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Sunday, February 15, 2015
The Children of Leta Maude Stanton
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Pedigree Chart for Leta Maude Stanton
This Pedigree Chart for Leta Maude Stanton shows 4 generations of her ancestors. I have additional generations on some of the lines.
Monday, February 9, 2015
My Grandmother, Leta Maude Stanton
Leta Maude Stanton-Stilwell-Lonn
March 30, 1901 to January 29,1982
debbie.storbeck@gmail.com
Minnie Moyer and David Stanton Nebraska 1900 |
The Overland Route from Nebraska to southwest Michigan, likely followed by David Stanton Family. |
Lilly Stanton was born
in Michigan in 1907, son Burzell was born in 1908 and died in 1909. In 1910 David & Minnie and daughters, Leta
and Lillie, who later changed her name to Lillian, live on a farm that they
have a mortgage on in Ireland Township, Benzie County, Michigan. The family is living next door to David’s
brother Isaac Stanton and his family. In
a letter dated June 10, 1965 Leta tells of her school days, “I started to school when I was 7 yrs. 4 mo. Old
and was just 15 yrs. 2 mo. when I got through school. Wasn't any high school where I attended
school. When I first started to school
we lived on a farm near Bendon I
attended Bendon school and walked 1 1/2 miles a day. Wasn't any cars or buses then, I wore leggins
above the knees that had to be buttoned all the way. Leggins we're black so was the buttons. Then we wore a cloth like over-shoes that
buckled up. This was in winter.”
The David Stanton Family. L- R, David Stanton, Leta Stanton, Lillie Stanton, Minnie Moyer with Flossie Moyer
|
In 1920 when Leta was
18 years old, David and Minnie Stanton were living in a mortgaged farm in
Colfax Township, Benzie County, Michigan.
There were 4 children, Leta, Lillie, Flossie who was born in 1913, and
who changed her name to Florence, and Harold, born in 1915. Hard times were upon the family and David
Stanton was living in a lumber camp in Haight Township, Ontonagon County, in
Michigan’s northern peninsula. In Colfax
Township Minnie and the children were living next door to extended family,
Henry & Goldie Dinger, whose son, Calvin was married to David’s sister Rosa,
and Jerry and Ettie Timlick whose daughter Lulu would marry Warren Stanton,
nephew of David.
On November 1 in 1922 Leta
Maude Stanton and Albert Edward Stilwell, Jr. “Bud” were married in Grand
Traverse County, Michigan, by Clergyman C.N.Babcock of the Bendon Methodist
Episcopal Church. Witness at the
ceremony were Warren Stanton, Leta’s first cousin and Leta’s sister Lillie
Stanton.
Albert Edward Stilwell "BUD" |
Leta Maude Stanton |
Leta and Albert "Bud" Stilwell, about 1922 |
On April 3, 1924, a
daughter, Arlene Leta Stilwell was born to Bud and Leta. Yevone Alberta Stilwell was born on June 16, 1926;
she died 2 weeks later on June 30th.
Yevone is buried next to her great uncle, James H Merrill Jr., in the
White Cloud Cemetery, White Cloud, Michigan.
On November 15, 1928, a son Roger Keith Stilwell was born.
The death of little
Yevone was the beginning of a period of grief and sorrow for Leta and Albert. In September 1929 Bud was diagnosed with
cancer of tongue and mouth, he died on December 6 at the home of his Grandparents
James and Edith Merrill.
Leta and her
5-year-old daughter Arlene, and her one year old son Roger moved into the home
of James and Edith Merrill in the Beecher Platt of Thompsonville,
Michigan. In a letter written on April
30, 2008 Arlene says, “G-Pa & G-Ma Merrill were great to help
relatives. They about raised my Dad—then
took your Dad (Roger), Me and our Mother in during my Dad’s bout with cancer
and after.”
Arlene
Stilwell-Isaacson told me that Benzie County gave her mother a widow’s pension
after Albert’s death, but “busy bodies” complained that James Merrill was
receiving a veteran’s pension and that Leta should not receive county aid.
James and Edith Merrill |
The Merrill Home in the Beecher Platt in Thompsonville, Michigan,Edith Merrill, Della Merrill Hamilton, John Hamilton abt 1923. |
The 1930 U.S. census shows Leta
Stilwell, Arlene and Roger living with James and Edith Merrill. The home, in the Beecher Platt, Thompsonville
is owned by James Merrill and valued at $500.
Leta cared for Edith in 1932 and 1933.
Edith died December 1933 of cancer.
Leta Stanton-Stilwell-Lonn and Yalmer Lonn 1945 |
In St. Joseph, County, Indiana on
October 3, 1934 Leta married Yalmer Isaac Lonn, an immigrant from Finland and
WWI veteran. Leta and Yalmer lived in
the Merrill home. The first child born to Leta and Yalmer was Helen Beverly
Lonn born January 1935.
In 1936 Leta and Yalmer bought
“The Farm” and the family moved. The description in Benzie Banner on July 31,
1958 said it was an “80 acre farm, 5 room house cinder block, basement, barn,
50 ft. x 36 ft . . . . 120 acre farm level, mostly cleared, good for tree
planting. The directions from
Thompsonville to the farm were “4 miles north, 1 mile west and 1 mile south.” That
is 4 miles north to Wallin Road, turn left (west) and go 1 mile to Haze Road,
turn left (south) and go 1 mile to Landis Road.
At “The Farm” Victor Elmer Lonn
was born in June 1937, John Robert Lonn was born in January 1939 and David
Wesley was born in June 1945. According
to John Lonn, during their time on “The Farm” the family raised cash crops of
beans, corn, cucumbers, and potatoes.
They began their farming with 2 horses and later bought a John Deere
tractor. One year they raised 200
turkeys. They milked 14 milk cows every day,
selling the milk the family did not need.
For family use they also raised pigs and chickens. There was a root cellar for keeping meat,
milk and produce for the large family.
John and Victor went to town for 50 pounds of ice about every three
weeks. They put the ice in the cellar on
some boards covered with burlap, then covered the ice with burlap, put the meat
on, covered it with some sort of vinyl then more burlap. Later someone gave the family an ice box, but
the trips for ice continued to keep it chilled.
The Lonn Farm |
The farm never had indoor plumbing
or electricity. Leta wanted a corner
cupboard for storage on the farm and one Easter week son-in-law Rudy Isaacson
built it for her. When he finished Leta
had a cupboard in the corner, not a corner cupboard. Nothing was ever said and that cupboard made
the trip to the Beecher Plat when the Lonn’s moved back into town in 1958 and
is probably still sitting in the house. During the farm years Leta sewed her sons’
overalls and flannel shirts using the Singer Treadle Sewing machine that
originally belonged to Edith Merrill.
Leta gave the machine to Arlene Stilwell-Isaacson who gave it to Debbie
Stilwell-Storbeck in 1976. My dad,
Roger, used to say his Mom could go to bed with a ball of yarn and wake up in
the morning with a finished pair of socks.
Leta’s daughters Arlene and Helen became proficient dressmakers, winning
4-H awards.
The Stilwell and Lonn children
always joke about walking 4 miles uphill to get to the school bus and 4 miles
uphill to get back home. The walk to county
road 669 and Wallin Road was actually 2 miles.
Once during the 1940’s there was a snow storm and hay for the animals
had been ordered and paid for. The
county sent a V plow normally used to clear the railroad tracks, pushed by 5
trucks through the 7-8 foot drifts; the plow broke a mile from the house and
that is where the hay was dumped. The
boys had to haul it from there.
According to an ad placed in the Benzie
Record newspaper on October 6, 1955 Leta and Yalmer tried to sell the Merrill
home and property, “For Sale—House with 8 lots in Thompsonville. $1500 cash.
Yalmer Lonn, 4 miles north, mile west and mile south of
Thompsonville.” Then in 1958 there is an
ad placed in the Benzie
Record newspaper on July 31, “For
Sale—80 acre farm, 5 room house cinder block, basement, barn, 50 ft x 36 ft.
$3000. 120 acre farm level, mostly
cleared, good for tree planting.
$3000. Yalmer Lonn,
Thompsonville.” ( Benzie Record newspaper, 6 October 1955, page 10, column 4.)
L-R Roger Stilwell, Victor, Helen and John Lonn |
Leta
and Yalmer moved back into the old Merrill home in Thompsonville in 1958. In 1947 or 1948 the house had been covered
with asbestos siding and the attached shed was torn down. Before the move John Lonn and wife Mary tore out
the wall between the second bedroom and the living room making the living room
the width of the of the house. The rest
of the house was one bedroom and the kitchen/dining room. The space that was to become the “indoor plumbing”
was a pantry. Burt Lemley and Dick
Lafever wired the house for electricity, going into the attic through the front
window, or maybe a hole in the ceiling in the bedroom. Son-in-law Rudy Isaacson, a plumber, turned
the pantry into a small bathroom that included a tub. Victor Lonn and crew dug the septic and John
Lonn dug the drain field. The water was
also brought into the house at this time.
Leta and Yalmer brought the fuel oil space heater they had been using on
the farm. Later a floor furnace from Don
and Melva Swisher’s was added. (Don and
Melva were in-laws of John Lonn)
Eventually that furnace was replaced.
The house got a new roof. In 1959
John Lonn and his wife Mary Swisher Lonn built a home across the street.
My Grandma' kitchen furnishings looked like these.
I remember when my sisters, brother and I walked from our maternal
grandparent’s home to the Thompsonville post office we were told to walk uptown
for the mail. When walking from Grandma
Lonn’s we walked downtown. Our family
spent many weekends and holidays in Thompsonville and my sisters, brother and I
spent summers freely wandering from one set of grandparents to the other. I remember Grandma Lonn’s pancakes, her brown
sugar syrup and tall glasses of cold milk. There was always a contest to see
who could eat the most. Sometimes other
cousins and uncles would be around to join in the challenge.
The recipes are:
Grandma Lonn’s Pancakes
Brown Sugar Syrup
1 egg 2
cups brown sugar
1 cup flour 1 cup water
1 to 1 ½ cup milk* Boil good, don’t burn.
1 teaspoon baking soda
*Butter milk or sour milk or sweet milk with 2 teaspoons of
baking soda.
Grandma and Grandpa had Sunday dinners. My sister Beverly remembers once Grandma
chopped the head off the chicken and hung it on the clothesline then plucked
it. The chickens likely came from her neighbor, Belle Kessler. Belle was scary, she dressed old fashioned,
and always had a broom in her hand, leading us to believe she was a witch. The Sunday family dinners were fried chicken,
heaps of mashed potatoes with smooth creamy gravy, a necessary vegetable and
pies for desert. I liked Grandma’s venison
mince pie best. It was crowded when we
all gathered around the big dining table.
When we were young Grandma Lonn made a lot of dresses for Beverly,
Leta and me, and sometimes Roberta too. The dresses were always exactly alike or the
same pattern in different colors.
Left photo L-R Deborah, Leta and Beverly Stilwell Christmas 1961.
Matching dresses made by grandma.
|
Right photo Deborah Stilwell
Dress made by Grandma.
|
Grandma crocheted a lot of fancy potholders. I have one that she gave me for high school
graduation. Grandma taught Beverly and
me to crochet and to knit.
Pot Holders made and given to Beverly Stilwelll and the sugar bowl from Grandma's table |
The last time I saw Grandma was Christmas-time 1980 when Mike and
I visited her at the Maples Nursing Home in Frankfort. We took our 6 week old daughter, Sarah Jean
Storbeck with us.
Labels:
Leta Stanton,
Lonn,
Moyer,
Stanton,
Stilwell,
Thompsonville
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