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151 arrived in USA on the ship Samuel 1732 with wife Rossina and son George

Description: German Passenger Lists from the "Samuel, of London" for 1732

Captain: Hugh Percy
From: Rotterdam
By Way of: Cowes
Arrival: Philadelphia, 11 Aug 1732

106 men, 89 women, 84 children; altogether about 279 persons.

Of which:

Johann Friederich Hartmann, 33
Rosina Margaretha (Kautzmann), 27
Maria Magdalena, 11
Johann Georg, 8

"To Lehigh Co, PA."


From http://www.progenealogists.com/palproject/pa/1732sam.htm 
Johann Friderick HARTMAN
 
152 Civil War vet John HARTMAN
 
153 Settled in Seattle, WA
Visited Eva Hartman, and wasn’t well received - they perhaps didn’t get along
moved to Everett in 1895

"Grandma Galligan was proposed to  by Grandpa Hartman, before agreeing to marry him and travel across the country to be settlers in Washington State, she asked him one question: "Will you  be building me a sod house or a wooden house when we get there?" " Grandpa Hartman, a tall handsome man, said, "A wooden one."  So, she accepted his marriage proposal and they left, Illinois, I believe it was, together. She had declined 2 marriage  proposals, previous to Grandpa Hartman's, by Russian men who had answered that question the wrong way." 
John Wesley HARTMAN
 
154 Funeral: May 9, 1908 at Uncle Jo Herrolds

baptized near Mansfield, Richland Co. Ohio June 31 1838 by Rev. E. Yocum of M.E. church 
Joseph S. HARTMAN
 
155 COD: pneumona secondary to myocarditis Lavinia Delcena HARTMAN
 
156 “Aunt Vine” Lavinia Delcena HARTMAN
 
157 Knew Dad in Chicago - loaned Dad her studebaker

Obit: NELLIE MAE "AUNTIE JI" HARTMAN, 90, of Carlsbad, Calif., formerly of Honolulu, died Sept. 13, 2003. Born in Everett, Wash. A representative of the U.S. Council of Social Work who established 20 schools of social work throughout India; later a professor of social work at the University of Hawai'i; named 2001 Outstanding Senior Citizen Volunteer by Mayor Jeremy Harris. Survived by nephew, Wesley Martin; nieces, Virginia Orr and Phyllis Matson; many other nieces and nephews. Memorial donations to Here I Am, Send Me Fund c/o Church of the Holy Nativity, 5286 Kalaniana'ole Highway, Honolulu HI 96821-1883, Attn: Rev. Downing. [Adv 20/09/2003] 
Nellie May HARTMAN
 
158 SSN: 572-78-1988 Verna Viola HARTMAN
 
159 WASHINGTON HARTMAN. ?One of the prominent farmers and respected citizens of Thurston county, ?Washington, and a man who through many varied experiences has come ?to the declining days of life with a good competence and well deserves the ?comforts which he now enjoys, is Washington Hartman, who lives on what ?is called the Wells donation claim on McAllister creek. His grandfather was ?David Hartman, who served his country in the war of 1812; his ancestors ?were German. William Hartman, the father of our subject, was born in the ?state of Pennsylvania, July 22, 1807. In 1853 he visited California, being ?at the gold diggings at Angels camp and also taking part in the Frazer river ?excitement. He later settled in Seattle, and owned some very valuable property ?in what is now the best part of the city. He died in 1887 at the age of ?eighty years. His wife's maiden name was Martha Parker, and she passed ?away in Iowa in her fifty-fifth year. They were the parents of eight children, ?of whom David A. and our subject are in Thurston county, one is in Iowa, ?two are in California. These worthy people were strict Methodists of the ?early sect, and the subject of this sketch relates that he was not permitted even ?to whistle on the Lord's day. ?Washington Hartman records his birth as occurring near the town of ?Mansfield, Richland county, Ohio, May 18, 1831. In Ross county of the ?same state he was reared to manhood and gained his education in the public ?schools. He then removed to Iowa, where he owned a farm of three hundred ?and forty acres, eight miles distant from Des Moines on the left bank of the ?river, and on it were three good houses, two large barns, and two hundred and ?forty acres were under cultivation. Mr. Hartman disposed of this property ?in 1866 for twenty-five dollars an acre, and this he considers the mistake of ?his life, as the land is now in the most valuable section of the great agricultural ?state of Iowa. In Morgan county. Missouri, he bought a farm, but sold ?it after six weeks and went on a prospecting trip through Kansas. Returning ?to Iowa and purchasing a farm, he raised one crop on it and sold it; his next ?purchase was five hundred and seventy acres in Crawford county, Missouri, ?which he also farmed one season and sold; he then bought a large number of ?mules and cattle and disposed of them at a profit; on a farm in Reynolds ?county he produced two crops, and, selling out in 1872, came by way of the ?Union Pacific Railroad to San Francisco, where he engaged in farming for ?two years ; he then returned east and brought out his family, having decided ?to make the west his permanent home. He acquired his present farm of one ?hundred and seventy-seven acres in 1879, and here he has built a commodious
residence and all necessary outbuildings and is employed in general farming, ?raising large crops of hay, oats and potatoes. ?In 1861 Mr. Hartman married Miss Annie Baker, a native of Henry ?county, Indiana, and a daughter of Isaac Baker, of that state. To this marriage ?one son was born, William Franklin, October 26, 1862; he is now married ?and lives in a nice residence on the home farm. Mrs. Hartman is a ?member of the Christian church, and he has been identified with the Odd Fellows, ?but of late years has been so distant from the lodge that he has given up ?his membership. He has voted with the Republican party since its organization, ?casting his first vote for John C. Fremont. In all things he is an enterprising ?and industrious citizen and worthy of representation in a history of the ?Puget Sound country. 
Washington HARTMAN
 
160 William Hartman family left Ohio 1846, travelling by steamboat on Ohio River and up Mississippi River to Keokuk, Iowa. From there to Ft. Des Moines, locating and filing on government land, 9 miles NW of Des Moines, bordered by Des Moines River on north and some claims divided by old Daniel Boone Trail. 1846 (source: letter from Ira Hartman)

According to docs from Thurston Co., WA Pioneers before 1870, they left Des Moines Iowa by Mule team in May 1859 (?) Arrival on coast San Francisco, then by boat up to Washington. Very hard to figure out from the entries. Located in Nisqually Valley. 
William HARTMAN
 
161 really named Steve? George HATCHELL
 
162 4400 West Kenyon Avenue Denver, CO 80236; Section 8 Site 96 George Joseph HATCHELL
 
163 Denver Post, The (CO) - May 16, 2001
Deceased Name: George Joseph Hatchell -- Insurance employee, 82
George Joseph Hatchell of Golden, a National Farmers Union Insurance Co. employee, died May 5 in Aurora of complications from Parkinson's disease. He was 82.

Mass was said May 9 at Light of the World Catholic Church. Interment was in Fort Logan National Cemetery.

He was born March 5, 1919, in Kaukauna, Wis. On Feb. 3, 1945, he married Jeanne M. Campbell in Charleston, S.C.

After serving in the Navy during World War II, Hatchell graduated in 1947 from the University of Wisconsin with a bachelor's degree in finance and accounting.

He was a member of the Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters and was involved in the Democratic Party.

He is survived by two sons, Steve, Dallas, and Dennis, Winston-Salem, N.C.; three daughters, Georgia Dickey, Danville, Calif., Mary Ann Barwick, Littleton, and Julie Jackovich, O'Fallon, Mo.; and seven grandchildren.

Contributions may be made to Parkinson's Association of the Rockies, 1420 Ogden St., Suite 103, Denver, CO 80218.

***

Rocky Mountain News (CO) - May 10, 2001
Deceased Name: GEORGE JOSEPH HATCHELL
GEORGE JOSEPH HATCHELL, 82, of Golden died May 5 in Aurora. Services were May 9, with burial at Fort Logan National Cemetery. Mr. Hatchell was born in Kaukauna, Wis., on March 5, 1919. He married Jeanne M. Campbell, 1945. He was a lieutenant in the Navy. He worked for National Farmers Union Insurance Co. Survivors include his wife; sons Steve of Texas, Dennis of North Carolina; daughters Georgia Dickey of California, Mary Ann Barwick of Littleton, Julie Jackovich of Missouri; seven grandchildren. 
George Joseph HATCHELL
 
164 Farmed near Tripp until his death - Ethel then moved into town. Carl HAWLEY
 
165 killed by lightning Charles Edmund HERROLD
 
166 resided in Kansas Fred Blaine HERROLD
 
167 cause of death: typhoid fever Henry HERROLD
 
168 established a smithy in Squatham in 1838 or 39
by 1844 built a water powered sawmill south of Otes, Indiana 
Henry HERROLD
 
169 IOOF Polk City
Modern Woodmen
Owls 
James Irvin HERROLD
 
170 COD: cardiac insufficiency secondary to senility Joseph HERROLD
 
171 settled near Beaver Creek in Jefferson Township after the Civil War Joseph HERROLD
 
172 iowa state degree - stayed on the farm Katherine HERROLD
 
173 resided in Washington DC Ralph HERROLD
 
174 Herrold also known as Grimes Russell Dorr HERROLD
 
175 WW1 service as 1st Lt. US Army Reserve Medical Corps from 5 April 1918 to 16 Sept 1919

Russell Dorr Herrold, urologist, and professor emeritus of the University of Illinois medical college, died at his home in Chicago September 30, 1960; born in 1891 at Herrold, Iowa, a community near Grimes, north of Camp Dodge, that had been named for his father, Joseph Herrold; graduated with the last medical class to attend Drake University, completed his medical studies at Rush Medical School in Chicago; served as a captain in World War I; taught at the University of Illinois medical school for more than 35 years, became widely known for his research in urological bacteriology, and was on the medical staffs of St. Joseph's Hospital, the Research and Educational Hospital, and St. Vincent's Infant Maternity Hospital, as well as the research staff of the John McCormick Institute for Infectious Diseases; worked on several medical advisory committees during World War II; received the title of professor emeritus upon his retirement from the medical school at the University of Illinois; past president of the Chicago Urological Society and the north central section of the American Urological Association; wrote a book on his researches and had published more than one hundred articles; survived by two brothers and a sister. 
Russell Dorr HERROLD
 
176 parents were German Pauline HOLTHUSE
 
177 Intelligencer Journal (Lancaster, PA) - April 24, 2006
Deceased Name: Nevin Lehman Horst
Nevin Lehman Horst, 75, of 360 East Church Street, Stevens died at home April 22, 2006, following a lengthy illness. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Blanche Mohler Horst. He is also survived by two sons, three daughters and 15 grandchildren: Adelle Horst Ward, wife of Richard C. Ward of Scotia, New York; Philip M. Horst, husband of Sandra Voth Horst of Lancaster; Phyllis Horst Nofziger, wife of Harold H. Nofziger of Stevens; Rachel Horst McLaughlin, wife of Larry J. McLaughlin of Williamsburg, Va., and N. Timothy Horst, husband of Donna Eberly Horst of Leola. Nevin is also survived by two sisters and five brothers: Sarah, wife of the late Charles Martin of Chambersburg; Mary, wife of the late Stanley Horst of Hagerstown, Md.; Lauren Horst, husband of Betty of Greencastle; Maurice Horst, husband of Norma, Chambersburg; David Horst, husband of Cornelia, Broadalbin, N.Y.; Glenn Horst, husband of Velma of Winchester, Va.; and Lowell Horst, husband of Carolyn of Middletown. Nevin was born June 1, 1930 at Mason Dixon, son of Benjamin and Martha Horst. He was a graduate of Eastern Mennonite College and Princeton Theological Seminary. He married Blanche Mohler December 24, 1951. Nevin was ordained to the ministry at Ephrata Mennonite Church in 1953. He served as a missionary with Eastern Mennonite Missions in Ethiopia from 1954 to 1969 and 1974 to 1976 and in Kenya from 1995 to 1997. Nevin pastored at Warwick River Mennonite Church, Newport News, Va and Mount Joy Mennonite Church, Mount Joy. He was an active member of East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church for many years. At the time of his death, he was a member of Ephrata Mennonite Church. Nevin opened and managed Provident Bookstore at Park City from 1970-1973. Nevin directed Tabor Community Services in Lancaster, from 1977 to 1995. Nevin also served on the board of Arbor Place in Lancaster. After he returned from Kenya in 1997, Nevin developed Habitat ReStore in Lancaster. A memorial service will be held at Ephrata Mennonite Church at 10:00 a.m. April 27, 2006. Friends are invited to a time of visitation with the family at Ephrata Mennonite Church from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. April 26, 2006. Interment will be private, at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts can be sent to: Tabor Community Services, 308 E King St., Lancaster; Meserete Kristos College, MK College Link, 520 Rockingham Drive, Harrisonburg, Va. 22802; or Hospice of Lancaster County, P.O. Box 4125, Lancaster, PA 17604. 
Nevin Lehman HORST
 
178 323 River Rd. Capt. Andrew Jackson HOWISON
 
179 shown as age 4 in 1850 Census Capt. Andrew Jackson HOWISON
 
180 8 children Henry HOWLAND
 
181 11 children Nicholas HOWLAND
 
182 8 kids Nicolas HOWLAND
 
183 8 children with Sarah Sowle

5 children with Ruth Davol 
Samuel HOWLAND
 
184 9 kids William HOWLAND
 
185 9 children Zoar HOWLAND
 
186 at residence of J.P. Rowe Eleanor HUSE
 
187 last name Sargent? Dudley H. JOHNSON
 
188 Once took Juliette and Marion [Rowe] Ward to a speakesy in Cicero, where they met Al Capone’s brother

Discharged from military for heart leak 
Arthur Donahower KILBOURNE
 
189 probably Weaverville Irma E. KIRK
 
190 cousin to John Locke (1632-1704), the English philosopher Edith LOCKE
 
191 “And also in Evergreen just inside the entering gate sharp left up near the fence (houses beyond) is Wylie lot where Clare (Lonergan) Wylie and husband Robert are buried. My mother’s sister. Over the years Brother ransom often stayed with the Wylies paying rent. Robert Wylie for a few years worked as a shipper in malden for Rowe around 1918-24. The Wylies lived in the Linden area near the quarry.” Clare Gertrude LONERGAN
 
192 cousin of his wife (second cousin)?

nine kids 
John E LONERGAN
 
193 or Chicago Frederick Augustus LORD
 
194 From Lille, France Mary LOVEL
 
195 SEAL HARBOR, March 13 [1953] - Mrs. Lena W. Campbell, 88, widow of Edmond [sic] T. Campbell, died Thursday morning at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Donald Newman, in Norwood, Mass., where she had made her home for the past 15 years.

She was a resident of Seal Harbor for several years.

Surviving, besides her daughter, are a son, Donald [sic] Campbell, Long Island, NY; four grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.

Funeral services were held today in Norwood, Mass. Committal services will be held Saturday in Seal Harbor. 
Aline West (Lena) MACOMBER
 
196 Commander of an expedition against Fort Royal in 1707. Col. John MARCH
 
197 Supposedly had old Rowe family bible

Washington Post, The (DC) - March 5, 1984
Deceased Name: Eleanor Mars Rowand, 93, a resident of the Washin
Eleanor Mars Rowand, 93, a resident of the Washington area since 1942 and the widow of a Coast Guard officer, died of congestive heart failure March 1 at the Woodbine nursing home in Alexandria.

Mrs. Rowand, a resident of Falls Church for 34 years before moving to the Woodbine in 1981, was born in Wayland, Mass. She graduated from Framingham Teachers College in Framingham, Mass.

In 1918, she married Harry E. Rowand, a Coast Guard officer who retired as a commander. They lived in the Washington area from 1927 to 1935 and then from 1942 onward.

Cmdr. Rowand died in 1965. Survivors include a daughter, Dorothy Rapp of Falls Church, and one granddaughter.

Washington Post, The (DC)
Date: March 5, 1984
Edition: Final Edition
Page: C6
Record Number: 8303030977
Copyright (c) 1984 The Washington Post 
Eleanor MARS
 
198 Civil War:
Enlisted as a Private on 30 August 1864 at the age of 34.
Enlisted in Company D, 2nd Heavy Artillery Regiment Massachusetts on 30 Aug 1864.
Discharged from Company D, 2nd Heavy Artillery Regiment Massachusetts on 26 Jun 1865. 
Francis MARS
 
199 died at 19 months Harold MARS
 
200 Remembering Carl Wesley Martin: 'Encyclopedia man' traveled world

By: PAUL EAKINS - Staff Writer
CARLSBAD -- Perhaps it was his love of knowledge that led Carl Wesley Martin, known to most as "Wes," into the encyclopedia industry.

Or maybe it was the other way around, said his wife Aldea Martin.
Either way, the former Carlsbad resident's intelligence was what got him ahead in life, and it was also what got him his second wife at almost 80 years of age, she said.

"When you get to be 80 years old, all men, they dodder and they aren't interesting," Aldea Martin said Monday. "I wouldn't be interested in those people. If I ever found anybody, it would have to be somebody who stood up straight, walked well, talked well. And this man was brilliant."

Wes Martin died of cancer and other illnesses Wednesday at the age of 84, less than five years after remarrying and only six years after returning to live in San Diego County following a long absence.

Martin came from humble roots, growing up in Portland, later entering the Navy and training in San Diego. Although his formal education ended at high school, Martin found success working for a publishing company, P.F. Collier & Son, his wife said.

What began as a part-time job selling copies of the World Book Encyclopedia after World War II eventually became a career in which he would travel around the country and advance to the highest ranks of the company, she said.

After a brief stint with Famous Artist School International, for which he worked in Sydney and London, he returned to his previous company, now known as the Crowell-Collier Publishing Co., to take over as president of the World Book Encyclopedia division.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Martin lived in Southern California, including many years in La Jolla where he bought and resold dozens of homes, his wife said.

Before meeting his current wife, Martin married and had three sons and a daughter, and has several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

He returned to live in San Diego County at Rancho Carlsbad Country Club Estates in 2000, where he met his future wife.

"We decided we'd better hurry up and get married if we were gonna get married, because you never know what's going to happen tomorrow," she said.

Martin was well-read, a great conversationalist and knew all about computers, and when the couple watched the TV show "Jeopardy" together, he would get most of the answers correct, Aldea Martin said.

"He was interested in everything and everybody and whatever happened in this world," she said.

The 6-foot, 2-inch Wes Martin was handsome and stayed youthful by playing golf and traveling, his wife said, at least until Alzheimer's disease began to slow him down over the last two years.

After a discussion once about whether East Coast or West Coast trees were prettier, Martin took her to his boyhood home in Oregon to make his point, she recalled.

"One day he said to me, 'I'm gonna' show you trees like you've never seen,' and he took me up there, and I was breathless," his wife said.

@@

Carl Wesley Martin

December 19, 1921 - August 23, 2006

Carl Wesley "Wes" Martin, 84, of Carlsbad, Calif., died August 23, 2006, after a long and courageous battle with Alzheimer's, cancer and multiple other illnesses. He was the son of the late Carl Conrad Martin and Elizabeth Hartman Martin. He was born in Portland, Ore., and raised in that area and in Everett, Wash. Wes graduated at the head of his class in Everett High School, he studied most all his life and was an avid reader until illness brought that to an end. His great joy until lately was his ability to answer correctly 85 to 90% of the questions on quiz shows, such as Jeopardy. He bought and sold multiple residences, which became a challenging hobby. He was a golfer for at least 50 years, his major avocation. His tremendous career accomplishments over a lifetime without benefit of higher education, are a source of great pride to Wes, family and friends.

After graduation from Everett High School, in 1939, he worked at the Navy Torpedo Station in Keyport, Wash. Classified by the U.S. Navy as an essential worker, until WWII was nearly over, he entered the Navy, and trained at San Diego, where he vowed to return some day. He served on Guam and was honorably discharged when the war ended.

Upon his release from the Navy, he worked as an apprentice machinist, in Everett, Wash., and part time as a route collector for P. F. Collier & Son in their World Book Division. In 1949, Wes joined the Collier Company full time, and in 1951 was promoted to manager of the Portland office. In 1954, he was transferred to their New York City home office, managing and establishing branch offices throughout the United States. In 1963 his career took him to Chicago, where he joined LaSalle Extension University as executive vice president. In 1968 he became vice president of Famous Artist Schools International (FAS), and moved to Sydney, Australia, and later to London, England, with that company, in charge of all overseas operations. He later returned to the Collier Company, then known as the Crowell Collier Company, as president of their World Book Encyclopedia Division. He moved to Stamford, Conn., and became president of their Overseas Operations, based in their New York offices until he moved to California, where he resided at Laguna Beach and Los Gaviotas, Baja, Mexico.

He retired in 1985, and returned for a short time to Kirkland, Wash. Missing Southern California, Wes returned to Carlsbad, where he has resided at Rancho Carlsbad since October, 2000, and was married to Aldea Halprin, on September 16, 2001. He is survived by his wife; his son, Dean Michael Martin and daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Martin of Glen Ellyn, Ill.; his daughter, Janice Martin of Portland, Ore.; and his son, Anthony Martin and daughter-in-law, Sharon, of Kirkland, Wash. One son, Ronald Wesley Martin, his eldest, predeceased him on July 21, 1989. He is also survived by eight grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren; his son-in-law, William J. Collins of Ramona, Calif.; a half-sister, Cecelia Finley Cling of Athens, Texas; and a half-brother, William Finley of Logansport, Ind.

There will be a memorial service on September 6, at 2 p.m. at Rancho Carlsbad, 5200 El Camino Real, Carlsbad, CA.

Memorial donations may be made to UCSD Shiley-Marcos Alzheimer's Research Center, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0948, San Diego, CA, or VITAS Innovative Hospice, 9655 Granite Ridge, Suite 300, San Diego, CA 92123. 
Carl Wesley MARTIN
 

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