] Matt was given up for adoption by his birth mom at birth. She has
recently found him Through adpotion records. He's living in Lincoln,
Ne..

[NI08136] 2nd Church in canterbury, New Haven Connecticut records marriage as 14 Jan 1753.

[NI08151] Died Young

[NI08166] His Tombstone stands at the dooryard of the old homestead at Cow neck.

[NI08169] Middle name spelled Ruben on Birth Records.

Vining Funeral Home,
Safford, Arizona

Rex Reuben Dodge
March 12, 1920 - March 8, 2014

Rex Dodge, age 93, of Pima peacefully entered into eternal life Saturday, March 8, 2014, at his residence.

Funeral services for Rex are will be conducted Saturday afternoon, March 15, 2014, at 2:00 p.m., at the Pima L.D.S. Chapel by Bishop Mark Beus of the Pima First Ward. Concluding services will follow in the Pima Cemetery.

The family will receive friends Saturday afternoon from 1:00 p.m. until 1:45 p.m., at the Pima L.D.S. Chapel Junior Sunday School Room.

To send flowers or a memorial gift to the family of Rex Reuben Dodge please visit our Sympathy Store.

[NI08174] Seth Arvid Dodge
1916 ~ 2011
Seth Arvid Dodge passed away peacefully at his Provo home Tuesday, February 22, 2011, just a week after his 95th birthday.
He was born in Pima, AZ on February 14, 1916, the third child of Seth Lyman Dodge and Nettie Bingham Dodge. He grew up in Pima, Thatcher and Safford, AZ. He was called to serve an LDS mission in the Eastern Canadian area, where he met a sister missionary who would later become his wife, Clara Isaksen. "Ikey" and "Smiler" courted at BYU and were married in the Mesa Temple on October 10, 1940.
After living in Phoenix for a few years, they moved to Orem, Utah, where they raised eight children. Raising their large family while caring for cherry and apple trees, horses, and many other animals, made their small farm on 400 West a busy and memorable place. The family particularly enjoyed boating, playing games, and regular family vacations.
Arvid graduated from BYU and received a B. S. Degree, with a major in accounting and a minor in economics. He became a CPA and had a thriving accounting practice in Orem for many years. He was involved in the Provo Lion’s Club for decades. He served in the LDS Church faithfully his entire life. His callings included scoutmaster, MIA presidency, Stake Presidency, Bishop, Temple Worker, Extraction Worker, Genealogist and Missionary.
After retirement, Smiler and Ikey enjoyed traveling to many lands with family and friends. In 1981 they served in the Mississippi Jackson Mission, where they became even closer than before. Arvid was an avid genealogist, spending countless hours on the computer.
The last 15+ years of their life, Arvid and Clara were snowbirds, living for several months each year in St. George at Meadow Creek, and the rest of the time at their home in Provo. They made many dear friends in both areas. Clara passed away in June 2009, and Arvid missed her so! He spent several months after she died living with each of his children. Over the past few months, his grandson, Seth and his wife Melinda, along with three great-grandsons and other family members, have been his loving caregivers. We will all miss his kindness, patience, guidance, unconditional love and wonderful sense of humor. His steadfastness in living the gospel has been a great example to everyone.
Arvid is survived by three siblings: Florence McDaniel; Rex Dodge; and Fern Lively; eight children: S. Martin (Charlotte), Orem, UT; Donald (Linda), Pleasant Grove, UT (Currently serving in the Canada Toronto East Mission); Roger (Sallie), Saratoga Springs, UT; Donna (Randy Harris), Alpine, UT; Gary (Kirsten), SLC, UT; Randy (Chris), Salem, UT; Karlene (Gary Young), Toquerville, UT; Karl (Gunda Le), Midway, UT; 39 grandchildren; 61 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandson. Many others considered him a loving father as well. Arvid and Clara opened their home to many people through the years. Arvid was preceded in death by his beloved wife, Clara, and his sister Opal.
Services will be held on Tuesday, March. 1, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at the Riverwoods Chapel, 4800 N. 300 W., Provo, UT. Friends and family are invited to gather at the same chapel from 6:00-8:00 p.m., Monday, February 28, and from 9:30-10:30 a.m. prior to the funeral service. Condolences may be sent to the family at www.sundbergolpinmortuary.com. Interment will be at the Orem City Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Primary Children's Hospital.


Read more: http://www.heraldextra.com/lifestyles/announcements/obituaries/article_7dbb469a-425d-11e0-9d16-001cc4c002e0.html#ixzz1XnMnCZJm

[NI08185] William was a vetraan of WW I.

[NI08186] Vetran of WW I

[NI08192] William probably came to Block Island from England with his brothers in
1667.
He was made a freeman in July 1670. perhaps he married again, since New
Shoreham, RI recorsd say he married again on 24 Apr 1694. He died after
16 Dec 1731

[NI08193] Stebbins is perhaps her name.

[NI08207] Utah State Archives and Records Service; Salt Lake City, Utah; Military Service Cards, ca. 1898-1975; Creating Agency: Department of Administrative Services, Division of Archives and Records Service; Series: 85268; Reel: 86.

[NI08222] Events:
1. Apprenticed about 1777 to Thomas Harland in Norwich CT. 1,3
2. Advertised in the Connecticut Courant (New London CT), 1787-1795, as
clock- and watchmaker. 3
3. New London CT, 1790: built shop opposite Winthrop's Wharf. 3
4. Penrose Hoopes' account of the yellow fever epidemic of 1798 in New
London records death of Dodge at age 32 and describes him as "watchmaker
. . . gold and silver smith, brass founder, gunsmith, locksmith, grocer.
... An ingenious mechanic, good man and valuable citizen." Marshall, in
Modern History of New London County, cites a local record of death, Aug.
29, 1798, of "Ezra Dodge, goldsmith, interred by the masons." 3

[NI08249] Twin to Richard Thorn

[NI08250] Twin to Amos Thorn

[NI08261] Died at 43 yrs. 11m

[NI08262] Place of birth given as Pennsylvania in 1860 and 1870 census, Ohio in 1850 census. Son of Charles Dodge and Judith Macomber Dodge. Married first Eliza Ann Hillyer Dodge. They were the parents of Cornelius Dodge, Margaret M. Dodge, Mary E. Dodge, William Henry Dodge, and Samantha A. Dodge. Married second Harriet Terwilliger Dodge. They were the parents of Delia Sophronia Dodge, Jasper Ezra Dodge, Derrick Chandler Dodge, Hewlettes Sheldon Dodge, Jefferson Lee Dodge, Emma Sophia Dodge (Holdeman), and Nellie Calista Dodge. After James Chandler Dodge dies Harriet remarried to George Park McPherson.

[NI08264] A Stone Marks her grave in Noffsinger Cemetery Elkhart, Indiana. Originally
Elkhart was known as Jimtown. she died 20 may 1861 @ 76 years of age.

[NI08265] Drowned.

[NI08269] Died at 31 yrs 3m 20 d

[NI08278] Barber in Mendocino, California.

[NI08283] Some records say she is buried in the Wesley Brown Cemetery, Salem, New london, Connecticut.

[NI08286] Memorial #84279858

[NI08295] Memorial #84279864

[NI08296] Memorial #84279860

[NI08300] Memorial #22912529
Died of smallpox while serving in Company E, 32nd Regiment, Iowa Infantry during the War Between the States

[NI08311] Memorial #84279862

[NI08313] Baptized as an adult in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New
London, Connecticut, by Rev. Jas. Hillhouse.

[NI08334] SAR

[NI08355] Aged 84 Years, 7 Months, 12 Days

[NI08357] Aged 62 Years, 6 Months, 18 Days

[NI08363] She was married before and now a widdow Lucrettia Helen Walters Mather.

[NI08370] Other records have name spelled Theodosia.
Another record has 27 Aug 1877 as date of death

[NI08377] Corp'l in 2nd Iowa Battr'y inCivil War

[NI08378] Se first marra Mr. Eames.

[NI08381] Some records say Hanes.

[NI08384] Avis Long
Avis Ione Long, 88, of Burlington, died at 4:37 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 2, 2010, at Great River Medical Center in West Burlington.

Born Oct. 10, 1921, in Boone, she was the daughter of George Frederick and Minnie van Delden Dodge. On Dec. 29, 1946, she married Leslie James Long in Boone. He died March 4,1960.

Mrs. Long taught school at Ida Grove and Eagle Grove high schools and worked as the librarian at Southeastern Community College for 22 years. She worked in the office of Congressman Jim Leach for two years following retirement. She served as deacon and elder of First Presbyterian Church. She was a member of Presbyterian Women, Chapter P, PEO, Des Moines County Historical Society, What-So-Ever Chapter of the King's Daughters, Retired School Personnel, CRISP, United Nations Association, Pi Lambda Theta, Republican Women, Art Guild of Burlington and Friends of Southeast Iowa Symphon

Survivors include two sons, William Long of St. Paul, Minn., and Robert Long of Chicago and Columbus, Ohio; one grandchild; nieces and nephews.

Besides her husband, she was preceded in death by her parents and one brother.

The family will receive friends at Prugh's Chapel in Burlington from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.

The funeral for Mrs. Long will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at First Presbyterian Church in Burlington with the Rev. Debra Miller-Kinney officiating. Burial will be at 2 p.m. Friday in Linwood Cemetery in Boone.

Memorials have been established for the First Presbyterian Church Organ Fund and Des Moines County Historical Society.

[NI08392] Wesley Dodge, Princeton, Illinois; Enlisted: 16 Feb 1865 - Union; Rank
Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 151st Regiment, Illinois Infantry,
Co. H

[NI08393] Paper: Union-News (Springfield, MA)
Title: Olive Dodge, co-founder, association for retarded
Author: STAFF
Date: April 1, 1997
Section: OBITS
Page: D6

Olive L. (Clark) Dodge, 79, of 130 Clesson Brook Road died Sunday at
the Franklin Medical Center in Greenfield. She was co-founder and
director for 10 years of the Massachusetts Association of Retarded
Children in Greenfield.Born in Hawley, she was a 1936 graduate of Smith
Vocational School in Northampton.

She served as a volunteer at various nursing homes in the area, and
she was a former Cub Scout and Girl Scout Leader for several years.

She was a member of the Sons and Daughters of Hawley and a member of
Mary Lyon Church in Buckland.

Her husband, Malcolm H. "Ted" Dodge, died in 1989. She leaves two
sons, Ronald F. of Jacksonville, Vt., and Russell M. of Buckland; five
sisters, Hattie Fuller of Cummington, Helen Lundrigan of Coconut Creek,
Fla., Myra Mongeau of Williamsburg, Jessie Thayer of Hatfield, and
Roberta Maxfield of Burlington, Wis.; seven grandchildren, and 10 great-
grandchildren. Another son, Rodney, died in 1960 and her daughter,
Bonnie G. Dodge, died in 1968.


The funeral is Wednesday evening at Smith-Kelleher Funeral Home, and
burial will be later in Upper City Cemetery in Buckland.

[NI08403] !HAS BEEN ENTERED IN LDS RECORDS BY OTHERS TO HAVE BEEN BORN ON THE
STEAMBOAT
SARANAC ON THE MISSOURI RIVER. HOWEVER, MY GRANDMOTHER, EVA ANN LABRUM
WILLIS,
WIFE OF HUGH WILLIS, SON OF SARAH MARIE DUFFIN SAID SHE WAS BORN ON THE
MAYFLOWER SHIP IN AMERICAN WATERS. A MOVIE WAS MADE ABOUT HER BUT THE
NAME OF
THE MOVIE AND THE PRODUCERS ARE NOT KNOWN AT THIS TIME. IT HAS AIRED ON
TELEVISION WITHIN THE PAST TEN YEARS. IT IS AN OLD BLACK AND WHITE MOVIE.
Came to Utah with the mormon pioneers. This is 1995 and I am still trying
to
find ships records to prove which ship she was born on.

Sarah Maria Duffin Willis as she is known by her grand and great-grand
children
is known as Maria and Mariah in the cemetary which she is buried in Twin
Falls,
Idaho. She is buried in Grave #6 Lot #13 Block #15 at the Twin Falls
Cemetary.
The block sets (facing south from the North entrance of the cemetary)
towards
Kimberly Rd. between the last and 2nd to last road in the east side of the
cemetary, 40'-50' NE of the flagpole near a dead tree between two fully
grown
pine trees.

Willis' in that same block of the cemetary are: 1) Eva Willis 2) Clara
Willis
3) Asa Willis 4) Joshuah T. Willis, Jr. (son of Joshua and Sarah
Maria(Duffin) Willis.

[NI08421] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 102
page 177

Mrs. Ada Kemp Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 101591
Wife of Clarence Porter Dodge.
Descendant of Capt. Johnathan David Kemp, as follows:
1. Dempsey Kemp (b. 1844) m. 1865 Martha Taylor (1846-1910).
2. Peter Hutchinson Kemp m. Permelia Womack.
3. Dempsey Kemp (b. 1792) m. 1810 Sallie Hutchinson.
4. Johnathan David Kemp m. 1779 Elizabeth Womack (b. 1759).
Johnathan David Kemp (1755-1808) served as captain in the Revolution and was engaged in the battle of Bunker Hill. He was born in Maine; died in St. Helena Parish, La.

[NI08425] The History of Rice University, Rice's First Entering Class 1912
Clarence Porter Dodge, Jr. (Houston)
The first graduating class was 1916.

Clarence Porter Dodge Jr.
Occupation: Asst. Superintendent, Texas Co. 5 Jun 1917 Atlanta, GA (later TEXACO Oil, his father Clarence Porter Dodge Sr. was Secretary, Gen Sales Mgr & Director of Texas (Oil) Co (later TEXACO) 1917 Houston, Harris Co., TX).
Pneumonia Cause of Death Feb 1935

[NI08431] Baptised as an adult in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New
London, Connecticut, by Rev. Jas. Hillhouse

[NI08433] Sometimes called Harry.

[NI08434] 127. William Harper DODGE - Ancestral File
Gender: M Marriage: 15 Dec 1892 St. Augustine, St. Johns County, Florida

[NI08448] No Issue

[NI08454] Crossville Chronicle August 4, 1932

Monday of this week F H Washburn received a letter from his sister in Idaho informing him that W Zenas Smith, 54, had died Thursday, July 28th of double pneumonia at his home in Twin Falls, Idaho after a brief illness.
The Smiths came from Chicago to this county (Cumberland County, TN) more than 20 years ago and located at Pomona. They lived there and conducted a general store for several years and the mother and father both died. Shortly after their death the 2 boys, W Z and John, left this section and went to Chicago where they remained for a short time. They then went to Twin Falls, Idaho and engaged in the bakery business. Some 6 or 7 years ago, the young one, John, died. About 2 years ago, Mrs Smith, wife of W Z died, leaving a daughter Virginia, who is now about 17 years of age. She survives her father.
Besides the 2 boys there was one sister, Miss Estelle, who married several years ago and went to North Dakota to live. She also survives her brothers.
The deceased was a man of many admirable qualities. His sense of honor was unnaturally high and it was his constant aim and ambition to render the very highest service possible. In his bakery, he had built up a business that represented the very highest quality product coupled with a service beyond compare. Throughout his entire life he was the very spirit of his father, whose greatest ambition was to render a little better service than others gave for the same compensation.v

[NI08462] Died in infancy

[NI08477] FITZGERALD CEMETERY


Located in Chariton County, Missouri. State Hwy 129 (north) to
intersection with State Route "D". Turn west on Route D for about a mile
(maybe a bit more). Cemetery is on the North side of the road. Please
note that this listing was transcribed from records found at the Chariton
County Historical Society, Chariton County Cemeteries Vol. III (copied by
Robert and May (Bartee) Couch, June 20, 1982). I have left all the
original typos, and included any notations that are indicated in the
records.


Transcribed and Contributed by Penney Ippen. Thank You Penney!!


Dodge, Erasmus D. Apr 4, 1852 Mar 10, 1923
Dodge, Laura E May 10, 1864 Nov 29, 1958
Dodge, Mary A. 1877-1957
Dodge, Francis E. 1862-1939

Dodge, John W. Sep 1868-Nov 1950

[NI08478] Died at age 27. from Childbirth..

[NI08482] She was a violinist and gave violin lessons to students in Dawson County, Nebraska. She eloped and married John Peter Hanson of Lexington who was a farmer's son.
They moved to North Platte, Lincoln County, Nebraska where they made their home. Ruby and John were one of the main owners of Sixth Street Food Stores and other businesses in the area.

They adopted one son; Jerry Patrick Hanson who married Alice Binegar; they had one daughter and one son.

They had one natural son; John Gordon "Jack" Hanson who married 1st Mary Ann Sieman (had two daughters and one son); married 2nd Donna; married 3rd Pat (had one daughter).

She died in an ambulance on her way to St. Joseph Hospital in Omaha, Nebraska from complications due to alcoholism. She was buried November 30, 1965.

[NI08483] Lived in Chicago for a period.

[NI08490] Was a private with company D of the 2nd Missouri Infantry in the Spanish
American War june 1898 to Feb 1899.
Hide indicates he was divorced at the time of his marriage to KATIE RYAN
IN 1915. He was listed as an auto mechanic at the time of his death.
Previous in 1930 census listed as a machinist and in 1920 census as a
Blacksmith.

He is buried in Mountain View Cemetery about 2 miles E of Dillon, Montana
1 1/2 of Lot 1, Blk D, Plat A. Katherine his wife is buried next to him.

[NI08491] Lived in Kansas City for a period.

[NI08492] Family lore says he fell down the stairs. Family was living in Spencer, Worcester County, MA at Earle's death. Recorded in Worcester died age 2 yrs 15 dys per Massachusetts VR's

[NI08496] Served in Union Army. Worked as a medic/Surgeon untill his fingers
stiffened from the cold camping conditions. After the he became a Lawyer
and Circuit judge of the 34th Judicial district, Elkart County, Indiana

James Shaw Dodge who for over half a centaury had been one of the best
known citizens of Elkhart, Indiana - and who served his country as a
Union soldier, had taught rural school,practiced the professions of
medicine and law, served as a circuit judge and department commander of
G.A.R (grand army of the republic) and weilded wide influence as a
publicist - died Jan. 19, 1923
The burial took place at Grace Lawn Cemetery, Elkhart, Indiana
He had a half-sister Mrs. Alice Stoner who lived with her daughter in
N.Mex.
Judge Dodge was born in Morrow County, Ohio on aug.24, 1846, a son of
Charles and Malissa (Shaw) Dodge. When he was than three years old the
family moved to Elkhart county. In 1850 Melissa died and his father died
in 1856.
James Shaw Dodge was now orphaned at 10 years old and he moved back to
Ohio to live with the Shaw family and othe relatives and went to work on
a farm and went to a common school. In June 1863 he entered the Army at
age 17 as a private in Co. M of the third Ohio cavalry, joining his
regiment at Chattanooga on Sept.17 and received his baptism of fire the
following day, in the battle of Chickamauga, The youth soldier that day
suffered a sabre wound, which, however did not keep him away from his
duties. He participated in the battles of Missionary Ridge, Rockyfaced
Ridge, Snake Creek Gap, Big Shanty, Kennesaw Mountains, Peach tree Creek
and other engagements marking the advance on Atlanta. At Atlanta he again
was wounded. Private Dodge particicipated in a raid on Andersonville
prison to liberate Union prisoners and in the pursuit and capture of
Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy. a horse was shot from
under him at Farmington, Tenn.
He was honorably discharged in July, 1865 being mustered out an orderly
sergeant at the age of 19.
In Sept.1865 he came to Elkhart and after attending High School one term
he secured a teacher's license. In 1866, in his spare time from taching,
he studied medicine with Dr. Haggerty and in 1869 he graduated from the
department of medicine of the University of Michigan. He practiced in
Elkhart, but desiring more information he attended lectures At Jefferson
Medical School i;n Philadelphia and a a school in New York. He practised
medicine for 15 years in Elkhart and Bristol and then decided to study
law.and was admitted to the bar in 1884. He became a judge in 1904 -
1911 and was active in the Republican party.
He was a forceful , ready and eloquent public speaker on patriotic,
political and civic questions. He had an imposing appearance and
possessed a voice that would carry over a large audience.

[NI08529] Myron L. Dodge

Myron L. Dodge, 83, of L'Anse, passed away Thursday, July 24, 2008, at Bayside Village, L'Anse following a lengthy illness.

He was born in Duluth, Minn. on November 25, 1924, the son of the late Willis and Martha (Kluck) Dodge. He graduated from high school in 1942.

He served in the Merchant Marines until he was drafted in the U.S. Army. Following WW II, he was stationed in Germany for a year and a half in the Armored Division in the European Operation.

After his military service, he attended the University of Minnesota. He completed his training in surveying and topographical drafting from the William Hood Dunwoody Industrial Institute in Minneapolis. Myron then worked for the Minnesota Highway Department and the Army Corps of Engineers. He surveyed the Newport and Seward, Alaska area after the 1964 earthquake.

He married the former Charlotte Marcott in Mundelein, Ill. in 1974.

Myron retired in 1986 from the Economic Development Agency in the U.S. Department of Commerce where he served as Chief Regional Agency Director.

He was a member of the L'Anse American Legion Post 144. Myron loved fishing, making wood, doing carpentry projects and crossword puzzles.

Mr. Dodge is survived by his loving wife, Charlotte; son, Richard Dodge of Traverse City; step-daughters, Johnne Smalley (Brian Hostak) of Colfax, Wis., Caryn (Thomas) Zappone of Dadeville, Ala. and Candace (Dale) Fenski of Colfax, Wis.; grandchildren, Madeline and Michael; step-grandchildren, William, Tina, Nicholas and Eric; brother, Willis (Donna) Dodge of Proctor, Minn.; and sister, Elizabeth (Howard) Jacobs of Duluth. Several nieces, nephews and cousins also survive.

He was preceded in death by a brother; two half brothers; and a half sister.

Memorial services for Mr. Dodge will be held at 1 p.m. Monday, July 28, 2008, at the waterfront in front of the L'Anse American Legion Post 144 with Judy Mattson officiating. The family will greet friends at the waterfront on Monday from 12 noon until time of the service. Baraga County Area Veterans, under the direction of the Baraga American Legion Post 444, will conduct military honors on the waterfront at 1:30 p.m. followed by a luncheon at the L'Anse American Legion Post 144.

Memorials in Mr. Dodge's honor may be directed to the American Cancer Society. Envelopes will be available at the Legion.

Mr. Dodge's obituary may also be viewed and condolences sent to the family at rfsc.net. The family has entrusted the Reid Funeral Service and Chapel, 'LAnse, with arrangements.

[NI08531] Enlisted WW II 30 October 1945 at Fort Snelling

[NI08538] Wayne L. Dodge, 64

Wayne L. Dodge, 64, of Lexington, died Sunday, October 26, 1997, at Lincoln General Hospital in Lincoln, Nebraska
He was born January 1, 1933, at Lexington to Ernest C. and Rose A. (Sladky) Dodge.
The family moved to Callaway as a young boy where Wayne attended school and graduated from the Calloway High School with the Class of 1950. He then entered the Army where he served his country during the Korean War rand as Corporeal. Following his stint in the Army, he attended Milford Technical School. He married Sheila Hendricks on June 13, 1959, at Upland, NE. While living in Calloway, Wayne worked in sales in Silver products. The couple's two girls, Beth and Bobbi, were born in Callaway. The couple then moved to Aurora in 1972 where Wayne was involved in sales and then to Lexington in 1992 where the couple managed the Minuteman Motel.
Wayne was a member of the Dawson Co. Travel and Tourism Committee and a
member os the VFW. Wayne's favorite hobbies included hunting, fishing and gardening.
Survivors include his wife, Sheila of Lexington; two daughters and their husbands, Beth and Ralph Medina of Fort Lauderdale, FL, and Bobbi and John Fox of Elwood; four brothers and wives, Ernest J. and LaVerne Dodge of Calloway, Dean and Gerry Dodge of Callaway, Gary and Karen Dodge of North Platte, NE and Dr. Terry and Vickey Dodge of Rockhill, South Carolina; three sisters, Wilma and Kenneth Thomas of Clay Center, KS, Evelyn Miller of Gothenburg and Elaine Nelson of Callaway; and three
grandchildren, Kristen Medina, Jessica and John Wayne Fox. He was preceded in death by his parents; a brother, Larry Dodge and a bother-in-law, Harold Miller.

[NI08540] Never Married.

[NI08550] Married her cousin, No Children

[NI08564] n Washington, D.C., where she was a mail reader for Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman and he was a uniformed officer with the Secret Service serving Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy.

Annie enjoyed singing, playing the piano and organ, and composing Christian songs. In 1993, she published a book of poetry entitled Unto Thee O Lord, and in 2000, she published her autobiography entitled The Journey God Meant for Good. She was an active member of First Baptist Church in Greenville

GREENVILLE – Graveside services for Annie Brister Dodge, 91, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at Greenlawn Memorial Gardens, Greenville.

She died Feb. 14, 2012, at the Good Samaritan Village, Mountain Home, Ark. Arrangements are under the direction of Mortimer Funeral Home, Greenville. Dr. James Nichols will officiate.

She was born on May 5, 1920, to John Wesley and Gladys McDonald Brister in Brookhaven. She and her husband, Charles S. Dodge, met in Washington, D.C., where she was a mail reader for Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman and he was a uniformed officer with the Secret Service serving Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy.

Annie enjoyed singing, playing the piano and organ, and composing Christian songs. In 1993, she published a book of poetry entitled Unto Thee O Lord, and in 2000, she published her autobiography entitled The Journey God Meant for Good. She was an active member of First Baptist Church in Greenville.

She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband; her sisters, Gertrude Harrison and Carrie Mae Brown; her step-son, Jim Dodge; and her step-daughter, Mary Lou Wolfram.

She is survived by her brother, John Wilson Brister of Salesville, Ark.; several nieces and nephews; and several step-grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

The Delta Democrat Times February 17, 2012

[NI08565] Johnstown Tribune-Democrat, Nov. 12, 1970
Hostetler Couple Mark Date
BEDFORD -- Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Hostetler celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Nov. 1 with a dinner and reception at the Holiday Inn here. Approximately 120 persons attended. Mr. Hostetler was born in Summit Mills, a son of the late Henry C. and Cora (Beeghley) Hostetler. His wife was born in Thayerville, Md., a daughter of the late James and Virginia (Chisolm) Dodge. They were married Nov. 6, 1920, in Cumberland, Md. The couple lived in Johnstown for 26 years before moving to Bedford County. Mr. Hostetler was a truck driver for Eastern Express for 15 years before he retired in 1965. The Hostetlers are avid automobile racing fans. They are the parents of nine children -- Elmer R., married to the former Dorothy Lucille Harvey, LaValle, Md.; Ellen Rebecca, married to Carl W. Stuver, Johnstown R.D. 3; Ernest R., married to the former Elvia Kimmell, Harrisonburg, Va.; Edna Ruth, wife of Richard Mitchell, Johnstown; Earl R., married to the former Betty Ross, Bowie, Md.; Eva R, wife of Melroy Petry, Johnstown; Eugene R., married to the former Naomi Mast, Silver Spring, Md.; Ervin R., married to the former Carol Grayson, Middlefield, Conn.; and Elinor Rosezella Hostetler, Bedford. All nine children were given the same initials as Mr. Hostetler -- E.R.H. There are 31 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

Johnstown Tribune-Democrat, Oct. 31, 1980
Hostetlers to note 60th
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Hostetler of 215 Ottawa St. will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary with a family dinner Sunday at the Encore Restaurant. Mr. Hostetler and the former Edith R. Dodge were married Nov. 6, 1920, in Cumberland, Md., by the Rev. M. L. Enders. Mr. Hostetler was born Oct. 26, 1900, in Summit Mills, the son of the late Henry and Cora Hostetler. Mrs. Hostetler was born Oct. 18, 1898, in Thayerville, Md., the daughter of the late James and Virginia Dodge. Mr. Hostetler retired in 1965 from Eastern Motor Express, Bedford. The couple and their nine children all have the same initials -- E.R.H. Their children are E. Randall, LaValle, Md.; Ellen R., wife of Carl Stuver, Johnstown; Ernest R., Harrisonburg, Va., Edna R., widow of the late Richard Mitchell, Johnstown; Earl R., Dallas, Tex., Eva R., wife of Melroy Petry, Johnstown; Eugene R., Silver Springs, Md.; Ervin R., Middlefield, Conn.; and Elinor R., wife of James Foster, Johnstown. There are 34 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren. The Hostetlers are members of the Second Brethren Church.

[NI08569] Had Several Children & Grreat Grand Children. Letter Carrier in WWI

[NI08571] Dean R. Dodge, Sr., 83, of Callaway, Nebraska, passed away, Thursday, August 7, 2014, at Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney.

Dean was born December 1, 1930, in Lexington, Nebraska, to Ernest and Rose (Sladky) Dodge, Sr. He attended school at Callaway and then two years at Milford Vocational Technical College. On February 5, 1951, he married Geraldine “Gerry” Relph at St. Boniface Catholic Church in Callaway.

Soon after, he was drafted into the United States Army, which took the couple to Fort Hood, Texas where they lived for two years. Following his honorable discharge as a Corporal, the couple moved back to Callaway then to Kimball. He worked as a diesel mechanic and farm/ranch hand. The couple returned to Callaway in 1968. Dean delivered propane and then fertilizer for COOP, and worked on appliances. His great love was woodworking and made many things for his family as well as helping build and remodel several structures in Callaway. He could build or fix almost anything. Following his retirement, if you could call it that, he helped local farmers with planting and harvesting.

Dean was a member of the Callaway Fire and Rescue Departments and attained his EMT certification. He was a member of St. Boniface Catholic Church, Knights of Columbus, VFW, and NRA. He had a great sense of humor, could find a joke or story to tell to almost anyone, loved going to the Casino, and keeping busy with his woodworking. He will be dearly missed.

Dean is survived by three sons and two daughters; Dean, Jr. and Sue Dodge of Fort Worth, Texas; Jim and Karen Dodge of Callaway, Nebraska; Mike and Debi Dodge of Fargo, North Dakota; Kathy and Pepper Dotson of North Platte, Nebraska; and, Bev and Rich Andre of Ogallala, Nebraska; special friend; Iris Anderson of Callaway, Nebraska; two brothers, Garry and Karen Dodge of North Platte, Nebraska, and Dr. Terry and Vicki Dodge of South Carolina; three sisters; Wilma and Kenny Thomas of Kansas; Evelyn Miller of Gothenburg, Nebraska; and, Elaine Nelson of Callaway, Nebraska; twenty-seven grandchildren, thirty-eight great-grandchildren, and three great-great-grandchildren; also surviving are many nieces, nephews, extended family and friends.

Dean was preceded in death by his parents; wife, Gerry; and three brothers, Ernie, Wayne and Larry.

Mass of Christian Burial will be Friday, August 15 2014, at 10:30 a.m. at St. Boniface Catholic Church in Callaway with Father Thomas Gudipalli officiating. Rosary will be recited on Thursday, August 14, 2014, at 7:30 p.m. at St. Boniface Catholic Church. Burial will be held at 2:00 p.m. at Fort McPherson National Cemetery at Maxwell, Nebraska with full military honors.

[NI08572] Lived at Red Bank Farm, Lewiston, New York

[NI08573] Born in Buffalo, New York

[NI08578] Married but no children.

[NI08580] Teacher in a High School in Seattle, Washington.

[NI08583] Married and had 2 Children.

[NI08595]

Zola I. Dodge of Rye, Colo., passed away Oct. 3, 2000. She is preceded in death by her loving husband of 67 years, Clifton Dodge, and son, Dan Dodge. She is survived by children, Chuck (Barbara) Dodge and Butch (Donna) Dodge; eight grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews. Zola was a past member of the Eastern Star. She enjoyed her life, dedicating it to raising her children and being a loving grandma. Funeral service, 1 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6, 2000, at Rye Home United Methodist Church. Interment to follow at Brookside Cemetery.

Pueblo Chieftain - October 04, 2000.

[NI08596] U S Navy Korea

[NI08603] World War I vet Pvt.

[NI08605] Mrs. Jane (Mitchum) Dodge worked at GE in Bridgeport, the former Robert Shaw Controls of Milford, the Dietary Department of Milford Hospital and was office manager of Daniel J. Dodge, Inc. She also was the owner of Fort Trumbull Bakery and Delicatessen, the "Pink Bakery."

She was a member of Fort Trumbull Volunteer Fire Company 2 Ladies Auxilliary.

[NI08611] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 50
THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE Daughters of the America Revolution
page 214

[p.214] Miss Jennie Pamelia Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 49488
Born in West Brookfield, Mass.
Descendant of Lieut. John Hitchcock, of Massachusetts.
Daughter of Joel H. Dodge and Susan M. Gleason, his wife.
Granddaughter of Lewis Gleason and Pamelia Makepeace, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Isaac Gleason and Ruth Burroughs, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of John Gleason and Azubah Hitchcock, his wife.
Gr-gr-gr-granddaughter of John Hitchcock and Thankful Burt, his wife.
John Hitchcock (1722-1807) served as lieutenant at the Bennington and Lexington Alarms. In 1778 he was appointed to look after the families of soldiers in Wilbraham. He was born in Springfield; died in Wilbraham, Mass.
Also Nos. 24811, 26906.

[NI08619] Ashley is Studying Forensic Science at Michigan State University

[NI08620] Brittany is studying at Macomb Community College.

[NI08649] Daniel died when he was 14 months old from pneumonia. He had long blonde
hair that was really curly.


Obituary

Lexington, Dawson County Herald, Sept. 8,1955

Death Claims Dodge Infant

Funeral services will be held this afternoon (Thursday) at 2:30 at the
Frist Presbyterian church for Daniel Harold Dodge, small son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Dodge, who died suddenly Monday afternoon, Sept. 5, at the
Lexington Community hospital. He was born in Lexington July 12, 1954.
Rev. Ralph Gerber will officiate at the services and burial will be in
Greenwood cemetery under the direction of the Pfeifer-Newman Funeral Home.
In addition to his parents, the infant is survived by one sister, Patrice
Marie, age 3; one brother, Douglas Kent, age 2; paternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Dodge of Kearney; maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Smith of Sacramento, Calif. and other relatives.

[NI08660] Johnny was about 3 months old when he died. Johnnie and Dannie are
buried side by side in the cemetery just north of Lexington, NE
(GreenWood). They're buried near their mother, Patricia and Great
Grandma Hudson, May Angie (Dodge).

[NI08662] Leslie Augustus Dodge, born 09 Aug 1891 in Halstead, Harvey County, Kansas
Entered Service from Richmond, Virginia; Apprentice Seaman; U. S. Navy; Died 12 Feb 1918

[NI08671] Amy graduated from school in Sacramento, CA. She moved to Jackson, TN.
and went to work for the Jackson Sun Newspaper as a dispatcher and moved
up the ranks from there. She moved to Kearney, NE in 1994, met Carter
and got married. They moved back to TN and had one more child. Amy
works for Larry Sturgis Properties. She went to school and recieved her
real estate license.

[NI08674] Living in Bushnell City, Illinois on the 1910 McDonough County census. George lived with his mother and step-father Thomas Jefferson Fuller until his mother died when he was 12 (abt 1843) and then he lived with his mother's brother, Isaac Wilson living near Princeton, Illinois.

[NI08690] Some spell this name Eleanor.

[NI08713] 1871 Canadian Census - Scotch, Hants, Nova Scotia
1881 Canadian Census - Scotch, Hants, Nova Scotia
1891 Canadian Census - Scotch, Hants, Nova Scotia
1901 Canadian Census - Scotch, Hants, Nova Scotia

[NI08725] Dawson County Herald. May 4, 1987

Obituary

Esther K. Dodge, 88, Dies Here Thursday; Rites Held Saturday

Services for Esther K. Dodge, 88, were held Saturday morning, May 2, at
the First United Methodist Church. The Rev. Art Ernst officiated at the
rites and interment was in Robb Cemetery south of Lexington,
Reynolds-Love Funeral Home in charge of arrangements.

Memorials are suggested to the First United Methodist Church.

Mrs. Dodge died Wednesday, April 29, at the Tri-County Hospital in
Lexington.
She was born Aug. 16, 1898, in Bloomfeld, Ill., to John and Sarah
(Stuzman) Mosher. She attended Bloomington Normal School and moved with
her parents and brother, Glen to Lexington in 1912, where she attended
Lexington High School. Dec. 26, 1916, she married Hugh A. Dodge in
Lexington. Five children were born to this union.
She was preceded in death by her parents and husband, Hugh, who dies June
12, 1969.
Survivorsinclude two sons, LeRoy Dodge of Highland, Calif., Roger Dodge
of Campbell, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Marjorie Hatting, Mrs.
Virginia Cumpston, both of Lexington and Mrs. Normalee Uhler of Ogallala.

[NI08748] Served 1st Lieutenant Company E, 13th Regiment, PVI, 3rd Bridgade, 1st Division, 2nd Army Corp, Spanish American War

[NI08775] 1870 Census, he is a Stock broker.

[NI08777] Adiel Yeaman Dodge, inventor, b. St. Louis MO 12/5/1891, s/o Adiel
Sherwood and Lucretia (Yeaman), m1. Geraldine Hopkins 10/1/1914,
children: Sherwood, Dorien Virginia, m2. Irma van Gorder 3/1/1933, last
loc. Rockford IL

[NI08796] This name is also spelled Willits.

The Underground Railroad on Long Island by Kathleen Velsor, History Press, 2013

On page 53 is this paragraph (circa1740's): "... Phebe Willets Mott married Tristram Dodge of Cow Bay. As was stipulated in the will, Tristram Dodge, a widower himself, and his son came to live at the Mott homestead. ... she continued her ministry, traveling to Quaker communities in New Jersey and England. She spoke out against slavery. In 1775 she was the first woman on Long Island to manumit her slave, Rachael."
Phebe Willets Mott Dodge was a friend and neighbor of Elias Hicks, a Quaker minister in Jericho, NY who led the the anti-slavery movement in the Quaker community on Long Island before the American Revolution. By 1791 the Westbury Friends Meeting he led recorded 154 manumissions of former slaves in Queens County. Elias Hicks traveled throughout New England, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana speaking out against slavery. Elias Hicks and his Hicksite Quaker followers set examples that helped to create the abolitionist movement in the United States.
Kathleen Velsor's book goes on to describe how the Quaker community developed stations in the Underground Railroad to assist runaway slaves from southern states escaping to Canada in the decades before the Civil War.
Best regards,
James R. Dodge

[NI08807] Spent his early life in Lewis Countyand came to Salisbury about 16 years before he died. He was the supervisor of the town of Salisbury and Ex Chairman of the Board.

[NI08830] Civil War military records confirm that he joined the Army in 1862 as a private and was discharged in 1865 as a Captain, and that he was in the US 18th Colored. Also that he was born in Jefferson County, Kentucky

His name is on the memorial of black soldiers and their officers who served in the Civil War .

18 April, 1859, the family left Iowa for Macon City, where Elizabeth Coons died and is buried. (Diary)


From: "History of Dallas County, Iowa, 1879, pp.438:
"Ordered, That an election be held in the village of Adel, at the court-house, on the 13th day of March. A. D. 1856, in order to take the census of the inhabitants, 'for incorporation' and 'against incorporation'; arid that N. B. Nichols, Leroy Lambert and M. F. Gerard be, and are hereby, appointed judges of said election; and that Wm. H. Dodge and J. Perkins be, and are hereby, appointed clerks of said election."

Have a photo of Senate of Kansas, 1867 and 1868 which shows him with a big, black beard.

He appears in William G. Cutler's "History of the State of Kansas", JACKSON COUNTY, Part 4, on County Officers: "The record of Jackson County in the war of the Rebellion is worthy of its name. It furnished commissioned, non-commissioned officers and privates.....William Henry Dodge and many others might be named as among the gallant band from the county.............District Clerk..... William H. Dodge, 1862......The Senators have alternated between the two counties, and in twenty-two years its eight Senators have been as follows: .........1867-1869, William H. Dodge, of Jackson."

Again, he appears in: "HIS FIRST FEE AND OTHER REMINISCENCES", By James W. Clark:
"THE writer hereof located in Great Bend November 6, 1884. During that month Judge Strang held his last term of court in this county, the same being the last court here as a part of the 16th judicial district. The sixteenth judicial district when it was created in 1881 consisted of the counties of Barton, Stafford, Pratt, Barber, Comanche, Edwards, Pawnee, Rush, Ness, Hodgeman, Ford, Clark Meade, Foote, Buffalo, Lane, Scott, Sequoyah, Arapahoe, Seward, Stevens, Grant, Kearney, Wichita Greeley, Hamilton and Stanton.
"In February, 1885, the 20th judicial district was created, and consisted of the counties of Barton, Rice, Stafford and Pratt. Hon. George W. Nimocks of the local bar was appointed as judge of this new district until the following election when Judge Clark was elected. The members of the Barton county bar at this time consisted of S. J. Day, W. H. Dodge, Joshua Clayton, James Clayton, Theo. C. Cole, E. C. Cole, Samuel Maber, William Osmond, C. F. Diffenbacher, Judge D. A. Banta, L. R. Nimocks, B. F. Ogle and the writer. The court docket was large, and most every little case was fought out to the finish with but few compromises or friendly settlements. The policy of the bar seems to have changed in this regard during more recent years. Now the attorneys and clients look upon lawsuits more as matters of business and seek just and fair settlements rather than unnecessary and expensive trials tinged with spite and vengence. "



He also appears in "Kansas Legislators Past and Present : surnames beginning with D", Compiled by Rita Haley, Sherri Schulte, Donna Copeland, Bill Sowers and Lois Delfelder:
Name: William Henry Dodge
Born: December 26, 1834 in Jefferson County, Kentucky.
Died:
Occupation: Lawyer
County: Jackson
Town: Holton
Party: Radical Republican
District: 6
Chamber: Senate 1867, 1868
Notes: Came to Kansas in 1861. Civil War veteran: 1st-- Company B, 11th Kansas. 2nd-- 18th U.S. Colored.
Source material: "Biographies of Members of the Legislature of 1861." found in: TRANSACTIONS OF THE KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 1907-1908. Topeka, Kan. : Kansas State Historical Society, 1908.

This last confirms that he is the same William Henry Dodge as our ancestor who left a diary of his Civil War experiences.

He moved to Shawnee, Oklahoma in 1896 with his third wife and their two children.
His Oklahoma death certificate, register no. 1032, states that his father's name was Henry, but I think that was wishful thinking on the part of his daughter. IN a letter to Orion, he very firmly states that Gen. Henry Dodge was a cousin to his father, Israel.

More About WILLIAM HENRY DODGE:
Burial: Fairview Cemetery, Shawnee, Oklahoma

Notes for ELIZABETH COONS:


When Elizabeth Coons Dodge died, her husband, William Henry Dodge, took their young son, Orion Virgil Dodge, to stay with a relative who could better care for the toddler. Alone and grieving, WHD began a diary written to his son, which he kept for about three years:

"November, 1st, 1860. My son, upon the 10th of last month your mother died. And you were just twenty months old, an orphan to be tempest tossed upon life's boisterous sea.Father concluded it would be to the advantage of us both that you should be taken to your aunt [WHD's sister] and there remainuntil Father could take you and administer to all your little wants. We.........travelled all the way by cars. You were a good boy and loved your father for it appeared you had transferred all your affecrtion to him, which was the result of your mother's long illness, and you -- poor soul -- were too young to know and realize her love for you. She was a Christian and died in the triumphs of a blessed immortality. She was scarce 24 years old and so pure, so innocent, she knew not the pride, envy, jealousy and depravity there exist in the world until it was forced upon her mind the last few years of our union, during which time fortune frowned upon us and misfortune appeared to claim us for her own. Poor soul, her only desire to live was to guard, nurture and protect you in your infantile moments. Oh! that she could have lived for that purpose, how much better would it have been for both of us. I would not the be deprived of your sweet step, your smile and little prattling tongue.................November 4th. I took a walk to your mother's grave today and OH! it is a lonely dreary place. Death dwells there -- a graveyard should not look so desolate -- the communnity should take more pride in beautifying and adorning the home of the dead that it mighht be a place for pleasant and agreeable resort. Right at the foot of your mother's grave stands a tree............Against this tree I stood and seen her placed down in the ground and listened to the crumbling and tumbling harsh sound of the earth as it enveloped her for the last time from mortal view. I stood there almost alone for we were among many strangers in a strange land and there were not many to commsole in the dark hour of adversity...........The thought that she followed me in my wanderings, so far from her friends and relations, was so devoted, and then to die and be buried so, no mother, father, brother or sister -- none but me to drop a tear of affection over her grave, was almost heart-rending. But I must not let such thoughts employ my pen so much. I was going to say that I stood by that tree tosay and thought and mused our Lizzie and of you........"

[NI08836] Murderd in Kansas City

[NI08838] Never married

[NI08839] Mrs Lillian Dodge, the wife of Orion Virgil Dodge of 2915 Charlotte Stret, vice presidnt of the Lucky Tiger Combination Gold Mining Company died at her home at 9:40 PM on 24 Aug 1914 following an illness of several months. She leaves her husband , her mother E. L. Doty and her 4 children. Per the Kansas City Times and the Kansas City Journal.

[NI08840] Recorded as Samuel Ritchey in 1850 census in Knox County, Abington twp,
Illinois

[NI08858] Lewis Warden "Lou" - 76, born in Brooklyn, Hants County, passed away September 26, 2006, in Calgary. He resided in Lawrencetown until moving to Calgary in the early 80s. He was a son of the late Warden and Hattie (Wood) Dodge. The years he spent in Nova Scotia, he was known as an avid auto mechanic. Surviving are brother, Angus (June) Dodge; sister, Inez Webster; daughters, Judy and Cindy; grandchildren, Jaye, Devin and Kandi; great-grandchildren, Megan, Marlee, Jacob, Kalyn and Elle.

[NI08864] ,

[NI08868] 2 March 2013

Harland Pray Dodge Jr.

Harland was born 26 April 1928 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the 3rd child of Harland P. Dodge Sr. and Helen Marr Delf.

Harland was a talented swimmer. His high school won the Michigan state championship in 1946. Harland was also a member of Michigan State’s national championship swim team in 1946.

He entered the Army immediately after turning 18 and served with the occupation troops in Japan from 1946 – 1948 at the end of WWII.

He married Carolyn Keppler in 1951 and they had three boys within three years. Harland moved everybody to Houston in 1960 because he saw more growth and opportunity in the south. He remained a Houston resident for the next 53 years.

Harland was a successful agent for Allstate Insurance for 30 years. But, his most successful role as a human being was that of care-giver. He got great satisfaction from being involved with and helping others. His checkbook showed donations to 100+ organizations over the two years prior to his death.

He developed congestive heart disease and his son Marc moved Harland to Austin, Texas for close family support during his last illness. Harland passed February 26, 2013 at 5:00PM in Austin. He was exactly two months short of his 85th birthday.

He died peacefully and without pain. His sons Gary and Marc were at his bedside when he took his last breath. Harland’s grand-dog Dodger had his nose resting on the bed when the end came.

Dad remained cheerful and upbeat throughout. The nursing caregivers all commented on his pleasant demeanor. This was consistent with his genius: caregiving.

Harland was cremated and his ashes scattered at Ipperwash Beach, Ontario. His family spent summers at Ipperwash for 90 years, so it was a very strong sentimental place for him.

Submitted by: Marc Dodge (son)

[NI08918] He deeded his farm to his son Isaac H. Dodge Jun 30 1809

[NI08929] Clinton P. Dodge, 46, of 15 Cooney Stet, residents of Somerville 13 years, died suddenly at work at the Leonard Tissue Company, Cambridge, on Monday. He leaves a stepson, Robert hickey of Westminster, Mass., a stepdaughter, Mrs. Margaret Stafford of Somerville, five grandchildren, and a brother, Earle Dodge of Somerville.
Funeral services will be held this afternoon at the funeral home of David Fudge and Son, Highland Ave. with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Everett, MA.

[NI08930] Diane H. Redden NEWINGTON – Diane H. Redden died peacefully at home on Thursday, July 14, 2011 surrounded by her loving family after a short illness.

Born in Somerville, MA on July 26, 1945, the daughter of the late Earl and Hazel (Sherren) Dodge she spent her early years in Somerville. Upon the death of her father her mother remarried and she moved with her family to Dover, NH. After graduating from Dover High School in 1964 she attended Garvin School of Hair Design. She then worked at Lyn's Looking Glass and later started her own business in Dover called Diane's Mane Concern. She gained great satisfaction from her eight years of service as assistant manager and coordinator for her fellow volunteers in the coffee shop at the Wentworth-Douglas Hospital, in Dover, NH.

Most recently she worked at JC Penny in Newington for thirteen years in sales and accounting. We Remember: First and foremost, Diane was a memory maker. Over forty years ago she started a tradition of gathering the family each Christmas Eve for a buffet and holiday celebration. Although the family has grown much larger this tradition continues. She loved to use her considerable culinary skills and creativity to create truly memorable gatherings for family and friends and was quick to include anyone who might otherwise be spending the holidays alone.

Diane had a way of knowing how to be helpful in difficult situations. She took a pause in her personal life to care for her mother during her final illness and then again in 2007 to care for her son, Tim and wife, Sue after a severe car accident. She was always ready to help family and friends with babysitting and had no greater joy than spending time with her grandchildren.

In even the most difficult situations Diane never lost her sense of humor. She knew how to put everyone at ease and loved to make people laugh. She will be greatly missed by her family and friends.

Diane is survived by her husband of forty-five years Thomas Redden Jr., her two sons, Tim Redden and his wife Sue of Dover NH, Thomas Redden the III of Newington NH; grandchildren Patrick and Allyson Redden of Dover NH and Taylor Redden of Charlotte North Carolina. Other survivors include her brother Clint Dodge and his wife Sandra of Barrington NH, her sister Greta (Dodge) Munton and her husband Steve of Portsmouth NH, her step-father Reece Allard of Dover NH, many nieces, nephews, cousins, and her aunt Alice of Borden, PEI Canada. She was predeceased by her brother, Kenneth Kingsley Dodge.

[NI08936] John William Albee, a well known business man of Roscoe died in the Horton Memorial Hospital , Middleton, on Sunday following an operation for internal obstruction
Albee Came to Roscoe 62 years ago. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Albee. His father still lives at the age of 96 and he the son passes out in the early 60's. Such are the certainties and uncertainties of life..

Mr. Albee was jeweler and optician and established a reputation for fine work and fair dealing, which followed him to the hospital and down the journey to the place he now calls home. "

He was affiliated with the Rockland Methodist church, the Masonic Lodge, for several years was a director of the Sullivan County Trust Company, director of the Livingston Manor Bank and vice-president of the Roscoe National Bank. Surviving him are his wife, Eva, daughters, Mary Miller, oi Montlcello; Marjorie Reynolds, Harvey Albee, Donald Albee and Ronald Albee of Roscoe. The funeral was on Tuesday at 2 o'clock and a multitude of mourners sorrow over his passing.
Republican Watchman, Sept 18, 1931

[NI08941] Resides Waverly, New York in 1904

[NI08975] Resides in Elmhurst, Queens County, New York.

[NI08979] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 98
page 124

Mrs. Alexandria Dodge Shannon.
DAR ID Number: 97392
Born in Bates County, Mo.
Wife of Martin James Shannon.
Descendant of Fielding Lewis, Capt. Fielding Lewis, Jr., Alexander Spotswood, and Augustine Washington, as follows:
1. Israel Alexander Dodge (1834-98) m. 1866 Frances Aurelia Weaver (1844-94).
2. Jeriel Dodge (1790-1839) m. 1815 Eliza Washington Spotswood (1794-1855).
3. Alexander E. Spotswood m. Elizabeth Lewis.
4. Alexander Spotswood m. Elizabeth Washington; Fielding Lewis, Jr., m. Nancy Alexander.
See No. 97391.
5. Augustine Washington m. 1743 Anne Aylett.
[p.124] Fielding Lewis, Jr. (1751-1803), commanded a company of Virginia militia during the Revolution. He was born in Fredericksburg; died in Fairfax County, Va.
Also No. 47380.
Augustine Washington was a member of the Virginia Assembly, 1778-80. He was born, 1720, at Bridges Creek, Va.
Also No. 78265.

[NI08997] Pfc US Army Worldd War II

[NI08998] died unmarried.

[NI09006] From the notes of D. M. Redman, 88 Ledgelawn Ave, Bar Harbor, Maine.

"Raymond was an engineer, and it has been told to me that he was also a tenor and violinist."

Born in Plantation 14, son of Joshua Warren and Jane (Shaw) Dodge; buried in Calais Cemetery, together with his daughter, Katie: Eastern Margin, Collins Lane, Block 38, Lot 5, Grave 5 [R. G. Dodge], Grave 4 [(Katie) Dodge]

[NI09007] She was a graduate of Washington State Normal School in Machias, ME

[NI09010] "William was born in 1832 and died in 1903. He married about 1860 Eleanor Smith, daughter of Haskell Wood and Deborah (Harriman) Smith of Cooper. (They are in the 1860 and 1870 Plantation 14 Census.) It is interesting to note that Deborah was the daughter of James and Deborah (Shaw) Harriman. Their children of whom we have record are Reliphenia (1861), James (1863-1941), and twins John Edgar and Joshua Everett. They were born on February 24, 1865. These twin brothers moved to Cooper, married sisters and each raised a large family there. John Edgar married Elmira Henderson and he died in 1950. Joshua Everett, who died in 1943, married Ella Henderson.

Many readers will remember a Dodge living in an old cape south of the Airline in Township 31. Today that building is just west of Pat Day's "Cloud 9" store. The 1900 census lists brothers James (37) and Lewis (23) as residents. Also living in the home was Eunice Gardner (17) and her infant son Neal. James and Lewis were sons of William and Eleanor (Smith)
Dodge of Plantation 14, listed above.

This place was the Moody homestead and was of 25 acres. The Charles Higgins family lived here prior to 1864, when they sold to Nathan Longfellow. Heirs of Nathan sold to James Dodge, a bachelor, in 1900. The
heirs of James and his brothers, John Edgar and Joshua Everett, sold theplace to John R. Sullivan in 1941 and his family owned it until recently."

[NI09011] E-mail from Nancy Dodge Bryan (nlbryan@comcast.net) to David James (jamesdm49@aol.com), dated 10 Sep 2006:

Hi, David,

I just discovered your website. Walter B. Dodge and Nellie J. Harrison were my great-grandparents. My father is Walter Lee Dodge and his father was Karl A. Dodge, a son of Walter and Nellie not listed on your site. I would like our family to be included and would like to know if that's possible and what format you would prefer. I use the Family Tree Maker Program.

One of the things I have been working on is who were the natural parents of Nellie. We knew from family history that her last name was Judge. So her real parents were not Jessie Harrison and Nellie Hooper Harrison. I have found and copied Nellie J's birth and adoption records. She was born Ellen Judge in the Tewksbury (Mass) Almshouse on June 14, 1874. Her parents were Annie (Kelly) Judge and Robert Judge (both born in Ireland) but according to Annie's intake interview, Robert died on Oct. 6, 1873 (I was unable to find a death record). Annie and Ellen Judge were discharged on May 24, 1875 and Annie found work as a cook living at the Cullis Consumptive Home in Dorchester. Subsequently Nellie was taken to the Temporary Home for the Destitute on July 1, 1875 because her mother was unable to care for her. Her mother signed adoption papers, and the next day, July 2, 1875, she was taken by William and Margaret Harrison of Edmunds, Maine. She was adopted by them (Suffolk Probate Court) on January 30th, 1878 and her name was changed to Nellie J. Harrison.

Regards,

Nancy Dodge Bryan

Father: Robert JUDGE b: in Ireland
Mother: Annie H. KELLY b: ABT 1848 in Co. Sligo, Ireland

Adoptive Father: William Kilby HARRISON b: 4 JUN 1824 in Plantation No. 3 [Charlotte], Washington, ME
Adoptive Mother: Margaret Elizabeth BRIDGES b: 17 FEB 1830 in Charlotte, Washington, ME

[NI09014] Enlisted World War I USN Portland Maine, Aug. 2 1918. AS 74 days; Sea 2c 27 days. Served at: NTS Newport RI Aug. 2 1918 to Sept. 14 1918; Naval Hospital Newport RI Sept. 14 1918 to Sept. 28 1918; NTS Newport RI Sept. 28 1918 to Oct. 15 1918; RS at Boston Mass Oct. 15 1918 to Nov. 11 1918. Disch, RS Boston, Mass.: May 15, 1919.
Roster~Navy

[NI09029] James Manning Dodge
Memorial Photos Flowers Edit
Learn about sponsoring this memorial...
Birth: Jan. 13, 1848
Whiteside County
Illinois, USA
Death: Jul. 31, 1885
Logan
Phillips County
Kansas, USA

James Manning Dodge was the son of William Franklin Dodge and Catharine ("Kate") Magby Dodge. He married Abby Louisa Upton on June 22, 1871, in Morrison, Whiteside County, Illinois. They were they parents of Pearl Elisabeth Dodge (Rumble). Abby died in October of 1872. James married Emily E. Davis in 1875. They were the parents of Ruby B. Dodge, Ernest Lyndon Dodge, Ada Pearl Dodge (Peak), and Goldie Isadore Dodge (Ingersoll). James died on July 31, 1885, the victim of a gunshot wound inflicted upon him four days earlier on the main street of Logan, Kansas.


Burial:
Old Logan Cemetery
Logan
Phillips County
Kansas, USA

Created by: Randy Rumble
Record added: Aug 15, 2008
Memorial# 2904890


[NI09061] Union
State Served:Illinois
Unit Numbers: 369 369
Service Record:Enlisted as a Private on 04 November 1861
Enlisted in Company E, 46th Infantry Regiment Illinois on 01 December 1861.
Died Company E, 46th Infantry Regiment Illinois on 04 May 1862 in Columbus, OH



1. Columbus8 Dodge (William F.7, Charles6, Charles5, Amos4, David Britain3, John2, Tristram1) was born Abt. 1844 in Whiteside County, Illinois1, and died 04 May 1862 in Columbus, Ohio.

He died in the Civil War.

Notes for Columbus Dodge:
Union
State Served: Illinois
Unit Numbers: 369 369
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 04 November 1861
Enlisted in Company E, 46th Infantry Regiment Illinois on 01 December 1861.
Died Company E, 46th Infantry Regiment Illinois on 04 May 1862 in Columbus, OH

More About Columbus Dodge:
Burial: Grove Hill Cemetery, Whiteeside County, Illinois

Columbus Dodge
Memorial Photos Flowers Edit
Learn about removing the ads from this memorial...
Birth: Jan. 19, 1844
Whiteside County
Illinois, USA
Death: May 7, 1863

Son of William F. Dodge and Catharine Magby Dodge


Burial:
Grove Hill Cemetery
Morrison
Whiteside County
Illinois, USA

Created by: Randy Rumble
Record added: Dec 27, 2008

[NI09062] Resides in California in 1910

[NI09068] DOB Also 22 Sep 1834 & 1838. Mary is listed as age 32 on the 1860
Plantation #14 Census.

[NI09072] the census for 1790--1840 and Gideon shows up first on the 1830 with:
1830 1 male under 5, 1 20-30, 1 female 20-30.
1837 2 m-f under 4, 2male 4-21, 2 21 and over
1840 1 male under 5, 1 male 10-15, 1 male 30-40, 2 free males 5-10, note there is no wife.
Hope this helps more than confuses.

[NI09076] From notes of D. M. Redman, 88 Ledgelawn Ave, Bar Harbor, ME:

As of March, 1987, no birth record has been found. Birthplace has been ascribed by various researchers as Seal Harbor (Isleboro), Waldo, ME; Seal Harbor (Mt. Desert Island), Hancock, ME; Seal Harbor, Guysborough, NS and Wilmot, Cumberland, NS. As Joshua's father lived on Islesboro, that seems the most likely place.

Joshua (b. 1804) is believed to be buried in Dennysville on the old Dodge homestead, but no stone.

In 1830, Joshua Dodge is listed in the Edmund, ME, tax records.

Joshua was a prosperous farmer in the Dennysville, Edmunds, Cooper area.

[NI09081] George was the son of Joshua and Jane (Shaw) Dodge of Plantation #14 and Dennysville.

George married Mary Benner daughter of John Haskell Benner and Mary Ann Whitney of Dennysville. They married September 3, 1851 and had children: Son George married Nellie Preston and after her death married Ada B. Mercier and resided in Edmunds; Frank married Laura A. Ward and resided in Pembroke; John married Josie Abbott and resided in Edmunds; Alfred married Cora Lyons and resided in Pembroke; Jennie L. Dodge married "John" Sylvanis Davis; "Lizzie "(Elizabeth) married Joseph E. Davis; Lillie May married William H. Sylvia, and sons Hiram who was age 7 in the 1870 census and Walter B. who was age 3 in the 1870 census and perhaps others.

George was a lumberman and carpenter. In the 1880 census in Dennysville George W. and wife Mary H. were both 49 and residing with them were children George T. age 19, Hiram E. age 17, Lillie M. 14, Walter M. 12, Lizzie M. 9, and Jennie 6.

He died at age 66 in Dennysville of heart disease. Death record indicates buried in Dennysville. His wife Mary survived him and died in 1904.

[NI09098] Raymond Linwood Dodge, 59, died unexpectedly Friday at his work in the grocery store of his brother, Malcolm Dodge at Lubec.

He was born at Belfast, Aug. 13, 1906, son of Walter B. and Nellie (Harrison) Dodge. He lived the early part of his life in Lubec before moving to Eastport, where he conducted a grocery store for several years before moving to Malden, Mass., returning to Lubec in 1965.

Surviving are his widow, Eva (Camic) Dodge of Lubec; one daughter, Mrs. John Shaw of Bolton, Mass.; one son, Raymond P. Dodge of Medford, Mass.; one brother, Malcolm Dodge; two sisters, Mrs. Grace Hodgins and Mrs. Virginia McGowan of Lubec; and four grandchildren.

[NI09103] Note: Census records state his father was born in Vermont,
his mother was born in New York.

1870 US Census - Chico, Butte County, California
1880 US Census -
1900 US Census - Humbolt, Butte County, California
1910 US Census - Humbolt, Butte County, California
1920 US Census - Forest Ranch, Butte County, California
1930 US Census - Chico, Butte County, California

[NI09104] Civil War soldier; apparently died shortly after his discharge (see below).

Per D. M. Redman: Guardianship papers for Alfred's two daughters, 3 Aug 1864, Ellsworth, by mother for Dr. Geo. Parcher appt. guardian, so girls could get survivor pension, as both girls under age 14. Probate Docket 2859.

================

American Civil War Soldiers Record

Name: Alfred Dodge
Residence: Plantation No 14, Maine
Enlistment Date: 06 December 1861
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: Maine
Unit Numbers: 1029 1029
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 06 December 1861 at the age of 26
Enlisted in Company A, 15th Infantry Regiment Maine on 06 December 1861.
Discharged Company A, 15th Infantry Regiment Maine on 15 June 1863

Source Information: Historical Data Systems, comp. Military Records of Individual Civil War Soldiers. [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 1999-. Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA from the following list of works.
Copyright 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 - Historical Data Systems Inc.P.O. Box 196 Kingston, MA 02364

[NI09112] No issue. Died young

[NI09129] Died at 24y, 11m, 9d. Was reported to be single

[NI09132] Prior to his demise he was a resident of Marion. He died at 33 y, 1 m, 4d,

[NI09144] Died 18y, 4m, 5d.

[NI09149] LUBEC -- Malcolm H. Dodge, 72, died Dec. 20, 1982, at a Machias hospital. He was born in Lubec, April 23, 1910, the son of Walter B. and Nellie (Harrison) Dodge. He was a prominent Lubec business man for the past 52 years and owned [and] operated Dodge's store at its present location in Lubec for 37 years. He was a a Navy veteran of World War II and a member of the Congregational Church in Lubec. He is survived by his wife, Mary (Tyler) Dodge of Lubec; one daughter, Mrs. Robert (Linda) Doran of Lubec; two grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. Friends may call at his residence on County Road in Lubec, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m., Wednesday. Funeral services will be held 2 p.m. Thursday at the Congregational Church in Lubec with the Rev. Richard Freeman officiating. Interment will be in Olson Cemetery, Lubec.

[NI09153] Karl A. Dodge, 73, of Mountain Road died Sunday at a Concord hospital.

He was born in Lubec, Maine, a son of Karl A. Sr. and Helen Ramsdell Dodge.

He was a 1940 graduate of Lubec High School and attended the University of Maine at Machias. He was Maine's high-jump champion in 1941 and later pitched for the Boston Braves.

Mr. Dodge worked for the National Biscuit Co. of Methuen, Mass., for 40 years, retiring in 1984. He enjoyed gardening.

He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Barbara Mawhinney Dodge of Concord; two sons, David W. of West Yarmouth, Mass., and Stephen M. of Canterbury; four daughters, Jane Elizabeth Vincent of Falmouth, Maine, Carol Dodge of Canterbury, Jennifer Gulluni of Somers, Conn., and Cynthia L. Dodge of Concord; a brother, W. Lee Dodge of Ashville, N.C.; and nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

[NI09165] He was known as "Will" or "Uncle Bill." He was able to work as a Blacksmith up until his death at the age of 82 years of age.

[NI09200] Civil War Union Army Officer. He was commissioned as Colonel and
commander of the 87th New York Volunteer Infantry on November 19, 1861.
He led his command during the Spring 1962 Peninsula Campaign, and was
wounded and captured at the May 31, 1863 Battle of Fair Oaks (Seven
Pines), Virginia (it was erroneously reported he was killed, and New York
City newspapers ran obituaries for him in June 1862). He was imprisoned
in Richmond's infamous Libby Prison until he was paroled on July 17,
1862, Buried Evergreen Cemetery Brooklyn NYPlot: Mount Lebanon Section, Lots 41-42

[NI09204] Civil War Union Army Officer. Captain, Company C, 13th New York Volunteer Infantry

[NI09205] Served in one of the New York City Regiments and in the 13th New York State Militia.

[NI09238] 1930 Great Neck, Nassau, New York
Willis E. Dodge, 69, formerly of Princeton, and pastor of the Pittsfield Federated Church in Pittsfield, Vt., died June 10 in Auburn, Maine, while he and Mrs. Dodge were visiting her brother, Henry Dunn.

Mr. Dodge was born in Calais, but, from the age of nine, his youth was spent in Princeton, where he was educated in the public schools.

He was an honor graduate of Hebron Academy, and of Bowdoin College, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year.

He served as principal of Princeton High School, as well as superintendent of the Congregational church school for several years. He was principal of Branford, Conn., High School and during World War I was in chemical warfare service at Lakewood, N.J.

He was also principal of the high school in Great Neck, Long Island, N.Y., for several years, and then superintendent of the entire school system, remaining there for thirteen years.

In 1942, he accepted the position of instructor in Latin and Greek in Western Reserve Academy, a private school for boys, in Hudson, Ohio, where he remained until his retirement in 1954.

After retiring, Mr. Dodge, still desirous of following some useful occupation, accepted the pastorate of the Federated Church in Pittsfield, Vt., where he served until his sudden death from a coronary attack.

He is survived by his wife, the former Florence Dunn of New Gloucester, Me.; a brother-in-law, Henry Dunn; and several nieces and nephews.

Funeral services were held in his church June 14, with the Rev. Mr. Webster of the Vermont Congregational Conference officiating.

Relatives from Princeton who attended the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Elsemore and son, Dennis, and Mr. and Mrs. Morey Hunnewell of Alexander.

[NI09242] 1 Title: The Ancestry of Annis Spear 1775-1858 of Litchfield Maine
Author: Walter Goodwin Davis
Publication: Portland ME, Southworth-
Note: ABBR R3 import #65484097REFN 61DATE 2 JUN 2001
Repository:
Note: New England Historic Genealogical Society
2 Title: Vital Records from the Eastport Sentinel of Eastport, Maine 1818-1900
Author: Maine Genealogical Society Special Publication No. 24, edited by Kenneth L. Willey
Publication: Picton Press, Camden, Maine, 1996
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Book
Page: p. 427
Text: Vol. 71 #40, 11 Sep 1889, Marriages: In Cooper, 23 Aug 1889, by Rev. S. M. Small, Joshua E. P. Dodge to Ella H. Henderson b/o Cooper

[NI09243] Leroy Elmore Dodge, Birth Place: Cooper, Maine; Birth Date: 06 May 1891; Residence: Cooper; Comment: Ind: Calais, Washington County, Jan. 23 1918. Disch on SCD: Jan. 25, 1918.

[NI09286] Unmarried

[NI09288] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as ".
[Tristram.FTW]

[NI09292] Death; LFNL, Vol 2, #2, p. 28. Age at death, 19 years, 11 mos, 29 =

[NI09302] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "La Grippe". Living with son, Alden and
family at the time of the 1875 RI Census.

[NI09308] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 47
page 174

Mrs. Mamre Dodge Bailey.
DAR ID Number: 46389
Born in Buffalo, N. Y.
Wife of Charles Henry Cady Bailey.
Descendant of Corp. Daniel Lowrey and of Sergt. Jesse Weed.
Daughter of Leonard Dodge and Emily Patty Hotchkiss, his wife.
Granddaughter of Hiram Hotchkiss and Mamre A. Lowrey, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Thomas Lowrey and Martha Weed, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Daniel Lowrey and Anna Monson, his wife; Jesse Weed and Anna Rice, his wife.
Daniel Lowrey (1749-1819) was a private at the siege of Boston under Capt. Selah Heart, and subsequently served as corporal. He was born and died at Farmington.
Jesse Weed (1746-1843) served as corporal in Capt. David Smith's company, 1776, and as sergeant, 1777, under Capt. Matthew Mead. He was born and died at Plymouth.
Also Nos. 8496, 14478.

Note:Anna Monson mentioned above is Anna Munson per mor recent records.

[NI09311] Living with dau. Betsy Dodge and husband Enoch Rodgers, at age 88 in New York. WOODWARD spells the name Libbeus.

[NI09313] Howard M. Dodge, Serial Number: 2723554; Residence: Cooper; Comment: Ind: Calais, Washington County, May 27 1918. Private. Org: Btry E 301 FA to disch. Overseas: July 16 1918 to Jan. 5 1919. Hon disch on demob: Jan. 18, 1919.

[NI09315] [Littlefield.FTW]

Listed as living with parents and wife at the time of the 1875 RI =

[NI09318] Livermore's History of Block Island, Rhode Island, 1877, =

[NI09319] Livermore's History of Block Island, Rhode Island, 1877, =

[NI09320] WHITINGHAM- Helen D. Dix, 83, a resident of School Street, died Sunday, August 12, at Grace Cottage Hospital in Townshend. Mrs. Dix was born in Whitingham on September 14, 1928, the daughter of Percy and Hazell (Vose) Dodge. She received her education in Whitingham schools, graduating from Whitingham High School. Mrs. Dix graduated from Castleton Normal School, and then attended Johnson State, receiving her bachelor's degree in education. Mrs. Dix began her teaching career in a one-room school house in Whitingham, then went on to teach in Readsboro, Wilmington, and the Woodbury Elementary School. She was a member of American Legion Post 17 Auxiliary, enjoyed spending time with her family, crafts, knitting, crocheting, reading, and was an avid Boston Red Sox baseball fan.

Mrs. Dix is survived by her children, June Tool and her husband Robert, of Readsboro, Susan Sullivan and her husband Richard, of Franconia, NH, and Linda Tarinelli and her husband Charles, of Belgrade, MO; her brothers, Ralph Dodge, of Florida, MA, Ray Dodge, of Kenewick, WA, and Roy Dodge, of Othello, WA; her grandchildren, Carrie and Philip Cromack, Kathleen and Elizabeth Sullivan, and Haley Tarinelli; and her great- grandchildren, Nicholas Rubino, Brandon Rice, and Rain Gilbert. Her husband Sanford Dix, whom she married in Whitingham, on June 11, 1947, died January 22, 2009.

A celebration of the life of Mrs. Dix will be held Friday, August 17, at 11 am at the Community Church of Whitingham.

Pastor John Brigham will conduct the service. Interment will follow in the family lot in Sadawga Cemetery in Whitingham.

[NI09323] Death; LFNL, Vol 2, #2, p.28. Age at death, 8 years, 4 mos, 13 =

[NI09324] Birth;Death; LFNL, Vol 2, #2, p. 28.

[NI09327] Buried , Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI

[NI09328] Buried: Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI

Will: New Shoreham Probate Records July 29, 1848 Book D Page 36-7

[NI09329] Buried: Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI[Littlefield.FTW]


Newport County, RI Births from Death records lists birth date as Aug = and
death date as Dec 1, 1863

[NI09334] Birth Certificate: New Shoreham Town Book 5, Page 462
Death Certificate: New Shoreham Book 1, Page 8

[NI09339] Death Certificate: New Shoreham Book 1, Page 5

[NI09353] Cause of death listed as "Senile Paralysis".

Newport County, RI Births from Death Records has birth date as April 1812

Some Records say his first name was Samuel.

[NI09355] Newport County, RI Births from Death Records has birth listed as Apr =

[NI09358] Buried: Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI

[NI09359] Mark & Wealthy settled on a farm south of Samuel Pendleton, near the bonnet Point, where they built their house later owned by Capt. Warren. They were enumerated in the 1850 Census at Northport, Waldo County, Maine.

[NI09360] Buried , Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI

[NI09372] Listed with son, Andrew and wife in 1915. Age listed as 69.
Cause of death listed as "Lobar Pneumonia".
Living at 38 Brewer Street in Newport at time of death.

[NI09373] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Chronic Diarrhea".

[NI09377] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Grippe/ Broncho-pneumonia".

[NI09385] [Littlefield.FTW]

Listed as "Insane" at the time of the 1865 RI Census.

[NI09389] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Disease of Liver".

[NI09394] Died Young.

[NI09396] In abt 1877 George nad his wife left Iowa and went to Texas to start a
cattle ranch for their three stockyards in Western Iowa. They were
accompanied by other family members, i.e., George's brother Henry Gilmore
and his wife, and Adelia's siter Mary "Emiline" Dodgeand her husband
Charlie Hall.

[NI09406] Ann is given as a daughter of of Tristram in Austins Gen Dic. Pg. 66. In view of the above record in the Rathbun Gen. this statement would seem to be in error. New Shorham records say Ann Dodge m. 11 Nov 1686, John Rathbun Jr., d. 1723, son of John, d. 1702 and Margaret Rathbun. The Rathbun Gen. says Ann was second wife and adds that her father settled on Block Islandin 1662 and. in 1723, but fails to mention his name.

[NI09410] Robert Bushnell, Steve Bushnell's father, recalled that William was a street and road contractor who put in many of the streets and sidewalks in Oelwein, IA. Many of the sidewalks were stamped with his name

[NI09416] They settled in Oneida, IA where Dick's mother, Adeline Harvey Dodge, was living with them at the time of her death in 1913. They later moved to Oelwein, IA where they lived out the remainder of their lives. He always slept with a loaded gun under his pillow. Possibly a hold over from his Texas Experiencee.

[NI09418] He sailed from New York, mate of the schooner Empress, of Taunton

His house was where the house of the late Captain Elisha K. Pendleton now stands in Islesboro, Maine. When the war of the revolution commenced, Stephen was serving in the British Navy, under Capt. Hendy, and was retained three years. He got his discharge by taking oath of parole, and then returned to Islesboro, where he found employment shipping wood to Cape Cod from Pendleton's Cove. He was six feet one inch high, and weighed two hundred pounds; was noted for his great muscular ability. After the war he was employed by the British to assist Capt. Hendy in surveying the line between Maine and New Brunswick, Nova Scotia. He purchased eight hundred acres near St. Andrews. He was living in New Brunswick when the War of 1812 commenced. He then returned to his home in Islesboro, joined an American privateer, and was in several engagements; taken prisoner, paroled, and returned to Islesboro, where he lived until 1827. He took an active part in all that helped to build up the town, more especially in building the roads. He was a member of the Baptist church.
History of Islesborough, John P. Farrow, 1893, page 252-3.

[NI09442] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

[NI09443] Served in Co. C of the Mormon Battalion of the Missouri & Iowa Volunteers in Mexican War.

Augustus Erastus Dodge, a member of the Mormon Battalion, Company C. He was baptized march 15. in Missouri, by Jacob Gates, worked on theKirtland Temple, was a prisoner with his father and others at the surrender ofFar West for eight or ten days, and was one of those that were driven from their homes in winter and suffered much. His father died in 1843 and hismother in 1845. He assisted in building the Nauvoo House and Temple; helped William Clayton and others to convey Church property to Mr. Pisgah and arrived in Council Bluffs July 15, 1846, started the next day on his march to California with the Battalion, and when crossing the Arkansas River he had his ankle mashed, but continued down the Rio Grande and on to California, striking the Pacific Ocean near San Diego. After staying there for six weeks he marched to Los Angeles where the members of the Battalion were discharged in 1847. He crossed the Coast Range to Sacramento, then across the Sierra Nevada and the desert to Fort hall, and from there to Salt Lake City, arriving December 23, 1847. He helped establish the ferry at Green River in 1849. Settled Sanpete Valley that year, and wa called to settle Dixie in 1861.
Note:
A company leaving Salt Lake Valley with provisions for the Manti colony, hadtwo Indian guides to help them on their way. On finding the snow so deep it seemed impossible to get through, Augustus Dodge, and one of the Indian guides, Tabinaw, undertook the journey up the canyon and over the divide on
top of several feet of frozen snow, occasionally breaking through. Mr. Dodge became so exhausted that he had to give up, but the Indian continued to the manti settlement, informing them of the difficulties encountered in trying to get the supplies through. Daniel Funk made a large hand sled and some
snowshoes and a party of men soon set out to relieve the situation. Some rescued Mr. Dodge, while others went on to the supply wagons and before longthey were all safely brought to camp.

[NI09445] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cerebral Softening".

[NI09452] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Died in the R.I. State Infirmary. Cause of death listed as
"Senile Dementia".

[NI09453] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Myocarditis (Chronic)". Married at =

[NI09467] Died Young.

[NI09479] Died Young.

[NI09482] Wallace E. Dodge, Serial Number: 2723569; Birth Place: Cooper, Maine; Birth Date: 01 Apr 1896; Residence: Cooper; Comment: Inducted: Calais, Washington County, 27 May 1918. Private. Org: Company A 303 MG Bn to 26 Aug. 1918; MG Company 26 Inf to 28 Jan.1919; MG Company 26 Inf to discharge. Eng: St Mihiel; Meuse Argonne; Army of Occupation. Overseas: July 8/18 to Sept. 4/19. Honorable discharge on demobilization: Sept. 27, 1919.

[NI09484] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Mitral Insufficiency (Cardiac) also
Cirrhosis of liver".

[NI09485] [Littlefield.FTW]

[uuu.FTW]

Cause of death listed as "Cardiac Insufficiency (Mitral) & =

[NI09486] William L. Dodge, 87, of Bruceton Mills, died Sunday, Nov. 12, 2000, at Prince Georges Hospital, Cheverly, MD.
He was born Jan. 4, 1913, in Terra Alta, son of the late Stanley and Mattie LuRay Dodge.
He was a member of the Sugar Valley United Methodist Church.
He is survived by his wife, Ruby Hazel Feather Dodge, of Bruceton Mills; a daughter and spouse, Carolyn and Joseph Eberhard of Bowie, MD; a grandson, Joseph Eberhard Jr., of Bowie; a granddaughter, Kimberly Jones, of Woodbridge, V A; and six great-grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by a sister, Elizabeth DeBerry; and two brothers, Willard Glenn Teets and Reese Dodge.

[NI09495] She was named after her mother and her mother's favorite sister. She was less than a year old when her parents moved to Volga City, Mallory Twp., Clayton County, IA. While her parents were farming in Volga CIty two more siblings were born there, her sister Phoebe in 1854 and her brother Bert in 1856. After eleven years in Minnesota, during which one more brother and three more sisters were born, she moved back to Mallory Twp, IA with her family at the age of 16 in 1869. It was about this time that she met her future husband, Jesse Gilmore (1852-1910), who was a year older than she and who lived in nearby Colesburg, IA in Delaware County. They married in 1871, farmed in Colesburg for five or six years, but they left Iowa for Texas via covered wagon in 1876 ,and moved to Ft. Worth, TX where her parents had moved in 1876. and returned to Iowa by 1885. While in Colesburg they had two daughters:

[NI09507] [Littlefield.FTW]

[NI09508] Newport County, RI Births from Death records lists birth date as Dec =

[NI09512] Newport County, RI Births from Death records lists birth date as Mar =

[NI09523] [Littlefield.FTW]

Living with nephew, Joshua T Dodge and family at the time of the = Census.

Buried Old Cemetary, New Shoreham, RI

Newport County , RI births from Death records list 1921 for =

[NI09533] Oneida News. Survivor Of Indian War.... Mrs. Adeline Dodge passes away at Oneida, was Witness of Indian atrocities on the frontier... Adaline Harvey was born Dec. 25, 1832 in New York and died at the home of her son dick at Oneida Dec. 20, 1913 at the age of 81 years. At an early age she came with her parents to Big Fort, Prairie Wisconsin. She married Trustum dodge November 27, 1855 at Marengo, Ill. They then removed form Illinois to Volga City, Clayton County Iowa where they lived 5 years. They then lived eleven years enduring all the hardships of a new county and the Civil War.

They moved to Minnesota when the Indians were massacring only seven miles form their home. She lived in a fort with her five small children for weeks.

In 1869 they moved to Oneida where they lived the remainder of Thier lives except for 7 years spent in Texas. The husband died eight years ago the 27th of December. Since his death she has made her home with her children, coming to her sons's Marvin Tristram Dodge two months and two weeks ago where she passed quietly away December 20. Then children were born to her, all of whom survive her and were here to attend the funeral except three daughters living in California

[NI09537] James M. Clendennen has throughout his life worked untiringly and persistently and has also lived economically and the result of his industry and thrift is seen in the well improved farm which he owns in Oneida township. He is a native son of that township, born on the 27th of March, 1865 of the marriage of James and Johanna (Sparks) Clendennen, natives of Pennsylvania and Scotland respectively. The father came to Iowa in the early '50s and located in Oneida township upon a farm which he purchased. On the 20th of October, 1890, he answered the last call and his demise was sincerely regretted by his many friends. The mother was brought to this county by her parents when a small child, and the family home was subsequently established in Delaware county, where her marriage occurred. She survives her husband and makes her home in Colesburg, this state. Of the eight children born to Mr. and Mrs. James Clendennen seven survive.
James M. Clendennen remained at home with his parents until he was twenty years of age and when not busy assisting his father with the farm work attended the local schools in the acquirement of his scholastic education. Upon leaving home he became a farm hand in the employ of William Hockaday, but after a few years rented the old homestead. After cultivating the home farm under lease for twenty years he purchased the eighty acre tract on section 10, Oneida township, where he now resides. The land is of great natural fertility, is in a high state of cultivation and produces good crops annually. He makes a specialty of dairy farming, but also raises grain for sale. He has improved his place with a number of substantial buildings and keeps everything in excellent repair, so that the property presents a pleasing appearance and deterioration and waste are prevented.
Mr. Clendennen was united in marriage in 1894 to Miss Ida Dodge, a native of Clayton county, Iowa, born on the 10th of January, 1872. Her parents were Trustum and Adaline (Harvey) Dodge, the former a native of Canada and the latter of New York. In an early day in the history of this state they removed to Clayton county, but both passed away in Delaware county. Ten children were born to their union and all survive. Mr. and Mrs. Clendennen have two daughters: Aggie Belle, born December 11, 1895, and now a student in the high school at Manchester; and Nettie E., whose birth occurred September 7, 1903. The parents are faithful attendants of the Congregational church.
Mr. Clendennen is a republican and has served as a school director, having at heart the best interests of the educational system of the county. All of his life has been passed in this county, and he has so consistently conformed his conduct to high ethical standards that those who have known him intimately since boyhood are his stanchest friends and esteem him most highly.

[NI09553] May 5, 1869, Mr. Dodge married Emily P. Hotchkiss, daughter of Hiram
Hotchkiss of Buffalo. Mrs. Dodge died December 31, 1872, leaving one
daughter, Mamre E., who married Charles H. Bailey of Buffalo,

[NI09565] Per D. M. Redman: Guardianship papers for Alfred's two daughters, 3 Aug
1864, Ellsworth, by mother for Dr. Geo. Parcher appt. guardian, so girls
could get survivor pension, as both girls under age 14. Probate Docket
2859.

[NI09576] Died, at age 25 yrs, 3 mos, 14 days, From George Rogers e-mail:
georgog@adelphia.net He states that Claridda died from complications
resuulting from young Clarissa's birth. Also that she is buried under
the parking lot of the Congregational Church on the corner of Pulteney
St. & Prichard Ave. in Corning, Steuben County, New York.

[NI09577] plot: Section L, Lot 16 in Cemetery

[NI09579] Obituary, Bangor Daily News, 7 Jul 1950, p. 20:
Merton James
Princeton, July 6 -- Merton James, 67, died suddenly today at his residence on Mill Street. He was the
husband of Mrs. Viola (Albert)James, who survives him.
He was born here the son of Josiah and Mary (Glidden) James. He had been a lifetime resident of this
community.
Other survivors are six sons, Raymond of Brownville, Victor and Virgil,both of Princeton, Francis in the U. S. Army, Germany, Carl in the U. S.Army in Japan, and Merton, Jr., in the U. S. Army in Texas;
fivedaughters, Mrs. Marjorie Hunnewell of Alexander, Mrs. Pansy Elsemore,Mrs. Katherine Grant, and
Miss Gloria James, all of Princeton, and Mrs.Florence Boynton of Calais; two sisters, Gertrude Leland
and Mrs. Myra(sic) McDowell, both of Princeton; a brother, William James of Princeton;and several
grandchildren.
The remains are at the Everett L. Scott funeral home in Calais and will be taken tomorrow to his residence here. Funeral arrangements will be announced.

[NI09581] In the book "Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead" on pages 384-387 is the following:

"This Indenture Made this Seventh Day of March Seventeen Hundread and four five By and between Amas Dodge of Cow Neck in ye bounds of Hempstead in Queens County on Nassaw Island house Carpenter of ye one party and Mary Cornell Widdow and Relect of Tho: Cornell late of Oysterbay Deceased of ye other parte Witnesseth that I ye sd Amos Dodge...do fully freely Clearly and Absolutely give Grant Bargain Sell...one Certain Messuage and tract of Land Scituate Lying and being on Cow neck Near ye middle of ye neck...Being Bounded in General terms on ye West by ye high Way leading through ye neck on the South partly by Jerimiah Dodges land and partly by Justice Onderdonk land on ye East by trustram Dodges Land on ye North by Tho: Dodges...I ye sd Amas Dodge am the true Sole and Lawfull Owner of ye above Bargained premises and was lawfully Seized & Possessed theirof in my own proper Right of a good perfect and Absolute Estate of Inheritance in fee Simple and had in my Self full poser good Right and Lawfull Athority to Sell and Dispose of ye Same...and furthermore I Sarah Dodge Wife of him ye sd Amos Dodge do hereby give grant Yield up and Surrender up all my Right of Dowry and power of thirds of in and to ye above Demised premises Unto her ye said Mary Cornell..."

[NI09593] Educated in Temple Hill Academy, Genesseo New York; Fairfield Academy Herkimer
New York and graduated from the University pf Rochester NY1874.
EXTRACTED FROM: History of Minneapolis, Gateway to the Northwest; Chicago-Minneapolis, The S J Clarke Publishing County, 1923; Edited by: Rev. Marion Daniel Shutter, D.D., LL.D.; Volume I - Shutter (Historical); volume II - Biographical; volume III - Biographical

Vol II, Pg 293

FRED B. DODGE
Fred B. Dodge, of the law firm of Dodge & Webber & Palmer, has practiced his profession in Minneapolis continuously since 1881. Mr. Dodge was the son of James L. and Mary Budreau Dodge, and was born at Leicester in Livingston county, New York, February 4, 1853. His father was of New England, and his mother of French Huguenot stock. He prepared for college at the old Temple Hill Academy, Geneseo, New York, was a member of the class of '75 of the University of Rochester, and was admitted to the bar of New York in 1879. He was married June 4, 1885, at Freeport, Illinois, to Etta Elizabeth Purinton, daughter of Judge George Purinton of that city. They have one surviving son, George Purinton Dodge of Chester county, Pennsylvania, who married Miss Eleanor Rossum Rogers of Fairfax county, Virginia.

In his long career as a practitioner at the Minneapolis bar, Mr. Dodge has retained and enjoyed the confidence of a select and almost unbroken clientele. He is known as a business man's lawyer, and in addition to his professional activities has served as a director in a number of Minneapolis corporations.

In politics Mr. Dodge is a democrat, in church affiliation an Episcopalian, and for many years has served as a warden of the Memorial (Episcopal) chapel at Minnetonka Beach, where he resides. He is a director of the Minneapolis Athenaeum, a member of the Lafayette and other clubs. His home at Minnetonka Beach houses one of the large private libraries of the state. As a collector of books he has specialized on the French Revolution.

[NI09614] living in SSpringfield Missouri

[NI09635] [Beecher.GED]

Individual: Pritchard, Grace
Social Security #: 062-52-9894
Issued in: New York

Residence code: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 13490
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Westmoreland, New York

[NI09639] Nickname may have been shorty.

[NI09643] No children. b. 17 apr 1755 differs from T.R.W.

[NI09650] Social Security #: 076-18-9820
Issued in: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 13104
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Manlius, New York

[NI09653] He was wounded during the 1st World Warand had trouble with his back
after that. He became crippled with Arthritis.

[NI09654] Committed suicide because he was not able to get a job (this was during
the depression.

[NI09655] No Issue.

[NI09656] Possibly died 1954.

[NI09676] [Beecher.GED]

[Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 7, Social Security Death
Index: U.S., Date of Import: Oct 11, 1999, Internal Ref.
#1.111.7.120289.160]

Individual: Herrig, Richard
Social Security #: 069-09-2834
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Mar 23, 1918
Death date: Jun 10, 1990

[NI09679] in 1822 Overseer of Higheay bottom od Cow Neck.

[NI09695] [Beecher.GED]

Buried at Sea[Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 2 L-Z, Ed. 7, Social
Security Death Index: U.S., Date of Import: Oct 11, 1999, Internal Ref.
#1.112.7.127935.8]

Individual: Utermark, William
Social Security #: 084-20-9272
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Dec 19, 1927
Death date: Nov 1975

[NI09705] T. R. Woodward spells the first name phebe.

[NI09739] He was an Elder in the Church.
Bert J. Dodge may have had a first name of Herbert or Hubert, but he was
known as Bert.

[NI09741] Private in Captain Robert S. Watts' Company, New York Militia from 2 September 1814 - 3 December 1814.

[NI09748] Individual: Dodge, John
Social Security #: 074-03-5544
Issued in: New York


Residence code: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 12302
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Scotia, New York

[NI09756] Died in infancy

[NI09769] Died in infancy

[NI09771] [Beecher.GED]

[Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 7, Social Security Death
Index: U.S., Date of Import: Oct 11, 1999, Internal Ref.
#1.111.7.32341.99]

Individual: Britten, William
Social Security #: 132-28-5456
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Aug 29, 1938
Death date: Jan 31, 1996


ZIP Code of last known residence: 12056
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Duanesburg, New York

[NI09782] Individual: Dodge, Winfield
Social Security #: 069-09-5657
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Jan 15, 1904
Death date: Sep 1979

Residence code: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 13478
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Verona, New York

[NI09831] Individual: Dodge, Edna
Social Security #: 102-26-8815
Issued in: New York


Residence code: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 12302
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Scotia, New York

[NI09832] Died in Ellis Hospital, Schenectady, New York

[NI09837] [Beecher.GED]

[Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 7, Social Security Death
Index: U.S., Date of Import: Oct 11, 1999, Internal Ref.
#1.111.7.71137.152]

Individual: Dodge, Bernice
Social Security #: 108-32-3659
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Dec 4, 1905
Death date: Apr 1971


Residence code: New York

ZIP Code of last known residence: 13478
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Verona, New York

[NI09841] [Beecher.GED]

[Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 7, Social Security Death
Index: U.S., Date of Import: Oct 11, 1999, Internal Ref.
#1.111.7.71159.23]

Individual: Dodge, Nellie
Social Security #: 115-36-0368
Issued in: New York

Birth date: Jan 10, 1907
Death date: Jun 17, 1988


ZIP Code of last known residence: 13478
Primary location associated with this ZIP Code:

Verona, New York

[NI09894] Unmarried.

[NI09895] Corporal in Civil War.

[NI09901] No Children

[NI09909] Founded Guarantee Roofing Company in Terre Haute, Indiana.

[NI09915] Worked at Guarantee Roofing Company in Terre Haute, which was founded by my grandfather. He also owned several business in Terre Haute.

[NI09939] Died 2 days after delivering a stillborn Child in Queen Victoria Hosp.

[NI09940] Stillborn.

[NI09944] Burried in same Graave plot as his Father John F. Dodge

[NI10007] New York

[NI10017] Queen Victoria Hospital

[NI10034] A few years after the death of his father, John Dodge Jr. and his wife Mima had the stately home we now call "The Dodge House" built. It is said that to build the house, 30 horse-drawn flatbed wagons were used to haul 165,275 bricks from a brickyard near North East, PA.

John Dodge Jr. gave the home to his son Edwin J. Dodge (1845-1919). Edwin married Isabella Moorhead (1816-1905) and her grandfather was Col. James M. Moorhead (1793-1881) who owned the property upon which Harborcreek's first log schoolhouse was built.

When Edwin died, his daughter Mary (1880-1977) took over. Mary was a spinster and turned the Dodge home into a boarding house known as "Cold Brook Farm." She couldn't run it alone so she asked her younger sister Anna (1883-1973) and her husband Ed Maryan, to live with her and help run the boarding house. Mary Dodge eventually signed the house over to the Maryans. In the 1930's, The Maryans ran the house as a tourist home, calling it Cold Brook Inn."

[NI10042] According to information found in the Bates' History of Erie County, John Ryan "acquired a school training in Mill Creek Township and chose farming as a vocation. Being only four months old when his father died, he was left entirely on his own resources to make his way through the world. He is owner of a valuable farm inside Erie County corporation, with a handsome brick residence thereon. Mr Ryan is a member of the Universalist Church."

[NI10045] Clarissa Dodge Wood (Mrs. L. W. Wood) a pioneer of West Salem, Wis., passed away Wednesday at 12:40 a.m. January 5th 1927, at the home of her son, Charles W. Wood, Necedah, Wisconsin.

Clarissa Dodge Wyatt was born at Painted Post, N.Y. on April 23, 1837 and was married to Luther William Wood of Watertown, New York at Harbor Creek, Pennsylvania on October 14, 1858.

They made their home in Berlin Wisconsin where Mr. Wood was a conductor on the Milwaukee and Horicon R.R. (now the C.M. & ST. Paul). In 1861 they moved to La Crosse and in 1863 they settled in West Salem. Wis. celebrating their golden wedding there in 1908.

Mr. Wood passed away in 1909 and Mrs. Wood then made her home with her daughter Mrs. Geo. T. McElroy of Minneapolis and for the past eight years has lived with her son Charles W. Wood of Necedah, Wis.

Mrs. Wood was the mother of three children, L.W. Wood, Jr., Mary Elizabeth, and Charles W. L.W. Wood, Jr. passed away in Mexico in 1903, Mary Elizabeth McElroy passed away in Minneapolis in 1918.

Mrs. Wood is survived by her son Charles W. Wood of Necedah and by twelve grandchildren and seventeen great grandchildren.

The funeral services were held in Necedah and on Friday January 7th she was laid to rest in the family plot at West Salem, Wis.

In the same newsclipping with the obituary, there appears the following "Appreciation":

Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Wood united with West Salem Congregational Church Feb. 1896, and their names were never taken from our roll.

Mrs. Wood was as ardent a member of the Eastern Star as was her husband a Mason. At Necedah, the pall bearers were all Masons and instead of a hearse, themselves carried Mrs. Wood to the depot, like royal funerals. And she was a royal woman.

With untiring energy and great adaptability the Woods made their hostelry here known throughout the state and favored as a week end stay by traveling men. There was a homelike hospitality that money could not pay for.

When the Woods retired from their hotel, the same spirit of helpfulness and hospitality pervaded their neighborly relations. Mrs. Wood was the soul of fellowship.

Mrs. Wood always retained her interest in West Salem and longed to return. Every Saturday night her son Charles read the West Salem paper to her as a proper completion of the week.

Her son, three granddaughters and one great grandchild accompanied the remains here. The West Salem pall bearers were likewise Masons.

In Mexico, I picked flowers from her son Will's grave and brought her. Now I figuratively scatter flowers on the memory of one of the brightest, most interesting and unforgetable of women.

[NI10054] "Luther William Wood, son of Lorenzo W. Wood, was born September 24, 1833, in Watertown, New York. Part of his own, somewhat inaccurate, account of his early years is quoted above. The full text of that 1892 biographical statement is as follows:

L.W. Wood, proprietor of one of the best hotels in this section of the country, is a native of Jefferson County, New York, born at Watertown, September 24, 1833. His parents were Lorenzo and Ann L. Jennison Wood, who were also natives of the "Empire State." The father died when our subject was a child of three years; the mother supported him and a sister, Harriet, until the death of the latter, in 1845; when L.W. was nine years of age he began to earn his own living, and from the time he had a home it was the shelter of his aged mother; she died at the age of sixty-eight years, a devout member of the Congregational Church, and a woman of rare force of character.

In 1854, Mr. Wood removed to Wisconsin from New York, and embarked in the railroad building which was then being begun by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co. When the road was completed he was made a conductor and held that position for nine years. At the end of that period he resigned to engage in the hardware business; he learned the trade of a tinner, but afterwards abandoned it to take up agriculture; he carried on farming until 1890, and in that year built the hotel over which he presides with great success. He keeps a first class house in every respect; there are twenty sleeping rooms for guests, and office, parlor and dining rooms, all of which are well furnished. Mr. Wood sold his farm in 1890, and gives his undivided attention to the care and comfort of the guests of the house.

He was married in 1858, to Miss Clarissa D. Wyatt, a daughter of William and Clarissa (Dodge) Wyatt of Erie County, Pennsylvania.

Of this union three children have been born: Luther W. is the agent for the Chicago & Northwestern Ry. at Huron, Dakota, a position he has filled for twelve years; he married Miss Carrie Mower and they have three children: Burt, Gracie, and Wyatt; Mary E. is the wife of George T. McElroy of West Salem, and is the mother of two children: Clara and Blanche; Charles W. is the cashier in the office with his brother at Huron, Dakota. The parents of these children are members of the Second Advent Church. Mr. Wood belongs to the Masonic fraternity, and in his political opinions adheres to the principles of the Prohibition Party. He and his wife have proven their ability and qualifications to fill the position of host and hostess in their popular hostelry; they have a constantly increasing patronage, a fact which shows the appreciation of the traveling public.

William Wyatt, father of Mrs. Wood, was born at West Point, New York, and was a tanner by trade; he carried on this business in Pennsylvania and New York, and afterwards engaged in mercantile pursuits. Later in life he removed to Stevens Point [Wisconsin] and there acted as Notary Public and land agent. He was born March 26, 1802 and died March 8, 1864; his wife was born in the state of New York, January 15, 1812, and died April 29, 1837. They reared a family of four children: Mary E., John H., William E., and Mrs. L. W. Wood.

LaCrosse, Monroe and Juneau Counties, Wisconsin Biographical History. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Co. 1892. p. 194

It is not clear how Luther William came to know Clarissa Dodge Wyatt, but their marriage in 1858 came several years after Luther had moved to Wisconsin. Clarissa's obituary says that they married in Harbor Creek, Pennsylvania, which was Clarissa's residence. How Luther came to be there is unknown.

Their first child, Luther William Wood, Jr. was born in Berlin, Wisconsin in 1859. Their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, was born in West Salem, Wisconsin in 1862. The son, Charles Wyatt Wood, was born in West Salem in 1864 (information from the family Bible).

Jason Southworth, Ann Jennison Wood Southworth, Luther William Wood, Sr. and Clarissa Dodge Wyatt Wood are buried in a family plot in West Salem.

A torn and undated newsclipping titled "Our Legislative Candidates" indicates that Luther William Wood was once a candidate for state political office. The relevant portions are as follows:

The prohibition party is not ashamed of it [sic] candidates for the State Legislature. Every one of the three are representative men. They represent the people and are not any one class or clique. They were not put up because they contribute abundantly to the campaign fund, but because first of their high standing in the communities where they live, and because they are successful self-made men. [...]

L.W. Wood of West Salem, to represent the Second Assembly District, has a record that can not be gainsaid and stands high among his townsmen. He is popular with the people and will make a faithful representative. If elected he will carefully guard the interests of the farmers of LaCrosse County. Vote for Wood. We know you would if you had a chance to partake of his hospitality at his popular hotel. Vote for these men and you will not make a mistake if you are looking for good, honest representative men.

[NI10056] Albert Delos Dodge was born May 24, 1910, in Central to Delos Allred Dodge and Alice Ann Allred. He left this life Jan. 15 in Glendale. He is the oldest of 18 children.
He is survived by three daughters, Flora (Rich) Bullard, Carla (Greg) Cox and Sandra (Jerry) Elliott; 15 grandchildren; 25 great-grandchildren; 10 great-great-grandchildren; one stepdaughter, Nadine (Don) Schendel; four step grandchildren; and one step great-grandchild. He is also survived by 11 brothers and sisters, Naoma Lamb, Belle Bryce, Lola Steele, Zola Lee, Alice Lou Cluff, Nellie Kearns, Alvin Dodge, Loren Dodge, Hugh Dodge, Veldon Dodge and Herbert Dodge.
A small graveside service was Jan. 22 at the New Central Cemetery in Central.
Arrangements were en-trusted to Lowman's Arizona Funeral Home in Phoenix.

[NI10080] DODGE, RUSS LEROY
US ARMY
WORLD WAR II
DATE OF BIRTH: 12/04/1917
DATE OF DEATH: 11/26/1999
BURIED AT: THATCHER CEMETERY THATCHER, AZ

[NI10084] US Army Sep 16 1940-Jun 29 1945

[NI10094] Alice Lou Dodge Cluff passed away peacefully in her sleep on Friday, October 5, 2018.
Alice was born on October 17, 1935, in Central, Arizona, to Delos Allred Dodge and Alice Ann Allred. Alice was the 17th of 18 children. She lived in Central until 1945 when the family moved to Mesa, Arizona. Alice graduated from Mesa High School in May 1953. Seminary was her favorite class in high school.
In June of 1957 Alice married Vere Carling Cluff, Jr. They were happily married for 60 years. They had 4 children, 12 grandchildren, and 15 great-grandchildren.
Alice was a wonderful and dedicated wife, mother, grandmother, and friend. She cared about everyone and spent a lot of time doing things for others. She wanted everyone to be happy and healthy. Alice made a lot of meals and other items for people who were ill or having some crisis in their lives. For the kids and grandkids, Alice always had crafts and activities for them. Many enjoyable hours were spent at home and at the cabin enjoying time together and just having fun.
Alice is preceded in death by her beloved husband, Carling, her parents, 8 brothers, 5 sisters, and her son-in-law, Alan Leatham. She is survived by 3 brothers, 1 sister, son Duane (Kari) Cluff, daughters Linda (LeRoy) House, Betsy (David) Miller, and Donna (Nathan) Lambson. She is also survived by 12 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.
Alice was a friend to all and loved by everyone. She loved her Heavenly Father and His gospel. That love was shown in all of the efforts she put into helping others with their spiritual and temporal needs. Even when Alice’s body would not let her do much physically to help others, she was helping by being a great friend and making sure that others, such as Carling, were volunteered to help with the physical needs.
A visitation will be held Friday, October 19, 2018, from 6 to 8 PM, at Bunker’s University Chapel, 3529 East University Drive, Mesa, Arizona. Funeral services will be at 10AM with a viewing at 9AM on Saturday, October 20, 2018 at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mesquite Canyon Ward Chapel, 2339 South Crismon Road, Mesa, Arizona 85212. Interment will be at Mountain View Memorial Gardens.

Published online at www.bunkerfuneral.com

[NI10149] William Morgan Dodge was born ca. 1830 in Goshen, Litchfield, CT. He moved with his family to a farm outside of Reedville, Jefferson County, New York in 1839.

[NI10174] Joined the US Army in WW II in 1943

[NI10182] Enlisted in Army WW II Dec 8 1942.

[NI10204] Rathburn was a prominent man; taking an active part in town affairs and
the wealthiest man in Islesborough. The frequent allusions to him in town
records show the estimation with which he was held in the town.

[NI10237] Twin to Susannah Rathbun.

[NI10243] Ashes scattered in Malbu, California.

[NI10244] SAR

[NI10248] Twin to Ruth

[NI10250] Twin to Elinor.

[NI10257] Tombstone reads only dau of Chauncy & Dolly M. (Cadwell) Dodge d, AE13
years 6m Section E in Riverside Cem. Gouveneur, New York,

[NI10258] Died at 34 years, 9mos, 5 days, No issue

[NI10259] Clyde died as infant and is buried with his Father. William M. O. Dodge.

[NI10269] Twin to Harriet.

[NI10270] Died in infancy

[NI10276] Note: [Revolutionary War] Enlisted at age thirteen as fifer in a unit of
the Continental Army commanded by his older brother, Capt. Henry Dodge;
served throughout the Revolutionary War, including seven battles and duty
at Valley Forge, PA, and during Lord Cornwallis' surrender at Yorktown,
VA

He was a Brigadeer General who was in charge of Sackets Harbor, in 1812.
At this period the State of New York along the Canadian frontier was to a
great extent an almost unknown wilderness, and communications and
transportation were still slow and laborious. The Mohawk river, slightly
improved in its natural course by the Inland Lock Navigation Company, was
the only route, except the rough highways, for the westward conveyance of
cannon, which were loaded upon the Durham boats. April 10th, 1812,
Congress authorized the drafting of 100,000 men from the militia of the
country, 13,500 being assigned as the quota of New York. A few days later
the detached militia of the State were arranged in two divisions and
eight brigades. The fourth brigade comprised the 10th, 11th, 12th and
13th regiments in the Mohawk valley, and was under the command of General
Richard Dodge, of Johnstown."

He was from Duchess County. At age 13 was so anxious to see his brother Henry, afterwards a captain in the US Army, he ran away from home, having nothing but his fife. He was a good player, welcomed by
the first company of soldiers he met; as music was scarce in the army.
When he was too tired to march the soldiers carried him on their backs- later because a combatant.
He enlisted in the 2nd Continental Regiment (Colonel Philip Van Cortland) when 13 years old, as a fifer. He later transferred to the 5th Regiment, where his brothers were lieutenants, under Colonel Lew Duboys. He rose to the rank of Colonel; and in the War of 1812 rose to Brigadier (Major?) General, and in command of the Northern Frontier, Canada.
After the war he returned to his schooling in New York, and became a surveyor. During this time of study, he became a close friend of one William Irving, Jr., living at 128 William Street, New York.
After he completed his studies he left for the Mohawk Valley, and settled at Caughnawaga (now Fonda) where he pursued his profession. While at this work, he must have found the fur business very lucrative, for he began trading with the Indians; and as he had no Sir William Johnson to contend with, or ask permission of, he must have done well. About this time, on one of his trips to New York, he found his friend,
William Irving, in poor health, and induced him to return to the Mohawk Valley with him. The courtship of William's sister, Ann Sarah, began about this time.
Richard Dodge apparently gave up his surveying and devoted his time to mercantile pursuits. He became a prominent merchant in Johnstown and a highly respected citizen.

[NI10281] Francis C. Cumpston, 85, of Lexington died Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2004, at Tri-County Hospital in Lexington, following a short illness.

Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at First United Methodist Church in Lexington, with the Rev. Todd Karges officiating. Burial will be in the Robb Cemetery south of Lexington, with Pastor Duane Russell officiating at graveside. Visitation will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Reynolds-Love Funeral Chapel in Lexington, with family receiving friends from 6 to 8.

Mr. Cumpston was born on Oct.15, 1918, in Wild Horse Valley north of Brady to Francis Henry and Clarissa Catherine (McNeal) Cumpston.

Survivors of the immediate family include his wife, Virginia; two sons and daughters-in-law, Dennis and Bett Cumpston of Grand Island, Richard and Lori Cumpston of Lexington; three brothers and sisters-in-law, Donald and Barbara Cumpston of Weeping Water, Leonard and Phyllis Cumpston of Pitman, N.J., and Harold and Lorretta Cumpston of Carroll, Iowa; a sister, Naomi Prato of Baltimore; a brother-in-law, Luther Miller of Gothenburg; and a sister-in-law, Janice Cumpston of Grand Island. Also surviving are two grandchildren and their spouses, Joshua and Allene Cumpston of Hastings and Jill and Joseph Sandmeier of Rochester, N.Y.; and five great-grandchildren, Katie, Trevor and Tyler Cumpston, Alyssa and Jacob Sandmeier.

Francis was raised in Wild Horse Valley north of Brady and attended Gothenburg High School. He was united in marriage to Virginia Elaine Dodge on May 29, 1940, in Gothenburg. He lived most of his adult life in Lexington. Francis worked most of his life as a mechanic. He could fix anything. Francis worked many years at the Ford dealership in Lexington, Rosenberg's, Dawson County Implement, and owned and operated Lexington Implement. In later years, he was head custodian at the Lexington Public Schools. He enjoyed the outdoors, fishing and all types of hunting, especially deer. He also loved children he met at school, nieces and nephews, grandchildren and his great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents; an unborn grandchild; an unborn great-grandchild; four sisters, Ruby, Virginia Brixius/Keiser, Lavonne Randle, and Wanda Miller; and two brothers, Leo and James.

[NI10282] Seated in the library of her home on Washington street, amid a profusion
of flowers sent by friends to express their welcome home, Mrs. Washington
Dodge again told the story of her experiences on the night the ill-fated
Titanic went down.
Dr. and Mrs. Dodge and their 5-year-old son, Washington Dodge Jr.,
arrived in the city yesterday afternoon, little the worse for their
experience. The parents' one anxiety is for the boy, who is seriously ill
from the effects of the exposure to the ice-chilled air on the night of
the disaster.
"Was it cold?" said Mrs. Dodge. "You can imagine how cold it was when I
tell you that we passed fifty-six miles of icebergs after we got on the
Carpathia. The baby had nothing on but his pajamas and a life preserver.
"I think it is foolish to speak of the heroism displayed. There was none
that I witnessed. It was merely a matter of waiting your turn for a
lifeboat, and there was no keen anxiety to enter the boats because
everybody had such confidence in that wretched ship. The officers told us
that they had wireless communication with seven vessels, which were on
the way to relieve us, and the men believed themselves as safe on board
as in the boats. It seemed the vaguest possibility that the ship might
sink before one of the seven vessels arrived.
"Of course, I left the Titanic before it began to settle into the water.
The steerage passengers had not come on deck. In fact, there were few on
the deck from which we left and more men than women.
TOOK SECOND BOAT.
"It happened this way. There seems to have been an order issued that all
women should congregate on the port side of the vessel. The vessel was
injured on the starboard side, and even when I left the ship there was a
slight list to starboard. We did not hear this order. I was in my
stateroom, had retired again after the accident when the doctor came
saying he had met our steward and had been told to get into a life
preserver. I slipped on my fur coat over my night robe and preserver, put
on my shoes without stockings; I did not stop to button them.
"We had made a practice of sitting on the starboard side of the deck, the
gymnasium was there, and naturally when we went above we turned to
starboard. They were lowering boats. I entered the second boat with my
baby. This boat had an officer in command, and enough officers to man the
oars. Several women entered with me and as we commenced to lower the boat
the women's husbands jumped in with them. I called to the doctor to come,
but he refused because there were still a few women on deck. Every woman
in that second boat with the exception of myself, had her husband with
her.
BOATS HALF FILLED.
"I supposed all the women were congregated on the port side because it
would naturally be the highest side, and the safest because [it would be]
the last to go down. We had no idea then that there would not be enough
boats to go around. In fact, the first boats were only half filled.
"There must have been some confusion in orders, else I do not see why
some of the women were not sent from port to starboard to enter those
boats being lowered there. My husband got into the thirteenth boat. At
that time there were no women on the starboard side. There was not one
women in the boat he entered, and no member of the crew.
"Bruce Ismay entered the fifteenth boat from starboard. It was being
lowered at the same time, and the doctor says he remembers this because
there was some fear that the boats might swing into each other as they
were lowered down the side of the vessel.
CRYING OF THE DOOMED.
"The most terrible part of the experience was that awful crying after the
ship went down. We were a mile away, but we heard it-oh, how we heard it.
It seemed to last about an hour, although it may have been only a sort
time, for some say a man could not have lived in that water over fifteen
minutes. At last it died down.
"Our officer and the members of the crew wanted to go back and pick up
those whom they could, but the women in the boat would not left them.
They told them if they attempted to turn back their husbands would take
the oars from them, and the other men outnumbered the crew. I told them I
could not see how they could forbid turning back in the face of those
awful cries. I will remember it until I die, as it is. I told them: 'How
do I know, you have your husbands with you, but my husband may be one of
those who are crying.' "
"They argued that if we got back where the people were struggling, some
of the steerage passengers, crazed with fear and the cold, might capsize
the boat struggling to get it, or might force the officers to overload so
we would all go down."
WOMEN HYSTERICAL.
"After the crying died down, two or three of the women became
hysterical-about what I don't know; they were missing none of their
people. I was trying to keep baby from realization of what was happening,
but when these women shrieked he would begin crying and asking, 'Where's
papa?'
"Finally I did what everyone thinks a strange thing. I changed lifeboats
in midocean. We overtook the first boat. It was hardly half filled. They
offered to take any of us aboard, and to get away from the hysteria of
the others I changed.
ON THE CARPATHIA.
"The most pathetic thing was the scene on board the Carpathia during the
rescue. As each boat drew up the survivors would peer over, straining to
see the face of someone they had left behind. They were the young brides
- everybody on board, of course, had known they were brides, and they had
watched them laughing and promenading with their husbands.
"The moans of anxiety and disappointment as each boat failed to bring up
those that they were looking for were awful and finally that awful
despair which fell over everyone when we knew there were no more boats to
pick up.
"Still they would not give up hope.
" 'Are you missing anyone?' the passengers would ask each other, never
'Have you lost anyone?'
KINDNESS OF PASSENGERS
"Too much cannot be said of the kindness of the Carpathia's passengers.
They gave up staterooms, they took the very clothing off their bodies for
us. I left the Carpathia wearing garments given me by a women whose name
I do not know and will never know."
She exhibited the bloomer trousers she had cut for Baby Dodge from a
blanket given her by a sailor.
"I am sorry that I knew the names of so few passengers. There were two
men aboard particularly, who every day used to come on the sun deck to
play with the baby, and we often fell into conversation. Those men were
not among the survivors. I do wish I had known their names that I might
tell their wives some of the beautiful things they had said to me of
their home life, casually, in these conversation."

[NI10288] Sister of Washington Irving the Author. Ann Sarah Irving of New York was the eldest sister of Washington Irving, who had lost his fiancee to a sudden fatal illness and subsequently never married nor had children. Ann Irving married (Major General) Richard Dodge of Johnstown, New York, in 1787. Richard Dodge had enlisted at age thirteen as a fifer/drummer in the Continental Army--he is said to have continued serving throughout the war, including duty at Valley Forge and at Yorktown, Virginia

Died-In the village of Johnstown, on Tuesday morning, the 17th instant, Mrs. Ann S. Dodge, wife of Col. Richard Dodge, merchant, age 37 years.

[NI10300] Captain in the war of 1812 at battle of Plattsburg.

[NI10327] A widow of the late Guy Carleton Grimes.

[NI10344] REV. BRENTON CLINTON DODGE:
Bates College, ME ‘48 BA, Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Philadelphia ‘51 BD,;American Baptist minister serving churches in Silver Spring, MD (1951-1953), College Park, MD (1953-1957), Wilmington, DE (1957-1962), Bangor, PA (1962-1965); Area Director of the World Mission Campaign, ABC/USA (1966-1968; minister of Christian Education, FBC, Dayton, OH (1968-1976) and worked for the Division of World Mission Support for the American Baptist Churches USA in Massachusetts (1976-1984) and Northern California (1987-1991). Directed capital campaign of the Presbyterian School of Christian Education, Richmond, VA (1984-1986) Retired in 1991. Moved to ST. Louis MO when wife Karen accepted a position as Prof. of Christian Education at Eden Theological Seminary.

Beginning in 1995, served as volunteer coordinator for a couple of years of the St. Louis Chapter of The Concord Coalition, a non-partisan organization working to reduce federal deficit spending

Through the retirement years, Brenton has served as volunteer seminar leader, teacher and consultant to local church and church association clergy and lay leaders in the fields of evangelism and stewardship. He has chair the area ecumenical Christian Education Event, and the local Interfaith Dialogue which meets monthly since 9/11/01. He has served as a tutor for eight years, working with one or two elementary students each year to improve the student's reading and writing skills.

Dodge, Brenton C. of Webster Groves, Missouri died September 1, 2013 at the age of 87. The son of Charles and Ethyl Dodge, he was born on August 12, 1926 in Scarborough, ME. He graduated from Scarborough High School in 1944, from Bates College, Lewiston, ME in 1948 and from Eastern Baptist Seminary in Philadelphia in 1951. An ordained American Baptist pastor, he served churches in Silver Spring, MD, Wilmington, DE, Bangor, PA and Dayton, OH. He also worked for the American Baptist Churches USA in Massachusetts and California. In retirement, he moved to St. Louis in 1991 and was active in the Concord Coalition, served as a tutor with OASIS, and provided consultation in stewardship with local churches. A member of Union Avenue Christian Church, after 9/11 he became an active participant in Interfaith Partnership of Greater St. Louis and facilitated an Interfaith dialogue group. He enjoyed playing his trumpet in the AIM and the OASIS bands and was an avid gardener. He is survived by his wife, Karen B. Tye; two sons, Stephen Dodge and wife, Gayle of Houston, TX and Kenneth Dodge of Franklin, TN; a step-son, David Brock of Baltimore, MD and a step-daughter, Kathleen Clegg and husband, Joseph of Affton; eight grandchildren: Jason Dodge, Sara MacKay, Jennifer Dyer, Katie Lewis, Phillip and Bonnie Dodge, Aidan and Lily Clegg; three great grandchildren: Corbin and Madison MacKay and Evelyn Dyer; a brother, Malcolm Dodge of Concord, NH and a sister, Marion Moseley of Westbrook, ME; numerous cousins, nieces and nephews. Services: A memorial service will be held on Saturday, September 14 at Union Avenue Christian Church, 733 Union Blvd., St. Louis. A time of visitation begins at 10 a.m. and the service is at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Interfaith Partnership of Greater St. Louis, 483 East Lockwood Ave., Suite 107, St. Louis, MO 63119 or to Union Avenue Christian Church.


To Plant Memorial Trees in memory, please visit our Sympathy Store.
Published in St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Sep. 5, 2013.

[NI10346] Surveyor, in Klondyke, Later a Highway Engineer with Nova Scotia Government.

[NI10347] Donald E. Dodge, beloved husband of Mrs. Hazel L. Dodge, father of Mrs. Barbara Kay Nofziger, Robert Gary Dodge, Donald E. Dodge Jr. and Richard A. Dodge; son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pennoyer, also survived by 4 grandchildren, a sister Mrs. Janice Kerley, a brother Dale E. Dodge and grandmother Mrs. Mabel Carson.

Service 1 p.m. Tuesday, in the Church of the Hills, Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills. Forest Lawn Mortuary.

[NI10350] The first mayor of the city of Syracuse. Harvey was involved in any number of local businesses, societies, and public activities. A noted attorney, he was elected in 1848 to the office of mayor.

[NI10368] Unmaarked Grave, Plot: Section Pg21 Row 81 Grave 47

[NI10373] They were enumerated in the 1850 Census at Northport, Waldo County, Maine.

[NI10413] He was a SSgt in US Army WW II.

[NI10425] 15 December 1866
A COLD-BLOODED MURDER ON LICK RUN - THE MURDERER ESCAPES
On Thursday night of last week, the 6th instant, a man named William N. Dodge, living on Lick Run, in this county, between two and three miles back of Wheelersburg, was killed by a man named Hamilton Harperee, under the following circumstances: There seems to have been some misunderstanding between the men, arising from the conduct of Harperee towards the wife of Dodge, creating jealously and hard feeling. On the fatal evening Harperee was at Dodge's house and being ordered out, went, and a few moments after invited Dodge to come out. This he did, but was met at the door by Harperee, who immediately dealt him a deadly blow with a knife, the blade entering the abdomen and cutting through the bowels and kidney. Dodge lingered in agony until noon of the next day (Friday) when he expired. The murdered man was buried at 4 o'clock, p.m., on Saturday.

[NI10433] 1860 Census IL, Jo Daviess County, Stockton Twp., Pg 983, img 667

[NI10434] James R. Dodge died at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. Chalmers Glenn, in Rockingham County, on the night of February 24th, 1880. He was
bright and cheerful to the last, and though in good health and spirits, for the last few years he had always expressed himself as only waiting
for his Master's call. His quiet, peaceful death was certainly in accord with the proverb that had been his guide through life. "Keep innocency, and cleave to the thing that is right, and that will give a man peace at last."

The following sketch of his life is in a great measure gleaned from a manuscript written by himself only three months before his death, and
given to his wife to keep for the benefit of his children and grand-children. It was, of course, never intended for publication, but a part of it is copied by permission, feeling it would be of great interest and that, as he says it "may aid the young by showing that energy and strict integrity will after many vicissitudes, lead to a peaceful old age, and if joined to christian faith, may lead to something better." "I fear," says he, "I have not profited much by his advice, (all that my excellent father, after his misfortunes, had to give,) except in one thing: 'be strictly honest,' and in this respect, I am now, in my old age, willing to face the world."

Mr. Dodge was born October 27th, 1795, in Johnstown, a village on the
Mohawk, in the State of New York, famous as the residence of Sir William
Johnson, the former Governor of all the Indian tribes in the North. Full
of life and vivacity, and fond of all field sports, he received a good
Academic education, and although his father wished him to finish at Union
College, his great desire was to see undiscovered lands, and to join
Western expeditions. When he was seventeen years old the war of 1812
began, and as his father was a Brigadier-General, and in command at
Sackett's Harbor, he was with him as an aid. Full of glee and perfectly
happy, he there saw company and sights that he enjoyed; Commodore
Chauncey and Captain Woolsey of the Navy, and Col. McComb, afterwards
commander-in-chief of the army, were guests at his father's table. This
life suited him so well that after their discharge and the return of his
father to Albany, where he then lived, he joined as a volunteer in a
company called "the Albany Independent Volunteers," Capt. Judson, and
they marched to Brooklyn Heights, to meet Gen. Packenham, and remained
there until Gen. Packenham changed his course for New Orleans, where he
met Gen. Jackson and defeat.

After peace he became a clerk in his uncle's store, in New York city, and
passed some years in his family. Enjoying the most refined society,
with a promise and prospect of getting into business through his uncle's
aid, he yet believed he could achieve a more splendid success in
the South, and embarked in the brig John, in October 1817, for
Charleston, S. C., recomended in the best letters from New York that the
city
could afford. When off the coast of Virginia they encountered a most
terriffic storm which kept all hands and the passengers at the pumps for
thirty-six hours, and they finally put in at Norfolk, Va. Here he met
an old friend, Hiram Paulding, afterwards an Admiral, then a midshipman
on the Macedonian, which was dismantled and partially wrecked in the same
storm. "While" (I quote his own words,) "in Norfolk during the repairing
of the brig, I made an excursion to Petersburg, Va., to see something of
Southern life. My fate was sealed, for better or worse; the brig John
was condemned, my Charleston trip and hopes destroyed, and I made a
speculation, the cause of all my future misery and happiness. After
struggling for two years, ruin came, and in the year 1820, still full of
hope and armed with the kindest letters from all who had known me in
Petersburg, and also with a license to practice law in Virginia, given
me, I fear, more of favor than desert, like Christian in the Pilgrim's
Progress did his sins, I strapped on my back my new debt of many
thousands, jumped into the stage, then our only conveyance, and landed in
the streets of Raleigh, not knowing one human being in North Carolina,
and not having fifty dollars. Ruffin and others to whom my letters were
directed, gathered around me. That noble court, Taylor, Henderson and
Hall, repeated my license. Badger, Archibald Henderson and Gaston honored
me with a friendship that lasted during their lives. They are now no
more, and with Manly and Guion, and a number more known afterwards, now,
although of different denominations, all fill christian graves. Soon
collections that had been given me in Petersburg, brought me to old
Stokes, and at the County court at Germanton, I found the same
reception from John Morehead, Thos. Settle, Augustine H. Shepperd,
Nicholas L. Williams, and others, now all gone except the last He was my
fate; through him I became acquainted with his niece, then a small girl,
but of a family famous for excellent wives. Her uncle Lewis Williams was
in Congress with my uncle William Irving, of New York, and in process of
time she became my wife."

Mr. Dodge was a member of the Episcopal church, and as a delegate to the
Episcopal Convention that elected him, voted for Bishop Ravenscroft.
During his life he filled many places of honor and trust, as Solicitor of
the Superior Court for the Lincolnton district; for twelve or fourteen
years Clerk of the Legislature; and also for many years Clerk of the
Supreme Court in Morganton. He was married to Miss Susan Williams on
May 24th, 1826, and resided in Wilkesboro' for eight years. After he was
elected Solicitor he removed to Lincolnton, where he resided four years.
He was succeeded by his old friend Hamilton C. Jones, as Solicitor; and
"then, upon consultation with my sympathizing and truly pious wife, we
retired to the banks of the Yadkin, our cottage and farm. She managed at
home, and I labored night and day at Court, at Raleigh and at Morganton.
At home we were always happy; care or trouble never entered our door,
and these years were far the happiest of my life. After many years of
toil had passed, I well remember the look of my old friend Ruffin, then
Chief Justice, when I handed to my old friend Jacob Ramsour $700.00,
which was the last debt I owed on earth. He was paid, and it is still the
last."

"The moral of this sketch is, persevere and do not look back, and our
apparent misfortunes may be blessings in disguise."

[NI10435] Served in US Navy during the Vietnam Conflict.

[NI10438] Birth: SEP 1831 in Stephenson County, IL (census says VA)
Birth: ABT 1829 in Maryland 1
Death: UNKNOWN
Census: 1900 Living with son, Oliver Asil, in Lincoln, Republic County, KS
Census: 1860 IL, Jo Daviess County, Stockton Twp., Pg 983, img 667

[NI10440] Marriage Records record her first name as Delitha .

[NI10444] Military Service Company G 2 W.VA Calvary Civil War.

[NI10445] Military Service 5 Aug 1861, 33rd Ohio Volunteers Infantry.

[NI10455] See her Mothers Will under Hannah Dodge.

[NI10459] ì In the name of God, Amen. I, Jeremiah Dodge, of Pauldings Precinct, Dutchess County, being weak in Body, do this 27th day of February, 1785, make this my last will. I desire all my debts should be paid and then I bequeath my oldest son, Stephen, ten shillings, and I desire that my sons, Daniel and Robert, collect all my debts and settle my other affairs; it is likewise my desire that Elizabeth have twenty shillings and the warming pan, and that after settling all my accounts that they, Daniel and Robert, divide equally what remains between themselves and Lydia, Rebecca, Jonathan and David as they think most properÖand this my will and testament I desire by the mouth of the above mentioned witnesses should be allowed and in full force as although I signed the same before I deceased. Witnesses Caleb and Joseph Lamb and Elisha Champlin. Will proved, Dutchess County, March 31, 1785

[NI10463] Marriage certificate Robert DODGE and Sarah (CARPENTER) WEEKS, 19d 8m 1784
Whereas there has been Intention of Marriage Between Robert DODGE of North Castle in the County of Westchester and State of New York, and Sarah WEEKS daughter of Joseph CARPENTER of the same place & Ame CARPENTER his wife deceased; and they having declared their Intention before Several Monthly Meetings of the people called Quakers at the Purchase & Shapaqua according to the good order used amongst sd. people: whose proceedings after a deliberate consideration and consent of parents; nothing appearing to obstruct their sd. Intention was approved by sd. Monthly Meeting.
Now these are to certify all whom it may concern that for the accomplishing their sd. Intentions this 19th day of the eighth month 1784; the said Robert DODGE and Sarah WEEKS presented themselves in a public meeting of said people and others at the Meeting house at Shapaqua the said. Robert DODGE taking the said Sarah WEEKS by the hand did in solemn manner declare that he took her to be his wife promising to be unto her a true and loving Husband untill death should Seperate them; then and there in the same manner the said Sarah WEEKS did also declare that she took ye said Robert DODGE to be her husband promising to be a true and loving wife untill Death, or to that affect. Moreover ye said Robert DODGE and Sarah his wife did then and there set their names, She assuming the name of her now husband as a further confirmation of their Marriage
Robert DODGE, Sarah DODGE
and whose names are hereunto Subscribed being amongst others at the Solemnization of said Marriage and Subscription as aforesaid have also as witnesses set our hand to these presents.
Reubin Haight, Jeremiah Dodge, Martha Thorn, Rebekka Sutton, Caleb Underhill, Joseph Leget, Amy Underhill, Elizabeth Underhill, David Marshall, Obediah Quinby, Sarah Weeks, Elizabeth Tuthill, Robert Runnels, Hannah Underhill, Ann Runnels, Phebe Dickenson, Elnathan Thorn, Marcy Underhill, Rosanna Skidmore

[NI10467] Unmarried.

[NI10468] Unmarried.

[NI10470] Unmarried.

[NI10471] Died Young.

[NI10472] Died Young.

[NI10474] Died Young.

[NI10478] Unmarried.

[NI10479] Died Young.

[NI10483] Captain Robert Howard Dodge, descendent of one of the original sixteen settlers on this island, died today at age of 78.
The New York Times
published November 29, 1937

[NI10521] He inherited his Father poetical talent and was skilled in vocal music. Resides in New York City, was a Lt. Col. in the war of 1812, and for many years afterward was colonel and brigadier-general of New York State Troops. He passed nearly his lifetime in the U. S. service in the New York Custom House, from which he was removed by Andrew Jackson.

[NI10533] No Issue.

[NI10538] Served as a private in Capt Maxxon's company.

[NI10541] Twin to Joseph Clark

[NI10542] Twin to William Clake.

[NI10554] Twin to Wait Rathbun.

[NI10561]

[NI10566] Served in The Civil War in Company B. 28th Regiment Iowa Infantry. From Civil War Military Records:
Pvt Levi Dodge, age 44 of Janesville,Iowa
enlisted Aug 20 1862 into Co B 38th Iowa Infantry.
Jan 1 1865 was transferred to Co I 34th & 38th Iowa Consolidated Infantry at Morganza, Louisiana. Unit was mustered out of service Aug 29 1865 Davenport, Iowa.

Norman F Dodge age 14, probably his son, of Janesville, Iowa nativity Michigan, enlisted same day into same company as a fifer. Norman died Aug 25 1863 St Louis, MO and is buried in Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery.
- K L Bonnett -

[NI10590] Because of this will the Dodge association believes this Genealogy is
correct:

In the name of God, Amen, August 14, 1735, I, HANNAH SUTTON,
Of the town of Hempstead, widow of Robert Sutton, being in bodily health.
I
leave to my 3 sons, Daniel, Joseph, and John, each 5 shillings. All the
rest of my personal estate, of whatever kind, I leave to my son Robert
and my daughters, Mary, Hannah, Elizabeth, Phebe, Deborah, Keziah, and
Jemima. And Mary and Jemima are to have as much as my other daughters have
Already had. All my real estate is to be sold by my executors, "by way of
vendue," and the proceeds divided among my sons, Robert, Daniel, Joseph,
and John, and my seven daughters. I make my son, Robert, and my
son-in-law,
Tristram Dodge, and my friend, Andries Onderdonk, Esq., all of Cow Neck,
executors.

Witnesses, Samuel Dodge, Andries Onderdonk, William Burch. Proved, April
1753

[NI10605] In a message dated 7/21/08 10:20:53 PM, OlenWDodge writes:

Hi, Norman. It was nice to speak with you. Here is as much info as I can give you at this time about my generation. I will try to get more detail from my surviving aunts about my cousins children.

Great Grandparents Wayne Sylvester Dodge Mary McCarty Dodge

My Grandparents Walter Blaine Dodge b 12/3/1885 died July 1973 BertRebecca Dodge B 8-18-1896 d 4-1982

My Uncles



Wayne George Dodge B Feb 1923 D June 2008 aged 85

John ( ?) Dodge not sure of birth date or date of death. He was 80 ( I will follow up)

Walter Bernard Dodge ( my dad) b June 18th 1926

Rebecca Louise Dodge B July 3rd 1936



siblings Linda Gail Dodge ( Brimmage) Spouse David Wayne Brimmage

Linda born 8-19-1956 Huntington WV

Son David Wayne Brimmage Jr. B 10-18-1982

Daughter Renee Diane Brimmage b august 11 1979( padgett) Spouse Tyler Padgett

Two sons Owen Pagett aged 4 Evan Pagett aged 3



Olen William Dodge born 10-1-1957 spouse Peggy Lynn Dodge ( kight) B 10-21-1958

daughter Michelle Louise Dodge b 7-25-1978( Scrum) spouse David Wayne Scrum B 1-30-1978

Two sons via married ( David's sons ) Anthony and Michael Scrum



Gloria Octavia Dodge ( Dennison) b 12/4/1958 spouse Chester Dennison

Sons Larry dodge Gathers b 1-13-1977 John Edgar Gathers B 7-9-1982



Virginia Mae Dodge b 3/22/1962

Son Nathaniel Stephan Dodge ( keeping mothers maiden name) b 5-16-1982



Cousins Sons of Wayne G. Dodge

Stephan Dodge ( has 4 or five kids will find out info )

Joseph Walter Dodge no kids ?



Cousins Children of John Dodge

Vina Marie Dodge has kids will get more info

Wesley John Dodge no kids

Marquita Dodge has kids will get more info



that is what I have as of now, I will follow up with more info on the next generation

[NI10607] Served in WW I in the US Navy. Traveled to Japan with Admiral Perry. Worked on the Rail lines and worked in the textile industry.

[NI10609] James Dodge who was the Surgeon on the USS Constitution in 1804.Under the commnd of Captain John Rodgers. He was later appointed Charge' d'Affaires at Tunis, Tunesia, Africa on August 18, 1805. He died in office in Tunis in October 1806.

[NI10610] Donated his body to Science at Ohio State University

[NI10612] Served in WW II as a us Marine. He worked mostly as a Boiler Engineer.
After the War He worked for the Federal Government as a boiler engineer
in Columbus.

[NI10614] Resident of Reynoldsburg, OH. Daughter of Lealon and Lula (Brewer) Spaulding. She was preceded in death by her parents, many siblings, and husband of over 60 years Walter B. Dodge. She is survived by her children Linda (Wayne) Brimmage, Olen Dodge, Gloria Dennison, and Ginger Dodge; brother Homer Spaulding; grandchildren Larry (Amber), Michelle (David), Renee (Tyler), Nathan, John, and David (Tori); great-grandchildren Michael, Anthony, Teagan, Corbin, Owen, Evan, and Piper; several step-grandchildren.

[NI10615] Is a Bank Manager.

[NI10630] He made Col. during the Spanish American War 1898-1899.

[NI10644] He purchased a farm in westfield flats about 1901 and there he and his wife Elisabeth raised their 10 children. One of the finely improved farms of Jasper County is located in Malaka, and-is the property of Mr. Dodge, who, through perseverance and tile exercise of good judgment has gained a ~ prominent place among the agriculturists of the community. The farm consists of two hundred and eighty acres, upon which, in 1888, he erected a suitable equipment of substantial buildings. He has also introduced
other valuable improvements, and has placed the soil under a high state of cultivation
Grandchildren of Susannah Ross and Daniel Finkle
Author: The Grandchildren of Susannah Ross and Daniel Finkle
Publication: Recorded in 1965
Note: ABBR Grandchildren of Susannah Ross and Daniel Finkle
Note: primary
These are family records of the grandchildren's memories.
Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Note:
Call Number:
Media: Manuscript
Title: 1850 United States Federal Census
Author: U.S. Government
Note: 1850 United States Federal Census
Note: NS15993
Source Media Type: Census
Repository:
Note:
Call Number:
Media: Card
Title: Sullivan County New York Gravestone Inscriptions
Author: Daughters of the American Revolution
Repository:
Note: Fort Wayne, Indiana
Call Number:
Media: Microfiche
Title: History of Sullivan County
Author: James Eldridge Quinlan
Publication: Liberty, New York. copyright 1873
Note: ABBR History of Sullivan CountyQUAY 2
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Call Number:
Media: Book
Page: 512
Title: 1840 United States Federal Census
Author: U.S. Government
Note: 1840 United States Federal Census
Note: NS218593
Isreal and his wife, who was only 17 years old (1795) left the family
home in Massachusetts(?) and came to New York State in what was then
unbroken forest, but now is know as Brom Sprague's farm (John Sprague)
about two miles down the Beaverkill (a little past the Red Rose.) they
build a log cabin at Cooks Falls, Delaware County, and their first two
children were born there: Abigail in 1796 and Austin in 1799. They lived
there several years and then Israel sold the farm and bought the property
now owned by Cyrus C. Dodge (Rockland, New York, next to Shellman's)
where the rest of their children were born.
Matilda Dodge Fuller, daughter of Austin and Mary Grant Dodge, writes: "I
can remember Israel (my grandfather). I saw him coming down the road
with Grandma to take dinner at our house. He wore a cap with a long peak
over his eyes. Something like jockey's wear and she carried a basket
with double lids opening from both ends. They both smoked. She carrying
her clay pipe in the basket. After they were at our house I did
something that displeased him and he put me behind the door and I cried.
[Dodge Family Records by Sue George, 1995>] Israel was the first
Supervisor of the Town of Rockland in 1810.
He is buried in the Westfield Flats Cemetery, near the Presbyterian
Church, Old Route 17, Roscoe, New York

[NI10650] Author: The Grandchildren of Susannah Ross and Daniel Finkle
Publication: Recorded in 1965
Note: ABBR Grandchildren of Susannah Ross and Daniel FinkleQUAY 1
Note: primary

These are family records of the grandchildren's memories.

Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Note:
Call Number:
Media: Manuscript
Title: 1850 United States Federal Census
Author: U.S. Government
Note: 1850 United States Federal Census
Note: NS15993

Source Media Type: Census
Repository:
Note:
Call Number:
Media: Card
Title: Sullivan County New York Gravestone Inscriptions
Author: Daughters of the American Revolution
Repository:
Note: Fort Wayne, Indiana
Call Number:
Media: Microfiche

Notes for Elizabeth Austin:
[Dodge Family Records by Sue George, 1995>] After my Grandfather's death,
she came over to our house alone, but when I was about 12 years old she
got so feeble she could not walk and we had a buckboard wagon she could
get into easily and Kennie and Dennie would go after her. One time in
having they were busy and couldn't be spared and my father sent me with
the injunction I was not to bet the horse go off the walk as the old lady
didn't approve of girls driving. So I followed instructions. When we
got about half way she grabbed the reigns slapping the horse's back and
said, "Make him go faster." We drove up to the gate at good speed and my
father commenced to scold me and she said, "Austin, I couldn't stand
going so slow." So you will see where we get our racing blood.
She used to sit and tell me about her girlhood. She was an only child;
married and came to Cooks Falls when about seventeen. When Aunt Abie was
six months old she went back to visit her people in Connecticut in horse
back. She stayed about six weeks and Grandpa went after her. It snowed
when they returned and he build a sort of jumper out of poles and came in
that.
"The following year her mother and father sold their property in
Connecticut and came to Rockland to live with her. their names were
Nathaniel and Abigail Austin. Your father was named Nathaiel after him.
My father had their name (Austin) and Aunt Abbie was named Abigail.
"I think they were quite well to do for those days for they gave me to my
father and Aunt Abbie on account of their names the land where Grams and
Lydia Ann's houses stood.
"One thing I forgot to speak of in connection with their life at Cooks
Falls: they had a fire place that was as large as the whole side of the
house. Every night they drew their fuel with the horse. A log big
enough to fit in it. The horse's name was "Old Hanks". My father used
to tell us about it. He said when the horse came in the house, he (my
father) ran under the bed.

[NI10652] Unmarried.

[NI10660] See John File

[NI10698] Taken Prisoner & died in New York 1778. Age 32

[NI10710] He was an early settler at Marbletown, Ulster County, New York but
removed August, 1779, to New York City, where he died. March 1776, he
was one of the signers of a petition to the Provincial Congress for the
Province of New York, from Marbletown, asking to be embodied into a
company of Grenadiers to be commanded by Charles W. Brodhead, captain,
which was granted.
In 1778 he and others signed a petition to Gov. George Clinton asking for
protection against Indians for Rochester, a town just organized from
Marbletown. He served with the American troops under General Gates, and
returned to New York City upon leaving the Army.

[NI10726] Frank M. Dodge of Whitman passed away at South Shore Hospital on October 19, 2014 surrounded by his loving family. He was 78. Frank was born in Ft. Lewis WA. He served in the U.S Navy during the Cuban Crisis. He was a Member of the Teamsters Union Local 25 working as a truck driver for over 15 years. He also worked as a small engine repair mechanic. He has been a resident of Whitman for the past 15 years. He was a member of the Pembroke Social Club, and the Dull Men’s Club in Pembroke. He enjoyed many trips with the Carefree Capers, but most of all he loved spending time with all of his family.

[NI10746] Jane and Samel Humphries were living in 1850 in Hardin Countyand with no
children. In the 1870 census there are four children living with David &
Jane.It seems most probable that these children are from a former
maarrfiage of David's.

[NI10761] 1790 Census Deerfield, MA 1 male under 16 , i male over 16, 2 females.

1800 Census Deerfield, MA 3 males under 10, 1 male 10-16, 1-male 26-45, 1 male 45+, 1 female 26-45, 1 female 45+

[NI10776] Some spell the last name as Bordon.

[NI10779] Ezekiel Noble [Parents] was born on 24 Aug 1787 in Sheffield, Be rks., MA. He died on 23 Jun 1856 in Warsaw, Wyoming, New York. He wa s buried on 26 Jun 1856. He married Theodocia Bates on 5 Jun 180 8 in Egremont, Berks., MA.

Theodocia Bates [Parents] was born on 7 Aug 1789 in Egremont, Be rks., MA. She died on 4 Dec 1869 in Fayett, Cayette, IA. She wa s buried on 6 Dec 1869. She married Ezekiel Noble on 5 Jun 180 8 in Egremont, Berks., M

They had the following children:

F i Sarah Ann Deming Noble was born on 22 Sep 1808.
M ii Joseph Bates Noble was born on 14 Jan 1810. He died on 17 A ug 1900.
F iii Eunice Noble was born on 22 Jul 1813. She died in 187
F iv Rhoda Noble was born on 17 Apr 1816. She died in 1890.
F v Elenora Perselia (twin) Noble was born on 4 May 1818. She di ed on 5 May 1856.
F vi Leonora Cordelia (twin) Noble was born on 4 May 1818.
F vii Mary Sophia (twin) Noble was born on 7 Aug 1820.
F viii Rebecca Maria (twin) Noble was born on 7 Aug 1820. She di ed on 28 Feb 1874.
M ix John Ezekiel Noble was born on 27 Apr 1823.
M x Harvey Sylvester Noble was born on 27 Oct 1825. He died on 2 0 Nov 1857.
M xi Robert Delano Noble was born on 6 Aug 1828. He died in 1885 .


---------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------

Ezekiel Noble [Parents] was born on 8 Jun 1745
3691.
MARY SOPHIA NOBLE, dau. of Ezekiel, was b. in Penfield, N. Y., A ug. 7, 1820.
She m. Jan. 1, 1837, WILLIAM ROSWELL DODGE, b. in Newport, N. Y. , May 25, 1813, s. of Lyman and Betsey (Birden) Dodge. He has re sided successively in Perry, N. Y.; Warsaw, N. Y.; Perry, N. Y. ; Warsaw, N. Y.; and Saranac, Mich. To the latter place he remov ed, in 1857, and there has continued to reside up to the presen t time, 1877. He is a mason.


CHILDREN.
4344. Elizabeth Theodocia, b. July 17, 1838, in Perry, N. Y.; d . in Warsaw,
N. Y., Apr. 13, 1847, I. 8.
4345. William Harcey, b. July 24, 1840, in Warsaw, N. Y.; m . No
1861, Mary Jane Campbell. He is a mason, and resides, 187
Saranac, Mich.
4346. Helen Marr, b. Feb. 24, 1843, in Warsaw; m. Oct . 27, 185
Marcellus Bowen Mosher. He is a mason, and resides, 187
Saranac, Mich.
4347. Martha Minerca, b. July 17, 1845, in Warsaw; m. Apr . 9, 186
Arthur H. Barber, and d. in Saranac, Mich., Mch. 15, 1863, I. 1
He is a teamster, and resides, 1877, in Saranac, Mich.
4348. Augustus Noble, b. Mch. 28, 1848, in Warsaw; and ther e d. Ja
18, 1849, I. 21 mos.


Page 486


4349. Welcome Noble, b. Feb. 20, 1850, in Warsaw; and ther e d. Sept.
29, 1851, I. 19 mos.
4350. Mary Camilla, b. Mch. 20, 1853, in Warsaw; and ther e d. No
18, 1859, I. 6.
4351. Lillie Bell, b. Nov. 20, 1855, in Warsaw; m. Jul y 28, 187
Estus Liford Mosher. He is a farmer, and resides, 1877, in Saran a
Mich.


Noble Genealogy

Author: Lucius Boltwood

Call Number: R929.2 N752


The Descendants of Thomas Noble of Westfield, Massachusetts wh o came from Europe.

Bibliographic Information: Boltwood, Lucius. Noble Genealogy. Np :Np.Nd.

[NI10780] She was called Mattie in 1910 census

[NI10788] She has done Secretarial work all of her life. She is an acccomplished & published author, and manages the world wide mail room for Star Trek fans with 40 Volunteers.

[NI10789] Aged 92 years 5m 21d

[NI10792] She wa a Delaware Indian

[NI10848] Union County, Pennsylvania History Annals of the Buffalo Valley by John Blair Lynn Pages 580 thru 596
Dodge, Edward R., Surgeon, U. S. Navy.

[NI10851] .Side Served:
Union

State Served:
New York
Unit Numbers:
1432 1432
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Service Record:
Enlisted as a Private on 20 February 1864 at the age of 25
Enlisted in Company D, 161st Infantry Regiment New York on 20 February 1864.
Transfered on 02 September 1865 from company D to company B
Mustered out Company D, 161st Infantry Regiment New York on 12 November 1865 in Tallahassee, FL

[NI10853] 1850 Census states name was Francis A.

[NI10854] 1850 Census states Alfred W. is Alfred M.

[NI10874] Mrs. Helen M. (Chapel) Dodge, widow of Dr. Edward R. died at the home of her son, Paul Livingston Dodge of Ashbury Park, New Jersey last wednesday night. Mrs Dodge was 76 years old and death was caused by general debility. Mrs. Dodge's husband wass a surgeon in the United States Navy during the Civil war. Mrs. Dodge leaves another son besides the one with whom she lived. He iss Fred Dodge of Allenhurst, Pennsylvania.

[NI10881] He was better known as TA Dodge.

[NI10884] Caroline Elizabeth Odell was married first to a Mr. Lawrence. Per the Illinois Marriage VR's. Still looking for Her parents.

[NI10887] DODGE -MRS. IDA CRANDELL, 94, of Franklindale, widow of the late Herman L. Crandell, passed away late Tuesday evening. She had been in failing health for quite some time and had been a guest at the Bradford County Manor of the past several years. She was born Dec. 10, 1884 in Franklin Twp., the daughter of the late Nathaniel and Mary Pennell Dodge. Her father was a Civil War veteran, serving as a Corporal in the First Regiment of the Artillery. She was always active in church and community affairs as long as her health permitted. Possessing a gracious manner and unique quality. Mrs. Crandell was the first woman in Franklin Twp. to be elected to the school board, the first woman to serve on the election board and the first woman to serve on a grand jury. She was a member of the United Methodist Church in W. Franklin, a 50-year member of the Towanda Valley Grange, a past member of the O.E.S. Chapter No. 76 in Towanda and a past member of the Rebekah Lodge in W. Franklin. She is survived by her son Amos B. Crandell, Franklindale; one granddaughter, Mrs. Tom (Shirley) Blackall of Franklindale; three great-grandchildren, Ronald Hooks, Kelly Hooks, and Shannon Blackall, all of Franklindale; and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Maryott Funeral Home in Towanda, with rev. Kenneth R. Pope officiating. Burial will be in the Christian Church Cemetery, Franklindale. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 7-9 p.m. The family requests that memorials may be directed to the Franklindale Christian Church, Franklindale. nTowanda Daily Review. (Died in 1979)

[NI10897] Still born.

[NI10900] Aged 3 years 2 mo. 12 days

[NI10913] No Children

[NI10916] No Issue

[NI10918] Source Information:
Census Place Claremont, Dodge, Minnesota
Family History Library Film 1254618
NA Film Number T9-0618
Page Number 392B
North Spencer Cemetery, Spencer, tioga County, New York
Dodge Edwin Feb 10, 1824 Aug. 18, 1856
Sarah H. Sept. 18, 1837 (Illegible) w/o Edwin; m.n. Vorhis

http://www.rootsweb.com/~nytioga/nortspen.htm

[NI10921] DODGE –DOROTHY DODGE PROOF, age 92, formerly of Wyalusing RR 2, died on Tuesday, June 8, 1999, in the Bradford County Manor in West Burlington, Pa. Born on November 9, 1906, in Sugar Run, Pa., she was a daughter of the late Myron and Bertha Page Dodge. Mrs. Proof was a lifetime resident of the Wyalusing area, and was a graduate of Mansfield Normal School, after which she was engaged in substitute teaching in the Bradford County area. On Feb. 25, 1992, she was preceded in death by her husband, the late George (Bill) Proof. Prior to his death they had spent more than 64 years of marriage together. She is survived by: two children, Robert Proof of Wyalusing, Pa., and Evelyn Kerschner of Endicott, N.Y.; nine grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; nieces and nephews. In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by two sons, Myron Proof and Donald Proof, and two sisters, Florence Neiley and Beatrice Sedd

[NI10925] Masonic

[NI10926] Went to Warrren New York after july 1994.

[NI10933] Lawton Constitution,
Fri., Oct. 27, 2006
Warren, Texas - Graveside service for ALBERT LOUISE DODGE, 95, of Warren, Texas, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Fairview Cemetery, Apache, with the Rev. Joe Jones, Pastor of Mt. Zion Christian Church, officiating, under the direction of Crews Funeral Home.
Mrs. Dodge died Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2006, in Cyril.
She was born April 13, 1911, to Albert and Frances Love in Broxton. Her father was killed in a train wreck before she was born. She married Melvin L. Dodge on May 15, 1941, in Safford, Ariz.
She traveled worldwide with her husband, who was a pilot for oil exploration companies. They lived in Liberia, Libya, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Lebanon. While in these countries, she frequently worked as a secretary for the American embassies. They lived in Oklahoma, Arizona, California and Louisiana, before they retired to Warren, Texas. She was a member of Mount Zion Christian Church in Broxton. She also was a member of the Golden Triangle Porcelain Art Club.
Survivors include a sister, Ruth Sawyer, Apache; many nieces, nephews and cousins.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Melvin; parents, Albert Love and Emma Cook; stepfather, Allie Cook; two sons, Kenneth James and James Franklin; two brothers, Ted and Jack Cook; and three sisters, Kathryn Cook, Betty Reed and Helen Hill.

[NI10986] Great Bend-Mrs. Adah E. Olley Dodge 66, wife of Clinton B. Dodge and resident of Great Bend all her life, died suddenly last night the sixth of April in the Basement of the Woolworth Memorial Church, where she was assisting in the Ladies Aid Society supper. She died on her husband's birthday. Mr. Dodge is the Great Bend correspondent for the Daily Times. She was suddenly stricken ill and died shortly afterward.
Mrs. Dodge was born near Great Bend Oct 18 1871, a daughter of James and Sarah Goldthrite Olley,and educated in local schools. She married Clinton B. Dodge of this village Apr 11 1893 by Rev.R. J. Thompson of the local baptist Church.
She had long been active in church and community activities. She was a member of the Crescent Rebekah Lodge of Black River. Surviving besides her husband are two brothers, J. Herbert Olley of Binghamton,and George B. Olley of Portland Ore.

[NI10991] Dodge-at Keyport New Jersey, Oct 5 1872, Adam T. Dodge, Sr. in his 81st
year, the funeral to take place at the home of his son, Stephen A.ugustus
Dodge, at 261 Gates Ave, Brooklyn New York.

[NI10993] Gallup, John D. [View Citation] [Table of Contents] [Page Numbers]

The genealogical history of the Gallup family in the United States : also biographical sketches of members of the family
Hartford, Conn.?: unknown, 1893, 331 pgs
Pg 71,

[NI10998] Loriston was a veteran of the Civil War. He enlisted at 35 years of age on 21, on 11 August 1862 at Wilna, Jefferson, New York. He was mustered in as a private, Company B, 1st Battalion, Black River Artillery (later to become Company D, 10th New York Heavy Artillery). He was discharged for disability on 16 December of the same year at Ft. Richmond, New York.


1. Annual Report of the Adjutant-General of the State of New York for the Year 1897.

2. Civil War Pension Index (filed twice): 1. Date 31MAY1880, Application #369940, Certificate #312338
2. Date 04APR1904, Application #803346, Certificate#577673 (filed by his widow), New York

3. 1890 Veteran's Schedule for Jefferson County, New York.

Again, hope this divulges some more pieces to the puzzle.

[NI11002] JOSEPH F. DODGE was born in Goshen, Litchfield county, Conn., October 21, 1832. He came with his parents to Wilna in 1839, where his father took up 200 acres land. He married Ann Maria, daughter of Brisband Brownell, in 1856. Seven children were born to them, five of whom are living: Oliver F., Julia M., Walter R., Nellie L. and Clinton B. Joseph moved with his family to Great Bend in 1867, and entered the employ of L. H. Mills. About two years later he engaged with the Great Bend Paper Company, where he remained until about four years since, when, his health failing, he was obliged to retire. His wife died in 1877. He is now in poor health and resides with his son Clinton, at Great Bend. Oliver F. Dodge is foreman of the Great Bend Paper Company, and is a justice of the peace.

[NI11011] [Genealogy.com, Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 9, Social Security
Death Index: U.S., Date of Import: Sep 23, 2002, Internal Ref.
#1.111.9.68627.90]
Individual: Dodge, Donald
Social Security #: 092-10-2499 Issued in: New York
Birth date: May 24, 1907
Death date: Jun 1975
Residence code: Rhode Island: ZIP Code of last known residence: 02840
Location associated with this ZIP Code: Newport County, Rhode Island

From New York State Society of the Cincinnati Biographical Data completed
by Donald Dodge on 8/28/1961...
Occupation: Steinmann, Cain, & White Architects, 101 Park Avenue, New
York, 17, New York
Education: The Taft School 1926. Princeton Univ., B.S. 1930. Princeton
Graduate College, M.F.A. 1932.
Memberships: N.Y. State Association of Architects, American Institute of
Architects, Princeton Club of N.Y., Bronxville Field Club, Conanicut
Yacht Club (Jamestown, RI)
Wife: Dorothy Grace Mechling-Apr. 22, 1938-St. Thomas Church, Whitemarsh,
PA
Children: Daphne, Sept. 24, 1942, Married Duncan Falconer Wood- June 6,
1961, Christ Church, Bronxville, New York
Mapes (daughter) July 24, 1944
Donaldson - August 7, 1947

[NI11015] He was among the first founders of the First Baptist Church in New York

[NI11022] 1889 -Germantown Acadamy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1901- Drexel Institute, Mechanical Arts

[NI11023] son of Thomas E. Dodge & Agnes (Jones) Dodge
m. Maud (Church) Dyer 8 April 1908
at Ashfield, Mass.

died aged 76 at Cooley Dickinson hospital after several years of failing health; born March 7, 1875 and spent early life in Buckland, coming to Ashfield when a young man; was janitor at town hall and Congregational church for a long while, and a plumber for a great many years; in 1908 he married Mrs Maud Church who died in 1948; leaves a brother George Dodge and a sister Mrs Orin Ruddock of Buckland; funeral services at Congregational church, burial in Plain Cemetery [published Tuesday, February 26, 1952, Springfield Union]

[NI11033] [Genealogy.com, Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 9, Social Security
Death Index: U.S., Date of Import: Sep 23, 2002, Internal Ref.
#1.111.9.68635.8]

Individual: Dodge, Helen
Social Security #: 178-05-4250
Issued in: Pennsylvania

Birth date: May 18, 1900
Death date: Dec 1985


Residence code: Pennsylvania

ZIP Code of last known residence: 17857
Location associated with this ZIP Code:

Northumberland, Pennsylvania

[NI11040] Age 10yrs, 10 days

[NI11044] Social Security Number: 109-16-6182
The state listed in the birth locality field is where the Social Security
Number was issued: New York
The zip code listed in the death locality field is the last place of
residence.
Death Residence Localities ZIP Code: 02840 Middletown, Newport County, Rhode
Island
Donaldson Dodge Note: Above from Social Security Records, 2003. Dorothy
Grace Mechling Dodge died while on a land excursion from a cruise to
Norway with her sister Mary Ann Mechling Bridger. She was cremated in
Norway and her ashes were spread on Narragansett Bay, off Green's Pier,
Jamestown, RI by Daphne Dodge, Mapes Dodge, and Donaldson Dodge.

[NI11052] Anson was in the Civil War, in Company C., 100th Reg. Illinois INF. and was wounded and taken prisioner at the battle of Chikamunda on Sep 20. 1963. He mustered in ias Private 2 Aug 1862 and musterd out as Corporal12 Jun 1865 in Nashville, TN. He had a distinguished Service medal.

[NI11059] Alonzo T. Dodge, Born 08 Dec 1834; Died 07 Mar 1863 in civil war; Enlisted: 08 Sep 1862 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 52nd Regiment, Massachusetts Militia Infantry, Co. D; Buried Baton Rouge National Cemetery, LA;

alternate Birth date 05 December 1833 Hawley, Franklin County, Massachusetts

Cemetery Baton Rouge, National Cemetery, Louisiana also see Brookside Cemetery in Deerfield, Massachusetts

[NI11060] 1860 Census in Deerfield, Franklin County, MA, listed under Henderson.

[NI11061] Amos was in the Civil War, PVT. enlisted 6 Aug 1862, 100 ILL. Reg Co.
serv 3 years transferred to Pioneer Corps. Disharged 12 Jun 1865.

[NI11066] Private, US Army WW I

[NI11067] Charles O. Dodge Jr, born February 1, 1926 in Lockport, died at age 80, February 3, 2006 at Salem Village in Joliet.

Charles is survived by his loving family; his wife Lois Dodge (nee Chorak); two sons Kenneth Dodge and Robert Dodge; two grandchildren, Jamie Dodge and Eric Dodge..

Charles was preceded in death by his parents, Father, Charles O. Dodge Sr. and Mother, Lavina Dodge (nee Murray); and his Daughter-n-law, Patricia Ann Dodge. .

Charles was a U.S. Army Veteran who served in the 82nd. Airborne Glider Infantry and is remembered in the military section of this web site.

Burial: Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery, Elwood, Will County, Illinois, USA; Plot: Section C3-50 Grave B1

[NI11083] Fought in Civil War

[NI11084] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 89
page 275

Miss Damaris Dodge Van Meter.
DAR ID Number: 88868
Born in Warren County, Ill.
Descendant of Josiah Rogers Dodge, as follows:
1. John Milton Dodge (1813-77) m. 1836 Margaret Murphy (1814-1901).
2. John Dodge (1784-1875) m. 1872 Theodosia Dodge (1794-1880).
3. Josiah Rogers Dodge m. 1783 Zervia Willis (b. 1763).
Josiah Rogers Dodge served as private in the ?Short Levies,? 1781, under Colonel Durkee. He was born, 1750, in Colchester, Conn.

[NI11087] Wedding Reception- Mad River Barn

[NI11089] Shot by Claim Jumper

[NI11093] Womens Relief Corps
THE MANHATTAN MERCURY, Manhattan, Kansas, Monday, April 23, 1917, Vol. IX, No. 55, Page 3, Column 3
Obituary - Sophronia Victoria Rall Dodge
Sophronia Victoria Rall was born in Van Buren county, Iowa, December 7, 1841. In 1843 she moved with her parents to Drakesville, Davis county, Iowa, where they resided until 1865. On Aug. 28, 1865, the deceased was married to Alexander R. Dodge, a Union volunteer soldier, a member of the Second Iowa battery. After a short time the couple moved to Dallas county, Iowa, where they lived on a farm for eight years. In 1873 the family took up a claim in Smith county, Kansas. They continued to live there until Mr. Dodge's death on Feb. 25, 1888. After this the widow, with her family, moved to the town of Athol, smith county, Kansas, where she lived until 1900. From there she moved to Manhattan, Kansas. Since 1910, she has made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Frank E. Farris, now living in Osage City, where she died April 20 at the age of 75 years, 4 months and 13 days.
At the age of sixteen years she began teaching school, and during her life time taught six years. She was converted at 15, joined the Christian church and was a constant, faithful worker all of her life.
Mrs. Dodge lived a widow 29 years, and left with a family of four small children to raise she at times experienced difficulties but came thru them remarkably well.
Mrs. Dodge leaves four children, two brothers, one sister, 18 grandchildren and two great-grandchilden to mourn her loss. The children are Mrs. Gussie Thomas, of Bethany, Neb., Mrs. W. J. Doty, of Manhattan, Kan., Mrs. Frank E. Ferris, of Osage City, Kans., and Warren K. Dodge, of Athol, Kansas. The brothers are: S. D. Rall, Huntington Beach, Calif., and W. A. Rall, of Wathena, Kansas. The sister is Mrs. D. H. Glemming of Manhattan, Kansas.
The body was taken to Athol for interment.

[NI11095] EVENING TRIBUNE, Des Moines, Iowa, Wednesday, March 26, 1919
Mrs. H. H. Dodge died this morning at 9:30 o'clock at her home, 1121 Twenty-fifth street.She is survived by her husband, and one son, Glen W. Dodge, of Chicago, Ill.
Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the University Church of Christ.
Interment will be made at Otterman cemetery, north of Van Meter, Iow

[NI11098] [Genealogy.com, Family Archive #110, Vol. 1 A-K, Ed. 9, Social Security
Death Index: U.S., Date of Import: Sep 23, 2002, Internal Ref.
#1.111.9.68627.208]
Individual: Dodge, Dorothy
Social Security #: 109-16-6182 Issued in: New York
Birth date: Jun 29, 1912
Death date: Jul 1979
Residence code: Rhode Island ZIP Code of last known residence: 02840
Location associated with this ZIP Code: Newport County, Rhode Island

[NI11105] Died Young.

[NI11106] Died Young

[NI11136] Margaret Elizabeth was born 25 March 1822 in New York City to Cyrenius Newcomb Dodge and Margaret Dodge who were first cousins. Their Dodge ancestry goes back to Tristram Dodge who settled on Block Island, Rhode Island in April of 1661. On 16 September 1850 she was married at her father's residence, 119 Henry Street, New York City. She was the second wife of Joseph Fletcher Florentine a widower. The mother of six children: Margaret Dodge 31 October 1851, William Dodge 30 January 1853, Sarah J. 27 July 1854, Phebe Munroe 4 February 1856, Mary Emma 20 July 1857, Joseph Fletcher 24 October 1859. Lived on Staten Island, Brooklyn, Dixon/Illinois, Altona/Illinois, Chicago/Illinois. Died of a cerebral hemorrage at the home of her son Joseph Fletcher Florentine in Wheaton, Illinois. Margaret was a deeply religious person of the Baptist faith who had a talent for writing poetry.

[NI11190] Died in infancy.

[NI11196] Dr. A. C. Woodruff, a native of Knox County, Illinois, was born July 2,
1850, and is a son of J. W. and Elizabeth (Dodge) Woodruff. His father
died when he was three years of age. When a young man he attended the
Abingdon College, where he received his education. In 1869 he came to
Dallas County, Iowa and the following year began reading medicine at De
Soto, Iowa with Dr. A. P. McCullough. In 1872 he attended lectures at
the Keokuk Medical College, and later became a graduate from that
institution. In the spring of 1881 he came to Griswold, where he has
since been engaged practicing his profession. He was married to Hattie
Dodge in 1879. The doctor is one of the oldest practitioners of
Griswold, and enjoys a good patronage.

[NI11208] Census US 1880, Homer, Will County, IL
Census US 1920, Oswego County, New York.

[NI11234] no issue !

[NI11270] Minor Dodge, youngest child of Cyrenus Newcomb Dodge. was born September 22, 1824. in New York City, and lived a long and useful life. While successfully engaged in business, he was fond of, art and poetry, and during his school 'lays exhibited considerable artistic talent Of indomitable energy and optimistic nature, he compelled success with every undertaking. and was very kindly and thoughtful of others. From early life, until his death, he was a member of the Baptist church. In the early part of his life he was a ship. owner of Lynchburg, Virginia and from 1870 to 1880, resided in Chicago, en-gaged in the insurance business_ In 1881 he removed to Brooklyn, New York, and died June 2, 1904, at Bryn Mawr Park, Yonkers, New York. He was often wont to quote poetry, and the following was one of his favorite stanzas:

In youth's early morning; in manhood's firm pride; Let this be our motto, our
footsteps to guide, In storm or in sunshine, whatever avail, Well onward and
conquer, and never say fail.

He married (first) September 6, 1848,Susan M. Hopkins, born February 23, 1825. at Bellefonte. Pennsylvania, died August 7, 1853. He married (second) February 11,1857. Emma Webb Sowers, born January 8, 1836, in Clarke county, Virginia, died July 29. 1864, at Lynchburg. Virginia He Married (third) May i6, 1866. Mary de Leftwich, a daughter of Rev. M. de Left-wich; she is now Living in a historic building formerly a convent, in Netumo, the birthplace of Nero, thirty miles from Rome, Italy. She is a painter, giving attention chiefly to portraits. She studied art in Munich, and received numerous medals_ The only child of the first marriage. Edward. Sanderson, died when five month. old_ Children of the second Marriage: Mary Sowers, horn November 1. 1857; Margaret, February 6, 1839; Emma Kerfoot, June 8, 1860. Children of the third marriage were: William de Leftwich b. March 9 1867 in Liberty; Annie de Leftwich, born May 15, 1879, in Chicago; and Robert E. Lee, born September 29, 1872, at La Grange. a suburb of Chicago

[NI11292] Los Angeles Times 6/24/1932:

DODGE. June 22. Howard A. Dodge, beloved husband of Bertha F. Dodge, father of Raymond T., Ogden D. and Wilber S. Dodge; brother of Schaler C. Dodge and Mrs. Annie J. Gilbert of Oakdale, Cal.

Funeral today, 2pm, from the Frank D. Weber Mortuary, 936 Venice Bouldevard.

[NI11313] Note: Born between 21 Sep 1856-20 Sep 1857

[NI11314] Oliver Asil Dodge was born in Jo Daviess county, Illinois, May 22, 1860, and died at his home in Republic county, Kansas, July 20, at the age of 67 years, 1 month and 28 days. He moved to Iowa with his parents when he was but a small boy, where he grew to manhood.

In 1882 he was married to Mrs. Martha E. Wilson and continued to make Iowa their home until 1885, when with his family he emigrated to Kansas and has made Republic county his home ever since with the exception of two years in Oklahoma and three years in Iowa.

He united with the United Brethren church many years ago at Sibley, Kansas.

He has been in poor health for nearly ten years.

He was the father of nine children: William H. Dodge of Rydal, Mrs. Chloe E. Syrie of Lander, Wyo., Mrs. Etta Barleen of Concordia, Claude F. Dodge of Belleville, Stanley A. Dodge of Concordia, Mrs. Sophia Westrick of Belleville, also three children that preceded him in death. He was also a loving and kind father to his two step-daughters, Mrs. Vina Roberts, Ontaria, Calif., and Mrs. Myrtle Higle of Belleville. He leaves to mourn him, his wife, eight children, thirty-one grandchildren, thirteen great-grandchildren, two brothers, George Dodge of Belleville, Frank Dodge of Ottumwa, Iowa; one sister, Mrs. Chloe Dorrance of Wellman, Iowa, besides a host of friends and neighbors.

The Belleville Telescope, Thursday, July 28, 1927

[NI11320] In January 1882, she was married to Oliver Dodge and to this union nine children were born. She continued to make Iowa her home until 1885 when, with her husband and family, she immigrated to Kansas and had made Republic county her home ever since, with the exception of two years in Oklahoma and three years in Iowa.

She united with the United Brethren church at Sibley, Kan., many years ago, later transferring her membership to the Christian church in Belleville and lived her Christian life in this faith until her death. Like many others she endured hardships and discouragements, which she met with Christian fortitude.

She was a loving mother, a dutiful wife, a good neighbor - always ready and willing to help those in need.

Since her husband's death in 1927, she made her home with her daughter, Sophia Westrick.

She was the mother of 11 children, six having preceeded her in death. Those left to mourn her passing are her three sons and two daughters, William H. Dodge and Etta Barleen of Concordia, Claude F. Dodge of Topeka, Stanley A. Dodge of Los Angeles, Cal., and Sophia Westrick of Belleville; also 34 grandchildren, 48 great-grandchildren; seven great-great-grandchildren; and one sister, Carrie Tatro of Wichita, besides a host of friends and acquaintances.

Funeral services were held Saturday, June 27, at 1:30 p.m.

Internment was in Pleasant Ridge cemetery.

The Belleville (Kansas) Telescope, Thursday, June 27, 1946

[NI11324] CONCORDIA - The funeral for William H. Dodge, 93, Concordia, will be at 2 p.m. Friday at the Chaput-Buoy funeral home, Concordia, the Rev. Jack L. Gilbert officiating. Burial will be in the Zion cemetery.

Mr. Dodge died Wednesday at the Park Villa nursing home, Clyde.

He was born Nov. 8, 1883, in Keoto, Iowa, and lived most of his life in Concordia. He was a retired stone mason.

Mr. Dodge was a member of the Weleyan Church, Concordia.

Surviving are the widow, Bertha, of the nursing home; a son, C.O., Concordia; 7 daughters, Mrs. Vera Houg, Witchita; Mrs. Gladys Morgan, Belleville; Mrs. Frances Sewart, Concordia; Mrs. Doris Sprague, Milton; Mrs. Betty taylor, Witchita; Mrs. Irene Stokesboary, Denver, Colo.; and Mrs. Ina Marie Lunan, Witchita;2 brothers, Stanley, Concordia, and Claude, St. Mary's; 2 sisters, Ella Barleen, Concordia, and Mrs. Sophia Westrick, Belleville; 21 grandchildren, 40 great-grandchildren and 5 great-great-grandchildren.

The Salina Journal, Thursday, January 27, 1977

[NI11349] Served on the USS Wasp Aircraft Carrier.

[NI11352] Cpl 7 Engineers WWI SS & DLC Pennsylvania

[NI11356] William de Leftwich Dodge was born in Bedford, Virginia, but spent most
of his childhood and adolescence between Paris and Munich where his
mother resided to pursue her art study.

In 1895 he was admitted to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris where he
studied with Jean-LeÛn Gerome. At age nineteen he was awarded the gold
medal of the American Art Association for a history painting depicting
the death of Minnehaha, the subject of Longfellow's popular poem,
Hiawatha. This and other of his figurative work was painted from life and
based on careful research to ensure its historical accuracy. In 1893,
while still very young, he was commissioned to decorate the dome of the
central building of the Colombian Exposition, the famous "White City" in
Chicago.

He emerged as one of the most prominent muralists of the era, at a time
when murals were regarded as an essential element of most public
architecture, theaters, municipal buildings, and even some private homes.

In 1906 he designed and had built for his use the classical Villa
Francesca at Setauket, Long Island, a small corner of which is depicted
in this painting.

[NI11357] Marion Raynor
(January 24, 1923 - November 18, 2015)
Marion Raynor
Marion Raynor, 92, of Vestal, NY, and formerly of Montrose, PA, passed away peacefully at Vestal Center Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, Vestal, NY on Wednesday, November 18, 2015. She was born on January 24, 1923 in New Field, NY, to the late Ninion N. and Sylvia Irene (Dodge) Hall.
Surviving is her son and daughter-in-law, Jack and Regina Raynor, Montrose, PA, daughter, Janet Pekera, Apalachin, NY, five grandchildren and their spouses, Patricia (Jim) Scalzo, Jack (Marjorie) Raynor, Sandra Raynor, Gregory (Ro) Pekera, Douglas (Paulette) Pekera, ten great grandchildren, Shannon Pasquarella, Bill Huggins, Kate Huggins, Corrin and Travis Raynor, Hannah, Haley and John Pekera, Joey and Jimmy Pigot, two great-great grandson, Abel Pasquarella and Hunter Huggins, four sisters-in-law, Barbara Hall, Vestal, NY, Retha Hall Stone, Montrose, PA, Alma Jean Blaisure, Montrose, PA, and Rosalee Raynor, Montrose, PA, several nieces and nephews. Her husband, Lawrence C. Raynor, step-father, Art Biggar, four brothers, Donald, Richard, Robert and Ken Hall predeceased Marion.
Marion was a member of the Franklin Forks United Methodist Church and the Lawsville Grange. She was the former President of the Silver Lake American Legion Ladies Auxiliary, Post # 983.
A Memorial Service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, November 28, 2015, at the Franklin Forks United Methodist Church. Interment will be in the Montrose Cemetery. Friends may call on the family from an hour prior to the service at the church.
In Lieu of flowers, donations in Marion’s name can be made to Franklin Forks United Methodist Church. The family would like to thank Vestal Center Rehabilitation and Nursing Center for their loving care of Marion.

[NI11371] She was 86.

Mrs Dodge was born in Brooklyn, New York a daughter of the late George and Rachel (williams) Brown. She was a graduate of Northfield Academy (Mass.) and resided in Franklin Lakes, NJ prior to becoming a Block Island resident in 1975. She was a member of the Harbor Baptist Church and a member of the "Lunch Bunch." She was a widow of Evan N. Dodge.
She is survived by a daughter, Elizabeth Demaggio of Peace Dale and Block Island and a son George E. Dodge of Block Island, 7 grandchildren and 2 great grand children. Interment will be in the Island Cemetery.

[NI11378] Robert was also an artist like his brother but less well known.

[NI11416] Thomas Palmer moved from Vermont to New York in 1804( according to
Cuttler's Genealogy of Central New York, Volume III, page 1543.) (source
of information on Abigail Dodge was Theron Royal Woodward, p. 173.)
Thomas Palmer was married a second time, after Abigail Dodge died. His
second wife was Olive Cutler Sabin. He married her in 1823 in Truxton,
N.Y. Olive was from Thompson, Ct. Her maiden name was Olive Cutler. She
was previously married to William Sabin, who died. Olive died in 1859 in
Milton, Wisconsin. (Later, Norman Palmer,a son of Thomas Palmer's and
Abigail Dodge Palmer married Huldah Sabin, who was the daughter of Olive
Sabin, so Norman Palmer actually married his step-sister.)

[NI11421] V
The Dodge Family Association believes that Samuel Dodge and Lydia Sprague are the parents of Amos Dodge.

"Amos Dodge was born on Block Island, June 8, 1791. Rachel Delong was a daughter of Daniel Delong and married Amos Dodge at Cooperstown, New York in 1815. They first made their home in Chenango County, New York, then moved to Portage County, Ohio and from there to Preston County, W.VA. in March 1839."

"Amos Dodge enlisted in the Union Army in July, 1862 in the 3rd Maryland Regiment under Capt Fallen, as a fifer. He was captured at Harpers Ferry Sept 15, 1862. Died at College Green near Annapolis, MD. Feb. 14, 1863. He was 71 years old at the time of his enlistment. He had 1 brother, Joseph and 2 sisters.

[NI11422] V

[NI11437] [p.12] Mrs. Fayelle Dodge Mulford.
DAR ID Number: 90030
Born in Philadelphia, Pa.
Wife of Spencer K. Mulford.
Descendant of Samuel Dodge, as follows:
1. James Mapes Dodge (b. 1852) m. 1879 Josephine Kern (b. 1857).
2. William Dodge, Jr. (1815-58), m. 1851 Mary E. Mapes (1831-1905).
3. William Dodge (1758-1842) m. 1814 Susan Johnson.
4. Samuel Dodge m. 1753 Helena Amerman (1735-1817).
Samuel Dodge (1730-1807) was a member of the Associated Exempts and signer of the Association Test in Dutchess County, N. Y. He was born in Cow Neck, L. I.; died in Poughkeepsie, N. Y.

[NI11439] STUARTS DRAFT, June 29-Funeral services for Mrs. William I. Rader, sixty-eight, who died at her home here yesterday following an illness and invalidism of many years' duration will be held tomorrow (Wednesday) morning at eleven o'clock at the Calvary Methodist church, conducted by the Rev. A. Vandevener, pastor, assisted by the Rev. R. H. Campbell, pastor of the Stuarts Draft Baptist Church.
Mrs. Rader is survived by her husband, William I. Rader; six children, Oder and Homer Rader, of Washington, D. C., and Mabel, Ruth, Hazel and Alden Rader, of Stuarts Draft. She is also survived by one sister, Mrs. T. B. Albright of Cumberland, Md., and four brothers, Charles, Howard and Allen Dodge, of Terra Alta, W. Va., and Scott Dodge, of Los Angeles, Calif.
Active pallbearers will be John Forrer, Tislon Cohron, W. A. Bussey, John Harper, B. B. Kube and John Alexander. Honorary: Robert McChesney, Herbert Harris, S. A. Shaner, Oville Flory, Dr. Paul Gutsche, O. P. Bussey, J. H. Weaver, W. T. Bradley, David Whitsell and O. L. Hockman.

Waynesboro News Virginian-date of paper: June 29, 1937

[NI11473] Pvt US Army World War I

[NI11476] Records say she was a twin to Brce Ancil Dodge - Still born

[NI11490] 1900 Census says she was born in West Virginia

Last Will and Testament, Pineville, Wyoming County, 26 Jan 1950

Tombstone says Nov 28 1884.

[NI11506] Twin to Clara.

[NI11514] Marven Dodge - Civil War Soldier
Enlisted Company C- Taylor Co. 25th Militia, W.V. State Troops. Enrolled at Kingwood
Preston Co. W.V.May have died in the Civil war or shortly there after.

[NI11516] Cephas A. Dodge a Civil War Soldier
Enlisted in Company C, 25th Militia, W. Va State Troops. Enrolled at Kingwood Preston Co.W.V. From compiled rolls dated 5 Aug.1864 (date of enrollment) to 7 Oct. 1864.

[NI11520] Unmarried

[NI11524] Served in the US Navy from 27 Oct 1997 - 26 Oct 2001

[NI11532] Death from an Accident

[NI11533] In the 1860 census Preston, WV, David is listed as being 1 years old(dated 20 Jul 1860) and as being born in Virginia.
In the 1870 census Preston, WV, David is listed as being 8 years old and born in WV.
West Virginia separated from Virginia during the Civil War over Slavery

[NI11544] Hiram Dodge - Civil War Soldier
Enlisted Company C- Taylor Co. 25th Militia, W.V. State Troops. Enrolled at Kingwood
Preston Co. W.V.

[NI11555] Official Death certificate says Berlinda Ann Dodge, b. 9 Oct 1865. Terra Alta, W.Va., Nov. 27 - Mrs. Berlinda Ann Dodge, 75, died Monday morning at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Charles Auman, near Cranesville. She was a daughter of the late Michael and Isabelle Duhl Teets. Her husband, Joshua Thomas Dodge, died in 1927. Surviving are seven children, Mrs. Florence Warren, Kingwood; Mrs. Ethel Jeffreys, Lenox; Mrs. Helen Guthrie, Mrs. Nellie Grove, Dorsey C. Dodge, Chester O. Dodge, Bruce D. Dodge and Mrs. Edna Auman, all of Terra Alta. Funeral services were conducted this afternoon by Rev. J. A. Ryan of Brandonville.

[NI11561] Chester died in the VA hospital in Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia. A World War II veteran, Chester was awarded a Purple Heart, a silver Victory medal and other medals

[NI11578] Born in the Home of his Father Hiram Dodge

[NI11581] Separated from Wife in 1917. Died at John Hopkins Hospital, Maryland

[NI11634] In US Navy July 1992 - present.

[NI11640] Enlisted in WW II National Guard 6 Jan 1941.

[NI11641] Ronald Franklin Dodge, 77, of Dundalk, Md., died Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2002, in Baltimore. He was born Dec. 2, 1924, in Terra Alta, a son of the late Bruce D. and Nellie F. Cupp Dodge.

He was a retired supervisor of Baltimore County Parks and Recreation.

He enlisted for WW II on19 May 1943, Enlistment State: Virginia, Clarksburg West Branch, Private, Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law, Automobile Serviceman, Single, without dependents

He is survived by two sons, Joseph and John Dodge; three daughters, Judy L. Horsey, Nancy Chambers, and Peggy E. Huffman; three brothers, Dale, Marion and Mike Dodge; nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

He was also preceded in death by his wife, Wava G. Dodge, on Dec. 13, 2000, and a brother, Donald Dodge. He will be interred in the Terra Alta Cemetery.

[NI11642] CPL US ARMY KOREA
GETTYSBURG, Pa. - Marion Kenneth Dodge, 79 of Gettysburg, Pa., died suddenly Thursday, March 12, 2009, while vacationing in Sebring, Fla.

Mr. Dodge was born May 26, 1929, and raised in Terra Alta, W.Va. He was the middle son of the late Bruce E. Dodge and Nellie F. (Cupp) Dodge. He was also preceded in death by his two older brothers, Donald and Ronald Dodge.

After graduating from Terra Alta High School in 1947, he went to Baltimore, and worked at Rheem Manufacturing. In 1951, he was drafted into the Army and served in the Korean War. When he returned home from the war, he continued his employment at Rheem Manufacturing until the company relocated. He then went back to school and studied to be an Electronic Technician and was employed by Bendix Radio Division. His experience and knowledge in electronics expanded when he worked for Baltimore City Transit and Traffic and Baltimore City Fire Dept. Communications. He was a member of North Point Baptist Church of Dundalk.

He resided in Dundalk, Edgemere and Finksburg, until he retired from the Baltimore City Fire Department in 1992. He was a full-time RV'er for several years. He later resided in Alpine Lake, W.Va., and Gettysburg, Pa. Mr. Dodge and his wife Jo Ann enjoyed traveling extensively in their motor home.

He is survived by his loving wife of 55 years, Jo Ann (Weeks) Dodge, of Gettysburg, Pa.; his three sons, Thomas, Daniel and Andrew, their wives and children which include 7 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren; and 2 brothers, Dale Dodge and Michael Dodge, both of Baltimore.


Interment will be in the Pleasant Valley Cemetery.

[NI11648] nanct Lee Dodge 61, of Terra Alta, died Wednesday September 8, 2010 at home with her family by her side. She was born June 20, 1949 in Cranesville, a daughter of the late Ronald and Wave (Cramer) Dodge. She is survived by her husband of 40 years, Blaine Chambers; a daughter and spouse, Kelly and Mark Linde, of Kingwood; a son and spouse, Jason and Michelle Chambers, of Terra Alta; two sisters and spouses, Judy and Gary Horsey of Terra Alta and Peggy and Robert Huffman of Baltimore; one brother and spouse, John and Joan Dodge of Flinstone, MD; three grandchildren, Gavin Chambers and Grace and Jesse Linde and several nieces and nephews. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by one brother, Joseph Dodge. Friends will be recieved at the Arthur H. Wright Funera Home, Terra Alta on Saturday from 2-4 and 6-8 Sunday from 4-6 and from 10:00 Monday September 13, 2010 until the 11:00 a.m. time of service with Pastor Timothy J. Kelley officiating. Burial will follow in the Oak Grove Cemeter

[NI11657] Hiram lived and died on Seven-Hundred Acre Island.

[NI11677] New Shoreham Town Book, #1, Page 14
"Know all men bye these presents that I Amy Briggs late wife of Daniell Briggs of New
Shorum Alease Block Island upon divers good considerations me there unto movings & Especially for & in conseideration of the love & good will that my father Thrustum Dodge Sen of the same Island doth bare unto mee & hath freed me from the trouble & charge oft the Maintenance & bringing up of my sonn Mathew Briggs & hath taken him as his own child till he come to the age of twenty one yeares & hath freed me from all trouble & Charge concerning my said sonn: I have absolutely fully & freely granted & resigned Up to my said Father Thrustrum Dodge& to his sucksessors & assignes till my sonn come To the age of twenty one yeares all my right title & interest that I have & that my sonn Hath to the halfe share on the southwest side of ye said island to have & to hauld the land to himself said Thrustrum Dodge his haires executors administrators & assignes & to His & theirs proper use & behoofs till my sonn Mathew come to the age of twenty one Yeares and for him or them peasceably to possess & injoy during said terme without any the least lett suit trouble or molestation of the said Amy Briggs her heires executor administrator or assignes or any by from or under her the said Amy Briggs her aeries or assignes during said terms In witness where of I have here unto sett my hund & seale this 14 day of December, 1675. Signed sealed & delivered in presence of Robt Guttrig and Jno Williams

[NI11697] Some Records claim the name is spelled Stoaks.

[NI11714] US Army, Korea, VietNam - Bronze Star

[NI11720] Uzella Coplan Dodge was born May 29, 1903 in Thatcher, Arizona. She was the fifth child born to Walter Willis Coplan and Sarah Harriet Earl.

Uzella was married on December 3, 1924 to Delos Albert Dodge in Lordsburg, New Mexico. Delos Albert is the the son of Andrew Jackson Dodge and Avoline Moleta Johnson. Delos Albert and Uzella were the parents of three sons, Wilbur Earl, Walter Jackson, and Larry Douglas.

[NI11725] Name:
John Burns
Gender:
Male
Spouse:
Rosabelle Allred
Spouse gender:
Female
Marriage date:
Jan 8, 1881
Source:
This record can be found in the marriage book at the County Courthouse located in Pima County, AZ in Volume UNKNOWN on Page 97.

[NI11728] Served in Spanish American War.

[NI11742] Vetran of WW II. He worked as a printer for the Balfour Co. in Attleboro fo almost 40 years before his retirement.

Also married Adelaide P. Luccette

[NI11777] Ediths maternal Grandmother was Lavina Phillips Potter, daughter of the Abolutionist and orator Wendell Phillips.

A graduate of a music school, she was an accomplished musician and played piano, organ, and violin. As a youth, she played the piano scores for silent movies. As an adult, she was a church organist.

For a time, she and her second husband Charles M. Lindsay, owned a store in Dolgeville, New York, and were members of the Dolgeville Methodist Church. After Mr. Lindsayis death, Edith lived for a time on Sanger Avenue in New Hartford, New York. She inherited her familyis home in Clayville and lived there until her death in the mid 1950s.

[NI11783] norway Tidings Article

In 1800 moved from New Ashford, MA to Fairfield, New York; to White
Creek, Herkimer Cty, New York in 1813 where he lived until 1858; then to
Wisconsin and later to Illinois. (Marion L. Yost Birch's record says
he moved to Newport in 1820).
By his first wife, Johannah, he had nine children: Jotham,
Henry, Electa, Arvilla, Juliette, Daniel S., Angeline, MARY BEACH and
Anna Jane.
Cyrus' second wife was Nancy Morris and third, Millicent Felt.
Excerpt from the NORWAY TIDINGS, September, 1890: "Several
members of the Dodge family lived to a remarkable age. Cyrus led an
active life and retained his physical and mental powers until near
death. He was a stone-cutter and mason by trade, and a good workman.
A culvert across the street in Norway village made by him over 50
years ago is still in good condition".

[NI11813] US NAVY

[NI11824] Committed Suicide.

[NI11866] Robert Pope Dodge passed away Nov. 15, 2008 in Colorado Springs, Colo., at the age of 88. He died at home from progressive bulbar palsy. Bob was born on December 29, 1919 in Chicago. His parents were Pope Yeaman Dodge and Virginia Titus Dodge. After attending Morgan Park High School and Depauw University, he joined the U.S. Army Air Corp and attained the rank of 1st Lt. serving as a B-24 flight instructor. Sixty five years ago, on April 24, 1943, he married Natalie Barker. He owned a Buick dealership with his father until 1959. That year, Bob, Natalie and their three sons moved to Santa Fe, N.M., where he was president of Sabre Pinon Corp. in the uranium exploration and processing business. In 1964, the family moved to Annapolis, MD. where he was a director of United Nuclear Corp. After retiring, Bob and Natalie moved to Vero Beach, FL., and spent their summers in Colorado Springs. Bob was a founding member of Bent Pine Golf Club in Vero Beach and the Kiva Club in Santa Fe. He belonged to the Vero Beach Yacht Club and was a member of Riomar Golf Club for 40 years. He was proud to have served as President of the local Amvet (American Veterans) chapter in Chicago. In addition to his family, Bob's passions in his long life were golf, boating and flying. Bob is survived by his wife Natalie; three sons, Gregson and his wife Barbara of Tempe, Ariz, David and his wife Kerstin Gusterman of Santa Fe, and Robert, Jr. and his wife Lynn of Longmont, Colo.; eight grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; and his sister, Virginia Dodge Robertson and her husband Ret. Maj. Gen. Edwin Robertson. Bob will be remembered for his clever sense of humor and storytelling. He loved planning for his family, to whom he was deeply devoted. Private services will be held at home in Colorado Springs

[NI11868] Pvt. the US marines in WW II

[NI11933] Hugo and Ida Marie Dodge were vegetable farmers.

[NI11946] Thyhis is zn adoptwed Son

[NI11970] U. S. WWII ARMY ENLISTMENT RECORDS

Leonard C Dodge
Birth Year:
1919
Race:
White, citizen
Nativity State or Country:
New York
State:
New York
County or City:
Washington


Enlistment Date:
9 Sep 1943
Enlistment State:
New York
Enlistment City:
Albany
Branch:
No branch assignment
Branch Code:
No branch assignment
Grade:
Private
Grade Code:
Private
Term of Enlistment:
Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to la w
Component:
Selectees (Enlisted Men)
Source:
Civil Life


Education:
Grammar school
Civil Occupation:
Bandsman, Cornet Or Trumpet or Woodworking-Machine Operator (Machine woodw orker. )
Marital Status:
Single, without dependents
Height:
00
Weight:
000

Len was born Dec. 6, 1919, in North Hebron. He was the son of Charles Jay Dodge and Laura Ethel Towne.

He was predeceased by his loving wife, Florence, of 51 years, which he always remarked were the best years of his life.

In addition to his parents and wife, Len was predeceased by his siblings, Milfred, Wesley, Myrtle and Mildred.

He was also predeceased by two stepsons, Donald and Richard Ingleston.

Len was a proud veteran, serving during World War II as a cannoneer with the 75th Infantry Division.

Battle campaigns during World War II included Central Europe, Rhineland and the Ardennes.

Len received numerous decorations and citations, including the American Service Medal, Good Conduct Medal, WWII Victory Medal and the European -African- Middle Eastern Service Metal.

Len was honorably discharged in March 1946.

[NI11972] Daughter of Herman Ehntholt and Marie Kraus.

[NI11998] Never Married

[NI11999] Maried & Divorced

[NI12073] Margaret Lightfoot was Adopted.

[NI12109] Donald Richard Dodge, 53, of Bement died Dec 29, 1988 at Kirby Hospital, Monticello. Funeral services were held Sunday in Roux-Wright Funeral Home with burial in Bement cemetery.

He was born April 5, 1935 in Urbana the s/o Frank and Freda Scott Dodge. He married Frances Pierce Aug 8, 1958 in Champaign. She survives along with sons: Donald Richard of Sullivan; Jack Alan of Bement; Robert Lee at home; daughters: Brenda Jane Summar, Bement; Sandra Louise and Deborah Lynn, both at home; mother of Bement; brothers: Frank of Mansfield; William of Phoenix AZ; sisters: Anna Mae Grimes, Urbana; Helen Rayhnes, Medosa CA; and nine grandchildren. One sister, his father and step-father preceded him in death.

Mr. Dodge was a factory worker for Sterling Drug, Monticello. Memorials may be made to the American Heart Assn. or donor's choice.

Piatt Co. Journal-Republican: Jan 4, 1989

[NI12110] CPL US ARMY KOREA

[NI12174] 1930 Census Pike Marion County, Indiana

[NI12265] Wisconsin State Journal, and Madison Capital Times, Madison, WI., Friday, August 22, 1980

Dodge, Dean H.
POYNETTE/BLUE MOUNDS, WI. - Mr. Dean H. Dodge age 65, of Rt. 3, Poynette died on Thursday, August 21, 1980 at a Madison hospital. He was born Feb. 14, 1915 and was married to the late Charlotte Bohle on Dec. 3, 1934. She preceded Mr. Dodge in death on Oct. 9, 1977. The couple had lived in Blue Mounds prior to moving to Lake
Wisconsin near Poynette. He was a member of the West Blue Mound Luiheran Church. Survivors include a son, Alton of Madison; two daughters, Mrs. Gene (Cheryl) Strobuch of Madison and Mrs. Frederick (Donna) Erbe of Colorado Springs, CO.; two
brothers, Leland of Blue Mounds and Vernon (Bud) of Poynette; three sisters, Mrs. Emory (Ruby) Opsal and Myrtle Lampman, both of Blue Mounds and Mrs. Gay (Marian) Sutter of Mount Horeb; five grandchildren. Mr. Dodge was preceded in death by a brother, Raymond. Funeral services will be held on Sat., August 23, 1980 at 10:30 a.m. at the West Blue Mounds Lutheran Church. Pastor Bob Twiton will officiate. Burial will be in West Blue Mounds Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday, August 22, 1980 at the Ellestad Funeral Home 500 N. 8th St., Mt. Horeb

[NI12268]

(NOTE: Not 100% sure of burial in this cemetery)

Wisconsin State Journal, Captial Times, Madison, Wisconsin
Monday, September 26,1983

Dodge, Leland E.
BLUE MOUNDS - Leland E. Dodge, age 72, died on Sunday, September 25, 1983. Mr. Dodge was born on March 28, 1911, at Hyde, Wisconsin. His parents were the late Lance and Emma Dodge. He was employed by the G.A. Watson Construction Company for over 20 years. He was a member of the Barneveld Lutheran Church. On June 29, 1936, he was married to Marie Gronil; and she preceded him in death on September 17, 1972.

Survivors include a son, Richard of Dodgeville, three daughters, Mr.s Richard Dauck of New Richmond, Wisconsin, Mrs. William Massey of Madison, and Mrs. Kenneth Brattlie of Barneveld; a very dear friend Darlene Darrow of Blue Mounds; a brother Vernon of Lodi; three sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Lampman of Mt. Horeb, Mrs. Emory (Ruby) Opsal of Blue Mounds, and Mrs. Gay (Marion) Sutter of Mt. Horeb; and 15 grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by a granddaughter, Vickey in 1967; and two brother, Ray and Dean. Funeral services wil be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday September 27, from the Barneveld Lutheran Church. Reverend Bob Twiton will officiate. Friends may call from 5-9 p.m. on Monday, September 26 at Ellestad F

[NI12270] Marion L. Sutter, age 87 of Mt. Horeb, WI, died on Friday, November 10, 2006 at Ingleside Nursing Home in Mt. Horeb. Marion Lucille Dodge was born on July 1, 1919 in Blue Mounds, WI to Lance & Emma (Peterson) Dodge. She married Gaylord Sutter on July 27, 1936, and they recently celebrated their 70th Anniversary. Her life revolved around her family and friends with whom she shared lots of love and laughter. Throughout her life, Marion was a loving and nurturing person who unselfishly cared for others whether they were stray birds, cats, or neighbors in need. She enjoyed her time with family and friends at Fish Lake, singing, and playing cards.

Marion was a member of St. Ignatius Catholic Church and of its Council of Catholic Women. She taught religion for many years. She was also a member of the Mt. Horeb American Legion Auxiliary for 17 years.

Marion is survived by her husband, Gaylord;
her children: Deann (Ray) Trainor of Mt. Horeb,
Bill (Sharon) Sutter of Hernando Beach, FL,
Daniel Sutter of Stoughton,
Greg (Lori) Sutter of Madison;
eight grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; one great-grandson;
a sister-in-law, Alice (Mrs. Vernon) Dodge of Waunakee;
and many nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by six brothers and sisters and her grandson, Ray Trainor.

[NI12279] WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1977

Dodge, Charlotte
POYNETTE/BLUE MOUNDS — Charlotte Dodge age 60 died Sunday
October 9, 1977 in a car accident. She was born in the Township of Springdale on August 20, 1917 and was married on December 3, 1934 to Dean Dodge. They
lived for many years in Blue Mounds and iust recently moved to Lake Wisconsin near Poynette. Survivors Include her husband Dean; one son, Alton of Madison; two daughters, Mrs. Gene Strobusch of Madison and Mrs. Frederick Erbe of Colorado Springs, Colorado; her father Carl J. Bohle of Mt. Horeb; one sister, Mrs. Isadore
Buechner of Cross Plains; one brother Alvin Bohle of Blue Mounds; five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday October 13 at THE WEST BLUE MOUNDS LUTHERAN CHURCH, Reverend Bob Twiton officiating. Interment will be in Blue Mounds Cemetery. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at THE ELLESTAD FUNERAL HOME, Mt. Horeb.

[NI12283] Wisconsin State Journal, Monday, August 10, 1998

Dodge, Alton "Bim" MADISON/BLUE MOUNDS - Alton "Bim" Dodge, age 61, died at his residence in Madison on Saturday, August 8, 1998. Mr. Dodge was born on October 6, 1936. His parents were the late Dean and Charlotte (Bohle) Dodge. Alton was raised in Blue Mounds and was a paper boy before moving to Madison in 1963. He is survived by two sisters, Donna Erbe of Spring Valley, California and Cheryl (Ronald) Strege of Watertown, Wisconsin; aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, August 12, 1998 at the WEST BLUE MOUNDS LUTHERAN CHURCH at 11:00 a.m.Friends may call from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday at the ELLESTAD FUNERAL HOME, in Mt. Horeb.

[NI12297] Massey, Nancy Lou
MADISON - Nancy Lou Massey, age 65, passed away after a lengthy illness, on Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2006, at the Johnson Anderson HospiceCare Center, surrounded by her family. She was born on Jan. 18, 1941, in Mount Horeb, to Leland and Marie (Gronli) Dodge. Nancy graduated as Salutatorian from Barneveld High School in 1958. She married William Massey on Jan. 26, 1958. Nancy retired as a secretary from UW-Madison, School of Journalism after long tenures with University Hospital's Neurosurgeons Department and Alpha Distributors. She was also secretary and accountant for many years with the family auto business. Nancy volunteered for the American Red Cross and assisted with Trinity Lutheran Church's outreach program for the homeless. She was at different times president, secretary and treasurer of the Madison Vintage Auto Club and enjoyed countless social weekends touring with her husband and a lengthy succession of impeccable vintage cars. Nancy long dreamed of seeing New York City, but her adventures would far exceed that plan. In her world travels, Nancy saw the pyramids of Egypt and the Sphinx. She saw the Eiffel Tower in Paris and visited the Louvre. On a trip with her sisters, Marilyn and Beverly, Nancy saw the fjords of Norway and stood above the Arctic Circle. The sisters also toured London and saw all its famous landmarks. And Nancy did finally, with her surviving sister, Beverly, visit New York City, seeing a Broadway show, Ground Zero, and the Statue of Liberty. Nancy was a faithful member of Trinity Lutheran Church, where she served for some years as Sunday school superintendent and also as a deacon and reader during worship services. She lived her life confident of the promise she learned as a young girl, she was a child of God by Baptism and saved by Grace. She is survived by her husband, William "Bill" Massey; five children, Michael (Robin) Massey, Scott (Patty) Massey, Kevin (Shari) Massey, Keith (Adriana) Massey and Joni Massey; sister, Beverly Brattlie; nine grandchildren; and a tremendous number of friends and loved ones whose lives she touched. Nancy was preceded in death by her parents; a sister, Marilyn Dauck; a brother, Richard Dodge; and a niece, Vickie Dodge. Funeral services will be held at TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH, 1904 Winnebago St., Madison, at 11 a.m. on Monday, Nov. 6, 2006, with the Rev. John Ruppenthal presiding. Burial will be at Roselawn Memorial Park. Visitation will be at GUNDERSON EAST FUNERAL HOME, 5203 Monona Drive from 2 p.m. until 5 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 5, 2006, and at the church from 10 a.m. until the time of the service on Monday. The family would like to thank the staffs of Meriter Hospital and the Johnson Anderson HospiceCare Center for their compassionate, heartfelt care, every step of the way. Gunderson East Funeral and Cremation Centers 5203 Monona Drive (608) 221-5420 www.gundersonfh.com

[NI12300] Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Monday September 18, 1972

Mrs. Leland Dodge
MT. HOREB - Mrs. Leland Dodge, 59, of Barneveld, was dead on arrival Sunday (Sept. 17, 1972) at a Madison hospital.
The former Marie Gronli was born in Madison and was married to Mr. Dodge in 1956.
She worked for the Barneveld school system, and for the last 13 years for the Barneveld State Bank.
She was a recorder for the Park Hill Camp 1315, Royal Neighbors of Barneveld, and a member of the Barneveld Lutheran Church and its ladies aid society.
Surviving in Madison are a daughter, Mrs. William Massey, 2310 Willard Ave., and a brother, Orvin Gronli, 3625 Odana Rd.
Also surviving are her husband; one son, Richard, Fennimore; two daughters, Mrs. Richard Dauck, Antioch, Ill., and Mrs. Kenneth Brattlie, Barneveld; one sister, Mrs. Dorothy Williams, Mt. Horeb; and 15 grandchildren.
The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the church. Friends may call after 6 p.m. tonight on the Ellestad Funeral Home in Mt. Horeb.

[NI12303] Also know as William Thomas Dodge

[NI12304] Capital Times - (Oct/3/2010)



Obituary for Gaylord W. Sutter Mount Horeb
Gaylord W. Sutter, age 94, of Mount Horeb, died on Saturday, October 2, 2010, at Ingleside Nursing Home.

He was born May 28, 1916, in Perry Township, to William and Julia (Miller) Sutter. He was a U.S. Navy veteran during World War II. He married Marion L. Dodge on July 27, 1936. Before Marion's death they celebrated 70 years of marriage. Marion died on November 10, 2006. He was a member of St. Ignatius Catholic Church in Mount Horeb, Holy Name Society and the Mount Horeb American Legion Post for 32 years.

He is survived by his children, Deann (Ray) Trainor of Mount Horeb, William (Sharon) Sutter of Aripeka, Fla., Daniel Sutter of Stoughton, Greg (Lori Bastean) Sutter of Madison; eight grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandson; a sister-in-law, Alice (Mrs. Vernon) Dodge, and other relatives and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife; a brother, Walter Sutter; three sisters, Nona Leichtenberg, Grace Swiggum, Helen Paloni; and six brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law; and his grandson, Ray Trainor.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, October 6, 2010, at HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC CHURCH, 10070 Spring Valley Road in Perry Township, with Father Tom Gillespie officiating. Burial will be at Calvary Cemetery in Mount Horeb. Friends may call from 10 a.m. till 10:50 a.m. on Wednesday at HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC CHURCH. The Ellestad Camacho Funeral Home, 500 N. 8th St., Mount Horeb, is serving the family.

The family would like to thank Ingleside Nursing Home and its staff for their loving care and support.


www.ellestadfuneralhome.com

[NI12306] Richard C. "Dick" Dodge, age 68, of Dodgeville, died unexpectedly on Sunday, Oct. 9, 2005, at Upland Hills Health, Dodgeville. He was born on Feb. 18, 1937, in Mount Horeb, a son of the late Leland and Marie (Gronli) Dodge. He graduated from Barneveld High School in 1955. On Feb. 16, 1963, he married Charlene Heiser at St. Luke's Catholic Church, Plain. Dick worked for United Parcel Service for 24 years, until his retirement in 1987. He was a member of St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Dodgeville. He enjoyed hunting, fishing and traveling with his family, and most recently, playing cards at the Red Room every morning. Dick is survived by his wife, Charlene; his daughters, Cindy Beerkircher of Dodgeville, and Sandy (Kris) Larson of Evansville; his grandchildren, Mike and Bridget Beerkircher, and Zack and Jenny Larson; his sisters, Bev (Ken) Brattlie of Barneveld, and Nancy (Bill) Massey of Madison; his brother-in-law, Dick Dauck of Monroe; other relatives and friends. He was preceded in death by his daughter, Vickie Dodge in 1968; his parents; and his sister, Marilyn Dauck. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2005, at ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC CHURCH, Dodgeville. Father Paul Ugo Arinze will officiate. Burial will be held in West Blue Mounds Cemetery. Friends may call from 4 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct 11. 2005, and from 9:30 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday at the GORGEN-MCGINLEY AND AYERS FUNERAL HOME, Dodgeville. Gorgen-McGinley & Ayers Funeral Home 400 E. Grace St. Dodgeville (608) 935-5222

[NI12336] Silas enlisted Aug 12 1862 with his brother John W. for 3 years in the
Civil War.He was wounded on June 27, 1864 in the battle of Kennesaw
Mountain in Georgia and died of his wounds in the military Hospital in
Chattanooga, Tennessee.

[NI12341] Daniel Leslie Dodge
SPARTANBURG, SC-- Daniel Leslie Dodge of Spartanburg, 55, died on June 9, 2006, after a long illness. He was the son of Emma Dodge Harrington and the late Jack Leslie Dodge. Dan was predeceased by his brother, David William Dodge; a sister, Marcy Dodge Harris; his former wife, Holly Babb; and step-father, Dr. John W. Harrington.
Published June 13, 2006

[NI12347] Research Notes:Civil War-Private-Company G-85th Regiment-Illinois
Volunteers-enlisted Aug 1862 description from pension records: age 26,
height 6 feet 1.75 inches, complexion light, eyes blue, hair dark, place
of birth Schuyler Illinois, occupation farmer Civil War veteran and died
from war wounds. Some say he died in Bushnel, IL.

[NI12358] Louisa recieved widow's pension from civil war. She later married George
Lemon, an attorney.

[NI12373] Source: Tribune-Record Gleaner (Clark County, WI) 04/03/2002
--Dodge, Darlene (23 JAN 1934 - 25 MAR 2002)
Darlene Ann (nee Rust) Dodge, 68, Brunswick, Maine, died on Monday, March 25,
2002, at Brighton Medical Center, Portland, Maine. Funeral services were held at 11 A.M. on Tuesday, April 2, at Brackett Funeral Home, Brunswick. Chaplain Robert Duane Purser officiated. Burial was in the Maine Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Augusta, Maine.

Darlene Ann Dodge was born on Jan. 23, 1934, in Spencer, to Herman and Faye (nee
Collins) Rust. She graduated from Greenwood, Clark County High School. She married Herbert Dodge on Aug. 2, 1960, in Las Vegas. She traveled with her husband during his military career. She was employed as a clerk at various department stores.
The couple moved from Shreveport, La., to Brunswick in 1986. She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star. Her interests included bowling, sewing and crafts.

Survivors include a stepson, Bradley J. (Sheila) Dodge, Camden, Maine two granddaughters, Wendy Dodge and Suzzy Dodge one brother, Jim Rust, Greenwood two sisters, Betty Bogdonovich, Willard, and Elaine Rizzolo, St. Charles, Mo. and nieces, nephews and friends.

Preceding her in death were her husband, Herbert, on Feb. 13, 1993 two brothers, Hermie Rust and Dick Rust and one sister, Ruth Faber. Brackett Funeral Home, Brunswick, assisted the family with arrangements.

[NI12383] Donna Kennedy
Donna Kennedy, 78, of Aurora, died peacefully in her sleep Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2007 at Crossroads Court in Aurora.
A memorial service was held Saturday morning, Feb. 24 at Higby-McQuiston Mortuary in Aurora with Rev. Loren Cooper officiating.
Donna Lee Kennedy, daughter of Charles and Cleo (West) Dodge, was born June 14, 1928 in Palisade. She attended school in Alma. Following school she was employed as a restaurant manager and cook in Alma. She also managed an apartment complex in Alma.
She loved her family and her main goal was to provide for them. She enjoyed traveling, having lived in 11 different states and making friends all the way. She moved to Aurora to be closer to her family and friends. She loved to sew and crochet, read, watch television, work jigsaw puzzles and collect angels and elephants.
She was a member of the First Christian Church in Aurora.
Survivors include four daughters, Diane Street of Hastings, Bobby (Terry) Mentgen of Lincoln, Carolyn (Allan) Roehrs of Bradshaw, Kathy Zarghami of Bradshaw; one sister, Carolyn Dodge of Aurora; 14 grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her parents; one brother, Charles "Bud" Dodge; two grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
Condolences may be e-mailed to the family through the Higby-McQuiston Mortuary website at higbymortuary.com

[NI12389] "History of Genesee County, Michigan"
by Franklin Ellis, 1879

pgs. 393 and 394
Franklin E. Dodge
Among the early settlers of Thetford there are few, if any, who have seen so much of the world, or led a life so full of adventures and romance, as Franklin E. Dodge. He as born in the town of Colchester, New London County, Conn., Jan. 29, 1821. The death of his father, when he was eight years old, left him to make his own living. He lived with his uncle until he was fifteen, when he started for the State of New York, working his way and earning money to buy the clothing he so much needed. For the next four years he wandered about, working some of the time on a farm and one season as a driver on the canal. He then got the whaling fever, and went to New York with a man who was hiring whalers; but a couple of weeks in a sailors' boarding house gave him an idea of the life of a whaler, and he gave the scheme up. But in 1836 he shipped on the line-of-battle-ship "Ohio", which was then fitting out in Boston for her first voyage, under the command of Commodore Hull, of the U.S.N. Mr. Dodge helped ship her rigging, guns, etc. They sailed from Boston to New York, and from there on a three years' cruise to the Mediterranean Sea. Visited all the ports of the sea, and the ports of the principal countires in Europe. He saw many of the crowned heads of free government of his native land. While in the port of Toulon he saw the French frigate which went after the remains of Napoleon. The news of the Patriot war started his ship for home, where they arrived in 1839, after a voyage full of excitement and with the daily expectations of war and carnage. He was paid off and discharged in Boston, and then went to Avon, N.Y., to visit his mother. Here he remained some time, although he was very uneasy and longed for the excitement and freedom of a sailors' life. The earnest protestations of his mother prevailed, and he worked at whatever he cound find to do until 1843, when he came to Thetford and purchased of his stepfather the forty acres on which he now resides, and the forty acres east of it, of the government. Mr. Dodge had but little means, and the next spring he returned to New York and worked through the summer; then came back to his farm, and built a house and commenced to improve. In 1845 he went to a neighbor to buy some boots, and got not only his boots, but a wife, who proved to be a true pioneer's help-meet. She never stood back and said "go", but was always willing to put her own shoulder to the wheel also. Her maiden name was Miss Mary Skinner, and they were married Oct. 12, 1845. Miss Skinner was born March 18, 1826. A few days after their marriage they moved to their new home, Mrs. Dodge driving a cow, while Mr. Dodge drove the oxen which hauled all their goods in a wagon-box, going five miles through the woods.
They lived some time in a shanty until a log house was erected. His first crop of wheat he hauled through the woods to Square Wilson's, who had a board floor on which he could thrash it. At that time there were no roads or paths; their going and coming were by blazed trees Mr. Dodge had marked. Though they lived in the woods, cut off from churches and their Christian associates, still, as Mr. Dodge very feelingly says, they felt that God was with them in the wilderness, as he had been with him in his seafaring days, when he knew that his mother's prayers were with him. Mr. and Mrs. Dodge have both been members of the Methodist Episcopal Church for over thirty-six years. Mr. Dodge was a Democrat until 1864, since which time he has been an ardent Republican. There have been born to them nine children.

[NI12408] Oliver Dodge came from Litchfield County, Conn., to Wilna in 1839, and located on the farm now owned by Henry Swind, on road 29, where he took up 200 acres.
This farm is located near Reedville, now on Fort Drum.
1820: Goshen, Litchfield County, CT
1830: Cornwall, Litchfield County, CT
1840: Wilna, Jefferson County, New York

[NI12466] Married 6 years

[NI12482] 20 Aug 1862 Norman Enlisted in Company B: 38th Iowa Infantry as a fifer.

[NI12492] Alwyn C. Dodge, retired transportation manager and Major in Army Reserves.

Survived by his children Andrew Dodge and Jeanie Balch; and four grandchildren.

Memorial service, Sunday 7 p.m., at St. Ambrose Episcopal Church, 7520 S. Boulder Road, Boulder.

Donations may be made to Denver Rail Heritage Society, PO

[NI12521] Some records have Osmyn is his middle name.

[NI12535] HARRY ROOT, 75 formerly of 505 Harris St., Sayre and the Senior Citizens Building, Towanda died Sunday, Nov. 9, 1986 at the Bradford County Manor. Born Dec. 18, 1910 in Beech Haven, Luzern County, Pennsylvania. he was the son of the late Harry and
Minnie Feist Root. Mr. Root was a veteran of World War II having served in the U.S. Army for 12 years. He was employed by the Ingersoll-Rand in Athens and later by the Lehigh-Valley Railroad in Sayre for many years. He was a member of the Sayre American Legion Post and the Fraternal Order of Eagles Lodge No. 1367, Towanda. Surviving are four sons; Harry Bryant Root, Jr. of Granville Summit, Aubrey Dale Root of Sayre, Raymond Eugene Root of Monroeton and Robert Michael Root of Edgewater, Fla.; eight daughters; Mrs. Boyce (Arvilla) Edwards of LeRaysville; Mrs. Boyd (Lois) Repsher of San Diego, Cal., Mrs. Donna Thomas of E. Berlin, Pa., Mrs. Ann Crawn of LeRaysville, Mrs. Robert (Linda) Casselbury of LeRaysville, Miss Sheila Root
of Sayre, Mrs. Richard (Connie) Swetland of Sayre, Mrs. Daniel (Nancy) Arnold of San Diego, Cal. and 38 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife, Ethel Mae Dodge Root in 1967 and by a son, James Root in 1981.

The funeral service will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Maryott-Bowen funeral Home, 217 York Ave., Towanda with the Rev. Joseph J. Gasper of Athens officiating. Interment will be in Bradford County Memorial Park. The family will receive friends this evening from 7-9 at the funeral home. mTowanda American Legion Post No. 42 will accord full military honors at the cemetery Wednesday afternoon. The family requests that memorials be directed to the American Heart Association in care of Mary Henderson, AHA Memorial, P.O. Box 428, Sayre, Pa. –Towanda Daily Review

[NI12547] Charrles D. Dodge of Winter Garden, Florida
Charles was a U.S. Army veteran, owned Dodge Well Drilling and was a member of Cypress Grove Fellowship. Surviving are his wife of 57 years, Elizabeth (married 1955); 4 children, 3 great-grandchildren, mother, brother and sister. Funeral Services will be held February 22, 2013 at the Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral Home - Winter Garden Chapel. Published in the Orlando Sentinel on February 21, 2013
\harles D. Dodge age 78 of Winter Garden, went to be with the Lord on February 19, 2013. He was born in Columbus, Ohio on September 9, 1934. He served in the US Army until he married Elizabeth in 1955. He will be sorely missed by his loving wife of 57 years and his four children, four grandchildren, three great grandchildren, mother, brother, and sister. Charles was a loyal Christian and devoted his life serving at Cypress Grove Fellowship. He loved his work as the owner of Dodge Well Drilling. Charles had a wonderful sense of humor and could always bring a smile. A greeting for friends will be held on Friday February 22, 2013 from 2-3PM with a 3PM funeral Service at the Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral Home – Winter Garden Chapel.

[NI12552] California Birth Index, 1905-1995 about Ada May Dodge
Name:
Ada May Dodge
Birth Date:
23 Mar 1931
Gender:
Female
Mother's Maiden Name:
Small
Birth County:
Butte

California Death Index, 1940-1997 about Ada May Norton
Name:
Ada May Norton
[Ada May Dodge]
Social Security #:
550427023
Sex:
FEMALE
Birth Date:
23 Mar 1931
Birthplace:
California
Death Date:
6 Jan 1997
Death Place:
Sutter
Mother's Maiden Name:
Joy
FATHER'S SURNAME:
Dodge

California Marriage Index, 1960-1985 about Ada M Dodge
Name:
Ada M Dodge
Age:
38
Est. Birth:
abt 1931
Spouse Name:
William C Norton
Spouse Age:
39
Est. Spouse Birth:
abt 1930
Date:
13 Apr 1969
Location:
Butte

NORTON, Ada May (Nee Dodge)

Ada May NORTON

A graveside service for Chico native Ada May Norton, 65, will be held at a later date at the Forest Ranch Cemetery.
Mrs. Norton died Monday, Jan. 6, 1997, at Live Oak Hospital, of natural causes.
She was born 23 Mar 1931, in Chico to Henry and Elizabeth Dodge.
Mrs. Norton graduated from Chico igh School in 1949.
She married William Norton on 13 April 1969, in Paradise (Butte County, CA).
Mrs. Norton was a past member of Native Daughters and Pockahauntes (sp?) Lodge of Chico.
She enjoyed crocheting, fishing, and animals.
Mrs. Norton, also, loved walks in Bidwell Park, camping, and watching her family grow.
Survivors inclue her husband, William of Chico; daughters Melva Stonecypher of Burson, Lucille Clevenger of Chico, and Charlotta Sistrunk of Colusa; a son, William Norton of Paradise; brothers James Dodge of Chico, Henry Dodge of Red Bluff, Otis Dodge of Forest Ranch, John Driver of Chico, Gene Graybill of Missouri, and Robert Graybill of Massachusetts; sisters Joyce Wayland and Dorothy Kendall both of Oregon, Lorna DePue of Chico and Leona Jones of Magalia; and 15 grandchildren.
Arrangements are under the direction of Bidwell Chapel.

[NI12553] Still born child

[NI12560] Michigan, USA

[NI12562] California Birth Index, 1905-1995 about Janice May Clark
Name: Janice May Clark Alternate spelling of name-Janise
Birth Date: 14 Oct 1934
Gender: Female
Mother's Maiden Name: Smith
Birth County: Fresno

[NI12579] Adopted name: Driver

[NI12581] Adopted out as Eugene Leroy Graybill

[NI12586] Adopted as Robeert Anthony Graybill

[NI12595] 1920 United States Federal Census about Joy Small
Name:
Joy Small
Home in 1920:
Disappointment, San Miguel, Colorado
Age:
7 years
Estimated Birth Year:
abt 1913
Birthplace:
Colorado
Relation to Head of House:
Daughter
Father's Name:
Donley V
Father's Birth Place:
Wisconsin
Mother's Name:
Ida
Mother's Birth Place:
Oklahoma
Marital Status:
Single
Race:
White
Sex:
Female
Image:
833
Neighbors:
View others on page
Household Members:
Name
Age
Donley V Small
40
Ida Small
27
Joy Small
7
Carolyn Small
5
Esther Small
4 3/12
Willard Small
2 6/12
**************************************************
California Death Index, 1940-1997 about Joy Elizabeth Depue
Name:
Joy Elizabeth Depue
[Joy Elizabeth Vonsmall]
Social Security #:
554204179
Sex:
FEMALE
Birth Date:
21 Oct 1912
Birthplace:
Colorado
Death Date:
21 Feb 1991
Death Place:
Siskiyou
Mother's Maiden Name:
Haley
FATHER'S SURNAME:
Vonsmall
********************************************
Social Security Death Index about Joy E. Depue
Name:
Joy E. Depue
SSN:
554-20-4179
Born:
21 Oct 1912
Died:
21 Feb 1991
State (Year) SSN issued:
California (Before 1951 )

[NI12608] California Birth Index, 1905-1995 about Melvin B Howard
Name:
Melvin B Howard
Birth Date:
13 Jan 1931
Gender:
Male
Mother's Maiden Name:
Lee
Birth County:
Butte

[NI12631] California Birth Index, 1905-1995 about Henry Willard Dodge
Name: Henry Willard Dodge
Birth Date: 9 Sep 1932
Gender:Male
Mother's Maiden Name: Small
Birth County: Butte

[NI12651] Adopted by the Daws

[NI12657] Enos P. died from Lockjaw as a result from being shot by a Rebel soldier, post hospital, Bolivar, TN 1862

Company -D- 4, Illinois Cavalry

[NI12673] Died in Childbirth.

[NI12674] William B. Dodge has been one of the representative citizens of Montello since his settlement in that village in the spring of 1873. He was born in Madison County, N. Y., Nov. 2, 1823, and is descended from an old New England family. His fathe was Orrin Dodge

Williams mother died at his birth, so he was reared to manhood in the family of his paternal grandfather. The days of his boyhood and youth were spent upon a farm and in the common schools he began his education but afterwards entered the Oneida Conference Seminary, of Cazenovia, New York. On leaving school, he engaged in teaching and farming for a number of years but at length altogether abandoned the former profession and devoted his entire time to the cultivation of his father's farm in Orleans County.

Mr. Dodge was twice married. In the autumn of 1843, he was joined in wedlock with Miss Mary Cook, and their union was blessed with a daughter, Orlina Janet, who was born July 15, 1845, and died Oct. 29, 1859. In 1856 Mr. Dodge led to the marriage altar Miss Rachel Seaver, who was born in Orleans County, Vt., in December, 1823, being one month younger than her husband. Her parents were Dorcas and Henry Seaver, who were also natives of the Green Mountain State and removed thence to Dane County, Wis., in 1855, where they resided until called to their final home. Their family numbered twelve children, nine of whom attained to
mature years, but only two are now living, namely: Mrs. Eveline Page of Rock County; George, the only surviving son, who is a resident of Milwaukee. Mrs.. Dodge died Feb. 6, 1890.

[NI12681] Places and Faces in Marquette County, Wis., Vol. 1
By Fran Spain
Published by Isabella Press, Westfield, WI
©1991

F. J. Dodge and the Montello Opera House (Pp 107-110)

MONTELLO — Commencement was an annual event that brought huge crowds to F. J. Doge’s Opera House on Barstow St. (now Montello St.). An account in the Montello Express in 1899 tells that the stage was hung with lace curtains and furnished to resemble the parlor of a mansion.

There was music by the orchestra, and a piano duet by Misses Gertrude Roskie and Blanche Dodge. All seven graduates of the three-year high school course at Montello gave orations. Kitty O’Brien was valedictorian and Principal Mortenson conferred the diplomas. Prettiest feature of the evening was the march of the fourteen tiny flower girls bearing gifts to the graduates.

The Opera House was so crowded that “quite 200 people who sought admission were turned away.”

A four-year course of study was instituted at MHS in 1901, and when thirteen girls and one boy (the largest class to date) graduated in 1904 (with Pearl Callahan as valedictorian and Hallie O’Brien giving the class prophecy), the enlarged Opera House still fell short of space.

Dodge’s Opera House was the center of activity for community events. Besides its popularity for school functions, it was a showcase for minstrels and vaudeville, local and traveling stage shows, silent movies, wrestling matches, basketball games, glee club concerts, and Miss Hopkins’ Elocution Class. It was meeting places for Ladies Aid societies and Epworth League, Royal Neighbors and W.C.T.U., Odd Fellows, Eagles and Eastern Star. It was the setting for holiday balls and wedding and anniversary parties, and the platform for salesmen, preachers, and politicians. Robert M. LaFollette arrived on a special train, and engaged the Opera House for a speech in Oct. 1900, a month before he was elected governor of Wisconsin.

No one is around to tell us when the Opera House was built but the Biographical Album records that Old Settlers’ Reunions were held in the Opera Hall at Montello in 1878 and 1880. In March of 1880, a Grand Ball was held at the Opera House to raise aid for suffering people in Ireland. Committee members were from all over the county. Ads urged: “Those who do not attend, please send $1.00. Suppers furnished at either hotel for 50 cents a couple.”

Frank J. Dodge, owner of the Opera House, was the son of W. B. Doge, former teacher and farmer from Orleans County, New York who migrated to Wisconsin in 1850, married Rachel Seaver in 1856, and moved to Montello in 1873, where he and his brother-in-law, Jesse Seaver, b ought a flouring mill and half interest in the local water power. Seaver sold out to Wm. Dodge in 1877, and the mill was destroyed by fire in 1882.

Dodge’s only son, Frank J. Dodge, was born in Rock County, Wis. in 1857. He was fifteen when the family came to Marquette County, and completed his education at Montello High School. In 1880 he married Nettie Houghton. They had one daughter, Blanche.

Dodge worked in the quarry until age twenty five (1882) when he was victim of a quarry accident. Attended by Doctors Meacher and Caveny of Portage, and Dr. Pease of Montello, it was determined that his right leg (broken 6 inches above the knee and knee cap split, complicated by infection) must be amputated. Forever after he walked with the aid of a single crutch, but it was noted in later years that although maimed he could harness a horse as fast as anyone, and in winter he climbed on the roof to sweep off snow.

In the fall of 1882, Dodge ran for the office of Clerk of Court in Marquette County, and though a Democrat in a strong Republican electorate, he held that position for thirteen consecutive terms (twenty-six years).

He studied law on his own and for ten years was assistant in official duties to County Judge Neil Dimond.

As pensioner, he was “besieged by widows and veterans for whom he performed legal services free of charge.” Farmers, especially sought his “frank and hones” advise in legal and personal matters. His interest in sports is said to have made him popular with the younger element. He was president of the Montello State Bank.

Dodge built a “splendid house” (next door to the Opera House) “in the handsomest residence port of the city” in 1897 and in the same sweeping shaded longhand in which he kept county records he kept accounts for the Opera House.

He charged $5 a night for use of the Hall, and a random sample of entertainment shows: Keeley League card party; Dr Galloway (4 nights); Chas. Brown wedding dance; Wrestling exhibition; Swiss Bell Ringers; Ackimas Comedians; Baseball Club dance; Wynima Rose Medicine Co. (6 nights); Wire Grass Man; J. Kruger (phonograph); J. Murphy (moving pictures); Berlin Minstrels; Willard Drama Co.; School Board; Band concert; Young Folks dance; Wis. Central RR (sterioptician views); Library benefit; Lyceum; Old Folks dance; Roller Skating; Girls’ Basketball.

In 1890, Opera House receipts totaled $140.50. Expenses included $1 for oil lamps, $3 for wood, and $7 for nine gallons of paint and three days work on the barn roof.

An undated Easter ball was “the most successful social event in Montello in many a day.” The five piece Bach Orchestra from Milwaukee played until 3:30 a.m. Every lady was presented with a carnation at 11 o’clock, and refreshments prepared by Mrs. Rohrbeck were served in the basement dining room.

At the May Ball in 1913, the Gibson Harp Orchestra from Appleton played, and $25 was spent on the May baskets filled with flowers that decorated the hall. Again, refreshments were served in the basement.

In 1903, Dodge leased a portion of the Hall’s basement to Mrs. Mary Wicks for a bowling alley, to be used only when there was no other entertainment upstairs. He reserved the south end, under the stage, for dressing rooms.

Blanche Dodge, described as a tall dark-eyed brunette, with talent for piano and drama, graduated from MHS in the class of 1899, attend the University at Madison, and married twice in as many years.

Her first wedding was changed from Montello on June 15 to Milwaukee on July 12, 1904 when “having gained the point that she would be married only in a quiet wedding,” she married Ralph Plumb of Manitowoc in the ‘red room” of the Pfister Hotel. Two years later, on Aug. 27, 1906, she married Berthold F. Wallschlaeger of Milwaukee.

On May 1, 1910, Frank J. Dodge was appointed by Gov. James O. Davidson, to fill the unexpired term of Marquette County Judge Neil Dimond, and announcements of Dodge’s non-partisan candidacy for the office of Marquette County Judge in 1913 appeared in the Portage Democrat, Westfield Central Union, Endeavor Epitome, Oxford Times, and Montello Express. Upon his election, congratulations poured in from judicial offices all across Wisconsin.

Death came to Judge Frank J. Dodge on Wed., Dec. 4, 1918. At the funeral Rev. Solner offered a prayer, Rev. Dowling delivered the sermon, and Rev. W. M. Ellis read the biographical sketch. Dodge’s life was capsulated as “gentle but, like the still waters, deep.”

Services were held in the Opera House, and an unusually long procession followed the funeral car to the cemetery.

[NI12682] Mrs. Blanche Dodge Wallschlaeger was born in the city of Montello on March 27, 1881, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Dodge. She grew to womanhood in Montello and attended and was graduated from the local high school.

On August 28, 1806 she was married to Bert F. Wallschlaeger, who preceded her in death by only two months. One Son, Bert Jr., was born to this union, who, with his family, resides in Milwaukee. Besides this son she is survived by her aged mother Mrs. F. J. Dodge of Montello; her daughter-in-law and two granddaughters.

For a few years the family resided in St. Louis, Mo., and for about ten years they made their home in Chicago, after which time they came to Montello and continued to reside here until the time of their passing away.

A few days after she had suffered a stroke she was taken to St. Agnes Hospital in Fond du Lac where for three weeks she hovered between life and death.

All the care and love that skilled physicians and an anxious household could devise and supply for her comfort and assistance were brought into play, but the fiat of Him who rules our goings and comings, had been issued and after a struggle of three weeks, despite prayers and entreaties of all who knew and loved her their appeals were over-ruled and before the beautiful sun had set on Sunday, October 8, 1945, the sufferer’s spirit took its flight to that home the Christian believes is the fulfill of the life everlasting.

Blanche, as she was known to all her acquaintances, was a person who made friends quickly wherever she went, and in her own home she was a most gracious hostess and being of a cheerful and loving disposition, she endeared herself to all. She was always anxious to make one feel at home in her company – her’s was a sympathetic and generous nature. She was a true friend and was never so happy as when she was able to do some good for those who were in trouble or in need of assistance, all who came to her for help were never turned away, but were always sure to receive just a little more than was expected. Montello and the entire community have lost a valuable and honored citizen, and not only will she be missed by her son and aged mother, but by everyone who knew her. Thus, a good and useful life has been brought to a close, but the memory of her will live for many years for the good she has done during her busy and active life. Yes, Blanche has passed from this life, but the memory of her never will.

[NI12688] "On Thursday, May 21st, Calvin Dodge aged 55 years. The funeral will take place this afternoon at 2:00 from his late re sidence #56 Forbes Street. The friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend without further notice.

The Pittsburgh Gazette, 25 May, 1863 tells of the drowning of Calvin Dodge in the Monongahela River: On Sunday afternoo on, between two and three o 'clock, a party of young men, in a rowing skiff on the Monongahala River, in the vicinityo f the Brownsille wharf boat, discovered the body of a man floating or rather lying near the stern of the steamer Gallat ia. The body was hauled ashore, when a crowd soon collected, but no one knew who the deceased was until John J.Mitchel l, Esq. came up and identified the remains as those of Calvin Dodge, a well known citizen of the Eigth Ward. The body w as then removed to the coffin rooms of Mr. Devore, on Gran Street where an inquest was held by CoronerMcClung. No evid ence was e licited tending to show how the deceased lost his life, and a verdict of death by drowning was rendered.

The deceased was a very worthy and esteemed citized and carried on the business of painting - his offce being located on Fourth Street. We learn that he left his residence on Forbes Street about eight o'clock on Wednesday evening last, not advising his family as to where he was going, or what his intentions were. As he frequently lay on the sofa all nigh t in warm weather, no search was made for him until Thursday, when it was found that he had not been in the housedurin g the night. Inquiries were then made in every direction, but no tidings were heard of him until his remains were foun d as stated. He was about fifty five years of age, and was a very industrious and useful citizen.

[NI12696] Will: Feb 11, 1826 New Shoreham Probate Records Volume B Pages 154-159
Buried , Old Cemetery, New Shoreham, RI

[NI12704] Daughter of Paul Kingston amd Bridget McKee, both born in Ireland.

[NI12714] "Dr. T. J. Dodge, the renowned "magnetic healer", ...He is now 36 years
of age and weighs 310 pounds."

[NI12720] Alice, the third child of our matriarch Sarah [Haughton] Blakely, was born in Lancashire County, England on December 1 , 1810. For many years, Alice was an unknown sister having never been mentioned in any of the writings or memoirs ofth e descendants of her brothers, James and John. She was discovered in 1998 when baptismal and marriage records were rece ived from the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

Alice was just a little girl of eight when she arrived in America with her mother, Sarah, and brothers, James, Willia m and John. What a frightening journey that must have been for a child so young!

Admittedly, little is known about the daughter, Alice, her husband and children. What is included in this book was take n from records received from the Diocese of Pittsburgh, newspaper clippings, census records and information suppliedb y a descendant of one of her children, John K. Hayes.

Alice converted to the Catholic faith and was baptized at St. Patrick's Church in Pittsburgh on July 20, 1828, the sam e day as her brother, John. The church record said she was sixteen years old and an Anabaptist convert, but she wasact ually seventeen at the time.

Four years later, on the 27th of November 1832, Alice became the bride of Calvin Dodge, at St. Patrick's Church in Pitt sburgh, her aunt and uncle, James and Susanna Blakely, as her witnesses.

According to the 1837 Business Directory of Pittsburgh, Calvin Dodge had a dry goods and grocery store on 5th Street, b etween Wood and Smithfield, in Pittsburgh.

[NI12722] Never married.

[NI12759] Some spell the Lurena, or Lorena.

[NI12784] Cremated

[NI12831] Age at time of death:39.6.23

[NI12837] Mrs. Maude Holly of Arena Is Dead

ARENA, Wis - Mrs. Maude Holly, 60, wife of Orson Eedward Holly, Arena barber, died at her home here Monday after a lingering illness.

She is survived by her husband, five sisters, Mrs. Nettie Sliter of Arena, Mrs. Vadie Hottman of Velleville, and Mrs. Audrey Keller, Mrs. Lucey Clark and Mrs. Georgia Dodge, all of Madison, and one brother, Detroit Lake, Michigan

THE CAPITAL TIMES, Madison, Wisconsin, Tuesday, August 19, 1941

[NI12853] Daughter of James McCarty and Rebecca Martin McCarty. Wife of Sylvester Wayne Dodge. Mother of John Wesley Dodge, Walter Blaine Dodge, Charlotte Dodge, Mary Dodge Weinburg, William R. Dodge, and Jennie Dodge Veazey. Year of birth given as 1862 on marker, 1861 on death certificate.

[NI12877] Known as Mary Mabel to her children, but her name appears to have been
Mabel Mary. Mary Mabel took piano lessons at the Music Conservatory in
St. Louis. Her mom would not let her do things that would damage her
hands, like cleaning. Those chores fell to her sister, Evelyn, who wasn't
too happy about it. Mary Mabel's father also sent her to business
school. As an adult, she worked as a secretary for the city of Corpus
Christi, TX, and taught music. Mary Mabel's hair was long enough for her
to sit on. She did not cut it short until about 1928, after she became
ill.

[NI12891] H

[NI12927] Judah Dodge, thr father of John K. Dodge,was born in 1796, and married Elizabeth Kilgore in 1816. In 1867, he removed from Darby to Marysville, where he died April 23, 1870. Hiram Dodge, another son, died, a farmer, in Jerome Township..

[NI12938] FC 3 US NAVY

[NI12941] Adopted by Gerald Irell Dodge

[NI12958] No Issue

[NI12979] Major League Baseball Player. He played Major League Baseball for two seasons (1912 to 1913) with the Philadelphia Phillies and the Cincinnati Reds. In 1916, he was killed by a pitch from future Major Leaguer Tom Rogers that hit him in the face while playing for Mobile of the Southern Association League. His totals for his brief career were 127 Games Played, 90 Hits, 4 Home Runs, 45 RBIs and a career .215 Batting Average

[NI12991] Called Charley in 1920 Shelby County, Salt River, Pg 107.

[NI12993] 1920 Shelby County, Salt River, Pg 107.

[NI12994] 1920 Shelby County, Salt River, Pg 107.

[NI12995] 1920 Shelby County, Salt River, Pg 107.

[NI13001] Age 66 at death. her Mothey Lucy is living with her in 1850 Census

[NI13074] Died at 50 yr 9 mo 20 da

[NI13075] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 87
page 53

Mrs. Elisabeth Wooster Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 86171
Born in Cuylerville, N. Y.
Wife of Thomas A. Dodge.
Descendant of Sergt. Mathew Dickey, as follows:
1. Anthony M. Wooster (1835-88) m., 1859, Hannah P. Dickey (1834-94).
2. John Pinkerton Dickey (1796-1895) m., 1824, Elizabeth Weller (1800-46).
3. John Dickey (1766-1837) m., Rhoda Varnum (1775-1838).
4. Mathew Dickey m., 1764, Janet Wallace.
Mathew Dickey (1728-1802), who fought in the early wars, served as private, corporal, and sergeant in the New Hampshire militia. He died in Londonderry, N. H.
Also No. 39812.

[NI13094] Went to Texas and was an Attorney.
1910
1920 was living in Pasedena California with his wife Mary
1930 was living in Pasedena California with his wife Mary, Occupation Lawyer

[NI13125] Reevolutionary war Soldier

[NI13126] 1850 Census Norway Herkimer County, New York

[NI13128] Lived in Gloversville for 30 years

Civil War Veteran having enlisted in Company I, Eleventh Regiment, New York Calvary, on Aug. 2, 1861.

Wife: Anna Dodge (surviving)

Census shows his wife as Frances Dodge in 1880 in Gloversville with son, William

Grandson: Ernest Dodge of Washington, D. C.

(Gloversville/Johnstown Morning Herald, June 6, 1923)

[NI13146] Died Young, Spinal Meningitis

[NI13147] Died at Sea.

[NI13183] Died of Sedptic poisoning due to abrasion on instep of foot.

[NI13197] Occupation: Trustee of Jerome Township; member of the Board of County Commissioners .
JOHN Kilgore DODGE, farmer, P. O. New California, ex-Commissioner of Union County, was born in Jerome Township November 17, 1833. He was a son of Judah Dodge, who was born in Vermont, January 23, 1796, His father, Judah Dodge, Sr., moved with his family to Union County at the beginning of the war of 1812, and settled on the Crocker Smith farm in Darby Township. Some years later he moved to Jerome, locating on a farm of seventy acres. In 1836 he purchased a tract of 400 acres near New California. This whole farm was then covered with a dense forest, without an improvement, save a rude log shanty, which had been erected by the Indians. Mr. Dodge died on the farm in May 1856. He had filled the office of Justice of the Peace a number of terms and was otherwise officially identified with Jerome Township. He entered the county at the time of the last war with Great Britain and was familiar with its early settlement, organization, and the growth and development of it up to the date of his death. Judah Dodge, Jr., was but seventeen when his parents came to the West, and he spent the remainder of his minority in clearing up the land his father located. July 4, 1816, he was married to Elizabeth Kilgore, who was born in Ross County, Ohio, January 20, 1799, and by whom he had nine children, of whom our subject is the third son and seventh child. In 1867, Mr. Dodge sold his farm and removed to Marysville, where he died April 23, 1870. He was for fifteen years an exhorter in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and a man of honor and highly respected. Mr. Dodge, the subject of this sketch, was reared and brought up on the farm and was educated in the common schools of Jerome Township. November 29, 1855, he married Miss Rebecca Rudolph, a daughter of John and Julia Rudolph. Mrs. Dodge was born in Delaware County, Ohio, July 1, 1833. Nine children were the fruits of this marriage, viz.: Andrew J. (married Flora E. Harrington), John R. (married Ella B. Boring), Glenna M. (wife of Elbert Bonnett), Thomas J., Jennie R., Tells, A., William M., Ottie J. and Frank E. In 1857, Mr. Dodge moved into Mill Creek Township, and in 1865 took up his residence on his present farm. He owns 509 acres of well-improved and highly-cultivated land. His occupation is agriculture and stock-raising ; in the latter pursuit he has dealt extensively for the last twenty years. Mr. Dodge has by his energy and careful business management achieved a reasonable success in the accumulation of property. He was Trustee of Jerome Township two years and member of the Board of County Commissioners one term. His attention has been given almost entirely to his farm, and he ranks with the successful farmers of the county

[NI13207] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 66
page 333

Mrs. Bertha Dodge Nellis.
DAR ID Number: 65963
Born in Leicester, N. Y.
Wife of George H. Nellis.
Descendant of Jotham Forbes.
Daughter of James Lloyd Dodge and Lucy Hull Blakeslee, his 2nd wife.
Granddaughter of Thomas Dodge and Phoebe Forbes, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Jotham Forbes and Lydia Batchelder, his wife.
Jotham Forbes (1758-1851) was placed on the pension roll, 1832, for service as fifer, 1777, under Captains Abraham Childs and Nathan Dix, Col. James Wesson's 9th Massachusetts regiment. He died in York, N. Y.

[NI13229] Picket Line Post & Mount Morris Union
Mount Morris, Livingston County, New York.
Thursday, January 29, 1953

HARRY DODGE.

GENESEO — Harry B. Dodge, born July 24, 1876 and a lifetime resident of Leicester, died Tuesday, Jan. 27, 1953, at Strong Memorial Hospital.

Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Edith Donnan Dodge; three sons James of Leicester, Richard of Ebridge and Blakeslee Sodge of Syracuse; a daughter, Mrs. Katherine Driscoll of Bayonne, N. J. and a sister, Mrs. George Nellis.

Mr. Dodge's father, the late James Lloyd Dodge, was one of the early settlers in the town of York, and his mother, the late Mrs. Lucy M. Blakeslee Dodge, was the daughter of the late State Senator Blakeslee of York.

Funeral services will be from the residence in Leicester Thursday at 2 p. m. Burial will be in Leicester Cemetery

[NI13247] Charles Parker Dodge Jr. and Jessie Ann Mosher married at the Canso Methodist Church in Canso, Guysborough, Nova Scotia, Canada on 7 Sept 1920. Item can be found in Registration Year: 1920 - Book: 30 - Page: 752.

Jessie Anne Mosher was the daughter of Capt. Charls Alexander Mosher & Elizabeth Matilta Feltmate. She died in 1981 in Fall River, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

[NI13273] She had 11 Children

[NI13324] Son of Raymond Vinton Dodge and Anna Wilhelmina Steinfadt.
He graduated from Colesburg High School.
He served in the Navy during World War II.
He was a barber and a farmer.
Husband of Lucille Handke, married 15 Mar 1939 at Dubuque.
He spent his last years living at Lincolnwood Assisted Living, the Edgewood Convalescent Home, and the Good Neighbor Home in Manchester.

[NI13353] Donald A. Dodge, 90, formerly of Colesburg, IA passed away Tuesday, July 6, 2010, at The Good Neighbor Home in Manchester, IA. A memorial service will be held at a later date. Don was the son of Raymond and Ann Dodge. He was born January 15, 1920 in Colesburg, IA. Don attended and graduated from Colesburg High School. He later joined the Navy and served 2 years for our country during World War II. Don barbered his whole life and farmed in the Colesburg area for 20 years. On March 15, 1939, Don was united in marriage to Lucille Handke at St. Marks Church in Dubuque, IA. To this union, two children were born. Don was a member of the American Legion and United Methodist Church in Colesburg. He enjoyed wood carving, fishing, golfing, playing piano, making people laugh with his witty sense of humor, and spending time with family. Don is survived by his children, Karen (Lavern) Lammers of Colesburg, IA and Cindy (John) Yates of Cedar Rapids, IA; 5 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 5 great-great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife, Lucille; his parents Raymond and Ann Dodge; and his sister, Dorothy Palmer.

[NI13356] Marvin G. Dodge 71 a Manchester resident at the Goodneighbor home since 1972, and formerly a resident of Oelwein for many years passed awy sat. morning Dec. 21, 1974. Marvin G. was born July 23, 1903 on the parental farm just east of Oelwein. Mr. Dodge is survived by four sisters, Mrs. Nell Bushnell of Mesa, Ariz., Mrs. Arnold "Florence" Schreiber of Rockford, Ill., Mrs. Flora Pellant of Los Angeles, Calif, and Mrs. Marion "Marie" Faber of Waukegan, Ill., and several nieces and nephews. he was preceded in death by one sister mrs. Grace Cocking.

[NI13367] Howard, nicknamed "Sparks," was a telegrapher, an ad man for Newsweek magazine, an accomplished musician and magician.

[NI13375] Joined the Navy on 12/26/1899 and served on several sailing ships.

[NI13376] Went to WW I Mar 31, 1918.

[NI13386] No issue

[NI13430] Maine Records say he was 7th child

BAILEYVILLE -- Perley C. Dodge, 73, died July 31, 1980, at a Calais
hospital. He was born at Cooper, May 2, 1907, the son of Everett and Ella
(Henderson) Dodge. He is survived by his widow, Hazel Scott Dodge of
Baileyville; a son and daughter-in-law, Vincent and Edith Dodge of
Baileyville; two daughters, Constance McDonough and Diane Rines of
Baileyville; a son-in-law, Bruce Rines of Baileyville; one brother,
Chester of Pembroke; one sister, Etta Murray of Boston; five
grandchildren, several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Scott-Wilson Funeral Home in Calais, with the
Rev. Wynn Stairs officiating. Interment will follow at the Woodland
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m.

[NI13431] WOODLAND -- Vincent P. Dodge, 61, died unexpectedly June 6, 1990, at his home. He was born July 17, 1928, at Woodland, the son of Perley C. and Hazel (Scott) Dodge. He was an Army veteran, a member of the Quarter
Century Club at Georgia-Pacific Corp. and a member of the W. T. Wren Post American Legion of Woodland. Besides his mother, he is survived by hiswife, Italia (Gazia) Dodge; two sons, Vincent Dodge Jr. and Julio Dodge;
two sisters, Constance McDonough and Diane Rines, all of Woodland; several nieces and nephews. Friends called at the Scott-Wilson Funeral Home, Calais, Friday. Funeral services [were] conducted by the Rev. Duane
Copeland, Saturday, at the funeral home. Burial was in Woodland Cemetery. The family requests that those who wish may donate in his memory to their local Salvation Army office.

[NI13434] Bangor Daily News, Tuesday, January 30, 2001:

DODGE, Italia M., 80

BAILEYVILLE - Italia M. Dodge, 80, died unexpectedly Jan. 26, 2001, at a Calais hospital. She was born Oct. 23, 1920, at New York City, the daughter of Carmelo and Josephine Gazia. Italia was predeceased by her husband, one son, several brothers and sisters. Survivors include one son, Julieo Dodge of Baileyville; many nieces and nephews. A private graveside service and burial took place on Monday in the Woodland Cemetery. Arrangements by the Scott-Wilson Funeral Home, Calais.

[NI13437] Cooper -- Syvilla Mae Dodge, 74, died April 16, 1984, at a Calais
hospital. She was born in Meddybemps, April 10, 1910, the daughter of
David and Martha (Taylor) Sennett. She was the wife of the late Nathan
Dodge. She is survived by three sons, Melvin of Cooper, Malcolm of
Machias and Robert of Florida; three sisters, Mildred Lund and Sadie
Miller, both of Pembroke, and Laura Hodgkins of Florida; four
grandchildren, several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held
Thursday at the Scholl Funeral Chapel, Calais, Interment in Evergreen
Cemetery, Cooper.

[NI13439] ROXINE I. DODGE

COOPER -- Roxine I. Dodge, 59, died July 23, 1987, at a Bangor hospital.
She was born at Woodland, January 17, 1928, the daughter of Roy and Doris
(Yates) Linton. She is survived by her husband, Melvin Dodge of Cooper;
two sons, Melvin Dodge, Jr., of Calais and Leonard Dodge, with the U.S.
Air Force in Utah; three granddaughters; many nieces and nephews. Funeral
services were conducted by the Reverend John Moore at 2 p.m. Sunday at
Scott-Wilson Funeral Home, in Calais. Burial was held in Evergreen
Cemetery, Cooper. Friends called at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
Saturday.

[NI13455] Co. L. 3rd OV Calvery

[NI13457] Identified as "Joel" on the 1850 Census

[NI13477] He was a slide Trombonest, & was the Electrial Supervison of the town of Salisbury, Herkimer County, New York.

[NI13497] Was also known as R. Irving Dodge or Irv.

[NI13534] East Bay Municipal Utility District, Oakland CA

[NI13564] Clark E. Dodge (Tristram, Israel, John, Daniel, Cyrus, Henry) was born August 22, 1837, his wife Frances M. was born in 1843. Their son, William C. Dodge was born July 9, 1869 in Gouverneur, Saint Lawrence, New York. He married Annis Bacon b. July 23, 1871 in 1890 and they had a son Ernest A. C. Dodge born Oct. 10, 1893, in Fulton County, New York.

On the Fourth of July, 1902, two trolleys collided halfway down Bleeker Mountain north of Gloversville, New York, killing more than a dozen people maiming and injuring scores of others in what was perhaps the deadliest railroad accident ever to occur in the Adirondack Mountains.
The Mountain Railroad was established to take guests from the town of Gloversville to a beautiful resort located on top of Bleeker Mountain. This was a short 4.6 mile trip up a very steep grade. At the summit, the railroad company had built a hotel, rental cottages, a shooting gallery, a casino, an outdoor theater, picnic areas, and a dance pavilion on a 140-acre wooded park that surrounded the lake. Visitors could swim, boat and fish on the spring-fed waters,and the shore was served by foot trails and a small steam launch.
A week before the 4th of July, the railroad had run ads in the Gloversville Newspaper for Mountain Lake Parkis patriotic festivities, which included a professional vaudeville act, a band concert, races, a baseball game, Fireworks. Thousands of revelers traveled up the mountain that weekend. Most waited until after the fireworks display to take the trolley home again.
Around 10:00 PM, Car No. 1 started down the mountain with about 75 passengers filling the aisles and seats, a full load for the light, open-sided coach. An experienced motorman named Arthur Perkins was at the controls. He had left another line to work for the Mountain Lake Electric Railroad when it first opened,and he was one of the few to remain on the job after the company cut itis motormen's salaries from $2.00 to $1.75 for a ten-hour shift, after one year in business.
For safety's sake, the cars run five minutes apart, but the railroad had no dispatcher and it was up to the motormen to determine when to head down the steep grade into Groverville. Car No. 5, a large closed trolley, was also crammed full, carrying 55 passengers and their baggage. The motorman was William Dodge, who normally worked in the car barn, where the trolleys were housed and maintained. He had been "drafted" for duty as a motorman for the unusually busy holiday weekend. When tapped for duty, William Dodge reportedly told his wife that he would rather die than motor down the mountain at night. He knew Car 5's reputation of being hard to brake, but he accepted the assignment
for fear of losing his job if he refused.
On that hectic night, the runs were growing chaotic. Car 4 had left the lake before ten o'clock and was returning up the mountain, where it entered a siding to allow Car 1 to pass on the way down. When Car 4 resumed its climb, however, it met Car 5 only about 500 feet further up the track, so it backed into the siding to let Car 5 pass by. In the meantime, Car 1 had reached the first sharp curve on its descent and, as a precaution, stopped to survey the track ahead; but just as Car 1 got underway again, Car 5 suddenly loomed on the track above, closing dangerously fast.
What followed may be best described in Motorman Dodge's own words. "When the car left the first switch, I tried to hold the car back with the brakes and found that they would not work. I then tried the reverse lever and could not
control the car; and when I started down the grade, I tried the brakes could not make them respond. Next I again reversed the car and continued to do so, but the car soon got away from me; and when I saw that a collision was
going to happen, I again reversed the car and the collision happened. The brakes would not work, and I could not control the car. Just as I reached the curve, the trolley went off."
Knowledgeable witnesses at the coroner's inquest testified that the brakes on Car 5 had always been hard to set. What Dodge didn't know was that by reversing the motors, he had tripped the circuit breaker in the powerhouse. With no electricity to keep the car in reverse, the weightier Car 5 soon overtook and plowed into the rear of Car 1, lifting the latter momentarily from the tracks. Dodge could have jumped off before impact - a number of panicked people on both cars did - but he dutifully stood in the control vestibule and was mortally crushed from the waist down.
The last person to die from the accident, Dodge succumbed two days later at Nathan Littauer Hospital in Gloversville, shortly after making his statement.
After the rear-end collision, the trolleys slid together down the dizzy grade at 60 to 70 miles per hour with 130 terrified excursionists aboard. In Car 1, Perkins and a passenger desperately pulled at the hand brakes, but the
shoes were not designed to handle the weight of two cars. At the coroner's inquest, and expert witness testified that he had found the brakes set the steel wheels sheared flat. Red-hot friction had scoured the locked wheels of Car 1 as the train careened down the mountain. At a hairpin curve to the left, Car 1 derailed and rolled onto its right side. Car 5 also left the tracks, But remained upright on the roadbed.
Ten passengers died beneath the overturned car. According to the newspaper account, "some of the bodies were terribly torn and partially denuded of clothing. Limbs were severed and on the faces of many of the dead were indications that they underwent frightful sufferings before death released them from their agony.
The number of casualties might have been higher than 14, but many people braved the jump into the black night. When the cars derailed, they lost their source of electricity and the accident scene was plunged into total darkness,
hampering rescue efforts until someone found the wits to light a bon-fire. The first hero of the evening was William Berghoff, 17, a passenger on Car 5. Risking his life, he ran up the tracks to flag down the next car before it piled into the unlit wreck. Another youth ran further up the dark mountain to get help. With great difficulty, a group of local men manually lifted Car 1 off the dead or dying victims lying crushed beneath it. It took more than two hours for a relief trolley to arrive carrying doctors and nurses from Nathan Littauer Hospital. The injured were quickly loaded onto the rescue car transported to the hospital, but many local physicians were out of town for the long holiday weekend. Available doctors and nurses worked through the night and all the next day to attend the scores of wounded.
Why did the accident happen? There were many factors, but cost-cutting by the Mountain Lake Electric Railroad was likely the chief one. By lowering salaries in the second year of operation, the railroad lost many of its experienced motormen. The NYS Commissioner of Railroads, Frank M. Baker, later testified that the Mountain Lake run was unusually challenging and required the best railroaders, but some of the replacement motormen were younger than
twenty-one years old. Without a dispatcher, there was no one to prevent the inexperienced Dodge from following Car 1 too closely. Each car was equipped with only one brake, and none had emergency or auxiliary brakes. The cars carried no signal lights.
In the aftermath, claims for damages against the Mountain Lake Electric Railroad were so high that the company went bankrupt. Mr. Dodge leaves behind his wife of 12 years, Annis Bacon Dodge, and a son, Ernest A. C. Dodge.

[NI13581] Signed up for WW II Draft

[NI13585] She was the daughter and youngest child of Jacob Albright (born 1799 in Switzerland) and Anna Albright (Born 1808 in New Jersey). Jacob Albright's last name likely was "Albrecht", and changed it upon immigration to America.

Martha is listed in the 1850 US Census as living at age 8 months with Jacob and Anna in the Spring Garden Section, Ward 2, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Residing with them are Sarah Elizabeth (daughter – age 13), Ellen D. (daughter – age 11), Alfred Albright (son – age 8), Emily Theresa (daughter – age 6), and Edward N. (son – age 2).

She is then listed in the 1860 US Census as living at age 10 with Jacob Albright (age 61) and Anna Albright (age 51). Residing with them are Sara (age 22), Ellen (age 20), Alfred (age 18), and Theresa (age 15). Jacob's occupation is listed as "Bookends Runner".

She married George Washington Dodge on January 31, 1870 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Together they had three children: George Warren (born September 15, 1870 in Philadelphia), Edmund Neville (born April 2, 1873 in Wilmington, Delaware) and Mary "Mamie" Wilkinson (Born January 21, 1875 in Philadelphia).

In the 1870 US Census they are listed as living in Philadelphia Ward 20, District 62 with Albert Albright (age 29), Anna Albright (age 62), Sarah Magee (age 33), Anna Magee (age 9), and Hall Magee (age 3). George W. Dodge's occupation is listed as Wood Carver. Martha's father, Jacob, had died in 1866.

George Washington Dodge died on May 5, 1879 at age 34 of Pulmonary Consumption, which was what Tuberculosis was called at the time. The family was living at 1234 Haines Street, Philadelphia, near Germantown. He was buried in his family's plot in Mount Vernon Cemetery, Philadelphia.

The 1880 US Census shows Martha's family now split up. She is listed as residing at 653 North 16th Street with Henry S. Hoover (age 36), August Hoover (age 30), Helen Hoover (age 2). She is listed as "Servant". Her son George Warren Dodge, is listed as residing at age 9 at the Union Temporary Home for Children, Philadelphia. Son Edmund Neville is listed as residing at age 7 with Henry G. Dodge (age 40), Sarah E. Dodge (age 35) and Anna R. Dodge (age 14) in Darby Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. Henry G. Dodge was George Washington Dodge's older brother, and worked as a Printer. Finally, her daugher, Mary "Mamie" Wilkinson Dodge, is listed as residing at age 5 at 1234 Haines Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania with Anna Albright (age 72), Sarah Magee (age 42), Anna E. (age 19), Albert Fletcher (age 20), and Louisa Conard (age 24). Sarah Magee is listed as Anna Albright's daughter, and Anna E. Magee is listed as Sarah's daughter and Anna's granddaughter. Albert Fletcher and Louisa Conard are listed as "Boarders". Mamie W. Dodge is also listed as a "Boarder", but that is a transcription error, as Anna Albright was her grandmother, Sarah her aunt and Anna E. her cousin.

In 1886 Martha Albright Dodge married 51-year-old Euclid Hill (Philadelphia County Marriage License #7306), who had been a widower, with his first wife ironically also being named Martha. In 1889 they had a daughter, Stella Harrison Hill.

Martha appears in the 1890 US Census Veterans Schedule as the widow of Corp. George W. Dodge, 4th Delaware Infantry, with a notation she resides at 1234 Haines Street and now is "Mrs. Hill".

On February 1, 1892 Mattie Hill and her three-year-old daughter Stella were killed in Woodbury, New Jersey by a locomotive belonging to the West Jersey Railroad.

Their remains were transported to Philadelphia, and they were buried there in Greenmount Cemetery, North Front Street.

Martha Louise Albright Dodge Hill was my great-great-grandmother. Her son, Edmund Neville Dodge, was my great-grandfather. Edmund Neville Dodge worked as a cabinetmaker and woodworker for Hale-Kilburn in Philadelphia for many years. Circumstances suggest that his stepfather got him the employment there.

Her first name is misidentified in the article below.


News Article, February 2, 1892, Philadelphia Inquirer -

"MOTHER AND CHILD KILLED

Distressing Accident on the Railroad in North Woodbury.
Special to the Inquirer

WOODBURY, Feb. 1. - Sarah Hill, wife of Euclid Hill, employee of the Hale-Kilburn Company, of Philadelphia, and their little 3-year-old daughter, were instantly killed near the North Woodbury station at 9 o'clock this morning. She was walking between the West Jersey Railroad tracks carrying the child, and at the noise of a coming train became bewildered and tried to get across the track.

The engine struck her on the head, and the child was thrown and its neck broken. Both were killed instantly. Mrs. Hill was on her way to have the little girl's photograph taken.

At the coroner's inquest the Railroad Company was exonerated."

[NI13591] He first served in in the 17th Pennsylvania for the first three months of the war, and was mustered out when the regiment's enlistment expired in August 1861 (the regiment was only enlisted for three months, like most early regiments). Hethen enlisted in the 2nd Pennsylvania Cavalry, where he rose to Captain of Company C. Pennsylvania Adjutant General records lists his name as "Harry G. Dodge" for his 2nd PA Cavalry enlistment. He was mustered in as a Sergeant in Company C, 2nd Pennsylvania Volunteer Cavalry on September 2, 1861. He was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant on October 1, 1862. He was captured at Saint Mary's Church, Virginia. On October 21, 1864 he was commissioned as Captain of Company C, but was never mustered in at that rank. He was honorably discharged on March 15, 1865.

[NI13597] Army WWI

[NI13598] John Henry Dodge was known as Harry. His father, Edmund Neville Dodge,
married three times, and John was the second of three children from
Edmund's first marriage. He served in the Coast Guard during the First
and Second World Wars, and had nine children.

His two siblings from his father and his mother were older brother Edmund
W. Dodge (1894-1967) and younger brother Arthur Raymond Dodge
(1899-1977). His half-sister from his father's second marriage was
Mildred L. Dodge (1912-1978). His half-brother from his father's third
marriage was Russell C. Dodge (1915-2004).

[NI13627] Ww II Draft Registration Card

[NI13671] Lived on Staten Island New York.

[NI13675] Henry Irving Dodge, author and playwright, who created the character, Skinner, of iSkinneris Dress Suiti and other stories, died at 11 oiclock yesterday morning of angina pectoris in the New York Hospital at the age of 73. He resided at Colonial Hall, Kew Gardens, and Queens.

Through his grandmother, Anne Irving Dodge, Mr. Dodge was a great-nephew of Washington Irving. His paternal grandfather Major General Richard Henry Dodge, who fought in the Revolution and the war of 1812. Mr. Dodge was born at Kasoag, Oswego County, N.Y., where both his grandfathers had been large landholders.

After attending public schools he studied engineering in Texas and law in this city. Neither subject retained his interest and he turned to writing, first to newspapers, then for magazines. Going to London he spent several years there as a freelance writer and correspondent for the old New York Herald.

His road to success as an author proved a long one, for he was 45 when his novels, iThe Other Mr. Barclayi and iThe Hat and the Mani were published, and he was 55 when he introduced to the world his imaginary friend, William Manning Skinner, in iSkinneris Dress Suit.i The story, published in 1916 won the sympathy of a large public and its immediate success led its author to ikeep Skinner goingi in three other well-received tales, iSkinneris Baby,i Skinneris Big Idea,i and iSkinner Makes it Fashionable,i the last issued in 1920.

The character scored in the imovies,i too, receiving three different portrayals, two on the silent screen, by Brant Washburn and Reginald Denny, and one for talking films, by Glenn Tyron. Made into a play, iSkinneris Dress Suiti has often been presented by amateur performers, and it is beginning acted nearly every night this summer by welfare players.

The list of Mr. Dodgeis plays includes iThe Counsel for the Defense,i The Higher Court, The Whirlpool,i The Love Thought and iThe Recoil.

In 1902 Mr. Dodge married Margaret Small, daughter of a Maine sea captain, and years afterward he told an interviewer that whatever he might have accomplished of value was due largely to her.

She survives, as do two sisters of the author, Mrs. Mary Du Puy of Port Richmond, L. I., and Mrs. Elizabeth Westervelt of Spring Valley, N.Y.

[NI13689] Banker in Callicoon, New York. Had severe times during depression
(1929-1934) but bank survived. President of the School Board. Head of
the Sunday School. Nursed invalid son until son's death in 1943.

[NI13690] Graduated from the Keystone State Normal School (later Kutztown State
Teacher's College), Kutztown, Pennsylvania, 1907. Lived with her Aunt
Heddi and the Schwoyer family while she went to college. Taught school
1907-1908. Lived in Callicoon, New York 1909-1972. Nursed invalid son
until son's death in 1943.

[NI13691] Became disabled with menijitus from mumps at an early age (about 1928).
Cared for by parents until his death from complications.

[NI13694] Grew up in Ohio and Callicoon, New York. B.A., Journalism, Syracuse
University, 1940. News reporter, Newburgh (New York) News, 1940-1. Bridgeport
(CT) Herald, 1941-2,45-8. US Army/AirForce, 1942-45. US Air Force
National Guard, Lt. Colonel, ret.,1950-78. Associated Press
Correspondent, State Capitol at Albany, New York, 1948-53. New York State
Thruway Authority (1953-78), Deputy Executive Director. Loved hunting
and fishing.

[NI13705] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 128
page 193

Mrs. Eva Dodge Albee.
DAR ID Number: 127592
Born in Rockland, N. Y.
Wife of John W. Albee.
Descendant of Daniel Dodge, as follows:
1. McKendree N. Dodge (1844-1914) m. 1867 Mary Reed (1842-91).
2. Austin Dodge (1799-1880) m. 1822 Mary Ann Montgomery (1802-46).
3. Istael Dodge (1773-1854) m. Elizabeth Austin (1778-1866).
4. Daniel Dodge m. Mary ?.
Daniel Dodge (1728-1821) served as private in the New York levies under Col. Fred. Weissenfelts. He was born in England; died in Rockland, N. Y.
Also No. 99804.

[NI13715] Mrs Jeanette Dodge, formerly of Rockland and widow of the late Montgomery Robert Dodge, died Tuesday of last week. She was born in the town of Colchester, Delaware County, New York, on March 28 1854, and would have been 96 next month, She leaves a daughter, Mrs N. Woolsey and a granddaughter, Jeanettte Wooolsey of York Pennsylvania and a sep-son, Frank Dodge of Liberty. She was amember of the Sullivan Chapter OES and the Methodist Church.

[NI13720] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 128
page 193

Mrs. Gertrude Clauson Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 127591
Born in Harvard, N. Y.
Wife of Dennison Israel Dodge.
Descendant of Nathan Elwood, as follows:
1. Henry Baldwin Clauson m. 1851 Rachel Purdy (1821-89).
See No. 127584.

[NI13734] Oswego Co

[NI13738] Oswego Co

[NI13741] Oswego Co

[NI13761] Supposedly had a wife and chld when he died.

[NI13786] Living 1950 in Morris Plains, Y

[NI13789] Henry Clifford Leitch was adopted by James King Dodge and
Henry's last name changed to Dodge.

[NI13817] Died as a child.

[NI13828] He was born in Marbletown, Ulster County, New York and when five months
old his mother fled with him and four other young children on a raft,
their path lighted by their burning house, amid the yells of the savages
and Tories. His father was at that time serving under General Gates, and
his mother was alone in her hour of trial. They escaped to New York, and
his father joined them there on leaving the Army. Robert Dodge was an
officer stationed at Fort Green in 1812. He was a prominent citizen, an
officer in the Fire Department, and a sachem at the organization of the
Tammany Society.
Research has shown that the family may have resided at Kingston, New
York, as on October 16, 1777, the town was burned by the British, with
the help of some native Americans. It may have developed as a family
story that Robert was part of the ordeal, but the family resurfaced at
Marbletown, after the event.

[NI13839] Went to California and was never heard from again.

[NI13843] Leonard Dodge, 92, formerly of Delia passed away peacefully Friday, February 11, 2011 at the Presbyterian Manor in Topeka.

He was born April 25, 1918 at Rydel, Kansas to the parents of Claude E. and Flossie McMullin Dodge. He lived in the Bellville area before moving to the Rossville community in about 1927. He graduated from Rossville High School in 1939.

Leonard was married to Emily Horak on September 11, 1940 and they celebrated 70 + years of marriage. She survives at their home at the manor. Leonard and Emily farmed in the Rossville area until 1946 when they moved to Delia where they farmed. He also was a school bus driver for many years and had worked as a security guard at the Jefferies Energy Center. He was involved in and was member of the Delia Presbyterian Church. Leonard was a 60 + year member of Delia Masonic Lodge No. 419 and also the former Delia Lions Club. He served many years on the Delia Water District Board and the Delia Cemetery Board. Leonard served one term as a Jackson County Commissioner from the third district. He received the Kansas Bankers Soil Conservation award in 1971.

Other survivors include his two children, Jim (Janet) Dodge, Rossville and Joanne (Mike) Bruce, Huntsville, TX; five grandchildren, David (Colleen) Dodge, Topeka, Karen (Jerry) Manhart, Shawnee, Michael Bruce, Huntsville, Kevin (April) Bruce, Houston and Stephanie Bruce, Fayetteville, NC; nine great-grandchildren, Casey, Darrin and Danielle Dodge, Abbie and Chad Manhart, Maddison, Regan, Damian and Malcolm Bruce.

Mr. Dodge was preceded in death by his parents and a great- grandson.

Funeral services will be at 10:30 A.M. Tuesday, February 15, 2011 at Piper Funeral Home in St. Marys. Interment with Masonic graveside service conducted by Delia Lodge No. 419 will be in the Delia Cemetery. Visitation will be one our prior to service time on Tuesday morning. In lieu of flowers the family suggests memorial contributions to the Delia Masonic Lodge No. 419, the Delia Presbyterian Church or the Rossville Senior Center and sent in care of the funeral home

[NI13860] Mary Beach Dodge (Mrs Chauncy Ross) is the source of records of
her antecedents published in the article "The Dodge Family" in the
NORWAY TIDINGS, September 1890. Norway is a township in Herkimer
County, New York.
Excerpt from above NORWAY TIDINGS: "Mary B., born in 1817,
married Chauncey Ross in 1843 in Mayfield, New York. They lived in Norway
until 1854, when they removed to Beloit, Wisconsin, where they still
reside. They are the parents of five children, viz: Mervin, Spencer
D., Marion, Helen, and Fred L., all living except Mervin who died in
1873. Both (sic) the sons served in the army during the rebellion.
Mervin was a fine scholar, a graduate of Beloit college. Mr. and Mrs.
Ross, by industry and good management, have secured a competency of
this world's good which they are enjoying in their evening of life."
Also: "We are indebted to Mrs. Chauncey Ross for the main
portion of the foregoing sketch (The Dodge Family).

Obituary:
Mrs. Chauncey Ross, of the town of Turtle, died this morning
after a long illness at the age of 80 years.
The funeral services will be held at the residence in Turtle on
Monday at 1:30 p.m.

Later obituary:
"SHE HATH DONE WHAT SHE COULD"
----------------------
The home of Chauncey Ross is in mourning for the loss of wife and
mother, though mingled with the sorrow is the helpful assurance that
the end of long and intense physical suffering, which human skill
could not relieve, is the beginning of eternal rest and freedom from
pain.
Mrs. Mary beach Dodge Ross, who died at the family homestead in
Turtle, Feb. 19th, 1898, was born in the town of Fairfield,N. Y., Oct.
29th, 1817. Her parents were Cyrus and Johannah Beach Dodge, who came
of that sturdy, tenacious New England stock, the indelible impress of
which has ever been prominent among the noblest and best types of
American citizenship. Her father was of the fourth generation of John
Dodge who settled in Block Island, Conn., in 1667 from the North of
England, and her mother was the daughter of Capt. Jotham Beach, an
efficient officer in the revolutionary army. Her father, grandfather
and great grandfather Dodge attained the ripe ages of 100 years 6
months, 104 years and 109 (not correct, per J R Birch) years
respectively.
In the year 1800 her parents removed from New Ashford, Mass., to
Fairfield, N. Y., and about 1820 the family settled in the town of
Newport, Herkimer County, where in her young womanhood she was a
teacher in the public schools of the county, and in 1843 she was
married to Chauncey Ross. They resided in the town of Norway, same
county, until
September 1854, when they came to Beloit, and November of the same
year settled in the adjoining town of Turtle where they have since
resided.
She was energetic, active and, when health permitted, managed her
own household. She was endowed with refined tastes and delighted in
surrounding herself and others with the beautiful results of her own
skill and industry in the production of artistic needle work,
ornamental bric a brac and rare flowers.
During the past thirty years her health has been much impaired,
and though never strong, she possessed peculiar powers of indurance
that enabled her to survive long periods of intense suffering, and
rally from conditions ordinarily considered fatal. Through all her
affliction she was ever hopeful, and determined that out of existing
conditions and
circumstances should come the best results possible. She never lost
her faith in the wisdom of God, and during the last six months she has
lingered along the valley, supported by the trusted rod and staff,
waiting patiently the signal from her Commander to pass through.
She was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church in Norway,
N.Y. She had not united with any church in Wisconsin, but has always
been identified with the Christian and charitable enterprises in her
vicinity, and was one of the founders and an active member of the
society that maintains the union religious services at Turtle Hall.
Her funeral services were held at the family residence, Feb. 21st
conducted by Rev. W. W. Sleeper, her sons and grandsons serving as
pall bearers. Interment was in the Beloit cemetery beside her eldest
son, Mervin C., who was a member of Company F., 16th Wisconsin
Volunteers, and of the Alumni of Beloit College, class of 1867, and
died in 1872. Her remaining children are Helen G. and Fred L. Ross,
of Turtle, Mrs. J. A. Yost, of Yost's Park, and S. D. Ross, of this
city.
Her eldest sister, Mrs. A. D. Easterly, died two weeks ago on
Feb. 4th, and her remaining sister, Mrs. J. A. Cooper, resides in
Neola, Ia.

[NI13870] Frederick & Jean have 2 sons.
Frederick & Frances have one daughter.

[NI13871] likely descended from Mayflower

[NI13877] Melvin & Unknown Anderson had 2 sons.
Melvin & Lillain has i daughter.

[NI13934] Lewis Blanchard Dodge
The sudden death of Blanchard Lewis Dodge of this town occurred Friday afternoon, May 10th, at the home of his cousin Mrs. Sarah Baker, Cottage Street, Berwick. He had driven up that morning from Middleton and after dinner was in the garden setting out a few plants he had taken with him when he fell, death occurring immediately. Dr. Bethune was called and pronounced heart due to a heart attack. Mr. Dodge had suffered from previous attacks.
He was 67 years of age and was the son of the late Ambrose and Annie Cox Dodge of Middleton.
He leaves two sisters, Margaret who resided with him and Mrs. O.P. Goucher, both of Middleton and one brother Harry Dodge of Sydney; Reverend H.S. Shaw and W.H. Shaw of Berwick were cousins.
The largely attended funeral was held from his late home Sunday afternoon, May 12th, at 2:00, Reverend J.M.

[NI13939] Harry Oswald Dodge was born in Middleton, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada in 1874. His parents were Ambrose Stephen Dodge, 1839-1926 and Annie E. Cox, 1840-1922. They are from of the Tristram Dodge line. In his childhood Harry lived in the sub districts of Wilmot and Melvern where his father works as a farmer. Harry lived his entire life in Nova Scotia and during his adult life he developed his love of Photography.
Early the nineteen century he opened his first photographic studio and he named it “H.O. Dodge”.
In an Article written and researched by Patrick Hirtle entitled”Old Fashioned Window shopping, season greeting from years gone by.” He writes and describes the “Commercialized” Christmas, by stepping back in time, about one hundred years back to a dirt and gravel road called Commercial Street in

Bridgewater, Nova Scotia. He describes all the trappings offered by the merchants to satisfy and delight everyone senses and in the two following paragraphs he describes Harry O Dodge’s offerings”
….”If toiletries weren't preferable, a portrait done by local photographer H.O. Dodge might have been the perfect gift-giving solution. The Dodge photography studio was the venerable "centre of attraction for some weeks" during the Christmas season, as families dressed in their finest for portraits, and sweethearts snapped on a sultry, secretive smile for their special someone.
And despite the demanding climate and the clunky nature of technology, Dodge promised his customers who arrived within five days of Christmas that their portrait prints would be ready for pickup in time for the big day”…
Henry not only did portrait work in his studio but traveled throughout Nova Scotia taking large Panoramic photographic of events taken place during his lifetime. Some of his work can be seen on the Government of Nova Scotia web site at (gov/ns.ca). One of his larger panoramic photos is part of the Virtual Archives within the virtual exhibit called, Halifax and Its People / 1749-1999 and the event was entitled “Boating on the North West Arm in front of the Waegwoltic Club, Halifax, ca. 1910.

Photographer: Harry O. Dodge (Gauvin & Gentzel); Date: ca. 1910; Reference no.: H.O. Dodge NSARM accession no. 1987-73 no. 3. What follows is some history of Waegwoltic Club.

In 1908, a group of private citizens purchased 'Bloomingdale', which had been the residence of Alfred G. Jones (1824-1906) from 1860 until his appointment as Lieutenant Governor in 1900; his family included daughters Frances (later Bannerman), a noted artist and poet, and Alice, a well-known author, both of whom later moved overseas. The purchase price for 'Bloomingdale' was $10,000, and the citizens' group subsequently founded the Waegwoltic Club, a name derived from the Mi'kmaq word for the North West Arm. The house and property remain intact today, a thriving private recreational facility and Halifax landmark. This photo is a must see at the web site to fully appreciate the time in which it was taken and the pure clarity and quality of the picture. The link to the web site can be found in the foot note 2.
On the same web site as previously noted you can find another exhibit featuring Henry Photographs in the Virtual Archives of “Men in the Mines” covering the history of mining in Nova Scotia, 1720-1992. In this exhibit he has four photos of the Collieries & Furnaces, Nova Scotia Steel & Coal Co. Ltd., Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia.

Even across the sea, Henry work is being displayed in the “British Library” in London England. In their Online Gallery in the exhibit called “Quebec 400” you will see two extraordinary panoramic photographic of the 1908 “Second Tercentenary Pageant. Henry’s work was described in this way:

The Tercentenary of Quebec City, 1908
“In 1908, the City of Quebec celebrated the 300th anniversary of its founding.
With many royal guests and dignitaries in attendance, the Tercentenary represented the opportunity for a celebration of the city's turbulent and cosmopolitan history, and the diversity of its peoples.

”In some ways, these celebrations resembled the multicultural flamboyance and color of 2008's 400th anniversary program, although the dramatic pageants and tableaux captured in early panoramic photographs held as part of the British Library's Colonial Copyright Collection clearly derive from a pre-digital age.”

The two photos are so long that they required special zooms technology in order to view sections of the photograph so you can see and appreciate the clarity and details within the pictures. Above are the two panoramic photos which were taken at the 1908 celebration, and on the next page is a blow-up of a portion of the bottom photo.


Canadian Copyright Collection number 19813. 'Monsignor de Laval, Bishop of Quebec, receives Marquis de Tracy Lieutenant-General of New France, in June 1665.' Photograph of Fifth Quebec Tercentenary Pageant. Quebec, 1908. © Copyright the British Library Board
Above is a partial blow-up of the much large panoramic photo. In the upper left corner of the blow-up you can see the original size and length of the picture and within it a small box. This small red box marks the outer limits of the blow up area shown above. This type of clarity is found through all of Henry Panoramic Photographs.
You can find many examples of his work being sold on many web sites such as ebay; on July 12, 2009 Henry’s Panoramic Photo of the Quebec City c1900 was purchased. This information was obtained from a Collector’s Site “WorthPoint, which is a fee based collectors’ site for all type of historical objects.
Henry works are in many kinds of books published in Canada one such book can be found on the web site of “John W Doull Bookseller at DoullBooks.com. The title of the book is “Cape Breton, Nova Scotia: The Unspoiled Summerland of America” the authors are Challoner, S.P. Mac Askill, W.R. Shedden, D.T., published in 1930. The book is classified as Tourism and includes photographs from H.O.Dodge, N.MacLeod, W.R.MacAskill, H.T.Bailey, and D.T.Shedden. The book sells for $60.00 and can be ordered from DoullBooks.com

Here are still other examples of Henry works that can be viewed and purchased at the Glenbow Museum. At the Glenbow Museum, intriguing stories from Western Canada connect with extraordinary art and artifacts from around the world. Combining a museum, art gallery, library and archives all under one roof, Glenbow boasts over a million artifacts and some 28,000 works of art in its vast collections and is one of the largest museums in Canada. Through a variety of dynamic programs and changing exhibitions and programs, and a broad collection of art, artifacts and historical documents, Glenbow Museum builds on a commitment to preserve our cultural and western heritage while simultaneously providing visitors with a glimpse of the world beyond.
In Henry’s exhibit he has nine panoramic views of Calgary, Alberta, the date is 1911. In the exhibit the Photographer is described as: Dodge. H.O., Sidney, Nova Scotia. To access his photo’s go to the Glenbow Museum web site and enter: H.O. Dodge in their search engine. Link: http://ww2.glenbow.org/search/archivesPhotosSearch.aspx


Above is one example of this photo within the Glenbow Museum. All of Henry photo’s can be purchased from this Museum. They will provide a digital copy of the photo at their original size. The cost for just the copy is $15.00 each, extra charges may apply for copy rights depending on the use intended. The writer as purchased this photo in this collection.


The above Photo is a panoramic view of Vancouver, B.C. and it was donated by a Mrs. Cotter in 1974 to the City of Vancouver. This photo can be seen and obtained at the City of Vancouver Archives Web Site which also houses many other fine examples of Henrys work. The following is a list of this works that can be seen and copied from this web site:
•Point Grey Municipality Junction of Marine Drive and South Boulevard 1911
•Point Grey Municipality, View of Kerrisdale (Municipal Hall on Left) 1911.
•Point Grey Municipality: North Arm of Fraser River from junction of Granville Street and Marine Drive. 1911.
•Point Grey Municipality: Shaughnessy Heights from Granville Street, 1911
•Vancouver, B.C.
•[Southward view of McCleery Farm]
•[View of Burrard Inlet from Point Grey]
•[View of Burrard Inlet toward Howe Sound from Point Grey]
•[View of Kerrisdale at 41st Avenue and West Boulevard]
•[View of Shaughnessy Heights from Matthews and Wolfe Avenues]
•[View towards Point Grey Municipality showing] Water Frontage Eburne Townsite North Arm of Fraser River. 1911


In order to view the above photo’s you must scroll down and within the “Access points” under the heading “Name Access Points” you will see the name: Dodge, H. O. (photographer) in blue ink. Just click on his name and it will bring you to his other photographs. See foot note below for link to this site.

And lastly at left is a copy of the original panoramic photograph of famous Lunenburg Harbor (circa 1905) by Henry Dodge of Sydney, Cape Breton. You can see the Lunenburg Academy, fish shacks (with salt cod), the original train station, old homesteads, schooners and much more. The image is 53.5" long by 7" high but the photo paper is larger. So you can see by these examples that Henry was much more that a portrait Photographer, no he was much more than that.

[NI13941] The death of Ardelice K. Goucher, wife of 0bed. P. Goucher, former minister of agriculture, occurred at her home in Middleton, Sunday, June 20, late noon following an illness of several months Friends of the late Mrs. Goucher in Middleton and throughout the province will be saddened to learn of her passing.
Possessed of a friendly and. kindly ,disposition coupled with a genial charm and grace, Mrs. Goucher will be greatly missed.
Mrs. Goucher was born in Melvern Square, Annapolis County, December 18, 1866, the daughter of the late Am¬brose and Annie Dodge. Until her marriage in 1893, Mrs. Goucher taught school in various districts in eastern Annapolis County. Her married life has been spent entirely in Middleton with. With the exception of the first three years in Lawrencetown and seven years from 1920 until 1933 when she resided in Halifax,
Besides her husband Mrs. Goucher is survived by two sons, F. Harold of Halifax and H. Gordon of Middleton and two grandchildren One brother, H. O. Dodge of Sydney also survives.
Funeral services were held yesterday afternoon (Wednesday) at three o'clock from the home. Bev. J. Murray. Armstrong, pastor of the United Baptist Church, of which Mrs. Goucher was a member, conducted, the service.

[NI13948] Drowned between Islesboro & Boston.

[NI13987] Homer bred, raised, and trained Standard bred horses.

[NI13994] He served his country in World War II with honor and pride as a corporal. He was with the 9th Armored Division in the European Theater. He served in Normandy, northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland and central European campaigns.

[NI13998] Amer Judah "Judy" Dodge, 85, of Marysville, died Tuesday afternoon, Feb.13, 2007, at the Ohio Veterans Home in Georgetown. He was a former funeral director and longtime dog warden for Union County. He was a member of New California Presbyterian Church, Palestine Lodge No. 158 F&AM, Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus, Aladdin Temple Shrine and the Union County Shrine Club. He also was a lifetime member of VFW Post No. 3320.
He was an Army veteran of World War II where he achieved the rank of technical sergeant and served as a drill instructor and teacher Manual of Arms, the 45 pistol and revolver. He was selected from his outfit to go to Fort Custer, Mich., to serve with the Criminal Investigation Division of China, Burma, and India. He was then selected to be a part of the War Crimes Commission in Singapore but chose to come back home to
the United States. He was born March 18, 1921, in Marysville, to the late Homer and Lucille Dodge. He also was preceded in death by a brother, Gene Dodge; a sister,
Virginia Hein; a son, Michael Dodge; and daughter, Colleen Higley. He is survived by his loving children, Scott Dodge of Delaware, and Kathleen Dodge of Reynoldsburg; three brothers, Joe (Karen) Dodge of Marysville, Jim Dodge and Richard (Gloria) Dodge of Powell; and several nephews and nieces. Burial will follow at Oakdale Cemetery

[NI14003] Richard Arlen Dodge passed away at his home Friday (Jan. 22, 2010) surrounded by his loving family.

He was born at his home on Route 2, in Marysville to Homer T. and Lucille Watts Dodge on Feb. 23, 1929. He was a graduate of New California High School, Jerome Township, attended Heidelberg College in Tiffin and the Ohio State University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science and a master’s in education and counseling. He was a veteran of the Korean War and was a teacher and counselor in Columbus public schools from 1954 to 1986. He was involved in many community projects, but his highlight was serving on the Del-Co Water Board from 1989 to 2010 as a director. He married the love of his life, Gloria Jean Brust, on May 26, 1952.

He is survived by his wife of 57 years; his three sons, Robert (Fran), Rickey (Janie) and Ronald (Adele) Dodge, all of Concord Township; seven grandchildren, Thomas, Michael, and Gina Dodge, Kasey (Nick) Leali, Susan (Dan) Buck, and Carrie Dodge and Benjamin Dodge; and one great grandson, Alexander Leali. Survivors also include his brothers, Joseph (Karen) Dodge of Marysville, Jim Dodge of Delaware; and several dear nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents; sister Virginia Hein, formerly of Toledo; brothers, Thomas J. Dodge, formerly of Arizona and Amer J. Dodge, formerly of Marysville; a nephew, Jeffery McCoy, formerly of Delaware; and a niece, Colleen Higley, formerly of Toledo.

[NI14014]
Charles Clark Dodge
1915 - 2009

Charles "Charlie" Dodge of Camarillo died peacefully Saturday, August 8, at the age of 93, having lived a long full life.

Charles was born November 3, 1915 in Ft. Scott, Kansas where he grew up and graduated from Ft. Scott High School in 1933. In 1938 he met the love of his life, Lillian Hisel the two were married August 4.

Charles answered the call to duty and enlisted in February, 1943. He underwent pilot training in Phoenix and Bakersfield, Calif.; and twin engine training in Yuma, Ariz. Charles graduated as a pilot in December 1943. He was assigned to a 10-man B-24 bomber crew as a co-pilot, and was sent to March Field, Calif. for crew training. From March Field he was sent to Langley Filed, Va. for B-24 low altitude radar training. In July 1944 his crew flew a new B-24J to Kunming, China and was assigned to the 308th Bomb Group, the 425th Bomb Squadron, the 14th Air Force commanded by Gen. Chennault.

After flying 300 hours of air combat against the Japanese he was discharged in November 1945. Charles was recalled during the Korean War for two years to the 80th installation in North Africa. Released at Camp Kilmer, NJ in November 1952 as captain. His service Medals include two Air Medals and the Distinguished Flying Cross, Republic of China WWII service Medal, Pacific Theater WWII service Medal, WWII Victory Medal. Charles was a firefighter for the city of Los Angeles and retired as a captain in 1976. He responded to the Bel Air fire (1961), The Watts Riots (1965), The Sylmar Earthquake (1971), Monty's Restaurant high-rise fire in Westwood, the Mandeville Canyon Fire (1978) and countless other emergency incidents. His son Stephen (retired) and his grandson Bryan are both Firefighters.

He is survived by his lovely wife of 71 years; Lillian; his two sons and daughters-in-law Stephen and Lucy Dodge, Robert and Tracey Dodge; his five grandchildren Bryan, Stefanie (husband Jason), Robyn, Scott and Rebecca and his sister Maureen Harward.

The funeral services will be held 11:00 a.m. on Monday, August 17th at Conejo Mountain Memorial Park, Chapel of the Islands in Camarillo. Burial will follow with military honors and a fly by from the Commemorative Air Force, Southern California Wing. Assisting the family with funeral arrangement is Conejo Mountain Funeral Home and Memorial Park, 2052 Howard Road, Camarillo. (805) 482-1959

[NI14024] Rose was her married name.

[NI14028] Age 71, retired Presbyterian minister and former pastor in this community died in his home in Pike, NY. Mr. Dodge graduated from Pike Seminary in 1894 and was ordained in 1904. On October 25, 1893 he married Adaline Keeney, who died in 1917. Survived by his second wife Harriet B. Dodge, formerly of Augusta; 2 daughters, Mrs. W.J. Peckham, Warsaw and Mrs. Cecil Korsiorek, Batavia; also 2 sisters, Mrs. Emma Thompson, Buffalo and Mrs. Ruth Soears, Warsaw.

[NI14036] OBIT FOR WALTER J. PECKHAM
Died at home 54 Center St., Warsaw. Born in Warsaw, son of Harry and Martha Moore Peckham and on 5/30/1919 he married Myra Dodge. Survived by his wife, a son John A. Peckham of Fort Knox, KY and 2 nephews. An assistant secretary of Wyoming Co. Bank and Trust Co and Wyoming County National Bank for 30 years. A member of United Church; Masonic Lodge, American Legion and Village Board. Veteran of Navy in WWI being inducted in Buffalo in June 1918 and discharged in Brooklyn in June 1921 as a seaman 1st class.

[NI14039] Harriet B. "HAttie" (Hewett) Dodge formerly of Pike and widow of the late Rev. Almon Dodge died at the Warsaw Hospital. Member of the Warsaw Baptist Church and WCTU. Survived by 2 step daughters, Mrs. Walter Peckham of Warsaw and Mrs. Miriam Kosioeek of Batavia. 1 brother Allen Hewitt of Augusta, NY; 2 sisters Mrs. Carrie Holmes of Madison, NY and Mrs. Lottie Barnes of Vernon, NY. Weeks Funeral Home handled arrangements.

[NI14040] Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock occurred the death of Mrs. Burdette Signor of North Spencer, aged 42 years, of consumption.

Mrs. Signor leaves a husband, and a sister, Mrs. Thomas Sheridan of
this city. The funeral will be held Tuesday from her late home at 2 p.m.

ITHACA DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1898.

[NI14047] Some Records say Rathbun died 14 July 1874.

[NI14049] DistinglishedArmy Career during Civil War. Then became a Lawyer Died 62
years, 5 months, 18 days.

[NI14057]

[NI14059] Aged 1 year, 5 months, 18 days.

[NI14070] 1860 Census says b. New York.

[NI14080] Died Aged 16 years, 5 months, 23 days

[NI14088] Worked as a gunsmith with his brother William in the 1870 census. At
that time he was living with his first wife Mary in Fish Lake, Chisago
County, Minnesota.

[NI14089] Neva Helloise died when her husbands store burned to the ground September
15, 1912. Her daughter Olive also lost her life.

From SEILING MESSENGER Seiling, Dewey County, Oklahoma - September 19,
1912


SEILING'S FIRST FIRE
Destroys the Temple of Economy Oldest General Merchandise
Establishment in Town, Entailing Property Loss Estimated
at $10,000 to $12,000, Partly Insured

MOTHER AND CHILD SUFFOCATE AND PERISH IN FLAMES
The first fire in the thirteen years' existence of the town from what is
now considered as incendiary orgin, destroyed Mrs. Hammon's large general
store Sunday morning, and she, together with her little daughter, Olive,
perished in the flames
.
Efforts to Save Prove Futile-------Alarm

As related by Miss Amanda Johnston, a clerk who was employed by and
boarded with Mrs. Hammon, awoke about 5 o'clock and found her bed
clothing afire. She made an attempt to exitinguish the blaze but
realizing the impossibility of it she called to Mrs. hammon who came
immediately to her assistance. Both fought with all human energy until,
in making a final effort as if to fully smother the flames, Amanda
overturned a vessel the contents of which she says caused the blaze to
seemingly envelope the room. With hands burned almost to a crisp and her
face almost blistered the girl fled from the room by way of the west door
and gave alarm, while Mrs. Hammon called to Johnnie and his father in the
building to the north, telling them to save themselves, that the store
was burning inside. It is said this was the last time she was seen or
heard.

Reported all Safe

It seems that she had been out carrying water just previous to this, but
there are so many conflicting statements it is difficult to make the
proper connections as to the real state of affairs a that time, and it
has been impossible to arrive at a definite conclusion as to how it
happened that she failed to take the child out the first thing and
suffered both to perish in a veritable furnace.
So convincing were the reports that all were out of the burning building
no attempt was made by the fire fighters to investigate to see whether
anyone might be left in some of the rooms, and all attention was turned
toward saving buildings near by. And let it be said to the credit of the
town's abundant water supply (which of course had to be pumped and
carried) and to the unrelenting efforts of men and boys --- and women,
too we would have you to know ---- that the entire west side of Main
street was saved. However, had it not been for the rain that fell Friday
and Saturday nights, and for the fact that there was very little wind,
all the water in the town would not have saved the business part of it.

The Ruins Reveal Their Dead.

After no trace of Mrs. Hammon be obtained, and as soon as the smoldering
embers could be cooled sufficiently to permit it, a search was
instituted, and soon the charred remains of the child and mother were
found in what had been the northwest bed room. It might appear, and does
look reasonable that the woman in her excitement did not realize the
imminent danger the child was in and did not consider it necessary to
take her up, thinking she had time to give the alarm and then return for
her. It seems evident that she made an attempt to get the child and in so
doing it is presumed that she became suffocated by the dense smoke and
fell unconscious a the foot of the bed upon which the child was sleeping
and perhaps also unconscious at that time.
When found, Little Olive was lying almost cross-wise of the bed,
partially on her side in such a manner tht one side of her head and hair
were practically unburned and recognizable.
The remains were immediately removed from the debris and taken to the
Davis building and there prepared for burial which made Sunday evening,
Rev. Voss of the Presbyterian church conducting the services at the
cemetery.

Idle Rumors Cause For Inquest

Owing to many unfounded statements and various rumors an inquest became
imperative. County Attorney Cary was sent for and upon his arrival and
investigation ordered the inquest. Practically nothing, in fact the
evidence taken failed to attach the blame to anyone, and nothing was
really determined by the inquest.

Origin of Fire Only Supposition

As in almost every case of fire, everybody has an idea, if they do not
know absolutely, how the fire started, but this one will remain one of
the mysterious unsolvable in this day and age, so far as can be seen now.
There seems to be no plausible answer to the question, "What started it?"
According to the testimony of the only one who could probably know, the
fire when discovered was burning the bed clothing and had started in the
wardrobe but how or by whom cannot be proven. If this be not the case the
facts never will be known, and in the absence of further proof, it
generally accepted as being a plan by someone who understood the
situation, as there was not nor had there been a match, light or fire of
any kind in that room that night. And the more the affair is drawn upon
the more the mystery deepens until it becomes as unfathomable as the
fates that govern the destiny of all things material.

A Small Fire But Immense Loss

Excepting the loss of life, in a general way Seiling lost but little in
the fire, as it was small and everything seemed to assist in confining it
to a very small area, but commercially it was the big store of the town
and will be greatly missed, which with its destruction and loss of two
lives the first fire has cost the town and amount beyond computation.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------
------


OBITUARY
Mrs Neva H. Hammon was born in Michigan, September 7, 1873. In early
childhood moved to Stafford county, Kansas with her parents , Mr. and
Mrs. O. L. Blount. From Kansas they removed to Oklahoma in 1893.
She was married to J. A. Hammon, September 21, 1895 to which union was
born two children, J. O, and Olive J. She was converted and joined the
Friends church when 19 years of age. Died September 15, 1912, leaving a
husband, mother and father, six sisters and three brothers and son.

Olive Hammon was born 1909, died September 15, 1912.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------
------


Surviving Son,

John Hammon was born 21 June 1896 in Oklahoma, and died February 1974 in
Tulsa, Tulsa County, Oklahoma. He married MYRTLE BURCHETT, daughter of
ALFRED BURCHETT and ELNORA STEWART. She was born 22 May 1891 in Missouri,
and died 5 May 1969. Children: JOHN HAMMON, JR., b. 23 February 1916,
Oklahoma; d. December 1983, Tulsa, Tulsa County, Oklahoma.



Contributed by Dorris McKinney - Dorrismck@aol.com - related to the
Burchetts, Hammons, McKinneys

[NI14104] Died in the Civil War while serving with Company K of the 1st Regiment of
New York. Killed by heavy artillery.

[NI14122] He was an active member of many fraternal organizations in Alameda.

[NI14127] RYE, Aug. 9 (.Special) Philip Tell Dodge, for 37 years president of the Mergenthaler Linotype. Company and prominently identified with many other companies, died of pneumonia today at his summer home, 973 Forest avenue. He had been ill for 10 days. Mr. Dodge was 80 years old.
Funeral services will be held Tuesday morning at the family home here and will be private. Mr. Dodge will be buried in Schenectady where he lived in his youth. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Lillian Sutherland Dodge; a daughter, Mrs. Olive Dodge Musgrave, wife of Col. T. E. Musgrave of the United States Army, and a son, Norman Dodge, who seceded his father as president of the Mergenthaler Linotype Company after the latter's retirement three years ago. Mr. Dodge's New York city home was at 944 Park avenue.

[NI14133] John Osburn Hammon lived in Ithaca, New York during the 1850 Census. This
is recorded on page 265 of the New York 1850 Federal Census I.D. No.
NYS6a1324410. John later on moved to Owattona, Minnesota. He passed
away in 1869.

In 1842 John purchased 6.42 acres with water rights Ithaca, New York from
a William Daily Jr. This is recorded in the Index to deeds 1817 to 1860
for Thompkin County, New York. Page 564. He later sold 1/4 acre in 1846
to Lorenzo Scott Huestic and Ano. Book V Page 510. And then in 1854 he
sold 10-1/2 r x 12 to Whalen Hammon as recorded in book 61 page 374.
[hammon tree.ftw]

[NI14142] I believe that George Dodge and Family was located in Solon, Courtland County, New York in 1830. The number and age of males and females matchs up with George Dodge's family as recorded in the John O. Hammon and Louisa Jane Dodge family bible. Also located in Solon are a Elisha and Elisha Jr. Dodge. Elisha Dodge has son's named Elisha and George as recorded in the 1894 copy of the Dodge Genealogy by Joseph Thompson Dodge on Pg. 409. In this book Elisha Dodge has the following children.Salina, Elisha, George (1795), Nathan, Lydia, Augustus, Oliver, Eliza and Olive. George Dodge is believed to have been possibly born in Massachusetts, however The Dodge Family Association in 2006 believes he was born in Newport, Herkimer County, New York. Georged served in the war of 1812 as a private in Captain Jaon Ellis' Company, from Sept 6 1813 thru Dec 8 1812.

[NI14144] On War of 1812 pension file she is named Mercy Ann Himes.

[NI14145] Living in Candor, Tioga County, New York in 1880
Living in Owego, Tioga County, New York in 1850

[NI14149] Charges were made that Commissioner Holloway retained Southern sympathizers in the Patent Office and refused to investigate charges against them made by ardent Unionists. William C. Dodge was a patent examiner who went to see Mr. Holloway to demand that he dismiss draftsman Lewis Bosworth for disloyalty. Mr. Holloway thought the charges were unfounded and refused to dismiss Bosworth. Dodge then publicly and loudly denounced Bosworth as a traitor in the lobby of the Patent Office. By nightfall, the news of this charge was all over town, and acquaintances of Mr. Holloway [Pg 162] were coming to him to ask if he were refusing to fire a traitor. Holloway called Dodge in to his office and asked if Dodge had personally seen Bosworth do anything that was disloyal. Dodge said that he only knew what people had told him. Holloway replied that he was not interested in hearsay. Dodge replied that by those standards neither of them knew that Jefferson Davis was disloyal, because neither had observed Jefferson Davis do anything disloyal. Holloway answered that unless better evidence could be provided than either of them could provide, Jefferson Davis could not be called upon to answer for anything. He then told Dodge that by making unsupported charges, he was making Holloway look bad, and that if Dodge continued Holloway would fire Dodge.Apparently, Dodge resigned just short of being fired, or perhaps he was actually fired. It was for reasons such as these that Mr. Holloway was investigated by a committee of the House of Representatives in February
1865 for refusing to fire known traitors

CIS (38)HS-T.1 - T.6 microfiche

Wrote a book published in 1900, titled "The orgin, nature, and effects of
patents" published in Washington, DC

Cited in Scientific American v35, no. 13, p 195, 23 September 1876. Regarding The United States Patent Association conference meeting on Sept. 7, 1876.

obit: Washington Post, January 5 and 6, 1914.

Inventor Dodge is Dead Man who improved old-time guns, victim of Pneumonia.
He was also gold miner, doorkeeper in House of Representatives, and Patent Attorney.

William Castle Dodge, well-known inventor, patent lawyer, and civic
worker, who had been ill for the past two weeks at his home, 116 B street
northeast, of Pneumonia, died at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon. While
Mr. Dodge had not been actively engaged in business for several years,
his general health was good and his death came as a great suprise to his
friends.
Born at Solon, Courtland county N.Y. December 9, 1827, Mr. Dodge led a
most eventful life. He was educated in the common schools of Solon, and
later was graduated from Ithaca Academy. In 1846 he went to Wisconsin,
where he took up the study of law. When the rush for gold was made to
California in 1849. Mr. Dodge was among the first to cross the prairies
in quest of the precious metal. The following year he returned to
Wisconsin, and in 1851 was admitted to the bar. In 1854 he went to
Minnesota where he settled near Winona and took up farming as a
vocation. He introducted the first iron water wheel for mill use in that
state. Four years later he went to St. Peter, Minn., where he conducted
the St. Peter Free Press, then one of the largest publications in
Minnesota. In 1860 Mr. Dodge came to Washington, where he bacame
doorkeeper of the House of Representatives. The following year he bacame examiner in the patent office. where he served until the close of the civil war. It was the war which led him to consider the then imperfect firearms, and it was largely due to him that many improvements were made to the guns then in use. He was honored by several European governments for his work along these lines, and the Congress also compensated him forhis services.
At the close of the war he also became a patent attorney and his business is still being run by his sons and grandsons. He was among those who founded the present Society of Associated Charities, and was for many years a member of the board of trustees. Mr. Dodge was first married in 1851 to Miss Jane Van Patten, of Schenectady, N.Y., who died in 1860. The following year he married Miss Elizabeth A. Schrivener, of Washington, who survives. He is also survived by three sons, Philip Tell, of New York; William W. and Horace A. Dodge, both of this city, and four daughters, Miss Jennie Dodge, Mrs. Thomas J. Johnston, of Brooklyn, New York.; Mrs. Clair Hillyer, of Chicago, and Mrs. J.W. Murphy of this city.

[NI14153] Enlisted in the Union Army on March 18, 1965. Served with the Minnesota 4th Infantry Regiment in E Company. Musted out at Louisville, Kentucky on July 19, 1865.

[NI14156] Pages 102-104 of book: Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge - by
Theron Royal Woodward.
"New York in the Revolution, p. 49, says he was in Col. James Holmes' regiment, N. Y. Line, 4th Regiment, Capt. James Rosekrans' Company. Service Aug. 3 to Oct 17, 1775. (These troops were regiments in the United States service under General Washington.) The same work gives the following military service of Stephen Dodge, but it is thought that the second item (p. 83) refers to another Stephen. Page 145: Stephen Dodge was a soldier in the Duthcess County Militia, 6th Regt., Col. Morris Graham. (The militia could not be called out of the state for more than three months. At the beginning of the war they volunterred, but later they were called out by the Convention.)
Page 83: Stephen Dodge was in Col. Albert Pawling's Regiment of The Levies. Service in 1781. (These troops were drafts from the different militia regiments and sometimes from the people direct as well.) After the above service in the Continental Army, it seems that Stephen Dodge changed his mind as to ther prospects of the result or as to the merits of the war. Page 254 (Supplement): The Commissioners of Sequestrations of New York reported, July, 1781, that the property of Stephen Dodge had been sold. Page 270: ( Supplement): The Commissioners of Forfeitures of New York listed the estate of Stephen Dodge among those forfeited. These commisssioners sold the real estate of Tories or others who had earlier gone over to the enemy or were suspected of not being friendly to the American cause. They did not begin work until late in the war, and were more systematic in their accounts than the Committee of Sequestration, who dealt for the most part with personal property. Samuel Dodge was a commissioner for the counties of Dutchess, Orange, and Ulster, and as such he probably sold the estate of his kinsman, Stephen Dodge. The comptroller of the state of New York writes as follows concerning the confiscation of the estate of Stephen Dodge: "The name of Stephen Dodge mentioned in New York in the Revolution (Supplement) among those whose estates were forfeited and confiscated, appears on the original documents as follows: "List of farms and houses sold by the commissioners of Sequestration in Dutchess County state that the house and small lot of Stephen Dodge of Charlotte was sold to Gilbert Worden May, 1779, and that in March, 1780, he paid eight pounds.
"Alphabetical lists of forfeited estates contains the name of Stephen
Dodge. Name also appears on a list of forfeitures. No additional information.
"On a statement of Sales of forfeited estates sold by the Commissioners
of Forfeitures in the Middle District there appears the name of Stephen
Dodge, opposite which is set the amount, one hundred and thirty pounds.
"A claim of Joseph Mabbett appears for thirty-four pounds fourteen
shillings and seven pence against the forfeited estate of Stephen Dodge,
and states the indebtedness was incurred previous to forfeiting the
estate."
In Smith's History of Butchess County, N. Y., p.49 (small, old edition),
it is stated that Charlotte Precinct, just previous to the Revolution,
was composed of the present towns of Clinton, Stanford, and Washington,
in Dutchess County, a dozen miles or more northeast of Poughkeepsie. It
was settled about 1750. Mabbettsville O. O. is in Washington. Joseph
Mabbett had a claim against the forfeited estate of Stephen Dodge of
Charlotte, and the P. O. name is a corroboration.
It seems probable that two of this name served in the Revolutionary War,
and which of them suffered confiscation may not be certain, but all
authorities seem to agree that Stephen Dodge, son of Tristram, emigrated
Oct, 1783, with wife and five children, to Nova Scotia and settled there
pursuant to conditions of treaty of peace. Judge Savary, in his History
of Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, calls him a "worthy Loyalist.," and
says that he settled first at Granville but afterwards in Wilmot, where
he obtained a grant to the rear of the river grants, north of Middleton
West. In a list or "muster roll" of discharged officers and disbanded
soldiers and Loyalists taken in the County of Annapolis in June, 1784,
the name of Stephen Dodge appears, "1 man, 1 woman, 3 children over 10, 3
children under 10, eight in all." Another reference to Stephen Dodge is
made in the sketch of his grandfather Jeremiah on a preceding page."

[NI14159] Enlisted in the Union Army on March 18, 1965 and served with the
Minnesota 4th Infantry Regiment in F company. Mustered out at
Louisville, Kentucky on July 19, 1865.

[NI14166] We show him as 5th child but Vital records show him as 6th child.

[NI14199] Name: Irving Dodge
Serial Number: 3160570
Birth Place: Wesley, Maine
Birth Date: 28 Apr 1894
Residence: Cooper
Comment: Ind: Calais, Washington County, July 24/18. Private. Org: 151 Dep Brig to Aug. 1/18; Co I 74 Inf to Sept. 9/18; Sup Co 74 Inf to disch. Overseas service: None. Hon disch on demob: Jan. 27, 1919.

[NI14227] Born on February 6, 1895 in Washington, DC, William Waldo Dodge, Jr. grew up during the popular era of the Arts and Crafts style in America. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy where courses in manual arts were becoming mandatory. Dodge broke away from his family history of patent attorneys and enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the school of architecture. Shortly before graduation, Dodge, along with crowds of other college students, enlisted in World War I. Returning home in 1919, he spent the next four years in military hospitals and tuberculosis sanatoriums. During his recovery, Dodge began his journey into silversmithing, learning the basics from the woman who would become his wife in 1921, Margaret Wheeler Robinson. The couple settled in Asheville in 1923. At this time, with his own silver shop, there was no clear evidence that Dodge was planning on pursuing his architectural career. However, it didn't take long. Dodge began designing residential homes in 1924 and later French style shops. His style included English Tudor, French Norman, and French country cottage. In 1940, Dodge and five other Asheville architects and engineers (Henry Irven Gaines, Anthony Lord, W. Stewart Rogers, Erle G. Stillwell, and Charles E. Waddell) pulled together and became known as the Six Associates. Dodge eventually chose to leave Six Associates and began his private practice, consisting mostly of renovations and additions. After he began experiencing medical difficulties, the Dodges sold their home and retired to their farm. It was here that William Waldo Dodge, Jr. died on February 21, 1971.



Located at US Hospital No. 19, listed as a 2nd Lt. during 1920 census. He began his Prfessional Life as an architect , but shifted his career focus after he was wounded during World War I. While recovering from his injuries he began to work with silver and eventually openned his own studio in 1924. A tea service created by Dodge reflects the Arts & Crafts movement popular at tis time.

From simple to ornate, thiis stunning collection in crafted from silver will dazzle the eyes. Stop by the N.C. Museum of History to polish up on your knowledgge of antique silver and appreciate the fine art of silversmithing.

[NI14252] Alison Davis Dodge Malone, 79, of Arlington, died October 21, 2012. She was the eldest child of Robert Irving Dodge, Jr., and Alice Foljambe Dodge. She was predeceased by her husband of 50 years, William Riley Malone, Jr., in 2006, and her younger brother Robert I. Dodge, III, in 2008.

She is survived by her four children: William Scott Malone, Christopher Dodge Malone, Robin Malone Ferris, and Douglas Harrison Malone; and five grandchildren: Cassandra Bratcher, Brandy Malone, David Estes, Jr., Alison Ferris, and Forrest Ferris.

Alison was always engaging, inquisitive and courageous, and she overcame many challenges with fierce determination. She was born in Albany, New York on January 17, 1933, and graduated from Wheaton College in 1954. She loved horseback riding, sailing and swimming. She was a tireless and forceful advocate for the rights of those with physical and developmental challenges, and she was present at the historic White House signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990. She inspired us all, and will be sorely and forever missed.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to CRAB (crabsailing.org). CRAB is a non-profit organization dedicated to making the thrill of sailing on the waters of the Chesapeake Bay a reality for physically and developmentally challenged individuals. CRAB was one of Alison and Bill's pleasures and is a wonderful organization.

The memorial service will be held at Arlington National Cemetery on April 18, 2013 at 11 a.m. Please arrive at the Administration Building at 10:30 a.m., with your vehicles. Vehicle transportation will be required throughout the service.

Published in The Washington Post on April 14, 2013

[NI14256] First R. F. D. carrier in Baugo, Twp., Elkhardt County, Indiana

[NI14272] John P. Dodge | Visit Guest Book

BROOKLIN and BLUE HILL - John Parker Dodge died July 21, 2010, after a brief illness. He was born Sept. 25, 1918, in Washington, DC, the eldest son of Parker and Charlotte Dodge. John obtained a bachelor's degree at the College of Arts and Sciences, Johns Hopkins University in 1940. Shortly after college he joined the Naval Reserve. During World War II he was a flight navigator with the Naval Air Transport Service in the Pacific. Post war, he began law school and was recalled to work in Naval Air Aviation Training publications during the Korean War. He earned a Juris Doctor degree at George Washington University Law School and practiced law in Bethesda, Md., and the District of Columbia, before starting a legal career with Securities and Exchange Commission and Interstate Commerce Commission, Washington, DC He retired in 1980 as an administrative law judge. During the war, John married Dorothy Tyler, R.N., of Brooklin. They had two daughters, now Susan (Mrs. Frederick) Kircheis and Jane (Mrs. David) Kidder. In addition to his beloved wife of 68 years and daughters, John is survived by grandsons, David and Daniel Kircheis; granddaughters, Leslie and Tyler Kidder; three great-grandchildren, Lauren, Aaron and Brianna Kircheis; sister, Margery Radomski; brother, Austin Dodge; many nieces and nephews of whom he was very fond. He was predeceased by sisters, Francis Gagliardi and Eleanor Wangersky; and brothers, Charles and David Dodge. In accordance with John's wish, there will be no funeral service. A celebration of his life will be scheduled at a future date. Contributions in John's memory may be made to Salvation Army, 65 South Park St., Bangor, ME 04401; Friend Memorial Library, P.O. Box 57, Brooklin, ME 04616; or Blue Hill Public Library, P.O. Box 824, Blue Hill, ME 04614. Arrangements by Jordan-Fernald, 141 South St., Blue Hill. Condolences may be expressed at www.jordanfernald.com.

Published in Bangor Daily News on July 23, 2010

[NI14313] Enlisted after the WW II on 16 Nov 1945 for the Panama Canal Dept. Regular Army.

Harold Reed Dodge, passed away May 7, 1998 in Wadsworth. He was employed at the Ohio Match Company for 40 years. Mr. Dodge is survived by his loving wife of 50 years, Dorotholene; son and wife, Harlan and Cheryl; son, Greg; daughter and husband, Linda and Ed Smith; grandchildren, Steve Smith, Brian Dodge, Angela Smith, Brandi Dodge; great-grandchildren, Valerie and Brittney Smith; brothers, Harlan, Eugene (Elma), Everett, Lynn, and Larry Dodge, Webster (Barbara), Dennis and Ronnie Lewis; sister, Evelyn Livengood Race.

[NI14331] Death at Prowers Medical Center,

[NI14343] [kelly86.ged]

Divorced Leonard Saint Vincent June 16, 1989. Birth stats: Sharp
Memorial Hospital, 3:22am, weight 7 lbs 0 oz, 21 inches. Parents were
living at 4349 46th St, San Diego, Ca.

[NI14351] Shirley Louise Dodge Greene, 88, died January 14, 2005, at her residence. She was born May 25, 1916, in Seal Harbor, the daughter of Albert L. and Gladys B Sullivan Dodge.

She loved living in Seal Harbor where she was raised and she enjoyed her walks around Long Pond. Shirley spent her quiet time doing crossword puzzles. She was a former member of the Seal Harbor Literary Club and a member of St. Mary and St. Jude Episcopal Church, of Seal Harbor. Shirley was a loving and caring mother, grandmother and great grandmother. Her family was very important to her.

She is survived by a son, David S. Hyde and wife, Cassie, of Northeast Harbor; two daughters, Julie Bender and husband, David, of Seal Harbor and Vicki Walsh, and husband, Ed, of Hulls Cove; a brother, Albert D. Dodge, of Lancaster, Mass.; a daughter-in-law, Helen Hyde, of Seal Harbor; seven grandchildren, Kenneth Hyde, Christy Suvlu, Michael Bender, Jennifer Seavey, Kathryn, Deborah and Sean Walsh; 11 great-grandchildren, Marie Ericsson, Laura Tracy, Cameron and Liam King, Colby Hyde, Dylan and Lee Suvlu, Ryan and Allyson Bender and Sarah and Sydney Cough.

Shirley was predeceased by her husband of 55 years, Elmer in 1994.

Spring interment was at Seal Harbor Cemetery. Contributions in Shirley’s memory to the Mt. Desert Nursing Association, PO Box 397, Northeast Harbor, ME 04662 or the Seal Harbor Cemetery Assoc., PO Box 305, Seal Harbor, ME 04675.

[NI14354] Graduated from University of Washington in December 1983 with a Bachelor
of Science in Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Attended Roosevelt High School in Seattle, Washington.

Born: Butte County Hospital in Butte, Montna at 3:27 pm on April 29,
1960. Weighed 5 lbs and 11.5 ozs.

Parents lived at: 310 1/2 W. Quartz in Dillion, Montana when Bryan was
born.

Godmother: Mrs. Marbeth LIttle

Godfather: Jack Walsh

Has an 111 out of 111 Marker Match with Harry Erwin.

[NI14362] Agawam, Hampden County, MA: Gordon K. Dodge, 94, of Harmon Avenue, Springfield, died Wednesday in a local nursing home. He was a press operator for the former Wico Electric Co. of West Springfield. He retired in 1969. He worked previously for Gilbarco. He also operated an Esso gasoline station at the "X" in Springfield for 20 years. He gave up the franchise in 1955. Born in Lawrence, he spent most of his life in Springfield where he attended the former Technical High School. He also had a home in West Chesterfield. His first wife, Ada M. (Eells) Dodge, died in 1942 and his second, Margery E. (Read) Dodge, in 1992. He leaves a son, Gordon S. of Springfield. The funeral will be Monday
morning at Dickinson-Streeter Funeral Home of Springfield, with burial in Oak Grove Cemetery. Calling hours are Sunday afternoon.

[NI14369] Served in World War II. Was on the U.S. Destroyer Lansdale which was sunk by a Navy Topedo bombers in the Mediterranean. He survived 5 hours at sea before he was rescued. He went on to Chiropractic School in Chicago, Illinois and eventually settled in Michigan. He died very suddenly at 39 yeays of age.

[NI14371] James A. Dodge

PUBLISHED: May 13, 2005

James A. Dodge, 66, of Mount Clemens, died Saturday, May 7, 2005, at his home. He was born July 10, 1938, in Emporia, Kan.

Mr. Dodge married Barbara Jean Vernier Diener on Oct. 5, 1993, in Mount Clemens. He served in the U.S. Navy and worked for 40 years in construction and excavating.

He is survived by his wife of 11 years, Barbara Jean Diener; children, Michael (Michelle) Riley of Harrison Township, James (Christine) Dodge of St. Clair Shores and William Dodge of Harrison Township; and six grandchildren. He was predeceased by his parents, William E. and Kathleen (nee Embry) Dodge.

A memorial service will be held at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday at Clinton Grove Cemetery, Clinton Township.

He was knownto all as "J.D." He loved boating and grew up most of his life on Lake St. Clair in Harrison Twp., Michigan He worked in construction his whole life. The last 10 years before he died he battled cancer.

[NI14373] James was born on a fire Engine on the way to hospital in Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

[NI14381] DODGE - Died in this village on the 9th inst., James Dodge, aged 63 yrs. He left a widow, 5 sons and 3 daughters.
19 Apr 1851 Pg 3 col 1
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~clifflamere/VR/VR-Cohoes-News.htm#Births

[NI14389] Maylower linage to Pilgrim Edward Doty.

[NI14391] Justice of the peace for 42 years in Sucession, all of his decisions were sustained even when carried to the Supreme Court or Courts of Appeals.

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORKoTo Andrew J. Dodge, Elijah Dodge,
> of New Baltiimore, Greene County, N.Y.; Anson Dodge, Samuel Shear, of
> Greenville, Greene County, N.Y.; Augusta Keator, Charles Dodge, of
> Binghamton, Broome county, N.Y.; Samuel Dodge and Myron Dodge, of
> Middletown, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania; Ithamer Dodge, of Scranton,
> Pennsylvania; John M. Dodge, of Albany, Greene county, Wisconsin;
> Orlando Gregory, of Albany, Albany County, N.Y.; Orville Gregory, of
> Schenectady, Schenectady County, N.Y.; Betsy Campbell, residence unknown
> and cannot after diligent search and inquiry be ascertainedoheirs at
> law and next of kin of SAMUEL DODGE, late of the town of New
> Baltimore, county of Greene, deceased Greeting:
> Whereas Andrew J. Dodge, of the town of New Baltimore and county of
> Greene, has lately applied to the Surrogate of Greene ccounty to have a
> certain instrument in writing, relating to real and personal estate,
> duly proved as the Last Will and Testament of the said deceased;
> You and each of you are hereby cited to appear before the said
> Surrogate, at his office in the town of Catskill, in the said county
> of Greene, on the 13th day of June next, at ten oiclock in the forenoon
> of that day, then there to attend to the probate of the said Will,
> In testimony whereof, the said Surrogate has hereunto set his hand
> and affixed the seal of the Surrogateis Court of said county, the 27th
> day of April, 1881.
> M. B. MATTICE
> Surrogate of Grreene County.
>
> Spouse: Dorcas WHITE
> Birth: 1784
> Death: 28 Jan 1847
>
> Children: John W.
Elijah (1805-)
Hezekiah
Anson (1810-)
Garret
Amanda (1814-)
Maranda
Malinda
Andrew (1825-)

[NI14397] Resided Honey Hollow Road, New Baltimore, New York, in 1850 census_Resided Honey Hollow, New Baltimore, New York

From an article printed in the Berkshire Eagle, Pittsfield,
Massachusetts, Wednesday, September 14, 1938, under the heading
"Berkshire Men of Worth" by Joseph Ward Lewis, it writes about Samuel
Dodge's grandson, Hascal Dodge born 2 May 1836, New Baltimore, Greene
County, New York, the son of Elijah Dodge born 1805, Greene County, New York:

"Two builders came over to Pittsfield from New Baltimore, Greene
County, New York, in the latter part of the eighteen sixtys, Hascal
Dodge and Dillwyn C. Bedell. Both were born in New Baltimore. Dodge
came first, in 1865; Bedeli came about 1868. They were contractors,
Dodge in mason work, Bedell in wood work. Hascal's wife was Mary J.
Bedell; Dillwyn married her sister, Antoinette Bedell. The three
sisters and Bedell were birthright Quakers, that is both parents in
each case were Quakers. Hascal's father was Elijah, a prosperous
farmer and stone mason, and he taught his boy the craft...

[NI14406] died in infancy.

[NI14408] Tombstone Picture on Website

[NI14422] He was a builder and coroner and crier of court of appeals for 25 years.Was for a while living in Jericho Vermont listed as a Grantee of the town.

MARRIAGE RECORD IN HATLEY, QUEBEC, CANADA
"Married by Banns this fifteenth day of March One Thousand Eight Hundred and Thirty Two, Amos Dodge, Widower, Baptist Minister of the Township of Eton (late from Irasburgh Vermont) and Betsey Starkweather, Spinster, of Bowenston, both of major age, in the presence of the subscribing witnesses by me C. Jackson Minister of Charleston, Hatley." Signed Amos Dodge, Betsey Starkweather, E. Starkweather, John Thomas

NOTE REGARDING QUEBEC MINISTRY:
Eaton Baptist Church, Province of Quebec:
On March 7, 1832, Amos Dodge was added to the church by letter. He was chosen as a candidate for the gospel ministry. A council was called; he was examined, approved, and installed as pastor. On October 1, 1833, the church voted in a new minister.

NOTE: Bought land in Jersey County Illinois in 1835, 1839, 1841 1843

NOTE REGARDING ILLINOIS MINISTRY:
Amos was a preacher of the Brighton Baptist Church about 1833 or 1834 and Bunker Hill Baptist Church in 1841. Both churches in Macoupin County, Illinois. He served a Baptist church in Greene County, Illinois from July 1836 to September 1840.
"History of the Springfield Baptist Association with Sketches of the Churches of Which it is Composed, and Biographical Sketches of Deceased Ministers"
Up to 1843, the church was destitute of stated preaching. In May of this year, Rev. Amos Dodge accepted the invitation of the church, and preached until March 19th, 1844, when he died, much beloved as a discreet and devoted minister.

[NI14427] PITTSFIELD
THE LATE HASCAL DODGE
had been a prominent contractor in Pittsfield Mass for more than 30 years; one of the most prominent mason contractors in Berkshire County; erected many of the most notable buildings in Pittsfield and adjoining towns, including Berkshire home for aged women, St Stephen's Episcopal churh, academy of music, Henry W Bishop 3d school for nurses, Central block, William Russell Allen's residence, William B Rice school, Lenox Episcopal church, Dalton Town Hall, Episcopal Church, Byron Weston residence and several of the Crane mills; he was the son of Mr and Mrs Elijah Dodge and was born in New Baltimore N.Y. in 1837; learned the mason trade from his father and soon after the Civil war went to Pittsfield, where he engaged in the contracting business; was very successful, but wishing to enlarge his work in 1895 sold his interest to his brother Samuel Dodge who formed a partnership with the late Daniel W Devanny, under the firm name Dodge & Devanny, and came to this city where he has since resided. [published Thursday, February 12, 1903, Springfield Republican}

[NI14431] James C. Dodge & his 4 brothers, descendents of Hezakiah Dodge b . 1731 on Long Island, New York, built stone buildings as contractors in the upper Hudson River valley near Poughkeepsie, New York. They did masonary projects, usually for New York and Massachusetts towns and cities including several churches. They did significant stone work in the 1890s at Vassar, WIlliams and Smith colleges. They worked on some projects together, and sometimes worked separately. With the depression, everything changed. When James' descendent, Harold O. Dodge inherited Dodge Construction Company (founded in 1865 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts) he was a general contractor who began to use air compressors and heavy equipment in underground utility work in western Massachusetts. His son, Hascal O. Dodge took over the company with his passing. Hascal recently sold the company and its name in 1986. Many of the stone structures built by James C. Dodge and his brothers stand today. The Bell Tower in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, built by these Dodges was made famous by artist Norman Rockwell."

[NI14432] 1900 Census says Samuel b. Jan 1846 New York

[NI14434] Mary Ann Serrill is how the name is speled in the Pittsfield Death Records.

[NI14438] Parents James G. Thompson & Caroline Bedford. Cemetery Stone says she died 1889

[NI14439] Father's name John Smith

[NI14440] Hartsell was her married name

[NI14443] Cemetery Stone says birth 1868

[NI14444] WWI Vetran

[NI14445] Massachusetts Birth Records says his name at birth was Oscar Harold Dodge.

Oscar Harold Dodge was born April 8, 1898, the second son of Oscar W. Dodge and Millicent Bosquet of Pittsfield Massachusetts. He married Mildred Derosia of Adams, Massachusetts and had three children, Hascal ODodge of Cambridge, Massachusetts, Leslie Edith (Dodge) Martindale of Newport Beach California, and James Renfrew Dodge of Worthington, Massachusetts. He was a lifelong member of the First Baptist Church and the YMCA.

He began working in the family masonry business with his father and brother and eventually took it over as sole owner in the early 1950's. (Harold never finished 10th grade!) During the Depression years he found that local WPA work projects needed his truck mounted air compressors as a source for portable power on their construction sites. He had several air compressors and experience in operating them to break concrete, drill rock ledge, compact soils and pump water in volume. Business was steady, even during those tough times. Harold also had a license for explosives issued by the state Fire Marshall. His construction company had a great reputation for employing several competent dynamite blasters who worked loyally for many years.

The nature of the type of construction work transferred from stone masonry before the depression years to underground utility construction in Berkshire County (Western Massachusetts) for his Dodge Construction Company. The regional telephone and electric companies hired his experienced crew, ranging from just 8 to 12 men, to install their underground lines plus build manholes and related buildings for their utility systems. Local municipalities and other utility companies, including the regional gas company and TV cable companies contracted with the company because of it's reputation for reliable workmanship and Harold's personal and fair dealings in business. He was known for his firm handshake and his word being his bond! He was also known for wearing khaki work clothes with a bow tie every day!

Harold died in his sleep in February 1972.

[NI14455] No Issue

[NI14462] 1860 a Fireman on tthe R/R. There is no visable Marker on his Grave Site.

[NI14463] There is no visable Marker on her Grave Site.

[NI14479] Some Records have her name spelled Hariot.

[NI14480] This is Samuel's 2nd wife.

[NI14482] Her name was Mrs. Biddick when she married Norman Covey Dodge.

[NI14483] Mary Marguerite Dodge was adopted by paternal grandparents.

[NI14489] Never Married.

[NI14528] A carriage builder.

[NI14537] DODGE, Dwight Abner

LOCAL MAN SUCCUMBS TO HEART ATTACKLake County Bee, August 19, 1949

Dwight Abner Dodge, retired general contractor of Lakeport, passed away at his home in Lakeport on Saturday, August 13, following an illness of two years.Dodge was well known in the bay area where he carried on a general contracting business for over thirty years. He was also employed with the Standard Oil of California for a short time.He married the former Helen Lyon of Lakeport in 1916, making their home in Richmond until four years ago when the couple returned to Lakeport.Dwight A. Dodge was a native of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, born May 28, 1881. He was 68 years, two months and fifteen days of age.Surviving are his wife, Helen Dodge, of Lakeport and a daughter, Mrs. Lucille Goldman, of Berkeley and two sisters, Mrs. Grace Dilger and Mrs. Jess Parker of Lakeport.Funeral services were held from the Jones Mortuary on Tuesday afternoon at 2:00 p.m., August 16. Interment followed at the Hartley cemetery.

[NI14540] Dodge, Edwin, died at Middleton, ‘yesterday', 81 years s/o Samuel Dodge ; he m.1. a daughter of Ambrose Dodge m2. Sarah Parker.[OM 19 April 1901 -obituary].
Source:Newspapers - Vital Statistics, 1901
The Register, Berwick, Kings Co., Nova Scotia
The Outlook, Middleton, Annapolis Co., Nova Scotia

Edwin Gilpin Dodge, was the son of Samuel Dodge and Lydia Woodbury.

[NI14548] She attended normal School probably at La Crosse.

[NI14550] Lloyd was b. in Minneapolis Minnesota, grew up in Minot, ND to age 5 or 6 then Spokane, WA. He left Spokane in 1916 when he was 19 to drive his future wife, Clara McElroy in her touring carto Minneapolis, MN. He has no middle Name just an initial "L." . On 11 January 1944 Lloyd was issue a patent # 2,338,710 for the treatment of both sulphate and sulphite papers on the paper machine by size press, spray or other application, of proteins or casein to which sutible plasticizers have been added. Papers treated with these solutios are greatly improved in greaseproof, gas proof and moisure protection as well as increasing the wet strength of the papers. These Grade A papers were used in the packaging of automobile, truck and other parts for the U. S. Army.

[NI14554] DODGE, Helen Lyon
Lake County Bee, January 13, 1961

Graveside services were held Thursday at Hartley Cemetery for Mrs. Helen Lyon Dodge, who passed away at the Masonic Home at Decoto Jan. 9. She was 76 years old. Funeral services had been held earlier at the Masonic Home.Mrs. Dodge, born and raised in Lakeport, was the daughter of the late Mr.and Mrs. George A. Lyon, pioneer residents of Lake County. Following graduation from Lakeport Academy, she attended San Jose Normal, graduating with elementary school teaching credentials. Mrs. Dodge taught a number of years at Lakeport Elementary School before moving to Richmond with her husband, the late Dwight Dodge. Mrs. Dodge frequently visited Lakeport after moving to the Masonic Home six years ago. She was a member of Lakeport Presbyterian Church while a resident of this community.She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Lucille Muzio of Oakland; sisters, Mrs. Edna Churchill of Pasadena and Mrs. Reba Specht of San Francisco; brothers, Homer Lyon of Portland, Ore., and Harold Lyon of Lakeport; and a number of nieces and nephews.

[NI14556] See Bradford Co. History, Dodge Family Pg 157 in Pennsylvania.

[NI14598] Fourth child born - previous three porbably died at birth or shortly
thereafter

Army - non-combat - possibly a cook

SSN 517-07-4700 issued in Montana. Lived at: 43 ? Washington St,
Dillon, Montana in 1936

May have suffered form scarlet fever as a child. May have had heart
difficulties - which appeared while 'running' in the service.

Potentially in the Conversation Corp

[NI14620] Parents are from Ireland.

Immigrated to US in 1901 (?) - from 1930 census record.

Buried next to her husband John Joshua Dodge- no head stone exists.

Died in county Hospital in Butte, Montana.

Her name is often Spelled Catherine.

[NI14621] Died at 3 yr, 1 mo, 9 da.

[NI14630] Died shortly after birth - maybe lived for 4 hours. Buried in Butte
Montana.

[NI14631] Margaret Dodge Adams, 83, of Gastonia, N.C., formerly of Atlanta, died Wednesday. The body will be cremated. Memorial service, 1 p.m. Monday, St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Atlanta; Greene Funeral Service, South Chapel, Gastonia.
Published in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on 5/13/2004.

[NI14641] Stillbirth

[NI14664] Died at 40 yrs 7 da

[NI14681] Maurice L. "Moe" Bailey, 75, of Marion, NY, formally of Barrington, RI died at his home peacefully surrounded by his family on July 12, 2016. He is survived by his wife Elizabeth "Betty" (Littlefield) Bailey; his sons, James Bailey, Anthony Bailey and his wife Julie; and daughter, Kerri (Bailey) Baeder of NY. He was predeceased by his son Jeffrey.

He also leaves his grandchildren, Brian and Chrissy Bailey of California, Kayleigh McClouth and husband Douglas of New York, Ryan Bailey and his wife Nicole of Warwick, Kevin Bailey and his partner Marissa Rose of North Providence, Allyson Baeder of New York, Cameron and Patrick Bailey of East Providence, and Grace Bailey of Virginia.

He also leaves 2 great grandchildren Lilly Mcclouth of New York and Colton Bailey of California.
He is survived by his sister Edna Bucholz and her husband David, and a brother Richard Bailey and his wife Carol all of New York. He was predeceased by his brother, Leslie Bailey and a sister, Rosalind Rouland.

[NI14695] War of 1812 Veteran!
1st Regt, PA Militia; Co 5, 144th Regt, 2nd Bgde, 9th Div, PA Militia

[NI14698] Federal Staffing Specialist at Letterman Hospital, in the Presidio of San Fransisco.

[NI14704] WAYNE A. DODGE Barefoot Bay Wayne A. Dodge, 85, died Thursday, November 22, 2012 at Richmond University Medical Center in Staten Island, NY. He was born in Buffalo, NY and came to Barefoot Bay in 1985 from West Seneca, NY. Wayne served in the U.S. Army during of WWII. In New York, he worked for Erie County Department of Social Services as a Social Worker for over 25 years. He was a long time member of The First Baptist Church of Barefoot Bay; he was a member of the FW, DAV, Lions Club, and the New York Club. Most importantly, Wayne loved to help people. He volunteered over 20,000 hours at Sebastian River Medical Center. Wayne was preceded in death by his wife Eva in 2006, after 48 years of marriage. He is survived by his son Herb Wayne Dodge of Sebastian, FL; his daughter Joyce Eva (Dodge) LaMorte and her husband David of Staten Island; and his sister Alice Craig of East Aurora, NY. A visitation will be held Wednesday, November 28, 2012 at Fountainhead Funeral Home in Palm Bay from 5-8pm. Services will be 11am Thursday, November 29th at First Baptist Church of Barefoot Bay. Paid Obituary

[NI14706] War of 1812 Veteran!
1st Regt, PA Militia; Co 5, 144th Regt, 2nd Bgde, 9th Div, PA Militia

[NI14707] Assessor and township trustee of Baugo, Twp., Indiana,

[NI14709] The body of Mrs. MinnIe M. Dodge of Schenectady was brought to Roscoe Saturday. Funeral services were held from the home of John W Albee, on Monday. Mrs Dodge was 68 years of age and was a daughter of Joseph Reed and his wife, Jane Chapman. She was the widow of McKendree N. Dodge. She is survived by one son, Harold, at Schenectady. Mrs. Albee and W. L. Dodge, of Callicoon are her step-daughter and step-son. She was postmlstress at Rockland for several years. She was a great W C. T.U worker, a member of the 0 E S. of the Rebeccas and of the Rockland M E. Church. Mrs. Dodge spent the most of her life in Rockland where she had a large cIrcle of friends. She was a direct descendant of David Joscelyn who was born in Massachusetts in 1760 and was a soldier in the American Revolution. She belonged to the same Joscelyn family as did Mrs. Russell Sage who traced her ancestral line back to Charlemagne. Interment was made in the family plot in Hillside Cemetery.
Liberty Register January 31, 1924

[NI14714] 4 years in the Air Force serving in Korea in 13th Bomber Squadron 1952-1953.

[NI14715] ewport, NH: Teresa Rose Dodge, 80, of Swan Street, passed away at the New London Hospital, Monday night, February 4, 2013, following a lengthy illness. Teresa was born in Newport, NH, September 4, 1932, daughter to the late Charles H. and Dorothy (Goslant ) Partlow. She was raised and educated in Newport and married Dartelle M. Dodge on March 31, 1956 sharing 53 years together when he passed on May 2, 2009. Teresa worked for 19 years in the molding/wax department at Pine Tree Castings in Guild retiring in 1986. She was a devoted wife, mother and grandmother, enjoyed animals and playing bingo. Surviving family members include 3 sons: Kim D. and his wife, Carol, Dartelle M. Jr. and his wife, Laura, all of Newport, Gary R. of San Francisco, CA, 3 brothers: Kenneth Partlow of S. Carolina, Dennis Partlow of California and Martin Partlow of Newport, one sister: Linda Davis of Newport, 4 grandchildren, 5 great-grandchildren and several cousins, nieces and nephews. In addition to her husband Dartelle, Sr. she was predeceased by 2 brothers: David & Selden Partlow and a sister: Janice Jamroz. Funeral Services will be held at 12 Noon Monday, February 11, 2013, at the Newton-Bartlett Funeral Home, 42 Main Street in Newport. Burial will follow at the Pine Grove Cemetery. Rev. Donna Leslie will officiate. Calling hours will be held from 2-4PM Sunday afternoon, Feb. 10th at the funeral home. Donations in lieu of flowers in Teresa's name may be made to the Upper Valley Humane Society, 300 Old Route 10, Enfield, NH 03748. Source: Newton-Bartlett Funeral Home Newport, NH

[NI14716] He spent 2 years in the USMC.

[NI14720] Our Dad was a busy man from the word go. By the age of 19 he had joined WW II as a Navy man, met my mother who was a divorcee' with two small children and working as a waitress; quickly they fell in love and he married her, then added two more children to the family. Not only did he finish his Navy term, but spent some time in the Air Force, the Coast Guard, and sailed as a Merchant Marine. Finally, his ship became a truck and he sailed along the roads of the U.S., cross country and long distance hauling, helping to supply the country with much needed supplies. In 1956 when the youngest of we children was almost a teenager, surprise-a little bundle of joy arrived bringing the family total to five children. Life sailed on until 1970 when Mom died. Daddy lost the mate he had spent most of a lifetime with. It took him some time, but almost fifteen years later, 1984 he met a wonderful woman who very much cared for him and who shared the final years of his life with him. In 2005 he died and left many, many memories for us to keep. And as long as we have those, he still live

Divorce 25 feb 1982 in Imperial Valley, California. He was cremated and the ashes shared among family members,

Cremated, Ashes given to family or friend.
Specifically: My step-mother and I share Daddy's ashes and we speak with him often. Some people think that's wierd. We can almost hear his comments. PS His two step-children, me being one of them, loved him much as if he had been our biological father. Memorial# 90887085

[NI14724] Evelyn Dodge Cockrell Evelyn Dodge Cockrell, age 88 of Provo, Utah passed away July 1, 2006. She was born March 25, 1918 in Pima, Arizona, the oldest child of Maybelle Brown Dodge and Thomas Hollace Dodge. She was lovingly called "Sister" or "SIS" by her siblings, aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors and parents. She married Leslie Thomas Alfred Cockrell March 23, 1935 in Los Angeles, California. They were later sealed with their family in the St. George LDS Temple. Evelyn was always a faithful and active member of the LDS faith. She held many ward and stake positions in Primary, Young Women's and Relief Society in wards and stakes where they lived. She and her husband were also seminary teachers in Lakeport, California and served as temple missionaries for three years in the Los Angeles temple. They owned and operated the "L and E Friendly Hardware" store in Baldwin Park, California, where they lived for 17 years. They moved to Lakeport, California in 1960 where they built and operated "Hill Crest Park" resort on ten acres of lake front property. In 1963 they moved to Santa Maria, California where they lived for more than 30 years. They moved to Provo, Utah in 1994. She loved to do genealogy, travel, write, teach, paint, crochet, needle point, embroidery, work in her garden, and dance. Life was exciting and beautiful to her. Her beloved eternal companion of 69 years preceded her in death March 25, 2004. She leaves behind a large loving family who will miss her until they are again reunited as an eternal family. She is survived by her daughter, Evelyn Darlene Jensen and husband Dave of Provo; two sons, Thomas Alfred Cockrell and wife Vivien of Verdi, Nevada, and Richard "Rick" Frederick Cockrell of Truckee, California; 16 grandchildren, 50 great-grandchildren and 12 great-great-grandchildren, two brothers, Tom Dodge of Onyx, California, Ron Dodge of Mayfield, Utah and sister Virginia Gilliland of Mossey Rock, Washington. Funeral services will be held Friday, July 7, 2006 at 11:00 a.m. in the LDS Parkway 3rd Ward Chapel, 2801 West 620 North, Provo. Friends and family may call at the ward chapel from 10:00 a.m. until the time of service. Interment, Provo City Cemetery. Services are under the direction of Berg Mortuary of Provo and condolences may be sent to info@BergMortuary.com.

[NI14737] He served in the United States Army as a 2nd Lieut. from 1951 to 1953 in the Korean War.
A graduate of Arlington High School in 1947, he held a BA in industrial management, and MBA and Ph.D. in marketing from the Ohio State University. Highly dedicated to his career, he was currently a professor of marketing in the College of Business at Eastern Michigan University. He served as Chair of the marketing department from 1990-2000. Earlier, he had served as Dean of the Williamson School of Business at the Youngstown State University. He was the author or co-author of 17 books and over 80 professional articles and papers on various aspects of marketing. He began his teaching career at University of Nebraska, Lincoln in 1954. He began teaching at Ohio State University in 1955, followed by Florida State University in 1957, California State University at Los Angeles in 1959, University of Southern California in 1963, and The University of Texas at Arlington in 1964. In 1965, he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship. He then taught at the University of Memphis from 1965-1976. He went to Northern Illinois University to become Chair of the Marketing Depart ment in 1976 and was named Dean at Youngstown State University in 1979. At the time of his death, he was writing a new book on Sports Marketing with his long-time colleague, friend and former student, Sam Fullerton.

[NI14743] Was in the Civil War. Enlisted: 01 Aug 1864 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry, Co. K.

[NI14753] 1ST SGT US ARMY; WORLD WAR II

[NI14754] He attended the public schools in Terra Alta and Morgantown. He was a Methodist. He was a member of the Kiwanis Club in Aurora. He graduated from West Virginia University with a B.S. degree in physical education. He retired from teaching school in Aurora after 30 years of service. He coached football, basketball, wrestling and track. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and was a captain in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He continued his military service in the National Guard.

[NI14763] He was employed at Packaging Corporation of America for 36 years, retiring in 1990.

He was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War and a member of Rittman Moose Lodge 860 and Wadsworth Eagles Lodge. Harlan enjoyed hunting, fishing and working on cars.

Surviving are his loving wife, Jewel (Hale) Dodge, whom he married Nov. 9, 1957;
sons, Tom E. Dodge and Jeff A. (Angie) Dodge, both of Columbus; grandchildren,
Brandy (Chris) Munk, Eric, Kody and Kaitlyn Dodge; a sister, Evelyn Livengood of
Terra Alta, W.Va.; and brothers, Terry Lynn Dodge of Roanoke, Va., Dennis Dodge
of New Stanton, Pa., and Larry Dodge of Phoenix, Ariz.

Brothers, Everett and Harold Dodge and Webster Lewis, died previously.

[NI14781] US Navy rank S1 WWII

Conant Dodge
Sept. 4, 2002
Conant "Connie" Dodge of Tacoma, Washington, passed away on Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2002. Connie, the youngest of Bruce and Lorena Conant Dodge’s seven children, graduated from Wyalusing High School in 1932 and received a degree in Mechanical Engineering from Drexel Institute of Technology in 1937 and a Management Certificate from Stanford University in 1959.

He was born on May 30, 1916 in Wyalusing. He served his countrv in the U.S. Navy during WWII. Connie married Edith Gyger of Kimberton, PA in 1942 and they had three children, Bruce, Marie and Wayne.

In 1946, Connie and Edith moved to Tacoma, Washington to work for Weyerhaeuser Co., where he designed bridges, roads and lumber mills. He eventually was manager of Weyerhaeuser’s Engineering Department, retiring in 1978. Connie was a member of the Society of Professional Engineers and a Life Member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

He loved to fish and spent his happiest hours with his family on his boat wandering the waters of the Pacific Northwest trolling for salmon or pulling up crab pots. Connie could fix anything and was often called on to solve plumbing problems or to re-wire electrical systems by family and friends. He was an avid cribbage player and could beat anyone hands down.

Connie retained his ties to Wyalusing and faithfully read "Just Ask Alice" each week. He was a lifelong member of Wyalusing Masonic Lodge 618. He returned often to enjoy fall colors and to spend time with friends and his sister, Orice Dodge. In Tacoma, he and Edith were longtime members of Mason United Methodist Church. Connie served his community in many ways. He chaired committees for Mason Church, was a Founding Father of Boy Scout Troop 224, served on the Eagle Board and the Board of Directors of Annie Wright School. Connie was deeply committed to education and helped many realize their educational dreams. As one of his last contributions, he established a scholarship fund to honor his sister, Orice, who had a 40-year career teaching in Wyalusing schools. This yearly scholarship will be awarded to a Wyalusing School District student who wishes to pursue teaching as a career.


Edith and Connie were loving and supportive parents and Connie was a wonderful husband to Edith, who died in 1996. He was a shy man, with a wry, gentle sense of humor, and loyal to friends and family. During his last years, he enjoyed companionship with Marilyn Hillier, who gave him great joy. Connie will be missed deeply by Marilyn and by his children and their partners: Bruce and Midge Dodge of Issaquah, WA; Marie Dodge Eaton and Mary Ellen O’Keefe of Bellingham, Washington; and Wayne Dodge and Larry Kreisman of Seattle, WA. He will also be missed by his grandchildren, Tova and Nathan Dodge, Malaika and Edward Eaton, Robin Hammond, Jared and Jessica Lombard, Dan Connor, and great-grandchildren, Emily and Gabrielle Connor.


The family would like those who wish to remember him to send a donation in lieu of flowers to The Orice Dodge Scholarship, Wyalusing Area School District, 115 Main Street, PO Box 157, Wyalusing, PA 18853-0157 or to Mason United Methodist Church, 2710 North Madison Street, Tacoma, 98407. A memorial service was held at 2 p.m. on Sept. 22, 2002 at Mason United Methodist Church.

[NI14790] Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Eagle, 1901 October 21, Page: 1

And Now Lad of 13 May Die
Young Marksman, Who is Under 15, is Under Arrest - Tragedy on the Far Rockaway Beach

As a result of the effort of two cousins to act out on the beach front at Far Rockaway that part of the old Swiss legend of William Tell, in which the father shoots an apple from his own son's head, one of the boys, Daniel Dodge, who is 13 years old and lives at Inwood, L.I., is now in St. John's Hospital, Long Island City, between life and death, with a bullet wound in his forehead.


Dodge's cousin, Walter Weston, 15 years old, the boy who fired the shot, was brought before Magistrate Healy in the Far Rockaway police court this morning and paroled until the result of his companion's wound shall be determined.


The physician of the Dodge family believes, it is said, that the thoughtless act of the two boys is responsible in great part for the death of a child that was born to Mrs. Dodge, the mother of the wounded boy, last night.


The story of the fatal conclusion to the play of the two cousins was told by young Weston in the police court this morning. The two boys were the closest of companions and on Saturday they decided that it would be a good idea to hold a Wild West show. Weston, who is a good shot with a rifle, went to his home and got his 22-caliber Winchester. Both youths walked down to the beach.


There they in turn spent some time in firing at different marks, but this sport grew tame, and Weston, to show his skill, told young Dodge to pick up a tomato can which had been washed ashore. Dodge did so, and Weston, stepping back, fired and knocked the can from his cousin's hand. This was repeated and each time with the same success, until this, too, became tiresome to Weson, and especially to Dodge.


While resting a second, a better idea struck Weston. He proposed that, instead of the Wild West show, the two boys should give William Tell, according to the story, which both of them had read. The cousins talked over the project, but Dodge was loath to give up altogether the plan of holding the Wild West show, at least in part. It was finally agreed to incorporate the most attractive part of the William Tell tale - that in which the father is compelled by the tyrant of Switzerland to shoot an apple from the head of his own son, in the show first determined upon.


Dodge thereupon picked up the tomato can and placed it upon his head, there being no apple at hand. Weston stepped back several paces and, taking deliberate aim, fired. His aim had been good and the can was whisked from the head of young Dodge. This seemed such good sport that the two boys commenced to repeat the performance. Again the can was placed by Dodge upon his head and again Weston succeeded in shooting the tomato can from the head of his companion. For the third time Dodge placed the can upon his head and Weston, once more stepping back, aimed and fired. The aim had been too low, for with a shriek, Dodge fell forward upon his face on the beach. Weston scarcely realized for several moments what he had done, but seeing the blood of his cousin crimsoning the sand, he became panic stricken with fright and cried in terror for help.


The cries of the boy soon attracted a crowd of people to the spot. Some one was hastily sent to the home of Dr. Pedro Francke, who lived near. Dr. Francke quickly arrived and dressed the wound in Dodge's forehead, but advised that he be taken to St. John's Hospital, Long Island City. The boy was placed aboard a train and taken from the depot to the hospital in an ambulance.


Weston was locked up pending his appearance before the magistrate in Far Rockaway today.


It was said by the physicians in the hospital in Long Island City at noon to-day that Dodge was still alive but that his condition was most serious. They would not venture a prediction as to whether or not the boy would live.

Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Eagle, 1901 October 22, Page: 1

No Hope for Daniel Dodge

Long Island City, L.I., October 22. - At St. John's Hospital this morning the physicians stated that Daniel Dodge, the boy shot while playing William Tell at Far Rockaway, would not live through to-day. The little fellow began to sink last night and it was feared at midnight that he could not last until this morning. The wound was believed to be mortal from the first and the boy has surprised physicians by lasting so long.


Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Eagle, 1901 October 24, Page: 6

William Tell Victim Dead

Long Island City, L.I., October 24. - Daniel Dodge, thirteen years old, of Far Rockaway, who was shot in the head on Sunday while playing William Tell, died in St. John's Hospital at noon to-day. The boy was shot by Walter Weston, fifteen years old, who was his cousin.

[NI14801] Married 9 Mar 1865

[NI14806] The United States Army Air Service was a forerunner of the United States Air Force, according to History of the AirCorps Tactical School 1920 - 1940, an Air Force History and Museums Program publication authored by Rort T. Finney and released to the general public in 1998. The Army Air Servicewas authorized by the Army Reorganization Act of 1920 and the Army AirService School of Application was headquartered on Langley Field, Virginia.1926, the Air Service became the Air Corps, still a branch of the Army, but having its own chain of command and training facilities, the Air Corps Tactical School.


I wrote this little bit of history as a lead-in to the object of this articlebecause applicants to the aviator training program had to be at least twenty-one years of age and unmarried, among other qualifications. James Harley Dodge had attained that age in 1926, the same year that the United States Army Air Service became the United States Army Air Corps, in which he had served until his untimely and tragic death. Dodge was one of the select young men who participated in the transitionalprocess that mode rnized the Army and eventually resulted in the formation of the United States Air Force as a stand-alone military organization.
James Harley Dodge was born March 18,1905 in Oakland, Garrett County, Maryland, son of James Salathiel and Harriett Virginia (Chisholm) Dodge.

According to a copy of his obituary,Dodge had attained the rank of Staff Sergeant in the Air Corp and was stationedat Bolling Field in Washingt on, D. C.

In Appendix 3 of, History Ö , referred to above, which lists Air Corps Tactical School Graduates by class years 1920-1940, no Dodge is listed. There may havebeen another Air Service or AirCorp school from which he had graduated, but sofar I have not located anysuch rosters. The fact that he was a pilot impliesthat he had eithercompleted a course of traini ng or had progressed to thepoint of obtaining thestatus of Military Aviator. Died at 27 yrs 8 mos 12 dys

[NI14809] PVT US Army Air Forces in WW II

[NI14811] Removed to Illinois. Where he enlisted in the Civil War Text: Side served: Union; State served: Illinois; Enlistment date: 10 May 1864., http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=hdssoldiers&h=3865112&ti=0&indiv=try, Name: Seward DodgeResidence Date: Residence Place: Pana, Illinois

[NI14813] Applied for Widows Pension.

[NI14814] He shows up Widowed in 1910 & 1920 Census

[NI14858] His educationSouthern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), Master of Architecture, 1999
Washington State University, Bachelor of Architecture, 1991

[NI14878] Died as an infant.

[NI14895] (U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs).
------
Son of Alton Yolman Dodge and Edith P. Upham.

Entered Service Jan 4 1941. Discharged Dec 1945 U.S. Army; Served in the European Theater; Military Police in Germany and Austria. Stationed in a variety of locations. Moving with the troops from landing on Utah beach thru France, Belgium, Holland and into Germany and Austria. Had multiple duties in the combat zone including Traffic control and bridge guarding. Guarded visua;l istalations as well as temporary duty handling the prisoners of war. Earned many honors and decorations.

[NI14897] PAXTON Norman C. Dodge, 84, died Friday, August 5, 2005, at the
Lutheran Home of Worcester. His wife of 41 years, Greta S. (Oberg) died
in 1986.

He was the devoted father of a son, Bradford N. Dodge of Roswell, GA
and daughters Christine J. Daley of Holden and Janice B. Dodge-Renaud
of Sturbridge. He also leaves a brother, Robert T. Dodge of Peabody, 6
grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.Born in Malden, he was a son
of Alton T. and Edith P. (Upham) Dodge. He was a decorated Army veteran
of WW II. Norman worked for New England Telephone Co. for 42 years,
retiring in 1983. He was a former trustee, deacon, treasurer, and
teacher at First Congregational Church of Paxton. He was once a Boy
Scout leader and served on the Paxton Board of Health. He was also a
member of Malden Masonic Lodge and the Telephone Pioneers of America.

[NI14898] Served in US Navy WW II

[NI14926] Clifford adopted her son Frederick.

[NI14935] She was a homemaker. Wava G. Dodge, 71, of Bullneck Road, Dundalk, Md., died Monday, March 13, 2000, at Franklin Square Hospital, Baltimore. She was born July 26, 1928, in Terra Alta.
She is survived by her husband, Ronald F. Dodge, of Dundalk; three daughters, Judy Horsey, Nancy Chambers and Peggy Huffman, all of Baltimore; two sons, Joseph Dodge and John Dodge, both of Baltimore; a brother, Alton Cramer, and sister, Helen Metheny, both of Terra Alta; eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Burial will be in Terra Alta Cemetery.

[NI14963] Census 04 OCT 1850 in Waukegan, Lake County, Illinois, USA

[NI14964] BRYANT W. DODGE, 95, a 14-year resident of the Bradford County manor died Sunday evening December 13, 1987 at the Manor after a lingering illness. Mr. Dodge was born on Grant Hill, Wilmot Township on August 30, 1892, the son of the late Charles and Ella D. Bacon Dodge. He was married to the former Bertha Arvilla McCarroll of Sciotavale. Bryant was employed as a farmer all his life and worked for many years in both the Hollenback and Towanda areas. He was preceded in death by his wife; one daughter, Ethel Root; two sisters and one brother. His survivors include two sons: Harold Wallace Dodge of Towanda RD 3 and Raymond Daniel Dodge of Towanda RD 2; one daughter, Doris Jean Bennett of Port Richey, FL; 22 grandchildren, several great and great-great-grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to call on Wednesday Dec. 16 from 7-9 p.m. at the James F. Smith Funeral Home, 305 York Ave., Towanda and to attend the service from the funeral home on Thursday December 17, 1987 at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Harry Ferguson of the Wysox Presbyterian Church officiating. Interment will be in Bradford County memorial Park. Donations in Mr. Dodge’s memory may be made to the American Cancer Society, Bradford Unit, 515 S. Main St., Athens, Pa. –Towanda Daily Review

[NI14980] Mayflower linage to William Brewster

[NI14985] He was an Arhitect, designing a wing for the Stonnington Library.

[NI14991] Dortholene L. Dodge (Boyer), 83, of Wadsworth, passed away on Tuesday, May 21, 2013 at Wadsworth-Rittman Hospital after a life time of heart problems.
She was born September 6, 1929 in Portland District, Preston Co, W.V. to the late Roy W. and Celesta Faye (Lewis) Boyer. Dottie was a wonderful mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and was soon to be a great-great-grandmother. She lived a full life, loved her garden, flowers and family holiday dinners. No one will forget Gram's potato salad and hot rolls that were requested at every holiday dinner.
Dottie will be deeply missed by her loving children Harlan (Cheryl) Dodge, Greg Dodge, Linda (Ed) Smith, grandchildren Steve Smith and fiancée Amy Ruch, Brian Dodge, Angela Smith and companion Rick Owens, Brandi Dodge, great-grandchildren Valerie Smith, Brittney Smith, Alonzo Helton, brothers Porter Boyer, of Dexter, OR., William Boyer of FL., sisters Mary McKim, Roxie (David) Bucklew, sisters-in-law Jewel Dodge, and Barb Lewis and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband of 50 years, Harold Dodge in May 1998, brothers Robert and Everett Boyer, sister Thelma Jean Scott, brothers-in-law Eugene Scott, William McKim, Webster Lewis, Everet Dodge, Larry Dodge, sisters-in-law Evelyn Livengood-Race and Ruth Boyer, infant brother Mervin Boyer, and infant sisters Bettie and Eldine Boyer.

[NI15024] He leaves his wife of 41 years, Norma (Todd) Dodge; two sons, Todd E. and Steven L. Dodge, both of Virginia; a daughter, Lisa A. Fleck of Virginia; his mother, Ann Cutting of Leicester; a brother, Clifford F. Dodge III of Denver; two granddaughters; four nephews and a niece. He was born in Worcester, son of the late Clifford F. Dodge, and attended Leicester public schools and the University of Massachusetts. He later
received a master's degree from Southland University and a doctorate from Walden University in Minnesota in 1990.Mr. Dodge earned a private pilot's license at age 16. Despite a boyhood accident that partially crippled his right arm, he did extensive rehabilitation and was accepted as a pilot by the Air Force in 1963. In 1964, he was assigned to a heavy, four-engine cargo plane. He served during the Vietnam War
before leaving the military service in 1970 as a Captain. He then was a travel club pilot, an insurance salesman, a stockbroker and a salesman for Medrad, a medical equipment company. He received a presidential commendation for his work in exports, particularly to China. Mr. Dodge sang in a local choir and with a local barbershop group. Most recently, he taught at several Western Pennsylvania colleges.

[NI15049] Name: Jacob W. Dodge
Serial Number: Lt
Birth Place: Portland, Maine
Birth Date: 26 Jan 1878
Residence: Roxbury, Mass
Comment: Enrolled: Nav Coast Def Res Mar. 28/17 as Chief Boatswain USNRF (prov).
Aptd: Ensign USNRF July 18/17 (prov); Lt JG USNRF (prov); Lt USNRF (prov) Mar.
14/19; Lt Comdr USNRF (prov) Nov. 1/19; Lt USNRF (Conf) Oct. 1/19. Record of
Serv: Duty on Virginia Mar. 28/17 to Apr. 9/17; To Naval Training Station
Marblehead Mass Apr. 9/17 to June 22/17; On "Ontario" June 22/17 to July 16/17;
To New Orleans for duty connection with "Bridgeport" and on board when
commissioned July 16/17 to Nov. 9/18; To Cardiff Wales, report to Naval Base for
assignment Nov. 9/18 to Dec. 10/18. Continued in service.

[NI15058] 11 Aug 1862 listed as Sergeant in the 36th Iowa Infantry, Co. I and He died during the war on 25 April 1864 at Mark's Mills, Cleveland County, Arkansas.

[NI15066] Also known as Johannes Riek.

[NI15076] HENRY H. DODGE
Dr. Henry Haskins Dodge, 82 of Chester, Va., died Sunday, May 29, 2005, at John Randolph Medical Center, Hopewell.
Dr. Dodge was born in Chester and was the son of the late Dr. Henry Stacy and Anna Haskins Dodge. Dr. Dodge attended the College of William and Mary and the University of Virginia and graduated from The Lincoln Chiropractic College in Indianapolis, Ind. He was a member of Kappa Alpha. He was the past president of the Virginia Chiropractic Association, member of the Virginia Medical Board, Chairman of the School Trustee Electoral Board for Chesterfield County, Charter member of the Meadowbrook County Club and was the youngest Master of the Chester Masonic Lodge. Dr. Dodge retired after 50 years of practice in the Richmond area. He was a former active member of Chester Baptist Church for many years having served as a Deacon, superintendent of the Sunday school and choir member, and later a member of St. John's Episcopal Church in Chester.
He is survived by his wife, Emily Hill Dodge; two daughters, Kathy Mansfield and husband, James, of New Bern, N.C., and Stacy Smith and husband, L.D., of Hampstead N.C.; four grandchildren, George Beckwith Jr. and wife, Anna, Henry D. Beckwith, Katherine Smith and Norma Ann Smith; two sisters, Mary Stacy Boyle of Charlottesville, Va., and Anne Weaver and husband, Robert, of Tucker, Ga.; and numerous nieces and nephews.

[NI15079] Dorothy Whitmore Gruver
Fairfax, Va. - Dorothy Whitmore Gruver, 92, died on Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2006, at Manor Care, Fair Oaks.

She was the beloved wife to the late Rev. Esdras S. Gruver; loving mother ofWilliam K. Gruver (Pam) and Susan Gruver; dear sister of William Wesley Dodge and Charles Dodge; cherished grandmother of William Scott Gruver.

The funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Reliance United Methodist Church, Reliance, Va., with burial to follow in Reliance Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Esdras GruverScholarship Fund, c/o Shenandoah University, 1460 University Drive, Winchester, VA 22601, Attn.: Jane Pittman.

Arrangements are by Everly Funeral home, Fairfax, Va., www.everlyfuneralhomes.com.

[NI15080] The Rev. William Wesley Dodge, 96, died March 3, 2012, in Asheville, N.C. An interment service will be held this summer for both Wesley and Mary Lee Dodge in Stony Point.
Dodge began his ministry in 1941 at Shenandoah Junction. In 1947, he was appointed to Ridgeville and in 1949 to Rockville. Eight years later in 1957, he was appointed to Hiss, and in 1963 to Congress Heights. In 1970 he moved to Severna Park and stayed there 10 years until he retired in 1980 and moved to Waynesville, N.C.
He was deeply involved in the community at the S.E. Jurisdictional Center at Lake Junaluska, N.C. He enjoyed many hours at his hobby of caning chairs. His greatest joy was his family, along with his extended church family. He also enjoyed and appreciated music.
He and Mary Lee Milholland were married in 1941 at the beginning of his ministerial career. They were married 68 years until her death in 2009.
Survivors include a daughter, Dorothy Dodge of Turners Falls, Mass., and two grandchildren.
Condolences may be sent to Dorothy Dodge, 142

[NI15083] Sgt US. Army Airf Forces World War II

ALTON - Stanley A. Dodge, 90, died Friday, March 2, 2012, at Epsom Healthcare Center after a period of failing health.

Stanley was born in Wesley, Maine July 29, 1921, the son of Sterling and Annie (Johnson) Dodge. He had lived the past 25 years as an Alton resident, and had previously spent many years in both Northwood and Epsom.

Mr. Dodge was a U.S. Army Air Corps veteran of World War II. He earned the rank of Sergeant and served from 1942 through 1945 in the European, African, and Middle Eastern Theaters. He was a member of the Joseph Jeffrey VFW Post in Northwood.

Prior to his retirement, Mr. Dodge had been employed for 35 years by the University of New Hampshire, Maintenance Department. He also ran a family farm and enjoyed hunting and fishing in his free time.

Mr. Dodge was predeceased by his wife, Helen (Tuttle) Dodge, in 1981; and by his grandson, Daniel Dodge in 2005.

He is survived by his son and daughter-in-law, John and Luanne Dodge of Epsom; and his granddaughter, Shannon Dodge of Manchester. He is also survived by his longtime companion, Pauline Riel of Alton and her family, Linda and Carl Moulton, Maxine Johnson, and Tucker and Dorothy Riel.

Friends and family are invited to a gathering in Stanley's honor, Thursday, March 8, beginning at 1 p.m. at the Still Oaks Funeral & Memorial Home, 1217 Suncook Valley Hwy. in Epsom. Services will be held at 2:30 p.m. followed by a reception.

Burial will be in the Strafford Cemetery later in the spring.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Joseph J. Jeffrey VFW Post #7217, Attn: Commander Brown, 5 Lakeview Lane, Northwood, NH 03261. -

[NI15086] TEC 5 US Army World War II

[NI15088] Ruth Dodge, a resident of Dallas, Oregon passed peacefully on Tuesday, June 3rd. She was born on September 11, 1923 in Roseburg, Oregon the daughter of Frank and Lydia (Kemmis) Dornhecker. Ruth graduated from Dallas High School in 1941. She married Seth B. Dodge on December 8th 1945 in Dallas. Ruth worked for Dr. Ector B. Bossatti as his receptionist and assistant. Ruth was a greeter at the Polk County Courthouse for 15 years, which she enjoyed greatly. Ruth loved raising her children. She always loved children and babies. Ruth had a wonderful circle of friends. For many, she was mom and grandma. She exhibited such a caring loving spirit throughout her entire life. She was devoted to her Christian faith and was dedicated to reading her Bible. Ruth was a member of the Dallas First Christian Church. She was also a lifetime member of the Polk County Historical Society and a past board of director. Ruth was a member of the Polk County Election Board for many years. She was the coordinator for the annual "Old Timers' Picnic" in the Dallas City Park for many years. She made sure the ice cream and lemonade were there each summer. Ruth loved sports and followed Dallas High School Basketball for countless years and earned a golden sports pass. She also followed the Portland Trailblazers and the Oregon Ducks. Ruth loved to bird watch and view the beauty of our Oregon Mountains. She loved to travel, especially to the coast. Ruth had traveled throughout the United States with family and friends; highlights being the East Coast fall foliage, Branson Missouri and the Ozarks.

She is survived by her children, Ron (June) Dodge of Dallas, Connie (Bob) Bowers of Monmouth, Nancy (Tom) Gosser of Sweet Home, John (Vickie) Dodge of Dallas, Val (Phil) Unger of Dallas, along with 10 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Seth B. Dodge, grandson, Wade Gosser, and great grandson Darian King.

The Funeral Service will be on Monday, June 9th at 1:00 p.m. at the Dallas First Christian Church. Interment will be in Dallas Cemetery. Visitation will be on Sunday, from 1:00-4:00 p.m. in Dallas Mortuary Tribute Center. Memorial contributions may be made to "4Him2Day, Children's Cancer Resource Foundation" in care of Dallas Mortuary Tribute Center who is caring for the family. To leave an online condolence for the family go to www.dallastribute.com The family would like to express their gratitude to Our Redeemer's Care for the loving care they provide Ruth the past 7½ years.

Published in the Salem, Oregon Statesman Journal on June 8, 2014.

[NI15099] Born in Walter Valley, Mississippi a son of Everett and Anna Roccena Dodge Cocke His mother died in June 1905, and he was adopted and raised by his maternal grandparents, Mr.& Mrs. John Wilbur Dodge. A graduate of Woodberry Forest PrepSchool in Orange, Va., he went on to Washington and Lee University in Lexington from 1926 to 1930. On Nov. 7, 1942, he married Medora Ford. In July of 1942, he was commissioned Captain in the Army Air Corp. and was OIC of the Lend Lease Section. In 1944, as World War II still raged, he was sent to France with the 14th Traffic Regulation Group. He was back in Reims for the arrival of the German Delegation to surrender in 1945. After the war he joined Region III, with the office of Civil Defense. He retired after 20 years as Regional Field Officer with the rank of Lt. Colonel in U.S. Army.
Making their home in Thomasville, Mr. Cocke became very active in the community, serving in many areas of Saint Thomas Episcopal Church and was the bell ringer for many years. He was director and president of Rose City Credit Union and in 1958, was Exalted Ruler of Thomasville Lodge 1618 Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks. He organized and was Commander of Chapter 59 Disabled American Veterans in 1973 and was a life member of American Legion Post 31. He was an active member and past president of Golden Kiwanis Club

[NI15126] Godolphin Dodge was born in about 1841 in Ontario, Canada. Godolphin is the son of David Horton Dodge and Martha McCool.

Godolphin marries to Anna Groat on October 14, 1862 at Port Huron, St. Claire County, Michigan. Anna was born in 1843 in New Jersey and is the daughter of Jacob Groat and Mary Porter.

Godolphin Dodge enlisted in the Civil War on September 9, 1862, and was a member of Company 'C' - 6th Michigan Cavalry. Godolphin dies on November 7, 1863 of disease while a Prisoner of War at Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia.

The 6th Regiment, Michigan Cavalry was organized at Grand Rapids, Michigan, May 28 to October 13, 1862. Men were mustered in on October 13, 1862. Among the officers who later joined the regiment as replacements were Thomas W. Custer, who would earn two Medals of Honor while serving with the 6th in the spring of 1865.

The regiment was assigned to what became the Michigan Brigade during the early part of the Gettysburg Campaign in June 1863. It saw its first actions under General Custer at the Hanover, Hunterstown, and Gettysburg. Armed with Spencer Repeating Rifles, the 6th provided superior firepower against the lightly armed Confederate cavalry.

The regiment suffered 7 officers and 128 enlisted men killed in action or mortally wounded and 251 enlisted men who died of disease, for a total of 386 fatalities. ~ Wikipedia.

Battle Unit Details - Union Michigan Volunteers, 6th Regiment, Michigan Cavalry [1].

Godolphin dies on November 7, 1863 in Richmond, Virginia from disease while a POW in Richmond, Virginia. He is buried at the Richmond National Cemetery at Richmond, Henrico County, Virginia, USA.


Was in the Civil War. Godolphin 6th Cavalry, Company C Huron Nov 7, 1863 - Enlisted 09 Sept 1862. POW 14 July 1863 at Falling Waters, Maryland. Died as prisoner of War in Richmond, Virginia.

[NI15129] On 20 April 1866 Pention is claimed by wife Anna M. Dodge.

[NI15147] Twin to Oliver

[NI15148] Amasa aame to Lewis County New York in 1806. Suspect was a second child name Amasa
born to Nathan Dodge and Abigail Graves in 1769 however Colchester birth
records do not show this. I sow 1760.

Records also show he married in Haddem, CT.

He was an ordained Minister in the Baptist Church. He was regionally renown Baptist minister. He traveled widely establishing and preaching at freewell Baptist churches throughout northern New York. He founded the freewell Baptist Churches in Lowville in 1816 in Depauville in Aug 1820 and in Lyme in 1827.

Lowville pronounced Lawville records say that he was 82 when he died

[NI15149] Served in WW II

[NI15169] BM2 US COAST GUARD

[NI15192] 1850 Census, Penn Cass County, MI
1860 Census, Penn Cass County, MI
1870 Census, Penn Cass County, MI
1880 Census, Penn Cass County, MI
History of Cass Co Michigan, published by Waterman, Watkins & County, 1882, page 250, Joseph D Dodge
states he was born in Montgomery Co New York and he came to Cass Co from Baldwinsville, Onondaga Co
New York.

[NI15194] He had a will files in Cass County, #2019

[NI15203] Her DAR # is 12131,

[NI15207] Death Record in Cass County MI Clerk Liber B Pg 128
age 80 ys, 3 mo, 26 da, resides Vandalia, married.
Father: Joseph D Dodge, Mother: Ann Depuy

Obituary from Cassopolis Vigilant 9 May 1912: Born 10 Jan 1832, Onondaga Co New York, died 3 May 1912,
age 80y, 3m , 26d. Married George Longsduff 9 Feb 1854. One son, Charles D who died in 1892.
Leaves husband, daughter-in-law, Mrs Keene and 2 grand children, Lucille and Georgianna Longsduff.
Two sisters, Mrs Frank Tietsort of Cassopolis and Mrs Sarah Pemberton of Alanson MI, two brothers,
Joseph of Newberg and Charles R of Cassopolis.

Marcellus News 9 May 1912:
Vandalia - The funeral of Mrs George Longsduff was held here at the Disciple Church Sunday afternoon
at 2:00. Burial at Cassopolis Cemetery. The deceased was about 80 years of age.

[NI15208] Age at death 22 yrs, 4 mos, 25 days from Cem Record

[NI15211] Cass Counth MI Death Index Liber B Pg 146. Death in Newberg, age 73y, 9m, 25d. Birth place unknown.
Cause: Killed by lightning. Father Joseph Dodge, Mother Ann Depuy.

Will of Joseph J Dodge: Date of Death 11 May 1914
Cass County MI Probate
Heirs: Newton R Dodge, son, age 42, Three Rivers MI
Anna Dodge Kantz, daughter, age 38, Vandalia MI
Lena Dodge, daughter, age 26, Marcellus MI
Real Eatate: $1,950 in Sctn 21, Newberg Township

[NI15212] Advertisement in Casssopolis Vigilant Newspaper 23 May, 1872:
CHARLES R DODGE MEAT MARKET
Keeps constantly on hand a fresh supply of choice meats of all kinds. Customers will
receive
the best cuts at regular prices. - Vandalia

Census, 1900 Cass Co MI, Penn Twp. Married 31 yrs, no children.

OBITUARY: Cassopolis Vigilant, Cassopolis MI Dec 16, 1926
Charles R DODGE, youngest son of Joseph and Anne DEPUY DODGE was born
in Newburg Township, Cass County, March 17, 1843. He was married to Amaretta FIKE
on July 4, 1868.
He was engaged in various enterprises, chiefly in that of farming and stock buying.
His wife passed away April 7, 1919. For more than five years he has made his home
with his niece and husband, Mr and Mrs Albert L DOOL. For the past year, he has
been in declining health until death relieved him on December 8, 1926. He leaves to
mourn one sister, Mrs Tillie TIETSORT, and many other relatives and friends.
The funeral was held at the late home, Saturday afternoon at 2:30, with Rev Joseph

Liindsay officiating, with Vandalia Lodge F. & A.M. of which the deceased was a
member, in charge of the grave service.
Burial in Prospect Cemetery, Cassopolis MI

Cassopolis Vigilant 9 Dec 1926:
Charles R Dodge died yesterday afternoon at the home of his niece, Mrs Albert Dool
on N Broadway. Mr Dodge was 83 years and almost a lifetime resident of Cass Co. He
was at one time well-known as an extensive stock buyer and farmer

[NI15214] Census:
1900 Cassopolis, Cass Co MI

Obituary in Cassopolis Vigilant, 7 Sep 1933
Matilda was the youngest of 8 children born to Joseph D and Anne DePuy Dodge who were
pioneer settlers of Newberg Township.
She was a member of the Christian Church, Vandalia.
Funeral Service was held at the Connelly Funeral Home in Cassopolis

[NI15217] He was an adopted child.

[NI15220] No Issue.
1840 Census, 1850 Census, 1860 Census, 1870 Census, 1880 Census

[NI15224] Twin to Egbert Sherwood Dodge.The death of little Robert Sherwood Dodge is a peculiarly sad blow to his estimable parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adeil Sherwood Dodge. He was their fourth child, who has died at a tender age, and his death leaves them childless. In their unusually sad affliction, Mr. and Mrs. Dodge have the sincere sympathy of a large circle of friends, who will long remember their bright little son, Sherwood, affectionately. - Sedalia Weekly Bazoo - Tuesday, July 22, 1890 pg.4
------------------------------------------------
Dodge, Sherwood, the six-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Dodge, died at the Southern hotel, in St. Louis, Friday, after only a few days illness. The body arrived in Sedalia yesterday afternoon on a special sleeping car, and the funeral will take place from the family residence, No. 302, East Seventh street, at 4 o'clock this afternoon.

The Globe-Democrat of yesterday said: "The numerous friends of A. S. Dodge, General Freight Agent of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas, will be pained to learn of the death of his only child, Sherwood, a bright little boy of 6 years, which occurred yesterday afternoon at the Southern Hotel, in this city.

Mr. Dodge had been called to Washington, D. C. to attend the grain rate hearing before the Interstate Commerce Commission, in which all the Western and Southwestern roads are interested, and he was accompanied by his wife and child. They arrived here upon their return on Wednesday evening, when the child was taken sick, and it was deemed advisable to stop off and obtain medical advice. They repaired to the Southern Hotel, and on Thursday alarming symptoms set in. The little boy failed to rally, and at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon he passed away. The Dodge family reside at Sedalia, the headquarters of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas system. - Sedalia Weekly Bazoo - Tuesday, July 22, 1890 pg.4

[NI15233] No children fro any marriage.

[NI15253] Never Married.

[NI15260] From Walter Lloyd Dodge, 1968: grandfather Austen Dodge was a farmer in Rockland Cound. Came from a pre-revolutionary family. Old Headstones in the cemetery in Rockland, New York. Married twice per Dodge family records by Sue George, 1995 He was named after his maternal grandfather. At their death they left $200 to Austin and his sister Abigail and with his money Austin bought a farm on which he built a home to which he bought his bride (D. I Dodge's home opposite Dot Bullis' and spent his married life. Afterwards he bought his sister's portion which afterwards became Montgomery R. Dodge's home. Died of Stomache cancer.

[NI15274] Sergeant Dodge was killed in a ground attack by a morter shell.

[NI15275] Killed as a pedestrian

[NI15281] Family Search says this name is Laty L. Fike.

[NI15283] No Death date on stone.

[NI15285] No Issue.

[NI15289] Census:
1900 St Joseph Co MI, living in grandparents home, Philip Bly, also mother &
stepfather Frank Parker,
Flowerefield Twp.
1910 St Joseph Co MI, school teacher, step-daughter in the home of Frank Parker,
Flowerfield Twp
1920 St Joseph Co MI, rural school teacher, living in the home of Frank Parker,
Flowerfield Twp
1930 St Joseph Co MI, Flowerfield Twp, living with her mother, Jennie Parker,
Flowerfield Twp

Named in her father, John Joseph Dodge will, age 26, living in Marcellus MI

[NI15308] MISS CORA M. DODGE
Died Very Suddenly This Forenoon
at Her Home at Groton

Miss Cora M. Dodge, a niece of Mr. and Mrs. M.L. Decker of this city, with whom she had made her home most of the time for the past fifteen years, died at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M.W. Dodge, in Groton at noon today.

Mrs. Dodge was in Cortland after medicine and different supplies, when her daughter's death occurred. She was not at Mr. Decker's when the telephone message was received, but was out making her purchases. Messengers started out at once to search for her.

Miss Dodge graduated from the Normal last June. She was never very strong and a hard cold contracted on commencement day could not be haken off. Tuberculosis developed and her decline was rapid. Death came very unexpectedly, however, and Mr. and Mrs. Decker were greatly surprised and shocked when the news came over the wire.
-Cortland Standard, 27 Aug 1912

[NI15309] LEONARD B. DODGE of 7897 Foster Road, Liverpool, died yesterday at St. Mary’s Hospital after a short illness.

A native of Scott, he lived in Liverpool seven years. He served as an engineer for the Erie Lackawanna Railroad 46 years before his retirement. He was a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engineers and was a former member of the Old Timers Bowling League.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Marjorie Sisk Dodge and a brother, Wayland Dodge of Little York.

Services will be at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Maurer Funeral Home, 300 Second St., Liverpool, the Rev. Charles L. Grover, missionary of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, Liverpool, officiating. Burial will be in White Chapel Memory Gardens, DeWitt.

Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the funeral home.

[NI15337] Enlistment Date: 22 August 1862 DISTINGUISHED SERVICE

Side Served:
Union
State Served:
New York

Unit Numbers:
1410 1410

Service Record:
Enlisted as a Corporal on 22 August 1862 at the age of 18
Enlisted in Company C, 143rd Infantry Regiment New York on 08 October 1862.
Promoted to Full Sergeant on 01 May 1864
Wounded on 20 July 1864 at Peach Tree Creek, GA
Mustered out Company C, 143rd Infantry Regiment New York on 20 July 1865 in Alexandria, VA

Fought in the Civil War. Enlisted as a private on Company C of the 143rd Regiment,
New York Volunteer Infantry, August 22nd, 1862. Sergeant, May 1, 186
Was wounded in action at the Battle of Peach Tree Creek (near Atlanta)
in leg, July 20, 1864. Had to sear out wound with red hot iron.
Had limp for the rest of his life. Was the Postmaster of Rockland,
New York, form 1874 until his death (except during the Cleveland administration)
and owned and operated a General Store. He was Town Clerk for one year and Town
Supervisor for 3 years. [Dodge Family Records by Sue George, 1995>] Nicknamed Kennie.
One page on the Bible says death was 25 Feb 1913, not 1914? [Dodge Family Records
by Sue George, 1995, obituary>] ...By the death of M.N.Dodge, Rockland loses her
foremost citizen. For forty five years he has been in business here and excepting
during the two administrations of Cleveland, postmaster. A figure as familiar to
men, women, and children as the members of their own homes. As a Republican, had
served his party always and had been supervisor of the Town. He was a Scottish
Rite Mason and a charter member of Livingston Manor lodge F.A.M., Treasurer of the
Board of Fire Commissioners. Organizer and Commander Morgans Post G.A.R. Loyal to
his country he served during the civil war in 143rd Regiment NYS Volunteers while
to every old comrade he was a brother and friend in plenty and in want giving time
and talents to their every needs. His house was build on a part of the farm where
he was born and all his life was spent among us doing the right as he saw it. His
health has been failing for years, but he would not surrender to his infirmities so
long as he could walk across the road. He died sitting in his chair after the
evening meal.... [Dodge Family Records by Sue George, 1995, obituary>] At the time
of the Civil War he enlisted as a private in Co. C. 143rd Regiment, New York
Volunteer Infantry, August 22nd, 1862 at Fallsburg, New York; mustered in as
Corporal October 8, 1862; promoted Sergeant, May 1, 1864; wounded in action at
Peach Tree Creek, Georgia on July 20, 1864; mustered out July 20, 1865 near
Alexandria, Virginia. He was Postmaster from 1874 to death except duri
administration of Cleveland. Town Clerk for one year; Supervisor, three years;
Charter member of the Livingston Manor Lodge F&AM (Free and Accepted Masons).

[NI15348] In 1880 he was living with his Parents & his wife in his Parents home. .He was a Dry Goods Merchant.

[NI15364] He was a World War II Army Veteran. Received the Purple Heart.

[NI15370] Israel I. Dodge was thrice married, his first wife having been a Miss Green, by whom he had two children: Israel, who died in the army in 1862, and Elmira, who lives in Postville, Iowa. Unto the union of Israel I. and Betsey (Fitch) Dodge, there were born five children, four of whom are living: Bessie, Emma, Ida and Joel. The third marriage was childless. The only son was born in Sullivan County, N. Y., November 27, 1839, and was reared to manhood upon his father's farm, mean time conducting his studies in the schoolhouses, which, with their primitive furnishings, bear a marked contrast to the complete and cozily furnished buildings of today. At the opening of the Civil War, his sympathies were on the side of the Union, and August 26, 1861, he enlisted as a member of Company I, Tenth Iowa ~ Infantry, Captain Garrett commanding. He served for fifteen months, and participated in a number of important engagements, including the two days' battle of Corinth. In the latter battle he was wounded in the hand and thigh, losing the use of the former from the effects of the injury. He now draws a pension of $24 per month.

[NI15410] Dodge, Hale A.

Hale A. Dodge, 80, Waverly, died Tuesday (3/16/04). Born, Healy, Kan. (1/5/1924), to Gilbert R. and Nora H. (Thon) Dodge. Retired, 1988, deputy director of operations, state of Nebraska Department of Aeronautics, 18 years, for which he flew Govs. Jim Exon and Bob Kerrey. U.S. Army Air Forces pilot in China, Burma and the India theater during World War II, also the Korean and Vietnam wars. Retired after 27 years, as a colonel. Member: First Christian Church, Dighton, Kan.; Rosehill Cemetery Board; American Legion Post 3. Lettered in football, track and basketball.

Survivors: wife, Ethel; son, daughter-in-law, Michael G. and Ann; daughters, sons-in-law, Arden M. and Doug Mohrman, Erin L. and Randy Dennis, all Lincoln; brother, Darold, Manhattan, Kan.; eight grandchildren. Preceded in death by: parents; son, Craig; three brothers.

Services: 11 p.m. Saturday, Roper & Sons Funeral Home, 4300 O St. Rosehill Cemetery, Waverly. Military rites by the Fort Riley, Kan., honor guard. Visitation: begins 5 p.m. Thursday until service time, funeral home. Memorials: Clark Jeary Retirement Center. Condolences may to e-mailed to roperandsons.com. q

Published in the Lincoln Journal Star on 3/17/2004.

[NI15411] From: Uj77@aol.com
Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 14:48:42 EDT
Subject: Re: F-105 pilot Ward Kent Dodge, POW

Just for information purposes here is a little more on Maj. Dodge:

He was flying an F-105D, s/n 61-0042 when he was shot down. He belonged to
the 357th Tactical Fighter Squadron, 355th Tactical Fighter Wing based at
Takhli, Royal Thai Air Force Base (RTAFB) in Thailand. An account on his last flight: "As one formation of Thuds was hitting the Cao Nung Bridge,
another group was bombing the railway yard at Vu Chua a few miles to the southeast. Just as Maj. Dodge was about to roll in from 15,000 feet to bomb the target, his aircraft was hit by an 85mm anti-aircraft shell. After a brief struggle to regain control, he was forced to eject close to the target. Ward Dodge is known to have been captured but he apparently died of unknown causes in a prison camp about a week after he was shot down." {from the book: "Vietnam Air Losses: USAF, Navy, and Marine Corps Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in SE Asia 1961-1973" The author is Chris Hodson and the publisher is Midland Publishing, published 2001.}

He went to Kansas State College and was in the R.O.T.C. program. He entered pilot training as a student officer and was assigned to Pilot Training Class 52-F (Fox) where he graduated from Webb AFB, Texas on September 13, 1952 earning his silver wings. He was given the nickname "schoolboy" by his classmates at Webb. He, along with my uncle and others from Webb who got to fly fighters after graduating, were in what was called the "pipeline" to Korea and were sent to Nellis AFB for combat crew training. He was eventually sent to Suwon AB at Suwon, Korea, known as K-13 and assigned to the 8th Fighter-Bomber Wing in early 1953. After going through orientation training in the Replacement Training Unit (RTU) for new replacement pilots, He, along with my uncle and several others, were assigned to the 36th Fighter-Bomber Squadron, known as the "Flying Fiends" and got to fly new F-86F Sabres in the air-to-ground role although they were able to go after MiGs if the need came up. The 51st FIW across the base had the role of interceptor work, where the top ace of Korea, Joe McConnell, was stationed.

The 36th FBS set a one-day sorties record on 15 June 1953 by getting 121 for that day. That record has yet to be broken. Unfortunately, my uncle was shot down by AA on 19 June 1953 while strafing trucks in North Korea and was listed as MIA, but others in the squadron continued their careers after the war including Dodge.

I included a few scanned pictures of Ward Dodge from the 52-F yearbook and a 36th FBS squadron picture with him in the third row, second from left. Also, a B&W picture that my uncle took of Dodge outside the 36th FBS Ops building in 1953.

Even though the pictures are 14 years earlier than when he went down, they will put a face with the name.

BYW, Elmo C. Baker, who was in Ward Dodge's squadron was shot down a month after Ward and became a POW for six years.

Ward was was also in the Vietnam war where he lost his life.
Ward was the son of Gilbert Ray Dodge and Nora Helen Thon

Eileen Dodge

Jim
uj77@aol.com

[NI15442] Irving served the Army 2nd Division and did cartoons for the Army Paper,
Worked for General Motors Acceptance Corp. Did various art work and
became Union Oil Co's top designer until he retired

[NI15445] A TESTIMONY OF JOSEPH C. DODGE, CONCERNING HIS WIFE, PHEBE DODGE

Since it hath pleased the Most High to prove me in the very close and afflicting dispensation of the removal of my wife, Phebe Dodge by death, I have felt my mind drawn to give this testimony concerning her, feeling it to be due to her memory, accompanied with a hope that it may prove a way-mark to others.

She was born on the 5th day ofthe 2d mo., 1792, in the town of South Salem, West Chester County, State of New York. Her parents were Richard and Susannah Weeks, who were honestly engaged for the promotion of Truth and Righteousness in the earth,(the latter an approved Minister and faithful laborer in the Lord's vineyard.) This their daughter was, agreeably to her own account, tenderly visited in her childhood with impressions of Divine love, and her mind so overshadowed therewith, that she was constrained to retire into lonely places, unseen by mortal eye, to hold communion with her God; in which seasons she was enable to behold His comeliness and to feel that she was owned, and stood in a state of acceptance with him, which caused her eyes to flow with tears, and her heart to expand with gratitude to him, and living desires were raised in her mind, that she might be kept pure in His holy sight.

About the fourteenth year of her age, while sittin one evening by the fireside with her parents, her mind being drawn from surrounding objects, and wrapped in meditation, this solemn language was sounded in the ear of her mind. "thou must prepare for death." This awful message so overcame her, that she withdrew from the family, and, in the silence of night, bemoaned herself on this wise;--"Must so young a creature as I be taken from kind and tender parents, whom I love, and from all my connections, must my days be numbered in the spring time of life, and I cut off from the happiness I have in prospect." In the anguish of her spirit as she poured forth her petition to the Lord, that he would be pleased to lengthen her days, and permit her a little longer, to enjoy the endearments of society in her father's house, she received this answer, "Thou shalt not die to the body, but thou must die to thine own will." But not following the Master in bearing the cross, she stumble, and yielded to the suggestions of the reasoner; and for refusing to yield to the clear manifestations of duty, she was often left in a state of poverty and deep suffering, losing sight of her heavenly Guide, to grope in darkness. Yet she was not wholly left, but after seasons of humiliation and deep abasement for disobedience, she witnessed a return of her Heavenly Father's love, as the descending dew and gentle rain, and the invitation extended afresh, to enter into the vineyard and labor, with the promise annexed;and although she felt a reluctance to engage in the work herself, she was concerned that others might not neglect their duty; and that the living principle and word of life might not be trodden under foot of men, but that all might come to the knowledge of it, obey it and be saved.

About the twenty-second year of her age, she experienced a very close trial in the death of her father and mother, within a few months of each other, and from this circumstances much care devolved upon her. In conducting the concerns of the family, her movements were marked with much prudence and care.

In the year 1818, we were joined in marriage, in which state we were united in near fellowship. Kind, affectionate, and sympathising in every situation, she was a true help-meet, in the full sense of the word:feeling deeply for her family, that they might be favored with a competency for this life; and while her hands were industriously engaged in her daily avocations, her mind was concerned for more durable treasure, being made sensible that this was only to be obtained by an unreserved submission to the Divine will. Knowing that she had been called into the vinyard to labor, that the call had been from time to time renewed, from the thirdto the ninth, and being clearly shown the eleventh hour was at hand, the prospect whereof appeared awful to her, she was brought under a deep exercise and concern of mind, to labor for submission to the will of her Heavenly Father, she was brought under the operating power of the "fire and the hammer;" and, abiding in the furnace, she witnessed refinement "by the spirit of judgment and by the spirit of burning," and was made willing to submit to the cross of Christ. About the thirty-seventh year of age, she first appeared in the ministry. After this full surrender, she became faithfully and honestly devoted to her Heavenly Father's work, and experienced a growth and enlargement therein.

For some month previous to her decease, her health had become greatly impaired, and towards the close she appeared to be much weaned from perishable things, from a sense, I believe she had, that she was soon to be gathered home.

She was taken ill on the 9th day of 1st mo, 1832, and suffered extreme bodily pain, but her mind was mercifully through all, with a prospect of being soon released and entering into a mansion of rest, of which she said, she had a most beautiful prospect; feeling an evidence that, through faithful obedience to her Master's will, during the latter part of her life, she was accepted of him.

During her illness she was at times favored in an extraordinary manner, with matter and utterance, which evidently proceeded from the source and fountain of life, which I trust, will be as bread to many. On one occassion, to her friends about her, she remarked, that her mind had been kept in a marvellous manner during her illness, adding, "the Lord is able to display his work in the earth; in a wonderful manner have you been taken from my heart, that I might have nothing in the world to cling to." At another time she observed that her mind had, for some time, been weaned from her family and friends; "though," said she, "I love them dearly, and if it was the will of my Heavenly Father, I should be willing to be spared to them a little longer, yet I feel I can adopt the language 'not my will, but thine, be done'".

Speaking of the meeting at greenwich, where, she said, but few words were uttered, she expressed the concern that she had felt, that Friends might feel after His living presence, which was much more than words. She had been a diligent attender of that meeting, and ever manifested a deep and lively interest in its prosperity and welfare.

She feelingly exhorted some of her young friends who visited her, to disengage their minds from worldly concerns, saying, "remember that with the increase of riches the mind is often drawn away." She endeavored to impress upon them the great importance of a diligent attendance of meetings, and the necessity of breaking off from every temporal engagement to attend to this important duty. To one whom she had observed with satisfaction to be engaged in the attendance of meetings, she said, "Abide stedfast in the truth, that thou mayest be an example to thy companion and children."

At one time, after much expression, she broke forth in this language, "Oh! praises, praises, praises, to Thy great andadorable name." She often repeated, "what a bed of ease this sick bed has been to me, but what would it have been, if the work had been unfinished at such a time as this," adding, "I think if I had anything more than pain of body to endure, I should not bear up under it."

She retained the possession of her mental faculties to the last, and a short time before her final close, she took a solemn and affectionate leave of her family and friend, on which occassion she was favored with strength and ability, in a powerful and feeling manner, to administer to the states of those present, recommending that, which she had found necessary for herself, saying that it was all sufficient to sustain her in this time of trial; realizing the truth of the declaration of the Psalmist that "the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him." In taking leave of her children, she called them to her bedside, one by one, and addressed them in a very feeling manner, giving them much excellent counsel and advice. To her little daughter she expressed a deep concern that she should keep to plainness of dress, saying, "Be plain and neat, not wishing to adorn thyself with those trifling things which so much engross the attention of too many."

Having relieved her mind of the exercise that had rested upon it, she was engaged in fervent supplication, thanksgiving, and praise to her Heavenly Father, until utterance failed, breathing shorter andshorter, until third-day morning, the 24th of 1st month, 1832, when she expired without a sigh or groan; and I have not a doubt, that she entered into that mansion, "where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at reest.

[NI15453] Robert was in the Air Force from 1967 to 1971.

Robert and Kathleen moved to Minnesota in 1978.

[NI15457] Is redily confused with Older Brother

[NI15467] Burton & his son Ellis ran a meat company in Wells, Maine for many years.

[NI15489] Baptized as a child in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New
London, Connecticut, by Rev. Jas. Hillhouse.

[NI15525] Twin Brother Frank H Dodge.

[NI15548] No issue.

She owned Harriet Hubbard Ayer cosmetics in NYC. She had a town house on East 65th Street and an estate in Mill Neck called Sefton Manor. It is now a school for the deaf

[NI15561] Revolutionary Soldier served 5 years, discharged 1 Feb 1780 at West Point, New York

[NI15640] Unmarried

Mr. Dodge was co-proprietor of the family business, Pets First of Swansea. He and his mother started the pet store and aquarium five years ago. Mr. Dodge enjoyed working with animals, and had worked at other aquariums before starting Pets First.

He was very knowledgeable about the world's oceans. His greatest adventure had been scuba diving at the Great Barrier Reef, off the Australian coast.

"He loved animals, that's why he had the pet store," said his maternal grandmother, Dalice (Taylor) Beal of South Kingstown, and also formerly of Block Island.

He was a descendant of one of the 16 founding families of Block Island, the last person to have a direct lineage to Trustrum Dodge, who settled here in 1661, Beal said. His paternal grandparents were Weldon (Weldon's Way) and Beatrice Ball Dodge, now deceased. Beatrice was a librarian and kindergarten teacher on Block Island and a great friend to animals, especially cats. Weldon was a building contractor.

Mr. Dodge was also predeceased by his paternal grandfather, Blaine Beal, of New York, to whom he was very close; and an aunt, Kathleen Beal Carpenter, and her son, Travis Carpenter, of Denver.

When he was young, Mr. Dodge lived at Chapel Cottage, a family house here, before moving to Wakefield so that his mother could attend college at the University of Rhode Island. After moving, he frequently visited, coming every summer, reading all the island history books he could, and becoming knowledgeable about the island and his family roots here. Beatrice Beal said he was at his happiest on Block Island.

His link to the island was nurtured by his close relationship with his grandmother, Beal said. He was close to all his grandparents, and was described as a best friend and great joy.

"I never saw John angry," Beal said. "He will be a great loss."

Besides his parents and grandmother Dalice Beal, he leaves an aunt, Julie (Beal) Dudow, of Littleton, Colo., her husband Richard and their daughters, Anna and Kailey; an uncle, Donald Carpenter, of Denver, and his son, Wes Carpenter.

[NI15676] George W. Dodge, Eastford, Connecticut; Enlisted: 10 Dec 1863 - Union; Rank Induction: Private; Rank Discharge: Private; 11th & 18th Regiments, Connecticut Infantry, Cos. D & F; George died 11 Oct 1864 in Florence, South Carolina

[NI15684] Some list this name as Isiah.

[NI15728] * 23 May 1900 in Waltham, Middlesex, Massachusetts

[NI15729] Joel Dodge, a veteran of the Civil War, now residing on Section 34, Malaka Township, was born in Sullivan County, New York, November 27, 1840, and with his parents came to Jasper County in 1858, the family locating on the same section on which our subject now resides. In 1861 Mr. Dodge became a member of the 10th Iowa Volunteer Infantry, and served 15 months. Was at the capture of New Madrid, Island No. 10, Iuka, and the battle of Corinth, where he was wounded the second day, for which he received his discharge. Returning to Jasper County in 1867, he was united in marriage to Sarah Gage, in Sullivan County, New York. They became the parents of three children: Anna, now Mrs. Chas. Kerr; Flora, now Mrs. R. Smith; and Arthur. In 1882 he was again united in marriage to Asenath Kerr. Their children are Edith, Bessie, Mabel, Imogene, Wallace, and Dorothy.

[NI15734] Sometimes called Warren J.

[NI15749] Private in Webbs' Company, Connecticut Militia, 18 April 1777, for a term of eight months, re-enlisted in Captain Bacons's Company, 6 August 1777 for a term of three years but deserted just before it's expiration on 14 Jun 1780. See Connecticut men of War of the Revolution Pg.186. Also Linage Books of D. A. R. indicates several descendants.

[NI15760] * Editors Note: Although listed on the Dodge Family monument and incorporated in the original publishing of the Tristram Dodge genealogy, later research has shown that Margaret's last name was in fact Acres. It is thought that she may have been the wife of Thomas Dodge, who appears briefly in the early records of New Shoreham, Rhode Island. She married John Rathbun, and her genealogy may be found among those families records.

[NI15771] John Albert Galloway was the son of William A. and Mary Dodge Galloway and the husband of Harriet Rhea Hunter Galloway whom he married Jan 8,1880. It is said that his mother died when he was two years old and that he grew up in the Boone's Creek Community and was reared by his grandmother, Eliza Dodge. John and his wife, Harriet Rhea Hunter, had three daughters, Adelene, Stella and Edyth.

[NI15800] Child died at 18 months.

[NI15851] Died 76 yrs, 2 mos, 13 dys. Never Married

[NI15861] Nobel Peace Prize Winner

[NI15901] Family Tree of Peter Rogers of Canada
Entries: 56267 Updated: 2005-10-22 19:45:25 UTC (Sat) Cont act: peter rogers

---------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------

Index | Download GEDCOM | Add Post-em

---------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
ID: I28833
Name: Helen Marr DODGE
Given Name: Helen Marr
Surname: Dodge
Sex: F
Birth: 24 Feb 1843 in Warsaw, Wyoming, New York, USA 1
Death: Y
_UID: C90CA01E454E4CC892CA20ECBE837EC526D4
Change Date: 5 May 2004 at 21:54
Note: d/o William and Mary (Noble) Dodge

Marriage 1 Marcellus Bowen MOSHER b: 1838
Married:
Change Date: 5 May 2004

Sources:
Abbrev: Descendants of Hugh Mosher and Rebecca Maxson Through Se ven Generations
Title: Descendants of Hugh Mosher and Rebecca Maxson Through Sev en Generations
Author: Mildred (Mosher) Chamberlain and Laura (McGaffrey) Clare nbach
Publication: Library of Congress Catalog No. 90-84352 Revised Ed ition
Date: Copyright 1990
Page: Page 232
Quality: 3

[NI15909] Lyman was listed, along Daniel Wilcox and Nathaniel Johnson as administrators of the estate of Daniel Dodge who died in Newport, Herkimer County, New York in 1814. The estate was granted to Martha Dodge, assumed to be Daniel's wife.

[NI15912] Pioneer in Electronics, created the sound system for the Olympic Stadium,
Detroit, Michigan and other Public Stadiums.

[NI15920] Henry William Dodge, Jr., Neurosurgeon of Vero Beach, died September 9, 2001 after a prolonged illness.

Dr. Dodge graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy and Yale University where he received his doctorate in medicine from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University. He received his Master of Science Degree from University of Minnesota Graduate School of Medicine. He was on the staff of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota and also St. John's Hospital, St. Vincents and University of Southern California where he taught anatomy. Dr. Dodge was President and Research Director of the Neurosciences Institute and Foundation. He was a special consultant to the Surgeon General of the U.S. Navy and served in the Medical Corp. of the U.S. Army during WWII in Tinian and Saigon. He headed the U.S. Army team that reviewed the A Bomb casualties in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. His patients included dignitaries from all over the world and received numerous awards.

He was a member of the Los Angeles Country Club, Bel Air Country Club, Regency Club, Jonothan Club, Palm Springs Country Club, Friars Club and Vero Beach Country Club.

He is survived by his wife, Hoda; four children from a previous marriage, Hank Dodge, James Dodge, Nina Thornburgh and Deborah Dodge; sister, Elizabeth Dodge Fuiks and 3 grandchildren.

Services will be held at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions may be made to the New York Disaster Relief Fund, in care of The American Red Cross, 2506 17th Ave., Vero Beach, FL 32960 in memory of Dr. Dodge.

Arrangements are under the direction of Strunk Funeral Home, Vero Beach.

[NI15940] Enlisted in Company M, Illinois 6th Cavalry Regiment on 18 Feb 1865.Promoted to Full Corporal.Mustered out on 05 Nov 1865 at Selma, Alabama.Enlisted in Company M, Illinois 6th Cavalry Regiment on 18 Feb 1865.Promoted to Full Corporal.Mustered out on 05 Nov 1865 at Selma, Alabama

[NI15943] Kinsbury Washington County, New York 1880 Census

[NI15982] 1930 census Fenton, Broome County, New York

[NI15986] PVT A. A. R. World War II

[NI16033] Her darghter Ella J. was born a Bancroft. Whe her father died whe she was about 1 years old Harriett remarried to Albert Ezekiel Dodge and they had 10 more Children

[NI16037] Never Married.

[NI16041] Jeremiah Dodge (William, Tristram). The first record we find of him he
bought land Cow Neck, Long Island, March 31, 1730. He has not been
connected with this line until Mr. Richard Despard Dodge of Brooklyn,
N.Y. (see his appendix to Tristram Dodge and Descendants) discovered a
letter written June 16, 1776, by Samuel Dodge (Samuel, William, Tristram)
to his "Loving Cousin", Thomas Dodge (Thomas, Tristram, Tristram), in
which he requests that he be remembered to his Uncle Jeremiah's family.
He adds that he saw Uncle Jeremaiah's grandson Stephen Dodge at Fort
Montgonery "last Wednesday," and that Stephen was again in Capt.
Rosekrans' Company. New York in the Revolution, p. 49, gives Stephen
Dodge as a soldier in the New York Line, 4th Regiment, in which Capt.
James Rosekrans commanded a company. This evidence establishes Jeremiah
Dodge as the son of William and grandson of the first Tristram. Judge A.
W. Savary of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, confirms the above parentage
in his excellent 'History of Annapolis County', and writes me, April 29,
1902, that the line was given him by the late William E. Chute, compiler
of the 'Chute Genealogies'----------Book: DODGE GENEALOGY DESCENDANTS OF
TRISTRAM DODGE ---- by Theron Royal Woodward 1904

Page 286.--"In the year of our Lord Christ 1774, the 31 day of March. I,
JEREMIAH DODGE, of Cow Neck, in Queens County, do make this my last Will.
All debts to be paid by my executors. I leave to my wife Elizabeth my
best bed and furniture in my house, and all her wearing apparell, and all
effects she had from her brother Robert Sutton's estate, and one-half of
my movable estate upon condition that she stands to the will. I leave to
my daughter, Phebe Underhill, 1/2 of my movable estate, on condition that
Samuel Underhill first pays to my estate 5 lbs which he oweth to me. And
that oe5 is to be paid to my grandson, Stephen Sands, when of age. I
leave the rest of my movable estate to my daughter, Mary Davenport, to be
kept by my executors and paid to her as they think she wants. My farm is
to be sold by my executors. My three sons, Jeremiah, William, and Robert,
are to pay to their mother oe3 each yearly. I leave to my son Jeremiah my
wearing apparell and 1/3 of the money from the sale of my farm. And he is
to pay the bonds I am bound for him. My son Jeremiah is to have 20
shillings for his heirship. I leave to my son William 1/3 of the money
from sale of farm, and he is to pay to the rest of his brothers oe2 10s.
for value he has received. I leave to my son Robert 1/3. I make my trusty
friends, Thomas Dodge, Petrus Onderdonk, and Adam Mott, Jr., executors."
Witnesses, Obadiah De Milt, Quaker, Joris Rapalye, William Salt. Proved,
May 11, 1780.
(from Abstracts of Wills (New York) Vol IX 1777-1783

[NI16053] Other records have he last name as Chadaeyne

[NI16072] Birthdate calculated from Tombstone 2 Jul 1870, 66 yr

[NI16073] Obituary

William Morgan Oliver Dodge Passed Away Last Thursday

Funeral services were held Saturday afternoon from the Methodist church for William Morgan Oliver Dodge, who died Thursday, August 8th, at his home here. Mr. Dodge was born at Carthage, New York, on Sept. 27, 1854, being nearly 75 years of age at the time of his death. Services were conducted by Rev. Olson of Overton, and interment made in Mt. Hope Cemetery.

[NI16074] Biirthdate calc. from Tombstone d. 30 Aug 1860, 57 y 11m 25 dy

[NI16089] died unmarried.

[NI16099] This John Williams exists in our John Dodge File:

[NI16100] Ruth's parents were Sylvanus Cobb, Jr., born 13 Sept 1779 in Conway, Franklin County, MA and Mary Smith, born 1768 in Conway, Franklin County, MA She died at 54 Years.

[NI16102] died unmarried.

[NI16113] They adopted several children - don't know if they had any biological children.....perhaps a son named Dennis.

[NI16115] Died in Newfane Rehab Center, Newfane, New York DDuring WW II she made bullets in Factory in Syacuse

[NI16116] Ralph was a sniper in WW II in Nortth Africa, Australiaa and S. Pacific Regions.Ralph N. Dodge, 91, of E. Syracuse, past away Sunday. He was a life resident of the Syracuse area. He retired from Dairylea Company in 1977 after over 25 years of service. He was a proud member of the 1st Marine Division having serving in World War II and Korean War and having survived the invasion of Guadalcanal. He was a member of the VFW Salt City Post. Ralph was a member of the Pastimes Athletic Club for over 65 years and coached the youth baseball team for 13 years. He was a communicant of Blessed Sacrament Church for over 55 years. He was predeceased by his wife, Anne Schill Dodge, in 1983, a son Patrick, and six brothers and two sisters. He is survived by three sons, Michael (Mark) Dodge, of Mattydale, Peter (Monica Cappa), of E. Syracuse, Ralph E. (Susan) Dodge, of Minoa; daughter-in-law Julie Cook, of LaFayette; grandchildren John, Donna and Stephan Dodge, Mackenzie Cook; and great-grandchildren Allison, Lindsay, John Katie and Deanna. Services: 10 a.m. Friday at Gang Memorial Chapel, 10:30 a.m. in Blessed Sacrament Church. Burial in Assumption Cemetery. Friends may call Thursday 4 to 7 p.m. at the funeral home, 104 Fordham Rd. at Teall Ave.

Published in Syracuse Post Standard on June 1, 2011

[NI16117] US Navy in WW II

[NI16119] Enrolled in WW II in 1939.

[NI16120] Gilbert Arthur Dodge
Died July 12, 2000
TRAVERSE CITY - Gilbert Arthur Dodge, 73, of Traverse City, died Wednesday at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City.
Born Feb. 5, 1927, in Detroit, he was the son of John G. and Gladys E. (Collins) Dodge. On Dec. 27, 1969, in Detroit, he married the former May Atkinson of Kendal Cumbria, England.
Gilbert was a university campus director at Wayne State University, retiring April 25, 1984. Prior to that he had worked for the Santa Fe Railroad in Los Angeles. He served with Army Transportation Corp during the Korean War, completed active service in 1955 and resigned his commission in 1965. Gilbert was a member of the American Institute of Planners, Michigan Group of Planners and Theta XI Fraternity University of South California, where he received his BA. Master of Urban Planner was received at Wayne State University. He brought his lovely wife from England where she was a head mistress. Gilbert became a member of Grace Episcopal Church in December, 1998.
He is survived by his wife, May Dodge, of Traverse City; mother, Gladys E. Dodge of Detroit; brother, Neil G. Dodge of W. Bloomfield and a nephew, Robert M. Dodge of Denver.
Gilbert Arthur Dodge
Died July 12, 2000
TRAVERSE CITY - Gilbert Arthur Dodge, 73, of Traverse City, died Wednesday at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City.
Born Feb. 5, 1927, in Detroit, he was the son of John G. and Gladys E. (Collins) Dodge. On Dec. 27, 1969, in Detroit, he married the former May Atkinson of Kendal Cumbria, England.
Gilbert was a university campus director at Wayne State University, retiring April 25, 1984. Prior to that he had worked for the Santa Fe Railroad in Los Angeles. He served with Army Transportation Corp during the Korean War, completed active service in 1955 and resigned his commission in 1965. Gilbert was a member of the American Institute of Planners, Michigan Group of Planners and Theta XI Fraternity University of South California, where he received his BA. Master of Urban Planner was received at Wayne State University. He brought his lovely wife from England where she was a head mistress. Gilbert became a member of Grace Episcopal Church in December, 1998.
He is survived by his wife, May Dodge, of Traverse City; mother, Gladys E. Dodge of Detroit; brother, Neil G. Dodge of W. Bloomfield and a nephew, Robert M. Dodge of Denver.

[NI16121] No issue.

[NI16131] Nathaniel DODGE, a VT farmer, who went to Oneida County, New York, and there taught school and singing school, and married Miss Eunice PERRY, of CT, and reared a family of four children: Orpha, deceased; Mary, married her cousin Andrew PERRY and both are deceased

[NI16132] US Marines in Viet Nam

[NI16141] Enlisted at age 30 into WW II; Rank Staff Sgt. served in Iwo Jima, Saipan, Okinowa; considered to be an outstanding decoder....spent some time after the war "speaking" in Morse Code during sleep. Contracted Dengue Fever while overseas and thought it to be incredibly difficult. Never interested in talking about the war or any exploits...said he was often so tired that he never gave it a thought when he slept on ammo dumps; sang on Armed Forces radio; enjoyed San Diego and Hawaii; but never wanted to revisit the Japanese islands again.

[NI16164] Had her name legally changed to Jamie Dodge Byrnes.

[NI16167] Last heeard from dec 30 2012

[NI16176] Post-Standard, The (Syracuse, NY ) - April 1, 1989

Deceased Name: William James Dodge

Services for William J. Dodge, 59, of Three Rivers Apartments, Clay, who died Thursday at his home, will be at 9:30 a.m. Monday at Allanson-Glanville-Tappan Funeral Home, Phoenix. Spring burial will be in Phoenix Rural Cemetery.

Calling hours will be 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home, 919 Main St.

A native of Syracuse, Mr. Dodge lived in Clay seven years. He was a cab driver with Ace Taxi Co., Syracuse, and was a former house painter.

Mr. Dodge was a member of the Loyal Order of the Moose. He served three years in the Army and nine years in the Air Force and was a member of the Valley Post of the American Legion.

Surviving are a son, William J. Jr. of Syracuse; three daughters, Gloria Sprague, Bonnie Dodge and Terry Sardella, all of Syracuse; four brothers, Duane and Richard, both of Syracuse, Michael of Hanover, Pa., and Charles of Rantoul, Ill.; five sisters, Jeanne Luteran of Syracuse, Beverly Graziano of Central Square, Dolores Tuttle of Fredericksburg, Va., Janet D'Aoust of Phoenix and Virginia Goulet of West Monroe; and several grandchildren, nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles

[NI16182] July 17, 2012
Michael A. Dodge, 65, of Brodhead, WI, formerly of Syracuse, NY, passed away on Tuesday, July 17, 2012. He was the son of William and Alice (Marshall) Dodge.
Mike was a shoe technician and had worked for H.H. Brown Shoe Co. of Connecticut, traveling the United States and overseas.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday, July 21, 2012, at the D.L. NEWCOMER FUNERAL HOME, BRODHEAD, WI. Online condolences may be made at dlnewcomerfuneralhome.com

Publisheed in the Syacuse Post Standard july 19 & 20 20012

[NI16185] Title: Freshwater Families Research and Genealogy, Edition: 2nd Edition Revised and Updated
Author: Edelblute, Clara (Freshwater); Freshwater, Ralph; Freshwater, Harold
Publication: Closson Press, Apollo, Pennsylvania, 1990

[NI16190] Sgt in WW II

[NI16230] Twin to Lydia Dodge.

[NI16231] Twin to Desire Dodge.

[NI16239] Betweeen 1910 & 1920 the family moves to Seattle King County, Washington

[NI16246] A sea Captain.

[NI16298] Mrs. John C. Champion,, a well known and highly esteemed resident of this city, died at her home, 401 N. Washington street at 10:45 Wednesday night. She had been confined to her bed, with a general breaking down of the system, for the past nine weeks.

Mrs. Champion was born in Rondout and was a daughter of the late William B. and Rhoda Dodge. Her maiden name was Harriett Barlow Dodge. In Westerly, RI on September 21, 1868, she was married to Mr. Champion. She came to Rome to reside 13 years ago and had lived in the home where she died for the past 44 years. Mr. Champion died on October 29, 1899. She is survived by three children, Mrs. Walter B. Johnson of this city, William Alexander Champion and John Cross Champion, both of New York, and a niece, Miss Mary Waterman Champion, who has always made her home with her aunt.

Mrs. Chamption was of bright and sunny disposition. She was kind and charitable and always found happiness in doing for others. She was an active member of Zion Episcopal Church and also took a great interest in the Rome Hospital, of whose board of trustees she was a member. She had many firends who will deeply regret her death.

[NI16305] No Children

[NI16310] Death Record in Cass County, MI Liber B. Pg. 171 Age 89 yrs, 10 mos, 19 days Retired Merchant, widowed

[NI16313] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 150
page 170

Mrs. Vivian Dodge Huntoon.
DAR ID Number: 149526
Born in Islesboro, Maine.
Wife of Morgan Huntoon.
Descendant of John Gilkey, as follows:
1. Edward Everett Dodge m. 1886 Fanny Judson Gilkey (b. 1868).
2. Paris Gilkey m. Jane Sherman.
3. Nelson Gilkey (b. 1814) m. 1838 Angeline Pendleton.
[p.170] 4. Thomas Gilkey m. 1792 Mercy Ames (b. 1772).
5. John Gilkey m. 1766 Sylvinia Thomas (1748-1832).
John Gilkey (1744-1818), a patriot, was taken prisoner by the British, 1780, and confined at Fort George, Castine, Maine. He died in Islesboro, Maine.
Also No. 117550.

[NI16318] Age at death 56 yrs, 1mo, 24 das.

[NI16330] Died in Civil War.

[NI16333] Died Age 73 yrs, 10 mos 20 days.

Wife of Hiram Cox. The 1900 census states she had 6 childen, 2 living. Her dead are beside her, Hiram Jr, John, Wilbert and Zeruah.

Jasper and Delia/Zelia, who was 17 in 1870, were the ones who lived to adulthood.

They married November 25, 1849. Witnesses were John Cox of Penn Township and Philo B. White of Wayne Township; the ceremony performed by Hendrick Nash, Justice of the Peace. Hiram was 30 she was 17.

She would seem to have been named after her grandmother, Lucinda R. Grinnell. She had a sister Zelia, who would appear to be the namesake of her eldest daughter.

[NI16334] !TWO MARRIAGES:

1-GEORGE LONGSDUFF ON MAR 9, 1856, ONE DAUGHTER, IDA BORN 1857.
2-FRANCIS M DODGE.

[NI16339] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, was age 50. Lived 1319 Cooper, Lansing MI.

[NI16340] Died at 76 yrs, 4mos, 10 das

[NI16351] Served in WW II in the Army Air corps. Enlisted 12 Dec 1941, Syacuse, New York Private

[NI16369] Death Record in Cass County, MI Age at death 11 Mos, 28 days

[NI16382] Age 75 yrs, 6mos,. 20 days

[NI16383] Notes found in the Michigan State Library, Lansing MI: Moved to Los Angeles CA in 1900. Married to Millie Ruple of Vandalia, she died Dec 1940. Had one son, Neil Dodge of San Francisco, brother Jess of Detroit, George & Milo and 1/2 sister Ida VanAntwerp, Howard Twp, Cass Co. Was once a barber in Cass County, MI.
Death in San Francisco CA, age 75+ yrs. Was cremated and returned to Lily Lake Cem. Cass County, MI.
California Death Record says he died in Alameda CA

[NI16384] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, age 48. Lived in Wakelee MI.

[NI16385] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, age 52. Lived in Three Rivers Michigan. Occupation: Barber. His shop was at the corner of Main & Portage Streets.
Home was on Spring Street.

[NI16387] 1861 CANADA CENSUS: LIVED IN ONTARIO, NORTHUMBERLAND CO, HAMILTON TWP.
AGE AT HIS NEXT BIRTHDAY, HE WILL BE 2 YRS. LIVING WITH HIS PARENTS, THOM
AS & MARY, TWO BROTHERS, JOSEPH & THOMAS AND SISTER, NANCY.

MARRIAGE LICENSE IN CASS COUNTY MI: MARRIED DEC 23 1895 BY HALE H MILLER,
MINISTER. ROBERT WAS 36, LIVED AT MARCELLUS, BLANCHE WAS 20, LIVED IN
VANDALIA. WITNESSES: C O DODGE OF VANDALIA & NETTIE RUPLE OF VANDALIA.
FROM CASS COUNTY MI MARRIAGES LIBER D, Pg 116.

LIVED IN CANADA, N. DAKOTA, MICH.

DEATH FROM KAKAMAZOO CO CLERK BOOK 2, Pg 258-1935. AGE 75 YRS, 8 MOS,
8 DAYS. RETIRED FARMER. CAUSE: CHRONIC MYOCARDITIS WITH MITRAL INSUFFICI
ENCY.
RESIDENCE: 906 REED ST, KALAMAZOO MI.
BURIED FISH LAKE CEMETERY, CASS COUNTY MI.

[NI16389] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, age 42. Lived RFD Box 312, Lansing MI.

[NI16393] Served in the Civil War. Enlisted Aug 31st in Cleveland Ohio Disccharged 26 Jun 1865. Served 9 mos 25 days. Private in Company B, 177th Ohio Infantry. Had a meat market in Vandilia and Traveled to St Louis Missouri to Purchase Cattle. A grandaughter named Aileen Bailey said he bought materials for his daughter Blanch to be made into dresses.
MILITARY RECORD: SERVED IN CIVIL WAR. ENLISTED AUG 31, 1864 IN CLEVELA ND OH. DISCHARGED JUN 26, 1865. SERVED 9 MOS, 25 DAYS PRIVATE IN CO. B, 177TH OHIO INFANTRY. I HAVE COPIES OF THIS RECORD. !MARRIED TWO TIMES: 1 - MARY A JONES ON 21 APR 1860, SHE DIED A SHORT TIME LATER, NO CHILDREN. 2 - LUCRETIA DEAL. THERE WAS NO PUBLIC RECORD OF THIS MARRIAGE IN CASS Co. WHEN LUCRETIA APPLIED FOR A WIDOW'S PENSION, FRIENDS AND RELATIVES WROTE AFFIDAVITS THAT THERE WAS A MARRIAGE. IN THE THE 1910 CENSUS, LUCRETIA STATED SHE HAD 11 CHILDREN, 5 WERE LIVING. OCCUPATION: HAD A MEAT MARKET IN VANDALIA AND TRAVELED TO ST LOUIS, MO TO PURCHASE CATTLE. A GRAND Daughter, AILEEN BAILEY TOLD ME HE BOUGHT MATERIAL IN ST LOUIS FOR HIS DAUGHTER, BLANCHE, TO BE MADE INTO DRESSES. DEATH CERTIFICATE STATES HE WAS A STOCK BUYER. BURIED IN LILLY LAKE CEMETERY, CASS County Michigan

[NI16394] Stephen died in Airplane crash while on a Mission for the U.S. Airforce

[NI16401] Died at 83 yrs, 10 mos, 11 days

[NI16403] There were no children born to this couple

[NI16404] MARRIAGE TO PEARL MIKESELL 10 SEP 1885

[NI16406] !MARRIED TO MARY CATHERINE FISHER, NO CHILDREN.

!OCCUPATION: AGENT FOR GRAND TRUNK RAILROAD IN KALAMAZOO MI

!I HAVE A COPY OF JESSE'S WILL FRON KALAMAZOO CO PROBATE COURT.

[NI16408] Never Married. Lived in Elkhart, Indiana.

[NI16423] 2. Wilbert COX

[NI16440] Death record Cass County, MI Pg. 223 Aged 69 yrs, 5 Mon, 16 da

[NI16456] Charles E. Dodge, Sr., 95, of Greeley, died Wednesday, April 20, 2016 at Fairacres Manor. He was born on July 15, 1920 in Moberly, Randolph County, Missouri to Louie Julius and Ethel Florence (Lester) Dodge.

Charles grew up in Missouri where he attended school. After his education he worked on the family farm, later helping an uncle with his farm. Charles then worked at a CCC Camp (Civilian Conservation Corps).

On September 11, 1942 he married Ione M. Gross in Virginia. She died on August 5, 1978. He married Delphine M. Dahler on March 5, 1980 in Greeley. She died on February 25, 2005.

Charles enlisted in the US Army on October 10, 1940. He served in the European Theater during WWII. He was honorably discharged on October 4, 1945. He attained the rank of Tech 5 and received the American Defense Service Ribbon, European African Middle Eastern Theater Campaign, US Army overseas bar and the Good Conduct Medal.

Charles was a life member of Adamson-Warmuth Post No. 6624, VFW and a member of American Legion Post No. 18, Greeley and the Last Patrol. He also was a member of First United Methodist Church in Greeley.

Charles worked for Snow White Grocery, Paul King Grocery, Miller's Grocery National Grocery and Ted & Chet's Grocery, all in Greeley. He later worked for Greeley Meat Company. He was a meat cutter for 31 years.

Charles loved fishing, time in the mountains and time at the cabin up the Poudre.

Charles is survived by a daughter, son-in-law, son, daughter-in-law, sister, six grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren [survivors names omitted].

He was preceded in death by four sisters and two brothers.

Graveside service, with military honors, will be at 1:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at Sunset Memorial Gardens.--Stoddard Funeral Home

[NI16457] She died at Fairacres manor at 90 years of age.

[NI16461] Died in a motor cycle accident.

[NI16463] "Young Son" meaning youngest son.
"Young son." Sept. 12, 1748 Jason Allen was appointed as his guardian,
and he was upwards of 14 years of age. He sold land, 1753, in Montville
to Jeremiah Vallet, said land formerly belonging to his father Israel..

[NI16472] Aged 16 yrs 6mos and 9das

[NI16474] Died as a young child

[NI16475] !OCCUPATION: FREIGHT AGENT FOR GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAIL ROAD IN KALAMAZ
OO MI

[NI16485] Was next to the youngest in a family of fourteen children, and passed his child hood among the Berkshire Hills in Massachusetts; when about seven his father removed with family to Wayne, Ohio, and there, in the uncertain schools of that new settlement, he made a beginning in the way of education. On arriving at manhood decided to enter the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and after he had completed his studies at Western Reserve College, Hudson, Ohio, entered the Theological Seminary at Alexandria, Va., where after graduation was ordained by Bishop Moore in 1841. His life in the ministry was one of untiring zeal, until the failure of his health obliged him to give up all active work, when he retired to Painesville, Ohio, and there made his home the remainder of his life . He was a man of dignified and distinguished appearance, six ft. in height, with black eyes and black hair. Although somewhat reserved in man ner, he was genial in his nature, and took great interest in the "Masons" and "Knights Templar," of both of which he was an enthusiastic member. He traveled extensively, and numbered among his friends many men distinguished in church and state. He died at the age of 77, and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Fremont, Ohio, not far from the grave of President Hayes, whose friendship he enjoyed during many years of his life.
Birth: 10 FEB 1812 in New Marlboro, Berkshire County, Massachusetts
Death: 5 NOV 1889 in Painesville, Geauga County, Ohio

[NI16488] Enlisted in US Army 30 Oct 1942

[NI16565] Co

[NI16581] Gouverneur Tribune Press - December 4, 1929
William Earle Dodge, age 73 years, died Wednesday evening, Nov 27, after a long illness at the home of Dr. F. W. Delmage where he had resided for several years. The funeral was held at the home Saturday afternoon at two o'clock, Rev. V. O. Boyle, rector of Trinity Episcopal church, Gouverneur, officiating. Interment was in Hermon cemetery. Mr. Dodge had been a familiar figure in Hermon for many years as he had spent almost all of his life here and for several years past had been night operator in the telephone office. As he was an only child, no near relatives survive, but he leaves a host of friends who sincerely mourn his passing.

[NI16584] "The younger son Adam2, born about 1672, died early in 1739, married in the 'meeting house at Westbury, according to the good order used among' Friends, this 5th day of 11th month, 1731-2, Phebe Willits, born 14th of 2d month, 1699, died at Cowneck 7th of 9th month, 1782, daughter of Richard and Abigail (Powell) Willits, of Jericho. This Richard Willits was the fourth of the five children of Richard and Mary (Washburne) Willits the immigrants, and was born 1st month, 1660. His mother, Mary Willits, was long a minister among Friends, and his daughter Phebe, when in 1731, she married Adam Mott, the younger son, had already been a minister for several year
The land on the shore of the Sound, on the western side of the entrance to Hempstead Harbor, which the younger son Adam bought of his brother Richbell for ú269, on the 2d of April, 1715, became his home, and has remained in the family until this day. He built the earlier part of the low- beamed, two-story, shingled house still standing a few hundred yards from the shore, and there his children were born and there he died, leaving a well stocked farm of nearly six hundred acres of land. His will, dated 3d September, 1738, proved 28th February, 1739 (New York Surrogate's office, L. 13, p. 165), leaves a competence to his widow, and a handsome dowry for a farmer's daughter to his eldest child Elizabeth, and a large farm with a farmer's outfit to each of his two sons. The will is in part quoted elsewhere, in the account of his grandson ADAM MOTT who married ANNE MOTT a great-granddaughter of his brother Richbell. About three years after the death of the "younger son Adam," his widow Phebe married the second time, the 28th of 11th month, 1741, Tristram Dodge, whence she has always been known among her descendants as grandmother Dodge. Tristram was already a widower with one son, Joseph Dodge, but she had no children after her second marriage. Grandmother Dodge traveled much as a minister, visited England and Wales. She was the mother of Adam Mott's three children, and she brought them up in "the old place," with their stepfather until Stephen, the youngest came of age in 1757; when, under their father's will, and in 1752 and 3, in case she married again, she left it, and it came to her son Adam, with the eastern half of the great farm, and the western part was set off to Stephen. The survey by their father-in-law, Samuel Willis is still extant, and is here copied in fac simile. On the portion assigned to him Stephen built his house, a quarter of a mile westerly from "the old place" of his brother Adam, on the sheltered slope of the hill, and here he lived and died, and here his grand-children are still living.

[NI16585] Baptized as an adult in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New
London, Connecticut, by Rev. James. Hillhouse, Second Congressional Church of North Parish. With his wife, Elizabeth, he united with the church April 7, 1723. In 1725, he sold land given him by his father in Montville, to his brother, Israel, and removed to Colchester, Connecticut. He afterwards removed to Canterbury, Connecticut. Norwich town records says: "John Dodge of Canterbury died November 16, 1776, in the 87th or 88th year of his age, as said by his son, Edward, at whose request this record is made." The following baptisms are from Montville church records. Children: John, baptized March 10, 1723, died January 23, 1794 (This date of death taken from church records of Hanover, a town adjoining Canterbury.)

Theron Royal Woodward, Member New England Historic Genealogic Society, Old Colony Historical Society, Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge, Lanward Pub Co, Chicago, IL (1904), p 11

[NI16644] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951. Age 55, lived 14615 Snowden, Detro
it MI.
Death date & place from Social Security Death Index

[NI16645] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951. Age 47, lived 1706 Anderson,
South Bend IN.
Lived same address 1962, South Bend City Directory, worked for Bendix.

[NI16647] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, was age 61, living 630 W Lusker, Elkhart I
N,
dated 1951

[NI16648] Moved with parents to Los Angeles CA in 1900, and living in San Francisco in 1941

[NI16675] !BURIED LITTLE FISH LAKE CEMETERY, CASS CO MI

!SOUTH BEND IN CITY DIRECTORY FOR 1930, Pg 139. CLAUDE & ELLEN LIVING
925 CEDAR, CLAUDE WAS A CORE MAKER.

[NI16676] !BURIED IN MARCELLUS CEMETERY, MARCELLUS MI

[NI16678] !OCCUPATION: CUSTOMER SERVICE WITH CONSUMERS POWER CO FOR 43 YEARS.

[NI16681] !OCCUPATION: SCHOOL TEACHER 4 YEARS
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEDICAL CENTER, SURGICAL SUPPLY INSTRU
MENT
PROCESSER.

[NI16702] Baptized as a child in 2nd Cong. Church of North Parish (Montville) New
London, Connecticut, by Rev. Jas. Hillhouse.

[NI16725] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951. Age 59, living 2133 Parkview Pl,
Elkhart IN.

[NI16734] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, was 55 yrs old, lived in Three Rivers MI.

[NI16735] Named in Uncle Jess Dodge Will, 1951, age was 46. Lived in New Carlisle IN.
ahaas365@comcast.net Ardith Haas

[NI16736] died at 12 yr 5 mo.

[NI16760] Graduate of Bates College 1949; Upon graduation, Marion worked for Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. in Hartford, CT. With husband David Moseley - moved to Ellington, CT. Moved to farm in West Buxton, ME in 1956. Now lives in Westbrook, ME, having sold the farm in 1998.

Marion took a strong interest in local government and the nurture and schooling of her four children, including an unsuccessful run for the town's School Board.

For many years she played the organ every Sunday morning at a nearby prison. She served many different positions as lay worker at Buxton Centre Baptist Church, and South Gorham Baptist Church.

[NI16767] Never Married.

[NI16770] CAUSE OF DEATH: CANCER OF LIVER. AGE AT DEATH 65 YRS, 2 MO, 23 DAYS.
RESIDENCE: 1011 LAY BLVD, KALAMAZOO MI. FROM KALAMAZOO CO DEATH RECORD,
LIBER 1, Pg 50-1940.
BURIED IN FISH LAKE CEMETERY, CASS CO MI.
Age at death 65 yrs, 2 mos, 23 days

[NI16775] !CCUPATION: LETTER CARRIER

!LIVED: MICH, OKLAHOMA, COLORADO, FLORIDA and PENNSYLVANIA.

[NI16776] OCCUPATION: PASTOR.

Favorite Bible Verse:
1 Samuel 12:24
But be sure to fear the LORD and serve HIM faithfully wi
th all your heart;
consider what great things HE has done for you.

LIVED: PERU, SOUTH AMERICA; MICHIGAN; MARYLAND; PENNSYLVANIA.

COLLEGES: MOODY BIBLE INSTITUTE; LANCASTER BIBLE; CAPITOL SEMINARY.

[NI16786] !FAMILY INFORMATION OBTAINED FROM HILDA BROWN

[NI16795] Dies at Wade Park, VA, Hospital. He played Snare Drom at HS & at Ohio State University in the Marching band. After a hitch in the US Army he return to Madison and worked for a number of Newspapers and print shops.

[NI16799] !CAUSE OF DEATH: ARTHRITIS & COMPLICATIONS. BURIED LITTLE FISH LAKE
CEMETERY.

!FAMILY INFO FROM MARY PATTERSON

[NI16800] No Issue

[NI16803] Died insane.

[NI16818] !CAUSE OF DEATH: HEART. BURIED MARCELLUS CEMETERY.
OBITUARY from ROOTSWEB MESSAGE BOARDS, CASS CO MI

!FAMILY INFORMATION FROM RUBY FOX

[NI16821] !PARENTS ARE WILLIAM HEINZE & BESSIE BROWGH

[NI16842] No Children.

[NI16844] Daniel was an early settler of Sharon township, Potter county, where he engaged in farming and lumbering, and resided until his death. By his first wife, Adelia Newcomb, he had five children: George W., Catherine L. (Mrs. E. D. Holmes), Mary A. (Mrs. Ralph Burdic), Jennie Lind, and Jerome D. (a physician at Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio). His second wife was Jeanette, daughter of Lewis Wood, of Sharon township. Daniel fought in the civil War in thee 16th Calvary for New York.

[NI16848] George W. Dodge was reared in Pike, New York He was a soldier in the Civil war, enlisting September 21, 1861, in Company F, Fifth New York Cavalry. He was wounded in the foot at Hagerstown, Maryland., in July, 1863, and was honorably discharged after a service of three years and one month. After the war he located in Sharon township, where he was engaged in the lumber business with his father for a number of years. In 1878 he embarked in mercantile business at Shinglehouse, in which he has since been engaged, and has been a member of the firm of Dodge & Newton, at Rixford, McKean county, since 1879. He also carries on the homestead farm. His wife is Emma, daughter of Nelson and Lorinda (White) Parmenter, of Sharon township, and they have three sons, Ulric S., Fred and Daniel. Mr. Dodge is a prominent citizen and merchant of Shinglehouse. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, and of the G.A.R. In politics he is a Republican, and in 1888 was elected member of the assembly from his district.

[NI16864] Died in a Car accident. Had a Heart Attack the morning of his son Ronald's Funeral in the Barn. Died on the way to the hospital while being driven there by son Paul "Butch" Dodge & nephew Richard "Dick" Cook.

[NI16866] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 49
page 8

Mrs. Sarah Ellen Dodge Finch.
DAR ID Number: 48015
Born in Rockland, N. Y.
Wife of William Edward Finch.
Descendant of Daniel Dodge.
Daughter of Augustus Dodge and Ella Frances Jones, his wife.
Granddaughter of Cyrus C. Dodge and Sarah Ann Reed, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Israel Dodge and Elizabeth Austin, his wife.
Gr-gr-granddaughter of Daniel Dodge and Mary, his wife.
Daniel Dodge (1728-1821) served as a private in the New York Levies. He is buried in the old cemetery at Rockland, New York, and upon his tombstone is inscribed ?A Revolutionary Hero.?
Also No. 44822.

[NI16931] BAMFORD DODGE was born in Nova Scotia, October 22, 1845. In 1850 he came with his parents to Ridgeway, Iowa county, Wisonsin In 1861 he enlisted in Co. G of the 11th Inf., and served until wounded at Mobile, Ala., near the close of the war. In 1868 he married Miss Anna Reeve, and moved to the village of Mazomanie in 1891. For many years he traveled for a wholesale grocery house of Milwaukee. He died September 14, 1895. The children are: Maud, who has been postmistress for the last four years; Lulu, now Mrs. R. Roberts of Blue Mounds, and Bamford.

[NI16948] He went away August 23, 1833, supposedly went west. Samuel E. Dodge we believe enlisted in the Third Regiment of Artillery, Company B on 14 November 1833 and was killed 28 December 1835 in a battle known as Dadeís Massacre. The Dade Massacre was an action that occurred during the Second Seminole War. On December 23, 1835, 107 U.S. troops under Major Francis Dade departed from Fort Brooke (present-day Tampa) and headed up the King Highway (military road) on a resupply and reinforce mission to Fort King (present-day Ocala). The troops marched for five quiet days until December 28, when they were just south of the present-day city of Bushnell, Florida. They were passing through a high hammock with oaks, pines, cabbage palms, and saw palmetto when a shot rang out. The troops were ambushed by about 180 Seminole Indians. Dade, who was on horseback, was the first to be killed. Many of the soldiers, in two single file lines, were also quickly killed; few managed to get their flintlock rifles from underneath their heavy winter coats. Only 3 Americans purportedly survived the attack. One was killed the next day by a Seminole. Ransome Clarke, although badly wounded made it back to Fort Brooke, where he provided the only narrative from the Army's side of what had occurred. A third soldier also returned to Fort Brooke, but died a few months later without leaving a report of the battle. The dead soldiers were buried at the site

[NI16957] Note name is given as Naham Gideon Dodge.

[NI16958] Wilford Edward Dodge, Serial Number: 3159627; Birth Place: Seal Harbor, Maine; Residence: Seal Harbor; Comment: Ind: LB No. 2, New Britain, Conn., 25 July 1918. Pvt 1st cl 21 Nov 1918. Org: 151 Dep Brig to 5 Aug 1918; CompanyF 14 Regt Inf to disch. Overseas service: None. Hon disch on demob: Jan. 22, 1919.

[NI16965] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 37
page 311

Mrs. Susie Dodge Hallock
DAR ID Number: 37881
Born in Terrytown, Pennsylvania.
Wife of Henry J. Hallock.
Descendant of Joseph Elliott, Elisha Keeler, Henry Elliott, Thomas Lewis, James Turrell, Ensign John Keeler, Capt. John Warner and Oliver Dodge.
Daughter of John Franklin Dodge (1814-71) and Melissa Elliott (1818-81), his wife, m. 1842.
Granddaughter of Edmund Dodge (1777-1861) and Rebecca Franklin (1783-1875), his wife, m. 1810; John Elliott (1791-1876) and Marietta Keeler (1791-1864), his wife, m. 1816.
Gr.-granddaughter of Oliver Dodge and Abigail Harris (1748-1837) his wife, m. 1773; Joseph Elliott and Debora Lewis (1770-1840), his wife, m. 1787; Elisha Keeler and Lucina Warner (1767-1834), his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Jonathan Dodge (1721-94) and Marcy Williams, [p.311] his wife, m. 1744; Henry Elliott and Mary Kegwin, his wife; Thomas Lewis and Mary Turrell (1748-1813), his wife, m. 1768; John Keeler and Abigail Copley, his wife; John Warner and Hanna Westover (1739-75), his first wife, m. 1763.
Gr.-gr.-gr.-granddaughter of James Turrell and Abigail Buck, his wife.
Elisha Keeler, (1764-1814), enlisted 1782 as a private in the Conn. militia. He was born in Wilton, Conn.; died in Stevensville, Pa.
Joseph Elliott, (1755-1849), was a soldier at Wyoming, and was one of the last survivors of the battle. He received a pension for his service. He was born in Stonington, Conn.; died in Merryall, Pa.
John Warner, (1739-1800), was promoted from lieutenant to captain of the 2d regiment Conn. militia. He was born and died in New Milford, Conn.
John Keeler, (1722-95), served as ensign in the Conn. militia 1776 raised for the defense of the state. He was born in Wilbur, Conn.; died in Stevensville, Pa.
James Turrell, (1716-1811), served on the Committee of Inspection and Correspondence. He was born and died in Milford, Conn.
Thomas Lewis, (1745-1810), served in the Canadian expedition, and in the defense of Danbury. He was born in New London, and died in Merryall, Pa.
Henry Elliott, (1712-1809), although an old man enlisted with three sons, Joseph, Jabez and John in the defense of Wyoming. He was born in Stonington, Conn.; died in Merryall, Pa.
Oliver Dodge, (1745-1802), served as a private at Bunker Hill. After the war he settled in Pennsylvania. He was born in Colchester, Connecticut; died in Terrytown (Dodgetown), Pennsylvania.

[NI16980] Cemetery, Worc
Cemetery, Worcester
Paper: Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA)
Title: Raymond E. Dodge, 93
Date: January 24, 2002
Section: DEATHS
Page: B7

VENICE, Fla. -- Raymond E. Dodge, 93, of 409 Manatee Court, formerly of Mattapoisett, Mass. and Auburn, Mass., died Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2002 at
home.

He leaves his wife, Josephine (Keating) Dodge; three sons, Ogden M. Dodge of Barrington, R.I., Conway T. Dodge of Thompson, Conn., and Raymond E. Dodge of Holden, Mass.; three daughters, Nancy L. Fistori of Fairhaven, Mass., Pricilla G. Hesford of Charlottesville, Va. and Susan M. Dentch of Northboro, Mass.; 22 grandchildren; and 34 great-grandchildren. His first wife, Gladys M. (Conway) Dodge, died in 1972. He was born in New York, son of Rufus and Julia (Tehan) Dodge, and lived most of his life in Auburn. Mr. Dodge worked 39 years as a general manager at Filene's Department Store, Worcester, Mass., retiring in 1966. He was a member of Epiphany Cathedral and a former member of St. Joseph's Church, Auburn. He was also a member of the Cursillo Movement and an Oblate of St. Benedict, having made his profession in 1951 at St. Anselm's Abbey, Manchester, N.H. He was a member of the Worcester Chamber of Commerce and the Worcester Mercantile Bureau.


The funeral will be held Saturday, Jan. 26, from O'Connor Brothers
Funeral Home, 592 Park Ave., Worcester, with a Mass at 10 a.m. in St.
Joseph's Church, 189 Oxford St., Auburn. Burial will be in St. John's
Cemetery, Worcester. Calling hours are 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, Jan. 25, in
the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be
made to the Sisters of St. Joseph, 637 Cambridge St., Brighton, MA
02135.

Section: DEATHS
Page: B7
Dateline: VENICE, Fla.

[NI16996] 1930 Census New York City

[NI17004] Served in World War II from 1/22/44 to 10/19/45. US NAVY

Clarence Eugene Dodge was born April 9, 1915 in Preston County, WV. He was the son of Bruce Ancil and Reba (Teets) Dodge.

His sister, Dollie Marie, born May 26 the year after, related the following to me while I visited her in her home in Terra Alta, WV about 1998 or 1999. The county sheriff had accused her father, Bruce Ancil Dodge, of having an affair with another woman. When her mother, Reba, heard of the charge, she took Clarence and started toward her parents home. Bruce caught up with her, took Clarence back and put him in the care of his parents, Charles Franklin and Clara Adine (Beatty) Dodge. Her mother was pregnant with her at the time of the separation, so she was raised by her mother at the home of her grandparents, Eugene and Jennie Ellen (Wolfe) Teets. At a social when Marie was of high school age, someone asked if she was going to speak to her brother. When she confessed that she had never seen her brother, they introduced her to him. Marie added that the charge against her father was never proved.

Clarence graduated from Terra Alta High School May 31, 1932, along with 25 other graduates.

He obtained a position with the Imperial Ice Cream Company in Fairmont, Marion County, WV as office manager.

On September 11, 1937, he married Myrtle Ellen Lee Dever, daughter of Martin Luther and Zoe Florence (Boyce) Dever of the Blueville Addition, Grafton, Taylor County, WV. The officiant was Reverend Denver C. Pickens of the First Methodist Episcopal Church in Fairmont, WV and witnesses were the bride's mother, Zoe Florence (Boyce) Dever, sister, Kathryn Imogene Dever, and Willard Harpold. The marriage was in Fairmont, Marion County, WV and was registered in the County Clerk's office in Grafton, Taylor County, WV.

After he left the Imperial Ice Cream Company, he managed the Dunlop Tire Company on Main Street, Grafton, WV.

On January 22, 1944, Clarence reported to the draft board in Fairmont, WV. He began active service on that date in the U. S. Navy. He was assigned to the Naval Training School at Del Monte, CA for electricity and radio training, then to Treasure Island, San Francisco, CA for training in radio electronics. He received an honorable discharge from service on October 19, 1945 with rank of Radio Technician Third Class from the USN Personnel Separation Center in Bainbridge, MD.

Following his service in the Navy, he worked for the US Postal Service Railway Mail Service, initially in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, PA, then in Grafton, WV.

His death came at the young age of 34 years on March 16, 1950 at the Newton D. Baker Veterans Administration (VA) Center in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, WV following nine months of illness. He was buried at the Terra Alta Cemetery in Terra Alta, WV with a military honors.

Surviving him were his widow, his children, Clara Virginia, Charles Luther, Katherine Zoe and Alice Lee, his sister, Dollie Marie (Dodge) Metheny, and mother, Reba (Teets) Dodge.

Although he died at a young age, my father left many treasured memories. He and my mother were a popular young couple, entertaining family and friends frequently. He had a good sense of humor and loved to play practical jokes. He was a devoted husband and father, writing letters to us often while serving in the Navy. He enjoyed taking us all to visit his family in Preston County, WV.

[NI17005] Homemaker & Book keepeeper for their Service Station & mining Operations.

[NI17014] Charleston SC United States Ila Rose Walls MT. PLEASANT - Ila Rose Walls, 81, of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, passed away Saturday, November 17. She was a former resident of Morgantown, WV. She was born on August 18, 1931, in Terra Alta, West Virginia, to Albert Ray Dodge and Verna Catherine (Groves) Dodge. She was the fourth of five Dodge children, with siblings Lucille, Freda, brother Carol Roy, and Joan. On Christmas Day, 1955, she married John Kenneth Walls. Ila Rose dedicated her life to raising their four children and serving the community through the health care profession. She worked for many years at Monongalia General Hospital, eventually leading the phlebotomy laboratory. Later in her career, she founded her own business, the Seneca Phlebotomy Institute, to provide area hospitals with highly skilled technicians for blood specimen collection. Ila Rose lived her life to the fullest, with grace, generosity, and style. She loved music, and this passion led to chairing local fund-raising efforts for the prestigious Charleston Symphony Orchestra. She thoroughly enjoyed the culinary arts, played contract bridge with flair, and, always ready for an adventure, she and Ken enjoyed traveling with family and friends. She energetically remained young at heart, forever appearing and acting younger than her years. She entertained with style, and was the consummate family expert for the planning, hosting, and oversight of social events from weddings to holiday galas. Her devoted husband of 57 years, her four children, and her fourteen grandchildren gather in loving remembrance of Ila Rose to honor and celebrate her vibrant life. Ila Rose's children include Randall and Sandra Walls of Charleston, SC; Judson and Barbara Walls of Warrenton, VA; Cliff and Valerie (Walls) Hefner of Louisville, KY; and Doug and Laurice (Walls) Haynes of Ridgefield, CT. A celebration of her life will be held at Mt. Pleasant Presbyterian Church on Monday, December 3, at 2pm. Visit our guestbook at www.legacy.com/obituaries/ charleston

Res Mount Pleasant, SC in 2002

[NI17035] He studied at Drew Theological Seminary, Syracuse University, and
Cazenovia Seminary, and was a Methodist minister.

Utica Herald Dispatch Tuesday January 4, 1910
DODGE, JAMES W. A.
Jan 4 -- At Yonkers on December 24, 1909, occurred the death of the Rev. James W. A. Dodge, D.D. He was born in Verona September 1, 1853, a son of the late William S. and Margaret Armitage Dodge. He was a graduate of Cazenovia Seminary, Syracuse University and Drew Theological Seminary. He served the following charges in the Methodist churches in the order named. Carmel, Liberty, Marlboro, Chelsea, New York City, Cold Spring St. Paul's at Peekskill, Aubury at Tarrytown and Tuckahoe. The degree of D.D. was conferred upon him by Syracuse University. He married Miss Lila Shurter, who with one sister, Mrs. Helen Ferguson of Utica survives.

[NI17047] Request Photo

Advertisement
John Dodge, Jr
BIRTH10 Mar 1723
New London, New London County, Connecticut, USA
DEATH23 Jan 1794 (aged 70)
Canterbury, Windham County, Connecticut, USA
BURIALNon-Cemetery Burial, Specifically: "Within six rods of the [Dodge] mansion ground [Canterbury] are graves of: Mr. [John] Dodge, his two first wives and two daughters. There are no monuments, nothing more than a simple stone." Hubbard Adams, Canterbury, Jan 12, 1852 Add to Map
MEMORIAL ID33424097 · View Source
SHARE SAVE TOSUGGEST EDITS
MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 0
FLOWERS 4
John Dodge was baptized March 10, 1723.
He married October 23, 1748, Lydia Rogers (Colchester Records) and is then called Junior. Lydia Rogers died September 3, 1770 (Canterbury Records).
John Dodge, Jr. married a second time in Canterbury, December 3, 1770, to Elizabeth Willis. She died December 27, 1785, leaving no issue.
He married a third time (Hanover Church Records) on November 22, 1787, to Mrs. Martha Shaw, who survived him.
As they were Baptists, the Dodges went to the Hanover Church instead of the Congregational Church in Canterbury. They at one time attended the Brunswick Church (so called), which was in the southeast part of the present town of Scotland, Connecticut. The old Dodge place was later included in the limits of the Hanover Society, whose records show that several were received from the Brunswick church.
A copy of a letter in the possession of Dr. John L. Dodge of Groton, Connecticut, written to the Honorable Andrew T. Judson, by Hubbard Adams of Canterbury, Connecticut, January 12, 1852:
"Mr. Dodge [John] came into Canterbury something like ninety years ago and settled on the bank of Little River, near what was then called Brown's Mills. He was a blacksmith by trade and made many instruments for the husbandman that were in use, such as broadaxes, steelyards, etc. I have now in my use broadaxes and a pair of steelyards as true as a die.
"As it respects his family, they were as follows: Mr. John Dodge married for his first wife Miss Lydia Rogers, with whom he lived and raised a large family, and they were as follows: Jordan, John, Israel, Josiah, Lydia, Elizabeth, Jeremiah and Nehemiah…Mr. John Dodge used very often to speak the names of his children arranged so as to rhyme, as follows:
"Jordan and John,
Israel and Josiah,
Lydia and Elizabeth,
Jere and Miah"
Mr. Dodge for his second wife married Miss Elizabeth Willis, with whom he lived a number of years. She also died and left no children. For his third wife, he married Mrs. Martha Shaw. He then died himself…The old mansion ground is plain to be seen. The ground that the old blacksmith shop stood on is very visible to this day. There are within six rods of the mansion ground the graves of five of the family, namely, Mr. Dodge, and his two first wives and two daughters, one an infant. At the graves, there are no monuments of intelligence, nothing more than a simple stone…" [Signed] Hubbard Adams
The record of death of John Dodge, Jr. and his wife Elizabeth and his marriage to Mrs. Martha Shaw was discovered in the Hanover Church Records.
John Dodge died January 22, 1794 (This date of death taken from church records of Hanover, a town adjoining Canterbury.)
Theron Royal Woodward, Member New England Historic Genealogical Society, Old Colony Historical Society, Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge, Lanward Pub Co, Chicago, IL (1904), p 11

John Dodge, Jr. served in the Revolutionary War in Connecticut in Captain Jones Company in Colonel Latimer's Regiment
DAR Ancestor # A032814

[NI17062] Some records spell Linde as Lynds.

[NI17110] OUTSTANDING FOLK ART DOUBLE PORTRAIT OF BOY, GIRL AND DOG. Picture shows
the eldest of two children of Alexander D'Autremont and Abigail Dodge
D'Autremont, being two of their nine children who lived in Angelica, New
York. Their father was a royalist from France who immigrated to build
asylum for the King and Queen of France. Their mother is the daughter of
a Revolutionary War soldier who fought at Bunker Hill. Portrait shows
young girl in pink dress next to younger brother with white outfit. Her
arm is around his shoulder and his arm is around their dog. Left side has
red draped curtain. Painting is untouched and in original condition.
Framed in 19th century frame which has been with the painting for a very
long time but not of the same period as the painting. This painting
descends directly along the family line and has never been offered
before. A wonderful opportunity to acquire a clean fresh folk portrait.
SIGHT SIZE: 24 1/2"h x 29 1/2"w. CONDITION: Excellent. Needs cleaning.
9-79762 (10,000-20,000)

[NI17121] Some records record this as Lyons. Some records record this as lynde.
Some records record him as Lynds.

[NI17133] Twin to Lyman Dodge.

[NI17138] Harry was Cremated

[NI17144] Mia Dodge Haven, 86, of Hampstead, died Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010, at her home. Mia was born Dec. 26, 1923, in Macon, GA, daughter of the late Leslie C. and Mia Dodge. Her husband, Stuart F. Haven, preceded her in death. Mrs. Haven was a member of St. Jude the Apostle Catholic Church. She is survived by two children, daughter, Mia Callahan (Bill) of Burlington, VT, and son, Philip Talbott (Cathy) of Hampstead, NC; five grandchildren, Lucas Trono (Genevieve), Derek Trono (Mandi), Brady Callahan (Rebekah), Kevin Talbott (Magdalene), and Cate Talbott; and three great-grandchildren, Alexa Talbott, Sophia Talbott, and Parker Trono. A funeral service was held Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2010, at Andrews Hampstead Chapel, with Rev. Terrence Collins officiating. Interment followed in Sea Lawn Memorial Park. A Hampstead Chapel Service

[NI17146] Twin to Lina Dodge.

[NI17153] Orrin Dodge was a native of Connecticut, but removed with his parents to the Empire State in his childhood. He was reared in Madison County and received an excellent education for that day. He afterwards engaged in teaching and was very successful in that profession. He married Janet Beswick, a native of Madison County, who died at the birth of her only child. Shortly afterwards, Mr. Dodge removed to Troy, N. Y., and took charge of weigh-locks on the Erie Canal, which business he followed for several years. On severing his connection with the canal company he engaged in the mercantile and lumber trade at Troy as a partner of Jabez Burrows, whose sister Laura he married for his second wife. They carried on the business conjointly for a few years, when having been converted, Orrin entered the ministry of the Baptist Church and continued to follow that holy calling until disqualified by age and failing health. He took charge of churches at various places for a number of years, but in 1848 became the District Secretary of the Missionary Union and for twenty-one years served his church faithfully in that capacity. He died in May, 1884, at the age of eighty-two years. He was a worthy Christian gentleman and did much to promote the interests of religion, especially in the missionary field, where his influence and power were greatly felt for many years

[NI17158] Jonathan Dodge was born 13 Oct 1785 in Wylusing, Lucerne Co., PA, and died 12 Feb 1854 in Stockdale, Pike Co. OH. He married (1) Margaret Atherton 08 Oct 1808 in Portville, Cattaraugus Co., NY, daughter of Asahel Atherton and Amy Jenkins. She was born 01 Mar 1788 in Luzerne Co., PA, and died 20 Jan 1850 in Scioto Co., Madison Twn, OH. He married (2) Rebecca Bedal 11 Apr 1852 in Scioto, Ohio. She was born Abt. 1804 in KY, and died 28 Sep 1881 in Scioto Co, OH. She was a widow of Caleb Bennett.

As noted in the Preface, Jonathan left home in Terrytown, PA with his brothers and sisters to settle in Western New York prior to his marriage in October 1808. The Early History of Portville notes: "the first marriage was that of Jonathan Dodge and Eunice Atherton in 1809". This does not agree with the Jonathan's Bible entry of 1808 nor is the name Eunice correct as it has not been viewed in other references to Margaret nor is it in the Bible. It does suggest that a marriage between a Dodge and Atherton did occur in Cattaraugius County early. It is noted that Asahel Atherton is on the same census page as Jonathan in 1810.

In 1806 Jonathan contracted for land in Range 2, Twn 4 (Hinsdale area) from the Holland Land Co.and is shown in the 1810 Census in the County of Niagara, Olean Township with wife, daughter, and unknown male over 45, and unknown female 10 to 16. Jonathan was noted in Court Records as a juror in October of 1809 and again in 1816. Jonathan also served as a Lieutenant in the 1815 Militia for Cattaraugus County and as Captain in the One Hundred and Seventy-third regiment of Infantry in 1820. In 1813 Jonathan is noted as purchasing Lot 27 in Portville and his brother Lynds Lot 28. In August 21, 1815 Jonathan and Lynds purchased 133 acres in Allegany County from the Holland Land Co. for $432.98 and in May 17, 1817 they purchased 100 acres in Cattaraugus County from the Holland Land Co. for $326.50. Jonathan owned 233 acres, Lynds 183 acres, and Alfred 50 acres in Range 3, Township 1 in 1820. In July 16, 1821 Jonathan and wife Margaret, and Lynds and wife Chloe, sold a lot in the town of Olean for $300.00 to Alexander Mills. Jonathan is not indexed in the 1835 State Census and is believed to have left for Ohio.

By 1840 Jonathan and his family are found in Madison Township, Scioto County, Ohio and in 1841 he recieved a Land Patent for 43 acres in S6 T4N R20W. Jonathan and his sons are listed as farmers in Madison Township, Scioto County, Ohio in 1850 and was a member of the United Brethren Church in neighboring Pike County. Times were not good for the family during the period as Jonathan was to lose his wife, one daughter, and three sons before his own death in 1854. Two years after the death of Margaret, Jonathan remarried to Rebecca (Bedal) Bennett, widow of Caleb Bennett. Jonathan may be buried in Adams Cemetery next to his wife Margaret. A field stone marks a grave between Margaret and son Wilkes.

[NI17184] Served four years in the Union Army in the Civil War. After his return home he wrote, under the pen-name of Peleg Arkwright, and also under his own name for the "Century" and other periodicals. He published a volume of poems, "Love Among the Gamins," 1877, "Mask and Domino," a volume of poems, 1888, and "From the Chapparal to Wall Street." a novel, in 1891.

[NI17187] Immigrated o US in 1854.

[NI17207] Date on Tome stone is one year later 1864 than Our Records.

[NI17214] Oswego Co

[NI17215] Oswego Co

[NI17216] Oswego Co

[NI17219] Oswego Co

[NI17222] Oswego Co
Oswego Co

[NI17223] Oswego Co

[NI17225] Oswego Co

[NI17230] R.L.D Pg 616 states Sally is Jamima Dodge

[NI17281] No Issue,

[NI17303] No issue.

[NI17316] “In 1810 he removed from Lowville, N.Y., to Buffalo, N.Y., where he was one of the first settlers. He was a sufferer from the War of 1812, and was driven from home by the British and Indians on the morning of Dec. 30, 1813, when Buffalo was burned. He was magistrate of Niagara Co., and held numerous offices in the old town of Buffalo and Black Rock. He and wife are buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery."

[NI17328] Marriage record spells Lucy's last name with two t's.

[NI17400] Served in the US Navy World War II

[NI17420] From 1850, Susquehana County, Middleton Twp. Birthdate Calculator figured birth date from date of death.

[NI17421] From 1850, Susquehana County, Middleton Twp.

[NI17426] Living with Father and Mother in Middletown, Susquehanna County, PA in 1879

[NI17454] US NAVY CB WW II

[NI17455] Unmarried

[NI17469] Virginia (Clink) Smith, age 85, passed away July 7, 2006 under the care of Hospice in Orlando, Fla. She was born in Rushville, Pa. on July 4, 1921, daughter of the late Bruce and Cora Davis Dodge. She was predeceased by her daughter, Sandra Clink Pruess; son, Dennis Clink, sister; Shirley Dodge Rosendale; brother, Willard Dodge; and stepson, John R. Smith, Jr. She is survived by her husband, John (Jack) Smith, Orlando, Fla.; daughter, Cynthia Clink Lewis, Montrose, Pa.; five stepchildren, 22 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren. Ginny retired in 1980 from the Commonwealth of PA as Deputy Secretary of the Bureau of Standards, Harrisburg, Pa.

[NI17514] Willard Parker Dodge death which was recorded in the:The Weekly Monitor, Bridgetown, Nova Scotia
NSARM, Halifax, Nova Scotia, mfm #1030 1878 Published on Wednesday

[NI17526] He enlisted as a Private in Col Fred Weissenfelt's company known as the Levies.

On his tombstone are engraved the words "A revolutionary Hero".

[NI17556] Clerk in the US War Dept Office.

James Dodge was born in 1839 in Occanum, Broome County, New York.

In the War Between The States, James served as a private in Company C, 109th Regiment, New York Infantry. Before 1864, he met and married Sarah Elizabeth Blakeney of Baltimore, Maryland. Their first child, Carrie, was born about 1864 in Maryland. James and Sarah had seven more children: Minnie, John, Kate, Hannah, Amos B., Charles C., and an unknown eighth child indicated on census records.

After the war, James and Sarah made their home in Laurel, Prince George's County, Maryland where James was employed as a government clerk. Sarah's widowed mother, Elizabeth Blakeney, resided with them until her death on 1 February 1889. Before 1900, James and family moved to Washington, D.C., where he continued his career as a government clerk.

James died in the District of Columbia on 18 Oct 1907 at age 68. He was buried in Site 17309, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington County, Virginia on 21 Oct 1907.

Civil War Pension record: James Dodge, Company C, 109 Regiment, New York Infantry, was filed in 1907.

[NI17574] Ingram B. Dodge, a long and respected resident of this city, celebrated his eightieth birthday at his home, 232 Broadway, Thursday. The day was pleasantly spent among his relatives and friends, many of whom availed themselves of the opportunity to call and extend to Mr. Dodge their hearty congratulations and good cheer. Dainty refreshments were served, those assisting, Ruth Wheelock, niece and Bertha Grimes, granddaughter. In addition to the calls there was a shower of post cards, about 150, many coming from out of town. A purse of gold was presented to Mr. Dodge by his immediate relatives, also cut flowers and potted plants. No one seeing him would ever take him to be over sixty-five; he is hale and hearty and takes active interest in the city?s affairs and other
matters as well.

Mr. Dodge was born in Middleton, Nova Scotia, in 1835. He was the son of Ambrose and Abbie Dodge. He was named after the famous preacher, Rev. I. E. Bill, for many years pastor of the Pine Grove Meeting House, Middleton. His grandson, at fourteen years of age was called the "Boy Preacher" of his time. Mr. Dodge was one of a large family. There were seven boys and four girls, but three brothers are living, Charles, Robert and Ambrose, all residing in the provinces. At the age of fifteen he came to Salem and learned the carriage business, returning afew years later to the provinces, and engaged in the mill business, setting up saw mills. When he left Salem he carried with him the axles and springs with which he made a three spring express wagon for two horses and this was the first wagon run on axles into Halifax with the exception of the mail coaches. He also made a wagon for his brother Robert that is in use today. He made the first pair of cattle guards at Aylesford Station, N.S. He worked on the opening up of the railroad from Berwick to Waterville, including the big Berwick cut.

Cupid made a trip to the provinces one summer and "Ingram Bill" could not hold out against the little fellow although he had been acquainted with his tricks for fifty years. The pride of his affection came from the United States so Mr. Dodge began to take a sudden liking to return to this country and in 1884 he made the trip and the following year was married to Mrs. Mary A. Grimes, widow of the late Guy Carleton Grimes and mother of Eben Grimes of the firm of Bride, Grimes & Co.

Mr. Dodge took up the carpentry trade, working for the city five years as foreman of the public property department. He worked on many of the school houses, Union Street, and at the time of the cyclone was working on the Essex school house. He worked under Fred Palister and worked for George Smith, contractors, and also the B.& M.R.R. Later years, although not steadily engaged he has been active in various lines of work and was heard to say, "he felt like a boy again."

All wish Mr. Dodge many years of joy.

"We may grow old, but never lose life?s zest; because the road's last turn will be the best."
--
Phil Vogler
P.O. Box 266
Berwick, Nova Scotia
B0P 1E0
http://www.glinx.com/~philv/

[NI17577] Seven children shown in 1910 Census

[NI17588] He ran a car dealership in New York City.

[NI17591] He received the title Captain as a member of the Salvation Army in charge of the USO Mobile Service during WW II.

[NI17609] Never Married

[NI17610] Charles M. Dodge was an industrial engineer in Cleveland, Ohio for the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway from 1924 to 1956. He died of a heart attack Wednesday May 29, 1968 at home, 2424 Fine Drive, Dayton, Ohio at age 64. He moved from 14124 Detroit Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio to Dayton in 1956 and was a stationary engineer for the Dayton school system. He attended Ohio State University. His first wife, Adelaide Boyd Dodge born 1902 in PA, died Oct 31, 1960 at in St. Francis Hospital, Wichita, Kansas and was buried in Calvary Cemetery, Erie, PA. His 2nd wife, Maudie L. Dodge, born Aug. 16, 1907 died Apr. 15, 1999

[NI17613] Mrs. Marjorie Mary (Joseph A) Maddaloni born March 7, 1924 in OH, died Jan 12, 2004 in a Las Vegas, Nevada hospital at age 79; buried in Las Vegas; the former Marjorie Behr of Wichita, KS

[NI17615] David Hamble Dodge born Feb 28, 1929 in Ohio, died July 13, 1995 in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, age 66, a US Marine Corps veteran; WW II formerly Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. buried in Monongahela Cemetery, Braddock Hills, Pennsylvania.

[NI17616] no children

[NI17630] Justice of the Supreme Court of New York.

[NI17646] Born at Port Washington, Town of North Hempstead; at the time of his birth, Port Washington was located in Queens County, L. I.; son of Peter Dodge & Hannah Ketcham; served in the Union Navy during the Civil War; husband of Mary A. Conklin [1844-1931]; Alonzo & Mary were married on 4 April 1871; Alonzo is listed on the 1870 Census - Town of Huntington, Suffolk County, L. I. as a blacksmith; charter member of the Huntington Protection Fire Company; member of the Huntington Library & Reading Room Association; Alonzo died at Huntington, Suffolk County; buried at Huntington Rural Cemetery on 10 February 1934.

[NI17655] President Stephens Institute of Technology.

[NI17679] Twin of William

[NI17692] Twin of Robert.

[NI17710] 1880 Census in Sherman, Jasper County, Iowa

[NI17761] U.S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946 Record
about George E Dodge
Name:
George E Dodge
Birth Year:
1922
Race:
White, citizen
Nativity State or Country:
Maine
State:
Maine
County or City:
Kennebec


Enlistment Date:
13 Dec 1940
Enlistment State:
Maine
Enlistment City:
Augusta
Branch:
Coast Artillery Corps
Branch Code:
Coast Artillery Corps or Army Mine Planter Service
Grade:
Private
Grade Code:
Private
Component:
Regular Army (including Officers, Nurses, Warrant Officers, and Enlisted Men)
Source:
Civil Life


Education:
Grammar school
Marital Status:
Single, without dependents
Height:
72"
Weight:
139 lbs

World War II and Korean Conflict Veterans Interred Overseas Record
about George E Dodge
Name:
George E Dodge
Inducted From:
Maine
Rank:
Technician Grade Five
Combat Organization:
895th Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
Combat Organization:
393rd Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
Death Date:
Aug 15 1944
Monument:
Rhone, Draguignan, France
Last Known Status:
Buried
U.S. Awards:
Purple Heart Medal

Tec 5 George E. Dodge 11, father George A. Dodge 10, Wayne.
Corporal Dodge. 21, a member of an antiaircraft battery, was killed In Southern France Aug. 15, according to word received by his father. George A. Dodge of Wayne. A native of Wayne, he attended Winthrop High School a year before entering the service Dec. 13, 1940. He had been overseas 22 months. A half brother, Adrian Breton, is at sea with the U. S. Merchant Marine. He also leaves four sisters. Mrs. Agnes Ridlon. Mrs. Alice Lowden and the Misses Dorothy and Martha Dodge, and two brothers. John and Thomas Dodge, all of Wayne.

[NI17766] Alice A.( Dodge) Lowden died at her residence Aug 30 1977

She was born 24 Jun 1977 in Wayne, Kennebec County, Maine the daughter of George and Winfred (Palmer) Dodge. She was educated in Wayne Schools and Winthrop Highn School. She ws a certified Public Accountant and employed by her husband Richard whom she married in Wayne in 1943. She was a member of the Abenaki Chapter OES at Winthrop and amember of the Wayne Community Church.

[NI17768] Winthrop - Dorothy "Dot" Auclair, 82, passed away early Tuesday morning, Oct. 25, 2011, at MaineGeneral Medical Center in Augusta.
She was born in Wayne on Nov. 27, 1928, the daughter of George A. and Winnie (Palmer) Dodge.

Dot was educated in Wayne schools. She married Richard Auclair on Sept. 14, 1946, and they recently celebrated 65 wonderful years of marriage together. Dot dedicated her life to raising her three children and being a loving and caring wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, and with all that she somehow found time to work for Health Tex in Gardiner for several years while raising her family.

Dot was predeceased by two brothers, George E. Dodge, who died in France during World War II on Aug. 24, 1944, and Thomas E. Dodge, who died on March 27, 1970; as well as two sisters, Agnes A. Dodge, who passed on Feb. 22, 1947, and Alice Dodge Lowden, who died on Aug. 30, 1977.

She is survived by her husband of 65 years, Richard Norman Auclair, of Winthrop; her two sons, Norman Auclair of Winthrop and Richard G. Auclair and his wife, Luanne M., of Sterling, Alaska; her daughter, Lynne Smith, and her husband, Curtis, of Dallas, Texas; one brother, Arthur A. "Skip" Dodge, of Santa Clara, Calif.; a former daughter-in-law, Ann Winters, of Jay; two grandchildren, Luke G. Smith of Dallas, and Kim Curtiss of Springvale; her two great-grandchildren, Adam and Dawn Lee, both of Livermore Falls; her best friend, Helen Watson, of East Winthrop; and Diane O'Keefe, who was like a daughter to Dot, from Wilmington, N.C.

A private graveside service will be held at the new Maine Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Mount Vernon Road, Augusta. (Kennebec Journal 10/27/2011)

[NI17771] Fought in WWII and Korean War.

[NI17772] Remarried to George Edward Richardson

[NI17775] Mary Dodge, 89, of Lakeway and Harker Heights passed away on Thursday, May 24, 2012. Mary was born on March 31, 1923 in Shadyside, Ohio to Helen and Frank Fedash. She traveled all over the world with her husband, courtesy of the United States Army, until moving to Texas in 1964. She loved to sew, knit, quilt and garden.

She was preceded in death by her husband of 66 years, John S. Dodge; two sisters, Ella and Anna; a brother, Charlie and her favorite feline, Tedd

Survivors include her daughters, Helen L. Dodge and Jennifer Lewis; son, Frank J. Dodge (wife Ilma); grandchildren and great grandchildren; two sisters, Margaret and Katy; and two brothers, Bob and Mike.

Graveside services will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 29, 2012 at Central Texas State Veterans Cemetery in Killeen, Texas.

In lieu of flowers, the family has requested memorial contributions be sent to the Humane Society of Austin, Austin Pets Alive or to the charity of your choice.

Obituary and memorial guestbook available online at www.wcfish.com. [Published in Austin American-Statesman on May 27, 2012.]

[NI17776] Fought in WWI

[NI17816] Gardner Dodge (27 Sep 1822 - ?) was born in Horton Twp, Kings co. Nova Scotia.
His wife Lucinda Cox,also from Nova Scotia, is buried in Arena, Iowa co., Wisconsin.

They belong to a group of families who came from Nova Scotia. They lived throughout Dane and Iowa Counties and beyond. Gardner and Lucinda lived in Arena and no doubt saw such relatives as William Allen Ward (1804-1883), & Wm's 2nd wife Margaret McKenzie Ward (1826-1913)- they shared grandparents in Nova Scotia and the same cemetery.


Gardner's maternal Gr-grandparents were William Allen Ward (1750-1844) & Elizabeth Grant (1752-1841), both from in Yorkshire, buried in Horton, Nova Scotia.

Jacob Dodge, his father, married twice. There is a question whether wife 1. Susannah Ward c.1795-1822) or wife 2. Olive Schofield (1800 - ) is the mother of Gardner (1822 -).

In any case. these two women are already related to each other - Aunt & niece.
Jacob's 2nd wife, Olivia Schofield's mother was Hannah Ward Schofield. Hannah Ward Schofield was the sister of Susannah Ward Dodge, Jacob Dodge's 1st wife. Both the 'Ward' women had the same Ward parents.

Ward grandparents (parents of Susannah & Hannah Ward)
William Allen Ward (1750-1844) & Elizabeth Grant (1752-1841)

Scholfield grandparents of Gardner
Nathan Schofield (1764-1856) & Hannah Ward [1774-WFT Est. 1819-1859] were Olive Schofield's parents.

Dodge grandparents
Gardner Dodge (1762-1808) & Mrs. Dodge.

Gardner Dodge's parents:
Jacob Dodge of Horton, Nova Scotia, (1791 -) married twice:
1st - (1812)to Susannah Ward (c. 1795-1822), of Beach [Beech] Hill, Kings co., Nova Scotia
2nd - (m.d.?) to Olive Schofield (1800 - )


Gardner Dodge (27 Sep 1822- ) married Lucinda Cox (1826-)

Their children were:
Phebe
Susie
Georgie Ward (1847-1885)
Charles Edward (1855- )
Amanda Mary (1858- )
Henry G. (1861-1888)
Lenard (1862- )
Olive
Frederick Ben
Jacob
Baby Girl (1864)
Baby Girl (1866)
Baby Girl (Dec 1, 1868)
Baby Girl (Dec 14, 1868)



http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=61478093

[NI17817] Rachel Dodge was born on Oct 26 1833 in Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Canada. Her birth date is derived from Iowa County, WI census of 1900 and the Bennett Family Bible. Rachel was born on a Saturday. She was in 1872 in Illinois. Rachel's obituary states: "She became interested in religion in the year 1872, under the labors of Elder Thompson and united with the A.C. Church on its organization as a charter member of which she has been a consistent member and energetic worker." She died on Jul 30 1911 in Elgin, Kane County, Illinois. Rachel passed away on a Sunday. She lived 77 years, 9 months, and 4 days. Her obituary states: "...she died after a long and severe struggle with the forces of our mortal nature, aged 76 years." Rachel's obituary continues: "We voice the sentiment of all who say, we sorrow with a deep pungent sorrow with the loss of such a lady from our midst. To the relatives of the deceased we would say you have the sympathies of the entire community. Our sister died in the expectations of the triumphant victory over death at the coming of our absent Lord, when the Sainted sleepers will respond to his call and come forth to be forever with the Lord." Another obituary for Rachel read: "Mrs. Rachel Bennett, a resident of Elgin since last October, died at 4:20 yesterday afternoon at the home of her grand daughter Mrs. Thaddeus L. Stephens, 133 College street, aged 77 years. She had been ill several weeks. Mrs. Bennett whose maiden name was Miss Rachel Dodge, was born October 22, 1833 in Nova Scotia. When she was 17 years old she located to Arena, Wisconsin where she made her home since with the exception of a few years. Besides her grand daughter with whom she lived, Mrs. Bennett is survived by a son Sidney Bennett and two brothers: Jacob Dodge of Round Lake, Minnesota." She was buried on Aug 2 1911 in Arena, Iowa County, Wisconsin. According to The Arena, Wisconsin published newspaper obituary of Miss Rachel Dodge, Rachel's funeral services were held at the A.C. Church of which she was a charter member. Her funeral was conducted at 2:00pm by Eld. B.N. Meigs. Rachel was buried next to her husband E.R. According to Rachel's obituary, she was originally from Nova Scotia and came west with her brother Gar diner and her family in 1854 and settled in Galena, Illinois were she lived 11 years. In 1895, Rachel and her husband E.R. moved to Arena, Wisconsin and lived nearby on a small farm. Soon after E.R. died in 1876, Rachel sold the farm, moved into town and built a comfortable home where she spent the balance of her life with the exception of a short time spent with Eld. (Thaddeus and Abbie) Stephens at Sparta, Wisconsin and Elgin, Illinois. Rachel was known to the family as "Ma Bennett".

Ma Bennett also had a foster son named Sidney E. Bennett that lived in Brigham, Iowa County, Wisconsin. Ma Bennett lists him and her grand child Abbie in her will dated December 7, 1909. A marriage record for Iowa County Wisconsin records that Sidney was married on March 14, 1900.

She was married to Elisha Rue Bennett (son of Emirato Bennette and Abigells Bennette) on Apr 27 1857 in Hazele Green, Grant County, Wisconsin. Hazel Green is on the very southern border of Wisconsin and Illinois. According to their marriage certificate, Elisha was from Mann, Illinois.

[NI17822] Jacob Nelson Dodge was born on Mar 5 1840 in North Alton, Nova Scotia, Canada. He was naturalized in 1856 in Arena, Iowa County, Wisconsin. The Minnesota Census of 1920 lists Jacob as immigrating in 1849 and then naturalized in 1856. This would have been at the time Jacob was 9 years old, then 16 years old while living in Arena, WI. He served in the military on Aug 26 1861 in Arena, Iowa County, Wisconsin. According to the The published newspaper obituary of Jacob N. Dodge, St. Paul, MN: on August 26, 1861, Jacob joined Company G, 11th Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry. He was a Corporal and then a Sergeant. He served throughout the Civil War and was wounded in the siege of Vicksburg, losing the sight in one eye and the hearing in one ear. "It was an act of God," he often said, that saved his life at Vicksburg. Fourteen soldiers went "over the top" of a ridge and only he came back. As recorded in the Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, Jacob was transferred to V.R.C. on February 2, 1864. He died in Jun 1931 in St. Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota. Jacob's obituary reads: Jacob Nelson Dodge of St. Paul, 91 Civil War veteran who came to Minnesota in a covered wagon, died Saturday night in the hospital of the Minnesota Soldiers Home after a short illness. Death came a few hours after he was taken to the hospital from the home of his son Dr. W.J. Dodge 182 Vernon avenue, St. Paul where he lived eighteen years. He was buried in Jun 1931 in St. Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota. Jacob's obituary also reads: A full military will be accorded him Wednesday. Services will be held at 10am in the chapel of the Soldiers Home. Burial will be in Forest Cemetery. According to the published newspaper obituary of Gardner Dodge, St. Paul, MN and the 1920 Census of Minnesota for Round Lake, MN, Volume 68, Sheet 10, Line 81, Jacob was an early pioneer that moved from Nova Scotia to Wisconsin with his parents when he was 9 years old. Still as a pioneer, with his wife and his family, he came to Minnesota in 1869, being the first settler in Round Lake Township, near Worthington. At that time the closest source of food and household supplies was at Spirit Lake, Iowa, 25 miles away. Jacob was granted American citizenship in 1856 and he remained in Round Lake township 44 years, coming to St. Paul with his wife Mary Dodge in 1913 to live with his son Dr. Wilbert J. Dodge.

Jacob was written about in the book History of Jackson County (MN): "...Round Lake township was another whose settlement was rapid and which early prepared itself for organization. Jacob Nelson Dodge was the first settler, locating on the north bank of Round Lake in the spring of 1869, when there was not another settler in the whole southwestern portion of the county. Jacob was granted a land patent from the United States government for his settlement in 1876

[NI17824] The Ruthven Free Press, Ruthven, Palo Alto County, Iowa, Wednesday, August 12,1936

(page 1)

Fuieral of Fred B. Dodge
Held Thursday, August 6

Fred Dodge, a resident of Ruthven for about twenty-five years, died at a hospital in Madison, Wisconsin on Tuesday morning. August 4th. 1936. His death was caused from injuries received from a fall the latter part of last June while visiting\ relatives in Wisconsin.
The funeral services were held at the Sacred Heart church, Ruthven, last Thursday with Rev. E L. McEvoy officiating. Burial took place in the family lot in Calvary cemetery at this place. The pallbearers were: Will Currans, Oscar Burgstrum, Nick Geelan, J. F. Hastings, R. L. Logan and Charles Metz.
Fred B. Dodge was born at Arena, Wisconsin, on December 15, 1869. He grew to manhood at Arena and in 1889 he was united in marriage to
Sarah Torphy at Ridgeway, Wisconsin.
Here they lived until 1895 when they moved to Avoca, Wisconsin, where they lived until 1911, when they moved to Ruthven, Iowa, where
they spent the rest of their lives. Mrs. Dodge passed away on May 16, 1935.
Mr. Dodge was a stone mason, and he followed this trade all his life with the exception of two years spent on a farm about three miles east of Ruthven. During the years he and his family lived in Wisconsin he was a building contractor, quarried
stone, and was employed in the erection of a number of public buildings and churches in the localities where he lived. Even in his later years hisservices were in demand for mason work, plastering and painting.
Mr. Dodge is survived by the following children: Jardner H. Dodge [Gardner?] of Racine, Wisconsin; Mrs. L. M. Miller of Ruthven, Iowa; Raymond T. Dodge of Madison, Wisconsin; Mrs. Albert A. Miller of Ruthven, Iowa; Robert Dodge of Superior, Wisconsin; Joseph Dodge of Kenosha, Wisconsin.
He is also survived by twenty-one grandchildren; and one brother, Len Dodge of Round Lake, Minnesota. One son, Fred B. Dodge, preceded him in death in 1917 while in the service of his country during the World war.
The following were among the out-of-town relatives who attended the funeral last Thursday: Mr. and Mrs. Len Dodge of Round Lake, Minnesota; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dodge of Round Lake, Minnesota; Mrs. Chris Johnson and Mrs. Floyd Dodge of Worthington, Minnesota; and Merle Miller and Howard Minear of Des Moines, Iowa.

[NI17832] Military
Between:1861/00/00-1864/00/00
Union Army Co. G, 11th Wisconsin Infantry

[NI17833] No Memorial for tthis person

[NI17835] His older brother Alonzo Dodge gave to Robert Irving Dodge. Jr his diary
of the Civil War years from his enlistment at the Brooklyn Navy
Yardthtough service in the blockade fleet of the carolinas, including the
battle with the Confederate Ram Albermarle.

[NI17839] Company F. 46 Regiment Volunteers Civil War

[NI17855] Enlisted on 08 Sep 1942 WW II for the duration of tthe war.

[NI17858] It appears as if Jordan married an Undertakers daughter & became one himself.

Daughter of James B. Kirby and Ann Eliza Albin, wife of Jordan Craft Dodge and mother of Herbert Kirby Dodge.

Obituary - Our people were grieved to hear on last Tuesday of the death of Mrs. Clara E. Dodge, the wife of Jordan C. Dodge of this village. She had been taken sick the Tuesday previous with pneumonia and her life had been despaired of since last Saturday night. She remained conscious until the last and was perfectly resigned and her death was peaceful. Mrs. Dodge had been a Christian for many years and was connected with the M.E. Church in this village. Her character was spotless and her many friends were strongly attached to her. The law of kindness was in her mouth. Her health had been precarious for a number of years but for the last six months she had enjoyed better health. Her time was fully occupied caring for a father, Mr. Kirby, who is 87 years of age, her husband, Mr. Jordan Dodge, her son, Albert, who is a young man, and her brother, Mr. John Kirby, all of whom will sorely miss her thoughtful, kindly attendtion. Mrs. Dodge was in her 57th year. Her funeral was attended at the M.E. Church on Thursday and her remains taken to Babylon on Friday for interment in the Cemetery in Babylon.

Also - Glen Cove, April 23, Clara E., wife of Jordan C. Dodge, ae 51y. Interment at Babylon.

[NI17859] He had a route carrying the mail from Worthington to Huntington. He died from Hodgkin's disease.

[NI17865] Fought in World War II Enlisted8 sep 1942 was engaged till the end of the war.

[NI17870] Obituary - Our people were grieved to hear on last Tuesday of the death of Mrs. Clara E. Dodge, the wife of Jordan C. Dodge of this village. She had been taken sick the Tuesday previous with pneumonia and her life had been despaired of since last Saturday night. She remained conscious until the last and was perfectly resigned and her death was peaceful. Mrs. Dodge had been a Christian for many years and was connected with the M.E. Church in this village. Her character was spotless and her many friends were strongly attached to her. The law of kindness was in her mouth. Her health had been precarious for a number of years but for the last six months she had enjoyed better health. Her time was fully occupied caring for a father, Mr. Kirby, who is 87 years of age, her husband, Mr. Jordan Dodge, her son, Albert, who is a young man, and her brother, Mr. John Kirby, all of whom will sorely miss her thoughtful, kindly attendtion. Mrs. Dodge was in her 57th year. Her funeral was attended at the M.E. Church on Thursday and her remains taken to Babylon on Friday for interment in the Cemetery in Babylon.

Also - Glen Cove, April 23, Clara E., wife of Jordan C. Dodge, ae 51y. Interment at Babylon.

(The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York), Tuesday, April 24, 1894 - Page 5; South Side Signal., May 12, 1894, Page 2; The Long-Islander., April 28, 1

[NI17875] Easthampyon - William H. Dodge, 85, of Easthampton died
Thursday. He survived by his wife of 63 years Doris (Williams) Dodge,
one son Lawrence W. Dodge, 2 daughters Barbara Kozash, Marjorie Likens,
one brother Elliot Dodge, 2 sisters Ruth Witherell, and Virginia Kirk;
4 grandchildren, and 4 great-grandchildren. The funeral will be
Wednesday June 2 at 2 p.m. in the Mitchell Funeral Home followed by
burial in Center Cemetery, Westhampton.

[NI17880] Served in WW II and awarded the purple heart.

[NI17881] Enlisted in World War II as a Private31 Mar 1945 for the duration of the war.or other emergence, plus 6months.

[NI17924] Obituary, GRAFTON Frederick J. Dodge, Sr., 81, passed away Sunday, August 13, 2006, at his home in the presence of his family. He was the husband of Laura P. (Childs) Dodge. Born in Worthington, MA, he was a son of the late Gladys (Severance) and Philip S. Dodge. Mr. Dodge was a retired carpenter foreman in the construction industry. He was a member of the Baptist Church of Grafton and the Franklin Lodge AF & AM of North Grafton. Mr. Dodge is survived by his wife; a son, Frederick.

[NI17925] Served in both 1 tour in Korea and 2 tours in Vietnam. He was a Sargent Major and (as I understand died as a result of complications from shrapnel he had received during service)

[NI17926] Obituary, Edith W. (Hathaway) Dodge, 86, of 63 George St. died Sunday at home. Born in Lebanon, Conn., she lived in Worthington before moving to this town 40 years ago. Her husband, Richard C. Dodge, died in 1978. She leaves a son, Gordon S. of West Springfield; three daughters, Lois M. Donahue of West Springfield, Eleanor La Vallee of Montgomery, and Rosemary La Vallee of West Springfield; a brother, Harold of Pittsfield; 10 grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren. Burial at Ringville Cemetery in Worthington.

[NI17927] Retired from Zero Corp., Monson, Hampden, MA. years. Born in Worthington, he attended the First Baptist Church, where he was a deacon, trustee, and stewardship committeeman. He moved here in 1950. He was a Korean War Army veteran, and a life member of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 872 in\ Southwick. He was its commander in 1970-71. He leaves his wife, the former Joanne Webster; two sons, Steven D. of Chicago, Ill., and Jeffrey of Ware; two daughters, Karen S. Skehan of Feeding Hills, and Lynn M. Dodge of Chicopee; three sisters, Lois Donahue and Rosemary LaVallee of West Springfield, and Eleanor LaVallee of Montgomery; five grandchildren. The funeral is scheduled Wednesday at the church, with the burial in Ringville Cemetery at Worthington.

[NI17928] Residence: 1997, West Springfield, Massachusetts 91420

[NI17931] Residence: 1997, West Springfield, Massachusetts.

[NI17932] Residence: 1997, Montgomery, Massachusetts

[NI17934] Residence: 1997, Montgomery, Massachusetts.

[NI17943] Doris M. Dodge, 93, of Easthampton, died on Thursday, September 4 at the Linda Manor Extended Care Facility, Leeds. She was born March 29, 1921 in Northampton, the daughter of Elmer and Marian Williams. She was a
resident of Goshen, attended the Goshen Elementary School, and was a 1940 graduate of Williamsburg High School.
Doris was married to William (Bill) Dodge in 1940; he predeceased her in 2004. The majority of their 63-year marriage was spent in Hadley where they produced fresh vegetables, grew strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and beautiful flowers. Gardening was her passion – canned all type of vegetables, made jams and jellies, and lots of pies.
Doris and Bill moved to Easthampton after retiring from the dairy farm work in 1994. Their new home provided space for that once again perfect garden, which they continued for many years.Doris is survived by one son, Lawrence W. Dodge of Hadley, two daughters, Barbara F. Kozash of Easthampton, and Marjorie L. Likens of Amherst, one brother, Robert L. Williams of Beverly Hills, Florida, four grandchildren, Bonnie, Kenny, Christopher and Gregory, five great grandchildren, Brett, Brandon, Caleb, Savannah and Trent. Elmer (Buddy) Williams, brother, died earlier.

The family wishes to express their deep appreciation for the loving care she received at Linda Manor.

[NI17952] On her birth record in Boston, Suffolk shis Sarah Lizzie Dodge

[NI17959] Fought in WW II.

[NI17966] 1913 - 2002 WEST SPRINGFIELD - Rita M. (Eagan) Dodge, 89, of Terry Road died Friday in Heritage Hall Nursing Home. Born in Worcester, she grew up in Springfield and has lived in West Springfield for the past 50 years. She was a housemother for the Clarke School for the Deaf in the 70's and was a communicant of Immaculate Conception Church. Her husband, Norman V. Dodge, died in 1961. She leaves a daughter, Margaret "Peggy" Welch of West Springfield; her sister, Eileen T. Byrnes; seven grandchildren, Ellen M. Flore, John D. Welch, John R. Menard, James E. Menard, Mary K. Welch, Christina M. Monette, James T. Welch; six great grandchildren; and a son-in-law, Raymond D. Menard. Her daughter, Audrey M. Menard, died in 1996; and her son-in-law, James "Red" Welch, died last week. She was also predeceased by her brother, Albert Eagan; and grandson, Christopher J. Welch. A Liturgy of Christian Burial will be held in Immaculate Conception Church Friday at 10 a.m. followed by burial in St. Thomas Cemetery.

[NI17967] Went to Apleton WI.

[NI17979] Some record say b. 6 June 1886. Port Washington Homestead. Member of
Atlantic hook & ladder company 50+ years.

[NI18011] Obituary, Ruby L... Dodge AGAWAM - Ruby L. (Testerman) Dodge, 85, of 27 Autumn St., died Sunday (16 July 2006) in Country Estates of Agawam. Born & educated in Cherryvale, Kansas, Ruby had been a resident of Agawam since 1982. Ruby had worked in Northampton at the One Hour Martinizing Dry Cleaning Store for over 20 years prior to her retirement. She also enjoyed cooking and crocheting. Ruby is survived by a daughter, Jeanne Sue Prior and her husband Donald of Agawam; a brother, Robert Testerman of Kansas; two granddaughters, Elizabeth Dodge of Belchertown and Kori Prior of Las Vegas; and a great-grandson, Jason Dodge. She was predeceased by her husband Russell Dodge in 1981, and a son, Arthur Dodge, in 2000. A private burial will be held in Center Cemetery, Westhampton.

[NI18015] Obituary, Arthur G. Dodge, 51, of this town, and formerly of Westhampton, Mass., died Monday (17 July 2000) in a work-related accident. He worked at the River Watch Country Club and previously at the former National Felt Co. and Tubed Products, both in Easthampton, Mass. Born in Northampton, Mass., he was schooled in Westhampton schools and graduated from Williamsburg (Mass.) High School. He moved to Sparta in 1978. A country-and-western musician, he played the guitar and led a band in the area for many years. He leaves his wife, the former Reba Kirby; his mother, Ruby (Testerman) Dodge of Agawam, Mass.; a daughter, Elizabeth Dodge of Shutesbury, Mass.; a sister, Jeanne Prior of Agawam; and a grandson.

[NI18017] No issue surviving.

[NI18018] Obituary, Joanne W. (Webster) Dodge, 67, formerly of Althea Street, died Tuesday, February 27, 2002 in a Agawam Nursing Home. Born in Fairhaven, Vermont, she had lived in West Springfield most of her life. She was a secretary for the West Springfield School Department for 25 years before retiring in 1993. She was an active member of the First Baptist Church and was involved with various boards and committees at church. She was in the Ladies Auxiliary of the Southwick V.F.W. Her husband Gordon S. Dodge died in 1997. She leaves two sons, Steven of Chicago, and Jeffrey of Ware; two daughters, Karen Skehan of Feeding Hills, and Lynn Dodge of West Springfield; two brothers, Robert of West Springfield, and Jon of Agawam; four sisters, Gwen Ely, Judith Webster, both of Holyoke, Marylou Johnson of West Springfield, Ora Webster of Lenox; and six grandchildren. The funeral will be held in the First Baptist Church Friday at 10 a.m. with Spring Burial in Ringville Cemetery, Worthington

[NI18025] Reba Evelyn (Kirby) Dodge, age 67, of Sparta, TN, passed away on Tuesday, April 24, 2012 at White County Hospital. She was born in White County, TN October 16, 1944 to David Franklin Kirby and Mattie Lou England Kirby. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, Arthur George Dodge; brothers, Charlie Ray Kirby and Franklin Eugene Kirby. Survivors include her sister, Ruby Paul of Sparta; special nieces, Donna Kirby, Ashley Tittsworth both of Sparta and Rachel Hale of Texas; Special friends, Linda and Eddie Herman and Elsie Hall; numerous nieces and nephews. Funeral service will be held at Thurman Funeral Home, Friday, April 27, 2012 at 12pm. Officiating will be Bro. Elmore Judd. Interment will follow in the Peeled Chestnut Cemetery. Family will receive friends at Thurman Funeral Home, Thursday, April 26, 2012 at 6 pm till 8 pm. Please sign the guestbook at www.thurmanfuneral.com Thurman Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

[NI18030] No Issue.

[NI18039] Note this is put here for reference See John Dodge Linage

[NI18040] This is put here for reference see John Dodge File for connection

[NI18041] Raised his family in St Paul, MN.
"Vocalist. He gave early evidence of musical ability, and became a professional singer. In 1845 he organized a concert troupe and toured theUnited States. He was the first to take a company overland to San Francisco. He was a strict teetotaler. He purchased first choice of a seat for Jenny Lind's first concert in Boston, paying a premium of $625, and in the next few months netted $11,000 in a New England tour. He was delegate to the "World 's Peace Congress" held in Exeter Hall, London, 1851. He established the Boston "Weekly Museum" in 1849. In 1862 he settled in St. Paul, Minnesota and was secretary of the St. Paul Chamber of Commerce, 1869-1873. He left some descendants, among them being Ossian East of St. Paul, Minnesota, who does not reply to letters asking for information." from book: "Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge"
by Theron Royal Woodward 1904

Since Osian E. Dodge made his sudden and more questionable departure from Saint Paul, nothing has been known, generally of his whereabouts. The Liess, however, reports that, within a few days his abandoned wife has received a letter from hiim thru a third party, in which he makes certain tangible propositions for her existance. He assures her that, if shwremains decorous in behaviour and leads a wholly upright and blameless life, he will provide ample means for her support so long as shee remains single

[NI18060] Death atage 76y 10m 7d

[NI18120] Sarah's father was Ruben Daniel Dodge & Mother Mary L. Burling.
Sarah was married to Moses Gregory and they had ten children.
Children: Sarah, Martha, Susan, Winfield, Otis, Elizabeth, Cornelia, Byron and Gertrude

[NI18125] Died the Same Day.

[NI18139] No Issue.

[NI18157] ROCKPORT Leroy Edwin Dodge Sr., 77, died Friday, Nov. 9, 2007 at Penobscot Bay Medical Center.


Leroy E. Dodge Sr. Born in Warren on Sept. 14, 1930, he was the son of Peter and Lillian (Yattaw) Dodge. He married Louise E. Austin.

Dodge did more than just raise his family in his 77 years of life, through making an impact and setting forth many traditions and a way of life for his family. He was a man of many trades, teaching and passing these things down to not only his own children, but to his grandchildren as well. He started out as a carpenter, taking everything he knew and learned to build his own house, which is still on Route 90 after more than 50 years. He began dabbling in antiques during this time, which turned out to be important to him later on in life.

He left the carpentry business to pursue his love for fishing. Lobster boats were being built in his driveway, and his horse barn was transformed into a trap mill where hundreds and hundreds of wooden lobster traps were produced. He never really left Rockport Harbor, just traded in his boat mooring for a parking spot where he could watch his sons and their fellow fishermen come in from hauling their traps and monitor the daily catch. Once wooden lobster traps became obsolete, Dodge started building handcrafted furniture at his Route 90 shop. This led him back into the antique business where many dealers came to strike up a deal with him.

Being a businessman and a laborer were not the only interests he had. Dodge was an avid hunter, he loved to garden, enjoyed playing his guitar and singing to his grandchildren, going to yard sales with his wife, and could out-shoot anyone in a game of pool. On days when the weather was unfit for fishing, Dodgeís driveway was full of cars and inside there were many heated games of cards being played.

Young and old will remember Dodge for many different reasons. His family will remember him as that old man who was recently pictured in The Camden Herald sitting outside his ìno longer in business antique shopî early in the morning sipping on a cold beer. He watched his family and friends drive by to and from work or doing errands. His family and friends will miss seeing him outside in his chair but know that his spirit lives on.

He was predeceased by his wife, Louise E. Dodge, who died on July 2, 1994, two brothers, Earl and Harold Dodge, and a sister, Virginia Scott. Surviving are his children, Leroy E. Dodge Jr. of Lincolnville; Kenneth Dodge of Rockport; Kandy Amborn of Rockport; Frank Dodge of Rockport; Raymond Dodge of Warren; Cindy Bolan of Rockport and Bruce Dodge of Rockport; 14 grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren with several more expected; two brothers, Charles Dodge of Rockport and Ronald Dodge of Lincolnville.

[NI18160] Friendship — Charles H. Dodge, 83, died Saturday, Jan. 28, 2012, at Miles Memorial Hospital in Damariscotta. He was born Jan. 1, 1929, in Rockland to Lord-Earl Dodge and Lillian Yattaw Dodge.

He worked as a cooks assistant as a young man on a freight ship. During World War II he worked on a ship that transported fuel and munitions.

He was a cabinetmaker and made many beautiful pieces over the years. He loved to sing and sang in many clubs when he was young. One of his favorite things to do was go to Moody's Diner for a piece of pie. Charles was lovingly cared for and lived with his grandson, David Maxcy and his wife, Kelly Maxcy. He was predeceased by his wife, Louise Waltz Dodge.

He is survived by daughters, Roxene Puls and her husband, Tim, of Mississippi and Lillian Haynes of Pittsfield; son, Donald of Newport; stepdaughter, Cindy Heim and her husband, Wayne, of Salt Lake City, Utah; sons, Donald Dodge, Peter Dodge of Mississippi, Edward Peerbomme of Mississippi and Charles "Buzzy" Dodge of Northern Maine; and several grandchildren.

A graveside service will be held in the spring at Amesbury Cemetery in Rockport.

[NI18206] Died the next day.

[NI18209] Francis R. Dodge born 6 July 1846 Joined Union Army in Gaines, Michigan
He was captured and held at Andersonville Prison. He was exchanged and
removed to the Army base at Davids Island, New York where he died 16 July
1864 Son of Harmon H. Dodge and Nancy Jane Shepard

[NI18214] He served as a 1st Sgt in the US Army in Korea and Vietnam

[NI18216] Paper: Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA)
Title: JOCELYN W. DODGE, 75
Date: September 23, 1995
Section: DEATHS
Page: A5

WORCESTER - Jocelyn W. (Whitehead) Dodge, 75, formerly of 30
Wellington St., onetime director of Faith House, died yesterday in the
Belmont Home after a long illness.

Her husband, Lewis H. Dodge, died in 1978. She leaves a son, Richard
A. Dodge of Daleville, Miss.; two daughters, Patricia F. Nishan and
Dianne E. Daly, both of Worcester; two brothers, Edmund J. Whitehead
Jr. of Waltham and Randall Whitehead of North Brookfield; seven
grandchildren; a great-granddaughter; a nephew; and a niece. She was
born in Brookline, daughter of Edmund J. and Garalda (Irish) Whitehead,
and lived here most of her life.She was a Marine Corps veteran of World
War II, serving as an airplane mechanic.

Mrs. Dodge was once director of Faith House for some years before she
retired.

She was a former member of Homer J. Wheaton Post, American Legion
Auxiliary.

Funeral services will be private. Burial will be at the convenience
of the family in Rural Cemetery. Calling hours are 2 to 4 p.m.
tomorrow at Alfred Roy & Sons Funeral Home, 12 Hammond St.

Section: DEATHS
Page: A5
Dateline: WORCESTER

[NI18220] In the Michigan VR's at time of marriage he is named Herman.

Harmon DodgeRESIDENCE: Gaines, Michigan
Side Served: Union
State Served: Michigan
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private at the age of 39.
Drafted into Company H, 23rd Infantry Regiment Michigan.
Died of disease Company H, 23rd Infantry Regiment Michigan on 24 Dec 1864 at Louisville, KY.

[NI18232] Served in the war of 1812

[NI18251] 15 nov 1870 is also recorded for their marriage.

[NI18310] 3-children

[NI18311] 6-children

[NI18313] 1- Child

[NI18315] 4-children

[NI18316] 2-Children

[NI18320] No Children

[NI18321] 6-children

[NI18324] No Children

[NI18325] A Celebration of Joe's life will be held at a later date. Memorials to the Emerson Hough Chapter of the Izaak Walton League or the University of Iowa Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Joe, the son of Max and Susan Nesmith Dodge, was born on July 7, 1950, in Newton. He was a lifelong Newton resident and graduated from Newton High School in 1968. He attended Iowa State University for two years on a wrestling scholarship.

Upon returning to Newton, Joe began working as a mechanic for Wilbur Davis at his service station. In 1980, Joe opened Dodge's West End Garage.

On September 24, 1988, Joe married Sandra (Moon) Aldrich in Beltrami County, Minnesota.

Joe enjoyed hunting—especially deer hunting with friends, fishing, any shooting sports, and vacationing at the cabin on Cass Lake in Minnesota. In his younger years, Joe also participated in many hot rod tractor pulls. Joe served his country in the U.S. Army National Guard. He was a member of the Emerson Hough Chapter of the Izaak Walton League.

Joe is survived by his wife, Sandy of Newton; sons, Tony Aldrich of Newton, Sean Aldrich of Newton, and Scott Aldrich; grandchildren, Jacob Aldrich, Danielle (Erik) Miller, Nicholas Aldrich, and Josh (Jessica) Aldrich; great-grandchildren; brothers, Jack Dodge and John Dodge, both of Newton; and several nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

Source: Wallace Family Funeral Home, Newton, Iowa

[NI18331] 2-Children

[NI18340] 1-child

[NI18341] No Children.

For Ancestry see John Dodge File.

[NI18342] 3-Children

[NI18345] 6-Children

[NI18347] 3-Children

[NI18354] Michigan Death VR's say she died in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan.

[NI18359] Burial Notes taken from " Old Gravestones of Dutchess County, New York"
Nineteen Thousand Inscriptions, Collected and Edited by J. Wilson Poucher, M.D. and Helen Wilkinson Reynolds, Collections of the Dutchess County Historical Society, Volume II, Poughkeepsie, New York 1924, Pg . 376

[NI18367] William Todd was the son of sea captain Adam Todd and Margaret (Dodge) Todd. He was born in the town of Washington in Dutchess County, New York where his family had fled from the British occupation of New York City. His uncle was John Jacob Astor, the German immigrant who invested his fur trading profits in New York real estate, leased but never sold the land, and was known as the richest man in America. At fourteen, William Todd was sent to Canada to learn the French language and Astor's fur trading business. There were no stage coach lines to Montreal. William went by sloop up the Hudson River to Albany, traveled north in an open wagon and crossed the frozen St. Laurence River on foot. The life at frontier fur trading outposts did not appeal to him, so he left Astor to join John Duffie's wholesale grocery business. William Todd ws six feet two and one-half inches tall. He was still young when his hair turned gray. Fine penmanship enhanced his position as secretary of the Gold Street Baptist Church. He was also treasurer nd chairman of the board of trustees, following his father-in-law John Duffie in those offices. It was said that William Todd's credit was always good, even when that of the church was not. A new translation of the bible used by the pastor, Dr. Spencer Cone, divided the Gold Street Baptist congregation into factions. Rather than accept the new version of the Bible, the Todds left the church to become members of the Baptist Tabernacle Church. From 1811 to 1835, the Todds owned the first line of Baltimore packets (called Todd's line) and other ships as well, but their principle business was the salt importing company. The name of the company changed several times after John Duffie died. While CRD was a partner, it was "Todd, Duffie and Todd." Todd was a Lt. colonel in the War of 1812 and a member of Saint Tammany Society. In his later years he was partly blind. January 14, 1857 was the fiftieth anniversary of William and Maria Caroline's wedding and it was celebrated by an assembly of their family and friends at their residence, No 33 East 23rd St, New York, New York. It found them both well and happy, but only a few months rolled around before that lovely Christian woman went to her reward. She died the 29th of July 1857 and was buried in the new family vault in Greenwood Cemetery.

[NI18370] PFC U S Army Air Force WW 2
William "Bill" M. Dodge, age 84, Honesdale, died peacefully at home Wednesday morning, April 3, 2002 following an illness. He is survived by his wife of 59 years, the former Anna Marshall. A memorial mass for family and friends will be held Saturday, April 6, 2002 at 10 a.m. in St. Mary Magdalen's Church, Church St. Honesdale. His ashes will be interred in St. Mary Magdalen's Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the church Saturday morning from 9:30 a.m. till service time at 10 a.m. Arrangements by the Hessling Funeral Home, 428 Main St. Honesdale. A complete obituary will appear in the next edition of the paper.

[NI18374] 1-Child

[NI18375] No Children

[NI18378] See the John Dodge file for Ancestry of this family.

1860 Census in Hamilton, Hamilton County, Iowa b. abt 1846
1870 Census in Sheman , Jasper County, Iowa b. abt 1846
1880 Census in Sherman, Jasper County, Iowa b. abt 1849

[NI18379] 1880 Census in Sherman, Jasper County, Iowa

[NI18393] Old Gravestones of Dutchess County, New York" by J. W. Poucher published in 1924, pages 250-255.

[NI18447] Enlistment Date: 14 Aug 1861
Enlistment Place: Syracuse, New York
Side Served: Union
State Served: New York
Service Record: Promoted to Full Veterinary Surgeon (As of 1st Prov'l Cav).
Enlisted as a Quartermaster Sergeant on 14 August 1861 at the age of 34.
Enlisted in Company A, 10th Cavalry Regiment New York on 27 Sep 1861.
Promoted to Full Privateate (Reduced to ranks) on 1 Jan 1862.
Promoted to Full Farrier on 27 Nov 1862.
Promoted to Full Veterinary Surgeon on 30 Apr 1863.
Promoted to Full Privateate (Reduced to ranks) on 27 Feb 1865.
Transferred out of Company A, 10th Cavalry Regiment New York on 24 Jun 1865.
Transferred into Company A, 1st Prov'l Cavalry Regiment New York on 24 Jun 1865.
Mustered Out Company A, 1st Prov'l Cavalry Regiment New York on 19 Jul 1865 at Cloud's Mills, VA.

[NI18466] In 1920 & 1930 Census he is listed as Janes.

[NI18488] T/ Sgt., U.S. Army, WW II. Entered the service Oct 14 1940 at Camp Shelby Mississippi. He was awarded the Good Conduct medal.

[NI18511] Sp4 US Army Vietnam, He was one of the first few five members of the Vietnam Veterans Association, served in the Vietnam war and participated in the ground breaking ceremony for the Wall. He received a purple heart in that ceremony.

[NI18532] No Issue

[NI18535] No Marker

[NI18538] Taken from the Wayland Register of May 14, 1931

LARGE Headline stated:

AGED RESIDENT CLAIMED BY DEATH

Sylvester Dodge passed away Last Night

Sylvester Dodge, for many years a resident of this village passed away last night at his home on Lackawanna Street, aged 70 years. He had been in poor health for some time.

Besides his wife, he is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Bertha Gamble and Miss Cora Dodge and one son, Dr. Leo.Sylvester Dodge.

Mr. Dodge came to Wayland in the early nineties when the cement industry was started here being a foreman at the plant of the Millen Compaany, which was recently dismantled. He was a past grand master of the local Odd Fellow lodge and also a member of the Warren Patchin Lodge, F. & A. M. and the M. E. Church.

Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon.

[NI18546] Compedium of History, Reminiscence and Biography of Nebraska
Page 978
E. M. DODGE. (Deceased.)
E. M. Dodge belonged to an old family of Custer county. He was a native of Fulton, Illinois, born January 9, 1859. He received his education in his native state, and there attained his majority. In company with his parents and sister, he made the trip from Indiana to Fillmore county, Nebraska, in the fall of 1883. They made this journey in typical emigrant style, with a covered wagon and horses, and were six weeks on the way. They engaged in farming in Fillmore county, and in the summer of 1886, Miles Dodge came on up into Custer county. The following summer his parents also came to the county, where they spent the remainder of their lives. One of their daughters, Mrs. Cosner, lives in Merna, and another, Mrs. Samuel Trot, in Anselmo, Nebraska.
Mr. Dodge was married, February 21, 1887, to Maggie, daughter of Joseph B. and Emma (Bristow) Smith, old settlers of Fillmore and Custer counties. A sketch of Mr. Smith appears in this work, with extensive mention of his family, which has been prominent in many circles in central Nebraska. Five children were born to Mr. Dodge and wife: Glenn, living in Seattle; Jessie, Kenneth, Bertie and Marvel, all at home. Mr. Dodge was a representative citizen, and was identified with the progress and upbuilding it his community.

[NI18554] In 1920 census living with his brother Jesse.
In 1930 Census Married with 3 Children

[NI18562] Obit: Janesville Daily Gazette- Monday, July 13, 1952 Mrs. Nettie B. Dodge
Mrs. Nettie Belle Dodge, 81, died Saturday afternoon in a local convalescent home following a long illness.
The former Nettie Canfield was born March 2, 1861, in the town of Fulton (Illinois). She was married to Sanford F. Dodge in 1832 and the couple came to Beloit in 1906.
Mrs. Dodge was a resident of Janesville for the past 10 years and was a member of the Beloit Methodist Church.
Survivors are a daughter Mrs. Ervin Halley, Milton, and 14 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Reining Funeral Home, the Rev. Marlin Smith officiating. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery, Beloit. Friends may call at the funeral home this evening

[NI18568] Moved to licking County, Ohio where he married his wife.
Moved to Stark County, Ohio in Aug 1829.
Moved to Pleasant Township, Whiteside County, in 1836.
buried on his farm.

John B. Dodge, a prominent character among the early settlers of this county, was born in Tioga county, New York, April 6, 1808. Removed to licking county, Ohio, where, November 6, 1828, he was united in the bonds of matrimoney to Miss lydia B. Smith. He removed to Stark county, Illinois, August, 1829, where he remained about seven years, when he removed once more to what is now Mt. pleasant township, Whiteside county, arriving in August 1836, and settling on section 20.

He was Captain of a Militia Company in 1830, and volunterred during the Blackhawk War, and was present at the battle of Bloody Run. He was a man of much energy, and was frequently called upon by his fellow citizens to bear the burdens of office, not less onerous than then now, and less remunerative. In those days of Aule Lang Syne, honor and desire for the public good, were the only inducements to office seeking. Fat saleries and well-furnished, comfortable offices exited only in extremely vigorous and daring imagination.

In May 1839, Mr. Dodge was one of the three County Commissioners who held the first Commissioners Court of Whiteside county, He is reported to have announced the opening of the session in the following characteristic words; "Fellow Citizens, the County Commissioners Court of Whiteside is about to set, and will be ready to hatch in two or three days." He was at different times Constable, and Justice of the Peace. He Died January 24, 1843 at the age of 35.

His widow re-married, her second husband being James Magby, who died several years since leaving her a second time a widow. She at present resides with her son-in-law, Gearoge P. Garlick of Fenton township.

Mr. Dodge was buried on his farm. In 1860 his remains were removed to the Morrison Cemetery, where they now repose.

The children were Eber B. born Nov 27 1829, who is married and now resides on this county, Matilda S. born Sep 1, 1832 married R.M. Thompson of Fenton December 25, 1849; Abiel Mc., born Oct 1, 1834, died December 28, 1835; Eli M. born Jan 20, 1837 is now a resident of Marshall county Iowa; Henrietta born Nov 4, 1839 married to James Garlick, and resides in Marshall county Iowa. There were children of the second marriage, one of whom married George P. Garlick of Fenton.

Bent & Wilson History of Whiteside County Page 301-302.

[NI18577] BELOIT DAILEY NEWS, Thursday, Jan 4, 1923, page 2

Ray W. Dodge, 30, is calleed by death:

Ray William Dodge, 30, died at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Dodge, 844 Hackett Street, this morning at 6:30 o’clock after an illness of more than two months. He was born in Fulton, Ill., July 12 1892, coming to Beloit about 20 years ago. Mr. Dodge was married to Miss Adabelle Stone of this city, April 10, 1917. For the past five years he has been affiliated with the Modern Pattern Works. Mr. Dodge is survived by his wife, his parents, and a sister, Mrs. Erwin Hawley, all of Beloit, also a sister, Mrs. George Feldt, of Shovel Lake, Minn. Funeral services will be held at his late home, 916 Kenwood Avenue, Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock, the Rev. C. F. Spray officiating. Interment will be in Oakwood Cemetery

[NI18583] Robert Ward of kilonie@ dreamscape.com
states date of birth as 26 Feb 1886.

[NI18597] In 1874 he founded the Dodge Institute of Telegraphy, a department of Northern Indiana Normal School (later Valparaiso University.)

[NI18653] He was a Buffalo City firefighter and died from complications after being injured in a fire.

[NI18657] Remodeled homes instead of paying rent, and then they moved on to another one.

[NI18662] Quarter Master Corps World War II

[NI18663] JAMES EDWARD DODGE, 74, of Memphis, retired security officer for Memphis Veterans Medical Center, died of heart failure Saturday at St. Francis Hospital. Mass will be said at 11 a.m. Tuesday at St. Anne Catholic Church on Highland, where he was a communicant, with burial in Forest Hill Cemetery East. Forest Hill Funeral Home East has charge. He leaves three daughters, Karen Walker of Largo, Fla., Laura Phinney of Los Angeles and Denise Graves of Hernando, and two grandchildren.

[NI18681] Died from crib death.

[NI18683] PAULINE (DODGE) STEVENS DANIELSEN
Mary Pauline (Dodge) Stevens Danielsen was born the second child of five children to Burton Josiah, D.O. and Maude Miller (Morton) Dodge on November 3, 1904 at Palisade, Nebraska. She departed this life Saturday morning, February 5, 2000 at the Andbe Home in Norton, Kansas at the age of 95 years, 3 months and 2 days.
Pauline, as everyone came to know her, moved to Alma, Nebraska from Palisade when she was 8 years olds. She attended school at Alma, where she graduated from high school with the class of 1923.
In December of 1923 she was united in marriage to Leon Claire Steven at Alma. To this union two children were born, a daughter, Winona Pauline, and a son, Leon Hugh Stevens. Pauline graduated from Kearney State Teachers College at Kearney, Nebraska. They made their home in Benkleman, Nebraska, and then they moved back to Alma. Pauline's husband, Leon, preceded her in death in 1933.
On August 10, 1936 she was married to Henry Grover Danielson at Phillipsburg, Kansas. They made their home on a farm 8 miles south of Alma. They moved to Long Island, KS in the 1950's. Pauline taught at Alma, Long Island, Almena, Herndon, Hill City, Bloom and Kirwin, Kansas. She was a devoted teacher and touched many lives. She retired in 1974 after 35 years of teaching. Pauline enjoyed China painting and made many beautiful lamps and dishes. She loved to do oil paintings and quilts. She was an avid Nebraska Cornhusker fan. In 1958, her husband Henry passed away. She returned to Long Island, KS in 1980, and to Alma in 1983. In 1996, Pauline moved to the Andbe Home at Norton.
She was a member of the First Christian Church in Alma, a past member of the Order of Eastern Star at Alma and a member of the NEA.
In addition to her husbands, she was preceded in death by her father in 1936; her mother in 1956; 2 brothers, Burton Dodge at 11 months, and Charles Dodge; and 2 sisters Lois Genevieve and Anna Vada, both in infancy.
She leaves to mourn her passing a daughter Winona Amen and husband Walter of Iliff, Colorado; son L.H. "Steve" and wife Marlene Stevens of Bishop, California; 8 grandchildren; 19 great grandchildren; 12 great-great grandchildren; other relatives and many friends.

[NI18700] They settled to Port Byron, New York and later moved to Rochester, New York. Major,
often went by M.J., died Feb 1922 and is buried in Mt Hope Cemetery. H.
Lillian died 1939 and is buried in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Rochester, New York

[NI18734] veteran of the Iraq War

[NI18757] He served in WW i as a member of the 7th Company Medial Officers, training at Fort Benjamin Harrisonin 1917. He was a medical Doctor with a specializtion in Psychiatry After the war he ran a private psychiatic clinic in Miami, FL. When died n 1963 this clinic was left to the City of Miami. He and his wife had no Children.

[NI18761] Died in Motorcycle Accident in Rochester, New York.

[NI18764] Harry was an excellent finish Carpenter. He worked for his father who was a builder in and around Needham-Wellesley area in Massachusetts. He lived in Auburn, Massachusetts, with Mabel, his wife, who suffered from multiple sclerosis and was in a wheel chair from age 40 until her death at age 78. When he could no longer carry her or move Her in the wheel chair because of a bad back, she went into a nursing home in Holden. At that time he divorced (around 1978) he separated from Mabel and moved to Rockport, MA where he lived with Doris Eames widow of Mabel's brother. Shirley, their daughter took care of took care of her mother until Mabel died in 1987, visiting the nursing home several times a week, doing all her laundry, getting her hair done at the beauty shop, and all other amenities.

Harry loved hunting and fishing and would go to Main every fall on a hunting trip.

[NI18765] Calton graduated from Boston Univesity with a Masters degreein Chemical Education and was a chemistry teacher fo 38 years at Wahconah Regional School District in Dalton Massachusetts. He was elected teacher of the year for District in 1996. He was active in the Congregational Church in Dalton, where he sang bass in the choir ( often as soloist) and serv3ed on various church committees over the years.

[NI18779] He was a professional photographer.

[NI18789] No Children by either marriage.

Janet was a graduate of Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School in Manhattan (the first ever to graduate with a 4.0 average from that school).

Janet was an executive assistant for a vice president in charge of high yield bonds at Dean & Bradstreet.

[NI18794] Judy graduated from New England Conservatory of Music in Boston with a degree in Music Education. She taught in Central Berkshire Regional School District as a general Music and classroom teacher for grades K-5 for 18 years. She was a soprano soloist in the Berkshires for a number of years after she came to the Berkshires in 1960. She sang in many area choruses and was a member of the Dalton Congegational Church choir and Hiltown Choral Society. She was a member of the Berkshire Family History Association, the College Club, and Delta Kappa International Soroty for women educators. She enjoyed cooking, crocheting, reading, and volunteering as a researcher for the Berkshire Family History Association. She alo worked (after her retirement

[NI18799] Roland oln Cemetery Stone. Never Marred

[NI18800] Kaylee grsduated from Bobson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. She worked as acomputer trouble-shooter for awhile at John Hancock Company in Boston, Massachusetts.

[NI18801] Gary graduated from Noble Greenough Preparatory School, then Harvard University, and received a Masters Degree from Vanderbilt University. He began his career working in Europe as a financial broker for emerging business following the break of the Soviet Union, first in Poland and then in Baltic countries of Lithuania and Finland.

[NI18811] Dickey on Headstone. Never Married.

[NI18837] Wadham's Oil and Grease Company of Milwaukee was a chain of filling and service stations based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the early 20th century. Their refinery was in Indiana. The company was headed by Harger Wells Dodge who assumed leadership from his father-in-law in 1916. He saw the potential in offering a convenient way for automobile owners to fill their cars with gasoline. Dodge would build off-street filling stations with underground tanks for the gasoline, and electric pumps to dispense it. Wadham's was purchased by Vacuum Oil Company in 1930. Vacuum Oil was then acquired by Socony, which later became Mobil.
Early gas stations were small, ugly or utilitarian buildings that attracted little notice, or even complaints from neighbors. Dodge hired Milwaukee architect Alexander C. Eschweiler to design eye-catching stations.[1] Inspired by Japanese culture, which was popular at the turn of the century, he created Wadham's signature pagoda.[1] As well as a prime example of Japonism the design was one of the earlier examples of
architecture forging a brand identity.
Each building was unique, having a different roof line and floor plan. The pagoda-style roofs were made of stamped-metal tiles. Atop the gabled red roofs many stations had cupolas - often multi-tiered - with lanterns hanging from the corners. The walls were black with yellow trim around the copious glass. They most often featured large plate glass windows on the front, and multi-pane windows covering the sides. Wadham's built over 100 of these distinctive pagodas between 1917 and 1930.
Few of these stations remain. One, built in 1927, was in use as a gas station until 1978. It was restored in 2000, and is now a Registered Historic Place and maintained as a museum display by the city of West Allis. Another, built in 1926, is part of the Washington Avenue Historic District in Cedarburg, and is in use as a jewelry store.

[NI18862] Fred origially came to the puget sound country from Wisconsin in 1860 with his parents across the plains in a covered Wagon. His parents & he returned to Wisconsin after one year. Later in 1879 he return to seattle are and went to the La Conner area. There he married Lila Dodge. he resided in La Connor till 1895 and then moved to Seattle going first to the Alsaka Gold Rush and then returned and became a depty King County Clerk which he held for 35 years. He was well knnown as the Cartooning Clerk for his sketches of courtroom scenes.

[NI18879] Obituary?: Annie Reeve was born in Dover, Wis., October 19, 1845. She passed away at the Wisconsin General hospital in Madison, December 9, 1932, of pneumonia, after a short illness. She had gone to Madison the Sunday previous to visit with relatives.
She was married to Bamford Dodge of Arena in 1868. Of this marriage were born four children, Edwin, who died in infancy, Mrs. Maud Dodge of Mazomanie, Mrs. William Johnson of Madison, and Bamford J. Dodge of St. Paul, Minn. Surviving her besides the three children are several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Mr. Dodge, her husband, passed to the life beyond in 1895.
Mrs. Dodge met with an accident more than a score of years ago, since which time she has been kept indoors almost constantly, but she bore her affliction with patience and fortitude. She was one of the earliest settlers of this community, and has been a resident of Mazomanie for many years.
Mrs. Dodge was always faithful, thankful, serving as a mother, sisters, beloved grandmother and friend. Her memory is a blessed one. her day has come, not gone. Her sun is bright in the world where death and change do not enter.
The funeral was held Sunday afternoon, with services at the home. Rev. H. S. Crouse officiating. Interment was in the Mazomanie cemetery. Among relatives present at the services were B. J. Dodge of St. Paul; Mr. and Mrs. Wm Johnson and daughter Carol Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Leo F. Thatcher, Mr. and Mrs. Casper Jaquish, Mrs. Henry Wolff of Madison; Mr and Mrs. J. W. Pearcey, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roberts and daughter of Dodgeville.

[NI18881] Annie Dodge,
Early Settler,
Dies, Aged 87

Pneumonia Takes
Mazomanie Resident
After Few Day's Illness

Mrs. Annie Dodge, 87, an early settler of Dane county and a resident of Mazomanie for more than 46 years, died early today at a Madison hospital after a few days illness of pneumonia.
She was born at Dover. Survivors are two daughters, Miss Maude Dodge, Mazomanie; and Mrs. William Johnson, Madison; a son, Bamford Dodge, St. Paul; seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
The Rev. H. Crouse will conduct funeral services at the home at 2 p.m. Sunday. Burial will be in the Mazomanie cemetery.

[NI18901] Was in the Civil War.

[NI18910] January 14, 1887 is what is recorded on his WW I draft registration Card.

[NI18920] Never Married.

[NI18934] Eau Claire Leader Thu May 23, 1957
CHIPPEWA FALLS - Claude B. Dodge, 81, Rt. 1 Chippewa Falls, a cook in a lumber camp in this area during his youth, died of a heart attack in his home at 8 a.m. Wednesday. Funeral services will be held here Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Hogseth-Pederson funeral chapel, the Rev. Sherman Warner of Lake Hallie officiating. Burial will be in Prairie View Cemetery. Mr. Dodge is survived by his wife, Floy; a son, Burt, of Wheeling, Ill.; two daughters, Mrs. Truman Misfeldt of Chippewa Falls and Mrs. May Buetow of Eau Claire; three grandchildren; and a brother, Thomas of Eau Claire. Friends may call at the funeral chapel after 10 a.m. Friday.

[NI18935] 1920 in Hoquim Grays Harbor WA

[NI18942] Anderson, Marjory L.
STOUGHTON - Marjory L. Anderson, age 83, of 317 West McKinley Street, died on Wednesday, September 25 at the Stoughton Hospital. Marjory was born on April 30, 1908 at Janesville, Wisconsin the daughter of the late Henry and Louella (Croft) Scott. She was a graduate of Stoughton High School, and furthered her education at Milton College graduating in the School of Education.
She was married to Irving Anderson on February 16, 1934. He preceded her in death in 1983. She was a member of Covenant Lutheran Church, Stoughton.
Surviving her is a daughter Ellen Newman of Stoughton; a son, Michael Anderson of Denver, Colorado; a brother James (Kae) Scott of Bradenton, Floriday; a sister Lois Olson of Stoughton; four grandchildren; two great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents; and a brother Robert Scott. Private family services will be held with burial in teh Cooksville Cemetery. Olson-Holzhuter Funeral Home, Stoughton.

[NI18943] The Murder of Ann Brown by her Husband, Capt Joseph J. Brown
As has been said elsewhere in this history, but one native of Islesborough has ever been committed to the State prison, that man having been Captain Joseph J. Brown, who was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to be hanged.
Brown killed his wife, Ann Brown, at their house in Islesborough, April 16, 1856. The murder was a cold-blooded and unprovoked one. Brown was a sailor, and had been master of a small coaster, and was about thirty-five years of age at the time of the murder. His wife was a native of Islesborough, and about thirty years of age when killed. She was an entirely inoffensive woman. Brown, when intoxicated, is said to have treated his wife brutally, beating her on such occasions without ever alleging provocation. The day before the murder, Brown had been to Belfast, and as usual when there, he had indulged freely in intoxicating liquor. He did not return home until the morning of the murder, arriving there just after breakfast. His family consisted of his wife, one daughter twelve years of age, an infant of four months. Four other children had been born to them, but all died young.
Before the murder, Mrs. Brown and the two children were the only persons in the house when Brown came home. Brown went into the house he gave his pocket book to his daughter, and in a few minutes picked up a butcher knife that was lying on the floor and deliberately cut his wife's throat from ear to ear; she begging him to spare her life, but her dying entreaties were of no avail. The young daughter tried to save her mother, but was powerless to do so. In her efforts to get the knife away from her father her fingers were badly cut. .Brown's trial commenced at Belfast, May 19, 1856.the trial lasted a week..the jury were out only about an hour, bringing in a verdict of murder in the first degree.judge May then pronounced the sentence of death by hanging, the prisoner to be taken to the State prison to await the execution of the sentence, until which time to be put to hard labor in solitary confinement. Brown was at once taken to Thomaston and committed to the State prison; but he was not hanged, as within a few months he killed himself by cutting his throat with a piece of glass.
History of Islesborough, John P. Farrow, 1893, pages116-9.

[NI18945] Pvt WW I US Marine Corps

[NI18948] US Army WW I

[NI18951] 1905 WI Census - Ridgeway, Iowa County, Wisconsin
1910 US Census - Ridgeway, Iowa County, Wisconsin
1920 US Census - Blue Mounds, Dane County, Wisconsin
1930 US Census - Blue Mounds, Dane County, Wisconsin

Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Sunday March 12, 1967

The Captial Times, Madison, Wisconsin, August 6, 1962

(underlined names I don't know yet)

Dodge Family Reunion In Dodgeville July 29

Eighter-four members of the dodge family attended a reunion in Dodge Park near Dodgeville July 29. The oldest member of the family was 82-year-old Lance Dodge from Blue Mounds and the youngest member was 8-month-old Gary Pope, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pope from Livingston.

Madisonians at the reunion were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Dodge; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Dodge and their sons, Timothy, Lance and Keven; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hickcox; Walter Bradley; Mr. and Mrs. William Massey and their sons, Scotty and Mike; and Mrs. Henry Knight.

Those from Arena were Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Dodge and daughters, Joan and Gayle; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Dodge, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Pope. Family members from Barneveld were Mr. and Mrs. Leland Dodge and Dick and Mrs. and Mrs. Richard Dauck, Steven and Rickey.

Livingston Residents were Mrs. Rebecca Mahoney and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pope, Debbie, Peggy, Cindy and Gary. Those from Ridgeway were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hubbard, Reggie and Diane, and Claire, Rachel and Sheila Hubbard. Attending from Blue Mounds were Mr. and Mrs. Dean Dodge and Dim and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Lampman Jr. and daughters, Jean and Linda. Those from Dodgeville were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Helmuth and Mr. and Mrs. Milo Anderson and Becky, Susie and Kennie.

Others were Mr. and Mrs. Emory Opeal, Norway Grove; Nevada Hottman, Belleville; Mr. and Mrs. Gay Sutter, Mt. Horeb; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Larson, Milwaukee; Mr. and Mrs. Morce [Maurice] Lampman and Lary [Larry], and Marge Weitzel, Spring Green; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Johnson, Jackie and Jeffery, Mazomanie; Mrs. Donna Erbe and daughters, Beth, Diane and Debbie, Lodi; Linda Johnson, Stoughton; and Mr. and Mrs. Ken Brattlle and Tim Holmes, Mountain.

The reunion in 1963 will be held the last Sunday in July in Blue Mound State Park.

Lance Dodge
BLUE MOUNDS - Lance Dodge, 86, died Saturday (Mar. 11, 1967) at the home of a daughter.
Surviving are four sons, Leland, Barneveld; Raymond and Dean, Blue Mounds; and Vernon, Middleton; three daughters, Mrs. Wayne Lampman Sr., Blue Mounds; Mrs. Gay Sutter, Mt. Horeb; and Mrs. Emory Opsal, DeForest; a brother, Lester, Rt. 1. Madison; two sisters, Mrs. Dean Pope, Arena; and Mrs. Rebecca Mahoney, Dodgeville; 22 grandchildren; and 39 great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday in West Blue Mounds Lutheran Church. Friends may call after 3 p.m. today at the Gesme-Elestad Funeral Home.

[NI18952] Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, November 19, 1945

Mrs. Susie Mae Pine
ARENA - Mrs. Susie Mae Pine, 62, Arena, was found dead in her bed Sunday morning.
Cause of death was given as a heart attack by Iowa County Corner F. W. Kepke and Sheriff Ray Reese, who investigated.
She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Erma Mae Hickcox, town of Arena; three sisters, Mrs. Hiram Hubbard, Ridgeway; Mrs. Rebecca Mahoney and Mrs. Dean Pope, both of Arena, and two brothers, Lance Dodge, Blue Mounds, and Lester Dodge, Madison.

[NI18962] Pauline Susan Dodge … 83, of New Minas, passed away with her family by her side, Friday, May 8, 2009 in the Valley Regional Hospital, Kentville. Pauline was born and raised in Port Williams. She had been employed at the cannery in Port Williams and at the former Palmeter’s Country Home, Kentville, from where she retired. She enjoyed gardening and playing cards and bingo. She is survived by two daughters, Juanita and Carolyn, both of New Minas; a son, Stan (Carol), Wolfville; a special grandson, Stewart and a special great granddaughter, Stephanie, both of New Minas; many other grandchildren and great grandchildren; sister-in-law, Hilda Bezanson, Port Williams; brother-in-law, Basil (Jean) Dodge, New Minas; sister-in-law and special friend, Dorothy Pelley, New Minas; several nieces and nephews. She will also be missed by her cat, Isabell. She was predeceased by her husband of 62 years, Carl; two grandchildren, Dauwayne Dexter and Susan Dexter.

The funeral service will be held at 10:00 a.m. Saturday, May 16, 2009 in the White Family Funeral Home, Kentville, Reverend Gary Manthorne officiating. Burial will take place in the Jaw Bone Corner Cemetery, Canard, Kings County.

[NI18967] Arrived with her parents in New Shoreham, Block Island Rhode Island.

[NI18978] Mrs. W. L. Clark

Mrs. William L. Clark, 57, of Route 4, died Tuesday at a hospital.
She is survived by her husband, two sons, Orland, Cleveland, OH and Loren, Janesville, Wis.; a daughter, Mrs. Elliott Thompson, Stoughton; four sisters, Mrs. Ray Dodge, Madison: Mrs. Emmons Keller, Beloit; Mrs. Elmer Hottman, Belleville; and Mrs. Frank Sliter, Middleton; one brother, Claude Dodge, Bagley, Minn., and 10 grandchildren.
The body was taken to the Joyce funeral home.

Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Wednesday, September 12, 1945

[NI18988] Raymond T. Dodge, 75, of 2814 Lakeland Ave., the great-great-grandson of the first governor of the Wisconsin territory, died Sunday (June 2, 1968) in a hospital after a long illlness.
Henry Dodge, Wisconsin's first governor and also one of the first United States senators elected in 1848 by the new State of Wisconsin, died in 1867.
Raymond was employed by Frautschi Funeral Home. From 1951 to 1954, he was a deputy sheriff of Dane County.
A veteran of World War I, he served in Europe for three years. Mr. Dodge was a member of Disabled American Veterans, American Legion Post 245, and the VFW.
He was a member of St. Bernard's Catholic Church and the Holy Name Society and was a charter member of the Knights of Columbus, Council 531.
Surviving are his wife, Eva; a sister, Mrs. Agnes Miller, Ruthven,Iowa.; and two brothers, Robert,
Kenosha; and Gardener, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

Burial will be in Resurrection Cemetery

[NI18989] Last Rites for
Agnes Miller

Services were held last Friday for Mrs. Agnes L. Miller of Ruthven. She died Jan. 8 at Spencer Hospital. She was 78 years old.
Mrs. Miller came to Ruthven with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dodge of Ruthven. In 1912 she married A. A. Miller at Ruthven; he preceded her in death.
Services were held at Sacred Heart Church in Ruthven with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Msgr. Robert Joynt officiated. She was a memeber of Sacred Heart Altar Society.
Survivors include a son, James, of Ruthven and six daughters, Mrs. Mildred Weiss, Grand Meadow, Minn., Mrs. Maxine Minear and Mrs. Marie Rierson, both of Ruthven; Mrs. Marcella Simington, Cornell, Wis., Mrs. Phyllis Mason, Westowwd, Calif, and Mrs. Marilyn Griggs, Rochester, Minn.
She is also survived by a brother, Robert Dodge of Kenosha, Wis. Other survivors include 22 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren.

THE REPORTER, Emmetsburg, Iowa, January 22, 1974

[NI19015] He died at 2 years of age.

[NI19030] Died Young at sea 14y 5m 11d

[NI19065] Died Young

[NI19077] Died Young

[NI19090] Died Young

[NI19103] Died Young.

[NI19136] Unmarried

[NI19202] William A. Dodge

William A. Dodge, 83, of Warren, and formerly of Ferndale, Hazel Park, Gladwin, and LaFeria, Texas, died Monday, Feb. 9, 2004, at home. He was born July 5, 1920, in Durand, Shiwassee, Michigan.

Mr. Dodge was predeceased by parents, Milo A. Dodge and Winifred Dodge; sister, Dorothy Day; son-in-law, Leslie Hooper; and granddaughter, April Wisneski.

Surviving are his wife of 63 years, Geraldine (Sylvester); children, James (Nancy), John (Janice), Linda (Art) Jankowski, Harry (Sharon), Donna Hooper, William M. (Marie), Susan Dodge; and his little dog. Buddy; 18 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-granddaughter.

[NI19341] National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 29
page 243
Miss Sarah Raynor Rowe.
DAR ID Number: 28662
Born in New Hackensack, New York.
Descendant of Capt. Henry Dodge, of New York.
Daughter of William Rowe and Catherine Wardell Dodge, his wife.
[p.243] Granddaughter of James Dodge and Electa Seward, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Henry Dodge and Sarah Rosecranz, his wife.
Henry Dodge, (1756-1820), served as sergeant, 1775; lieutenant, 1776; captain-lieutenant, 1780, and commanded a company of levies, 1781. He was born in New York; died in Poughkeepsie.
Also No. 14565.

[NI19350] No issue.

[NI19370] Our beloved mother and grandmother, Doris K. (Battles) Dodge, passed away peacefully July 28, 2012.

She now begins her journey of eternal life with her husband, Albert. She was born August 31, 1919 in Akron, Ohio to Carl and Kathryn Battles. She was a graduate of South High School. Doris was a homemaker and was very involved in her church, First Grace United Church of Christ. She was an avid Bridge player, bowler and caregiver. She adored her children and grandchildren and hearing about their lives. The last few years of her life were spent quietly at the Village of St. Edward. She enjoyed a rich life with family and many friends. Many thanks go to those who helped her along her way; leaving a sunset on earth to experience a sunrise in Heaven each day in the presence of God's forever love.

She was preceded in death by her husband of 58 years, Albert J. Dodge; brothers, Hamlin and Robert Battles and great-granddaughter, Brianna Dodge. She is survived by her children, Barbara (Frank) Samuelson of North Carolina, David (Bonnie) Dodge of Illinois, and Carol (Stuart) Moss of Fairlawn; six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. She is also survived by her dear brother, Ralph (Lois) Battles and brother-in-law, Ralph (Margaret) Dodge, along with numerous nieces, nephews and friends.

Funeral service will be Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Ciriello and Carr Funeral Home, 39 S Miller Rd., Fairlawn, Pastor Adam Marquette officiating. Private inurnment will take place at Chestnut Hill Cemetery. For those who wish, in lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to The Village at St. Edwards, 3131 Smith Road, Fairlawn, Ohio 44333 or Hospice of VNS, 3358 Ridgewood Rd., Akron, Ohio 44333

[NI19397] Wendell went by the name of Windy. He died at a hospial in Grand Blanc,Michigan. The services were held on Wednesday 1pm, June 1,2005 at Owosso Church of Christ at his church in Owosso,Michigan where his home is. Officiating is Mr. Lynn Bradbury, Minister. Resting place is at Oak Grove Cemetery,Owosso,Michigan. Arrangements were done by Jennings-Lyons Chapel, Owosso, Michigan

[NI19414] 1880 Census Green, Mecosta, Michigan

[NI19419] Earl was adoped by Orra Spencer & Clara Mongomery.

[NI19421] Enlisted in WW II

[NI19441] Died at 78. per Lorraine Schneider barry.schneider@verison.nt

[NI19498] George M. also was a telegrapher and later headed the telegraphy school. George M. was said to have learned telegraphy from his mother and at age 15 began his career as a telegrapher in railroad service. He was later associated with Western Union in Valparaiso for over 40 years. He reorganized the telegraphy school in the 1890s or early 1900s and headed it until 1941 when he resigned as president. The school then became known as the Valparaiso Technical Institute. In the late 1880s, G.M. Dodge wrote the first comprehensive textbook for students of telegraphic work. It was titled "TheTelegraph Instructor" and was revised a number of times. I have a copy. The last edition was printed in 1921. He also wrote several other texts. And he worked with the federal government, the armed services and students from other countries in various training projects.

[NI19503] Matilda died of Arterio Sclerosis.

[NI19515] Alice Died of Pneumonia

[NI19522] They returned to the United States that same year. Then on the 24th Oct. 1920 Norman Dodge, their first son was born. The family at the time was staying at Lawrence's mother house in Charlotte, Michigan. At that time his mother, Celia Iron (Shepherd) Dodge was devorced from Lawrence's father, Manning Dodge.

Sadly, Vera filed for divorce which was granted on 4 March 1927. She returned to France with her son Norman but fell ill shortly before or after her return. She died two years after returning to France as a young mother on July 1, 1929, at the newly constructed American Hospital in Neuilly, Île-de-France, France, at the age of 31 from Tuberculosis , and was buried in Paris, Île-de-France, France.

Her son, Nowman, returned to the US on the 13th Dec 1929 and was brought up by his grandmother & father.

[NI19539] Sophia Never married.

[NI19590] 1930 Census Kent, Solon, MI

[NI19600] Mary Ann grew up in Kirwin, KN and graguated from high school there June
1887. She was born a natural artist and in so developing her talent, did
many works of art in oil and pastels. The story goes that it was nt
lady-like to be an artist.

[NI19606] George's obituary was published in the Deseret News on Monday, February 16, 1942 on page 14. That newspaper is on microfilm in the LDS Family History Library film number 027,138. It could be ordered at any branch library. There was a picture with this obituary but it was rather poor quality. The film was black with white writing - among other things.

"GEORGE HENRY WRAY
"Funeral services for George Henry Wray, 76, retired florist, will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. at 2350 East Thirteenth South Street, by the Rev. Floyd W. Barr. Entombment will be in the Sunset Lawn Mausoleum. "Mr. Wray died at his home, 4945 Holladay boulevard, Saturday. He was born Aug 3, 1865 in Fairfield, Iowa, and had resided in Salt Lake 32 years. For a number of years he operated a floral shop in the Keith O'Brien, Inc.
"Mr. Wray and his widow Harriet Dodge Wray, would have celebrated their fifty-fourth wedding anniversary Monday."

[NI19636] No Children: Obit in March 10 daily Astorian.

[NI19643] She was an artist, studying art Students League and in Paris. She also attended Molly Corrigan's Residence School in New York City.

[NI19672] Clifton Rodgers Dodge, Rye resident the past 45 years, passed away April 2, 1996.

He was born at Nowata, Oklahoma Territory, Sept. 17, 1904. He was the son of Arthur and Ella (McDonald) Dodge. Mr. Dodge married Zola Hoar in 1929. He ranched in the Granada, LaVeta and Rye areas, served as Deputy Sheriff of Prowers County during World War II and purchased livestock for the United States Government for Camp Amache at Granada where he served as Mayor. During the 1920's Cliff followed the rodeos throughout the country. He was a member of Rye Home United Methodist Church and a mason for 67 years. He was a member of Greenhorn Valley Lodge No. 196 AF&AM.

Mr. Dodge was preceded in death by son, Dan Dodge. He is survived by wife, Zola, of the family home; two sons, Chuck (Barbara) Dodge and Butch (Donna) Dodge, all of Rye; two brothers, Raymond Dodge and Bud (Frances) Dodge; sister, Doll Parsley; and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Services at 1 p.m. Friday, April 5, 1996, Rye Home United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Bob Adams officiating. Interment at Brookside Cemetery, Rye. Masonic graveside services by Greenhorn Valley Lodge No. 196 AF&AM. The family will receive friends in the Auxiliary Building next to the church immediately following the service. Those who wish may make contributions to Sangre de Cristo Hospice in memory of Mr. Dodge.

[NI19690] He grew up quickly and took on the responsibilities of the family farm. He was called to serve his country in 1941 and he joined the Army. World War II had just begun and Earl served most of his military career in Okinawa, Japan.
Earl spent his early life, farming, ranching, as a cattleman, horseman, breaking horses to ride or pull farm machinery. He was raised on a ranch and loved the outdoors. You could always find him hard at work. Earl also drove truck, first for Ida-Cow (until their operation moved to Caldwell, Idaho) and then later for Montana Express. He had driven for them right up to present day.
Earl's hobbies, when he had spare time, were hunting, fishing and woodworking. He was forever having someone give him a drawing or a model of something so that he could try his hand at building it. Many people have seen his handiwork at the Wendell Restaurant -- he rebuilt the buckboard in the storefront from some old scraps that were lying around. It has since been seen in several parades and other events in the Magic Valley. Earl was a very quiet person who showed his love by doing for his family and friends. He will be deeply missed.

[NI19711] Note: Theron Royal Woodward had this name spelled Laurence.

[NI19723] William C. Brown enter the Army 14 Jun 1918.

Appointed Corporeal Signal Corps of the army, 1 Nov 1918.

Discharged 16 Jan 1919 (W W W 1 veteran

[NI19748] Enlisted in US Army PVT Apr 5 1944.

[NI19752] A memorial service was held June 2 at Trinity United Methodist Church in Terra Alta, W.Va., for Robert Elwood "Bob" Dodge, 83, of Terra Alta and formerly of Pasadena, who died May 15 at his home. The cause of death was not available.

Mr. Dodge was born Nov. 17, 1919, in Terra Alta and lived in Pasadena for approximately 30 years before returning to Terra Alta.

Mr. Dodge served in the Conservation Corps in Elkins, W.Va., when he was 16. He was retired from Kaiser Aluminum, where he was a maintenance supervisor.

He was an active member of Trinity United Methodist Church in Terra Alta, the Masonic Lodge and the Bay Country Chevrolet Club, which he joined in 1986.

Survivors include his wife of nine years, Josephine Tasker Dodge; one son, Robert S. Dodge of Annapolis; two daughters, Ellen Joan Sullivan of Ellicott City and Barbara J. Myrick of Baltimore; two stepdaughters, Carolyn F. Hill of Mountain Lake Park and Linda S. Powell of Terra Alta; one brother, George Dodge of Baltimore; one sister, Mary Dodge Groves of Terra Alta; eight grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-granddaughter.

He was preceded in death by his first wife, Mary Virginia "Peg" Smith Dodge; his second wife, Henrietta Warner Dodge; his parents, Ezra Benson and Dessie Shaffer Dodge; three brothers, Harland "Hank", James "Jim" and Charles "Charlie" Dodge; and two sisters, Barbara Jean Dodge and Virginia Dodge Casteel Humphries
.
Mr. Dodge was a Human Gift Registry donor at West Virginia University.

Burial will be at a later date. Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice Care, P.O. Box 760, Arthurdale, WV 26520.
=============================================================================================
COMMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS: Per his obit info:

Robert married three times:
First to Mary Virginia 'Peg' Smith - per WVA Marriage records they married in 1936 - no specific date'

Second to Henrietta Warner - per SSDI
Born 9 Mar 1924
Died 12 Jun 1994 Pasadena, Anne Arundel County, Maryland
Memorial# 131040796

Third to Josephine Dorothy Tasker (see her obit below_
Born 2 Aug 1927 Terra Alta, Preston County, West Virginia
Died 12 Jun 2014 Heartland, Preston County, West Virginiae
Daughter of Junior Adrian and Zora Mae (Ringer) Tasker
Find a Grave Memorial# 131324324

Per a very skimpy Family Tree
Robert and Henrietta had a son, Robert S. Dodge ( no dates)
who is mentioned in the obit

Per same very skimpy Family Tree
Robert and Mary had two daughters,
Barbara Joyce Dodge who married a Myrick
Ellen Joan Dodge who married Nelson Sullivan
No other data no the girls or their marriages

ALSO FROM OBIT BELOW FOR JOSEPHINE DOROTHY TRASKER
She had two daughters by her first husband, James Carlton Dodge
Carolyn Dodge who married John Hill
Linda Dodge who married Gary Powell
======================================================================================================
Josephine Dorothy Tasker Dodge, 86, of Terra Alta, went to be with her Lord on Thursday June 12, 2014 at Heartland of Preston County. The daughter of the late Junior A. Tasker and Zora Ringer Tasker Casteel, she was born August 2, 1927 in Terra Alta. Her greatest joy was her family and church. To her children she was "Gramma Dodge". To her many friends she was just "Jo", the little lady with a pure heart and a big smile. She was a faithful member of Trinity United Methodist Church of Terra Alta where she sang in the choir, taught Bible School and held various offices. She worked at Ben Franklin 5&10, Gregg's Pharmacy and retired from Hopemont Hospital. She is survived by two daughters and spouses, Carolyn and John Hill of Oakland and Linda and Gary Powell of Terra Alta; two step-daughters, Jo Sullivan and husband Nelson of Salem and Barbara Myrick of Baltimore; a brother, Robert Tasker of San Francisco, CA; a sister, Sharon Roy of Terra Alta; five grandchildren and spouses: Mike and Lori Hill, Max and Amber Hill, Matt and Shelli Hill, Marcia and Brent Hauser and Chris and Melissa Powell; six great grandchildren: Blake, Jenna, Brandon, Samantha, Mason and Mikey; one great great granddaughter, Hailey; 15 step-grandchildren: Tina, Nelson Jr., Debra, Sandra, Kirk, Harley, Michael, Barbara, Samantha, Colby, Cameron, Elizabeth, Caylor, Eyan, Ethan and Julia; and several nieces and nephews. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband, James Dodge and her second husband, Robert Dodge. Family and friends will be received at the Arthur H. Wright Funeral Home, Terra Alta on Friday from 5:00-8:00 p.m. and from 10:00 a.m Saturday June 14, 2014 at the Trinity United Methodist Church until the 11:00 a.m. time of service with Pastor Eric Beeman officiating. Burial will follow in the Miller Cemetery, Cranesville.

[NI19754] Pvvt US Army WWorld War II

[NI19756] The had two children.

[NI19791] UNmarked Grave Plot: Section Pg21 Row 81 Grave 54

[NI19821] Garrett Dodge, New York Enlisted: 16 Jan 1864 - Union Rank Induction: Private Rank Discharge: Private 50th Regiment, New York Engineers, Co. M.

[NI19824]
birth place & parents
badness0324 added this on 26 Jan 2012
FAMILY HISTORY HAS BEEN THAT TIMOTHY AMIS SULLIVAN DID NOT KNOW HIS BIRTH PARENTS. IT HAS BEEN TOLD HE WAS RAISED ST ANNE'S ORPHANAGE IN D.C.BUT THEY HAVE NO RECORD & HE COULD NOT PROVE ANYTHING ABOUT HIS BIRTH OR WHAT ORPHANAGE HE WAS IN. STORY I HEARD WAS HE WAS QUESTIONED ABOUT IT AS A YOUNG MAN & I AM NOT SURE IF IT WAS THAT HE COULD HAVE INHERITED MONEY OR WHAT. THAT HE WENT TO LIVE WITH THE EASTON FAMILY IN GAITHERSBURG MD. HE CAN BE FOUND ON THE 1880 CENSUS THERE, AGE 19. IT WAS SAID HE TOOK HIS MIDDLE NAME FROM A FAVORITE TEACHER MR. AMIS. DIFFERANT CENSUS' HAVE DIFFERANT PLACES OF BIRTH FOR HIM & FOR HIS PARENTS LISTED, ALTHOUGH HE STATED HE KNEW NOTHING ABOUT THEM.

[NI19839] Linsley Villars Dodge, Sr, born 5 Nov 1901 New York City, New York died Sep 1982 Hilton Head Island, Beaufort, South Carolina. Son of Villars Atherton Dodge ( Memorial# 72113961) and Bessie Louise Linsley ( Memorial# 72114342).

Linsley married 1st on 24 Jun 1924 at the First Congregational Church North Adams, Berkshire, Massachusetts in to Lyda French Plunkett (1903-2007) daughter of William Caldwell Plunkett & Florence Agnes Canedy. Linsley and Lyda divorced and he remarried on 13 Jun 1959 to Frances Bass, ( Memorial# 85997954), the widow of George Miller Appleton (1889-1951) and mother of 5 Appleton children. Lyda remarried to John William Moore Robbins (1901-1975).

Frances is the daughter of Lyman Metcalfe Bass ( Memorial# 85996914) and Grace Holland Bass ( Memorial# 85996862).

Linlsey Villars Dodge Sr and Lyda French Plunkett Dodge Robbins are the parents of one son: Linsley Villars Dodge Jr (1925-2012) and four grandchildren.

[NI19852] Obituary from the Daily Recorder-Gazette Greenfield, Mass. Monday July 22, 1935

Charles Barrett Passes At Home
----------------------------------------
Golden Wedding Celebrated last Year by Former Merchant and Town official
----------
Charles s. Barrett, 75, retired merchant and town official, died shortly before midnight Sunday at his home at 79 Prospect street after several years of failing health.
Barrett was born in Greenfield, March 13, 1859, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Barrett. He attended the local schools and was graduated from a private academy in Quincy. He returned here later and was superintendent of the workshop at the Franklin County house of correction under his step-father, George A. Kimball, county sheriff. He also held a similar position at the Hampshire county house of correction.
Barrett later formed a partnership with Frank Foster and they ran a clothing store for many years in the store now occupied by Liggett's. Barrett later bought out Foster's interest and conducted the business under his own name.
In 1918 he became sealer of weights and measures and about two years later was named clerk of the board of selectmen, continuing in that position until about three years ago. He was also town purchasing agent and soldier's relief agent for many years.
Barrett married Miss Emma E. Dodge of South Deerfield on Oct. 16, 1884, and the ceremony was preformed by Rev. John F. Moors of All Souls church. The couple celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary last fall. They have spent their entire married life in Greenfield.
He was a member of Republican lodge of Masons and of the Connecticut Valley commandery, Knights Templar.
Funeral services will beheld at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday at the St. James' church. rev. William h. Cole will officiate. Burial will be in Green River cemetery. The body is at the Hodgen funeral home on High street. friends are asked not to send flowers.

Son of William F. Barrett and Ellen Bonn (Hall) Barrett
Stepson of George A. Kimball

[NI19924] Rogersville: Drexel Melvin Dodge, age 91 of Rogersville, , died Tuesday, August 12, 2008 at Indian Path Medical Center after a brief illness. Mr. Dodge was born August 25, 1916 in Grampian, Pennsylvania. He was a veteran of World War II having served in the U.S. Navy SeaBees in the South Pacific. Mr. Dodge received a BS degree from George Washington University, Washington, D.C. He was employed by the U.S. Postal Service entering as a Railway Mail Clerk on trains between Washington, D.C., New York City and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Mr. Dodge was promoted to Training Officer at the Washington Regional Office retiring as Chief of Training Branch. He was a member of First Baptist Church, Overton Masonic Lodge No. 5 F. & A.M., Scottish Rite, and was a Charter Member of Jericho Temple AAONMS. He was preceded in death by his parents, Roxie M. and George W. Dodge; sister, Naomi Mason; brother, George D. Dodge; son, James K. Dodge; wife, Myrtle McDonald Bolton; wife, Hilda L. Dodge. He is survived by his wife, Eula Morgan Dodge; sons, David G. Dodge and wife, Betty of Warrenton, VA, John R. Dodge and wife, Pandy of Bowie, MD, Timothy F. Dodge and wife, Cathy of Rogersville; daughters, Judith Ann Peterson of Westchester, VA, Susan K. Dugan of Westchester, VA; step-daughters, Brenda Bryant and husband, Benny of Dandridge, TN, Diane Woody of Rogesville; step-son, Gary Varnell of Rogersville; sister-in-law, Miriam Dodge of Picayune, MS; daughter-in-law, Kay Dodge of Colorado Springs, CO; sixteen grandchildren and several great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Calling hours will be 1:00 P.M. to 2:00 P.M., Sunday, August 17, 2008 at Broome Funeral Home, Rogersville Funeral service will be conducted 2:00 P.M., Sunday, August 17, 2008 in the funeral home chapel with Rev. James W. Lindsay officiating. Interment will be in the Mountain Home National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society, 508 Princeton Rd., Suite 102, Johnson City, TN 37601 or American Heart Association, 208 Sunset Dr., Suite 113, Johnson City, TN 37604. Online condolences may be made at www.broomefuneralhome.com Broome Funeral Home, Rogersville is serving the Dodge family.

[NI19935] Jordan Dodge was a celebrated Baptist minister of his time. Not much is known of his early life. He was a worker in iron, like his father and many of his family. He made some inventions in nail-making appliances. He was pastor Baptist Church at Stockbridge, Mass. from Oct 27, 1784, to 1788 (see History of Worcester County, Massachusetts). Larned's History of Windham County, p. 246, says that Jordan Dodge preached in Hampton, Conn., after 1776, much to the annoyance of the settled pastors but with the result that many were converted that would not have been reached by the regular clergy. The same work states, p. 231, that about this time Jordan Dodge, a zealous Baptist itinerant, held meetings in Scotland, Conn., that resulted in revivals, the converts joining the Baptist congregation in neighboring towns. He removed from Sturbridge, Mass., to Granville, N.Y.,1789. In 1792 he was called to the ministry of Granville, where he officiated as pastor until Sept 13, 1800.
He is found in Fair Haven, Vt., in 1804. Rev. N . S. S. Beaman, D.D., says in Adams' "History of Fair Haven, Vt.: "Among the patrons of my school I may mention Mr. Dodge, a Baptist preacher, who seemed to maintain a kind of independent position in his relations. Two of his children, a son and a daughter, I well recollect. The girl was older than myself, and was the best scholar in the school, and the boy had a spice of his father's eccentricity. The lads made the fires by turns, and there had been some neglect on this subject, and we had suffered for several mornings in consequence. It was young Dodge's turn to make a fire in the morning. The preceding evening I gave strict orders to have the former nuisance abated if the officer in charge had to sit up all night and burn up the entire woodpile at the door. In the morning the sanctum was warm as the tropics, and little Dodge sat demurely studying his lesson in the corner.
"I have spoken of the peculiarities of the elder Dodge. One anecdote used to be related in Fair Haven in that day which may be forgotten now. The messenger of peace worked six days for his daily bread, and dispensed the gospel on the seventh. He was employed as a bloomer (rather, nailer) in the Fair Haven Iron Works. One day a dispute took place between Elder Dodge and a fellow laborer, and after the preacher had invoked all the patience he had to his aid in vain, he threw down his tongs and straightened himself up to his full height, threw off his black coat and said: "Lie there, divinity, till I do this man justice."
" I heard the elder preach once in the school house, but never in the "Lord's barn," as it was then generally called, whether excluded by the elements or by church authority I am not able to say. He was a man of talents and wit. His son I met a few years since, in the town of Black Brook, in Essex County, N.Y. He (John Adams Dodge) is a respectable Baptist clergyman, and he very pleasantly reminded me of the incident of fire-making in the old school house in Fair Haven, in 1804, sixty-five years ago."
From Adams' "History of Fair Haven, Vt.": "Elder Jordan Dodge was a Baptist preacher, resident here in 1804, and is said to have been really the first settled minister of the town. He preached in the school house and in private houses, and a portion of the time at the church in Hampton. He lived, at one time, on the south side of West Street, beyond the old burying ground; at another, and perhaps later period, on the north side of the street running past the iron works, then called Johnnycake Lane, having a shop on the rocks above the iron works, where he is and to have worked at his trade of nail-making. Dr. Besman represents him as a bloomer, working in the forge during the week, and preaching on Sunday. He was a man of excitable temper, eccentric, naturally talented, and witty. Numerous anecdotes and stories are told concerning him, all similarly characteristic.
" It is related that, as he had some trouble in the church, the church taking him to discipline for some violence on his part, he felt himself persecuted, and remarked that an apple-tree which held many clubs in its branches was clubbed on account of the superior quality of its fruit, when one hearing it replied that sometimes trees were clubbed because of great hornets' nests contained in them."
In his later years he resided at Monkton, Vt., but he traveled extensively, spreading the gospel throughout the land. He was considered a powerful preacher, and was welcomed by the people wherever he appeared. By request, he preaches to the legislature at Albany, N.Y., and was presented with $200, and a cloak costing $75, which he always wore. When he returned home and was asked why the legislators were so generous to him, he replied that he "prayed for all the big men."

[NI19982] Mrs Mary T. Dodge 85, of Stoneleigh Apartments in Broxville , died yessterday after a short illness.

Mrs Dodge was born in April 1878 in New York City, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs Thompson. A Resident of the Park Hill section of Yonkers for many Years. Mrs Dodg spent many years in the Far East where her Husband Henyy Temple Dodgewas an importer.

She was a communicant of St. John's Episcopal Church, Getty Squar, served on the board of directors of the Yonkers Visiting Nursing Association for more than 50 years an also spent 50 years on the board of directors of the Salvation Army. Mrs Dodge is survived by a son Henry Temple Dodge Jr. and a sister Mrs. Maurice (jane) Kricki of Fairfield Connecticut and four Grandchildren.

[NI19988] Living in 1910 in Webb City, Missouri. Sometime known as Jennie

[NI19990] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 128
page 194

[p.194] Mrs. Mary Dodge Albee Miller.
DAR ID Number: 127593
Born in Rockland, N. Y.
Wife of Henry E. Miller.
Descendant of Daniel Dodge, as follows:
1. John W. Albee (b. 1869) m. 1894 Eva Dodge (b. 1872).
See No. 127592.

[NI19992] New York LT COL World War 1 & 2

[NI19995] Edward Dodge a Private was in the Connecticut Militia. He served in Capt. Ebenezer Lathrop'sCompany in Colonel Jonathan Latimer's Regiment, having enlisted at Norwich, Conn., August 29, 1777.

The following excerpt from National Archives Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783 has this about the Militia at Saratoga in 1777:

[Two large regiments of militia, composed of detachments from all the brigades, were ordered to re-enforce Gen. Gates at Saratoga in the summer of 1777. They were assigned to Gen. Poor's Continental Brigade in Arnold's Division, and ought in both the battles with the enemy, Sept. 19 and Oct. 9, 1777. In the first battle they lost more than any two other regiments in the field. Upon their dismissal after the surrender of Burgoyne, Gates spoke of them as "two excellent militia regiments from Connecticut." They were commanded by Colonel Jonathan Latimer, of New London, and Thaddeus Cook, of Wallingford. . . .]

[NI20003] Died from a Rivit Gun Acccident while installing guages on a ship at Green Bay, Wisconsin

[NI20044] Commander and Air Ship pilot of the U.S. Dirigible Akron Stationed at Lakehust, New Jersey.

Graduate of the class of 1911 in the US Naval Acadamy.

The WW II destroyer "DD534" USS MCcord was named for him and was lauched on Jan 10 1943 by his widow

They were married at Presbyterian Church in Washington DC june 1 1926.

[NI20050] In April of 1999 Jan Martin has provided info on descendants.

Dar #A205557 per Anne Poupel - poupelfamily@yahoo.com (3 Oct 2008)

[NI20102] Lived in Sulphur Springs, TX in 1958 according to her father’s obituary.

[NI20103] Cedar Rapids Iowa

Donald William Dodge, 92, of the Manor, the Methwick community, formerly of 3224 Terry Dr. S.E. died Thursday, Dec. 21, 2006, after a long illness. Per Donis wishes his body was cremated with inurnment at Oak Hill Cemetery. There will be no services. Cedar Memorial n West Side Chapel is assisting the family. He is survived by his son John, a daughter Bonnie and son-in-law Terry Kemme, all of Cedar Rapids. A brother-in-law Richard Royer of Dallas Center; two nephews and two nieces.

Don was born Jan. 27, 1914 in Oelwein, to Bertha Alice Buchannan and William Jacob Dodge. He graduated from College of Commerce at the University of Iowa, in 1938, then the College of Law in 1941.

While at the University of Iowa, he was a member of the Menis Gymnastics Team from 1936-1938, serving as captain the last year and as president of Gymnastics Athletic Club. In addition he was a member of the board of directors of Student Publications and the Iowa Memorial Union and of Omicron Delta Kappa Senior Honorary Leadership Society.

From 1941-1946 he was a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigations in Maryland, Florida, Oklahoma, and Arizona. He and Martha settled in Cedar Rapids in 1946, where he worked for nine years as an attorney at Simmons, Perrine, Albright, Ellwood, and Neff. From 1965 until his retirement in 1981 Don was a government contracts administrator for Collins Division of Rockwell International.

Don was a long-time member of the Lynn County Bar Association, Beethoven Club, Lynn County Jazz Society, and Cedar Rapids Symphony Orchestra Association, and at one time was principle trumpeter for the symphony as well as the Coe Promenade Orchestra.

In his lifetime he served as president or chairman of the following organizations: Law Club of Cedar Rapids, Hawkeye Toastmaster Club, Local 450 A.F. of Musicians, Municipal Board of Adjustment and the Cedar Rapids Chapter of Former Special Agents of the FBI.

Donis lifelong loves were tennis and trumpet, and he enjoyed composing poetry. When he was 18 he was the organizer, manager and director of the Oelwein Summer Concert Band and conductor of the Urbana High School Summer Concert Band. While a student at the University of Iowa he was the leader of the Avalon Orchestra, a popular college dance group, which also played at Yellowstone Lodge. He continued to play both tennis and trumpet through his 80s, often times sitting in on trumpet with the Dick Watson jazz trio at the Lighthouse.

Don was preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Martha Jean, in 2006; a sister Dorothy; a son, Richard Allan in 1969; and a daughter Donna Jean in 1950.

[NI20134] Practicing in Collingsville, Texas

[NI20146] Practicing in Collingsville, TX

[NI20156] Obituary for Beatrice CockingBeatrice C. Cocking, 96, of Marion, died Sunday, April 28, 2013, at Crestview Acres Care Center, Marion. Per her wishes, there will be no funeral services. Survivors include her children, Shirley (Al Bartus) Dement, Coretta Sweeney, Dreanna (Don) Zachmeyer, and Rick Cocking; 12 grandchildren; many great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren; and sister, Ruth Hayes. She was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Glen; sister, Sybil Simmonds; three brothers, James, Marvin, and Ray Hayward; son-in-law, Wayne Sweeney; and grandson, Donald Riddle. Beatrice was born June 8, 1916, in Morley, Iowa, the daughter of James and Augusta (Reed) Hayward. She graduated from Roosevelt High School, in Cedar Rapids. Beatrice married W. Glen Cocking on December 31, 1949. Glen died in 1990. She was the founder of Cockings Yarn and Needlecraft. Beatrice enjoyed crocheting, needlework, and cross stitching.

[NI20221] Theodosia, Wife of John DODGE, Died 27 Aug 1877, Aged 85y 7m 27d

[NI20238] Served in WW I

[NI20257] "had a grant at Grand Pre, but left it and returned to Colchester,
[Connecticut]"

[NI20276] Never Married.

[NI20317] Kenneth was a Tec 5 U.S. Army in WW II.

[NI20353] The Register, Berwick, N. S. May 5, 1915, Wednesday Evening

JOHN WHEELOCK DODGE

A gloom has been cast over our town by the passing away of Mr. John W. Dodge, at the age of 64 years. During his four months' illness, confined to his bed, the best medical skill was in constant attendance, assisted by loving attention from the family, but despite all, Mr. Dodge grew weaker until 6.20 p.m. Monday, when the end came. He was conscious until almost the last.

The deceased was a most estimable citizen, and few persons were better known or more deservedly esteemed in the community. His gentleness, kindness and thoughtfulness of others, as well as his cheerfulness not only endeared him to his own, but gained the respect and esteem of a large circle of friends and acquaintances, here and throughout the adjoining County and Valley, where he was well known, being a native of Aylesford.

For young and old he had a kindly greeting and a friendly smile, and not only in the home will he be missed and mourned, but in our midst we shall miss him sadly.

The deceased leaves to mourn, a sorrowing widow, who was formerly Miss Lena M. Margeson, of Kingston, having been married there thirty-eight years ago. The children are: Harley L. who has been here all through his father's illness, and Mildred, Mrs. Hedley W. Richardson, and one grandson, John Church Dodge. There were two brothers, Bradford, who died at Boston some years ago, and James, who died at Aylesford. Mr. Dodge is the last of the family. He was a son of Charles and Jane Dodge, of Aylesford. His mother died here almost a year ago at the ripe old age of 96 years, and to whom Mr. Dodge was affectionately devoted.
Hants Journal.

[NI20378] ROGERS, Doris Agatha (Dodge) - passed away peacefully on Tuesday Feb 26, 2013 at the Blomindon Court at the age of 100. “Ginger” as she preferred to be called, was born in Middleton NS, on Feb 4, 1913, a daughter of the late Lewis Anthony Dodge and Elizabeth Dodge (Meisener). She was predeceased by her husband of 24 years – H. Stetson Rogers, her brothers, Murray, Loring, John, and her sisters Katherine, Elizabeth and Margaret. Agatha was the last remaining member of the original Dodge family. She is survived by her sister-in-law Helen, many nephews & nieces and their families. She travelled to Maclean hospital in Boston to become a nurse but after a few months returned to attend the Maritime Business College where she took shorthand and typing but had a keen interest in business. After WWII broke out, she joined the Royal Canadian Air Force to become a Corporal and remained in the service for two years. She left the RCAF in 1944 returning home to care for her mother who had had a stroke after receiving news of her son John being shot down and missing overseas. After her husband’s passing, Agatha continued living alone in the family home on Commercial Street until her health declined at the age of 96. She had lived a total of 80 years in the home her father had built. After the war she continued her business career and worked as comptroller at the Sydney Steel Mill, worked for A.J. Nader for 2 years before pursuing a 17 year career at Andrews Department store in Middleton. Ginger had a very soft heart for family and her pets (dogs/ cats / horses / strays) and even the groundhog which passed her one day in her house. She hosted many large family dinners and her health and happiness was strengthened due to the old Linden trees which provided dozens of bags of leaves, a therapy she enjoyed for her advancing arthritis. Cremation has taken place. There was visitation for Agatha on Sunday March 3 at the Middleton Funeral Home, 398 Main St., (902) 825-3448. No flowers please by request and donations may be made to a charity of your choice. Many thanks to her support folks at the Blomidon Court in Greenwich who enjoyed her smart wit and her sharp tongue

[NI20388] Enlistment in the US Air Corps on Feb 26 1946

[NI20414] died young?

[NI20487] Dr. Clarence Irving Dodge led an adventurous early life. Known to be fearless, and a trained athlete, he earned college money from boxing. He was a proficient boxer, ran the 100- yard dash in ten seconds, and broad jumped 19 feet. He trained by running with sandbags tied to his feet. He also taught in lumber camp schools in Northern Michigan and Wisconsin where teachers had been injured by student assaults. They tried and failed with Clarence.

As did his father, Dr. Dodge insisted on having the fastest horse around. If someone elseiS horse could beat his he would soon replace it. He practiced medicine for several years in College Hill, Kentucky in the late 1880s, being the lone Yankee in the post Civil War town. (The family has many Dr. Dodge stories, yet unpublished.) He also practiced in the New York towns of Fly Creek, East Otto, Rushford, Lake Pleasant, and Glenfield.

In his old age, the town children in Glenfield made up a song about him, reciting things that had happened. Each verse ended i Nuthini ever bothered Old Doc Dodge.i When his great granddaughter was a young teacher, this song was sung for her by an elderly man living in Lowville, New York, who had been one of the boys.

At the time of his death, Dr. Dodge was the village health officer for the rural village of Glenfield, New York. Due to the distance to be traveled to go elsewhere, local patients would still come to be seen for emergencies even as he declined in health in his last months. His very last patient needed a broken bone set. When later x-rayed, at Mrs. Dodgeis suggestion, it was found to be perfectly set. The Doctor died a few days later.

An obituary incorrectly gives his middle name as Irvin. It is Irving.

[NI20523] In 1880 residing in Lynchburg, VA. US Census for Sullivan Co.,
Tennessee , Spotswood J. Dodge 30, clergyman
b. VA, Sarah Age 34, b. VA, Alexander, age 16 m, b TN; Cathander, age 7
f, b TN; Jerial Age 6 m, b TN, Eliza age 4 f, b Tn, Mary, age 2 , b TN.

[NI20548] JOSIAH DODGE was born in Washington County, Tennessee, November 19 1827. He was there reared till seventeen years of age, when he settled in Pulaski County, Missouri, engaging in farming. In 1846 he
enlisted in the Mexican war under Captain Stein at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and served in Company D. First Dragoons of Kentucky, till September 28, 1848. During his service he was wounded with a lance in
the thigh, and at Tucker's Bayou was thrown from his horse, which \disabled him for some time. In 1848 he returned to Pulaski County, Missouri, where he remained till 1850. Emigrating to California, he mined and dealt in stock till September, 1879, when he came to St. \Clair County, Missouri. He has a fine farm of 200 acres under cultivation. Mr. Dodge was married September 8, 1853, to Miss Lucy Willoughby. They had six children, four of whom are living: Ellen, Charles, Jefferson and William. Mrs. Dodge's death occurred in
January, 1863. He was again married January 18, 1864, to Miss Margaret Underwood, of Jackson County, Missouri. They had one child, Josiah B. His second wife died in August, 1866, and he was subsequently married to Elizabeth Eames September 28, 1868. His present wife was formerly Betty Kirby, a native of Tennessee. They have had five children: Kirby, Lydia, Lucy, Jeriel and Jessie.

[NI20584] vital records say lanphear is spelled Lanfair.

[NI20587] Specialized in growing Lemons.

[NI20588] Dorothy Lattuce was adopted by Stephen Clay Dodge. Her natural Father was
J. S. Lattuce

[NI20611] Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, November 19, 1945

Mrs. Susie Mae Pine
ARENA - Mrs. Susie Mae Pine, 62, Arena, was found dead in her bed Sunday morning.
Cause of death was given as a heart attack by Iowa County Corner F. W. Kepke and Sheriff Ray Reese, who investigated.
She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Erma Mae Hickcox, town of Arena; three sisters, Mrs. Hiram Hubbard, Ridgeway; Mrs. Rebecca Mahoney and Mrs. Dean Pope, both of Arena, and two brothers, Lance Dodge, Blue Mounds, and Lester Dodge, Madison.

[NI20613] Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisc., Sunday August 7, 1966

To Be Feted
Mr. and Mrs. Dean F. Pope, Arena, will observe their 50th wedding anniversary Aug. 14 at an open house from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Arena Community building.
No formal invitations are being sent.
The Popes have spent their entire married life in the Arena area. They have two children, Harvey Pope, Livingston, and Mrs. Maurice Lampman, Spring Green; seven grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

Capital Times, Madison, Wisconsin, December 29, 1984

Pope, Lillian B.
ARENA — Lillian B. Pope, age 86, of Arena, died on Friday, December 28, 1984, at Sauk Prairie Hospital after a recent illness. Survivors Include a daughter, Frances Lampman of Spring Green; a son, Harvey Pope of
Livingston; seven grandchildren; six great-grandchildren. She was preceded
In death by her husband, Dean, in 1971.

[NI20614] I did find, in the 1930 US Census that Lester's first wife was Goldie, born 1904 in Kansas.

I also found per SSDI Lester was born 20 Aug 1901 and died 22 Nov 1979 in Brooksville, Hernando County, Florida



MADISON - Ruby I. Dodge, age 94, died Thursday, Nov. 6, 2003, in a local care center. She was born June 28, 1909, in Wonewoc, Juneau County, Wisconsin, the daughter of Walter and Hulda (Stanley) Bradley. Prior to her retirement in 1970, she had been employed by Ray-O-Vac for 43 years. Ruby was united in marriage with Lester Dodge in 1937. Survivors include one sister, Leta Kelsey of Madison; one stepdaughter, Daisy Richardson of Florida; two nephews, Alan (Margie) Kelsey of Waterloo, and Eugene Kehl of Madison; three nieces, Sharon (Joe) Fisher of Florida, Martha Bazan of Madison, and Marion Sutter of Blue Mounds, Wis. Ruby was preceded in death by her husband; her parents; one sister; and one stepson. Services will be held at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, 2003, at the CRESS FUNERAL HOME where friends may call from 11 a.m. until the time of service. A committal service will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, 2003, at the Arena Cemetery in Arena, Wis.

[NI20721] BELLEVILLE -- Gladys P. Morgan, 91, Belleville, died Friday, Feb. 1, 2002, at a Belleville hospital.
She was born June 15, 1910, in Belleville, to William and Bertha Schrock Dodge. She had worked for several businesses in Belleville.

She was a member of the United Methodist Church in Belleville.

Her husband, Fred Morgan, died in 1987. A daughter, Arletha Taylor, died in 1992.

Survivors include two sons, Jack Morgan, Belleville, and Jerry Morgan, Plymouth, Neb.; four daughters, Bernetha Sasser, Fredda Lash and Cheryl Eickmann, all in Belleville, and A. Amanda Honeycutt, Seabrook, Texas; a brother, Cal Dodge, Concordia; three sisters, Doris Sprague, Concordia, Bonnie Stokesbury, Denver, and Ina Marie Lumen, Wichita; 20 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; and six great-great-grandchildren.

Services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the United Methodist Church in Belleville. Burial will be in Zion Cemetery in the Talmo community southeast of Belleville. Mrs. Mrogan will lie in state from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today at Tibbetts-Fischer Funeral Home in Belleville.

Memorial contributions may be made to Golden Bell Haven in Belleville, 66935.

[NI20737] Some still spell it Rebekah White.

[NI20747]
Advertisement
Vera Dodge
BIRTHunknown
DEATH1 May 1963
BURIAL
Forest Lawn Cemetery
Buffalo, Erie County, New York, USA Add to Map
PLOTBristol Home Lot
MEMORIAL ID161696897 · View Source
SHARE SAVE TOSUGGEST EDITS
MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 0
FLOWERS 0
Miss Dodge became a resident of the Bristol Home (formerly known as the Home for the Friendless), 1500 Main St, Buffalo, in 1960. Rev Herbert Harrison conducted the funeral service at Austin Funeral Home, and she was buried in the Home Lot at Forest Lawn.

[NI20754] Harold Dodge (American, 1924-1990) noted Buffalo, New York artist, environmentalist, musician, teacher, photographer and lecturer known for his acrylic paintings of urban and natural scenes. In the 1960’s Harold began a distinguished volunteer career with various local naturalist, environmental and land-use planning organizations. He worked to establish two environmental education centers in the Western New York area; the Beaver Meadow Audubon Center and the Tifft Farm Nature Preserve. He served as chairman of the Tifft Farm Development Committee and was its first president during the Preserve’s critical formative years in the mid 1970’s. In addition, he also served as chairman of the Erie County Environmental Management Council, chairman of the Erie County Development Coordination Board and as a member of the Town of Boston Planning Board. He maintained his residence and studio on Back Creek Road in Boston, New York.

Harold’s early training was for a musical career. He attended the Buffalo Public Schools and graduated from the Fosdick-Masten High School in 1943. Following one year at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, he entered the Aviation Cadet Program of the U.S. Air Force, where he received training as an air navigator. He served in World War II in the 446th Bomber Group, 707th Bombardment Squadron, flying in 35 missions over occupied Europe as the navigator of a B-24 Bomber dubbed “Shoo Shoo Baby”. He closed his tour of duty at the 8th Air Force Headquarters near London, England, doing plotting work on Radar installations. He continued his service as a Captain in the Air Force Reserves. While stationed in England, he met and married his future wife Barbara with whom he later raised five children; Vicki, Carol, Judy, Darrell and Susan. Upon his return to the U.S., Harold obtained an accounting degree from Bryant and Stratton Business School and worked as a junior executive at General Mills, Buffalo, New York. Harold was largely a self-taught artist and never had any formal training with the exception of several workshops with friend Charles Movalli (American, 1945-).

In 1953 he became assistant manager of the George A. Terry Company, a manufacturer of specialized tools for the aviation industry. He retired as the owner of Terry Tools, Inc. in 1989 and transferred the company to his children.

“Painting has remained important all through my life…In art I have been not so much interested in developing a distinctive style as in exploring many styles – and, in so doing, learning and growing as an artist...I have generally sought growth and diversity…I am looking for freedom of expression that will enable me to speak through art in the same way I can through the written and spoken word and through music. My interests are broad – and I take them all seriously. We can only get full enjoyment – real FUN – out of doing something if we are serious about it. The only real limits to our lives are those we place upon ourselves.”[1]-Harold Dodge

Harold was an accomplished musician, with a flare for song writing. He played many instruments including the piano, guitar, banjo, trumpet, French horn, cello, violin and his hand-made dulcimers. He conducted a popular series of educational programs and concerts at public schools, featuring multi-media slide presentations and films showing the complex ecology of Western New York wildlife, forests and wetlands. The programs showcased his own songs and sing-a-longs on environmental themes, accompanied by his guitar, banjo or one of his hand-made dulcimers. He also taught and held demonstrations on painting techniques for many groups and organizations in and around the Buffalo area.

Chronology:

1924- Born, Buffalo, New York.

1943- Graduated from the Fosdick-Masten High School in 1943, Buffalo, New York.

1944- Entered the Aviation Cadet Program of the U.S. Air Force, where he received training as an air navigator. He served in the 446th Bomber Group, 707th Bombarment Squadron, flying in 35 missions over occupied Europe as the navigator of a B-24 Bomber dubbed “Shoo Shoo Baby”.

c1944-45- While stationed in Europe during WWII in the Air Force, Harold met and married his future wife Barbara with whom he later raised five children; Vicki, Carol, Judy, Darrell and Susan.

c1945- Closed his tour of Duty in the U.S. Air Force at the Air Force Headquarters near London, England, doing plotting work on Radar installations. He continued his service as a Captain in the Air Force Reserves. He began painting as a hobby.

c1945-53- After WWII, while back in the U.S. Harold obtained an accounting degree from Bryant and Stratton Business School and worked as a junior executive at General Mills, Buffalo, New York.

1953- Became assistant manager of the George A. Terry Company, a manufacturer of specialized tools for the aviation industry.

1973- Exhibited, first one-man show, Associated Artists Organization (AAO), Wilcox Mansion Gallery Lincoln & Fillmore Rooms, 18 large oil and acrylic ornithology paintings and 4 pen & ink drawings, with proceeds donated to the Beaver Meadow Nature Center, Buffalo, New York.

c1980’s- Traveled to Colorado, Montana and New Mexico to find subject matter for a series of new nature paintings and to further develop his technique, which was largely self-taught, with the exception of several workshops with friend Charles Movalli (American, 1945-).

1982- Reduced his volunteer activities to devote more time to painting. Exhibited, in one of five (5-person) mini solo shows, at the AAO Gallery, industrial and cityscape paintings, Buffalo, New York.

1983- Exhibited, Sill House Gallery (Jackson-Sill house), 224 Liberty Street, Warren, PA. Exhibited, juried show, at the 12th Annual Art Festival of the Hamburg Art Society in Hamburg Memorial Park, wins best-in-show award for the acrylic untitled painting on paper of a Colden Street Scene, 1983, Hamburg, New York.

1983-85- President of the Hamburg Art Society, Hamburg, New York.

1984- Received the Distinguished Contribution to Community Award from the Local Section and Upstate Region Chapter of the American Planning Association, which acknowledged his 20 years of service in environmental and planning areas, including Tifft Farm, the founding of the Buffalo Audubon Society’s Beaver Meadow Environmental Education Center, presidency of the Buffalo Ornithological Society, work as officer and member of the board of directors of the New York State Association of Conservation Commissions, Chairmanship of the Town of Boston Conservation Council and Erie County Development Coordination Board, and membership on the Southtowns Planning Group and Town of Boston Planning Board, Buffalo, New York.

1986- Exhibited, “Buffaloscapes, Paintings By Harold Dodge”, West Side and Waterfront paintings of Buffalo, Art Dialogue Gallery, Buffalo, New York.

1989- Retired as the owner of Terry Tools, Inc. and transferred the company to his children.

1990- Died, November 7th, at his home at the age of 66 after a long illness, Boston, New York.

Member of: Hamburg Art Society (President 1983-85, and on board of directors), Hamburg, New York; Associated Art Organizations (AAO, gallery director), Buffalo, New York; Officer & member of the board of directors of the New York State Association of Conservation Commissions, Buffalo, New York; Buffalo Audubon Society’s Beaver Meadow Environmental Education Center, Buffalo, New York; Buffalo Ornithological Society (once president), Buffalo, New York; Southtowns Planning Group, Buffalo, New York; Town of Boston Planning Board, Boston, New York; Boston Conservation Advisory Council (secretary), Boston, New York; The Buffalo Chapter of the National Audubon Society, North Java, New York; the Erie County Environmental Management Council, Buffalo, New York; The Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, Buffalo, New York; The National Wildlife Federation; The Buffalo Museum of Science, Buffalo, New York.

Honors & Prizes: Received the Distinguished Contribution to Community Award from the Local Section and Upstate Region Chapter of the American Planning Association, Buffalo, New York; Best-in-Show award, juried show, at the 12th Annual Art Festival of the Hamburg Art Society in Hamburg Memorial Park, for the acrylic untitled painting on paper of a Colden street scene, 1983, Hamburg, New York; First prize and numerous other awards and ribbons.

Other media: Created the movie “Waterways of Western New York”, which focuses on the wildlife that lives along its shores.

(Rewritten & compiled chronologically by Mark Strong of Meibohm Fine Arts, Inc., East Aurora, New York, 11/2008. Sources: Supplied biographical information, PDF’s, newspaper clippings and quote [1] from Harold Dodge’s daughter Carol Zwolski; The Buffalo Evening News, “Wilcox Art Exhibit Will Feature Harlod Dodge’s World of Birds”, by Jean Reeves News Art Critic, March 1st, 1973; The Buffalo Courier Express, “Wilcox Mansion Exhibit Show of Style, Variety”, by Nancy Tobin Willig Courier-Express Art Critic, Art Notes section, March 11th, 1973; Allentowner Magazine, a Publication of the Allentown Association, Vol. 1, #5, pg. 4, May 1986; Unknown news paper art article, “Art Gallery at Wilcox mansion One of a Kind in United States”, 1973; The Jamestown Newspaper, “Artist to Display Work”, article, Warren, PA, October 2nd, 1983; The Hamburg Sun newspaper, “Art Festival Attracts Thousands Harold Dodge Wins Best in Show”, art article, Thursday, September 15th, 1983; Unknown newspaper article, “Soft Twang of Mountain Music Finds Its Way to Boston Hills”, by Grace Goddard, unknown date; The Buffalo Courier Express, Courier Calendar, section B-6, Friday, January 15th, 1982)

[NI20776] ???? Alva Curtis WOODRUFF said his father was bornin NC in 1910 census.

[NI20788] DIED -- On Sunday morning last, May 18th, about five o'clock, John DODGE who had reached the advanced age of 87 years He had left the house early in the morning unnoticed by any of his son's family, with whom he lived, and gone into the orchard, where he was found dead about five o'clock with his arm resting in the forks of a peach tree, his body bent forward as if he had attempted to rise and could not. His body was still warm when found, which shows that he could not have been out long We are not familiar with his history or antecedents, we only knew him to be a good old man, who was patiently waiting His coming

."Buried in Cem 2 miles E of Berwick, Warren County, Illinois. at 86 ys,
3mo., 20 da.

[NI20790] Tec 5 US Army

[NI20794] Per Obit: Veteran of U.S. Marine Corps. Founder and owner of Dodge City Night Club.

[NI20808] Served as Corporal in US Army in Korea.

[NI20810] Buried in Cem 2 miles E of Berwick, Warren County, Illinois.

[NI20825] As a youth, Clarence became interested in trains and telegraphy nwhich were popular with young boys of that time. The local station agent taught Clarence telegraphy, which he loved, and he became very skillful. One day the agent was late returning from playing in an afternoon baseball game, arriving after the next train should have been processed through to continue to its next stop. The agent rushed in, expecting to have a waiting train and a lost job, to find that the young Clarence had processed the train perfectly in his absence. No one knew of his absence and he kept his job. This was an amazing thing in those days.
After graduating from Rushford High School, New York, he joined the army at Fort Terry, New York, as part of the 100th Company Coast Artillery Corps. He achieved the highest ranking in marksmanship, which earned him a higher pay scale, and he was given an office assignment because of his skill at the telegraph.
Upon discharge in December 1912, on a visit to his father, he met and later married in 1914, in the Mexico Methodist Church, Grace Mae Mosher of Texas, New York, daughter of Richard and Mary Ann Mosher. Clarence worked as a by-product engineer with Semet Solvey Co. manufacturing TNT during WWI. In his words, hei returned to his first love n telegraphyi. He happily made a career of telegraphing as a station agent for the New York Central Railroad, and traveled the U.S. extensively with his rail pass.

Five years before his death, he married the widow Mrs. Lura Callahan, and lived his last years with her in a home he purchased for them in the village of Pulaski, Oswego County, New York.

[NI20827] About 1947, Helen and Perry moved to Texas, New York to live on her family homestead, which was an original farm carved out of the wilderness of the Scriba Patent. (Her ancestor was a Revolutionary War soldier and had moved to the frontier --now Oswego County-- from Vermont after the Revolutionary War.) They lived there until their deaths.

Helen was a Regents graduate of Adams High School, Adams, Jefferson County, New York, class of 1940. She was proud to say a Regents graduate because of the rigorous standards to achieve that diploma at the time. (The standards had been lowered in the last decades of her life.)

Helen graduated as a License Practical Nurse, Oswego County BOCES School, Mexico, New York. She had developed an interest in nursing from being with her grandfather, Dr. Clarence I. Dodge, Sr. She preferred geriatric nursing and worked in several nursing homes in Oswego, New York. She was a supervising nurse at the Michaud Nursing Home, Fulton, New York.

Through her mother Grace Mosheris line and her grandmother Edith Pratt Dodgeis line, Helen was the direct descendent of Mayflower Pilgrims, two signers of the Declaration of Independence, two Revolutionary War soldiers, a Civil War Calvary soldier, and a French Napoleonic Wars soldier n who came to northern New York State with the large group of Frenchmen and the former Emperor of Spain, Louis Napoleon, after the fall of his brother Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. Helen was an avid, lifelong student of American History, which is logical given her background.

[NI20828] Perry was born in a snowstorm on the family farm near Worth, New York. The
doctor could not arrive until the next day. Given the birth date the doctor could verify, Perry had 2 birthdays n the real one and the legal one, a day later.

Perry was an avid outdoorsman all his life n hunting, fishing, and trapping, and had been a hunting guide in Northern New York. During World War II, he worked for the Nestle company making the non-melting chocolate bars which were packed in the soldiersi field rations. After the war, he permanently moved his family to Helenis family homestead near Texas, New York. He was a founding member and past president of the Butterfly Waterfowl Association located in New Haven, New York.

He died at Oswego City Hospital, in Oswego, Oswego County, New York.

[NI20829] Sharon is a retired educator. She has several college degrees and teaching certifications. She taught mainly elementary school/ middle school grades in New York State and Pennsylvania. She also taught computer courses in a New York State Community College.

As her mother and brother, Sharon is also an avid American history buff, with special emphasis on the Revolutionary and Civil War periods. Sharon and George moved to Baltimore upon retirement, the first in her family to go South since 1864

[NI20830] Barry is a member of the National Speakers Association and works as an international speaker, writer and trainer who contributes to Bankersi Hotline, and iBank Security Report,i as well as a security and compliance igurui for Bankersonline.com. He is recognized worldwide, presenting in Brussels, Belgium to European Bankers on Internal Fraud, at the United Nations on Identity Theft, and to Japanese bankers on Bank Security. He has been interviewed by Newsweek, Computer World, and other national and regional publications. Barry has worked in the financial services industry for nearly thirty years, and has held the positions of security officer, compliance officer, treasurer, senior vice president, and executive vice president. He has handled over 900 security cases and has been involved with investigations and prosecutions at federal, state and local levels.

Barry was an honors graduate of Oswego State University with a BS degree in Accounting and minor in Economics. He has attended prestigious schools held by the American Bankers Association and America's Community Bankers: National Trust School at Northwestern University, National Compliance School at The University of Oklahoma, and Investment School at Fairfield University. He is a iCertified Regulatory Compliance Manageri (CRCM) and a member of the American Society for Industrial Security (ASIS) and the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners.

Active in the local community, Barry is the past president of the Oswego State Alumni Association, a past board member of Rotary, Safe Harbor Museum, and a life member of the Oswego Masonic Charities Corporation. Barry is the 4th generation of his family to be a member of the Mexico Masonic Lodge No. 163 and a member of the Media Shrine. Long active in Masonry, he is a Past Master of Mexico Lodge and in 1989 was the Assistant Grand Lecturer for Oswego County

[NI20833] Marcus Anthony Bennett is a graduate of Spring Valley High School, Spring Valley , New York and has a Batchelor of Science and a teaching degree from SUNY Oswego i, 1967. He was an Industrial Arts and Technology teacher for the Lowville Academy and Central School for 34 years. Mark is a skilled carpenter and avid hunter and fishermanand traveled to Colorado to hunt elk and Canada to hunt caribou and Moose. He lives in Glenfield, New York with his second wife Linda Disney and their family

[NI20835] No Children

[NI20838] George Kibbe is a full elder of the United Methodist Church, now retired. He is a graduate of Williamsport High School and Lycoming College, Williamsport,PA; Evangelical Theological Seminary, Naperville,Illinois; and Drew University, NJ. He also has worked for the Human Rights Commission in Maryland and is a former Executive Director of the Human Rights Division of the State of Idaho

[NI20839] She was the Salutatorian of her class at Little Falls High School in Little Falls, New York. She received a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering and a Master of Science degree in Engineering and Manufacturing Management from Clarkson University, in Potsdam, New York. Her employment has included engineering positions at Corning, Inc. and BetzDearborn, Inc. Her husband, Jim, also a graduate of Clarkson University with a Master of Science in Physics and worked for the Spirit, Ascend, and Lucient Technologies as a network/systems Engineer. He is reportedly a direct descendent of General Daniel Morgan of the American Revolution, which they are trying to substantiate. Brenda and Jim reside in Halfmoon, New York, near Albany.

[NI20848] DALLAS COUNTY NEWS, Adel, Iowa, Wednesday, December 12, 1877, Vol. VI,
No. 4, Page 3, Column 4
Word was received of the death of J. M. DODGE, esq. of Van Meter
Twp. Death occurred Tuesday morning about 4 o'clock after a short
illness. He had been in the field gathering corn the first of last week
and got cold and wet. This brought on lung fever
which resulted in death. John M. DODGE was an earnest member of the
Christian Church. Funeral services are to be held at the family residence
today at 10 o'clock.


Affidavit on 26 Feb 1891 by Dr. Charles M. DODGE of Massena, Cass County, IAstates that he knew John M. DODGE, the father of John M. DODGE the
soldier, for 30 years before his death. That he was the family physicianfor ten years and attended him in his last sickness. That he died on the11th day of December 1877 of diabetes. That since he first knew him hewas lame of a broken leg and in the years of 1860 and 1861, he was also lame of a fever sore and was troubled with kidney disease until his death and was unable to plow or do other farm work which required walking.

1850 Christian Preacher; real estate valued at $700.
Living just one house away is a John Dodge age 62, b. CT; Thordosia 56 b. Missouri, and Nancy R. 20 b. KY and Louisa Ann 16 b. IN. This family is followed by another Dodge family: The father's first name is hard to make out, but probably Jourdan (?) age 31 b. KY; Mary 22 b. IN and Elizabeth 4, b. IL and Newton M. 2 b. IL. With them is an Amanda I Taylor 9 b. IN; followed by Irene Murphy, 40, who is a widow of Seth Murphy--brother of Margaret, wife of John Milton. Following Irene's name is Susan Murphy 14, Paul C. Murphy 12; and then John D. Taylor 7, William H. 10, Alicia 8, and Hezekiah 5. (Not sure of surnames of last 3 children.

[NI20894] LANE COUNTY HERALD, May 6, 1886
From Alamota -- I have the painful duty to record the death of one
of our number this week. Rev. Jordan DODGE died suddenly the first and
was buried Sunday at 4 p.m. at Alamota Cemetery. Services were conducted
by S. F. DICKINSON, our worthy Sabbath School Superintendent.
(There is no longer an Alamota Cemetery. Apparently, Jordan's
remains were later removed to the Dighton Cemetery, Dighton, Lane County, KS)


DODGE-----I have only recently learned that Bro. Jordan DODGE finished
his earthly life and passed to the better land the first day of May
1886. He was born near Louisville, Ky. Nov. 10, 1819, and was therefore
at the time of his death in the 67th year of his age. In 1838 he removed
with his parents from Ky. to Illinos. In 1845 he was married to Mary
DARLAND, who survives him, and with surviving sons and daughters whom God
has given them, mourns his loss. For many years he lived in Abingdon,
Ill. from which place he removed to Allen County, Kansas in 1877. From
Allen he removed to Lane Co. in 1884 where, after an illness of one week,
borne with Christian patience and resignation, he died of inflamation of
the stomatch. While Bro. DODGE lived in Abingdon the writer ministered
several years to the church of which he was a member and was intimately
acquainted and associated with him, being for a time a fellow Elder. In
all these years I do not remember that his sincerity, devotion, or zeal
was ever unfavorably criticised. Bro. DODGE was the father of a large
family, before whom he act a worthy example of earnest consecration to
the person and work of his Master. By his daily life he plainly showed
his acceptance of the doctrine that here we have no continuing city, and
that he was seeking one with foundations whose bulder and maker is God.
Though he never made preaching his special work, he was never ashamed to
own his Lord nor to defend his cause, and as often as opportunity offered
he was ready to speak publicly or privately in his behalf. He had the
joy and satisfaction of seeing his children following him as he also
followed Christ. And now that he has been called to go up higher, may
the stricken wife, sons and daughters left behind still follow him till
all shall be reunited in that happy land where sad partings can never
come.
Manhattan, Kan., Sept. 10, 1886 A. J. THOMPSON

[NI20899] No children

[NI20903] Melvin Lavar Dodge - NOMMI US Navy WW II
Tyler County Booster - Obituaries - November 15, 2004
Melvin Lavar Dodge, 82, of Warren passed away Sunday, Nov. 7, 2004 at his residence.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 10 at 3 p.m. in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Fred under the direction of Stringer & Griffin Funeral Home of Woodville. Graveside services are scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 13 at 1 p.m. at Fairview Cemetery in Apache, OK.
Visitation was held on Tuesday, Nov. 9 from 5 - 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Melvin was born Nov. 16, 1916 to David and Sarah Dodge in Central, Arizona. His early education was in Pima and Safford, Arizona. He later graduated from Hemphill College as a diesel engineer in Berkley, California. He served in the Navy in WWII as a submarine sailor. Pearl Harbor was bombed on Dec. 7 and he was sworn in on Dec. 10. He served the whole four years. He was aboard one of the submarines that scouted the Japanese coast in preparation for dropping the atomic bomb. After the war was over he fulfilled a lifelong dream and learned to fly. He was a fixed wing and helicopter pilot too. He first went to Liberia West Africa in his flying career as a bush pilot, but later started flying for oil exploration companies and flew in Lybia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Lebanon. He went to Liberia with 600 flying hours and came home with 14,000. He had no children of his own, but loved everyone elses. They all called him Uncle Mel. He took them fishing and tried to teach them to be good American Citizens. He loved to fix things, and after his retirement he became “Mr. Fix-It” for the whole community.
Mel was preceded in death by his parents, David and Sarah Fergueson Dodge and his brother Homan and his sister Wanda. He leaves to mourn his passing, his wife Alberta, whom he married May 15, 1941; two brothers, Quentin and wife Marjorie, Bruce Kay and his wife, Fern; two sisters, Rotha Young and Zelma Thomas, all of Oregon; a host of nephews and nieces.
Memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society, 105 N. Pecan, Woodville, TX 75979.
Services are under the direction of Stringer & Griffin Funeral Home of Woodville.

[NI20905] She served in WW II.

Thomas, Zelma Dodge 88 09/13/1921 11/09/2009 Zelma was born in Central, Ariz She worked in housekeeping for Birds Eye Zelma is survived by her son, David. She was preceded in death by her son, Michael. Visitation will be at 9 a.m., followed by a funeral at 10 a.m. Monday, Nov. 16, 2009, in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Woodburn. Interment with military honors will follow at 12:30 p.m. in Willamette National Cemetery. Arrangements by Cornwell Colonial Chapel, Woodburn

[NI20906] LANE COUNTY JOURNAL, February 9, 1906
OBITUARY
From McPHERSON FREEMAN.
Mary DARLAND was born near Terre Haute, Indiana, August 25, 1829. At
the age of 15, she moved with her parents to Illinois. In 1845 she
married Jordon DODGE, they moved to Kansas in 1877, where they have since
made their home. To them were born twelve children, of whome six still
survive. Mrs. Elizabeth (DODGE) CARSON of Edgewood, Tenn., two sons
Samuel and John living in western Kansas, William DODGE now attending
Kentucky University at Lexington, will graduate this year, a minister of
the gospel, and Mrs. McGILL of this place and Miss Elsie DODGE of Dighton
the only two able to be at the funeral.
Grandma, as she was known, gave her heart to the Lord at the age of
15 and for 61 years adorned her life with a Godly walk before men. She
passed away at the home of her daughter Mrs. T. D. McGILL, Jan. 29, 1906,
at the ripe age of 76 years 5 months and 4 days. She was buried from the
home Jan. 31 at 2 p.m. The funeral was conducted by Rev. MORRISON her
pastor. The sermon was preached from the text Rev. 14: 12-13, theme.
"The Patience of the Saints, and Blessed Dead." Grandma had been failing
for several months of old age, and gradually grew weaker until finally
the light went out. She in her dying moments resigned all to the Lord,
whome she had so humbly followed for so many years, and simply passed
into the higher life gladl, to be with the Savior. She said "I am only
waiting" and when the Lord called she was ready. A large concourse of
old settlers, and many new friends followed the remains to the McPherson
cemetary where she was laid to rest in the family lot.
"Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth."

[NI20907] WW

[NI20908] Barbara Dodge Gill, born Dec.1922, in Ventura, died Sunday, May 20, 2007, in Camarillo. She was 84 years. Barbara's father, James Dodge, was a local farmer who specialized in growing lemons. Her mother, Jenne Hyde Dodge, built the Mayfair Theater in Ventura.

As a young child, Barbara was stricken with polio. Doctors at the Mayo Clinic doubted that she would ever walk again. Barbara was determined to overcome her handicap and live as normal a life as possible. Not only did she learn to walk without braces, but she also learned to bicycle, swim, and even play tennis. Her real passion was horseback riding.

While in high school, Barbara met Carmelita Nicholson Fitzgerald, granddaughter of Adolfo Camarillo. The two became friends for life. Carmelita often invited Barbara to go horseback riding at the Camarillo Ranch, home of the famous Camarillo White Horses. Barbara's favorite horse was Paisano, a beautiful, feisty stalleion who took a liking to her. Over the years, Barbara developed exceptional riding skills. As a result, she was invited to ride Paisano in numerous parades with members of the Camarillo family.

In the mid-1960s, Barbara became politically active. As a political novice, she ran a successful primary campaign for a local candidate running for California Assembly. She also became close friends with Bob Finch, California lieutenant governor during Ronald Reagan's first two years as governor. Bob was impressed with Barbara's ability to grasp the issues and propose viable solutions. Whenever he needed a sounding board, he knew he could count on Barbara's input.

Barbara was an avid reader and enjoyed her rose garden. She is survived by her children, Sharon Hamill, John Besser and Brian Besser; granddaughter, Kim Pankratz; and sons, Grant, Spencer and Blake. Besides missing Barbara's love, compassion and guidance, all will miss her exceptional cooking skills

[NI20914] Bunker Family Funeral & Cremation,
Mesa, Arizona

Jay Lavan Boyle
February 26, 1923 ~ December 30, 2012

Jay Lavan Boyle, 89, passed away on December 30, 2012 at age 89. He was born on February 26, 1923 in Pima, Arizona, to Lavan Henry Boyle and Blanche Dodge.

He grew up in Los Angeles, California, where he met and fell in love with Jeri Jones. In 1943 they were married for time and all eternity in the Arizona Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was 19 and she was 16.

They remained happily married for 51 years until Jeri's death in 1994.

Jay graduated from Arizona State University in 1950, and he and Jeri moved back to Los Angeles where they raised a family of six daughters.

In 1968 they returned to Arizona where they started and operated a successful home furnishings business for many years. Jay loved his family. He loved hunting and fishing and the outdoors. He loved music. He loved serving in the church.

Jay is survived by his daughters April Montierth, Delores Wright, Robin Allen, Leslie Woods, Star Bailey, and Lyric Boyle, along with 25 grandchildren and 47 great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held on Saturday, January 5 at 11 AM at the Mesa Central Stake Center, 925 North Harris in Mesa, Arizona, with a viewing at 10 AM that same morning.

There will also be a viewing on Friday, January 4 from 6 to 8 PM at Bunker's Garden Chapel, 33 North Centennial Way in Mesa.

[NI20917] Served as a T SGT in US Marine Corp. World War II from 4 May 1942 - 9 May 1946

[NI20941] Nancy's middle name may be Keen

[NI20955] Buried in Cem 2 miles E of Berwick, Warren County, Illinois. 24 yrs., 20
dys.

[NI20980] Enlisted in Natinal Guard 3 Mar 1941 prt. Field Artillery.

[NI20983] Enlisted WW II Pvt.

[NI20994] Enliste in World War II

Branch: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Branch Code: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Grade: Private
Grade Code: Private
Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emerge ncy, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherw ise according to law
Component: Selectees (Enlisted Men)
Source: Civil Life

[NI21010] Served in US Navy in WW II.

[NI21014] Peter was lame for life by fall from Horse.

[NI21015] When quite young he went to New York City, where, after spending some time in the study of medicine, he took up the profession of dentistry, then in its infancy. He soon built u p a large practice, continuing it
for sixty years, the long est practice on record. He spent the closing years of his life at Morristown, New Jersey. He had the keen sense of humor and inexhaustible fund of anecdote and illustratio n that runs so strongly in the Dodge family.

[NI21036] Dorothy Dodge Davis
Davis, Dorothy Dodge 1923-2010
Dorothy Dodge Davis, age 86, passed away peacefully at her home in Ann Arbor on January 22, 2010. She was surrounded by her loving family and friends as she lost her courageous battle with cancer. Dorothy was born in Ann Arbor, MI toHarland Pray Dodge and Helen Delf Dodge. She was a lifelong resident of Ann Arbor, leaving her beloved hometown only while serving in the US Navy during World War II. She served her country as an occupational therapist, helping to rehabilitate navy personnel injured in the Pacific theater. Although she met her husband, Sherrill Hall Davis in kindergarten at Eberbach Elementary School, they did not become reacquainted until after World War II, when they both resumed their studies at the University of Michigan, after suspending their academic careers to enlist in the US Navy. Dorothy graduated from Ann Arbor High School and the University of Michigan. She was an active member of her Ann Arbor High School class of '40 alumni group, helping to plan numerous class reunions for the graduating classes of 1940 and 1941. She was a member of the Congregational Church, Alpha Delta Pi sorority, a participant in the Waterman lecture series and the Gainful Gals investment club. She was an early and long-term member of Huron Valley Swim Club and enjoyed the companionship of her swimming families for many years. She was well known for her kindness, her outgoing and friendly personality as well as her quirky sense of humor. She was preceded in death by her husband of 37 years, Sherrill Hall Davis, a lifelong Ann Arbor resident, and her daughter Lynn Davis McAndrew, of Sugar Land, TX. She is survived by her daughters Diane 'Dee' Davis Fandialan of Okemos, MI and Sherri Lee Davis of Houston, TX, sons-in-law Atwood 'Woody' McAndrew III and Angel Fandialan and six grand children Christopher McAndrew, Megan Thelen, Atwood Richardson McAndrew IV, Lisa Fandialan, Brian Fandialan, and Andrew Fandialan. She is also survived by her two brothers and their wives Donald Delf Dodge (Phyllis) and Harland PrayDodge Jr. (Beverly). Family and friends will be welcomed at Nie Family Funeral Home on Sunday, January 31, 2010 from noon until the time of the memorial service at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to: Dr. Daniel Hayes, MD for Breast Cancer Research University of Michigan Cancer Center 1500 E. Medical Center Drive Ann Arbor, MI 48109. You may visit Dorothy's personal memorial page at www.niefuneral homes.com to leave a message or share a memory.

[NI21038] Lynn was born to Dorothy Dodge Davis and Sherrill Hall Davis in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Lynn was predeceased by her father. Lynn was a graduate of Michigan State University with a Bachelors and Masters Degree in Adult and Continuing Education. Lynn was most recently employed as a Life Skills teacher at Fort Settlement Middle School in Sugar Land, Texas. Lynn is survived by her husband of 33 years, Atwood 'Woody' McAndrew III and their three children Christopher Ryan-Ross McAndrew, Megan Elizabeth McAndrew and Atwood Richardson McAndrew IV. Lynn was an exceptionally loving and devoted mother and her children were always the light of her life. Lynn is survived by her mother, Dorothy Dodge Davis, of Ann Arbor, Michigan and her two sisters Sherri Lee Davis of Houston, Texas and Diane (Angel) Fandialan of Okemos, Michigan and their children Lisa, Brian and Andrew Fandialan. Lynn is survived by her uncles Harland P. (Beverly) Dodge Jr. of Katy, Texas and Donald D. (Phyllis) Dodge of Dearborn, Michigan. Lynn is survived by in-laws, Mr. and Mrs. Atwood R. McAndrew Jr. of Murietta, California and Martha P. McAndrew of Cheboygan, Michigan, Sister-in-law Cissy McAndrew of Silver City, New Mexico, Brother-in-law Tom (Vida) McAndrew of Orchard Lake, Michigan and their daughters Claire and Laura. Lynn was a very artistic and creative individual who enjoyed sewing, designing and decorating painted shirts, making silk flower arrangements, creating leaded stained glass windows, black & white photography and designing and creating various types of purses and lamps. Lynn loved all of her cats even the "outdoor" ones. Lynn always enjoyed traveling with her husband and family, whether to their bay house on Galveston Island or the cruise to the Western Caribbean that the family enjoyed in August. Lynn had a passion for baseball and the Houston Astros. Over the years she enjoyed watching Astros games with her family and had watched all of the World Series games. Lynn will always be remembered as an exceptionally kind, caring and loving daughter, sister, wife, mother, and friend.

[NI21065] Was born James Anthony Webb then went ent by James Anthony Salzer and then was adopted by Mr. Wakeford.

[NI21135] Killed in action.

[NI21140] Mrs. Winston Clark
DIGHTON - Laura E. Clark, 60, died
Wednesday at the St. Catherine Hospital,
Garden City.

Born Laura Sharp on May 10, 1918 at Amy,
she married Winston Clark on Feb. 16, 1957
at McCook, Neb.

She was a lifetime area resident.

She was a member of the First Christian
Church, Dighton.

Survivors: widower, of the home; son:
John Pelton, Dighton; stepdaughter:
Mrs. Janet Small, Higden, Ark.; father:
Virgil Sharp, Dighton; brothers: Rolland,
Dighton; Rosco, Belle Plaine; sisters;
Mrs. LaVerna Jordan, Dighton; Mrs. Lois
Bryant, Mrs. Lorroyae Stein, both Scott
City; two step-grandchildren.

Funeral will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the
church; the Rev. Robert Vance. Burial in
Dighton Memorial Cemetery. Family suggests
memorials to the Lane County Long Term Care
Home in care of Niles-Zenor Funeral Home, Dighton.

Hutchinson News September 8, 1978

[NI21144] DIGHTON - LaVona Jordan, 66, died Oct. 2, 1992, at her home at Dighton.

She was born Feb. 7, 1926, at Healy, the daughter of Virgil Frank and Zuma Fern Dodge Sharp.

A lifetime Lane County resident, she
was a homemaker.

She was a member of the First Christian
Church and the American Legion Auxiliary,
both at Dighton.

On Feb. 9, 1945, she married Orval Jordan
at Oceanside, Calif. He survives.
Other survivors include: three daughters,
LaVera Ware, Arkansas City, Lynette Figger,
Cimarron, and Lori Morrow, Dighton; a sister,
Lois Bryant, Scott City; nine grandchildren;
and three greatgrandchildren.

Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Monday at the
First Christian Church, Dighton, with the Rev.
Larry Long presiding. Burial will be in the
Dighton Memorial Cemetery. Memorials may be
sent to the church in care of Boomhower
Funeral Home, Dighton.

Hutchinson News October 4, 1992
(bio by: smurph)

[NI21150] Sandra Marlene Dodge, 75, of Newton died on Sunday, April 18, 2021, at Bright Kavanagh House in Des Moines. A graveside service for Sandra and her husband, Joe, who died on February 18, 2021, will be held at 2:00 p.m., Monday, April 26, at Wittemberg Cemetery in rural Newton. Memorials to EveryStep Hospice may be left at the Wallace Family Funeral Home and Cremator

Sandra, the daughter of Dale and Doris Moon, was born on November 16, 1945 in Collins. She grew up in the Colo area. As an adult she lived between Newton and Maxwell before making Newton her permanent home. On September 24, 1988, Sandra was united in marriage with Joseph Dodge at the Beltrami County Courthouse in Minnesota. She had worked at Party Time Pizza, Cliffs, as a housekeeper, as a Journeyman Press Operator at the Vernon Company, and as the bookkeeper at Joe's Garage. Sandra enjoyed hunting and fishing and doing yardwork. She also enjoyed trips to their cabin at Cass Lake in Minnesota. Sandra also was certified to install air conditioners in cars and trucks

Sandra is survived by her three sons, Tony Aldrich (Brenda Vanderpol), Scott Aldrich, and Sean Aldrich; grandchildren, Jacob Aldrich, Danielle (Erik) Mille, Nicholas Aldrich, and Josh (Jessica) Aldrich; and three great-grandchildren, Riley, Hudson, and Jensen. She was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Joe Dodge; and two brothers, Ronnie and Bobby Moon.

[NI21158] Mr. Alvan L. Dodge. Mr. Dodge was born in Lowville, Lewis County, this State, March 21st, 1808 and was accordingly in his seventy-fourth year. When he was but three years old his parents removed to Buffalo Erie County, New York in 1811. When the war came and the village was sacked and destroyed by the British and Indians, the family in common with the rest of the population of a few hundreds retired into the country to a place of safety, but returned to Buffalo which was over after Alvan Dodge's well loved home. His life was mainly devoted to agricultural pursuits, but he had a good talent for business and prospered, acquiring a considerable portion of this world's wealth. The name of the Dodge farm is familar to all old residents and all concerned in real estate matters. Consisting of 200 acres, it lay on both sides of Main street in the vincinity of Cold Spring. As the city extended in the northerly direction, this land greatly increased in value. from time to time portions were sold to be built upon, so that now rows of elegant mansions stand where once were Dodge corn-fields.
In 1827 Mr. Dodge was wedded to Ruth H. Bosworth. Their married life extended to the year 1878, when it was broken by her death. Subsequently he was again married to Mrs. Hannah C. Brown, who survives him. Mr. dodge was an upright and sincere man who performed his own part well and did not withhold the helping hand from others. None could fail to recognize and appreciate his native worth, and many will long tenderly preserve his memory.

[NI21165] Residence: Islesboro; Comment: Ind: Ellsworth, Hancock County, Maine Sept. 3/18. Private. Org: 151 Dep Brig to Dec. 11/18; Cons Div Gen Hosp 10 to disch. Overseas service: None. Hon disch on demob: May 5, 1919.

[NI21167] Walter E. Dodge, b. 30 Sep 1900, Orrington, Maine; Residence: So. Brewer; Serial Number: 131-45-63
Comment: Enl: USN Portland, Apr. 14/17. AS 60 days; Sea 2c 445 days; Electrician 3rd class radio 31 days. Served at: NTS Newport RI Apr. 14/17 to July 5/17; USS Pennsylvania July 5/17 to July 12/17; USS Wyoming July 12/17 to July 15/17; USS Connecticut July 15/17 to Nov. 11/18. Disch, NTS Great Lakes, Ill.: Aug. 4, 1920. Roster~Navy

[NI21171] 1850 Census he is 13 living with parents in Black Rock, Erie County, New York.

[NI21174] Father is Edward J. Humphrey, mother is Katherine Unknown.

[NI21175] DATE BEF 1918 Embalmer for Clark Kenna Funeral Home
Military 1918 WWI - Sgt. 1 CL, 306 Field Sig. Bn., 81 Div.
BET 17 OCT 1921 AND MAY 1940 Money Order Clerk/Oneida Post Office.

[NI21177] Fought in Spanish War. In one census his name is listed as Nathaniel.

[NI21178] Daughter of Hezekiah Houghman and Anna Bella.

[NI21180] Hi Jim,

AS REQUESTED:

From the Oneida Daily Dispatch dated 5/16/1981:
GEORGE DOUGLAS DODGE

Brooklyn -- George Douglas Dodge, 63, of 2316 Surf Ave., formerly of Sayles Street, Oneida, died Thursday in Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn.

Born March 28, 1918, in Knoxboro, he was the son of George W. and Elizabeth Humphrey Dodge. He was raised in Oneida during his school years.

Educated in Oneida schools, Mr. Dodge graduated from Christian Brothers Academy, Syracuse, and attended Notre Dame University. Prior to his illness of several years, Mr. Dodge was the purchaser and later the sales manager for the Plaza Hotel, New York City.

Surviving is one son, David Dodge of Columbia, S.C.; two daughters, Mrs. John (Dee Anna) Miller of Salem, Ark. and Mrs. John (Connie) Porter of Independence, Mo., an aunt, two cousins and several grandchildren.

DODGE:

Funeral services for George Douglas Dodge, 63, of Brooklyn, formerly of Oneida, will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. in the family plot at the Skinner Cemetery, Vernon Center. Funeral arrangements are being handled by the Campbell-Dean Funeral Home, Inc., 260 Main St., Oneida -- END

From the Oneida Daily Dispatch dated 8/28/1962:
MRS. ELIZABETH DELANEY

Mrs. Elizabeth H. Delaney, 71, of 525 Sayles St., died in Lenox Memorial Hospital, Canastota, late yesterday evening.

She was born in Canastota June 28, 1891, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Humphrey. She had lived in Oneida for the past 40 years.

In 1912 Mrs. Delaney married George Dodge who died in 1940. In 1949 she married Emmons Delaney who died in 1955.

She is survived by one son, Douglas Dodge of New York City, two brothers, Leo Humphrey of Kalamazoo, Mich, and James Humphrey of Oneida Castle; three sisters, Mrs. Ethel Kensinger, Oneida, Mrs. Lucille Brill of Utica and Mrs. Marie Prosser, Canastota; a step-daughter, Mrs. Gertrude O'Donnell, Utica; five grandchildren, three great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.

She was a communicant of St. Patrick's Church, Oneida, a member of its Altar and Rosary Society and of the American Legion Auxiliary and the 40 and 8 Auxiliary.

Friends may call at the family home Tuesday evening and Wednesday afternoon and evening at their convenience.

The James Iles Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Services will be from the family home, 525 Sayles St., Thursday at 9:45 a.m. and at 10:30 a.m. from St. Agatha's Church, Canastota, where a solemn high Mass will be said with Rev. Edward McDowell officiating. Burial will be in Skinner Cemetery, Vernon Center. -- END

From the Oneida Daily Dispatch dated 5/13/1940:
LEGION DIRECTS DODGE FUNERAL -- Former Post Head and Money Order Clerk in Oneida Post Office

Full military rites in charge of Oneida Post 169 American Legion, will be held tomorrow morning in Vernon Center Cemetery for George W. Dodge, past commander and veteran Oneida post office employee, following services at St. Patrick's Church at 9:30. Prayer services will be held at the home at 8:45 a.m. Rev. Thomas H. Quinn, pastor, officiates at the church.

Mr. Dodge died Saturday afternoon at the family home. He had been in declining health for several years, a condition resulting from wounds suffered in the first World War. He had been confined to his home since May 1. He was 49 years old, having been born in Oneida May 24, 1890, son of Judge D. and Agnes Cleary Dodge. He attended Oneida schools and Notre Dame University, where he played football. He married Elizabeth Humphrey of Canastota, April 17, 1912, who survives with one son, Douglas Dodge.

Former Embalmer
Prior to enlisting in the World War, Mr. Dodge was an embalmer and employed by the late Clark Kenna. He served 18 months overseas as first class sergeant with the 306th field signal battalion, 81st division. His war service covered two years, one month and 26 days.

He was a charter member of Oneida Post 169, and was the first post commander to serve two years, 1936-37. He was adjutant of the Madison County Legion at the time of his death.

Mr. Dodge was appointed money order registry clerk in the post office on October 17, 1921.

Bearers will be Francis Bradley, post office employee and member of the Legion, former sheriff William Jones and Merrion Olds, District Commander of the Legion, both of Cazenovia; Charles Schuyler, Roger Greenhalgh and Ned Nadeau, Oneida.

Honorary bearers will include: Earlville - Sawyer Chase, Ray Adair; Canastota - Earl Beeman, Kirk DeLano, Harris Osgood, Mayor A. G. Waldo: Cazenovia - Russell Frazee, Lester Hendrix: Munnsville - Kenneth Whitworth, Herbert Lillibridge, Leonard J. Cunningham: Morrisville - George Spader, M. L. McPherson, Howard Harter: Hamilton - Lester Danehy, Harry Babcock: DeRuyter - Dr. S.S. Reynolds, Dr. C.R. DeMott: Oneida - Dr. Robert L. Crockett, Mayor A. K. Zellner, Frank Musante, Charles L. Lloyd, Robert J. Burns.

Arrangements for the military services are in charge of County Commander William Meehan and Leo McGlynn, post commander. Frank H. Mayer, chaplain of the post, will conduct the rites. Charles Twomey, captain of the Oneida Squadron, Sons of Legion and Norman Griesmyer, will sound taps. A squad from Company K in the charge of Sergt. Henry M. Burnet, will fire the salute at the grave.

Three organizations will visit the Dodge home tonight, the Sons of Legion at 6:30, Legionnaires at 7:30 and Oneida Council 473, Knights of Columbus at 7:45. -- END

Take care now,

Katie

[NI21184] No issue.

[NI21186] No issue.

[NI21189] Date of birth calculated from death date on stone.

[NI21190] Mary married her cousin.

[NI21193] Willis Dodge, was born in Oneida County, New York, and grew up there until he was 20 years of age. At that time Willis Dodge made a trip to Wisconsin on foot and passed through Janesville, Rock County, when there was but one house there. He traveled all the way from New York to Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and studied the country. He was so pleased with the appearance around where Janesville now stands that he bought land there and paid some upon his purchase, and then returned to New York. Nathaniel Dodge, his father, had not seen the land and naturally distrusting the judgment of youth, dissuaded him from either returning to Wisconsin or paying more upon the land, and to induce him to remain he bought him a farm in his home vicinity, paying for it $4,000, and there Willis Dodge remained until the death of his father. Willis Dodge received a fair education in the common schools, and when his father had died he immediately made his way to the State which had so taken his boyish fancy. He bought farm on section 23 in Dane County, Wisconsin, improved it and added to it until he had 320 acres. When he came to this place there were very few improvements here, and he began at once to improve it. He found the land fine for wheat and could raise great crops of that cereal, but he had to haul it a long distance to Milwaukee and then sell it for from 25 to 50 cents per bushel. After a few years he built a better house, hauling the lumber from Nickeljohn's mills, a distance of 112 miles, by team, and this same house is still standing.

The first two marriages of Willis Dodge, took place in New York, but in Wisconsin he found his third wife, Miss Harriet Closs, a native of New York. From this marriage came a family of four children: Ella, married S. D. Smith, and lives in New York township New York ; John W.; Ida May, married George E. Graham; and Hattie, lives at home. Willis Dodge died in 1882. The children of his first marriage were: Eunice, deceased; Amarilla, married O. Carskenden and lives in New York; Emily, married John Johnson and lives in York Township, Dane County, WI; and Adelia, died in IA and left three children. The children of the second marriage were: Roxy, deceased, died in Kansas and left one child; Eliza, married Malford H. Carskenden and lives in Prescott, Linn County, Kansas; Jane, is the mother of two children, married Philander Perkens (deceased); Maria, married Fren Horaehe (deceased); George W., who died in York, Dane County, Wisconsin; and Luraney, deceased, who married Eben Perkins in New York.

The farm which Willis Dodge owned was rented at the time of his death, and as soon as the lease time was over, John W. Dodge, who was born on 05 Jul 1864, took charge of the place and now rents 320 acres for a cash rent. His aged mother finds a pleasant home with him. He is interested in creameries,
conducting one in York, Dane County, Wisconsin, and a [p 509] partner, owning a half interest, conducts one in, the town of Bristol, Dane County, Wisconsin.

[NI21194] Unmarried.

[NI21206] Unmarried

[NI21216] Mrs. Ella Smith
MARSHALL - Mrs. Ella Smith, 83, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. T. T. Pyburn, Wednesday.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the Sorenson funeral home and 2 at the Methodist church with the Rev. Roy P. Steen officiating.
The one daughter, Mrs. Pyburn, and a sister, Mrs. E. J. White, both of Marshall, survive.
Mrs. Smith spent practically her entire life in the community.
Source: The Wisconsin State Journal, October 16, 1941.

[NI21217] Obituary

SILAS D. SMITH CALLED SUDDENLY

The sudden death of Silas D. Smith brought a great shock to the community. It was one of those unexpected occurrences that strikes like a thunderbolt. "Tip" as he was familiarly known, although well along in years has always been very active and seldom ailing. He was a man of high esteem always cheerful and ready for a joke and ever sincere in his dealings.
Silas Daniel Smith was born in the town of Ankrem, Columbia County, NY September 25, 1837 and died April 1, 1926 at the age of 88 years, six months and six days. In the year 1854 he came with an older brother to Wisconsin and has been a resident of this community for many years. On August 15, 1862 he enlisted as a volunteer in the Civil War and after serving his country faithfully was honorably discharged June 22, 1865. In 1878 he was united in marriage to Ella Dodge. To this union was born one daughter, Mrs. Thomas T. Pyburn, who with sorrowing wife, one brother Alexander, two grandsons, Silas and Thomas Pyburn and a nephew, Frank Smith, remain to morn the loss of a kind husband, brother, grandfather and uncle. Six brothers and three sisters have proceeded him to the great beyond.
Funeral services were held Saturday morning conduced by Rev. E. G. Roberts under charge of the American Legion. Burial was in the Medina Cemetery.
Out of town guests who were here for the funeral were, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Graham of Milwaukee, Mr. and Mrs. William Roberts, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. A.C. Travis, Oconomowoc.
Source: The Marshall Record, Vol. XXXI, Marshall, Wisconsin, April 9, 1926

[NI21218] Wayne Dodge was the son of Alvan Leonard and Ruth Hoyt (Bosworth) Dodge. He was born Black Rock (now Buffalo), New York. His 1st wife was Lillian W. "Lilla" "Lillie" (Zent) Dodge. They were married Williamsville, Erie County, New York October 8, 1873 and she died March 7, 1903. His 2nd wife was Louise Dodge. He was a miller.

[NI21219] WI BIO - Dane County - DODGE, John W.
Biographical Review of Dane County, WI. Chicago: Biographical Review Pub. Co.
1893, Vol II, pp 508-509

John W. DODGE is a farmer living on section 23, in York Township, Dane County, WI.

John W. DODGE was married on 20 Nov 1889 to Miss Lettie BRADLEY, born in
Cottage Grove Township, Dane County, WI, and one child, little Robert, has
been born into the family.

[NI21228] U S Army WW II 23 Aug 1943 to 15 Dec 1944

[NI21230] Jonathan Wayne Dodge passed his early life in Buffalo, and March 29,
1838, was married to Charlotte Hull of Tonawanda, N. Y., by Justice
Sweeny. She was born in Canada, October 3, 1817. After marriage, Mr.
Dodge moved upon his farm in Lancaster, where he lived and held numerous
official positions during fifteen years; then moved to Clarence, N. Y.,
where Mrs. Dodge died.

Mr. Dodge was a Democrat and held many offices in the town of Clarence.
Jan 1846 he was Supervisor in Lancaster.

In April, 1864, Mr. Dodge purchased the flouring and grist-mill in
Williamsville, which he entirely rebuilt soon afterward, and which has a
capacity to manufacture one hundred and fifty barrels of flour daily, and
is now known as the Dodge Roller Mills.

April 1, 1870, Mr. Dodge took up his residence in Williamsville.

[NI21236] When Vernon Brenton Dodge was born on January 2, 1909, in Annapolis, Canada, his father, Stuart, was 27 and his mother, Winnifred, was 25. He married Evelyn Louise Tremaine on July 30, 1939. They had three children during their marriage. He died on May 21, 1967, in Nova Scotia, Canada, at the age of 58, and was buried in Annapolis, Canada.
His Obituary:
Vernon Brenton Dodge, 58, Melvern Square, died in hospital at Kentville following a long illness. Funeral service was at Melvern Square Baptist Church, conducted by Rev. Donald McDormand. Interment was in Melvern Square cemetery. He was born at Melvern Square, son of Stuart P. and Winnie Gates Dodge. He was married in 1937 at the Margaretville Baptist Parsonage to Evelyn Louise Phinney, Patatka, Florida. In early life he was a bank clerk. Later he farmed and prior to his retirement in 1960 was a salesman. He served five and a half years with the Canadian medical corps where he had the rank of staff sergeant. He was a member of the Middleton branch Royal Canadian Legion. He is survived by his wife, his step-mother, Mrs. Elsie Dodge; one daughter, Martha Louise Dodge at home; two sons, Michael Stuart, Melvern Square, and Robert Andrew, Bridgetown; one sister, Helen (Mrs. Stanley Dunn), Melvern Square; two brothers, Loring A., Lawrencetown and Harry B., Napanee, Ont., and one grandson.

[NI21278] Helicopter pilot in Vietnam conflict.

[NI21280] Unmarried.

[NI21285] Emma Peterson Dodge

Capital Times, Madison, Wisconsin, Thursday September 19, 1963

Mrs. Dodge, 77,
Dies Today
BLUE MOUNDS - Mrs. Lance Ddoge, 77, Blue Mounds, died unexpectedly today in a Madison hospital. The former Emma Peterson, she was born in the town of Arena in 1885, and had lived in Blue Mounds 56 years.
She was married in 1905, and she and her husband observed their golden wedding anniversay in 1955.
Mrs. was a member of the West Blue Mounds Lutheran Church.
Surviving, besides her husband, are three daughters, Mrs. Gay Sutter, Mt. Horeb; Mrs. Emory Opsal, De Forest, and mrs. Wayne Lampman Sr., Blue Mounds; four sons, Raymond and Dean, both of Blue Mounds; Vernon, Middleton, and Leland, Barneveld; one sister, Mrs. John L. Frame, Blue Mounds; one brother, John Peterson, Arena; 22 grandchildren, and 31 great-grandchildren.
Friends may call at the Gesme funeral home, Mt. Horeb, from 2 p.m. Friday until noon Saturday, when the body will be taken to the West Blue Mounds Lutheran Church.
Funeral services will be held in the church at 2 p.m. Saturday, with the Rev. Robert Twiton officiating. Burial will be in the West Blue Mounds cemetery.

[NI21288] The Capital Times, Madison, Wisconsin, Thursday, December 4, 1941

Spring Green Couple Are Married 57 Years
SPRING GREEN, Wis. - The five children of Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge were present here Sunday night at a dinner honoring the couple on their 57th wedding anniversary. Those present were Mrs. Nelia Hayes, where the dinner was served; Mr. and Mrs. Thane Dodge, Madison; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Peart, Baraboo, and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Dodge, Spring Green.



Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Thursday, December 4, 1941

Dodges of Spring Green Mark 57th Milestone
SPRING GREEN - Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge were honored at a dinner Sunday at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Nelia Hayes, on the occasion of the 57th wedding anniversary. Attending were their children and families, Mr. and Mrs. Thane Dodge, Madison; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Peart, Baraboo, and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Dodge and Mrs. Nelia Hayes, Spring Green.



Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Tuesday, December 1, 1942

Married 58 Years
Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge [caption under photo of the pair]
SPRING GREEN - Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge, Spring Green, will be honored Wednesday at a family dinner marking their 58th wedding anniversary.
They were married in Arena by the Rev. Byron Meggs, and have lived in Spring Green 45 years. Dodge is 80; Mrs. Dodge is 75.
They have two daughters, Mrs. Nelia Hayes, Spring Green, and Mrs. Lorna Peart, Baraboo; two sons, Edwin, Spring Green, and Thane, Madison; nine grandchildren, one of whom, John Peart, Baraboo, is in the navy, and a great grandchild.



Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Monday, November 29, 1943

Spring Green Couple Marks 59th Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge [caption under photo of the pair]
SPRING GREEN - Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge will observe their 59th wedding anniversary Thursday. Nettie Beadell and Dodge were married Dec. 2, 1884, near Arena.
Mr. and Mrs. Dodge have four children, Mrs. Nelia Hayes, Spring Green; Edwin Dodge, Spring Green; Thane Dodge, Madison, and Mrs. Lorna Peart, Baraboo. They have nine grandchildren. Two grandsons are in the service, Pvt. Walter Hayes, Camp Crowder, Mo., and John Peart, who is in the nav
Dodge is treasurer of the village of Spring Green.



Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Sunday, December 3, 1944

Mark Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. G.N. Dodge [caption under photo of the pair]
SPRING GREEN - Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge, Spring Green, will hold open house from 2 to 5 p.m. today in observance of their 60th wedding anniversary.
They were married Dec. 2, 1884 in Arena and have lived in Spring Green for 47 years.
They have two daughters, Mrs. Nelia Hayes, Spring Green, and Mrs. Lorna Peart, Baraboo, and two sons, Edwin, Spring Green, and Thane, Madison.



Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, Sunday, December 2, 1945

Spring Green Couple Marks 61st Wedding Date
Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge [caption under photo of the pair, same photo as ones before]
SPRING GREEN - Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Dodge, Spring Green, will observe their 61st wedding anniversary a their home today. He will be 82 Tuesday and she is 77.
They were married Dec. 2, 1884, in Arena. Mrs. Dodge was the former Nettie Beadell, and both were born and raised in Arena.
Dodge was employed for many years at the Schlosser, Held, and Davis store here and later by the Schoephroester and Sprecher store. He has been treasurer of the village for many years.
They have two daughters, Mrs. Nelia Hayes, Spring Green, and Mrs. Lorna Peart, Baraboo, and two sons, Edwin Dodge, West Bend, and Thane Dodge, Madison.

[NI21294] TIBBITS-CAMERON LUMBER CO.
New Building Completed
Best Service

Tibbits-Cameron Lumber Company have completed their new yards and buildings which they have been working on the past year.
It is a model plant with all of the latest improvements and conveniences to enable them to handle a lare amount of stock quickly and economically.
The last building to be completed was their 600 ton coal elevator, which elevates the coal from the car and delivers it into the wagon, rescreeened without any shoveling.
This gives the patrons good clean coal. Previously they had built a lumber shed and office 66x100 feet, with a side track running into the building.
All lumber is unladed under cover, which gives them good clean, dry lumber, of which there is a complete new stock. The feed house is 28x60 feet.
Tibbits-Cameron Lumber Company is a large concern owning ten yards and are able to handle any contract, no matter how large, promptly; small orders are also shown equal courtesy.
Charles F. Dodge is the local manager and will be very glad to show any one through the new buildings.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------

Daily Herald, Chicago, Illinois, April 23, 1915
Arlington Heights-
Misses Alice Dodge and Lillian Klehm are on the sick list this week.

Daily Herald, Chicago, Illinois, January 16, 1920
Arlington Heights-
Miss Alice Dodge Gave a party of her school friends a merry sleigh ride one evening this week. A tip over and some slight hurls made it a "really truly" sleighride.

Captial Times, Madison, Wisconsin, July 11, 1922
Spring Green -
Charles Dodge and family returned to Arlington Heights after a week's visit with Mrs. Josephine Hess and the Dodge families.


Daily Herald, Chicago, Illinois, December 15, 1922
Arlington Heights-
Miss Alice Dodge is said to be quite ill.

[NI21317] DODGE nELIZABETH DODGE SHINER, 78, widow of Paul M. Shiner, formerly of 600 Barnes Ave., Endicott, N.Y., died Tuesday morning, April 10, 1990 at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Binghamton, N.Y. Since June of 1989, Elizabeth has been a guest at the River Mede Manor Nursing Home in Binghamton. Born January 2, 1912, in Franklin Township, Pennsylvania, she was a daughter of Torrence A. and Ella Smith Dodge. Elizabeth attended the Franklin Center School and was a graduate of Towanda High School. Mr. and Mrs. Shiner lived in Powell area until 1948 when they moved to Endicott to make their home. Her husband, Paul, preceded her in death on March 17, 1978. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Harold (Edna) Allen of Endicott; three grandchildren; Mrs. Susan Allen of Houston, Tx.; Mrs. Bonnie Brugone and Mrs. Paula Shaw, both of Edgewater, Fla.; four great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Juanita Dodge of Endicott; two brothers-in-law, Kenneth Shiner of Newark Valley, N.Y. and Irvin iPati Shiner of Baltimore, Md.; also nieces and nephews. She was also predeceased by a daughter, Mrs. Kay Henrich, on April 1, 1973; a sister, Mrs. Mary Cook on June 15, 1955; two brothers, Sam Dodge on Dec. 24, 1975 and Paul Dodge Sr. on Aug. 10, 1984. The funeral service will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home, 217 York Ave., Towanda, with the Rev. Emmalou Kirchmeier officiating. Interment will be in the Franklin Center Cemetery, Franklindale. nTowanda Daily Review.

[NI21332] John Shaw grew up in Eastport, ME, with lots of relatives on both sides of the family (including aunt Norma Chevrier, who was the same age!) Graduated from the University of Maine at Orono. In the Army, he had Basic in Alabama, was stationed in Germany and New Jersey. While in Germany, he saw alot of Europe, including Scotland, France, and England. When in New Jersey, he often went to jazz clubs in New York City. Trained in electronics, started at Raytheon as a technician, moved up to engineer.

[NI21368] He invented the first American Sewing Machine.

[NI21400] One record spells her name Lovisa.

[NI21402] One record had her name as Mercy.

[NI21435] Son of Abel Ellis and Sally Morse

[NI21437] Served in the Co. I, 3rd Massachusetts Heavy Artillery

[NI21441] Birth year calculated from age at time of death.

[NI21442] Birth year calculated from age at time of death.

[NI21443] Member Odd Fellows.

[NI21453] He was stillborn.

[NI21466] 2d LT Company D 117 inf 30 Division World War I

[NI21477] Served 8 years in the Army-82nd Airborne.

[NI21478] Served 4 years in U.S. Air Force.

[NI21616] Built the Mayfai Theater in Ventura, California.

[NI21617]
Frank Cannon Dodge passed away at his ranch on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2009. He was 80 years old. Frank was raised in Oxnard by parents, James and Jenne Dodge, in the family home on F Street with his siblings, Jim, Barbara, and Tom, and beloved Great Dane, Jerry. After one summer working in the sugar beet factory, Frank decided a college education was in order, so he enrolled and graduated from Cal Poly Pomona with a degree in citrus fruit production. Once he finished college, like his father and brothers before him, Frank served his country by enlisting in the US Navy and served on Midway Island during the Korean War. After returning from the Navy, he went to work for Raytheon County, in Oxnard, where he aided in the production of the Sparrow and Hawk missiles for the Defense Department. While working full time at Raytheon, Frank purchased his own piece of the Oxnard Plain, now known as the Frank Dodge Ranch, and became a lemon farmer. After a full day at Raytheon, he would spend his evenings in the fields, often with his three children as his field hands. In his 60s, he retired from Raytheon with more than 35 years of service and went on to enjoy his true passions...golfing every Monday, attending Friday meetings with the "lunch bunch", having a beer in town, watching literally every football game televised during the season from the comfort of his Lazy Boy chair and enjoying the peacefulness of living on his own land. Frank is survived by his three children, Frank Dodge, Stephen Dodge, and Laura Meyer; and by his five grandchildren, Frank Dodge II, Corey Dodge and Wesley Dodge of Venture, and Kelly Meyer and Andrew Meyer of Ojai. Frank requested that services be private. In lieu of flowers....etc.

[NI21665] "Monday, August 14, 1950, The Wisconsin State Journal Madison, Wisconsin

G. L Dodge, Union Official Dies at 64
Guy Leslie Dodge, 64. of 3514 Lucia Crest, secretary and business agent of the Madison Steamfitters union Local 394. Madison, died at his home Sunday after a long illness.
Mr. Dodge, a Madison resident for the past 35 years, was born in Arena township September 11, 1885. He was a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. He is survived by his wife, a sister, Mrs. Grace Robson, Spring Green; three brothers. Nels and Charles, both of Spring Green; and E. G. Dodge, San Francisco; a stepson, Victor T. Culver, Seattle, Wash.; a granddaughter. Noreen Whitrock, and a great granddaughter, Georgia Lee Whitrock, both of Mondovi, Funeral services will be held at 1 p. m. Wednesday in the Schroeder funeral home, with the Rev, Richard Anthens officiating. Burialwill be in Spring Green cemetery."

GUY L. DODGE
Funeral services for Guy Leslie Dodge, 64, of 3514 Lucia Crest, who died Sunday, will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Schroeder funeral home, with the Rev. Richard C. Anthens officiating. Burial will be in the Spring Green cemetery. He was secretary and
business agent of the Madison steamfitters union. Pallbearers will be Gary Greve, Ed Karsten, Sam Pharo, George Poster, Walter Schnurbosch and Vernon Lawler.

[NI21714] Mary is the managing editor of the Boothbay Register.

[NI21718] This is a John Dodge line. Please see the history of the John Dodge Family.

[NI21730] age 76 years, 5 months, 27 days
Daughter of Chauncy Brewer and Samantha Treat.

1900 US Census - Concord, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
- living with Daughter, Clara Hart

[NI21731] She was Cremated

[NI21777] He was stillborn.

[NI21786] OBITUARY

Boston Herald – Wednesday, December 11, 1946

Charles L. Dodge, 48, of 92-A Pinckney Street, Beacon Hill, died yesterday at Wyman House, Cambridge.

He was born in Chicago, graduated from Abbott Preparatory School and attended Bowdoin College, leaving in 1918 to enter the Navy. He was a partner in the paper firm of C. H. Dodge Company, 10 High Street.

He leaves his wife and father, Charles. H. Dodge of Newton. Funeral services will be tomorrow at Mt. Auburn Chapel at 2 P.M.

[NI21794] 1860 US Census - Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts
1870 US Census - Fall River, Bristol County, Massachusetts
1880 US Census - Fall River, Bristol County, Massachusetets
1900 US Census - Derby, New Haven County, Connecticut
- living with son, William
1910 US Census - Derby, New Haven County, Connecticut
- living with son, William

[NI21798] Walter served in WW II and Korea.

[NI21814] Mother's maiden name was Wheeler.

[NI21817] His family moved to Southern California when he was a child, and he graduated from
Hollywood High School. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II. In 1947 in Santa Barbara, CA, he married Nancy Ross, who survives him. They moved to Wimer from Chatsworth, CA 31 years ago. He worked in the family confection shop
in Studio City, CA and also as a postal clerk. He was an artist and enjoyed car- tooning, drawing and painting. He also enjoyed wildlife, history, reading and inventing gadgets.

[NI21819] Mother's maiden name: Cresswell

[NI21936]
Christine Helen Miller Dodge, age 51, died early Tuesday morning, January 19, 2009.

She was the daughter of Donna ("Dee") Miller and the late Wilbert Miller, also of Wilmington.

"Chrissy" graduated from Johnston-Willis Hospital School of Nursing in Richmond, VA and was employed for many years at Cape Fear Memorial Hospital. She was an award-winning Registered Nurse who was passionate about her profession. Her compassionate care will be sorely missed by our community.

She is survived by her devoted husband, Robert Nixon Dodge ("Nick") and her loving daughters, Erin Henley and Nurry Leigh Dodge. She is also survived by her mother, her sister and brother-in-law, Patty and Scott Rader, and her brother, Scott Miller and his family. Her other survivors include her mother- in-law, Nurry Nixon Dodge, and her brothers-in-law, Mac and Will Dodge and their families, all of Raleigh. In addition she will be missed by many friends and colleagues.

"My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; but, ah, my foes, and, oh, my friends It gives a lovely light!" -Millay

[NI21952] Denton Francis Dodge was born 19 May 1891 per WWI DRC and died 16 Dec 1944 in Kane County, Illinois per IL Death Index.
Per cemetery stone in West Batavia Cemetery, Batavia, Illinois Helen E. Dodge 1900 - 1977 (wife of Denton) A picture of the gravestone (with a replica of a cow's head in the center of the stone) is on .

The obit below is for Denton 'Sonny' Dodge, son of Denton Francis Dodge and Helen Price. Per SSDI his middle initial was C.

Now interestingly, the obit lists siblings both alive and deceased. I tried to find out just who/where for siblings and came up pretty much empty handed as the obit did not give spouses. Suffice it to say, however, that at least one, if not more, siblings were from the first marriage of their father and therefore would be half-siblings.

I could find no death for Eva Salerno or Marion Grimm. However, Doris Crissip was born 28 Aug 1923 and died Jan 1966 - so that would most likely make her a child of the first marriage, but don't know for sure, since we don't have a divorce date or death date on his first wife. I just know that in the 1930 census Denton Francis Dodge and his wife, Helen Price were listed with no children. I tried to find the kids living in 1930 but could not find them - they just disappeared off the radar screen I guess.

[NI22051] Went to live with the Colburn Grandparents after her mothers death.

[NI22085] Denton "Sonny" Dodge
Denton "Sonny" Dodge, 71, of Aurora passed away on Friday, October 1, 2004 at Rush-Copley Medical Center in Aurora. He was born on June 8, 1933 in Aurora, a son of the late Denton and Helen (Price) Dodge. Sonny served his country in the Marine Corp as an M.P. during the Korean conflict. He owned and operated D & L Fire Protection prior to working for Valley Welding Supply for many years. He then went of with Heartland Blood Bank as a driver. Sonny was an avid bowler, golfer, fisherman and Cub fan. He loved his grandchildren dearly.
Family members include his wife of 46 years, Lona of Aurora; a daughter, Debbie (Chris) Bode of Earlville; three grandchildren, Reece, Addison and Jack; his siblings, Rita (David) Bliss, Ronnie Dodge and Jeanne Hughes; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents; and siblings, Marion Grimm, Bob Dodge, Doris Crissip and Eva Salerno.

[NI22103] US COAST GUARD, US NAVY
Note: WORLD WAR II, KOREA, VIETNAM

WEYMOUTH

Anthony A. Dodge, 82, died May 10, 2008 at South Shore Hospital.

He was born in Boston, grew up in Lynn, and lived in Weymouth for many years.

Mr. Dodge was an electrician at the General Dynamics Shipyard in Quincy for many years.

He served his country for over 20 years in Europe and Africa during World War II in the Navy, and in the Coast Guard for the Korean War, from which he retired.

He was past president and member of the Weymouth Eagles Aerie 2899 and a state officer as well.

He was the father of Steven A.P. Dodge of Indian Harbor, FL, Carl E. Dodge, Sr. of Cary Plantation, ME, and Ellen Patricia Ciardelli of Lakeland, FL. He was the brother of Albert Dodge of Billerica, Alfred Dodge of Lynn, and was the brother of the late Charles and the late Benjamin Dodge.

He was the brother-in-law of Ann Dodge.

He was the grandfather of Timothy, Amy, Ryan, Carl, Jr., Elishia and Jacquelyn.

A funeral service took place at the Clancy-Lucid Funeral Home. Burial was in Mass National Cemetery in Bourne.

[NI22104] St. Petersburg Times - St. Petersburg, Fla.
Author: STEVE THOMPSON
Date: Dec 21, 2003

One evening in early October, a deputy dropped off a white- haired man at the Holy Ground homeless shelter. The man seemed hungry, in need of a bath and a little lost.

But he quickly made himself at home, sleeping in the shelter's dorm and spending afternoons in a plastic chair under an oak tree. He called himself Charlie.

Years had taken their toll on him. Charlie's hands shook. Sometimes he talked to himself.

Holy Ground founder Lisa Barabas-Henry asked Charlie about his background. He courteously answered her questions - "Yes ma'am," he'd say, or "No ma'am." But he revealed little beyond his name, Charles Davis Dodge, and his date of birth, April 2, 1927.

What had he been doing? Charlie would say he wasn't sure.

Do you have children? Charlie seemed confused.

"You'd have to sit and pick his brain for a while, bringing it back to him," Barabas-Henry said.

Over time, Charlie endeared himself to the people at the shelter. Barabas-Henry's sister, Andrea Hill, often pulled up a chair with him under the oak tree.

"He was," said Hill, "a wonderful, sweet, precious, little old man."

Over time, she and Barabas-Henry learned more about Charlie. They found out he had brothers, who didn't know he was alive; an ex- wife, who still loved him though he'd abandoned her; a daughter, who had been hoping to find him; and grandchildren, who had never met him. Ultimately, a larger, sadder truth emerged:

Charlie could have had a wonderful life.

Charlie told Barabas-Henry he was from Massachusetts and mentioned some towns there. He said he had brothers who lived there. He thought one of them was named Sidney.

Barabas-Henry started calling information, looking for Sidney Dodge.

No luck.

Then, after hours of dialing and searching, she found an Albert Sidney Dodge.

"I couldn't believe it, I almost fell out of my chair," said Albert Dodge, 70, describing Barabas-Henry's call. "What a nice surprise to hear that he was alive. We were so happy."

Charlie also seemed elated. Tears filled his wrinkled eyelids as he spoke to his brother, whom he hadn't seen for more than 30 years.

Also living in Massachusetts were Charlie's three other brothers, his daughter and ex-wife. His son was in Ohio.

None of them had seen Charlie since the 1960s.

"The last we heard he was out in Indiana," Albert Dodge said. That was about 20 years ago, he said. "Then we never heard any more from him. We had reached the point a couple of years ago where we figured he must be dead."

Charlie's past

Charlie left his hometown of Lowell, Mass., and joined the Navy during WWII when he was only 16 or 17. When his superiors discovered his age they kicked him out, his family says.

He rejoined, this time in the Army, a year later. After the war he got married and had two children, Linda in 1950 and Charles Jr. in 1952. During those years he worked in a textile mill.

His ex-wife, Terry Bachelder, says that during their marriage Charlie would black out for no reason. She blamed it on a head injury he suffered when his Navy ship got hit during the war.

"He'd just go in outer space or something, and you couldn't talk to him," she said. "He wouldn't go get help.

"He'd never tell me he was hurting, but for someone to pass out like that for nothing just wasn't right."

Charlie abandoned her soon after Charles Jr. was born. Though she struggled after he left, she never fell out of love with him.

"I never was mad at him for it," she said, "because I knew a person doesn't go off like that unless there's something wrong."

Even through her second marriage, which split up after five years, she thought of Charlie.

"He was the easiest-going guy there ever was," she recalled.

She found out later he had been in and out of jail and had been locked up in a mental hospital for several years.

His brother Albert said he helped Charlie out of jail a couple times in the 1950s. But Charlie would quickly find his way back in.

Charlie's problem was alcohol, Albert said.

"Because of drink he couldn't hold a job," he said. "Then he was locked up for not paying child support. He lost his whole life because of drink."

Massachusetts records show Charlie faced charges including larceny in 1950, forgery in 1952, breaking and entering in 1954 and armed robbery in 1956.

Charlie's daughter, Linda, saw him for the last time when she visited him in 1965, when she was 15. She visited him at Massachusetts' Bridgewater State Hospital. It was a facility for the criminally insane, but in those days people often were sent there for indigence or alcoholism.

It was a bittersweet meeting, Linda recalled. She was happy to see him, and he seemed happy to see her. But it was tough to see him in a place like that.

In 1981, Linda and her father briefly corresponded by mail. Charlie had phoned Albert from a ranch where he was working in Indiana. She wrote him letters there and received one from him. Then he was gone again.

No one knows what Charlie did afterward, but Florida records give a spotty account of his whereabouts. His earliest charge in Florida was in Pensacola in 1982. An officer there arrested him for sleeping in a park under some palm trees.

There was a trespassing charge in Sarasota County in 1987, a disorderly intoxication charge in Columbia County in 1993 and a trespassing charge in Santa Rosa County last year.

Found again

During the weeks after the family rediscovered Charlie in October, his brothers called him at Holy Ground, and sent him cards, pictures and letters.

"He was so excited when he got mail," said Hill, who would help him read the letters under the oak tree. "I never saw him without having one of the letters in his shirt pocket."

He would fold and unfold them, and read them over and over.

Because he could not steady his hands, Charlie could not write.

So Hill offered to write letters for him.

One of the letters Charlie dictated was to his daughter.

"Dear Linda," the letter said. "Hope you are fine. I've thought of you through the years and Alfred too. He gave me your address. Alfred called me and told me all about you and the rest of the family. I just wanted to say I love you.

"I appreciate hearing from everyone. Let's stay in touch and not put so many years between us . . . I'm very proud to hear about how wonderful my grandchildren have done. You did a great job. I love you . . . Love, Dad."

So much missed

"We were so excited because he was found," said Charlie's daughter, Linda Perona.

Her daughter, Maria Therese, is graduating from Northeastern University this year. Her son, Marco, is graduating from high school. Now they would finally be able to meet their grandfather, who had missed the joys of watching them grow up.

"He just missed so much," Perona said. Her graduation. Her wedding day. The birth of her children. The time Maria Therese starred in her junior-high production of Pirates of Penzance. The time Marco's hockey team won the Metro League championships.

"All the stuff kids do, first communions and confirmations, all of that . . . He just wasn't around," Perona said. "Isn't it a shame all that love he's missed out on."

Lost reunion

She hoped her 76-year-old father could make up for the lost decades.

She and her mother began making plans to travel to Florida after the holidays. Charlie's brothers made plans to go too.

Finally, in early December, Perona called Holy Ground to talk to her father for the first time in 38 years.

But Charlie wasn't there. He'd left without a word to anyone.

"He left with no clothes, no nothing," Barabas-Henry said. "He just kind of wandered off."

Charlie did turn up one last time.

It was at 8:29 p.m. on Dec. 8, about 8 miles away from Holy Ground, on State Road 52. Two days later, the Times reported what happened:

"An unidentified pedestrian, whom authorities described as a white male, about 70 years old, stepped out in front of a Dodge van. He was pronounced dead on the scene."

They buried Charlie on Tuesday afternoon in Lynn, Mass. Standing graveside were Charlie's ex-wife Terry, his daughter Linda, his brothers Albert, Alfred and Anthony, four nephews and a few other relatives and family friends.

The brothers huddled together and cried.

"All these years not knowing where he was . . .," Albert said. They were grateful, too. If they'd not found Charlie, he would have ended up in a pauper's grave in Florida.

"The best part," Albert said, "is we know where he is."

Charles Davis Dodge stands with his foster mother and his then wife, Terry, in 1946 in Lowell, Mass. The picture was taken several years before he left his family. At top right, Dodge, who was hit by a car Dec. 8 on State Road 52, is shown in October at Holy Ground in Hudson. At lower right, he is shown in his Navy uniform during World War II.


Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Abstract (Document Summary)
Holy Ground founder Lisa Barabas-Henry asked [Charlie] about his background. He courteously answered her questions - "Yes ma'am," he'd say, or "No ma'am." But he revealed little beyond his name, Charles Davis Dodge, and his date of birth, April 2, 1927.

His brother [Albert Sidney Dodge] said he helped Charlie out of jail a couple times in the 1950s. But Charlie would quickly find his way back in.

They buried Charlie on Tuesday afternoon in Lynn, Mass. Standing graveside were Charlie's ex-wife [Terry Bachelder], his daughter [Linda Perona], his brothers Albert, Alfred and Anthony, four nephews and a few other relatives and family friends.

[NI22105] LYNN

Mr. Benjamin F. Dodge, age 77, died on Sunday, Jan. 21, 2007, at Kindred Hospital, Boston, after a lengthy illness.

Born in Lynn, he was the son of the late Auburn A. and Elizabeth M. (McNevin) Dodge. He was raised in Lowell, attended Lowell Schools and had lived in Lowell all his life, before moving to Lynn 20 years ago.

Mr. Dodge had served in the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict.

He had worked for many years at the Atlantic Parachute Co., Lowell, until the company closed. He then worked as a maintenance worker for various companies, including the Sheraton Boston Hotel.

He was the brother of Alfred Dodge, of Lynn, Albert Dodge, of N. Billerica, Anthony Dodge, of Weymouth, and the late Charles Dodge.

Service information: His funeral will be held on Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the SOLIMINE, LANDERGAN AND RICHARDSON Funeral Home, 426 Broadway (Route 129) Lynn. Burial will be in Pine Grove Cemetery. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited, visitation Wednesday 10-11 a.m. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to American Heart Association, 20 Speen St., Framingham, MA 01701 or American Diabetes Association, 330 Congress St., Boston, MA 02210.

[NI22128] Was in the CIvil War: induction into 2nd Calvary, Company C., Minnesota discharge as a corporal.

[NI22130] Went to Minnesota in 1856.
Served as a representative to the Minnesota Legislature in 1862 and as Minnesota State Senator 1877-1878.

[NI22147] West Brookfield’s towering tree on the common has been a tradition for nearly a century, almost as long as there has been electricity with which to light it. That lovely tradition was begun by a young woman named Helen Dodge, a West Brookfield native born in May, 1900 to Herbert Dodge and Annie Ford. She loved her family Christmas tree, and admired the evergreen then adorning the common. She consulted her dad, who was, it appears, more dependable regarding such things than most. She
suggested that the town should light the tree. He agreed, but told her she must
raise the funds for the light bulbs and the lighting. He would assist, once the funds
were at hand. So, she drove her horse and buggy about town, appealing to businesses and individuals to contribute. And so they did, and the tree enchanted the townsfolk. (The spunky Miss Dodge later met and married a young entrepreneur named Ray Burrington, who for more than 60 years ran his garage where his nephew, Gerald Martin, now operates the True Value hardware store.) The lights on that first tree were all white, there being no other options available. Later, colored bulbs were added, the fire department happily decorated the tree, and the lights were turned on shortly after Thanksgiving each year. That tradition continued until recently, when a group of civic-minded citizens came up with the idea of White Christmas. On the first Sunday of December,White Christmas in West Brookfield, white lights blaze along Route 9; businesses, churches, the town hall and the firehouse put their holiday finery into action. Sadly, according to West Brookfieldelder statesman Lindsey Smith and a few others whose names dare not be mentioned, though White Christmas is in fact a pretty good idea, some traditions deserve to be held sacred; the town’s Christmas tree all white is a saddening sight. The fire department, one fireman lamented, was, at the advent of White Christmas, fired as decorators, though their colorful swags, looped beautifully as a Christmas tree should be, were works of art. Now, the Grinch, according to some critics, works his mean magic. Long, crazily looped strings of white lights hang sadly where colorful splendor once reigned. Whole sides of the tree are neglected at times. No swags, no red, blue, gold and green, no fun.

[NI22164] Private in the Civil War - Ohio

[NI22201] She was cremated, and her ashes are buried.

[NI22202] Hiram P. Dodge 1828 - 31 Aug 1899, buried Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Eagle Twp., Richland County, Wisconsin


Hiram Dodge
Residence: Arena, Wisconsin
Enlistment Date: 15 Feb 1865
Side Served: Union
State Served: Wisconsin
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 15 February 1865.
Enlisted in Company E, 50th Infantry Regiment Wisconsin on 15 Feb 1865.
Deserted from Company E, 50th Infantry Regiment Wisconsin on 9 Sep 1865.


Married - don't have date or place but somewhere around 1858 or so


Evangeline Ermina Bishop 1842 - 29 July 1899, buried Pleasant Hill


Children that I know of through census or cemetery records, all born Wisconsin:
Sylvia H. Dodge, abt 1858
George P. Dodge, Jan 1865
Walter Dodge, abt 1868 (prisoner in Wisconsin Industrial School for Boys in 1880 census)
Alice Dodge, abt 1871
Alexander Dodge, 13 Nov 1875 (per WWI DRC) - George P. Dodge next of kin
Pearl Alonzo Dodge, 1 Sep 1880 - 17 Sep 1895, buried Pleasant Hill
Thomas J. Dodge, 27 Jul 1882 - 1 Nov 1882, buried Pleasant Hill


In my Mystery File I just discovered I had Hiram and Evangeline - but I have some more info - 3 new children to add:


1. Floyd Allen Dodge, born 9 Aug 1886 in Richland County, Wisconsin per WWI DRC


I have a note that in the 1910 US Census he is living in Wyoming, Iowa County, Wisconsin with the William Billington family as a cousin.


2. I also have Edna Rebecca Dodge, born 4 Dec 1889 in Richland County, Wisconsin living with the same Billington family. She died 15 Aug 1971 in Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin.


On 5 Oct 1910 in Dodgeville, Iowa County, Wisconsin she marries Rene Lawrence McIntosh who was born 27 Jan 1880 in Dodgeville, Iowa County, Wisconsin and died 6 Nov 1950 in Dodgeville, son of James McIntosh and Narcissa Floyd


Children of Edna and Rene McIntosh, all born in Dodgeville:
Bernice, 1 Aug 1911
Alice, 1913
Frederick Arthur, 6 Jun 1916
Alfred Eugene, 7 Jun 1918
Gladys Enora, 3 May 1920
Violet Narcissa, 1922 - twin
Vera Lecine, 1922 - twin


3. Guy Arthur Dodge, born 20 Nov 1892 in Richland County, Wisconsin, living with the same Billington family.


I also have a note that Evangeline Ermina Bishop married first, Albert Green and was Evangeline Ermina Bishop Green when she married Hiram P. Dodge.

[NI22203] Lake Junaluska, NC, Mary Lee Milholland Dodge, age 89, of Givens Estates, died on Sunday, July 12, 2009 at the Givens Estates.A native of Alexander County, she was the daughter of the late Walter C. and Ina Victoria Johnson Milholland. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, Fred M. Milholland and two sisters, Pauline Neill and Ruth Rufty. Mary Lee was a graduate of Lenoir-Rhyne College and taught school at Claremont and Stony Point and was also a principal of Junction School. She was a member of First United Methodist Church of Waynesville.She is survived by her devoted husband of 68 years, Reverend William Wesley Dodge; one daughter, Dorothy Lee Dodge, of Baltimore, Maryland; three sisters, Jean Rufty of Catawba, Jackie Sherrill of Statesville, and Betty Lackey of Stony Point; and two grandchildren, Nathan Leaf and Benjamin Seth Miner.As a teacher, Mary Lee was adored by her pupils, to whom she passed her love of singing. Her many church and family friends will forever remember her sunny smile and loving hugs.A memorial service will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, July 19, 2009 at Givens Estates with Reverend C. Garland Young and Reverend Joseph Fulk officiating.Memorials may be made to First United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 838, Waynesville, NC 28786.

[NI22237] Lillian Dodge of Camarillo, Ca, died peacefully Thursday, Feb. 20, 2010, at the age of 91, having lived a long full life.

Lillian was born Oct. 6, 1918 in Long Beach, Washington to George Harvey Hisel of Missouri and Margaret Maggie McKeever of Jewel, Oregon. Her family moved to So. California in the 1930s and she graduated from North Hollywood High School in 1937.

In the 1938 she met the love of her life, Charles "Charlie" Dodge and the two were married on August 4, 1938. During World War II she was employed by Timm Aircraft as a secretary and helped with the P-61 "Black Widow" fighter aircraft production while Charles was overseas in China flying B-24J bombers with the 14th Air Force.

They enjoyed 71 years of marriage before he passed away on Aug. 8, 2009, after the couple celebrated their 71st wedding anniversary. The Dodge's enjoyed many happy years together before his retirement in 1976 playing golf, traveling around the USA and enjoying time together with their family and friends. They enjoyed cruising and visited Australia, New Zealand, Europe, Russia, Mexico and the islands in the Caribbean and Mediterranean Sea.

She loved to play golf and was president of the Valencia golf club. She was an accomplished seamstress and made many of her own clothes and helped tailor wedding dresses for her relatives. Her home was filled with antiques and she was an excellent cook and always made her guests feel welcome in her home. She took great pride in her home and her beloved family.

She survived the 1971 Sylmar earthquake and the 1994 Northridge earthquake when they lived near the epicenter in Granada Hills. Since Charles was a firefighter for the city of Los Angeles she was sometimes on her own. In 1995 after rebuilding their home in Granada Hills, the Dodges moved to a house on the golf course in Camarillo Springs, CA. She was always interested in her children and grandchildren and helped them whenever she had the chance.

She is survived by her two sons and daughters-in-law, Stephen and Lucy Dodge; Robert and Tracey Dodge; her five grandchildren, Bryan, Stefanie (husband Jason Hardy), Robyn, Scott and Rebecca, and her great-granddaughter, Cashlynn Hardy. She was preceded in death by her seven brothers and sisters.

Funeral services will begin at 11 am on Tuesday, March 2, int he Chapel of the Islands at Conejo Mountain Memorial Park in Camarillo with interment to follow.

Arrangements are under the direction of Conejo Mountain Funeral Home, Crematory and Memorial Park, 2052 Howard Rd., Camarillo, CA 93012.

[NI22283] ID: I086541
Name: Louisa Jane Gove
Sex: F
Birth: 11 AUG 1834 in Springport, New York
Death: 7 APR 1851 in Argentine, Michigan




Father: Stephen Gove b: 4 MAY 1811 in Springport, New York
Mother: Mary Jane Kitchen b: 23 FEB 1818 in New Jersey

Marriage 1 Orius Dodge b: WFT Est 1809-1834
Married: ABT 1853 in Bryron, Michigan

Sources:
Title: World Family Tree Vol. 15, Ed.
Author: Broderbund Software, Inc.
Publication: Release date: November 20, 1997
Note: Customer pedigree.
Repository:
Media: Family Archive CD
Page: Tree #1212
Text: Date of Import: 3 Jan 2001

[NI22313] He was a Private, Companies C & F, in the 15th New York Engineers during the Civil War.

[NI22334]      Born Leforest Earl Dodge on November 2, 1945 I grew up with music all around me. Most of my father's & mother's families were into playing the piano & guitar and just about any other instrument they could get there hands on. I started learning the guitar at age 12 and it's been on going ever sense. I started writing songs & lyrics in high school. I have to date over 1400 songs on file and I try to write at least one new song every day.
     I'm married to a wonderful woman Marlene Wentworth Dodge  and we have been together for 38 years, and have made our home in Rockport Maine for the last 33 years. We have two wonderful children Todd & Angela and three grand children Josh, Katherine, and Robbie.
     In the summer I play music with the Country Music  Folk Theater and at many of the local country music festivels all over the state of Maine.  I have built a small prodject studio in my home and use it to preserve the songs I write. This CD is well over due as it's been 45 years in the making.
     Thank you Cal Meece for putting this projest together it's like magic and also all the musicians that have made it possible. Especially Ken Ryan for the initial track we did on a cold winter night at Hole-N-Wall recording studio in
Nashville, Tn.

[NI22346] Leforest Earl Dodge Sr. was at Schofield Barracks Dec.07 1941. He fought and lived through that attack and only 1 of many more. He wounded in 1943 on one of the many Pacific islands that fought and taken from the Japanese. He was a highly decorated soldier for his combat duty at that time. and eventually he died from his wounds years later. In the early 60s he was a volunteer subject in the governments funded program on heart disease and new heart devices from which he got a personal letter of thanks from :President Nixon, for his courage and willingness to participate in a program to better understand the workings of the heart for the betterment of mankind. He died in the summer of 1969.

Leforest joined the Army 1940 and was 28 at the time quite old compared to most of the guys while while he was working in the CC Camp program, Then after his basic training in Fort Sills Oklahoma he was stationed in the 25th unit 35th infentary or in 35th unit or in the 26th infentary at Scoofield Baracks in Honolulu Hawaii . On D day he said he was in the mess hall when the attack started and said it was confusing because they didn't have any keys to get into the Amory for there guns, and there amunitions were at another location, but when they did get them they were mad as hell and put up a good fight until the planes all left. He said they did get a couple of the planes but the deaths and damage was terrific and he said he would never forget it.The rest i'm not sure it's been over 44 years sense he died and another 29 years before then, and he never talked about it directly to me, only to a couple of friends that came to visit who were with him in Hawaii on D Day and it was long after the war was over. i'll look through my mothers stuff for the letter from Nixon . She's pretty protective his was momentos. He was often sick from Malaria, that he got in the pasific which got him in the end.. After he got home from the service he worked in the Knox Wollen Mill for awhile and then worked for CK Hopkins and Sons Contractors in Camden Maine as a house painter( For most of his llife). He and my mother divorced in 1960 i think it was, but got remarried in 1965 or 66 i'm not sure. and were together when he died in the vetrains Hospital in Togas in Augusta Maine in 1969. He was shot in the head ion an island in combat, and in a military morge when he came too close to days later. It was a surprise the the guys working there because he had already been read his rights and he was ready to be processed for burial. After that he was scent to an Arizona Military Hopital.Then after he got released in 1944 and came back to Camden Maine

[NI22419] DODGE - Walter DeForest, Jr., died peacefully of old age on Sunday, November 29, 2009. He is going home to God and to his wife Catherine with whom he shared their 58th wedding anniversary before she preceded him in death in 2007. Walter was born in Inwood, LI, New York the son of the late Mary Louise and Walter DeForest Dodge, Sr. He served as an active member and president of the Far Rockaway Chamber of Commerce and President of Franklin National Bank in Inwood, then, Peninsula National bank, in Inwood. Walter and "Kay" enjoyed raising their three children in Huntington Station, New York and spending summers in the mountains of Delhi, New York with sons, Kenneth, a veterinarian of Fabius, New York, Greg, a government contracts manager of Warrenton, VA and daughter Sharon, a local pottery crafter of Sunset Beach, NC. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Seaside United Methodist Church at 1300 Seaside Road, SW, Sunset Beach, NC 28468.

[NI22421] Ella & John are divorced before 1930.

[NI22422] Known as Elly, was a former boxer. He lived at 110 Roosevelt St., Inwood, New York
Was in the Marine Corps.

[NI22423] Innwood later becomes Nassau County, New York

[NI22440] In the 1910 Census Transcribed as Mac Elizabeth Kenn

[NI22523] Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA) - July 1, 2003
Deceased Name: Sylvia A. Valentine , 85
SHREWSBURY -- Sylvia A. (Melvin) Valentine, 85, formerly of 337 Boylston
St., died Sunday, June 29, in Oakdale Rehabilitation and Skilled Nursing
Center, West Boylston, after a short illness.

[NI22578] Zelma Marie Dodge, 94, Manhattan, passed away on Friday, December 09, 2011, at Meadowlark Hills Retirement Community, she was born December 10, 1916, on a farm near Hoisington, Kansas, the daughter of Clara (Bicknell) and Charles Finn.

Zelma received a bachelors degree in Micro-Biology from Kansas State University. She also served a Medical Technology internship at Kansas University Medical Center, and received a teaching certificate from Emporia State University.

Zelma Marie Finn was united in marriage to Darold A. Dodge on March 22, 1943, who preceded her in death on December 17, 2008.

She was a member of St. Thomas More Catholic Church, a member of the American Association of University Women, Daughters of the American Revolution, Retired Educators Association, and the Welcome Club of Manhattan.

Zelma is survived by six daughters; Rae Marie Crisel, wife of John, of Zionsville, Indiana; Alvena Spangenberg, wife of Kenneth, of Great Bend, Kansas; Cecilia Smith, wife of Floyd, Newnan, Georgia; Beth Warren, wife of Jimmy, of Manhattan, Kansas; Clare Rehme, wife of Erwin, of Longmont, Colorado; and Eileen Rinke, wife of Mark, of Lakeville, Minnesota. She is also survived by ten grandsons, five granddaughters, and four great grandchildren.

There will be a rosary at Irvin-Parkview Funeral Home on Sunday, December 11 at 7:00pm with the family receiving friends from 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at St. Thomas More Catholic Church in Manhattan at 10:30 am on Monday, December 12th, with Father Don Zimmerman officiating. Inurnment is at a future date.

The family requests donations to Good Samaritan Fund at Meadowlark Hills Retirement Community, 2121 Meadowlark Rd. Manhattan, KS 66502.

[NI22608] He was Protestant. He was a member of the Labor Union, Morgantown.
He is survived by three daughters; one brother; four sisters; and six grandchildren

[NI22661] He was born March 16, 1912 in Clinton, Okla., to Claire A. and Martha Fern Dodge. His dad died of TB when he was young and he was raised by his mother and grandparents, James and Catherine Robinson, in Winfield, Kan., where he delivered milk by wagon under the watchful eye of Granddad and "Nellie", who knew the route as well as anyone. He started playing the trumpet in grade school and continued as a hobby the rest of his life. He moved to Oklahoma as a young adult to work for his uncle, Charlie Robinson. He later worked for Harry and Frankie Wellman becoming their foster son. Harry operated an equipment dealership at this transition period from horse powered to tractor powered farming. After a wild accident with a "trade-in" horse bolting on a bridge, Mr. Wellman agreed to provide a tractor and thus started the life long relationship.

He married Susie Marie Johnson of Tonkawa, Jan. 2, 1938, the beginning of their 70 year marriage. They farmed near Lamont, first south of the Salt Fork River, then on US 60 where they lived for 48 years. He loved farming and working with his hands and helped build the prisoner of war camp in Tonkawa, and several buildings in Lamont including the Methodist Church, the State Exchange Bank and the Post Office. They retired and moved to Tonkawa in 1990 and started going to South Padre Island where Frank enjoyed entertaining, inviting friends and family down for a "Grand Tour" of south Texas. He also brought back Texas fruit and distributed it far and wide.

Frank is survived by his wife of 70 years of the home in Tonkawa; a son, Clint and wife Debi Dodge of Albuquerque, N.M.; and a daughter, Linda Kester and husband Larry of Tulsa; grandsons, Robn Kester, Brad Kester, Brian and wife Megan Kester; and one great-granddaughter, Hannah Kester. Also a niece, Janet Rossmiller and cousins Forrest Robinson and Bob Robinson.



He was preceded in death by his parents, and a sister, Catherine Dodge Reed.



Services will be held at 2 p.m., Tuesday Nov. 18, at the First United Methodist Church of Tonkawa with Anderson Funeral Home of Tonkawa in charge of arrangements.

[NI22664] Susie Marie Johnson Dodge died at St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa on Thursday, March 19,2009.

Susie Marie Johnson Dodge was born March 26, 1915, to Hope Bell Devore Johnson and Charles E. Johnson on a farm Southwest of Tonkawa and raised by Charlie and Eva Gulick in Tonkawa. She is preceded in death by Frank, her husband of 70 years, and eight brothers and sisters, with one remaining sister, Ann, living in Oklahoma City. She is survived by one son, Clinton Dodge and wife Debi of Albuquerque, N.M.; one daughter, Linda Kester and husband Larry of Tulsa; three grandsons, Robin and Brad Kester of Tulsa; and Brian and wife Megan Kester with great-granddaughter Hannah, of Arlington, Texas.

Susie and Frank were farmers, raising their two children on the family farm four miles east of Lamont. She loved the farm, working in the flower beds, raising vegetables and supporting all the farm activities. She was active in the Methodist Church teaching Sunday School, participating in United Methodist Women and supporting church, community and school activities.

They retired from farming in 1984 and moved to Tonkawa, where she resided until Frank's death in 2008 when she moved to Tulsa to be closer to her daughter and grandsons.

Susie enjoyed travel and was "ready to go" if the opportunity arose, visiting numerous countries around the world, building scrapbooks and other keepsakes of her adventures. She loved the ocean and looked forward to visiting south Texas at Padre Island during the winter.

She was a avid supporter of family, organizing a Devore/Johnson annual reunion attended by hundreds of her siblings, cousins, nephews, nieces and other hangers-on.

A celebration of Susie's life will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, March 23, 2009, at the Tonkawa First United Methodist Church, with interment to follow in the Tonkawa IOOF Cemetery. Arrangements have been trusted to the care of Anderson Funeral Home of Tonkawa. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Tonkawa First United Methodist Church Memorial Fund in care of Anderson Funeral Home; PO Box 337; Tonkawa, OK 74653.

[NI22680] Harold S. Dodge CORINTH- Harold S. Dodge, 93, of County Rt. 10, died Tuesday, August 9, 2011 at Pleasant Valley Infirmary in Argyle following a short illness. Born on April 5, 1918 in Corinth, he was the son of the late Harry and Elizabeth (Tupper) Dodge. Harold attended Corinth High School. He joined the United States Army on August 20, 1943 serving during World War Two in the pacific theater. He joined the special forces of the 593rd boat and shore regiment, participating in five assault landings in the pacific and his outfit was one of the first to enter Japan at the end of the war. He received several medals and honors including the Asiatic-Pacific Service Medal and the Good Conduct Medal. Harold married Susan S. Pekurney on May 27, 1946 in Cooperstown. The couple resided in Corinth all their lives. He first owned and operated Dodge's Newsroom in Corinth for several years and also worked as an insurance agent. He was employed for 28 years at the International Paper Co. in Corinth until his retirement in 1979. He also was a member of the IP Quarter Century Club. Harold was a retired member of the Hudson River Federal Credit Union, serving on the credit committee and the board of directors and was a member of the Horace D. Washburn American Legion Post 533 of Corinth. He enjoyed traveling with his wife, riding his Indian Motorcycle and during his youth he enjoyed hunting and fishing. Besides his parents, he was also predeceased by one sister, Evelyn Frasier. Survivors besides his wife of 65 years include three sons, Leonard Dodge of San Jose, Calif., Jeff Dodge of Perry, NY and Jerry Dodge and his wife, Carol of Corinth; seven grandchildren, Brian Dodge of San Francisco, Calif, Patrick Dodge of San Jose, Calif., Ryan Dodge of Perry, Jesse and Jennifer Dodge, both of Corinth, Rebekah Dodge of Greenfield and Joshua Dodge of Queensbury; four great-grandchildren, Damien, Jonathan, Trista and Mariah; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. A Memorial Service will be held at 2 p.m., Tuesday, August 16, 2011 at the Densmore Funeral Home, Inc., 7 Sherman Ave., Corinth with the Rev. John Aldridge, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Corinth, officiating. Burial will be at Maplewood Cemetery, South Corinth with military honors provided by the Horace D. Washburn American Legion Post 533. The family wishes to the thank the staff at Saratoga Hospital and at Pleasant Valley Infirmary for the kindness and care shown to Harold and to his family.

[NI22693] Jennifer Lynn Dodge

Jennifer Lynn Dodge, a resident of Eureka Springs, was born Sept. 6, 1960 in Riverside, California, a daughter of Edward Monroe and Kay (Curtis) Dodge. She died Wednesday, Feb 23, 2005 in Eureka Springs at the age of 44.

She is survived by her son, Jason Allen Dodge of Dallas, Texas; her daughter, Brianna Lynn Dodge of Eureka Springs; her mother, Kay Belk of Eureka Springs; three brothers, David Edward Dodge of Eureka Springs, And Ray Dale Smith and Richard Allen Sweaney, both of Riverside, California; several nieces and nephews; other relatives and a host of friends.

She was preceded in death by her father, Edward Monroe Dodge. Memorial funeral services were held Wednesday, March 2, 2005 at the Nelson Chapel of the Springs in Eureka Springs with Rev. Craig Butler officiating. Cremains will be interred in the Eureka Springs Cemetery at a later date

[NI22706] Cremated, Ashes scattered, Specifically: Robert's ashes were scattered in his big back yard in Centennial, Colorado.

[NI22718] June Rose Budd Dodge, 59, died May 15, 1977, in Salt Lake City.

Born June 8, 1917, Salt Lake City, to Charles William and Rosetta Maude Dixon Budd.

Married Keith J. Dodge, July 20, 1937, Salt Lake City, later solemnized Salt Lake LDS Temple. Active in Relief Society.

Survivors: husband; sons, Wayne, Taylorsville; James, Layton; 6 grandchildren; brothers, sister, Charles, Salt Lake City; Clyde, Mrs. Carles (sic)(Florence) Yocum, Granger.

Funeral services Tuesday, noon, Cannon 3rd LDS Ward Chapel, 1301 S. 1200 West. Friends may call Monday, 6-8 p.m., Larkin Mortuary, 260 East South Temple and Tuesday at the ward one hour before services. Burial, Redwood Memorial Estates.

[NI22729] June B. Dodge Otte, 82, died August 13, 2003 at Fleur Heights Care Center in Des Moines. Funeral Services will be 10 a.m. Monday, August 18, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, West Des Moines, with burial at Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines.

June was born January 24, 1921 to Harold and Lillian (Fuller) Daly in Des Moines and had lived in the West Des Moines and Des Moines area all of her life. She worked as an Assistant Purchasing Agent for Drake University for 17 years and retired in 1978. She was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

She is survived by daughter, Deborah Dodge Shepard of West Des Moines; three sons, Frank J. Dodge, III and his wife, Patricia, William J. Dodge and his wife, Debra all of Des Moines and Thomas D. Dodge of West Des Moines; seven grandchildren, Julie Melton and her husband, Tom, Jeff, William, Darcy, David, Jennifer and Michael Dodge and a great-grandson, Cole Melton. She was preceded in death by her parents; husbands, Frank Dodge, Jr. and Chuck Otte, and son, James P. Dodge.

[NI22750] Harold "Red" Dodge, 81, passed away Friday at Loretto Cunningham Building. Born in Syracuse, he was a graduate of Central High School. Red was a U.S. Army veteran, serving with the 11th Airborne during WWII in the Pacific Theater. He work-ed for Merchants Bank for over 40 years and retired from the mortgage department. He was a communicant of St. James Church and served on the finance committee. Red was a member of the Mortgage Bankers Association and was a literacy volunteer, an avid bowler, oil painter, golfer, gardener and racing fan. Survivors: his wife of 52 years, the former Maureen Creed; son, Matthew Dodge; daughters, Amelia Dodge and Cathleen Dodge; grandchildren, Meghan Dodge Kurland, Martha Dodge, Sarah Dodge and Hannah Dodge; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. Services: 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Tindall Funeral Home and 10 a.m. in St. James Church. Burial with military honors will follow

[NI22751] Maureen C. Dodge, 79, passed away peacefully at Our Lady of Mercy Life Center in Guilderland, New York, surrounded by her family. She was born in Far Rockaway, New York, on June 18, 1929, and married Francis H. Dodge on May 21, 1955, at St. Anthony of Padua Church in Syracuse. Maureen was a longtime resident of Syracuse, having moved here from Woodside, New York, in 1941. She graduated from St. Anthony of Padua High School as valedictorian in 1946 and graduated from Miss Susan B. Henley's Business School in 1949. Maureen was a legal stenographer for Hancock, Estabrook, Ryan, Shove and Hust. She also worked as a secretary at Le Moyne College, Sears Roebuck and County, and Syracuse University's School of Education. In her retirement, Maureen volunteered for several Syracuse groups, including the Upstate Medical Center Children's Unit, the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and Unity Kitchen. Maureen was an accomplished artist who participated in local art shows and generously gave her work to family and friends. She also enjoyed playing the piano, baking and cooking, gardening, reading and most especially, spending time with her beloved husband, Francis, who preceded her in death on March 21, 2008, and her children and grandchildren. She was a communicant of St. James Church. Survivors: son, Matthew Dodge; daughters, Amelia Dodge and Cathleen Dodge; grandchildren, Meghan Dodge, Martha Dodge, Sarah Dodge and Hannah Dodge; and several nieces, nephews, and cousins. Other survivors are her siblings: sisters, Ann Creed Gochanour and Catherine Creed Luke; brothers, Robert Creed and the Reverend Peter Creed; and her dear friend of more than 60 years, Lucille Maschiri. Services: 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at Tindall Funeral Home and 10 a.m. at St. James Church. Burial will follow in St. Mary's Cemetery, DeWitt. Calling hours are 5 to 7 p.m. Monday at the funeral home, 1921 W. Genesee St. Contributions in Maureen's memory may be made to Covenant House, PO Box 731, Times Square Station, 340 West 42nd Street, New York, New York 10108.

[NI22762] Adopthion 05 Jun 2004 adoption, CCalifirbia.

[NI22773] TEI US Navy World War II

[NI22775] RICHARD DODGE: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice

Spokesman-Review, The (Spokane, WA) - Wednesday, August 25, 2004

Deceased Name: RICHARD DODGE

Graveside inurnment service for Richard Junior "Dick" Dodge, 77, will be Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the Newport Cemetery. Sherman-Knapp Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Mr. Dodge, who was born in Oldtown, Idaho, died Monday. In 1944, before graduating from high school, he enlisted in the Navy and served during World War II as a radioman until 1946. After the war, Mr. Dodge returned to school, and in 1947 graduated from Newport High School. He reenlisted in the Navy and served during the Korean War. In 1952 he was honorably discharged. Mr. Dodge held various jobs, including as a counselor at boys’ ranches. After retiring from Oldtown Hardware about 10 years ago, he moved to Spokane. In 1983 he married Melody Spencer. Survivors include his wife; three stepchildren, Joel and Joni Brooks, both of Spokane, and DeAnna Brooks of Hollywood, Calif.; and two brothers, Cleo Dodge of Coeur d’Alene and Gerald Dodge of Mexico.
Edition: AllZones SpoCounty
Page: 7D
Copyright (c) 2004 The Spokesman-Review

[NI22780] Dorsey Frank Elliott, 89, died Jan. 14, 2006, at Terrace Garden Care Center, Garden City.

He was born Jan. 11, 1917, in Sublette, the son of Ernest Henry and Myrtle McCoy Elliott. He graduated from Sublette Rural High School in 1934, and then graduated in 1938 from Washburn University, Topeka. A resident of Garden City, he was a teacher in Sublette and Caldwell, was a farmer, and active businessman at Sublette and Garden City, he sold securities and insurance until retiring.

He belonged to Sublette United Methodist Church and First United Methodist Church, Garden City.

In 1938, he married Eunice Ellen Dodge. She died January 1961. On Sept. 20, 1962, he married Marjorie Rinehart Fletcher in Topeka. She survives.

Other survivors include: a son, Dennis, Arlington, Texas; a daughter, Diane Elliott Blunt, Vicksburg, Mich.; a stepdaughter, Janice Fitzgerald Dufield, Liberal; a brother, Merton, Tacoma, Wash.; a sister, Eltrude Elliott Hall, Sublette; nine grandchildren; and 19 great-grandchildren.

[NI22842] Civil War pention papers filed Date 04APR1904, Application #803346, Certificate#577673 (filed by his widow), New York

[NI22843] Coleen was born to Glen and Glenna Dodge on December 12, 1948.


She married her eternal sweetheart, Darwin "Bud" Christofferson, on May 25, 1970 in the Salt Lake Temple and together they raised three children. Though Coleen struggled with health problems for more then 30 years, she was a fighter and never let them stand in her way.


She showed amazing strength, determination and courage and endured well to the end. She was a gifted teacher in word and deed, finding teaching moments in everyday life. She taught Relief Society in the Sandy Central Edgemont Ward for more than 10 years.

She was an apt pupil, continually learning more about the world around her and the gospel of Jesus Christ. She was a talented artist and taught us to see beauty in nature and in people. She showed us the power of determination and positive thinking. She was a good friend, a listener, counselor and gift giver. She gave of herself and many of us can hold onto a piece of her in the handmade gifts she gave. Her grandchildren were the light of her life and she had a special relationship with each one of them.

Coleen is survived by her husband, sons: Clint (Julie) and Ryan (Maria) Christofferson, daughter Megan (Michael) Wallgren, her parents, brother Merrill (Jeanine) Dodge, sisters: Teresa Garrard and Michelle (Vic) Groves and 13 grandchildren. She was preceded in death by by our angel, Marissa.

Memorial# 35674084

[NI22852] "William J. Minford", blacksmith, Harrisonville, Ohio, was born in Country Entrin, Ireland, January, 1829, a son of John and Mary (Awl) Minford. When seventeen years of age he came to the United States, his father having died in Ireland. They landed in New York City about the 1st of June, 1845. They came to Ohio and settled in Portsmouth, remaining there eight years. He learned the blacksmith's trade of J. L. Ward. In 1853 he went to Iowa and remained there four years. He then traveled through Missouri seeking a better location, but finally returned to Portsmouth and subsequently came to Harrisonville, where he has remained, or resided. He enlisted in 1863, in Company L., First Ohio Heavy Artillery, and served in the Army of the Cumberland under General Thomas; was discharged at Camp Dennison, Ohio, in 1865. Mr. Minford was married in 1853 to Mary Ann Maps, daughter of Thomas and Mary Maps, a great-
granddaughter of General Schuyler. Nine children were born to them, but six now living-
Mary, now Mrs. Daniel Carroll; Agnes, now Mrs. Robert Dodge; Ellnorie, now Mrs.
George Milan; Sallie, Frank and Carrie at home. Ellie, William and John are deceased.
Mrs. Minford died in August, 1876. In 1878 Mr. Minford married Abigail, daughter of
Hezekiah and Lydia (Dodge) Mead, natives of New York, but residents of Scioto County. Since early childhood Mr. Minford has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, and his wife of the Missionary Baptist church. He is a member of Scioto Post, No. 287, G. A. R. When he first came to the United States his capital was limited, but by industry and economy he has accumulated a good property, and has won the respect andconfidence of his fellow-citizens.

[NI22872] Col. George Bascom was one of the pioneer settlers of Cattaraugus County, and was prominently known in this area, where most of his life was spent. In the days of general trainings he was closely connected with the State militia, whence he obtained his title of colonel. In 1850 he was in lumber in Burton, Cattaraugus Co. In 1860 he was a merchant in Allegany, perhaps a lumber yard, his sons George and Charles were clerks. In 1870 he was farming and in 1880 a Rig Builder, age 70. George Bascom kept a store in a building on the north side of Bascom Street in 1848. He built a store 36 by 80, on the corner of Main and Bascom Streets, in 1854. This building was moved in 1875 to the west side of Main Street, and was called "Bascom Hall." A Republican and Prohibitionist he served as Coroner in the 1880’s. He died in Allegany village April 11, 1893, in his eighty-fourth year.

[NI22876] Ch arles Harvey Bascom was born 15 Aug 1842 in Burton, Cattaraugus County, New York; died 23 Feb 1905 in Military Home, Leavenworth, KS. He married Nancy Angeline Root Bef. 1870 in Cattaraugus County, New York; born Abt. 1850 in Cattaraugus County, New York.

Charles remained at home in Allegany, Cattaraugus County, New York until 1861. He is shown at home in the 1850 & 1860 Federal Census. He worked as a clerk for his father who was in the lumber business as well as other firms. In the spring of 1861 he went to Cincinnati where he enlisted as a Private on 19 June 1861 at the age of 20 in Company C, 5th Infantry Regiment Ohio. He was of light complexion, light brown hair, blue eyes, 140 lbs, 5' 4". During a double quick march in a drill he received a severe rupture of the left groin, disabling him from active duty and leading to his discharge in January 20, 1862 in Virginia.

He returned home via Cincinnati, OH then to Oil City, Venango County, PA until 1876. He is shown in Oil City Pennsylvania in 1870 with wife Angie. He worked at Bowling Saloon, a boarder Frank Renwick, born New York, age 24 is living with. After 1876 he traveled west to Deadwood, Dakota Territory, then on to Junction City, Montana spending 2 years at each. He returned to Deadwood for two years and also returned to Junction City for another two years. He worked as a miner and in lumber. He re-injured his groin while rafting logs on the Yellowstone River in Montana and was required to wear a truss which he obtained in Miles City, Montana at the end of a cattle drive.

Returning to Oil City in 1884 he filed for pension May 25, 1885. He failed to provide evidence or show for a medical exam and the Application was rejected in 1888. His whereabouts from 1885 until 1898 is not known although his address was Oil City, PA. He re-filed in August 1898 from National Military Home in Leavenworth, Kansas and in the 1900 census is listed an inmate at Leavenworth Military Home, Leavenworth, KS. Gives birth as Aug 1842, New York. He received $6.00 per month and in 1904 re-filed and obtained $12.00 a month. He remained at the Home until his death and is buried in the National Cemetery at that place.

[NI22948] BLUE HILL - Dorothy Merle Tyler Dodge died on April 5, 2014, at her home at Parker Ridge in Blue Hill, after a brief illness. Dottie was born in Brooklin, Oct. 11, 1917, the youngest of eight children of Charles and Hattie (Anderson) Tyler. She graduated from Brooklin High School in 1935 and from the Maine School of Nursing at Portland General Hospital in 1939.

She was employed at Blue Hill Hospital in 1941 when she met her future husband, John Parker Dodge, whose family lived in Chevy Chase, MD, and spent summers in Brooklin. They were married in Jacksonville, FL, in 1942 while John was serving in the U.S. Navy.

After the war, Dottie and John lived and raised a family in Silver Spring and Bethesda, MD, returning to Brooklin every summer. After retirement in 1981, they lived and traveled seasonally between Maine, Maryland, and Florida, enjoying friends, family, bridge, and golf throughout the year. In 2002, they settled at Parker Ridge Retirement Community in Blue Hill and continued to spend the summers at their cottage in Brooklin. Dottie was a talented knitter, golfer, bridge player, and gardener, and enjoyed her large extended family.

Dottie was predeceased by her husband, John in 2010, and by all of her brothers and sisters.

She is survived by two daughters, Susan Kircheis (Fred) of Carmel and Jane Kidder (David) of Freeport; four grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. (Bangor Daily News 4/8/2014)

[NI22962] Sam Dodge
This article was written by Bill Nowlin.
Right-handed pitcher Sam Dodge (0-0 in his career) appeared for the Boston Red Sox in 1921 and 1922, but never took part in anything but losing efforts. The Red Sox themselves didn’t do too well in those years, finishing fifth in 1921 (23½ games out of first) and dead last in 1922.

The “crack pitcher” was purchased from Flint of the Michigan-Ontario League on August 31, 1921. It was reported that the purchase price was the highest ever paid for someone from that league.[1] Dodge’s debut came at Fenway Park in the second game of a September 24 doubleheader against the St. Louis Browns. He threw the ninth inning, but there was little suspense: The Browns held a 10-0 lead after eight. He gave up a walk and a hit, and one run, and it was 11-0 Browns; that’s the way it stood after nine.

The Red Sox had won the first game, 2-1, with Herb Pennock beating Dixie Davis, who lost the game with one out in the bottom of the ninth. Davis was apparently just getting warmed up; he pitched the second game, too, a six-hit shutout with nary a walk. Sad Sam Jones (22-16) took the loss in the second game. The two games together took three hours and eight minutes.

There were eight games remaining on the schedule, but Red Sox manager Hugh Duffy didn’t use Dodge again that year.

Dodge didn’t make it past April in 1922. Duffy was his manager once more, and he used Dodge every other day – April 24, 26, and 28, the first two against Washington at Griffith Stadium and the last game against the Yankees at the Polo Grounds. None of them were close games – 11-3, 15-6, and 10-3. In the four games Dodge appeared in, the Red Sox pitchers surrendered 49 runs.

Dodge was the last of four pitchers in the April 24 game, throwing the final two innings without giving up a run despite giving up three hits and a base on balls. Dodge pitched the fifth, sixth, and seventh innings in the April 26 game, allowing three runs in the three innings, but none of them were earned runs. And it was already a lost cause, Boston behind 11-3 before he came in. Two days later, in New York, it was 7-2 when Dodge came in to throw the bottom of the eighth. This time he was hit for three earned runs in the inning. But starter Benn Karr got the loss.

Dodge had come originally from Neath, Pennsylvania, a small rural community about 30 miles southwest of Binghamton, New York. He was born in Neath on December 19, 1889. His father, Frank, was a farmer in Warren Township, Bradford County. Ten years later Frank was working as a salesman, selling coal on a retail basis. Sam had a sister, Cecil (presumably Cecile). Sam’s mother worked in a local shoe factory.

The Saginaw Aces were the first team to give Dodge a job. He worked in the Class B Michigan-Ontario League in 1920, at the age of 20, and threw 175 innings, finishing the season 7-15 with a 4.11 earned-run average – Saginaw was a last-place team that year. Dodge was signed to Saginaw in 1921, but when Saginaw cut three of its six pitchers in early June, Dodge was promptly picked up by the Flint Vehicles (his official record shows him as “assigned by Saginaw to Flint”), and then to Boston at the end of August. Flint finished last in 1921; Dodge at least won half his games – he was 14-14 with a 3.97 ERA in 222 innings. And he’d actually pitched against the Red Sox before he pitched for them. Boston played an exhibition game in Flint on August 29, 1921, winning 12-7. Dodge was the second of the two pitchers Boston faced.

After his April 28, 1922, appearance with Boston, Dodge stuck with the ballclub for a few weeks, until he was sold to the Springfield Ponies (Eastern League) in a straight cash deal on May 13. The Red Sox retained an option to purchase him back again, should they want to. The Springfield Union summed up the Sox’ thinking: “Dodge showed considerable progress while south with the Sox this spring and those who watched him in action thought he would stick. Hugh Duffy, the Boston manager, thinks highly of Dodge but realized that the youngster will get more knowledge working every day than sitting on the bench with the Red Sox.”[2] The same day’s Springfield Republican quoted team management as denying there was any option – “no strings of any kind attached.” The paper agreed that Duffy was bullish on Dodge, but felt he was “too young for major-league work.”[3]

Dodge got in 162 innings of work and was 6-9 with the Ponies, with a 4.22 ERA. At bat, he hit .203, the exact same average he had with Saginaw in 1920. The Boston Globe told readers that he had “taken on a new lease of pitching life” but that proved to be short-lived optimism.[4] It wasn’t an easy tenure for either pitcher or team.

Just a week after the Globe story, the Springfield Union reported on August 18 that Dodge had been indefinitely suspended by the team after he “showed up for the Pittsfield-Springfield game yesterday in no condition to play.” Springfield skipper John Hummel ordered him off the field. It was reportedly Dodge’s second offense. An earlier suspension had been in effect, but he was then reinstated. The Union said, “The Pony management handed over a neat sum for Dodge to the Red Sox last May but he has failed to show much since coming here.”[5] About a week later Hummel was said to be considering Dodge’s pleas for reinstatement, perhaps to back down from his decision to give him the rest of the season “to think over his departure from training rules.”[6] Those familiar with the shorthand of the day understand that Dodge had most likely shown up drunk or hung over once too often.

On August 26 Sam was reinstated, “now reported to be in the best of condition and ready to do his part. … Dodge can pitch when he cares to, and he has told Manager Hummel that he will care to all the time from now on.” One of his last efforts was an attempt at an “iron man” stunt on September 22, pitching both halves of a doubleheader in Pittsfield. He beat the Hillies 11-3 in the first game, a six-hitter, but lasted only 6 1/3 innings in the second game, losing 6-1. Former Red Sox manager Patsy Donovan took the helm for Springfield in 1923; Dodge trained into April with Springfield but was assigned to Grand Rapids before appearing for the Ponies. For one reason or another, he never pitched for Grand Rapids, either, and was released outright near the end of May. He signed on with the Hamilton Tigers, also in the Michigan-Ontario League. He appeared in eight games, going 0-2 with an ERA of 11.74 and having been hammered for 36 runs (30 earned) in 22 innings. Understandably, Dodge’s future was seen as far from bright.

What happened to Sam Dodge from this time forward? That’s a good question. He lived a fairly long time, dying of heart disease on April 5, 1966, in Utica, New York. His obituary in the Utica Observer-Dispatch said that he’d come to Utica around 1961 (two years after he had lost his wife, Alta LaPerr of Neath, Pennsylvania). Dodge worked for the Earl Fletcher Co. of Tupper Lake. He was survived by his daughter, Shirley Dodge of Detroit.[7]

[NI22970] WW II Vetran

[NI23002] Wilson William Doddge died in Little Falls Hospital. He was a graduate of N. Y. State School of Technology at Cobleskill. Class of 1933. Operated the family farm, "Beaver Branch Farm" on Spencer Street in Dolgeville, until 1977. He was last known to be employed at Mohawk Harvester Co., of Richfield Springs in 1977.

[NI23020] “Edward Dodge was one of the firm of E. W. Clark & County, and E. W. Clark, Dodge & County, in Philadelphia and New York, in the ex-change brokerage and banking business, his partner being Enoch W. Clark, formerly of Providence, his brother-in-law. He afterwards went to New York and continued in the same business under the firm name of the well-known Clark, Dodge & Co. He retired from business but afterwards resumed it with the well-known Jay Cooke, and as principal partner in the New York firm of Jay Cooke & Co. He subsequently retired from that firm, before their failure, and lived without the cares of business at his home in Brooklyn, until his death. He had married the second time, Ellen, daughter of J. T. and E. M. Daugherty, and she survives him. “

[NI23024] Caroline is a descendent of John Alden of the Mayflower as follows: Cyrus , Joseph , Seth , Joseph , Joseph , John.

[NI23029] “Harry E. Dodge succeeded his father in the firm of Clark, Dodge & County, New York, and the business as bankers and brokers still continues. It is said that he intends his son Edward to enter the house, looking forward to the time when there will have been three generations in the family as partners in the firm of Clark, Dodge & Co.

HARRY EUGENE DODGE son of Edward and Caroline Perkins Alden Dodge of Providence RI was born in Philadelphia Pa on January 14 1844 From childhood he was a resident of Brooklyn and was educated at the Polytechnic Institute At an early age he entered the banking house of Clark Dodge & Companyof which his father was a partner and in 1867 became a member of the firm in which he continued to the day of his death being for some years the active member of the firm In 1866 he had become a member of the New York Stock Exchange being elected by the largest vote ever cast up to that time for any candidate Mr Dodge was prominent in yachting circles as the owner of the yacht Triton and was a member of the Atlantic Yacht Club of which he was at one time Vice Commodore For several years he was respectively Treasurer and Secretary of the Brooklyn Club On October 8th 1866 he married Jeannie M Hall by whom he had two children His son Edward survives him He died June 3 1887 in the forty fourth year of his age and was buried in Greenwood Cemeter

[NI23062] The Divorce: "Whereas my wife Huldah Dodge has left my bed without cause or provocation, I hereby forbid all persons harboring or trusting her on my account, as I will pay no debt of her contracting after this date, September 16, 1848." He was granted a divorce on September 21, 1848.

[NI23069] From the History of the Counties of McKean, Elk, and Forest Pwennsylvania.....

O. Dodge, lumberman, P. O. Caledonia was born in Burlington, Bradford County, Penn. October 2, 1824, a son of Loren and Jane (Head) Dodge, natives of Massachusetts. They reared a family of five children, our subject being the second son. Mr. Dodge received a practical business education in the comon schools of Bradford County, but worked at home on h is father's farm until October 19, 1846, when he married Miss Amanda Smith, daughter of Rufus and Eunice (Mead) Smith, of Connecticut. In 1846 he also engaged in mercantile business, which he continued three years, when he returned to the farm, on which he passed another period of three years, after which he removed to Mississippi and engaged in lumbering. in 1865 he came to Elk county where he reengaged in lumbering and still resides. Mr. Dodge has held various township offices, and is a successful business man.

[NI23072] Varying databases have her name as "Celuta", "Celester", "Selestia", a nd "Lucy" "Celuta is correct per her great grand daughter , Kathy Fornel l, who has a copy of her Legal Documents after the Civil War. She is buried in Glasgoww, PA. On the line between Cambria & Clearfield counties. The Marker just says Lucy. From the Civil War on, it seems that Celuta was destitute. She sued for a widow's pension in later years and won only after jumping through all kinds of legal hoops and obtaining one affadavit after another. You should see all the material I have dated back to those days. Two years ago, I was able to submit all to the Veterans and get a government-issued tombstone for Welcome A. Rice. He lay there 130 ye ars with only a rock, for a marker.

[NI23076] Welcome served all of the Civil War (Union, PA), was killed by a falling tree.

[NI23101] Dagmar L. Hanson, 78, of Orlando, Florida, passed away peacefully at her home on the afternoon of March 8th 2012. Born in Boothbay Harbor, Dagmar was a loving and devoted mom to her 5 children, and Nannie to 9 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren.

She is survived by her son, Edward T. Dodge, III and his wife Kim of East Haddam, Connecticut; son, Scott C. Dodge and his wife Lynne of Damariscotta; daughter, Brenda Grosso and her husband Larry of East Haddam, Connecticut; daughter, Lynde Dodge of Orlando, Florida; and her son, Eric H. Dodge and his wife Rachel of Orlando, Florida. Nannie was blessed with her grandchildren, Chris and Jay Grosso; Carrie Dodge Pendleton and Scott Dodge, II; Justin and Shiloh Dodge; Eric Dodge II, Christian Dodge and Matthew Dodge; and 3 great-grandchildren, Ethan, Ella and Eva Pendleton.

A private graveside service will be held at the Highland Cemetery in Edgecomb.

Arrangements are under the direction and care of the Strong-Hancock Funeral Home, 612 Main Street, Damariscotta, ME.

[NI23103] Obituary - Madeline Smith, was in Sales at 97 Weymouth

Madeline M. (Stanley) Smith, 97, a retired sales representative, died Aug. 9 at the Pond Meadow Nursing Home in Weymouth.

Born in Grand Manan, New Brunswick, Canada, she was raised in Lubec, Maine. She worked for the Gilchrist's department store in Quincy for 17 years before retiring in 1962. Mrs. Smith had lived in Weymouth since 1925.

She leaves her daughter, Marilyn DiPucchio of Brockton; a grandson, and one great grandchild.

[NI23120] tephen Roger Dodge
CLINTON - Stephen Roger Dodge passed away at home January 17, 2011 from a short, intense battle with cancer. He was surrounded by his family at the time of his passing. He was born June 17, 1938 to William L. Dodge and Isabelle M. Batchelor Dodge at his grandmother Batchelor's home in Ogden. He was raised in Ogden, attended Ogden City Schools, and graduated from Ogden High School in 1956. Immediately after graduation, he joined the U.S. Navy where he served as a submariner aboard the U.S.S. Bluegill (SS 242) based out of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. He was honorably discharged in 1960. He was immensely proud of his service to his nation and was always grateful to be an American. Shortly after his discharge from the Navy, he met Connie Stark. After a whirlwind romance, they married August 25, 1961 and were sealed in the Ogden Temple March 31, 1979. He was a lifelong member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. Throughout his life, he held many positions in the Church, including High Priest Group Leader and Ward Clerk. He worked construction for several years. In 1964, he graduated from Salt Lake Trade Technical Institute with a certification in barbering and worked as a barber both full and part-time for many years. He started work at Hill AFB in 1970 becoming the foreman of the Waste Water Treatment plant. He later worked as an Environmental Protection Specialist. He retired in 2000. Steve loved being at home working in his yard. Some of his happiest moments were spent at family gatherings and events with his children and grandchildren. He also enjoyed taking road trips to visit various parts of the country, reading, and was especially interested in U.S. history. He is survived by his wife, Connie of Clinton, three daughters and one son, Stacey (Bruce) Smith of Roy, Scott ( Holly) Dodge of Bountiful, Laurie (Peter) La Fond of San Jose, CA., Chantal (Brian) Richards of Roy, ten grandchildren; his five buddies, Andrew, Timothy, Wyatt, Nathaniel, Adam and his five angels; Teresa, Paige, Rachel, Sophia, Emily; two great grandsons, Xander, Maxim; two sisters, Sheila (Del) Helm, Nedra Green; and his beloved dog, Shadow. Steve was preceded in death by his parents and three brothers; Lamar, Harry, and Dale. The family would like to thank the staff at McKay Dee Hospital for the care and consideration Steve and his family received. They would also like to thank Chuck and Beverly Lambidin for their support and kindness during this difficult time. Funeral services will be held on Friday, January 21, 2011 at 11:00 am at Larkin Mortuary 496 24th St. Ogden, Utah. A viewing will be held on Thursday, January 20 from 6:00-8:00 pm. at the mortuary. Interment will be held in Clinton Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family at viewobit.com/larkinmortuary
Standard-Examiner Wednesday, January 19, 2011 page 4A.

[NI23133] Rhonda Lee Dodge was born on June 25, 1951, the daughter of Douglas and Leotta (Batesole) Montague. She graduated from Cresenta Valley High School, La Cresenta, California in the Class of 1969. Rhonda went on to attend Bryman Nursing School.

On August 12, 1977 she married Dale Charles Dodge in Los Angeles, California. Rhonda and Dale moved to Alexandria after they were married. She loved Alexandria and the lakes area. Rhonda loved her lake home and enjoyed watching her flowers grow, especially her roses. She liked her boat cruises on the lake and was a collector of hearts, angels and Santas. She was a mother to everyone who knew her. She was
a loving, comforting and caring woman whose enjoyment in life was making her family and friends comfortable and happy.

Rhonda died on Monday, June 21, 2004 at the age of 52 years. She is survived by her husband: Dale Dodge of Alexandria; sons: Michael Wilson of Minneapolis; and Jason Dodge of Bloomington; daughter: Crystal and husband Chris Busch of Somerset, WI; mother: Leotta and husband Ken Schweiger of Prescott, AZ; and sister: Robin and husband Dave Henry of Palm Desert, CA. She was preceded in death by her father: Douglas Montague; and her grandparents.

A Funeral Service was held on Tuesday, June 29, 2004 at First Baptist Church in Alexandria with Pastor Fred Tuma officiating. Interment was in the Kinkead Cemetery in Alexandria. Casketbearers were Jason Dodge, Michael Wilson, Chris Busch, Darin Batesole, Jim Rooney and Dawn Batesole. Music was provided by Bobbi Batesole, soloist, and Jim Pennie, organist.

[NI23146] Etta Dodge | Visit Guest Book

Etta M. Dodge 1936 - 2011 BRATTLEBORO, VT Etta M. Dodge, 74, of Brattleboro died on Feb. 6, 2011, at the Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, surrounded by her family. She was born on Sept. 15, 1936, daughter of the late Everett "Johnny" and Marian Davidson Akley, in Brattleboro. Etta was married to Sgt. Major Ashley Orville Dodge. USMC, who predeceased her in 1970. She worked many different places, including Fuzzy Fur in Hinsdale, NH, Bickfords Manufacturing in Winchester, NH, was assistant manager at the Ames Dept. Store in Brattleboro, and also worked at Sam's Dept. Store in Brattleboro. She was a member of the Hinsdale VFW Auxiliary, belonged to the Eagles Auxiliary, and was a member of the Pocahontas Aux. of Greenfield, Mass. She was active in her church and enjoyed gardening, birds, sewing, shopping and family. She raised four children on her own, and always loved her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Mrs. Dodge is survived by three sons, Brian A. Dodge of Worthington, Mass., Kevin J Dodge of Hinsdale, Bruce A. Dodge of West Brattleboro, a daughter, Kolleen Dodge of West Brattleboro, a sister, Elizabeth "Betty" Stark of West Brattleboro, seven grandchildren, Timothy, Jennifer, Kevin, Matthew, Hannah, Lukas, Tyler, a great-grandson, Bryson, and two dogs, Osso and Mich. FUNERAL NOTICE: Funeral services for Mrs. Dodge will be on Saturday Feb. 12, 2011, at 11 a.m. at the KER WESTERLUND FUNERAL HOME. Burial will be at the West Brattleboro Cemetery later this spring. Calling hours will be on Friday evening at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. For those who wish, memorial contributions may be made to the Canal St. Head Start School Program C/O Early Education Services 130 Birge St. Brattleboro, VT 05301, American Heart Association , Vermont Affiliate, 77 Hegeman Ave., Burlington, VT 05401, American Lung Association 1301 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20004, and Paralyzed Veterans of America, Donation Processing Center, 7 Mill Brook Rd. Wilton, NH 03086 Arrangements are under the care of the Ker Westerlund Funeral Home and Crematory 57 High St. Brattleboro, VT 05301

[NI23161] Served in Co. A in the Santa Fe Battalion of the Mounted Volunteers. He was Sheriff of Iowa County, Wisconsin.

Dodge was born into a prominent Missouri family in 1810. His father was a noted Army general, and his brother became a U.S. senator. Henry fought beside his father and brother in the Black Hawk Indian Wars

Henry Lafayette Dodge
This man has captured the attention of many a historian down through the last 150 years. They have written about his exploits as a hero, a soldier, a lead miner, a businessman, an Indian agent, a gambler, a cheat, and even an adulterer. Could these be the reasons he left his family in Wisconsin and ended up in the southwest frontier of Santa Fe? Facts are hard to come by but it is documented that H L Dodge became the first treasurer of Santa Fe in the newly established territorial American government in 1846.

Over the next ten years he played several roles in settling the American west. He was involved as a scout, interpreter, merchant, miner, soldier, and his final role was that of Indian Agent to the Navajo Indians in what was then called the New Mexico Territory. History also tells us that he was helpful to many around him including Indians, Mexicans, white settlers and missionaries. We know he was not intolerant of other cultures because he took Juana Sandoval as his woman. (Even though no legal or church marriage records have been located, marriage records for her two Dodge children indicate that she considered her children legitimate)

We know he was intelligent because he was able to communicate in other languages and negotiate with those who had conflicting opinions and objectives. We know he died trying to be noble and do what was right as an Indian agent. The Navajo Culture to this day honors the role he played in attempting to gain fair treatment for their ancestors and recognizes his role in making necessary changes to their lifestyle in order for their culture to coexist with the onslaught of settlers coming to the west.

Many questions go unanswered as to the truth behind his leaving his Wisconsin home and family. Many questions go unanswered concerning his death. What we know from military records is that in November 1856, it was near the Zuni Pueblo area in New Mexico that Henry Lafayette Dodge was killed by Apache Indians. He was with a group of soldiers and Indian scouts that were searching for renegade Indians when he and a scout went hunting game for the search party. They separated and he was never seen again. Several different stories surfaced, but only his skull could be found, his murderers couldn’t be named, and there were more questions than answers as to why he was killed and exactly who killed him.

Lt. Carlisle reported, “ a portion of his remains were found near where he parted with Armijo, snow was stained with blood, we were led to believe he was waylaid, murdered, scalped, and deprived of his clothing.” (as reported on February 11, 1857) Source: Through White Mens' Eyes By Lee Correll



Perhaps the saddest thing of all is that today his grave site is unknown and unmarked at Fort Defiance, Arizona. There is no place for descendants to ponder on their memorable ancestor unless one would like to venture to El Moro National Monument where his name is carved on the mountain side along with so many explorers and adventurers of New Mexican History.

Note: There has long been speculation that Henry Lafayette Dodge fathered a Navajo child by the name of Henry Chee Dodge. Henry Chee Dodge was a well respected leader of the Navajo People for many years. He was responsible for helping his people transition into the modern world.

Historians have written that he was born to a Navajo mother, however, naming his father proved more difficult. The two most written about and accepted versions are:

1) His father was a Spanish man named Juan Anaya who worked with and for Henry Lafayette Dodge. In this version the boy was named after the well respected friend and Indian agent. (Most Navajo Dodges accept this version.)

2) His father was Henry Layfayette Dodge- DNA provew this not to be Correct

The research isn’t clear and Henry Chee made conflicting statements. It was clear that DNA could help reveal the truth so we contacted his grandson, Benjamin Dodge in Window Rock, Arizona. We visited him there and met him, his brother, and brother-in-law. We had a wonderful day discussing the possibility of being related.

Benjamin had the full 67 marker DNA test run and when the results came back they were negative. He is not related to Henry Lafayette Dodge or any other Dodge in the Dodge DNA database.

Does this mean that Henry Chee himself was not the son of Henry L Dodge? No, Henry L could have been the father to any number of people. It is documented in the 1850 census that he lived with two Gallego women in Cebolleta now called Seboyeta, he lived with Juana Sandoval and had children with her that have proven to be his descendants, and he traveled about the New Mexico Territory extensively for ten years. However, it must be remembered that speculation is not documentation.

[NI23240] Betty Louise Hall Dodge, a former resident of St. Augustine, died March 16, 2003 in West Jordan, Utah. Known to her childhood friends and family as Betty Lou, Mrs. Dodge graduated from Ketterlinus High School in the class of 1949. During the following years she made her home in several different states before returning to St. Augusinte in 1981. She resided here until 1992 when she moved to Utah. Mrs. Dodge was preceded in deathh by her father, Guy Ernest "EG" Hall, mother, Lillian Hall Mackey and her brother Robert V. "Bob" Hall, Sr.

Funeral services will be held 11 a.m. Saturday at Craig Funeral Home Chapel. Rev. Ron Moore, Pastor Anastasia Baptist Church and Pastor Steve Reinhard, of West Jordan, Utah, officiating.
Burial will be in Evergreen Caemetery. Visitation will be held 5-7 p.m. Friday at Craig Funeral Home.

She is survived by her daughters, Robin D. Wilder, West Jordan, and Colleen D. Turner, Randolph, Maine; sons, Wilson R. Dodge, Jr., Dayton, Ohio and Guy B. Dodge, Sandy, Utah; eight grandchildren, two great-great grandchildren as well as daughters and sons-in-law; nieces and nephews.

Craig Funeral Home and Crematory is in charge of arrangements.
(St Augustine Record, 03/20/2003)

[NI23241] WW II Enlistment states he was born in 1926.

[NI23304] Marcelina "Lena" Dodge, age 84, passed away on November 25, 2012 in Albuquerque following an illness. Lena was born on March 26, 1928 in Puerto De Luna, NM to the home of Joseph R. and Marcelina (Padilla) Page. Lena was reared and attended schools in Puerto De Luna and Santa Rosa. Lena married Antonio Dodge on June 2, 1946 in Puerto De Luna. Lena and Antonio were faithful members of St. Rose of Lima Catholic Parish. Lena was a member of the Catholic Daughters, she was Eucharistic Minister, sang in the church choir, a religious education teacher for over 20 years and ran the St. Vincent De Paul Store for many years. Lena enjoyed playing the piano, gardening, embroidering and drawing. Lena was a loving wife, mother and grandmother and will be truly missed by her family and friends. Lena was preceded in death by her parents, her brothers and sisters, Richard (Dick) Page, Carmen Cordova-Blea, Patrick Page, Frank Page and Ruth Page. Survivors include her husband Antonio Dodge of Santa Rosa, her children, Anthony Dodge and his wife, Sharon of San Antonio, TX, Gloria Dodge-Campos of Albuquerque, Susan Sanchez of Albuquerque, Nicholas Dodge and his wife, Gloria of Taylor Ranch, John Dodge and his wife, Kate of Albuquerque, James Dodge and his wife, Linda of Santa Rosa, William Dodge and wife Kim of Albuquerque, Frank Dodge of Santa Rosa and Timothy Dodge and his wife, Marilyn of Las Vegas, NM. Also surviving is her brother, Cecilio Page and his wife, Ann of Puerto De Luna, step-sister, Frances Madrid Chavez Delgado and step-brother, Christian Madrid, 25 grandchildren, 31 great-grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends. Rosary services will be held on Tuesday, November 27, 2012 at 6:00 p.m. at Nuestra Senora de Refugio Church in Puerto de Luna. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Wednesday, November 28, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. at St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church in Santa Rosa with Father Thomas Kayammakal officiating. Burial will follow at Nuestra Senora de Refugio Cemetery in Puerto De Luna. Serving as Pallbearers will be her grandsons, Jon C. Dodge, Cory Dodge, Fernando Sanchez, Jessie Dodge, Henry Campos Jr., Carl Sanchez, Raphael Sanchez, Moises Gallegos, Joseph Gonzalez, Jonathan Gonzalez and Josh Dodge.

[NI23448] Orson O. Dodge, aged 73 years, died May 19, of heart disease, at his home in Charleston. The funeral was held Saturday at 2 o'clock, Rev. J.H. Stoody, pastor of the Methodist church, officiating; interment in the Cherryflats cemetery. Mr. Dodge was twice married, his first wife being Juliette Smith, who died about 25 years ago. Their daughter, Mrs. Josie Smith, of Manchester, N.Y., survives, besides his second wife, nee Ella Thompson.

[NI23455] Committed Suicide.

[NI23458] One of two sons born prematurely at 6 1/2 months. One lived 11 hours and the other 23 hours. Their bodies were used for medical science.

[NI23499] Chicago Tribune (IL) - September 29, 1941
DODGE
Deceased Name: Marjorie Hill Dodge
Marjorie Hill Dodge of 1437 Sherwin Avenue, Sept. 27, 1941, beloved daughter of O. F. and Agnes Hill Dodge, sister of Virginia D. Holland. At chapel, 5501 N. Ashland Avenue, where services will be held Monday, Sept. 29, at 2 p.m. Interment Acacia Park.
____________________________________________

Miss Marjorie Dodge, soprano who has frequently appeared in Chicago theaters and on Chicago radio programs, died yesterday in the Swedish Covenant Hospital. Miss Dodge has sung with opera companies and symphony orchestras throughout the country.

[NI23631] Arvilla Mae Root Edwards, 71, widow of Boyce Allen "Bucky" Edwards, well-known resident of East St., LeRaysville, PA, died on Wednesday evening, Nov. 3, 2004 at the Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre. Born Feb. 10, 1933, she was the daughter of the late Harry Root, Sr. and Ethel Mae Dodge Root. Arvilla was a graduate of Towanda High School. On Jan. 10, 1953, she married Boyce Allen Edwards in Towanda. In early years, Arvilla was employed by Sylvania Electric in Towanda. She assisted her husband in the operation of their logging business in LeRaysville and the surrounding area for over 50 years, until the time of her death. Arvilla worked in the woods with "Bucky," side by side, throughout the years, assisting in the harvesting of timber. Known for their love of modified racing, Arvilla and Bucky owned a modified race car for many years, which was widely recognized and driven by Bucky's brothers, Larry and Wayne Edwards in numerous events throughout the region. Arvilla and Bucky were avid NASCAR and Dale Earnhardt fans and attended the Daytona 500 in Florida together for 39 years consecutively. Arvilla was devoted to her husband and family. She enjoyed reading, crocheting, sewing and macramé. She is survived by brothers and sisters-in-law, Harry, Jr. and Nancy Root of Granville Summit, Raymond and Joyce Root of Monroeton, Robert and Sue Root of Edgewater, Florida; her sisters and brothers-in-law, Lois and Boyd Repsher of Salinas, California, Donna and Mike Meckley of York, Linda and Bob Casselbury of LeRaysville, Ann and Jim Crawn of LeRaysville, Nancy and Dan Arnold of Ulster, Sheila Roof of Waverly, New York and Connie and Ritch Swetland of Sayre; her sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Alice and Amel Blanton of Richmond, VA; her brother-in-law, Larry Edwards of Camptown; her brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Wayne and Lois Edwards of Lawton; as well as numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. She was preceded in death by her husband of 51 years, Boyce Allen "Bucky" Edwards on Oct. 16, 2004 and by two brothers, Aubrey Dale Root in 1986 and James Root in 1981. The family received friends from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m., Friday, Nov. 5 from the Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home at 217 York Ave., Towanda. The funeral service was held at 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 6 at the funeral home, with Pastor Richard Vieldhouse of the Orwell Bible Church, officiating. Interment followed in the Stevens Cemetery

[NI23634] Boyce Allen "Bucky" Edwards Age 72 of East St., LeRaysville, PA, died Saturday, October 16, 2004, following a motor vehicle accident in Pike Township, Bradford County, PA. Born August 14, 1932 in Birchardville, Susquehanna County, PA, he was the son of the late Clair Edwards and Norene Boyd Edwards. Bucky owned and operated his logging business in LeRaysville and the surrounding area for over 50 years until the time of his death. Known for his love of modified racing, Bucky owned a modified racecar for many years, which was widely recognized and driven by his brothers, Larry and Wayne in numerous racing events throughout the region. Surviving are his wife of 51 years, Arvilla Mae Root Edwards; his sister and brother-in-law, Alice and Amel Blanton, Richmond, Virginia; brother, Larry Edwards, Campton, PA; brother and sister-in-law, Wayne and Lois Edwards of Lawton, PA; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, Harry and Nancy Root Jr., Granville Summit, PA, Raymond and Joyce Root of Monroeton, PA, Robert and Sue Root of Edgewater, FL; sisters-in-law and brothers-in-law, Lois and Boyd Repsher, Salinas, CA, Donna and Mike Meckley, York, PA, Linda and Bob Casselbury, LeRaysville, PA, Ann and Jim Crawn, LeRaysville, PA, Nancy and Dan Arnold, Ulster, PA, Sheila Root, Waverly, New York, Connie and Rich Sweatland, Sayre, PA; and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. The family will receive friends Tuesday, October 26, 2004, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home, 217 York Ave., Towanda, PA. The funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 27, 2004, at 11 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment will follow in the Stevens Cemetery, Pike Twp., PA.

[NI23686] No Children.

[NI23729] David worked many years as a car/truck mechanic in Connecticut and Maine, was a Whirlpool Parts Manager at Commercial Distributors in Portland, and retired as a Metal Finisher from Reese Corporation, Gorham in 1990.

David enjoyed working the farm, doing mechanical work, and choral singing. He was a member of the Lawrence Davis Chorale singing bass for several years in the 1970s. He served as Machinist Mate II in the Navy Air Force during WW II. He belonged to the Buxton Lodge #115 A.F. & A.M. and worshipped at Buxton Centre and South Gorham Baptist Churches

[NI23792] Clark, Loren

JANESVILLE - Loren Clark, age 62, of 1315 Laurel Avenue, died on Saturday, April 6, 1974, at Madison General Hospital. Born March 31, 1912 in Arena, He was a tool and die maker for 27 years at Parker Pen, Janesville. He married Virgina Hess Cashore on June 28, 1952 in Dubuque, Iowa. Survivors include his wife; three sons, Loren J., Chicago, William, Belleville, Ill., Steven, at home; two daughters, Mrs. Delores Whitmyer, Monona, Mrs. Judith Schoeberle, Janesville; a stepson, Richard Cashore, Oakland, Calif.; 13 grandchildren; a brother, Orland, Mountain View Calif.; a sister Permelia Wiehle, Woodstock, Ill.; a half-sister, Mrs. Charlotte Heitke, Stoughton. Funeral services will be held at SCHNEIDER FUNERAL HOME at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, April 10. Burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Friends may call from 4-9 p.m. on Tuesday, April 9.



THE CAPITAL TIMES, Madison, Wisconsin, Tuesday, April 9, 1974

[NI23796] Dodge, Mrs. Lisle L.
MADISON/PRAIRIE DU SAC - Mrs. Lisle L. Dodge, age 85, of Prairie du Sac passed away on Thursday, May 19, at a Sauk City nursing home after an extended illness. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Fritz (Doris) Berndt of Prairie du Sac and Ms. Shirley Dodge of Los Altos Hills, California; a sister, Helen Sisson of Prairie du Sac; and five grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Jimmy, in 1947, a former Madison baseball player and businessman and by one grandchild. Funeral services will be held at the GNEWIKOW-SCHWOEGLER-ZIMMERMAN FUNERAL HOME, Sauk City, at 11 a.m. on Saturday, May 21, with the Reverend William Richards officiating. Burial will be in the Prairie du Sac cemetery. There will be no visitation.

Wisconsin State Journal, Saturday, May 21, 1977, Madison, Wisconsin

[NI23797] A private family memorial service is planned for Shirlee Dodge, 91.

Shirlee Helen Dodge died Sunday, Jan. 20, 2008 in Jeanerette at the age of 91.

She was born in Prairie du Sac, Wis. on April 28, 1916.

As a young woman, she became the first dance professor of The University of Texas, when she was hired in 1943 to start the dance program in Austin. While her dance program was initially part of the University’s Physical Education College, she worked with Dean Bill Doty to move Dance to the College of Fine Arts, where it flourishes today.

Shirlee taught modern dance, movement and choreography at the University of Texas until 1969, when she transferred to Stanford University and later The University of Iowa.

Shirlee grew up in Prairie du Sac and Madison, Wisconsin. She viewed the world through beautiful blue eyes, and her adventurous spirit, sense of humor, and passion for dance were evident early on. By 1928 she and her sister were performing acrobatic dance routines in vaudeville shows in the area. She took on her first group of dance pupils when she was a junior at West High School in Madison presenting programs that included tap dancing and acrobatics at the high school in Prairie du Sac.

In 1934 she entered the University of Wisconsin, which offered the first dance major in the country. After being exposed to modern dance through the European concert dancers who performed in Madison, Shirlee moved to Dresden, Germany to study with Mary Wigman, considered the founder of modern dance.

After graduation from the Wigman Institute in 1939, she taught dance in Gothenburg, Sweden until World War II interrupted her

European adventure. After Hitler invaded Norway in 1940, she managed to join a Swedish sponsored group that traveled back through Germany and on to Genoa, Italy, where her group boarded one of the last ships allowed to sail for the United States. Once home, she turned her love of dance into a career that spanned 51 years filled with great performances and treasured friendships with talented faculty and gifted students alike.

She is survived by her daughter Pam Graham McIlhenny husband, Edmund McIlhenny and their daughters Cassie and her family, Virginia and her family, and Mary; her daughter Nancy Graham Ehrig and her husband Kenneth Ehrig and their children, Jason and his family, Kevin and Susan and Susan’s husband Jason Robert Thonhoff; her daughter Jet Graham Eckels and her husband Robert Eckels and their daughter, Kirby and her sister, Doris Dodge Berndt; her nephew, Jack Berndt and her niece, Deb Berndt and her family.

Shirlee’s family thanks Ms. Marsha Jones, Maison Teche Nursing Center, Dr. Stephen Boudreaux and Hospice of Acadiana for the friendship and fine care she received.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the College of Fine Arts of The University of Texas, at 1 University Station, D1400, Austin, TX 78712-0340.

To view on-line obituary and sign guestbook, go to www.pellerinfuneralhome.com

Pellerin Funeral Home, 502 Jefferson Terrace Blvd, New Iberia, LA. 70560 (337) 365-3331 is in charge of the arrangements.

[NI23812] Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin, March 5, 1939

Funeral Director Ralph Anderson, Stoughton, Dies
STOUGHTON - Ralph J. Anderson, 200 N. Monroe st., funeral director, died here suddenly Saturday afternoon. He suffered a stroke and died on the way to the hospital, doctors said.
Mr. Anderson had lived in Stoughton for the past 17 years. He formerly was a resident of Avoca. He was a member of the Masonic lodge and the First Methodist church.
Surviving are the widow; a daughter, Esther, at home; two sons, Irving, Stoughton, and Buryl, Mazomanie; a sister, Mrs. Torrence Hughes, Beloit, and three grandchildren.
The body was taken to the Booth funeral home at Oregon [Oregon, Wisconsin].

[NI23813] STOUGHTON - Irving W. Anderson, age 80, of 317 McKinley Street, died on Monday, September 12, 1983. He was born at Arena, Wisconsin, on August 16, 1903. He moved with his parents the Ralph J. Anderson's to Stoughton in 1920. His father was a long time Stoughton funeral director and Ralph manufactured and sold cosmetics and related products to funeral homes. He was also an upholsterer by trade. He was married in 1934 to Marjory Scott of Stoughton. He is survived by his wife; a son, Michael of Madison; a daughter, Ellen Newman of Colorado Springs, Colorado; four grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Esther Homme of Toronto, Canada. He was preceded in death by his parents; a brother, Buryl; and a sister, Ruth Anderson. Services and burial will follow cremation at a later date. Olson-Holzhuter Funeral Home, Stoughton.

[NI23906] No Children

[NI23908] Per the WWI Draft Registration Card filled out on 12 September 1918 in Broome County, NY:
Oliver Cromwell Dodge was born 26 January 1873. Wife, Anna Dodge.
Residing at 118 Endicott Avenue, Johnson City, Broome County, NY
Worked as a shoemaker for E. J. & County, Johnson City, NY
Medium height, medium build, blue eyes, black hair

All census records state both his parents were born in New York

In the 1900 US Census the family was living in Union, Broome County, NY
Oliver was a shoe laster.

In the 1910 US Census the family was living in Union, Broome County, NY
Oliver was a laster at a shoe factory

In the 1920 US Census the family was living in Union, Broome County, NY
Oliver was listed as a foreman in a shoe factory

In the 1930 US Census the family as living in Johnson City, Broome County, NY
Oliver was apparently deceased as Anna was listed as a widow

[NI23912] Edward Franics Dodge was a Navy Surgeon in the Pacific during WWII.

U.S. Veterans Cemeteries, ca.1800-2006
about Edward F Dodge
Name:
Edward F Dodge
Service Info.:
LCDR US NAVY WORLD WAR II
Birth Date:
26 Jan 1904
Death Date:
19 Sep 1983
Service Start Date:
15 Jul 1944
Service End Date:
4 Aug 1946
Interment Date:
22 Sep 1983
Cemetery:
Ft. Snelling National Cemetery
Cemetery Address:
7601 34th Avenue, South Minneapolis, MN 55450
Buried At:
Section R Site 3912

[NI23916] U.S. Veterans Cemeteries, ca.1800-2006
about Agnes Dell Dodge
Name:
Agnes Dell Dodge
Service Info.:
LCDR US NAVY
Birth Date:
3 Mar 1903
Death Date:
17 Nov 1993
Relation:
Wife of Dodge, Edward Francis
Interment Date:
22 Nov 1993
Cemetery:
Ft. Snelling National Cemetery
Cemetery Address:
7601 34th Avenue, South Minneapolis, MN 55450
Buried At:
Section R Site 3912

The 1930 US Census states that Agnes and her parents were born in English-speaking Canada and immigrated to the United States in 1910. By the time of her marriage Agnes was a naturalized citizen.

[NI23944] Serving in US Army during Vietnam, Notts Detachment. Accidental fall in shower while in Columbus Ohio while on Army Business. His Army rating was a SP5

[NI23965] Veteran of WW I

[NI24049] See John Branch this is a cross over family:

[NI24109] He was born in Granada, CO on July 17, 1933. He was a life-long cattle rancher who believed in a time when a mans life stood behind his handshake and his word was as good as money in the bank. Mr. Dodge was a member of the Soil Conservation Board, served on the Pueblo District 70 School Board, belonged to the Pueblo County Stockmans Association, the Colorado Cattlemens Association, the Colorado Farm Bureau and the Rodeo Cowboy Association, an organization that existed before the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association.

He was preceded in death by his daughter Heidi Dodge, his parents Cliff and Zola Dodge and his brothers Dan and Butch Dodge. Mr. Dodge is survived by his loving wife of 60 years, Barbara; his daughters, Bobbi Ann (Ken) Highberger, Sandra (Derril) Ackley; and grandsons Jack and Nick Highberger.

Special thanks are extended to the remarkable people at Sangre de Cristo Hospice who spent many hours with the family and Mr. Dodge providing loving care. Memorial service will be held on Friday, June 8, 2012 at 11 am in the Rye Home United Methodist Church. The family will receive friends at a luncheon following the services in the adjoining Education Building. In lieu of food and flowers, donations may be made to the Rye Home United Methodist Church or to Sangre de Cristo Hospice. Online condolences at DavisMortuary.com

[NI24143] DNA TESTED TRISTRAM

1830 Census Pike, Allegany County, NY
1840 Census Trumbull County, OH
1850 Census Allegany, Venango County, PA, born NY
1860 Census Pleasantville, Venango County, PA, born NY
1870 Census Portland, Chautauqua County, NY, born NY
1880 Census Portland, Chautauqua County, NY
(listed as William)

[NI24154] Libby Wilma Dodge, 98, of Rogue River died Friday, Dec. 22, 2006, at Three Rivers Community Hospital.

A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday at Chapel of the Valley-L.B. Hall Funeral Home, with Richard Kelso, pastor of Rogue Valley Community Church, officiating. Private burial will be at Hawthorne Memorial Gardens.

Dodge was born Feb. 7, 1908, in Woodston, Kan., to John and Anna Velharticky. On Sept. 18, 1943, in San Bernardino, Calif., she married Ralph Dodge, who died in 1993. They moved to Grants Pass in 1948 from Los Angeles. In 1991, they moved to Rogue River.

She was a member of Rogue Valley Community Church in Rogue River.

Survivors include four grandchildren.

[NI24168] Diane H. (Dodge) Ridden - Newington

Born in Somerville MAon 26 july 1945 the daughter of the late Earl & Hazel (sherren) Dodge.

[NI24169] When Agnes Ann Patterson was born on April 9, 1898, in Frontenac, Canada, her father, Samuel, was 37 and her mother, Jean, was 41. She married William Hickey and they had one son and one daughter together. She then married Clinton Parker Dodge in 1938. She died on December 15, 1951, in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 53.

[NI24189] CH MACH US NAVY WWI & WWll

[NI24191] ATC US AIR FORCE KOREA

[NI24197] Isreal Ray Dodge
September 21, 1937 - April 4, 2008

Isreal Ray Dodge, age 70, of Crossett, passed away on Friday, April 4, 2008 at the Ashley County Medical Center. He was born on September 21, 1937 to his parents, Isreal Edward and Lula Mae Oliver Dodge in Rusk County, TX. He retired from Georgia Pacific Chemical and enjoyed camping and fishing. He was preceded in death by his parents and his first wife, Ila Merle Dodge.

Survivors include his wife, Lucille Dodge of Crossett, AR; a son, Eddie Ray Dodge of Crossett, AR; a daughter, Terrie Almond (Clay) of Haughton, LA; a step-son, James Michael Morgan (Linda) of West Monroe, LA; a step-daughter, Blanche Donaldson (Steve) of Crossett; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 5, 2008 at Jones Funeral Home Chapel. Interment will follow at Hickory Grove Cemetery under the direction of Jones Funeral Home of Crossett, AR.

Visitation will be held from 6 - 8 p.m., Friday at the funeral home.

Memorials may be made to Meridian Baptist Church or the Crossett Public Library

[NI24244] The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 47
page 188

Mrs. Helen Josephine Prichard Dodge.
DAR ID Number: 46417
Born in Greenfield, N. Y.
Wife of George Henry Dodge.
Descendant of Lieut. Jeremiah Prichard.
Daughter of Gilman Prichard and Lucy La Broad, his wife.
Granddaughter of Jeremiah Prichard, 3rd, and Helene Vila, his wife.
Gr-granddaughter of Jeremiah Prichard, 2nd, and Nancy Barr, his wife.
[p.188] Gr-gr-granddaughter of Jeremiah Prichard and Elizabeth Smith, his wife.
Jeremiah Prichard (1754-1813) served in Capt. Town's company at the battle of Bunker Hill. He was lieutenant at White Plains, where he was wounded, and also engaged in the battle of Hubbardton. He was born in Ipswich, Mass.; died in New Ipswich, N. H.

[NI24254] Michael H. LaBow, 63, of Mountville, passed away on Monday, January 9, 2017 at home. He was the husband of Cheryl A. Zerphy LaBow, with whom he celebrated their 21st wedding anniversary on May 5, 2016. He was born in Alexandria Bay, NY, son of the late Jean A. LaBow and Carol Walts Hannesson, Sun City Center, FL. He was a bio-medical engineer at Lancaster General Hospital for more than 20 years. He was a veteran of the US Navy, and enjoyed golfing, fishing, NASCAR, playing the guitar, listening to music, and he loved his dog, “Jasper”. He also achieved the rank of Eagle Scout.

Surviving in addition to his wife and mother, his children: Christopher A. (Becky) LaBow, LaFargeville, NY; Chelsea M. (Karl) Murphy, Sandy Hook, CT; Craig M. (Kaire) LaBow, Landisville; A. Jason (Rose) Licht, Columbia; and Keith R. (Isabela) Lichtm Chambersburg. Ten grandchildren: Carley, Morgan, Ella, Emily, Riley, Connor, Lance, Nadia, Brett, and Elliot. Two sisters: Cindy (Gary) Edick, Gouverneur, NY; and Brenda Minasian, Johnson City, Tennessee.

The Memorial Service will be held at the Workman Funeral Homes, Inc., 114 West Main Street, Mountville, on Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 1:00 P.M. with Deacon Peter Jupin, officiating. Private interment will be held for the family. Full Military Honors will be accorded following the memorial service. Visitation will be held from 12:00 Noon to 1:00 P.M. Please omit flowers. Memorial contributions may be made in his memory to: Hospice and Community Care or LGH Cancer Center. To send an online condolence, visit the condolence page.

[NI24274] Mary Reese's grandfather, Elijah Winchell was in the Revolutionary War: Elijah Winchel enlisted from Schaghticoke and acted as an aid to Gen. Philip Schuyler. He was bearer of dispatches from headquarters 1781,
when mortally wounded near Albany. DAR numbers: 23001, 18756, 20289, 21767

[NI24275] 1st Lieutenant in Civil War.
1850 Census states his name is Jonathan.

[NI24293] He was working with something electrical and touched the wrong thing a and was electrocuted.

[NI24294] Killed in a auto accident.

[NI24295] Died during Flu epidemic.

[NI24296] Married first Miriam Hamlin who died 12 June 1873.

[NI24298] Came to California about 1900. Lived in South Pasadena on Milan Aven ue in 1920. Married to Flora M, from Vermont
when he was 36. (It was her second marriage.) He was born in November 186 0, and she was born in June 1856. He was a house carpenter in 1900, a self -employed construction superintendent in 1910, a carpenter in 1920, and re tired in 1930.

[NI24299] A Justice of the Peace at the time of his death. Was an apple grower and harness maker in Pennsylvania. His nicknames were "Leflet" and " Liff."

[NI24306] Served as a chauffeur, 14th squadron, Flying School Detachmen t , March Fi eld, California, Jun 14, 1918 - Jan 28, 1919, rank : Pr ivate. Member, Per fect Ashlar Lodge No. 12 (Grand Lodge F . and A .M. of Arizona), Bisbee, A rizona, 1921. Member of Indust rial You ng Men's Christian Association
(Industrial Copper Mines Association) Jul 8, 1918, Bisbee, Ariz o na. D AR application # 357789.

[NI24309] Served in the Spanish American War;
At the same time of his marriage he changed his from Alfed Edgar Dodge
to Edwin Eugene Erwin (possibly from a friend's name).
He was Vice President of Gilmore Oil, California to 1913.
From 1913 to the late twenties he was the President of Nippon Oil (Japan) .
He was also the Oil Advisor to the Japanese Emperor.

[NI24313] Harrtr held a PhD in Computational Biology, and was a professor at the University of Sunderland in England.
Prior to receiving that degree he had worked as a systems engineer for a number of government contractors, such as TRW and Norden Systems.
His professional interests included artificial intelligence and the study of bat behaviour. He was a soccer referee for youth leagues, enjoyed singing in the church choir, and reading science fiction. He also introduced me to my professional career, in tabletop roleplaying games, and was an avid wargamer. His hobbies included caving, the study of cladistics, genealogy, archaeology, and history

[NI24329] Parent's names and places of birth from death certificate.

[NI24335] Rather short, according to her granddaughter Audrey (about 5' 3 " or 5'4") .

[NI24336] Jay Munson Woleben was born in portland, Chautauqua County, New York. he was the only son of Milton Jabez Munson and Julia Dodge. His mother passed away only 4 days after his birth. For a time his father hired care for his son, but eventually put him in the care of his cousin Mary Munson and her husband Marvin Woleben. Eventually they adopted him when he was about 2 years old.

[NI24340] Naturalized 12 March 1928, Riverside, California. Merged Gener a l Note:
!Dar application # 357789

[NI24352] Arms: Gu 4 crosses patonce arg on a canton az a lion passant or.

[NI24379] CMM US NAVY WORLD WAR II

[NI24399] Mrs. Mary Martin Dodge, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Abraham B. Martin, died at her home in Old Hickory, Tennessee, Sunday. This is the third death in the Martin family this year. In January, the mother died at her home in this city, in May Mr. Bailey Martin passed away, and in July the only daughter of the family was called to rest.

Mary Martin spent her girlhood days in Delphi, and everybody who knew her loved her. She was of a remarkably sweet and gentle disposition. She was singer of abisility and gave of her talent freely in the activities of the Delphi Baptist church. She taught music in the Delphi schools. It was through their mutual enjoyment of music that Will Dodge and “Mamie” Martin became acquainted. The romance, which started soon after their introduction, culminated in their marriage. During the most of their married life, they have lived in Tennessee.

To them were born five sons and one daughter. It was the pleasure of the writer of this article, in company with her mother, to visit the Dodge home in Nashville, Tennessee, many years ago. Never was there a happier home, or a family more devoted one to the other than the Dodge home and family. A picture that will ever be remembered is that of the mother at the piano with her children gathered around her, singing some of the old melodies.

For the past few years both Mr. and Mrs. Dodge have been in ill health. Their children have been devoted to them and the daughter, Margaret, now eighteen, had taken charge of the home, thus giving her mother a much needed rest.

The people of Delphi who knew Mrs. Dodge are thinking of her today as the sweet singer of old, as the happy, devoted, young mother, and as the faithful, loyal wife. Sickness and age may have changed her but to her friends here, she is remembered as she was when she used to come home for visits with her loved ones, and always took the time to call upon her girlhood friends.

Funeral services were held in Old Hickory and burial was made there. Mrs. Dodge leaves her husband, five sons and a daughter, and two brothers, Ben of Logansport, and Lew, of this city.

[NI24413] Tec 4, US Army

[NI24422] Cherokee By Blood

[NI24532] Arthur R. “Ron” Dodge Sr. “Old man”, 73, of Lincolnville passed away peacefully January 29, 2010 with loved ones at his side after a year-long battle with colon cancer. He is now in Heaven with his loved ones who have also passed on. He was born September 20, 1936 in Camden, son of Lord and Lillian (Yattew) Dodge. He worked at Knox Mill, Green Island fish plant and Marriner’s Paving. He was a foreman at W. H. Shirtlift Company for 20 years where he was a part of the Union. He served on the volunteer Rockport Fire Department. In his later years he also cut wiping rags for area businesses. He had a buy and sell shop and helped out a Town Line and Rockland Redemption Centers. The kids remember how he always wanted to have cookouts when they were growing up. He also enjoyed attending auctions with his grandson, playing poker games at his brothers and going to the camp for cookouts. Ron always looked forward to going to yard sales and getting good deals. He also enjoyed talking to his birds and loved his dog Scooby “Boo-Boo”. He watched Price is Right daily while drinking a beer and liked watching Golden Girls. He enjoyed visiting his friends, Jim Bogg and Helen Nielson. He enjoyed his shaves and talks with the volunteers from Kno-Wal-Lin Hospice and would like to say thank you for all your help and thanks to all the staff at Pen Bay Hospital. He touched the hearts of many and will be sadly missed by all.


He is predeceased by his parents; a sister Virginia Scott; brothers, Earl “Bubby” Dodge, Leroy Dodge, Harold Dodge; a daughter Kathleen Dodge , grandson Nicholas Davis and friends Bob and Art. Survivors include his partner of 25 years, Roberta Morgan; his children, Annette Robbins and husband Jerry of Montville, Arthur Dodge Jr. and wife Sherry of Lincolnville, Tim Dodge and wife Pam of Rockland, April Turnbull and husband Paul of Plait, South Dakota, Priscilla Davis of Rockport, and step-son, Robert Morgan of Augusta; his brothers Charlie Dodge Sr. and Howard Bassett; 13 grandchildren, Chris Collins, Katie, Jesse, Justin and Miranda Dodge, Krystal, T.J. and Michael Dodge, Angel Jones, Christopher and Paul Davis and Nathan and Brandon Morgan; 10 great-grandchildren and one ‘on the way’; several nieces, nephews and extended family in Chelsea; special friends Jim Bogg, Helen Nielson and Rodney Morgan.


Memorial services will be held in the spring. Burial will be at Amesbury Hill Cemetery in Rockport. Those who wish may make memorial contributions in his memory to Kno-Wal-Lin Hospice, 170 Pleasant Street, Rockland, ME 04841 or to Roberta Morgan, PO Box 803, Rockport, ME 04856. On-line condolences may be made to the family at www.crabielripostafuneralhome.com .

[NI24541] ROCKLAND - Timothy ‘TJ’ Dodge, Jr., 19, died unexpectedly early Tuesday, from injuries sustained in an automobile accident on U.S. Route 2, in Old Town.

Born in Rockport, July 22, 1992, he was the son of Tim J. and Pam Leach Dodge. While growing up in Rockland, TJ attended local schools and was 2010 honors graduate of Rockland District High School.

Throughout his school years, TJ was passionate about most sports and was a member of RDHS’s wrestling, baseball, track and football teams. He was also a member of the ‘Just Off Broadway Players’.

TJ was the recipient of many theater and sports awards.

At the time of his death, he was in his second year as a psychology major at University of Maine at Orono.

During the summer months, he was employed at the Samoset Resort.

In remembering TJ’s many accomplishments and qualities, his family said that he was committed to his family and friends and was known by his nickname, “The Man”. His mother said that TJ’s tattoo says it all about him; “Refuse to be Forgotten”.

TJ was pre-deceased by his paternal grandfather, Arthur Dodge in 2010, and a cousin Nicholas Davis in 2009. Other than his parents of Rockland, he is survived by his sister Krystal L. Dodge; his brother, Michael A. Dodge, both of Rockland; his girlfriend of several years, Nicole Weaver of Warren; his paternal grandmother, Mary Hodgkins of Rockport; his maternal grandparents, Louis and Gloria Leach; his maternal great-grandmother Edith Merrifield, all of Rockland; aunts and uncles including, Holli and Sean Jewel of Rockland, Louis, Jr. and Heather Leach of Tennessee, Mary Robins of Montville, April and Paul Turnbull of South Dakota, Priscilla Davis of Rockport, Ronnie Dodge and his wife, Sherry of Rockport; several cousins including, Chris, Katie, Jesse, Mandy, Justin, Angel, Chris, Paul, Andrue, Mathue, Drew, Ariel, Alysa, Seanie; and his niece Rhapsody; as well as many close friends who are considered family.

Family and friends are invited to visit from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., Thursday, April 26b b , 2012 at Burpee, Carpenter & Hutchins Funeral Home, 110 Limerock Street, Rockland. A celebration of his life will be held at 2:00 p.m., Friday, April 27, 2012 at West Rockport Baptist Church. The Reverend David English will officiate. Interment will follow at the West Rockport Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Oceanside High School Football Program or Theater and Arts Program, c/o Oceanside High School, 400 Broadway, Rockland, Maine 04841.

To share a memory or condolence with TJ’s family, please visit his online Book of Memories at www.bchfh.com and the Facebook Page ‘In Loving Memory of TJ Dodge’.

[NI24552] Birth: Jul. 1, 1952
Death: May 17, 2012

LaGrange: Charles H. Dodge Jr. 59 died May 17, 2012 at a Pittsfield hospital following a period of ill-health. He was born in Camden, ME July 1, 1952 the son of Charles H. and Alpine (Woodman) Dodge. He attended Camden schools.

Charles was employed as a lobsterman in Rockland in his younger years. He worked in the woods for many years and in later years he was a self employed cabinet maker. He loved the outdoors especially while hunting and fishing. He was always ready to have a "family cookout."

Charles is survived by his mother Alpine Taylor of Veazie, his significant other Marci Henry of LaGrange, three sons; Chris Dodge of Rockland, Charles Dodge III of Rockland, Bryan Dodge of Athens, two daughters, Sherri Dodge of Rockland, Shannon Day of Hartland, two brothers Peter Dodge of Mississippi, Donald Dodge of Newport, two sisters, Roxine Puls of Mississippi, Lillian Haynes of Pittsfield, seven grandchildren Nick, Casey, J'Lissa, Jay-Lynn, Isaiah, Audrey, and Connor, several nieces and nephews.

Graveside memorial services will be conducted at the Pine Grove Cemetery Hartland, Me. (Morning Sentinel 5/21/2012))

[NI24578] Sgt US Army Air Corps World War II

[NI24628] Alma Mae (Blocher) Dodge
SALISBURY, Pa.-, 83, of Ord St., Salisbury, died Tuesday, Dec. 8, 1998, at Memorial Hospital, Cumberland, Md.
Born Dec. 6, 1915, in Salisbury, she was a daughter of the late Aden and Mildred Ruth (Hawn) Blocher. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Reuben E. Dodge, on Jan. 29, 1996; three brothers, Glenn, Roy and Fred Blocher; and two sisters, Vesta Blocher and Grace Brown. Mrs. Dodge had been employed by the Acme Markets and was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church and the Lutheran Church Women.
She is survived by three sisters, Mary Harris, Havre de Grace, Md., Margie Tressler, Salisbury, Lois Blocher, Mobile, Ala., Sue Blocher, Conyers, Ga.; and a number of nieces and nephews.
Friends will be received on Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the Newman Funeral Homes, P.A., Grantsville, Md., where services will be conducted on Friday at 2 p.m. with the Rev. David E. Fetter officiating.
Interment will be in Salisbury Cemetery.
Expressions of sympathy may be directed to the American Heart Association.

[NI24630] Beverly — Anna G. (Fitzgerald) Dodge, 96, wife of the late Arthur H. Dodge, died at home on Sunday. Born in Beverly, daughter of the late Daniel and Annie (Galvin) Fitzgerald, she lived in Beverly most of her life. Mrs. Dodge was a graduate of Beverly High School and Salem State College, Class of 1938, she was one of the first female tellers at the former Beverly National Bank. She was a member of St. Mary Star of the Sea Church and was devoted to her family. Surviving her are one son Arthur H. Dodge and his wife, Aileen of Beverly; one daughter Martha D. Niccolini of Beverly; eight grandchildren, Abaigael Anna Dodge of Beverly, Alyssa Niccolini Wenzel of New York, Rachel Anna Niccolini of California, Lesley E. Riley of Salem, Mathew D. Niccolini of Groveland, Adam A. Niccolini of Maine, Chelsea and Jason Horton both of Salem; four great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. ARRANGEMENTS: A funeral mass will be celebrated at St. Mary Star of the Sea Church, 253 Cabot Street, Beverly, on Friday at 11 a.m. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Burial will be at St. Mary's Cemetery in Salem. Contributions may be made in her memory to Hospice of the North Shore, 75 Sylvan Street, Danvers, MA 01923. Information, directions, condolences www.campbellfuneral.com.

[NI24680] Stillborn

[NI24691] Veteran of the Civil War, Co C; 6th PA Reservers GAR 1861-1865 Grave Marker. Possibly born in New Jersey.

[NI24729] Cleo ‘Bud’ Dodge, 74

Updated Dec 10, 2010
Cleo “Bud” Dodge, 74, of Coeur d’Alene died in an ATV riding accident on June 29, 2010. Although he was taken from us much too soon, Bud died doing what he enjoyed most in life — adventuring and exploring with friends.
Bud was born in Oldtown, Idaho to Guy & Nellie (Hader) Dodge, the fifth of six children. He spent his early childhood “goofin’ around” on Idaho Hill, swimming in Diamond lake, walking the rail bridge over Albeni Falls at Oldtown, and pedaling his bicycle to keep up with his friends who had those newfangled Whizzers. He attended Idaho Hill School. His father died when he was young and Papa Ray Sullivan came into his life as a step father, a man he very much respected and admired. Bud graduated from Newport High School, enlisted in the U.S. Army at Fort Lewis, Wash., and he was quickly singled out to be a platoon leader and drill sergeant.
After the Army, Bud settled in Bayview, and had two wonderful children, Kimberly and Guy who brought a lot of joy to his life.
Bud truly had a passion for Coeur d’Alene, having lived here the last 30 years. Bud knew local history and reveled in acting as a personal tour guide for family and friends. He was an enthusiastic outdoorsman who spent his free time camping, canoeing, sailing, bicycle riding, ATVing, scuba diving, fishing, and golfing. He believed every day was a special blessing and not to be taken lightly. He always said “Life IS good.”
Bud enjoyed a multitude of occupations, but found the perfect fit with Pepsi Cola as a delivery driver, where he traveled the open road and revisited his route friends. He so enjoyed being outside and thought the physical activity a bonus.
After his retirement at 65, Bud got reacquainted with his special friend Patty Black and they fell in love and spent the last nine years “dancing as if no-one was watching.” Bud loved playing, going and “doing.” He was game for anything, anytime, anywhere. He was a member of Back Country ATV Association, Blue Jeans Singles, VFW, and a life time member of Good Sam.
Bud is survived by Patty, daughter Kim Easton of Seattle; son Guy Dodge of Batesville, Ark.,; three grandchildren Taren, Connor and Meagan; brother, Gerald Dodge, of Hauser Lake; nieces Rhoda Ellerbroek of Hauser Lake; Richae Boyer of Hayden Lake; and Rhea Rice of Portland, Ore.; and numerous great nieces and nephews.
An outside memorial service will be held at 5 p.m. Monday, July 12, 2010, at the home of Chuck and Rhonda Ellerbroek, 9535 N. Cloverleaf Road, Hauser Lake. Please dress casually and appropriately for the weather, plan on staying after the service for an old fashioned hot dog/ potato salad picnic. For more information please call Patty at 699-3547.

[NI24748] He was born Oct 23 2952

[NI24749] Playground Daily News
January 13, 1974 Page 2A

Mrs Pauline Dodge Dies

Mrs. Pauline Dodge, age 51, of Fort Walton Beach, passed away Saturday in the Eglin Air Force Hospital.

Mrs. Dodge was the wife of Russell Dodge, a long-time employe of the Playground Daily News in the production department. Mrs. Dodge was a native of Geneva County, Alabama, moving from Slocumb, Ala., in 1953 to make her home in Fort Walton Beach.

Mrs. Dodge was a member of the Christian Home Baptist Church, the VFW Auxillary Post 7674 in Fort Walton Beach, and the Okaloosa County Cancer Society.

Visitation will begin Sunday at 5 p.m. VFW Auxillary services will be held Sunday at 7 p.m. in Little Chapel Mortuary.

Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 3 p.m. from the Cinco Baptist Church by Reverend Talmadge Smith. Burial will follow in Beal Memorial Cemetery.

The family suggests that contributions may be made to the Okaloosa County Cancer Society in lieu of flowers.

Survivors include her husband, two sons, a daughter, five sisters, and two grandchildren.
-------------------------------------
January 13, 1974 Page 6A

Mrs. Pauline Dodge, age 51, of 424 Sherry Circle, passed away Saturday in the Eglin A.F.B. Hospital.

Visitation will begin Sunday at 5 p.m. VFW Auxillary services will be held that night at 7 p.m. Funeral services will be conducted by Reverend Talmadge Smith from the Cinco Baptist Church Monday at 3 p.m. Burial will follow in Beal Memorial Cemetery.

The family suggests that contributions may be made to the Okaloosa County Cancer Society.

Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Little Chapel Mortuary.

Survivors include: her husband, Russell Dodge; two sons, Douglas and William; one daughter, Mrs. Nanette Young, all of Fort Walton Beach; five sisters, Mrs. Mildred Baxley of Umatilla, Fla., Mrs. Clyde Hicks and Mrs. Vassie Watkins of Slocumb, Ala., Mrs. Ados Davis and Mrs. Robbie Kent, of Malvery, Ala., and two grandchildren.

[NI24809] Birdh date calculated from Deeath Date

[NI24821] NEVER MARRIED

[NI24831] Never Married

[NI24833]
NEVER MARRIED

Funeral services for Charles Dodge, 74, who was found dead in his home on Water Street about 6 p.m. Tuesday, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday in the Sharer Funeral Home, the Rev. Thomas Chinn officiating. Burial will be in Hillcrest Cemetery. There will be no visitation.

Neighbors became concerned Tuesday because the man had not been seen since Sunday. Green County Coroner Richard Wagner said Mr. Dodge died sometime Sunday night from an apparent heart attack. No inquest will be held.

Mr. Dodge was born in Albany Jan. 19, 1890, the son of John M. and Martha Mosher Dodge. He was a veteran of World War I and had been employed in Chicago with a mail order concern. He operated a film developing business in Albany for many years, processing and printing on overnight mail service. He had made a study of the stock market and many of his predictions came true. One concern had commended him for his work and chartings. Only immediate survivors are a nephew, Paul Dooley, Evansville, and a niece, Mrs. Laura Hollibush, Beloit. A brother was killed in 1883 in a fire that burned two blocks of Albany. Also preceding him in death were two sisters, Miss Laura Dodge and Mrs. John Dooley.

Information from the Janesville (Wisconsin) Daily Gazette, Thursday, October 8, 1964 
 

[NI24862] Memorial# 99465600
Mrs. Dodge has been Professor of English Literature at Shurtleff College, now Instructor in Elocution and Literature at Western Military Academy in Upper Alton, 111. (1903)

[NI24887] Born to Irving and Joan (McLaughlin) Cleghorn.Adopted by Perley and Hazel Dodge. Wife of Bruce Rines.

[NI24898] Mary Ann [Dodge] Griffing (1813-1843) was the daughter of Daniel Dodge who came to Tioga County from Schoharie County in 1825 and settled on a farm previously owned by Joseph Gaskill in the town of Owego opposite Apalachin.

She married Henry Griffing (1809-1855), a son of Rev. John Griffing (1784-1844) and Lydia Redfield (1792-1872). Henry and Mary Ann had two daughters before her death in 1843; Emma Griffing (born 1839) and Velma Griffing (born 1841). After Mary Ann's death, Henry Griffing remarried and later moved with his family to Kansas Territory where he died in 1855. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the Topeka Cemetery along side his five year-old son John who died in the same year [cholera?].

Note: Marker says "Mary Ann, Wife of Henry Griffin." Henry Griffing often spelled his name without the final "g".

[NI24905] Leonard A. “Butch” Dodge was preceded in death by parents, Cliff and Zola Dodge; and brother, Dan Dodge.

He is survived by wife, Donna Dodge; sons, Dustin (Kathy) Dodge and Brad (Leila) Dodge; brother, Chuck (Barbara) Dodge; grandchildren and numerous family and friends.

Memorial service, 11 a.m. Friday, Jan. 15, Rye Home United Methodist Church. Donations may be made to Rye Home United Methodist Church.

[NI24911] Cleveland Plain Dealer
Monday, August 23, 1926
Ramp, John B., beloved husband of Jennie O., father of Charles A. and Bessie, Friday 10:15AM.

[NI24926] Memorial #84279861

[NI24945] Stillborn.

[NI24966] Mary E. Bogan, 93, of Utica, passed away Saturday, December 11, 2010 at Manor Care Nursing Home, Silver Spring, Maryland.

Mary was born on May 25, 1917 in Utica, the daughter of Fredrick and Catherine O'Connor Dodge. She married John Bogan at St. John's Catholic Church. Mr. Bogan passed away August 31, 1973. Mary was employed with Doyle Knower as a sales clerk and later as office manager for State Street Mills. She was a former member of Blessed Sacrament Church.
Mary was a wonderful baker and passed on her knowledge to many family members and friends. She was an avid bowler in Utica and Maryland where she enjoyed bowling with four generations on her team.

Surviving Mary are her son and daughter-in-law, Jack and Karen Bogan, Florida; two sisters, Carol Weisse, Florida and Florence Brooks, Utica; grandson, John and Rana Bogan, Maryland; great grandchildren, Zachary and Christopher, Maryland and several nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by two daughters, Mary and Janice Bogan; sisters, Beatrice, Cecilia and Doris Dodge, Ruth Worden, Madeline Gregory and Elizabeth Edwards; brothers, Thomas, Marshall, Joseph, Fredrick, William and Howard Dodge and a daughter-in-law, Mildred Bogan.

[NI24967] Son of Frederick and Catherine O'Connor Dodge.
On March 31, 1934 he married Anna Lottermoser.
He is survived by his wife, one daughter, Mrs. Michael
(Karen) Davis of Utica, 3 sons, William H. Dodge, Jr. and John D. Dodge, both of Utica; Richard F. Dodge of Frankfort; 9 sisters, Miss Beatrice Dodge, Mrs. Louis(Cecelia) Aliasso; Mrs. Harold (Ruth) Worden: Mrs. John(Mary) Bogan, Miss Doris Dodge; Mrs. Dennis (Madelyn)Gregory; Mrs. William (Carol) Weisse; Mrs. Arthur(Florence) Brooks, Mrs Robert (Elizabeth) Edwards; 5 brothers, Thomas; Marshall; Joseph; Fred and Howard
Dodge, all of Utica; two grandchildren, Shane A. Dodge of CA and Michelle Davis of Utica

[NI24968] Carole D. Weisse, 89, formerly of Utica, passed away on Sunday, February 23, 2014 at the Life Care Center of Estero, Florida with her loving family by her side.

Carole was born on March 18, 1924 in Utica, the daughter of Frederick and Catherine (O'Connor) Dodge. On July 19, 1947, Carole married William F. Weisse in St. Francis deSales Church, a union of 19 years prior to his death on March 31, 1966. She worked in retail for her whole life in various businesses in Utica. Prior to moving to Florida 10 years ago, Carole was a member of the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes.

Surviving are her beloved daughter and son-in-law, Carole and Gary Glatt; Bonita Springs, FL; grandchildren, William Owens and his wife, Jennifer, Bonita Springs, FL; Megan Owens and her partner, Defelicio Dos Santos, Estero, FL; great grandchildren, Will and Madison Owens and Owen Dos Santos; sister, Florence Brooks, Whitesboro; sisters-in-law, Priscilla Langdon, Utica and Stella Dodge, Utica, with whom she had a special relationship and stayed with when visiting Utica; Godchild, Lisa Dodge, Utica and dear friend, Evelyn Reile, Herkimer. Carole also leaves many nieces and nephews including two special great nephews, Eric Manley, Yorkville and Robbie Gaetano, Arizona, who were near and dear to her heart.

She was predeceased by her sisters, Beatrice, Doris and infant sister, Lois Dodge, Cecelia Aliasso, Mary Bogan, Ruth Worden, Madeline Gregory and Elizabeth Edwards; brothers, Thomas, Marshall, Joseph, Frederick, William and Howard Dodge and mother-in-law, Gertrude F. Weisse.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend a Memorial Mass of Christian Burial to be celebrated on Wednesday, April 2, 2014 at 1 p.m. at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes. The family will greet guests prior to the service at the Church at 12:15 p.m. Inurnment will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Whitesboro.

[NI25004] LANCASTER -- Kil Soo (Lee) Dodge, 80, of Lancaster, died Saturday, Feb. 28, in River Terrace Nursing Home.
Born in Won Son, Korea, the daughter of Taek and Dol (Kim) Lee, she attended school there.
During the Korean War, Mrs. Dodge began working in a garment factory in North Korea. Once the South Korean soldiers who occupied Won Son retreated, she made her way to Seoul and then to Tague, where she worked in a tailor shop. She met her husband there and was married in the U.S. Embassy. She moved with her husband to the United States, living at the former Fort Devens for a year-and-a-half. She had lived in Shirleyfor 15 years and had also lived in Leominster, Fitchburg and Worcester before movin to Lancaster.
She enjoyed sewing and was a member of the Episcopal Church.
Mrs. Dodge is survived by her husband, Albert D. Dodge of Lancaster.

[NI25076] Mrs. Thelma P. Richardson, 77, of 34 1/2 Hubbard St., died Friday evening, Jan. 2, 1982 at Cortland Memorial Hospital.

Mrs. Richardson was born Aug. 2, 1904, in Newark Valley, the daughter of Raymond and Mabel Bennett Prentice.

She was the widow of Deloss Richardson who died Nov. 14, 1981. She has been a resident of this area for most of her life. She was an elementary school teacher in area schools for 25 years.

Mrs. Richardson was a graduate of Newark Valley High School and Cortland State College. She was a former member of the Congregational Church of Newark Valley and attended the Cortland United Community Church.

She was a member of the Dryden Rebekah Lodge, the Cortland County Retired Teachers Association and the American Association of Retired Persons.

Survivors include one brother, Leon Prentice of Troy, Pa.; a sister, Ethelyn Anthony of Cortland; two granddaughters, Mrs. Dina Bennett of North Carolina and Mrs. Janice Pinney of Port Crane; four great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Senneth Ayers of Cortland; one niece, Mrs. William Haight of Cortland, and one nephew, Theodore Anthony of Maryland.

Services will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Wright-Beard Funeral Home with the Rev. Norman Farnum Jr. an the Rev. Lawrence Plumley officiating. Interment will be in the Center Lisle Cemetery.

Friends may call Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Friends may make contributions to the Cortland United Community Church or the Cortland Heart Fund.
-Cortland Standard

-----------
Mr. Richardson was her first and third marriage. Mr. Dodge was her second marriage.

[NI25102] Besides his wife, he leaves his mother, Mrs. Gertrude Weisse; a daughter, Miss Carol Ann Weisse, at home and a sister. Mrs. William (Pricilla)Langdon, Utica.

[NI25117] She changed her name to Lisa

[NI25123] Watertown Daily Times (NY) - Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Deceased Name: HILDA E. DODGE

Hilda E. "Bunny" Dodge, 98, formerly of State St., died Monday evening at the Samaritan Keep Nursing Home where she had resided for about 2 1/2 years.

Mrs. Dodge was born January 12, 1913, in Watertown to the late Henry and Augusta (Barney) Eveleigh. She attended Watertown Schools. She married Elwin H. Dodge November 26, 1932, in Dexter, NY. Mr. Dodge died February 18, 1985.

Mrs. Dodge was a member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Watertown.

She is survived by a son and daughter in law Robert and Mary Jean Dodge, Washington, PA, a granddaughter Elena Corbett and three nephews. Two sisters Mildred DeVito and Dorothy Gibbons died before her.

The Funeral Service will be Thursday 2 p.m. at the Reed & Benoit Funeral Home Rev. Walter Giles officiating. Burial will be at North Watertown Cemetery.

[NI25195] He was reportedly married to Liddie Reed, and Willlie Tate

[NI25197] She was married first to William Perry and brought Henry and Buel Perry to the marriage.

[NI25198] Charley Lee Dodge, 89 of Lamar died Tuesday Oct 17 1995 at Johnson Regional Hospital.
He was a native of Hartman, retired farmer and timber employee, attended the Baptist Church, and was a son of the late Charley and Lee Beartrough Dodge.
Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Claudia Mae Henderson Dodge; three daughters, Mae Adams of Muskogee, OK, Willene Morris of Keoto, Ok, and Anna Jean Lediak of Houston TX, one son, William A. Dodge of Tulsa, OK; five sisters, Orabelle Tumbleson, Rosa mae Galentine, Nora Pitts and Polly Holben all of Lamar, and Jewell Henderson of Belleville; one brother Eyns Dodge; one stepbrother, Henry Perry of Lamar; 12 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Funeral will be at Roller-Cox Funeral Home Chapel with Rev. Amos Pledger officiating.
Active pallbearers will be Donnie Henderson, Ernest Duvall, Danny Duvall, Steven Campbell, Robert Faubion and Andy Henderson.
Honorary pallbearers will be Ernest Henderson and John L. Henders
Burial:
Minnow Creek Cemetery
Hagarville
Johnson County
Arkansas, USA

[NI25200] Mrs. Ora Bell Tumbleson 81 of Lamar died Wednesday, May 10, 2000 in Clarksville. She was a daughter of the late Charlie and Ellen Doak Dodge, widow of Harley Lenley Tumbleson, and was preceded in deathe by one daughter Imogene Parker; and one son Gary Tumbleson. She is survived by two sons, James Harley Tumbleson of Lenexa, Kansas, and L. G. Tumbleson of Kent, Washington; four sisters, Jewel Henderson of Belleville and Nora Pitts, Rosemae Galentine and Polly Holben all of Lamar; two brothers, Eyns Dodge and Henry Perry, bot of Lamar; 19 grandchildren; and 40 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral was at the Strawberry Assembly of God Church with Rev. George Willis and Rev. William Hickman officiating.

Active pallbearers were Stacy Tumbleson, Marty Tumbleson, Darian Holman, Taylor Gogard, Jason Holman, and Michael Farris. Honorary pallbearers were Kerry Tumbleson and L.G. Tumbleson, Jr.

[NI25202] Rosa Mae Galentine, 83, of Lamar died Monday, Feb. 12, 2007, at her home.
She was a homemaker and a member of Strawberry Assembly of God Church. She was preceded in death by her parents, Charlie and Ellen Doak Dodge; brothers, Henry, Bueal and Clide Perry, and Lloyd and C.L. Dodge; and sisters, Ora Bell Tumbleson and Betty Jane Dodge.
Survivors include her husband, Willis Galentine; sons, Earl and Donna Galentine of Lavaca, and Kenneth Galentine of Lamar; a brother, Eyns Dodge of Lamar; sisters, Jewel Henderson of Dardanelle, Nora Boehmem of Clarksville and Polly Holben of Lamar; three grandchildren, Cathy Rushing and husband, Michael, of Lamar, Lori Lacy and husband, Logan, of Lamar and Samantha Galentine of Lavaca; and four great-grandchildren, Cassie Rushing, Summer Lacy, Caitlin Rushing and Samuel Lacey, all of Lamar.
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Feb. 16, 2007, at Roller-Cox Funeral Chapel with Brother and Sister Ketcherside. Burial will be in Minnow Creek Cemetery by Roller-Cox Funeral Service.
Pallbearers include Larry Holben, Mike Morgan, Charles Dodge, Michael Dodge, John Hull and Gary Crotts.
Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.

[NI25205] Willis Anderson Galentine, 87, of Lamar died Monday, Dec. 8, 2008, at his home. He was born March 8, 1921, in Hagarville. He was a saw mill worker, a shoe factory worker, a farmer, a World War II Army veteran, a member of Strawberry Assembly of God and the widower of Rosa Mae Galentine.
Funeral will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Roller-Cox Funeral Chapel in Clarksville with burial at Minnow Creek Cemetery in Lamar.
He is survived by two sons, Earl Galentine of Lavaca and Kenneth Galentine of Lamar; a sister, Clara Lievsay of Russellville; three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Pallbearers will be Larry Holben, Mike Morgan, Michael and Charles Dodge, Jackie Freeman, Stacey Tumbleson and Ralph Freeman.
The family will visit with friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

[NI25214] Loyd J. Dodge, aged 62, of Lamar died Wednesday Oct 14, 1992 at his home. A native of Ozone, he was the son of the late Charlie Lee and Ellen Doak Dodge, a member of the Strawberry Assembly of God Church, and a retired employee of Eureka Brick and Tile after 37 years of employment. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Elsie Charlene Tumbleson Dodge; two daughters, Esther Allene Askew of Paris and Dorothy Marie Gabbard of Lamar; six sons, Charles Loyd Dodge of Clarksville, Ronald Lee Dodge, Donald Wayne Dodge, Robert Alan Dodge, and Edward Dwayne Dodge, all of Lamar, and Dale Glen Dodge of Hartman; five sisters, Ora Bell Tumbleson, Rosa Mae Galentine, Nora Pitts, and Polly Holben all of Lamar and Jewell Henderson of Belleville; three brothers Eyns Dodge, Buster Dodge, and Henry Perry all of Lamar; 22 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

[NI25234] Mrs. Elsie Charlene Dodge, 82, of Clarksville, passed away March 23, 2015 in Clarksville.

She was born May 16, 1932 in Hagarville, AR to Charles Leonard and Quency Elsie (Malick) Tumbleson.

Mrs. Dodge enjoyed sewing, quilting, and making pillows; she was known as, “The Pillow Lady.” She was always happy and laughing. Charlene loved flowers, hummingbirds and going to church; she was a member of Strawberry Assembly of God.

Mrs. Dodge is preceded in death by her husband, Loyd Dodge; parents; granddaughter, Tamera; great- grandsons, James Mashburn III and Nathaniel Reese Stricklin.

She is survived by sons, Charles Dodge of Clarksville, Ronald Dodge of Clarksville, Donald Dodge of Hector, Dale Dodge of Hartman, Alan Dodge of Lamar, Dwayne Dodge of Lamar; daughters, Allene Jones of Mansfield, Dorothy Gabbard of Hartman; brothers, Mark Tumbleson of Clarksville, Fred Tumbleson of Clarksville; sisters, Phyllis Oliver of Clarksville, Louise Rigley of Lamar, Wanda Scoggins of Clarksville, Judy Pawson of Minnesota; aunt, Gertie Farrell of Benton; brother-in-law, Eyns and Betty Dodge; sisters-in-law, Nora Pitts, Roy and Polly Holden; sixty grandchildren; fourteen great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews.

Visitation will be 6:00-8:00p.m., Thursday, March 26, 2015 at Roller-Cox Funeral Home Chapel. Mrs. Dodge’s Funeral service will be 10:00a.m., Saturday, March 28, 2015 held at Roller-Cox Funeral Home with Bro. Eddie Birdsong officiating.

Burial will follow at Minnow Creek Cemetery. Shannon Mangum, William Mangum, EuGene Dodge, Bradley Dodge, Rodney Dodge, Ronnie Dodge, Jason Dodge, Michael Rooks will be serving as Pallbearers. Honorary Pallbearers will be Malachi Hylton, Jared Dodge, Allene Steele, and Earlene Davis.

[NI25255] Some have her Evelyn Louise Tremaine

Born in Lawrencetown, Annapolis Co., she was a daughter of the late Harvey Tremaine and Bertha Louise (Rosengren) Phinney. Surviving are son, Robert Andrew Dodge, Edmonton; daughter, Martha Louise (Dave) Dings, Cottage Cove; brother, James Elijah Phinney, Palatka, Fla.; several grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, and one great great-grandchild. She was predeceased by husband, Vernon Brenton Dodge; son, Michael Stuart Dodge; brother, John Harvey Phinney; sister, Jessie Wheelock Patriquin. She arranged to have her body donated to Dalhousie Medical School and her family have respected her wishes. Also at her request, there will be no funeral service. Donations in her memory may be made to Canadian National Institute for the Blind or a charity of choice

[NI25288] Leslie Thomas Alfred Cockrell, age 91, of Provo, passed away March 25, 2004. He was born January 11, 1913 in Montreal, Canada to Frederick Agustus and Emma Osgood Cockrell. He married Evelyn Dodge March 23, 1935. He became a U. S. Citizen on November 9, 1938. Leslie was always proud to be an American. He worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad in Los Angeles, CA from the age of 17 until he retired after 30 years of service. During WWII he was away from his family for a year moving troops and equipment. Leslie was a businessman in Baldwin Park, CA where he owned and operated L & E Friendly Hardware Store. In 1960 he moved to Lakeport, California and built Hillcrest Park Resort. In 1962 he moved to Santa Maria, California and started the 3rd largest independent insurance agency in the central coast of California and also sold real estate. He later sold his insurance agency and moved to Utah to be closer to his family. He and his wife enjoyed traveling throughout the world and in their motor home through the U. S., Mexico, and Canada with their boat and motorbike in tow. Leslie was a member of the LDS Church. He loved the Lord and served in scouting, as a Branch President and in many auxiliaries of the Church. He and his wife served a five year temple mission in the Los Angeles Temple. His most cherished possession was his family, and he will be greatly missed. He is our superman. He is survived by his wife Evelyn of Provo; a daughter, Evelyn Darlene Jensen of Provo; two sons, Thomas Alfred Cockrell of Verdi, Nevada; and Richard Frederick Cockrell of Truckee, California; 16 grandchildren, 39 great-grandchildren with two on the way, and 10 great-great-grandchildren; two brothers, Arthur Messenger of Palm Desert, California; and Stuart Messenger of Cameron Park, California. Funeral services will be held Friday, April 2, 2004, at 11:00 a.m., in the Lakeside 11th Ward LDS Chapel, 260 North 2801 West, Provo. Friends may call at the ward chapel, from 9:30 to 10:30 prior to services. Interment, Provo City Cemetery. Services under the direction of Berg Mortuary of Provo.

[NI25347] Josephine Dorothy Tasker Dodge, 86, of Terra Alta, went to be with her Lord on Thursday June 12, 2014 at Heartland of Preston County. The daughter of the late Junior A. Tasker and Zora Ringer Tasker Casteel, she was born August 2, 1927 in Terra Alta. Her greatest joy was her family and church. To her children she was "Gramma Dodge". To her many friends she was just "Jo", the little lady with a pure heart and a big smile. She was a faithful member of Trinity United Methodist Church of Terra Alta where she sang in the choir, taught Bible School and held various offices. She worked at Ben Franklin 5&10, Gregg's Pharmacy and retired from Hopemont Hospital. She is survived by two daughters and spouses, Carolyn and John Hill of Oakland and Linda and Gary Powell of Terra Alta; two step-daughters, Jo Sullivan and husband Nelson of Salem and Barbara Myrick of Baltimore; a brother, Robert Tasker of San Francisco, CA; a sister, Sharon Roy of Terra Alta; five grandchildren and spouses: Mike and Lori Hill, Max and Amber Hill, Matt and Shelli Hill, Marcia and Brent Hauser and Chris and Melissa Powell; six great grandchildren: Blake, Jenna, Brandon, Samantha, Mason and Mikey; one great great granddaughter, Hailey; 15 step-grandchildren: Tina, Nelson Jr., Debra, Sandra, Kirk, Harley, Michael, Barbara, Samantha, Colby, Cameron, Elizabeth, Caylor, Eyan, Ethan and Julia; and several nieces and nephews. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband, James Dodge and her second husband, Robert Dodge. Family and friends will be received at the Arthur H. Wright Funeral Home, Terra Alta on Friday from 5:00-8:00 p.m. and from 10:00 a.m Saturday June 14, 2014 at the Trinity United Methodist Church until the 11:00 a.m. time of service with Pastor Eric Beeman officiating. Burial will follow in the Miller Cemetery, Cranesville.

[NI25361] BATAVIA -- Cecil Kosiorek, 91, of Batavia, who loved farm life, animals and especially his family, died Friday (Oct. 7, 2005) at Batavia Nursing Home.

Mr. Kosiorek was born Aug. 2, 1914, in Batavia, a son of the late Stanley Sr. and Victoria Wazniak Kosiorek. He worked at Peterson Drug Co. in Oakfield for many years and was a former member of First Wesleyan Church of Batavia. He was known as a kind, gentle and social man who was always willing to help people.

His wife, Miriam Dodge Kosiorek, died in 1991. He was father of the late Carlton, LeMar, Donald and Loren "Bud" Clor. He was brother of the late Edmond, Leon and William Kosiorek, Amelia Kosiorek, Rose Dombrowski and Stella Potwora.

Survivors include a daughter, Joyce Sorenson of Minnesota; a brother, Stanley (Marien) Kosiorek of Synder; grandchildren and great-grandchildren; four daughters-in-law, Gloria Clor of California, Irene Zong and Peggy Barnett of Tucson, Ariz. and Eileen Clor of Batavia; two sisters-in-law, Jennie Kosiorek of Barre Center and Dolores Kosiorek of Batavia; and nieces and nephews.

There are no calling hours. A graveside service will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Grand View Cemetery, with Charles Wood officiating. Memorials may be made to National Wildlife Association.

A memorial and guest registry are at www.gilmartinfuneralhome.com. Arrangements were by Gilmartin Funeral Home, 329 West Main St.

[NI25412] Laura is pictured in the 1918 Aegis, yearbook of Central High School in Houston, and is a senior.
Davis, Laura Elizabeth, sr, p. 25

1. Spouse: Dempsey Kemp Dodge b. 5 Mar 1895 Temple, Bell Co, TX d. 1960 New Orleans, Orleans Parish, LA. Burial: Glenwood Cemetery, Houston, Harris Co, TX

Texas Marriages, 1837-1973
Groom's Name: Dempsey K. Dodge
Bride's Name: Laura Elizabeth Davis
Marriage Date: 17 Mar 1926
Marriage Place: Harris County, Texas
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M00029-4, System Origin: Texas-EASy, Source Film Number: 25254, Reference Number: 71300
Marriage ending in Divorce Circa 1935

2. Spouse: Unknown Dunn

Texas, Deaths, 1977-1986
name: Laura Elizabeth Davis Dunn
event: Death
event date: 27 Mar 1978
event place: Houston, Harris, Texas USA
gender: Female
age: 77
estimated birth year: 1901
father: John G Davis
mother: Laura A Fahm
certificate number: 28985
digital folder number: 00587

[NI25426] Utica
Frederick J. (Jake) Dodge, 70, of Utica, passed away Sunday, March 4, 2012, at Albany Medical Center, with his loving family by his side. Jake was born on March 14, 1941, in Utica, the son of Frederick and Charlotte Walsh Dodge. He was a graduate of UFA. On May 19, 1986, he married Patricia Tartaglia in Utica, a blessed union of 25 years. Jake served his country in the US Air Force. He was employed as a Police Officer with New York Central Railroad and later with the Utica Police Department, retiring in 1991. Jake was a loving husband to his best friend and wife, Patricia, and a loving father and grandfather. He cherished the time that he spent with his grandchildren. Jake enjoyed hunting, fishing, golf and visiting casinos with his wife. He was an avid Syracuse Basketball fan. Jake kept a keen eye on the weather and considered himself quite the weatherman. He also enjoyed his special friends at the Breakfast Club. Surviving Jake are his wife, Patricia; daughters, Yvonne Carcone, New York Mills, and Kelly Carcone, Utica; sons and daughters-in-law, John and Kellie Dodge, Utica, and Mike and Jodi Dodge, Florida; sisters and brothers-in-law, Lois and Jerry Deuser, California, Connie and Dick Smithgall, Florida, Gail Fobes, N. Syracuse, Cathy Dodge, New Hampshire, Joey Tartaglia, Utica, and Roger Tartaglia, Virginia; brother and sisters-in-law, Howard and Jackie Dodge, New Hartford, MaryAnne and Lewis Drake, Florida, Laura and Bill Brucato, Westmoreland, and Rosalie Homer, North Carolina; stepbrothers, George Mills, Oneonta, and Earl Mills, Pennsylvania; grandchildren, Jacob, Matthew, Kaylee and Kaitlin Dodge; and special cousins, Mike and Nancy Edwards. He is also survived by his close friend, Chuck Kelly. Jake was predeceased by his brother, Dick Dodge; sister-in-law, Alvira Spine; and brothers-in-law, Larry Homer and Wayne Fobes. Relatives and friends are invited and may call on Thursday from 4-7 p.m. at Nunn & McGrath Funeral Directors, 470 French Rd., Utica. Funeral services will be Friday at 9 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment will be in Calvary Cemetery. Jakes family wishes to thank Dr. William Ryan for his years of care and compassion. In lieu of flowers, remembrances in Jakes name can be made to . Envelopes will be available at the funeral home. Messages of sympathy at www.nunnandmcgrath.com
Frederick Dodge

[NI25449] Birth: May 14, 1953
Corinth
Saratoga County
New York, USA
Death: Nov. 29, 2016
Saratoga Springs
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Ms. Dodge, age 63, passed away at Mary's Haven after her struggle with ovarian cancer.

She was the daughter of Dorothy (Swanson) Towers of South Corinth and the late Curtis L. Towers.

She graduated from Corinth High School in 1972 and attended Albany Business College.

She married Jerry L. Dodge on June 15, 1975 at the South Corinth Methodist Church and they have resided in Corinth for over 40 years. She also was very proud to have home schooled her four children.

She owned and operated “The Bread Box” for over 30 years and was affectionately known as the “The Bread Lady." She enjoyed baking for her customers of whom many became good friends.

She was an active member of the Kingsbury Seventh Day Adventist Church for many years.

She was a wildlife rehabilitator for a number of years. She loved God and all nature that He created.

She was an avid gardener and enjoyed hiking, biking, canoeing and cross country skiing.

Survivors besides her mother and her husband of 41 years include four children; six grandchildren; six siblings; and many nieces, nephews and cousins.

A memorial service was to be held at Kingsbury Seventh Day Adventist Church, Rt. 4, Kingsbury, at a later date to be announced.

Arrangements were under the direction of the Densmore Funeral Home, Inc., 7 Sherman Avenue, Corinth.

[NI25453] Served in the US Air Force.

[NI25476] Mrs J. D. Mcdonald was born Alta Morehouse. She died at the home of her parents Frank Morhouse and on December 23, 1909 at the age of 41 years 9months and 6 days. She had been ailing more or less for 25years and 4 years ago it became necessary for her to undergo an operation. While the same was in a measure sucessful, it led to other complications and for the last 18 onths she gradually failed until the end came.

Shewas born at new Ulm, Brown County, Minnesota, on March 17 1868. When 8 years old the moved with her parent to the State of Washington. In 1884 she was married to Frank Dodge but their unionwas not a happy one. and fifteen years later secured a divorce.

[NI25479] No Memoial Sone.

John Duncan McDonald was born February 7, 1863 in Kenyon Twp, Glengarry County, Ontario, Canada. He is the 5th of the seven children of Donald Rory McDonell (1824 - 1899) AKA Donald R. Macdonald and Mary Cameron Macdonald (1830 - 1911).

John D McDonald married Alta Morehouse Dodge, the daughter of Frank M and Julia Morehouse. She was born March 27, 1868 in Brown County, Minnesota. McDonald was her 2nd husband.

Before she met John McDonald, Alta Morehouse had married Mr. Dodge. On February 5, 1885, they had a son and gave him the name William E. Dodge. They called him "Willie" for short.

Willie Dodge died at 5 1/2 years old, on Sept 10, 1890. He is buried in the Morehouse Family Plot in Oak Hill Cemetery in Melrose, Minn.

Alta Dodge divorced her 1st husband after Willie's death, allowing her to marry John McDonald. The couple adopted a little girl and the McDonald family lived in Deer River, Itasca County, Minn.

Alta (Morehouse) McDonald died December 23, 1909 in Melrose and is buried in the Morehouse Family Plot with her parents, son Willie Dodge and other family members.

After his wife's death, John returned to his home and job in Deer River, Minn and continued to work as a bartender in a local saloon. His adopted daughter remained with the Morehouse family in Melrose.

On Tuesday, March 25, 1913, a drunk and angry bar customer shot and killed McDonald.

An article was published in the Duluth News-Tribune on March 26, 1913 about the incident. The headline provides an

[NI25480] easy to identify local racial prejudice in the area:

[NI25574] Waunita Jean Bergstrom, 85, of Klamath Falls, Ore., passed away in a Bend nursing home on Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2012.
The daughter of Pearl and Etta Matilda (Dodge) Barleen, Waunita was born Dec. 4, 1926, at the family home in Concordia, Kan., the fifth of six children. She graduated from Concordia High in 1944 and attended Kansas State College in Manhattan, Kan., obtaining a special elementary emergency teaching certificate. She began teaching at age 17 and continued for two years.
Waunita married her late husband Sylvester Arthur Bergstrom on June 2, 1946, in Concordia, where they farmed until moving to Klamath Falls in 1956. She was an active participant in Campfire programs as a group leader and with camp Ka-est-a.
She was an avid gardener and an enemy to weeds. With her husband, she ran Bergstrom's Nursery for many years.
Remembered for her passion for archiving family histories in her many scrapbooks, she also enjoyed traveling whenever she could to various family reunions and picnics.
Survivors include her brother Donald Barleen of Klamath Falls; children Lyle Bergstrom (Patricia) of Klamath Falls, Karen Berger (Rick) of Helena, Mont., Bonnie Mueller (James) of Eugene, Ore., Bruce Bergstrom (Judy) of Walton, Ore., Eric Bergstrom of Sprague River, Ore., and Sonja Applebaker (Joe) of Gillette, Wyo.; 14 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.
Visitation will take place at Eternal Hills Funeral Home on Friday, Oct. 19, 2012, from 5 to 7 p.m. A funeral service, burial and light reception will be held on Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, at 1 p.m. at the Eternal Hills Memorial Gardens Chapel

[NI25592] Shirley G. Kitchen died September 27, 2014 in Nashville, TN. She was born at home Aug. 9, 1922, to Omar and Olive Dodge in Topeka, KS.

She worked on the family farm near Overbrook, KS, during her school years and also in the Lyndon district Court office during the summers before graduating from Overbrook High School. She attended Topeka Business School and worked a short time in the office of Ripley’s Laundry in Topeka. She was a lifetime member of The Church of Christ.

She married Oliver A. Kitchen of Lyndon in 1941. They farmed in Osage and Wabaunsee Counties in Kansas, and were active 4-H Club leaders. Her husband became a commodity futures broker in 1969, and she assisted him in the brokerage offices in Florida and Tennessee until they retired in Nashville in 1984. After retirement, they kept busy buying, selling, and leasing farm and ranch land.

Her husband preceded her in death in 2003, after which she moved to Topeka and resided at Thornton Place, Rolling Hills, and Brewster Place Retirement homes. She is survived by two sons: Douglas and his wife P.J. of Nashville, TN , and Brent and his wife Judy of Mt. Vernon, MO; three adult grandchildren- Brian Kitchen and his wife Anne of Austin, TX, Brenda Kitchen of Edmond, OK, and Stacey Stewart and her husband William of Edmond, OK; and one great granddaughter, Berkley Stewart of Edmond, OK.

Harpeth Hills Funeral Home where a celebration of Shirley’s life will be conducted at 2:00 pm with Brother Clifford Dobbs officiating.

Burial at Harpeth Hills Memory Gardens in Nashville, TN.

[NI25636] "Mrs. Katharine F. Dodge, aged 87, of Oneonta, died Friday, August 9, at Fox Memorial Hospital in Oneonta, following a brief illness. Mrs. Dodge was born April 16, 1881, at Worcester, the daughter of Jeremiah and Lucy (Foland) Smith. She was married to Rev. Wilbur C. Dodge on September 19, 1900, at Worcester. Rev. Dodge was pastor of the First Methodist Church of Cooperstown from 1934 to 1940. He died June 7, 1952. Mrs. Dodge had resided in Oneonta for the past 16 years, formerly residing in Cooperstown. She was a member of the Elm Park Methodist Church, the WSCS of the church and the Loyal Workers of the Church. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Floyd B. (Pauline) Baker, Oneonta, Mrs. Leslie (Lois) Hammond of Hampton, Va. and Mrs. Robert (Ellen) Wilber, Jr. of Cooperstown, four sons, Smith C. Dodge, of Binghamton; Nathan E. Dodge, of Dubuque, Ia.; Wilbur C. Dodge of Omaha, Neb., and Robert E. Dodge of Rochester; 30 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren and nieces and nephews ... Burial was in Maple Grove Cemetery, Worcester."

[NI25654] John Holcombe Dodge, 98, passed away on February 4, 2008. John was a native of Kingsport, NY and moved to Pensacola in 1981.

He was preceded in death by his parents John and Edith Dodge, his sister Virginia Jones and his niece Martha Bolduc.

He is survived by his sister, Jessie Hamlett, of Pensacola, nieces Nancy (Richard Haskell) Hamlett, Betty Ann (Richard) Lurton, Carol Hamlett, Janet (Larry) Brasington, Jessie (Bill) Spinney, and Catherine (James) Wheatley, nephews Hallett (Bobbi) Jones, Duncan Jones, and Andrew (Maureen) Jones and many great nieces and nephews.

John was a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He served in the Army during World War II and later retired from the Army Reserve.

John's taught high school physics for 27 years and co-authored physics and physical science textbooks.

John moved to Pensacola in 1981 and began a 15 year career as a volunteer physics teacher for Escambia County.

John was a devout member of St. Paul Lutheran Church. A memorial service will be held at 11:00 AM, Tuesday, February 12 at St. Paul Lutheran Church with Rev. Matt Dollhausen officiating.

In lieu of flowers donations to St. Paul Lutheran Church, Loaves and Fishes or Helping Hands Ministry are suggested.

The family would like to express their appreciation to the staff at Azalea Trace for their care and thoughtfulness.

Rose Lawn Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements. 850-932-9109

Burial:
Unknown

[NI25684] Rome Sentinel
March 16, 1928

One of the most widely known and most highly respected Rome women, Miss Mary W. Champion, aged 66, died suddenly late Thursday night at her home, 208 W. Embargo street.

Her sister, Mrs. W. B. Johnson, who lives at 401 N. Washington street, had been notified at Nassau in the Bahamas, where she is on a vacation. Two brothers, John C. Champion and Alexander Champion, are expected to arrive in Rome tonight from their homes in New York.

Miss Champion was especially active in the interests of Zion Episcopal Church and of the Rome Hospital. In the church she was organist for many years. She was president of the Altar Guild. For a long time she was a member of the Rome Hospital board of managers. As a member of Oak Twig she also contributed notably to the welfare of the institution.

Miss Champion was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Cross Champion. Her entire life was spent in this community, where her friendly greeting and generous helpfulness were recognized as a distinct asset.

Rome sustains a heavy loss in the death of a woman whose influence was so far reaching.

[NI25708] After Edward died she married Henry Sloughter

[NI25739] Sue was first maried to a Mr. Holland.and brought a child to the Marriage to Frank M. Dodge.

[NI25740] Frank M. Dodge of Whitman passed away at South Shore Hospital on October 19, 2014 surrounded by his loving family. He was 78. Frank was born in Ft. Lewis WA. He served in the U.S Navy during the Cuban Crisis. He was a Member of the Teamsters Union Local 25 working as a truck driver for over 15 years. He also worked as a small engine repair mechanic. He has been a resident of Whitman for the past 15 years. He was a member of the Pembroke Social Club, and the Dull Men’s Club in Pembroke. He enjoyed many trips with the Carefree Capers, but most of all he loved spending time with all of his family.

He is survived by his beloved wife Sylvia D. (Thomas) Dodge. Loving father of Darlene M. Mysiuk of Whitman, Frank M. Dodge, Jr. of Rockland, Karen S. Palmer of Whitman, and Wayne S. Dodge of Rockland. Brother of the late William Holland of NV. Also survived by 9 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.

Visiting hours in the MacKinnon Funeral Home, 760 Washington St., Whitman on Thursday Oct. 23rd 4-7 pm.

Funeral Mass in Holy Ghost Church, Whitman on Friday at 9 am. Relatives and friends invited to attend.

Interment at St. James cemetery, Whitman.

Charitable donations may be made in Frank 's memory to the following organizations:

Dana Farber Cancer Institute
http://www.dana-farber.org
Attn: Contributions Services 6th Fl., 10 Brookline Place West, Brookline, MA 02445
Tel: 617 632 2903

Whitman Food Pantry, C/O Holy Ghost Rectory
518 Washington Street, Whitman, MA 02382

[NI25799] Formerly of Hamilton, N.J., on March 18, 2013. Born on April 3, 1924, in to Clair R. and Lorraine L. Dodge. Predeceased by her beloved husband, Robert E. Bittner, and parents. Dearest mother of Karen A. Ruder (Gary) of Ellisville, Mo; Susan C. Gephart (Stephen, deceased) of Columbus, N.J.; Robert E. Bittner II (Judy) of Palm Coast, Fl.; Dennis C. Bittner (Beth) of Jacksonville Beach, Fl.; and Thomas R. Bittner of Ellisville. She is also survived by 11 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren. She was the patient and loving mother of five, including a special needs son. As a child, Mrs. Bittner often took fishing trips with her parents in Missouri. She played many sports in high school, including basketball and softball. She pursued her love of aviation as a teen-ager when she took flying lessons at the Kansas City Municipal Airport during the early 1940's. Mrs. Bittner later met her husband Robert while ice skating. Robert was a US Naval Aviator instructor pilot at the US Naval Base in Olathe, Kansas. They were married for 67 years, prior to Robert's death in November, 2012. They lived in Hamilton, N.J. for 63 years. After raising her family, Mrs. Bittner resumed flying in the 1970's in a J-3 Piper Cub that she owned with her husband. She spent many happy years with all of her family on the family tree farm. She loved reading, was an avid sports fan and enjoyed playing tennis.

Published in St. Louis Post-Dispatch on March 19, 2013

[NI25816] Her Ancestry is carried upward thru the John Family File.

[NI25835] DIANNA MARIE DODGE, 53, of Memphis, died of an aneurysm Sunday at Methodist Hospital. Services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Forest Hill Funeral Home East with burial in Forest Hill Cemetery East. She leaves her mother, Avis Edwards of Memphis. The family requests that any memorials be sent to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

[NI25882] Kirk was born November 19, 1930 in Chicago, IL to Howard McLellan. and Kathryn (Kirkpatrick) Dodge. He was raised in suburban Chicago and later in the St. Louis area, where he graduated from Ferguson High School. Kirk graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia with a degree in Journalism, following his military service in the US Coast Guard. He married Lorinda “Linda” Mathew on June 15, 1957 in Oskaloosa, IA. They lived in Columbia and Jefferson City, MO before moving to Overland Park. Kirk spent over 50 years in the advertising business, the last 40 operating his own advertising agency. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, Alpha Delta Sigma, a national, professional advertising honorary society and Gardner Presbyterian Church. Kirk was active in coaching YMCA football and 3 & 2 baseball in the Nallwood area of Overland Park, KS, before moving his family to a wooded acreage in rural Johnson County. For many years Kirk was involved with the Kansas City running community and participated in many area triathlons. He qualified for and traveled to several National Senior Olympic events in racquetball and triathlon. Kirk was a long-time member of the Athletic Club of Overland Park. He and his wife, Linda, owned a winter home in the Tucson area. He will be missed by family and friends.

Kirk was preceded in death by his parents and sister Nancy Dodge Figon. He is survived by his wife Linda; son Kevin and wife Carolina, Accident, MD; daughter Lori and husband Robert Rose, Des Peres, MO; grandchildren Rhiannon Dodge, Jenna, Adam and Celia Rose and nieces and nephews.

[NI25923] His wife and he were first cousins with the same last name.

[NI26021] Roy served in the US Army during WW I.

[NI26106] une 1947 listed as Phyllis Ann Dodge

Sep 1955 listed as Phyllis Ann Sonnenschein

Feb 1962 listed as Phyllis Sonnenschein Rasmussen

Sep 1969 Phyllis Ann Hansen

6 May 2004 Phyllis A. Hansen

[NI26108] Lena first married Thomas LaPointe and they had a daughter, Alice LaPointe whom she brought to the marriage with John Dodge.

[NI26117] age 11 y 1m 13 ds

[NI26132] A man who always had to be busy is now still. Theodore (Ted) Dodge, 70, of Winthrop, Maine, had a tough battle with cancer, and ultimately just couldn't fight anymore. He passed peacefully surrounded by his family at Maine General Hospital in Augusta on August 25, 2017.

Ted was a quiet man, a busy man, and he left an impact on many. After his schooling, Ted proudly served in the US Navy before becoming a technician in the hi-tech industry at Digital and AMI for most of his life. One of his favorite past times was being outdoors hunting and fishing. He also enjoyed working in his workshop in his spare time and was always fixing something for someone. His ability to tear down a lawnmower engine and build it back up left most in envy. He had a gift for small engines and assisted half the town of Winthrop keeping their lawn mowers, weed whackers, and snow blowers running.

He was always there to help friends with household projects, coaching his two boys and their friends in youth baseball for the entirety of their childhood, and whatever else people asked of him. He enjoyed watching his boy’s wiffleball games in the backyard while they were growing up, watching his grandchildren swim in his pool, and always made everyone feel welcome in his home. One of his true passions was the time and dedication he had for the Monmouth Volunteer Fire Department, where he gave almost 40 years. Even when his health limited his ability to actively fight fires, you could still find Ted outside directing traffic because he couldn’t stay away from the department.

Ted is survived by his wife of 51 years, Linda Dodge and their two sons, Theodore Dodge IV of Winthrop, and Chance Dodge and his wife Jadine McCluskey-Dodge of Litchfield; sisters Terry Ridlon of Wayne, and Betty Wells of Augusta; two grandchildren Abbey and Anna Dodge of Litchfield, along with several nieces, nephews and extended family. Ted was a loving father, husband, grandfather, uncle and friend to all. As those who knew him can attest, his silence spoke volumes to all those who spent time with him.

A graveside service will be held at the Glenside Cemetery on Turkey Lane in Winthrop.

In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Monmouth Fire Department at PO Box 270, Monmouth, ME 04259. (Roberts Funeral Home and Cremation Service)

[NI26157] John L. Dodge, 66, of Dillsburg, died Thursday, Feb. 10, 2005, in Holy Spirit Hospital, East Pennsboro Township.

Born July 27, 1938, in Rensselaer, N.Y., he was the son of the late Harry H. Jr. and Marie (O'Connor) Dodge.

Mr. Dodge was a retired office manager for Gannett-Fleming Inc., Camp Hill.

He served in the U. S. Air Force during Vietnam and was a member of the American Legion, Montoursville.

Mr. Dodge is survived by his wife, Janice L. (Kitzmiller) Dodge; two sons, Timothy Dodge of Chesapeake, Va., and David Dodge of New Cumberland; two daughters, Susan Jones of Elizabethtown and Wendy Dodge of Montoursville; a brother, Richard L. Dodge of Harrisburg; a sister, Judy Jones of Missouri; 10 grandchildren, three nieces, two nephews, three great-nieces and three great-nephews.

Services will be held at 1 p.m. Monday in Cocklin Funeral Home Inc., 30 N. Chestnut St. Dillsburg, with the Rev. Robert Conrad officiating. Burial with military honors will be in the Rolling Green Cemetery, Camp Hill.

A viewing will be held noon to 1 p.m. Monday in the funeral home.

Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association, 1517 Cedar Cliff Drive, Camp Hill, PA 17011.

[NI26220] Jack was united in marriage to Francy Haberling-Morgan June 16, 1958 and to this marriage one child was born, Kim Morgan-Palecek.

In Jack’s early career he traveled cross country working on the pipeline where he met Francy in South Dakota. Jack continued his work for Joy’s Insulation in South Dakota and later Spangler Insulation in Belleville. From there Jack worked on the Rock Island Railroad in Belleville as a switchman and later the Kyle Railroad. He continued his railroad career by moving to Huron, South Dakota and working on the Dakota Minnesota Eastern Railroad as an engineer where he retired in 1999.

Jack was an avid 8-Ball pool player. Widely recognized not only for his pool skills but his personality. Even being recognized in the South Dakota 8-Ball Hall of Fame. Jack never knew a stranger no matter what state he was in there was always someone he knew. Jack will be greatly missed by his other pool sharks and in Heaven, Jack will never scratch on the 8 ball again.

Jack was preceded in death by his parents and sisters Arletha Taylor, Fredda Awalt-Lash and brother Jerry Morgan.

He is survived by his wife Francy, of the home, and Kim (Cody) Palecek of Munden and 7 grandchildren: Tatum (Brad) Couture, Domonik (Clark) Siemsen, & Gretta (Jeremy) Snapp, all of Belleville, Molly Elizabeth (Chris) Sederlin, Junction City, Little Cody (Megan) Palecek, Duke & Dalton Palecek, of Munden.
Jack was then blessed with 11 Great-Grandchildren, Gunnar & Gannon Couture, Maddix & Zelma Siemsen, Frankie & Farmer Snapp, Gabbi, Addi, & Maddie Sederlin and Cody Hank & Harper Palecek. Jack is also survived by 3 sisters, Bert Sasser, Cheryl Eickmann & (Alice) Amanda Honeycut as well as lifelong friend Francis (Marsha) Esslinger and also many other dear relatives & countless friends.

[NI26221] Anchorage Daily News March 31, 2010

Longtime Alaskan Benjamin R. Taylor, 72, died March 27, 2010, surrounded by his cherished wife, beloved family and dear friends, after a lengthy illness, which culminated in pulmonary and kidney failure. A funeral was April 6, 2010 at Anchorage Church of Christ, 2700 DeBarr Road, with the Rev. Mike Shero officiating. A visitation was held until the time of the service.

Ben was born Oct. 1, 1937, in Colorado to Orbrey and Alice Taylor. He was a vibrant man who lived life to the fullest. If asked how he was doing, his response was always, "Fantastic! Gets any better I could scream." An avid outdoorsman, he loved snowmachining, four-wheeling, hunting and fishing. He retired from the U.S. Postal Service as an accountant after 23 years.

He is survived by his loving wife of 14 years, Pattye; sons, Ben Cater and Mark (Alisha) Cater; grandchildren, Alex, Taylor, Hunter and Logan Cater; daughter, Annie (Michael) Vasakis; and grandchildren, Abbey Dodds, Joseph Vasakis and Nikolas Vasakis. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that remembrances be made to the Midnight Sun Bible Camp, care of the Anchorage Church of Christ, 2700 DeBarr Road, Anchorage 99508. Arrangements are with Alaskan Heritage Memorial Chapel, Anchorage, www.akheritage.com. Visit the online memorial at legacy.com

[NI26239] White was her married name when she Married Claarence Harland Dodge,

[NI26249] Burdette Signor, aged 66 years, who had spent his entire life in this county, died yesterday at his home near Besemer. He was a native of Spencer. He had been ill with both pneumonia and measles.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Georgia Signor, and a son, Edison Signor, both of Besemer; also four brothers and three sisters.
The funeral will be held from the residence tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. B. Frank Tobey, pastor of the Danby Methodist Episcopal Church, officiating. A second service on Sunday and burial will be at Spencer. - ITHACA DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 1, 1918

[NI26256] Doris was born on September 16, 1922, the daughter of Ernest and Frances (Atwood) Maughan in Minot, ND. She was raised and educated in Minot, graduating from Minot High School in 1940. She attended Minot State Teachers College before going to work for Dr. Halvorsen in Minot.

On September 5, 1953, she was united in marriage to Miles "Mike" Everett Common in Minot, ND. In 1955, their only son, Mike was born. The family made their home in Minot where in 1963, Doris started to work at Sears Roebuck and Company in Minot. She worked part-time at Sears until her retirement in 1989. Mike died May 20, 1995. Following his death she continued to live in Minot.

Doris was a member of the All Saints Episcopal Church, the All Saints Evening Guild, Laureate Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi for over 50 years, a lifetime member of the Elkettes, the Minot Retriever Club, in which she was the field trial secretary from 1956-1996, the Shrine Auxiliary, in which she was active selling toys at the Shrine Circus.

Doris was a doll collector, enjoyed working in her yard and was a fan of the Minot High boys swim team. She was an active lady, who had great faith. Her grandson, Garrett, was the "twinkle in her eye" and she could be found at any event he participated in. She will be missed by all that knew her.

She is survived by: Son: Mike (Shari) Common, Minot; grandson, Garrett Common, Minot, brother-in-law, Keith Common, Denver, CO. Numerous nieces, nephews and cousins also survive.

Doris was preceded in death by her parents, husband, brother Robert, sister Phyllis, and a niece, Mary Jane.

[NI26262] Married first, to James Andrew Judd, whom she divorced on 17 Nov 1945
Married second, on 31 Dec 1945 at Imlay City, Lapeer, County, Michigan to William Woodrow Dodge

[NI26305] The death of Patrick Summers occurred at his home, 1026 Farnam St., at 8:30 o'clock last evening from old age. He was 84 years, one month and two days old. He was born in County Slingo, Ireland, came to this country in 1851, and settled in Albany, N. Y. where he lived two years. Then he came West and settled in Davenport, and the city has been his home ever since. He was an employee of the old Rock Island railroad for 45 years, first being with the old M. & M. road. For the last 15 years of his railroad life, up to his retirement three years ago, he was flagman at the Perry Street crossing.

He is survived by his wife, two sons and one daughter. The sons are Hugh of Sioux City and Andrew of Chicago, and the daughter, Mrs. Joe Briggs of Cripple Creek, Col. The funeral will be on Monday morning from the residence at 9 o'clock, with services at Sacred Heart cathedral. Interment will be at Saint Marguerite's cemetery.

Davenport Daily Republican, Sunday, February 3, 1901

[NI26348] Marjorie A. Dodge of 608 Conifer Drive, Baldwinsville, died of cancer Wednesday in Crouse Irving Memorial Hospital after a brief illness.

Mrs. Dodge was the widow of Leon B. Dodge who died in 1968.

She was born in Boston, Mass. and lived in Baldwinsville 20 years. She was a retired employee of the Metropolitan Water Board in Clay. She attended Community Wesleyan Church, Baldwinsville.

Surviving are a sister, Isabelle Devin of Baldwinsville; and a grandson, Charles Hamlin of White Plains.

Graveside services are at 2 p.m. today at White Chapel Memory Gardens, DeWitt.

[NI26391] ARENA - Alice F. Dodge went to be with the Lord Friday, Feb. 17, 2017, at the Greenway Manor Nursing Home. Alice was born Oct. 3, 1925, in Black Earth, to Ralph and Anna Dodge. She graduated from Arena High School in 1943 and from Northwestern Bible College in 1948. Alice worked as an accounts receivable manager at Rayovac in Madison until her retirement. She was a member of Bethany Evangelical Free Church and a past committee member for the East Side Christian Women's Club.

Alice was well known for her beautiful roses and daylilies grown in her large garden. But her greatest joy was being a second mother to her two nieces and second grandmother to her four-great nieces. She is survived by her sister, Ruth Parrott of Arena; her nieces, Karen (Mark) Kirby of Lakeland, Fla., and Pam (Dale) Fargen of Arena; her great-nieces, Amanda (Dale) McCaw and Meghan (Kevin) Streets both of Lakeland, Fla., Alison (Steven) Daughters of Middleton and Ana (Kevin) Malmros of Sauk City. She was preceded in death by her parents, Ralph and Anna Dodge.

A memorial service will be held at the RICHARDSON-STAFFORD FUNERAL HOME in Spring Green, on Friday, Feb. 24, 2017, at 11 a.m., Pastor Michael Gormican will conduct the service. The family would like to thank the Greenway Manor staff for their wonderful care during the years Alice lived there. Online condolences available at www.staffordfuneralhomes.com. The Richardson-Stafford Funeral Home is assisting the family with the arrangements

[NI26398] Posted on Friday, 17th February 2017 | Pleasant Grove
Gerald W Dodge (Jerry) 58, of Oregon, Texas, and Utah passed away Wednesday February 15, 2017. Jerry is the precious son of Lee W Dodge and Pearl Nelson Dodge. He was born at six months gestation (fifth of six children), a tiny baby less than 3 lbs. in Medford Oregon. A small child growing up weak and scrawny, who knew he’d become a great athlete? In his early years he grew up in an earthly heaven in Yamhill, Oregon where they owned a farm. His mother said he was such a happy child and would play so contented all day with his army men, and tractors outside in the dirt. He would have a deep affection for Oregon, especially the country all his life. When Jerry was a freshman in High School he had a PPI with his Bishop (His Dad) and told him his physical goal was to become an Oregon State Wrestling Champion. Though holding back a slight giggle his father helped him chart a course to the attainment of his goals. They would forge an incredibly close bond as his father supported him, drove him to every available match and tournament throughout the western United States. He would clock Jerry’s runs and Jerry would tap on his father’s window and yell, “Time, time, time?!?”, and Lee would holler back the answer. Lee worked in Portland and would mark a spot between Portland and their house in the country and he would tell Jerry when to start running, and if he was in the designated spot when his father drove by after work Jerry would be picked up for a ride back home. If he wasn’t there…he had to turn around and run home. This gave Jerry his first tastes of focus and mental toughness, and built his stamina. Jerry has always enjoyed a very close bond and relationship with his siblings and their spouses. He was a loving and devoted uncle to a plethora of adoring nieces and nephews who were asked on many occasions by him, “Who is your BEST buddy?” so one of the young children began lovingly calling him ‘Uncle Buddy’ and it stuck. He is still referred to by the family as ‘Uncle Buddy’ because he is everyone’s BEST buddy, still. Jerry went from having trouble doing a single push-up to Oregon State Wrestling Champion at 136 lbs in 1976. He then went on to become a National Champion. Highly recruited,, he settled his sights on BYU and was a WAC Champion. He won the Olympic Trials in 1980, the year the United States boycotted the Olympics in Moscow. He coached many young wrestlers and had a personal belief that wrestling built character, strength and mental toughness that made great husbands, fathers, and successful providers and he was oh so right. He loved that the sport of wrestling allowed young men of any size to become great athletes.
He met the love of his life, and eternal companion Sandra Joy Beaujeu and Heavenly Father blessed them with an especially close relationship, and a true eternal love. They were sealed for time and all eternity in the Salt Lake City Temple on the 23rd of June, 1981. They have four children, Maria Christine, Andraya Camille, Cassandra Joy, and Jered Lee Dodge. They enjoyed music and joy in their home and three of his children were Texas State Champions in Voice, Clarinet, and first chair All-State Choir. He wasn’t much of a music man, but he was tutored by his children and supported them, taught them to set goals, and attended all their performances. He loved them deeply. Jerry was called home to his Heavenly Father from an accident after heart surgery. Our hearts are broken, but our faith is not. He worked in the newspapers industry as a Circulation Manager, as did Sandi. They worked side by side 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Days off were extremely rare for him. His work ethic was legendary. He was a walker of the talk. Jerry was a friend to the down trodden, employed the unemployable, helped those in need, and fought for the underdog. When he saw a need, he quietly went about doing good in the shadows, not being one to call attention to himself. He was humble. He loved his Heavenly Father and was especially grateful for the Atonement of our Savior Jesus Christ. He knew personally what Jesus Christ means to each of us.
He leaves to mourn his passing his beloved wife, Sandi, their children, and his brothers and sisters; Chris and Dolores Zahlmann (OR), Don and Pauline Dodge (WA), Jim and Linda Tracy (UT), Charlie and Lori Dodge, and a vast number of nieces, nephews, friends, and collegues. He is preceded in death by his parents, and sister Patty Dodge. We love this man. Not passed tense ‘loved’, but forever tense.
Funeral services will be held Tuesday, February 21, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. in the Stillwater LDS Ward Chapel, 136 W Summerhill Dr., Saratoga Springs, Utah with a viewing from 9:30 – 10:45 a.m. prior to the service. Family and friends may also attend a viewing Monday evening February 20, 2017 from 6 -8 p.m. at the Church. Interment will be in the American Fork City Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family at www.olpinmortuary.com.

[NI26448] Edward Hathaway Dodge, 86, of Waverly, Ohio, passed away Thursday, February 26, 2015.

Born December 12, 1928, in Marlboro, Middlesex County Massachusetts, he was the son of LeRoy A. and Gladys H. Dodge.

Mr. Dodge was a graduate of Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, and the Bangor Theological Seminary in Bangor, Maine. He was an ordained minister of the United Church of Christ and served churches of that denomination for forty years, including Sixth Street Congregational Church in Auburn, Maine; West Roxbury Congregational Church in West Roxbury, Massachusetts; Southwick Congregational Church in Southwick, Massachusetts; First Congregational Church in Rialto, California; and First Congregational United Church of Christ in Tucson, Arizona, from which he retired in 1993. Mr. Dodge also served as chaplain and officer in the United States Navy from 1961 to 1963.

In 1952 he married the former Charlene Meisner, daughter of the Rev. John and Mrs. John Meisner of Dover-Foxcoft, Maine. Mrs. Dodge died of a brain tumor in 2001. Mr. Dodge retired to Bristol Village in 2001 and in 2003 married Anna Allen of Bristol Village. He leaves his wife Anna and three stepchildren, Joanna Allen and Judy Allen, both of Bar Harbor, Maine, and James Allen of Lake Villa, Illinois.

A memorial service was held on March 3rd in Traditions at Bristol Village.

Arrangements are under the care of the Boyer Cremation Services located in Waverly, Ohio.

[NI26478] Obituary
Amherst Bee
Amherst, Erie County, New York
Thursday, March 12, 1908
DODGE.--The sad intelligence reached our village early on the morning of Tuesday, March 10, 1908, of the death of Mrs. Wayne Dodge, which occurred at her late home in Buffalo at 10:00 o'clock Monday night. Although Mrs. Dodge had been under the care of a physician for some time, her condition up to a short period before her death was not alarming, and recovery was expected. During Saturday and Sunday the symptoms changed rapidly, and Monday the physician pronounced the case hopeless. A telegram was sent to her daughter, Miss Mary Dodge, who was attending Mt. Holyoke College. She left for home immediately, but upon her arrival her mother had passed from this life into that of a higher one. Lillie Zent Dodge was the daughter of Philip J. and Hannah W. Zent. She was born in this village October 13, 1853, Her girlhood days were spent at the family home here. On October 3, 1873, Rev. J. B. Wright performed the ceremony that united her in marriage to her surviving husband, Mr. Wayne Dodge. Eleven children were born to them all of whom are living with the exception of one, as follows: Miss Louise Dodge, Mr. Philip W. Dodge, Alvan (deceased), James, Mary, Jeanette, Frank, Charles, Alice, Lillian and Harry. This happy home has been invaded. The mother's life work has been done faithfully and well. She is at rest, and we could not ask to have it done otherwise. The hearts of all are now throbbing in deepest sympathy for the bereaved family who have been reared under the loving influence of a devoted and Christian mother. The memory of her faithful love and care will linger in their fond hearts forever. Mrs. Dodge was a faithful member of the Methodist Episcopal church, in which belief her family had been raised, all of whom are devoted to their religion. That Mrs. Dodge had a large circle of friends was evidenced by the large assemblage who gathered the Wednesday following her death to witness the last sad duty to be performed. The floral offerings were beautiful and in great abundance, coming from friends with sympathetic hearts for those in grief. After the Methodist Episcopal service at the late home by Rev. Davis of Trinity, the remains were taken to Forest Lawn Cemetery, where, with a brief prayer by Rev. Johnson, and amid the sobs and tears of the weeping ones left to mourn, the faithfull, the devoted mother, the kind and thoughtful friend, was laid away to await the resurrection of the jus

[NI26488] PFC Leland Edwin Dodge Michigaan Sep 21 1930 - Oct 28 1973

[NI26536] Loretta Nadine (Dodge) Shreve, 68, of Oakland died on Monday, June 25, 2012 at Monongalia General Hospital in Morgantown, WV. Born on July 26, 1943 in Cranesville, WV, she was the daughter of the late Ronald E. and Ruth E. (Frantz) Dodge. Loretta worked in housekeeping at Dennett Road Manor Nursing Home. She was a member of the Shady Dale Chapel. She is survived by her husband of 50 years, Robert Shreve of Oakland; a son, Chris Shreve and wife Bridget of Oakland; two granddaughters, Brittany Shreve and Dianna Nadine Shreve, both of Oakland; three sisters, Carolyn Sanders of Terra Alta, WV, Kathy Armstrong of Terra Alta, WV, Betty Brown of Martinsburg, WV; a brother, Richard Dodge of Terra Alta, WV; and a number of nieces and nephews. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister, Wilda Faye Dodge and a brother, Donnie Dodge. Friends will be received at the Burdock-Fredlock Funeral Home, P.A., 21 N 2nd St., Oakland on Wednesday, June 27th from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 PM. A funeral service will be held at the Shady Dell Chapel on Shady Dell Road on Thursday, June 28th at 11 AM with Rev. Don Uphole officiating. Interment will follow in Beckman Cemetery. Memorials may be made to the Shady Dell Chapel, Shady Dell Rd., Oakland, MD 21550

****************************************************From the Burdock-Fredlock Funeral Home Site***********************************************************

[NI26560] Bittner, Robert Edward of Ellisville, MO, formerly of Hamilton, Township, NJ, on November 20, 2012. Robert was born on January 3, 1921 in Trenton, NJ, to the late William and Margaret Bittner. Robert is also preceded in death by his siblings. Beloved husband of Betty Jean Bittner (nee Dodge); dear father of Karen A. (Gary) Ruder of Ellisville, MO, Susan C. (the late Stephen) Gephart of Jacksonville, NJ, Robert E. (Judy) Bittner, II of Palm Coast, FL, Dennis C. (Beth) Bittner of Jacksonville, FL, and Thomas R. Bittner of Ellisville, MO. He is also survived by 11 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Mr. Bittner and his identical twin, Thomas, obtained their flying licenses when they were sixteen years old at the Central-Jersey Airport near Windsor. Robert flew for Penn Central Airlines prior to World War II. He then proudly served as a U.S. Naval Aviator during World War II, instructing pilots at the Olathe, Kansas Naval Air Base. After WWII, he continued his flying career, retiring from United Airlines in 1973. After his retirement, he continued to pursue his love of flying by instructing and flying his J-3 Cub and Waco UPF7. He had many happy years with all of his family and enjoyed his hobbies of woodworking and taking care of his tree farm. Special thanks to Heartfelt Hands Senior Services and Mercy Hospice. Services: Funeral from the SCHRADER Funeral Home and Crematory, 14960 Manchester Road at Holloway, Ballwin, Wednesday, 9:00 a.m. to St. Alban Roe Catholic Church, Wildwood for 9:30 a.m. Mass. Interment Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Ameri can Diabetes Association or The Wounded Warrior Project. Visitation Tuesday 4-8 p.m.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) - Sunday, November 25, 2012.

[NI26562] THE POTTER ENTERPRISE COUDERSPORT PENNSYLVANIA 10 NOV 1932 THUR PAGE 2 EDGAR C. WOODHOUSE Edgar Charles Woodhouse, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Woodhouse, passed away at the Cresson Sanitarium, Saturday evening, October 21st having an illness of several months. He was born in Blackwells, Pa., December 7, 1888, and came to Galeton at an early age with his parents. For – years he was employed on the – S. railroad, and later conducted - sales and repair shop here. The deceased was popular with both old and young and had a large circle of friends who mourn his untimely death. He is survived by his father and mother; one brother Royce, of – Four sisters, Mrs. W. J. Reingate, Galeton, Mrs. J. H. Havens, Mrs. – Fee, Coudersport; Mrs. Frank ----, Olean. Funeral services were held at his parent’s home on School Street, Wednesday at 1.00 P.M., Rev. Paul Sappie, officiating. Burial was made in Wild--, cemetery, Williamsport, and the --- at the grave were in charge of --- Lodge No 6002, F. & A. M., which the deceased was a member. The out of town relatives who attended the funeral were Mr. and Mrs – Dewey, Mr. and Mrs. Olen Hill, ---; Mr. and Merton Dodge, --- Edgar of Wellsboro; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lamont, Mr. and Mrs. --- Woodhouse, of Olean; Mr. and Mrs. – H. Havens, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. -- of Coudersport.- Galeton, Leader ---

[NI26597] Sylvanus Kelley served 95 days in the war of 1812 in Capttain William Shermaans Company of the New York Militia, in the infzntryregiment commasanded by Lieut Colonel Ezra Post, from 01Sep 1814 through 10 dec 1814. He was discharged at Harlem Heights, New York. Sylvanus died on 28 Feb 1863. THe facts were established by H. D. Brown, Son-in-law Samuel F. Powell ( Husband of daughter of Eliza Jane) and brother-in-law Amos Dodge (Mary Dodge Kelley's youngest brother.

Mary Dodge Kelley widow of Sylvanus Kelley, was awarded a widow's pension of $8.00 per monthon 24 July 1874: "Admitted july 24, 1874 to a pension of $8.00 per month from February 14, 1871" No pension had been received by Mary Prior to 1874.

[NI26638] Buried 28 Jun 1895; 78 years of age.

MRS. L. C. HYDE, aged 77 years, died at Beloit very suddenly. She lived in Kenosha before Mr. Hyde engaged in Banking in Beloit over forty years ago. Mr. Hyde's daughter, MRS. W. M.. BRITTAIN, and husband, are in the East, having gone to Andover, Mass, where their daughter, MISS ALICE, graduated from Abbot academy a few days ago. (The Weekly Wisconsin ([Milwaukee, Wisconsin] 29 Jun 1895, Saturday, Page 7.) (Accessed 22 August 2015.)
----
A Julia Hyde is listed in cemetery record as having plot 1st-10-15,16 with burial date of 1 Jan 1895. The above Mrs. L. C. Hyde is listed with plot 1st 10-14,6 with a burial date of 28 Jun 1895, aged 78. Apparently, Julia Hyde (1) and Mrs. Julia (2) L. C. Hyde were the same person, even though the cemetery database listed each as a separate burial in a different plot.

In checking census records and city directories, I found only one extant Julia A. Hyde. Therefore, assumption is for cemetery or database error. Julia Hyde (1) is now deleted 9/22/2015.

There are identical problems in records noted to date with Clara Hyde Brittan, Julia A. Hyde, Louis H. Brittan, and Walter Britton, Roy K. Rockwell, and Alice Rockwell, all of which have been corrected.

(Mrs. will remain in her name for clarification.)

[NI26639] Cild less than 1 Year old.

[NI26775] David T. Dodge Obituary

North Stonington, Conn. - David T. Dodge, beloved husband of Ellen Dodge, of North Stonington, Conn., died Thursday, Jan. 4, 2018 in Providence, R.I., from complications of Alzheimer's.

Born in Hanover, N.H. in 1940, he grew up in Stonington, Conn., where he attended Pine Point School. He graduated from St. Paul's School, Concord, N.H., and, after a stint at the University of Chicago, graduated from Columbia University in New York. He and Ellen moved to North Stonington in 1969 to a house in the corner of a 10-acre field at the end of a half-mile dirt road. The place drew a community of friends with children and dogs. David dubbed it Dogfight. He worked at the Mystic Seaport in the 1970s and for the Connecticut Commission on the Arts in the 1980s. David was a philosopher, photographer, steam boat engineer, motorcycle wrangler, model airplane builder and flyer (including the caper in Grand Central Station), super-smart and a smart aleck, irascible, sweet, creative, funny, a collector of all things funky, a wise and adoring father with a highly tuned balderdash meter, and a true-blue husband.

David is survived by his wife, his brother, Nathaniel, of Avondale R.I., and his sister, Elisabeth (Poo) White and family, Terry, Charles and Annie White and her family, Ken Rampino, Maisie and Isabelle; as well as his daughter-in-law, Molly Gray, of Warren, Maine. He was predeceased by his son, Matthew Dodge; and his parents, John E. Dodge and Carlota S. Dodge.

[NI26841] Thomas S. Dodge, 77, of Keokuk, IA, died Tuesday, December 2, 2014 at his home.

He was born June 24, 1937 in Burlington, IA, the son of Raymond and Vieva Dodge. Tom was united in marriage to Jane Ensminger in February of 1967. She survives.

Other survivors include one son, Chris Dodge and his wife Joy of Iowa City, IA, one brother, Raymond Dodge, Jr. of Keokuk, one sister, Sandra Smith and her husband Melvin of Keokuk, one niece and two nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents and one sister, Joyce.

Thomas graduated from Keokuk Senior High with the Class of 1955.

Tom was a Veteran of the United States Army. His years in the Army were very important to him and he was proud of his honorable and faithful service to his country. Throughout the years he took time to reconnect with his Army buddies.

He had been employed at Steel Casting and Sheller Globe in Keokuk and Armour Dial in Ft. Madison.

Tom loved to fish and Prices Creek was his favorite place to throw a line. He also enjoyed watching the deer. He was an avid St. Louis Cardinal and Iowa Hawkeye fan. Tom made sure not to miss a game and he also made sure his family and friends didn’t miss any games by passing out schedules to everyone.

Graveside services with Military Rites will be held at 1 p.m., Monday at the Keokuk National Cemetery.

Visitation will be held prior to the service on Monday from 11:45 a.m. – 12:45 a.m. at the Vigen Memorial Home in Keokuk.

Memorials may be made to the Heritage Center in Keokuk.

[NI26895]

BAY CITY, MI - A long-time facet of the Bay County aviation community has died.

Douglas C. Dodge, 70, of Bay City died on Wednesday, March 24, 2021 after a courageous battle with cancer, according to his obituary.



According to his obituary, Dodge was born in Bay City on January 27, 1951 and he was a 1969 graduate of T.L. Handy High School. He married Jeannine Fritz on October 6, 2001.



Dodge worked for General Motors and was most recently the Airport Manager for James Clements Airport; a position he held for the past 32 years. Referred to as a talented and gifted pilot by his obituary, Dodge was also the owner of Acro Specialties and was a well-known crop duster for farmers, especially in the Munger area.



Dodge was a world-class aerobatic pilot, said his obituary, who flew in numerous air shows and was known for his mechanical and innovative thoughts and abilities. Described as artistic and intelligent, Dodge was able to build from scratch many of the planes he flew in the airshows and was a proud member of the Experimental Aircraft Association, International Council of Air Shows, and Valley Aero Club, said his obituary.



====================

Obituary for Douglas C. Dodge

Douglas C. Dodge, 70, of Bay City, our generous, humble, strong-willed, and sometimes feisty husband, father, "Papa Doug," son, brother, uncle, and most loyal friend passed away on Wednesday, March 24, 2021 after a courageous battle with cancer.

Doug was born in Bay City on January 27, 1951, the son of Donald Dodge and the former Norine Anne Frank. He was a 1969 graduate of T.L. Handy High School. While working at Vescios Supermarket during his high school years, he happened to meet the former Jeannine Fritz. They reconnected later in life and were united in marriage on October 6, 2001. Doug worked for General Motors and was most recently the Airport Manager for James Clements Airport; a position he held for the past 32 years. A devoted and gifted pilot, Doug was also the owner of Acro Specialties and was a well-known crop duster for farmers, especially in the Munger area. Doug was a world class aerobatic pilot, who flew in numerous air shows and was known for his mechanical and innovative thoughts and abilities. Artistic and intelligent, Doug was able to build from scratch many of the planes he flew in the airshows and was a proud member of the Experimental Aircraft Association, International Council of Air Shows, and Valley Aero Club. His humorous and generous ways will forever live on.

Doug leaves to carry on his legacy, his wife of nearly 20 years, Jeannine Dodge; parents, Donald (Carole) Dodge and Norine Treadway; children, Megan King, David Jankowiak (Ellen Burley), Kerri (Ryan) Moore, and Kelly (Chris) Carque; grandchildren, Erin, Kevin, Aidan, Mollie, Emerson, and Sunny; siblings, DeeEllen (Russell) Hawkins and Rebecca Dodge; step-siblings, David (Margaret) Treadway, Karen (John) Roth, and Kevin (Susan) Treadway; brother-in-law, Thomas Fritz, along with many nieces, nephews, and friends. Doug was welcomed Home to Heaven by his stepfather, Dr. Gaylord Treadway and his in-laws, Kenneth and Cecilia Fritz.

Doug’s family will be present to receive visitors on Monday, March 29, 2021 from 2:00 PM until 8:00 PM at Skorupski Family Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 821 N. Pine Rd., between Ridge & Center. Interment will be held privately in St. Patrick Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be directed to the wishes of the family. Expressions of sympathy may be shared with the family online at www.skorupskis.com.


Dodge’s family will be present to receive visitors on Monday, March 29, 2021, from 2 - 8 p.m. at Skorupski Family Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 821 N. Pine Rd., between Ridge & Center. Interment will be held privately in St. Patrick Cemetery, according to Skorupski’s. Memorial contributions may be directed to the wishes of the family and expressions of sympathy may be shared with the family online at www.skorupskis.com.

[NF0009] MA Marriage VR

[NF0069] Divorce

[NF0091] Divorce

[NF0094] Divorce

[NF0097] Divorce

[NF0098] Divorce

[NF0100] Divorce

[NF0263] Divorce

[NF0290] Divorce

[NF0293] Divorce

[NF0303] Annulment

[NF0417] Divorce

[NF0422] Divorce

[NF0481] Burt Northop friend of Burton was his best man. They spent honeymoon in
the Adirondacks. They planned to start their home at Glen Park.

[NF0508] Coose her parentws 40th anniversary for her wedding

[NF0535] Married at the Middle Road Congregational Church in Rutland

[NF0752] Divorce

[NF0758] Divorce

[NF0767] Divorce

[NF0779] Divorce

[NF0826] The Maine Marriages online Data base gives the marriage of George Treagy to Addie M. Dodge as occurring on 02 July 1798, both parties of Lubec, while "VR of Eastport Sentinel" says it occurred on 17 July in Dennsville. Pending consultation of the Original marriage record, it would appear that the Maine online database is probably the date of intentions. (copied from notes of David M. James)

[NF0841] Divorce

[NF0863] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF0866] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF0879] Marriage
Date: 12 SEP 1816

[NF0955] Divorce

[NF0957] Divorce

[NF0962] Divorce

[NF0992] Divorce

[NF1018] Divorce

[NF1025] Divorce

[NF1101] Divorce

[NF1183] Divorce

[NF1189] Marriage
Date: 11 NOV 1956

[NF1205] Divorce

[NF1206] Divorce

[NF1365] Divorce

[NF1595] Divorce

[NF1630] Divorce

[NF1631] Divorce

[NF1636] Divorce

[NF1637] Divorce

[NF1650] Divorce

[NF1671] Rose Bay Church of Christ

[NF1701] Divorce

[NF1771] Divorce

[NF1781] Divorce

[NF1846] Divorce

[NF1851] Divorce

[NF1854] Divorce

[NF1855] Divorce

[NF1856] Divorce

[NF1868] Divorce

[NF1872] Divorce

[NF1882] Divorce

[NF1921] Divorce

[NF1924] Divorce

[NF1925] Divorce

[NF1926] Divorce

[NF1929] Divorce

[NF1930] Divorce

[NF1932] Divorce

[NF1933] Divorce

[NF1939] Divorce

[NF1941] Divorce

[NF2046] Divorce

[NF2128] Divorce

[NF2153] Trinty Parish Church

[NF2223] Presbyterian Church

[NF2234] Divorce

[NF2258] Divorce

[NF2262] Divorce

[NF2271] Married by Rev. William H. King D.D.

[NF2281] Divorce

[NF2521] Divorce

[NF2545] Divorce

[NF2630] Divorce

[NF2646] Some records say they were Married on Block Island and then moved to
Colchester, New London County, Connecticut.

[NF2721] Divorce

[NF2799] Divorce

[NF2814] Divorce

[NF2908] Divorce

[NF3151] Marriage record can be found in Sycamore, DeKalb Counry, Illinois

[NF3169] Divorce

[NF3199] Divorce

[NF3210] Marriage
Date: 16 SEP 1885
Place: Penn Twp, Cass County, Michigan

[NF3229] Divorce

[NF3230] Divorce

[NF3290] Divorce

[NF3324] Divorce

[NF3341] Divorce

[NF3343] Divorce

[NF3507] Oswego Co

[NF3508] Oswego Co

[NF3511] Oswego Co

[NF3528] Divorce

[NF3529] Divorce

[NF3534] Divorce

[NF3649] Divorce

[NF3653] Divorce

[NF3730] Divorce

[NF3938] St. Theresa's Church

[NF3939] St. Vincent's church

[NF3956] St. Vincent's Church at Buffalo, Erie County New York
Divorced in September 1996

[NF3969] Divorce

[NF3984] Divorce

[NF3985] Divorce

[NF3986] Divorce

[NF4091] Marriage
Date: 1 DEC 1834
Place: Islesboro, Waldo County, Maine

[NF4150] Divorce

[NF4398] Divorce

[NF4436] "I, William Henry Burns, a Minister hereby certify that Mr. Ern est Q.,
Heartt and Miss Jessie M. West were united in Marriage b y me at, Chicago
in the County of Cook and State of Illinois, o n the 30th day, of October
1907 "., , (signed) William Henry Bur ns, A Minister

[NF4440] Lois M. Moder, Probate Deputy Clerk for Union County Probate Cou rt,,
replied to my letter of inquiry dated 8 Feb 1999. She stat ed ,"We, have
a marriage record for a James K.Dodge and a Sara h Thompson where, they
applied for a marriage license on Septemb er 30, 1840. But the, return
was never made so we do not know i f they were ever married. We, have no
other marriage record fo r a J. K. Dodge in this time period."

[NF4469] Marriage license, State of Illinois, Champaign County. signed b y M.,
Powell, Justice of the Peace and J. W. Shuck, County Clerk

[NF4484] Marriage
Date: ABT 1880
Place: New Shoreham, Newport County, Rhode Island

[NF4523] This information from D.W. Thompson family bible.

[NF4556] William Daniel was born "Daniel William" but had his name change d,
legally at age 21.

[NF4639] Divorce

[NF4650] Divorce

[NF4714] Divorce

[NF4716] Divorce

[NF4718] Divorce

[NF4719] Divorce

[NF4878] Obituary for Mrs. Elizabeth Delaney from the Oneida Daily Dispatch newspaper dated 8/28/1962
Obituary for George W. Dodge from the Oneida Daily Dispatch newspaper dated 5/1940

[NF4962] Certifidcate #5457

[NF5229] Divorce

[NF5230] Divorce

[NF5412] Divorce

[NF5420] Divorce

[NF5421] Divorce

[NF5481] Marriage was at the home of her Uncle P. A. Richards.

[NF5882] Published in the Brooklyn Eagle News on Sept 10 1853

[NF6019] Louis DeGUIRE could have married Marie DODGE???????????

[NF6024] Married 5 Jun 1849 by John e. MURPHY, Minister of the Gospel.

[NF6025] Marriage Bonds of Hardin County, KY 1792-1812 Compiled by Mary Harrel
Stancliff

Page 19 John DODGE and Theodicia DODGE. Surety, Richard WINCHESTER.
Bond dated July 30, 1811, married July 24, 1812, by Lewis CHASTAIN.

[NF6027] Married 17 Mar 1836 by Alexander REYNOLDS, Minister of the Gospel.

[NF6029] Married 14 Sep 1837 by Alexander REYNOLDS, Minister of the Gospel

[NF6030] Married 11 Dec 1845 by Elijah DAVIDSON, Minister of the Gospel.

[NF6057] The place of marriage might have been St. Charles, MO????????

[NF6102] Hardin County, KY Marriages 1815-1840 Page 11
Josiah DODGE to Mrs. Ann COX on 19 Jul 1826. Married by Geo. L. ROGERS,
Preacher.

[NF6103] Hardin County, KY Marriages 1815-1840 page 11

Josiah DODGE to Mrs. Deborah WADLEY on 15 Mar 1841. Married by James
DAUGHERTY, Preacher.

[NF6111] DALLAS COUNTY NEWS, Adel, Iowa, Wednesday, August 1, 1877, Vol. 5, No.
37, Page 3, Column 6
Married ----- At the residence of the bride's father, on Sunday,
July 22, by Rev. J. G. GRAHAM, Mr. J. O. ANDREWS, a rising young
attorney, and Miss Lizzie DODGE, eldest daughter of Dr. C. M. DODGE, all
of Van Meter.
The event was one of the most pleasant of the season. The bride was
dressed in rich bridal costume, becoming the occasion. The bridegroom
being equally attired, the couple presented an elegant appearance. A
large number of relatives and friends were present to witness the
ceremony. after the usual congratulations, dinner was served up in grand
style, and was bountifully partaken of by all. Then followed a pleasant
sociable, all present enjoying themselves extremely well. After wishing
the bride and bridegroom prosperity and happiness, the friends retired to
their respective home.

[NF6136] Divorce

[NF6267] Divorce

[NF6612] Marriage
Date: 25 MAY 1835
Place: New Shoreham, Newport County, Rhode Island

[NF6698] Some Records Place this Marriage at Colchester, Connecticut.

[NF6777] The name on the marriage record is spelled Wiles but is the same person as John Willis

[NF6780] Divorce

[NF6806] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF6807] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF6809] Marriage
Date: 23 JUL 1832

[NF6813] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF6870] Divorce

[NF6919] married at the Immaculate conception Church in Gilbertville, Blackhawk County, Iowa

[NF6920] Central Christian Church in Blackhawk, Waterloo County, Iowa

[NF6933] Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =
Marriage record from Married on Block Island, The Marriage =

[NF7265] Never Married

[NF7310] Married a 2nd time 1 oct 1964.

[NF7319] Note: this couple originally married by Justice of the Peace 11 Aug 2005 before Grant was deployed to Iraq. Formal wedding is 23 Dec 2007 this is the wedding date they celebrate

[NF7343] Christ Presbyterian Church.

[NF7462] They were divorced.

[NF7600] 21 Sep 1848, Sullivan Twp., Tioga County, Pennsylvania

[NF7757] Marriage Notes for Katie Dodge and Robert Lewis:
Wedding was held at Rippa Villa Plantation. Weather pleasant for an outdoor wedding and reception. About 200 in attendance. Mother could not be present because of illness. Grandparents [Barrett and Dodge] were in attendance.

[NF7853] Marrried at Central Christian Church in Black Hawk, Waterloo County, Iowa

[NF8062] Marriage recorded in Buckland

[NF8118] Documented by Marriage License, issued 1 Jun 1922. Hettie L. Er w in and
Harry A. E. Rowlands witnesses, ceremony performed by Willar d C . Selleck ,
All Souls Universalist Church, Riverside County, CA.

[NS110541] TEXT TITL jim.dodge@gmail.com - Jim Dodge
bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Gra

[NS110751] TEXT TITL Title: Freshwater Families Research and Genealogy, Edition: 2nd Edition Revised and Updated
Author: Edelblute, Clara (Freshwater); Freshwater, Ralph; Freshwater, Harold
Publication: Closson Press, Apollo, Pennsylvania, 1990
Repository: Pg. 419
kgeveringham@bigfoot.com

[NS112031] TEXT TITL 1920 Census in Limestone, Aroostook, ME
1930 Census in New York City

[NS130131] TEXT TITL Passion_4life@hotmail.com Elizabeth Aarhus..
1900 Census in VeniceShiawassee County, MI

[NS107641] TEXT TITL 1910 Census
1930 Census

[NS2316973] Conay New Hampshire

[NS113021] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS113061] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS115881] TEXT TITL jim.dodge@gmail.com - Jim Dodge
bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Graziano..

[NS113071] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS113081] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS133393] Civil Registry

[NS132041] TEXT TYPE Census

[NS117991] TEXT TITL STONINGTON BRANCH OF THE DESCENDANTS OF ALLEN BREED, p. 239. THE HISTORY OF STONINGTON, CONN., by Richard A. Wheeler, page 580.

[NS118641] TEXT TYPE E-Mail Message

[NS118781] TEXT TITL Pamela Dodge Barlow 8148 Centerville Road Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (850) 839 2479
barlow8148@embarqmail.com

[NS118791] TEXT TITL Pamela Dodge Barlow 8148 Centerville Road Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (850) 839 2479
barlow8148@embarqmail.com..

[NS118811] TEXT TITL Pamela Dodge Barlow 8148 Centerville Road Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (850) 839 2479
barlow8148@embarqmail.com..

[NS119161] good

[NS119951] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS119971] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS120631] TEXT TITL FVitus@aol.com Frank Vitus..
lthsrt17@webtv.net Robert A. Dodge..
1870 US Census Homer, Lockport, Illinois.

[NS121101] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS121141] TEXT TITL United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Tenth Census of the United States, 1880, Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration, 1880

[NS121171] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS121261] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS121291] TEXT TITL alock@dreamscape.com tisha ..
St. Josephs Hospial

[NS121351] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS121641] TEXT TITL State of North Carolina Office of Register of Deeds
Tyrrell COUNTY Jany 18 19 06
To any Ordained Minister of any Religious Denomination or any Justice of the Peace of said County:
G. H. Simmons having applied to me for a LICENSE for the marriage of Jerry Hassell of Tyrrell, aged 28 years, color white, the son of Stephen Hassell and Martha Hassell, the father now living, the mot
her dead, resident of Creswell And Lula Dodge of Tyrrell, aged 18 years, color white, daughter of Wm Dodge and Emma Dodge, the father living, the mother living, resident of (blank).
And the written consent of Wm Dodge the father of the said Lula Dodge to the proposed marriage having been filed with me.
And there being no legal impediment to such marriage known to me, you are hereby authorized, at any time within one year from the date hereof, to celebrate the proposed marriage at any place within th
e said county.
You are required, within two months after you shall have celebrated such marriage, to return this License to me, at my office, with your signature subscribed to the certificate under this License, an
d with the blanks therein filled according to the facts, under penalty of forfeiting two hundred dollars to the use of any person who shall sue for the same.
T. L. Jones
Register of Deed
s

[NS121751] TEXT TITL Provincial Archives of New Brunswick St. Stephen Church
Publication: Government Records > RS141 Vital Statistics Search Engine
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Electronic
Page: Index to New Brunswick Marriages: 1847-1954

[NS121771] TEXT TITL Simon D. Sprague Justice of the ease.
Performed the marriage.

[NS121861] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS121931] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS122041] TEXT TITL Holy Rosary Church
bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Graziano..

[NS122061] TEXT TITL St. Rose of Lima Church
bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Graziano..

[NS122081] TEXT TITL St Michaels Church in Central Square
Bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Graziano..

[NS122241] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS122311] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS122491] TEXT TITL Marrried at Palma Ceia United Methodist Church
,

[NS122611] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS122651] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS123701] TEXT TITL ralston@ncentreal.com Ruth A. Larson..
August 21, 1850, Madison, Scioto County, Ohio

[NS123951] TEXT TITL Gindstone Island Families
amjldodge@suite224.net Joyce Dodge..

[NS124611] TEXT TITL Social Security Record says b. 3 Dec 1918 and dided in Snowflake, Navajo, Arizon
a

[NS125031] TEXT TITL http://automatedgenealogy.com/census/
Page: Chesley Corner Pg. 6 #23

[NS125081] TEXT TITL Eduffett@aol.com Ed Duffett..
Whidden Mem. Hospital, in Everett, MA

[NS125101] TEXT TITL Eduffett@aol.com Ed Duffett..
Lowell Gen Hosp., Lowel,l MA

[NS125131] TEXT TITL Eduffett@aol.com Ed Duffett..
Lowell Gen Hosp., Lowell, MA

[NS125111] TEXT TITL 1901 Kings Census
Title: 1901 Kings Census
Page: Centreville Pg. 3 #43

[NS126421] TEXT TITL 1901 Nova Scotia Census
ramann@ns.sympatico.ca Jennie..

[NS126931] TEXT TITL Kent Turner
14344 240th Street
Redfield, IA 50233-6029
Phone 515-577-3928
Email k-turn@msn.co
m

[NS126981] TEXT TITL 1950 Census Canton, Fulton County, IL
1860 Census 21 in Lamoine, McDonough County, IL

[NS127571] TEXT TITL 1880 Census Westfield, Sullivan County, New York
1900 CCensus Sullivan County, New York

[NS128091] TEXT TITL 1900 Census in Portland, Preston, West Viirginia
1910 Census in Portland, Preston, West Viirginia
WW I Draft Registration Card - Paralized unable to Walk.

[NS128761] TEXT TITL Author: Alexander-Crawford Historical Society, John Dudley, editor
Publication: 216 Pokey Rd, Alexander, ME 04694
Repository:

[NS106421] TEXT TITL Title: Freshwater Families Research and Genealogy, Edition: 2nd Edition Revised and Updated
Author: Edelblute, Clara (Freshwater); Freshwater, Ralph; Freshwater, Harold
Publication: Closson Press, Apollo, Pennsylvania, 1990
Repository:
kgeveringham@bigfoot.com

[NS106971] TEXT TYPE CensusPLAC Humbolt Butte County, California

[NS130161] Excellant

[NS130801] TEXT TITL 1910 Census in Port Angeles Clallam County, WA
1920 Census in Waverly, Tioga County, New York
1930 Census in Waverly, Tioga County, New York

[NS131311] TEXT Excellant Two Volumes

[NS109731] TEXT TITL Abbrev: 1901 Kings Census
Title: 1901 Kings Census
Page: Centreville Pg. 3 #43

[NS109741] TEXT TITL Abbrev: 1901 Kings Census
Title: 1901 Kings Census
Page: Centreville Pg. 3 #43

[NS109751] TEXT TITL Abbrev: 1901 Kings Census
Title: 1901 Kings Census
Page: Centreville Pg. 3 #43

[NS110161] TEXT TITL Palos Heights Hospital
lthsrt17@webtv.net Robert Alan Dodge..

[NS112011] TEXT TITL 1920 Census in Limestone, Aroostook, ME
1930 Census in New York City

[NS110321] TEXT TITL 1900 Census
bevgraz@aol.com - Beverley Graziano..

HOME


HTML created by GED2HTML v3.5e-WIN95 (Sep 26 1998) on 05/01/2021 03:58:25 .