Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Emma J Haitz Marries Elwood Griffith


St. Michael Catholic Church in Ripley, Ohio
1938 Marriage License and Certificate
Leonard E Griffith and Emma J Haitz

The 1938 marriage document for my great-aunt Emma J Haitz and Leonard E Griffith can be found in the Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2013 database on Family Search.  From it, I was able to learn several new pieces of information while it also raised a couple of questions.  

I was not aware that Emma's husband was named Leonard.  All I have ever seen or heard was Elwood.  For this marriage license application, he stated his birthdate as February 7 and since he was 20 years old that previous February.  He still resided in the town and was a truck driver there.  His parents were Marion Griffith and Selma Shelton.  It was his first marriage.

Emma J Haitz was about 5 years older than her husband according to this document.  Her date of birth was December 7 and her 26th birthday was just around the corner from the time she and Elwood were granted the marriage license.  I do not know what Emma's middle name was and finding out has been added to my To-Do list.  Her parents were Joseph and Henrietta (Koehler) Haitz and she was a housekeeper, most likely helping her mother at their house in Ripley, Ohio.  She had not been previously married.

Due to Leonard's age, the consent of his father was required and Marion's signature is below that of the couple's.

The Rev. Father Anthony Hoch of St. Michael Catholic Church in Ripley married the couple.  His signature can be found on the bottom of the marriage certificate that was filed and recorded in probate court on December 22, 1938.  Therein lies the big question I have about this marriage.  The date that Father Anthony wrote on the marriage certificate is December 26, 1938, but how can a certificate be filed before the marriage was performed?  Did Father Anthony make a mistake in writing the date?  Was the marriage performed on November 26 instead of December?  Writing the wrong month would be an easy mistake to make, especially if the calendar had already turned by the time Father Anthony had completed this form.  It can be easily seen that he had already written Leonard's name where the date is indicated.  

My plan is to try to find a wedding announcement in The Ripley Bee that will clear up the mystery when I can get a chance to take a road trip to Ohio.  Until then, the question remains!

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Robert Haitz and Virginia West - Marriage

Haitz West marriage, Adams County, Oho
Ohio, County Marriages, 1789 - 1994, page 267, Robert Haitz and Virginia West, 21 May 1934; digital images, Family Search, Ohio, County Marriages, 1789 - 1994 (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 24 June 2015); original records found in county courthouses.  


Robert Haitz married Virginia West on his 29th birthday, Monday,  May 16, 1934. The marriage most likely took place at St. Michael Catholic Church in Ripley, Ohio, although this document only states that Father Anthony was the priest at the church.  

Robert was the second child and first son of his parents, Joe and Henrietta (Koehler) Haitz.  He was the proprietor of a restaurant in Ripley.  His bride, Virginia, was the daughter of Thorton and Ivy (Eagle) West with whom she made her home in West Union.  She was stenographer.  

This document has at least one mistake in it.  Henrietta's last name is spelled incorrectly. It should be Koewler.   I also am wondering if Virginia's father was Thornton instead of Thorton.  

Monday, June 22, 2015

From the Pages...My New Series

I love old newspapers!  I use them to find tidbits about the lives of my ancestors that records and documents do not reveal.  As I hunt through the pages from the past I often run across pieces that are just plain interesting, funny, or even shocking.  Without television or radio, newspapers were often the tabloids and cable television of their day.  Not only did they inform, they also entertained their readers.  This is the start of my new series, From the Pages, where I share some of the more interesting, but not exactly genealogical items I run across.  The newspaper sites that I most often use are Chronicling America, Genealogy Bank, and Newspapers.com.  

I love this one!  Only with the little blurb after the "birth announcement" does it become clear that the writer for The Ripley Bee was indulging in a little word play for the entertainment of his readers.  Well, I certainly hope that was the case anyway!

from the Ripley Bee
The Highland (Hillsboro, Ohio) Weekly News_Jun 16 1870_pg 1 col 8
http://www.newspapers.com

Here's another one that was originally published in The Ripley Bee.

from the Ripley Bee
The Evening Bulletin (Maysville, Kentucky) Jan_15__1904
http://www.newspapers.com
My grandfather and my father-in-law raised pigs, but I don't remember any of them to be nearly this size!  Now, I could be wrong and I hope someone will correct me if I am.  If pigs do get this big though, I want to know why the cost of bacon and pork is so high!  
By the way, I tried to find this lucky pig owner in the 1900 census, but had no luck.  I even tried different spellings of his name because I don't think it's spelled correctly in the article.  

I hope you enjoyed reading these as much as I did.  If so, let me know in a comment!

copyright 2015 Lynn Ann Wayson Koehler.  All rights reserved.