Hasselbein, Johannes (b. 8 OCT 1757, d. 21 JUN 1780)
Death: 21 JUN 1780 Nothweiler, Germany
Death: 3 JUL 1816 Wingen
Death: 10 AUG 1807 Nothweiler, Germany
Death: 1786
Death: 7 JAN 1729/30 Rumbach
Death: 1758 Rumbach
Source: (Name)
Title: Census, 1900
Media: CensusPage: Western Portion of Precinct B, Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio--page 258, E.D. 77
Note: Anna Schlenker Kindelberger died on 17 April 1877 about six or seven days after delivering her second child, an unnamed baby (sex unknown) who died the day after birth.[PhilipKindelDescendants.FTW]
Anna Schlenker Kindelberger died on 17 April 1877 about six or seven days after delivering her second child, an unnamed baby (sex unknown) who died the day after birth.
Source: (Name)
Title: Cincinnati Marriage Index 1870-1884, The Restored
Author: Jeffrey G. Herbert
Publication: Hamilton County Chapter, The Ohio Genealogical Society, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1994
Call number: LDS Microfilm 1983603
Media: Book
Note: This book was compiled from various sources, newspapers, church records, etc. as a replacement for the original marriage records which were destroyed in the Courthouse riot in Cincinnati in the 1880s.
Source: (Death)
Title: Kindelberger, Anna Death Notice of
Author: The Cincinnati Freie Presse, Cincinnati, OH
Publication: 19 April 1877
Media: Newspaper
Source: (Death)
Title: Walnut Hill Cemetery Data Base
Author: 3117 Victory Pkwy, Cincinnati OH 45206; (513) 961-1424
Publication: Section 16, Lot W
Media: Electronic
Note: Phone call 9 Jun 2000, Paper copy of records requested.
Death: 17 APR 1877 Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio
Burial: 19 APR 1877 Walnut Hills Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio
Note: Information from Social Security Death Index (possible son):
GEORGE BUENING
SSN 298-28-0221 Residence: 45014 Fairfield, Butler, OH
Born 13 Apr 1903 Last Benefit:
Died 27 Apr 1999 Issued: OH (1951)
This could be a child of Tillie Kindelberger and George Buening.
Source: (Name)
Title: Cincinnnati Daily Gazette Death Notices
Media: Book
Note: LDS Family History Center MicrofilmPage: p. 257.
Source: (Birth)
Title: Cincinnnati Daily Gazette Death Notices
Media: Book
Note: LDS Family History Center MicrofilmPage: p. 257
Data:
Text: Notice on 11 April 1877 died Kindelberger, ___ 1 day old.
Death: 11 APR 1877 Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio
Note: Obituary (Wichita Eagle, 27 July 2002)
Garvey, Willard, 81, C.E.O. Garvey Industries and entrepreneur, died Thursday, July 25, 2002 at his home in Wichita. Service 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 30, 2002 at W.S.U. Hughes Metropolitan Complex, 29th and Oliver.
Mr. Garvey was born July 29, 1920 in Colorado Springs, moving with his family to Wichita from Colby, Kan. in 1928. He graduated from East High School and in 1941 from the University of Michigan with a degree in Economics. He earned the rank of Major in the Army during World War II, serving at the Pottsdam Conference and with Allied Kommandatura of Berlin.
An intelligent man of infinite talents and much charisma, he was equally at home with worker or world leader. He had a passion for building, education and volunteerism. Mr. Garvey was an active member of Plymouth Congregational Church. He lived the principles he espoused and loved to share his unique and practical philosophy of life.
Survivors: wife, Jean of the home; sons, John and Jim both of Wichita; daughters, Ann Garvey, Emily Bonavia, Julie Sheppard all of Wichita, Mary Theroux of San Francisco; sisters, Ruth Fink of Topeka, Olivia Lincoln of Lincoln, Neb.; 14 grandchildren. Memorial established with President's College School of Law, 123 S. Market, Wichita, 67202. Broadway Mortuary.
-------------------------
Editorial (Wichita Eagle, 30 July 2002):
Posted on Tue, Jul. 30, 2002
OUR VIEW
Builder
Willard Garvey's legacy is his civic ideology
Wichita without Willard Garvey? Unthinkable.
But as of Thursday, when Mr. Garvey died at age 81, the city no longer has the benefit of the iconic entrepreneur's strong vision and stronger persona. It will be left to others to probe elected officials with Mr. Garvey's usual question: Why not let the market and private enterprise prevail?
Mr. Garvey's death deals a blow to the community and south-central Kansas, whose roots are bound up in the Garvey name and spirit, and in family business operations ranging from construction to agriculture to oil.
Mr. Garvey -- whose funeral service is 3:30 p.m. today at Wichita State University's Hughes Metropolitan Complex, 29th and Oliver -- didn't simply live in Wichita, employ Wichitans and help build Wichita -- though all that would have been enough, given his wide-ranging interests and investments. He didn't just share his money, time and enthusiasm with arts groups, schools, the YMCA, charities and his church to the point of civic ubiquity.
Unlike few others in the city's history, Mr. Garvey also helped shape how Wichitans think -- or at least challenged them at every turn to give his vision of limited government and privatized services a chance. So prevailing was his voice, and so ever-ready his willingness to fight a proposed tax increase or public expenditure, that Mr. Garvey didn't even have to attend a meeting to have an influence on its outcome.
Some counted him among the community's chronic naysayers, including this editorial board at times. Indeed, his pro-privatization message could seem monotonous and indiscriminate, as if no good could ever come from government or from public schools. But Mr. Garvey was like an accountability hawk hovering over City Hall, the Sedgwick County Courthouse and, through his family's support of the Kansas Taxpayers Network, the state Capitol.
That welcome legacy -- of prodding citizens toward a community and state operated according to free-market principles -- resounds in citizens' voting patterns and civic debates today. Mr. Garvey's death seems unlikely to change that -- something that would surely please him. Like the 22-story Epic Center that he helped build 15 years ago, the late Mr. Garvey will continue to tower over Wichita for decades.
----------------------------
Wichita Eagle, Posted on Wed, Jul. 31, 2002
Hundreds come to honor Garvey
BY NOVELDA SOMMERS AND LORI O'TOOLE BUSELT
The Wichita Eagle
Willard Garvey held strong opinions, drove fast and let nothing stand in his way, those who knew him said Tuesday at a service to memorialize the Wichita businessman.
Even as he was hospitalized and in pain shortly before his death Thursday at age 81, Garvey worked on blueprints for his latest project: a building for Presidents College School of Law, his son Jim Garvey said.
Jim Garvey was one of 10 people who addressed a crowd of about 800 gathered at the service at the Wichita State University's Hughes Metropolitan Complex.
It was because of his father, Jim Garvey said, that people all over the world have homes, schools, places to work and grain storage.
Willard Garvey was the president of Builders Inc. and Garvey Grain. He helped underwrite some of the city's best-known institutions -- from Friends University and the Institute of Logopedics (now Heartspring) to the YMCA, the Center for Human Functioning, Presidents College, Collegiate School and the Independent School.
He built the Epic Center, Kansas' tallest building, which stands amid other buildings Garvey built in downtown Wichita.
With his company World Homes Inc., which he started in the 1950s, he built homes in 27 countries, including Peru, India, Colombia, Egypt, Pakistan and Taiwan. He met with several U.S. presidents and other countries' heads of state.
"Dad's work is done here," Jim Garvey said. "But it will go on and bless thousands of Wichitans and people around the world."
By all accounts, Garvey never wasted time.
He married Jean, his wife of 56 years, three months after the two met, his daughters said before the service.
His grandson Nicholas Bonavia told those who gathered about seeing the Grand Canyon with Garvey -- through the window of a car going 65 mph.
"He would show you where the canyon was, but leave you to discover it for yourself," Bonavia said.
Garvey was an avid swimmer and carried a swimsuit in his briefcase in case the opportunity to go for a dip should arise, family members said.
His daughter Julie Sheppard said her father taught her that it's more important to learn than to get an A-plus, that you can always get enough sleep if you have a clean conscience, that you can usually get around a traffic tie-up by driving on the shoulder, and that God's awesome creations are so numerous that you can't see all of them no matter what.
Bob White, president of Garvey International, said that his friend "Will" redefined the word passion, a fact known to anyone who ever argued with Garvey.
He was driven and unstoppable, White said.
"If you thought you could do it, he'd give you the baton and let you run," White said. "He was larger than life, a giant among men, a leader in business and a pioneer among entrepreneurs."
His daughter Ann Garvey said her father was often vilified for his views against what he saw as government intrusion and excess, opinions his friends and family said he often shared.
The Rev. W. Michael Chittum, senior pastor of Plymouth Congregational Church, where Garvey was a member said: "I am still an unrepentant liberal, yet that disagreement never affected our relationship."
After the service, Dennis Schoenebeck, YMCA general executive, said he enjoyed the "Willardisms" mentioned during the service -- descriptions of characteristics that Garvey exuded, including his high energy, discipline and dedication.
"Look at how many people he touched," Schoenebeck said.
Garvey is survived by his wife, Jean, of the home; two sons, John and Jim, both of Wichita; and four daughters, Ann Garvey, Emily Bonavia and Julie Sheppard, all of Wichita, and Mary Theroux of San Francisco; two sisters, Ruth Fink of Topeka and Olivia Lincoln of Lincoln, Neb.; and 14 grandchildren.
A memorial has been established with the President's College School of Law, 123 S. Market St., Wichita, KS 67202.
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Death)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
Death: 2 JAN 1986 Warr Acres, Oklahoma Co., Oklahoma
Burial: Spring Creek Cemetery, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Note: [CharlesBrownDescendants.FTW]
Notes from Leota Elue Brown Kindel say he was killed in war (presumed to be WW II).
[GeorgeWalterDeeterDescendants.FTW]
Notes from Leota Elue Brown Kindel say he was killed in war (presumed to be WW II).
[LymanBrownSrDescendants.FTW]
Notes from Leota Elue Brown Kindel say he was killed in war (presumed to be WW II).
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Birth)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's Date Book
Author: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown
Media: Book
Note: Thomas J. Kindel has possession of
Death: 4 AUG 1989
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Birth)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's Date Book
Author: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown
Media: Book
Note: Thomas J. Kindel has possession of
Death: DEC 1969
Note: [CharlesBrownDescendants.FTW]
Jean Kindel Garvey (May 1999) stated that she thought that Leroy died of an illness that caused many deaths--not sure if it was smallpox, cholera, or what.
She said that Granny, Leota, was very fond of Leroy who was her older brother.
Obituary (unknown paper, clipping found in Leota Elue Brown Kindel's papers):
Leroy E. Brown Funeral is Held
Funeral is Held at Greenville, Tenn.(sic.), for Well-Known Citizen
Funeral services were held in Greenville, Ill., yesterday for Leroy E. Brown, the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Brown, 1412 North Collins avenue, Okmulgee.
Mr. Brown died in Greenville Friday night after an illness of three weeks with typhoid fever. At the time of his death he was principal of the Mulberry Grove, Ill., high school, and was striving to earn his own way as he prepared himself for a life career as a minister. For six years he had been following this course, and during that time he attended college at Greenville, Ill., while not teaching. For two years he was dean of men at the Greenville college.
Mr. Brown was married to Mis Carylon Van Valin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Van Valin of Williamsport, Penn., July 8. Surviving Mr. Brown, in addition to his wife, who is with the parents in this city, are the father and mother; three sisters, Mrs. George Kendel (Kindel) of Wichita, Kan., Dorthy and Genevieve; two brothers, C. A. and Kenneth Brown of Okmulgee, a half-brother, G. W. Burchfield, of Franklin, Penn., and other and more distant relatives.
The survivors are in Greenville, where they attended the funeral yesterday.[GeorgeWalterDeeterDescendants.FTW]
Jean Kindel Garvey (May 1999) stated that she thought that Leroy died of an illness that caused many deaths--not sure if it was smallpox, cholera, or what.
She said that Granny, Leota, was very fond of Leroy who was her older brother.
Obituary (unknown paper, clipping found in Leota Elue Brown Kindel's papers):
Leroy E. Brown Funeral is Held
Funeral is Held at Greenville, Tenn.(sic.), for Well-Known Citizen
Funeral services were held in Greenville, Ill., yesterday for Leroy E. Brown, the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Brown, 1412 North Collins avenue, Okmulgee.
Mr. Brown died in Greenville Friday night after an illness of three weeks with typhoid fever. At the time of his death he was principal of the Mulberry Grove, Ill., high school, and was striving to earn his own way as he prepared himself for a life career as a minister. For six years he had been following this course, and during that time he attended college at Greenville, Ill., while not teaching. For two years he was dean of men at the Greenville college.
Mr. Brown was married to Mis Carylon Van Valin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Van Valin of Williamsport, Penn., July 8. Surviving Mr. Brown, in addition to his wife, who is with the parents in this city, are the father and mother; three sisters, Mrs. George Kendel (Kindel) of Wichita, Kan., Dorthy and Genevieve; two brothers, C. A. and Kenneth Brown of Okmulgee, a half-brother, G. W. Burchfield, of Franklin, Penn., and other and more distant relatives.
The survivors are in Greenville, where they attended the funeral yesterday.[LymanBrownSrDescendants.FTW]
Jean Kindel Garvey (May 1999) stated that she thought that Leroy died of an illness that caused many deaths--not sure if it was smallpox, cholera, or what.
She said that Granny, Leota, was very fond of Leroy who was her older brother.
Obituary (unknown paper, clipping found in Leota Elue Brown Kindel's papers):
Leroy E. Brown Funeral is Held
Funeral is Held at Greenville, Tenn.(sic.), for Well-Known Citizen
Funeral services were held in Greenville, Ill., yesterday for Leroy E. Brown, the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Brown, 1412 North Collins avenue, Okmulgee.
Mr. Brown died in Greenville Friday night after an illness of three weeks with typhoid fever. At the time of his death he was principal of the Mulberry Grove, Ill., high school, and was striving to earn his own way as he prepared himself for a life career as a minister. For six years he had been following this course, and during that time he attended college at Greenville, Ill., while not teaching. For two years he was dean of men at the Greenville college.
Mr. Brown was married to Mis Carylon Van Valin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Van Valin of Williamsport, Penn., July 8. Surviving Mr. Brown, in addition to his wife, who is with the parents in this city, are the father and mother; three sisters, Mrs. George Kendel (Kindel) of Wichita, Kan., Dorthy and Genevieve; two brothers, C. A. and Kenneth Brown of Okmulgee, a half-brother, G. W. Burchfield, of Franklin, Penn., and other and more distant relatives.
The survivors are in Greenville, where they attended the funeral yesterday.
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Birth)
Title: Brown, Leroy E. Death Certificate
Media: Book
Source: (Death)
Title: Illinois On-Line Death Index
Media: Book
Note: http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/Genealogy/IDPHDeathSearchServlet
Source: (Death)
Title: Brown, Leroy E. Obituary
Media: Book
Source: (Death)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
Occupation: Date: OCT 1926
Place: School Teacher
Death: 22 OCT 1926 Greenville, Bond Co., Illinois
Burial: 26 OCT 1926 Mont Rose Cemetary, Greenville, Illinois
Cause: Typhoid Feaver
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Name)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
Source: (Death)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's Date Book
Author: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown
Media: Book
Note: Thomas J. Kindel has possession of
Death: 7 SEP 1981
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Name)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
Source: (Name)
Title: Kindel, Leota Elue Brown's notes
Media: Other
Note: Original retained by Norma Jean Finley Kindel, Wichita, KS/George Kindel has copy.
Source: (Name)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
Source: (Name)
Title: Wire, James G. Brown Family Records
Author: Rt. 1 Box 185, Luther, OK 73054; (405) 277-9964
Media: Manuscript
Note: George Kindel's Family Files
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