Category: Bauer

M Is for…Military

M Is for…Military

For today’s post, I had grandiose ideas of making a simple list of all the relatives in my database with military activity. Then I realized even just providing a complete list of names would result in an outrageously long post. So instead, here is just a sampling of what I found.

Thomas William Davis, my 7th great-grandfather: born 15 May 1719 in Westerly, Rhode Island, he served as a captain in the 3rd Regiment, Monmouth County (New Jersey) Militia in 1777 and also from 1780-1781. He later moved to Monongalia County in what would become West Virginia, where he died in 1791.

Thomas Goolsberry Childers, my 1st cousin 6 times removed: this Thomas was born 31 January 1790 in Lincoln County, Kentucky. Records I found make him sound like an early-day Forrest Gump, so I should probably do some more research to verify claims that he: took part in the Battle of Tippecanoe, then was captured by the British during the War of 1812 and held prisoner for two years, then in 1832 fought in the Black Hawk War before moving to Texas and taking part in the Battle of San Jacinto with Sam Houston. Thomas died in Coryell County, Texas in about 1851.

Andrew J. Slatten was my third cousin four times removed: he was born somewhere around 1831-1833 in Illinois. In 1860 he was living in Des Moines, Iowa, and was occupied as a lawyer. Shortly after the Civil War broke out, he enlisted in Company D, 2nd Reg. Iowa Volunteers, Infantry. Less than a year later he was wounded at the Battle of Fort Donelson in Nashville in February 1862. Two months later he died in Saint Louis as a result of the leg and temple wounds he had received. He is buried in Des Moines’s Woodlawn Cemetery.

Ozro C. Taylor, third great-granduncle: born 21 January 1847 in New York State, he enlisted 29 August 1864 in the 1st Regiment of the New York Light Artillery in Malone, New York. He enlisted as a substitute for a Seymour Gibbons; he was later mustered out at Elmira. He later moved to West Union, Iowa, where he was occupied in the livery business. He died 8 December 1890 “after ailing all fall.”

Ozro Taylor’s gravestone, West Union Cemetery

While most of the relatives I found were men, not all of them were. Mary Alice Evans, third cousin four times removed: born 18 February 1889 in Nortonville, Kansas, she served in the Army Nurse Corps between 16 February 1918 and 28 July 1919. She had been a nurse before the war and would continue her occupation after her military role ended. She died in 1948 in San Joaquin County, California, and is buried in the Stockton Rural Cemetery.

And last but not least from this random selection we have Ernest E. Bauer, half first cousin twice removed: born 14 January in either 1894 or 1895 in Gridley, Illinois, he left from Watseka, Illinois on 21 June 1918 to serve for six months during World War I. After his return he married Mary Yergler in Cissna Park, Illinois, in February 1920, and he died there in October 1966.

A Trip to the West: The Marriage of Esther Bauer and William Yergler

A Trip to the West: The Marriage of Esther Bauer and William Yergler

Today we remember Esther Matilda Bauer and William Yergler, who were married on this day in 1926 in Paxton, Illinois. Esther was my half first cousin once removed as well as my first cousin three times removed. She was the daughter of Marie (Hoffmann) Bauer, who was the daughter of our immigrant ancestor Jacob Hoffmann and his first wife, Anna Meyer. Marie’s sister Catherine was my 2G-grandmother, and her half-brother Paul was my great-grandfather.

Esther was the sixth of nine children born to Marie and George Bauer. She was born on 11 June 1902 in Cissna Park, Illinois. In the 1910 census, “Ester” is enumerated with her parents and siblings in Pigeon Grove Township, Iroquois County, Illinois. Her father was 47 and her mother 40. Her mother is noted as having given birth to 8 children, of whom 7 were then living. The child George and Mary had lost was their son Elmer Ernest Bauer, who lived from18 February – 25 September 1894. The other children in the household in 1910 were Alline E., 17; Earnest E., 15; Charley G., 13; Edna A., 10; Leona M., 6; and Harry W., 3. By the 1920 census, still in Pigeon Grove, George and Mary’s last child had joined the household: Arthur, 5.

George Bauer died in Cissna Park on 25 August 1924, and two years later Esther married William Yergler, son of William and Marie E. (Mangold) Yergler. William, Jr., was 2 1/2 years younger than his bride. An article about the wedding appeared in the 7 October 1926 issue of The Paxton (Illinois) Register. It notes they were married at the Christian parsonage at 11 a.m. on 6 October by the Reverend O. R. Keller. The article also states that “Immediately after the wedding the bridal couple left on a trip to the west” and would reside near Cissna Park once they returned.

The Paxton Register, 7 October 1926

The year following their wedding, Esther gave birth to a son who, sadly, lived only one day. This event would surely have brought back painful memories for Esther’s mother Marie. The next year Esther had another son, Wallace “Wally” Yergler. Three years later Harry Gene followed, then Mary Ann in 1933 (six months after the death of Mary Ann’s grandmother Marie), and Arthur in 1936.

The family (then just William, Esther, and Wallace, along with a boarder named David Rocke) is enumerated in the 1930 census in Ash Grove Township, Iroquois County, where William is a farmer. In 1940 they are still in Ash Grove, where they are renting their home for $10 a month. In that year the household consisted of William, Esther, Wallace, Harry, Mary Ann, Arthur, and a hired hand named Roy Kennedy. This census notes that William had gone through one year of high school, and Esther had completed the 8th grade. The family still resides together by 1950, though they no longer have a hired hand or boarder with them; Wallace and Harry are now listed as farm helpers.

Two years later Mary Ann, then 18, married Lowell Rassi on 31 August 1952 at the Cissna Park Apostolic Christian Church. Thirteen days after that, Esther Bauer Yergler passed away at age 50. An article in The Gridley (Illinois) Advance on 18 September 1952 notes simply that “Mrs. Yergler passed away suddenly on Saturday morning” and lists those relatives and friends who attended her funeral at Cissna Park. Esther is buried in the Cissna Park Cemetery, as is the infant son she had lost 25 years earlier.