Showing posts with label Main. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Main. Show all posts

John Lewis Main (1834-1918)

John Lewis Main
John Lewis Main
Born:22 Aug 1834 Gaines, New York
Died:6 Nov 1918 Lansing, Michigan
Father:Samuel Main
Mother:Hannah Maria Perkins
SiblingsMiles Main
Burton Main
John Lewis Main
Jarvis Whitman Main
Daniel Canfield Main
Francis Newton Main
Fredrick Truman Main
Harvey Perkins Main
Franklin R. Main
Married:15 Sep 1867 Alpine, Michigan
Spouse:Ella Isadora Scothorn
Children:Minnie Pearl Main
Frederic Main
Cora Bell Main
Marion Main
Baby boy Main
Obituary

Unnamed Petoskey newspaper, Saturday, November 9, 1918:

F. F. Main received a telegram Wednesday announcing the death of his brother, John L. Main at his home at Lansing at the age of eighty-two years. He was a veteran of the Civil War, Co. L. 61st Military Cavalry. This leaves F. F. Main the only survivor of a family of ten children.

Main home, 1107 N. Washington, Lansing, Michigan

Fredrick Truman Main (1844-1937)

Fredrick Truman Main
Uncle Fred
Born:24 Aug 1844 Pembroke, New York
Died:10 May 1937 Harbor Springs, Michigan
Father:Samuel Main
Mother:Hannah Maria Perkins
SiblingsMiles Main
Burton Main
John Lewis Main
Jarvis Whitman Main
Daniel Canfield Main
Francis Newton Main
Fredrick Truman Main
Harvey Perkins Main
Franklin R. Main
Married:12 Apr 1875 Hastings, Michigan
Spouse:Amelia A. Judd
Children:Sadie M. Sweet Main
Fredrick Truman Main was born 24 August 1844 in Pembroke, Genesee, New York, son of Samuel Main and Hanna Maria Perkins.

Fred served in the Civil War Co. F. Reg. 100th Vol. For his efforts he was given land in Harbor Springs, Michigan where he spent the remainder of his years helping the Native Americans in the area.

His home is on Spring Street at the base of the boardwalk in Harbor on the left. His niece Minnie Pearl Main's daughter Isadora Minerva Price Sallows lived in the house for years as a summer home.

Fred married Amelia A. Judd on 12 April 1875 in Hastings, Michigan. He died 10 May 1937 in Harbor Springs, Emmet, Michigan. He was cremated at White Chapel Crematorium Birmingham, Michigan on 12 May 1937.

Fred is buried in the Lakeview Cemetery, Harbor Springs.

Article

Emmet County Graphic, Thursday, July 28, 1932, pages 1, 10:

Old Soldier Tells Touching
Story of Civil War Events
_____________
Fred W. Main, 87, Resident of Harbor Springs 54 years,
Enlisted as Youth of 17, Lost Leg in Fort Wagner
Assault Tells of Early Days In Emmet County
_____________
By C. W. Lucas

“War is hell.”

These terse words are Fred W. Main’s bitter denunciation of war. War that took him as a carefree youth of 17 and made him a professional killer. War that cost him his right leg at 19, and left him maimed and nearly a hopeless cripple for life. War that he helped to fight 70 years ago that has brought him physical anguish every day since, and now as a man of 87, war that brings sleepless nights suffering from a wound that never healed.

Donald Arthur Price (1900-1974) Letter

Letter

                                                                                                                           Harbor Springs, Mich.
                                                                                                                                    July 10, 1915.

Dear Kenneth : -

How is everything in Lansing? All is O. K. here.

I arrived here two days ago and have been too busy having a good time to write before.

It rained in the night and it is quite muddy this morning so I guess it's a good time to write.

The scenery around this part of the country is beautiful. There are great bluffs, covered with trees, vines, and flowers, over which there are many pleasant roads.

In back of my uncles's house there is a great bluff up which run wooden steps and from whose to[p] you can see the country for miles around including a fine view of the harbor and town.

Harbor Springs, from the Bluff

Minnie Pearl Main (1868-1949)

Minnie Pearl Main Price
Minnie Pearl Price
Born:2 Oct 1868 Lansing, Michigan
Died:5 Jul 1946 Lansing, Michigan
Father:John Lewis Main
Mother:Ella Isadora Scothorn
SiblingsMinnie Pearl Main
Frederic Main
Cora Bell Main
Marion Main
Baby boy Main
Married:6 Jul 1892 Lansing, Michigan
Spouse:James Lincoln Price
Children:Isadora Minerva Price
Donald Arthur Price
Minnie Pearl Main was born 2 October 1868 in Lansing, Ingham, Michigan.

Her parents are John Lewis Main and Ella Isadora Scothorn.

Her siblings are Frederic, Cora Mabel and Marion Main.

Minnie married James Lincoln Price on 6 July 1892 at Lansing, Ingham, Michigan. The newspaper notice of 7 July 1892 reads as follows:
James L. Price and Miss Minnie Pearl Main were married at home of the brides parents Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Main at 508 Kilborn Street by Rev. H. S. Jordan. The couple will reside at 717 North Walnut Street. The groom is a member of Lansing Confectionary Company.
Their children are Isadora Minerva and Donald Arthur Price.

Minnie loved her children and her husband. She spent her days taking care of them. Minnie had a partial stroke to her face while caring for her ailing husband and always kept that side of her face away from his sight so he would not know. He died July 4, 1917. Minnie went on to share many years with her sister and children. She also spent time in Harbor Springs with her Uncle Fred Main.

Minnie died 5 July 1949 in Lansing, Ingham, Michigan. She was buried in the Mount Hope Cemetery in Lansing.

Dorothy Andrus Crane (1902-2002)

Dorothy Andrus Crane Price
Grandma Price
Born:4 Feb 1902 Congo, Ohio
Died:11 Nov 2002 Petoskey, Michigan
Father:Guy Gilman Crane
Mother:Edith Stanley Andrus
Siblings:Gladys Faith Crane
Dorothy Andrus Crane
Roderic Dwight Crane
Baby boy Crane
Elizabeth Helen Crane
Married:9 Feb 1922 Lansing, Michigan
Spouse:Donald Arthur Price
Children:Donna Joanne Price
Patricia Ellen Price
Baby girl Price
James Douglas Price
Dorothy Elaine Price
Obituary

Petoskey News-Review, Thursday, 14 Nov 2002, p. A2:

Dorothy Price, 100 

Dorothy Price, 100, of Petoskey, died Nov. 11, 2002, at Sunnybank Assisted Living. She was born in Congo, Ohio, on Feb. 4, 1902, the daughter of Guy and Edith (Andrus) Crane.

Her family lived in several towns in Ohio and Illinois before moving to Michigan. She graduated from Lansing High School in 1921, and on Feb. 9, 1922, she married Donald Price in Lansing.

Dorothy and Donald also lived in Florida, and during the Great Depression, homesteaded in the mountains of Northern California. There they built and lived in a log cabin, enduring many hardships. In 1933, they moved to Bangor, Maine, and finally returned to Michigan, where they cared for Donald's great-uncle, Fred Main, Harbor Springs' last Civil War veteran. In 1941, they moved to Petoskey. There they became members of the First Presbyterian Church and its choir, where Dorothy sang for 48 years. She also was active in the Women's Association and Guild. She was a member of the Petoskey Little Theatre, appearing in "Life With Father" in 1949. She provided props for Little Traverse Civic Theatre as recently as its October production.

Her most fulfilling role was homemaker for Donald and their four children, Donna (Leslie ) Heinz and Patricia (John) Duvernay of Harbor Springs, James (Iola) Price of Bakersfield, Calif., and Dorothy (Robert) Dennis of Petoskey.

Donald preceded her in death in 1974.

She had 12 grandchildren, 39 great-grandchildren and 40 great-great-grandchildren, and was happy to hear there is a great-great-great-grandchild due in March. She also had four step-grandchildren and many step-greats- and great-greats.

Dorothy Andrus Crane (1902-2002) Interview

Video-taped interview 

G. PRICE:  Mother (Edith Stanley Andrus Crane) was telling me years ago about when she played in the little string band, that they had formed at her church. And she played the violin, and she had a banjo too, but mostly the violin. And uh, my dad (Guy Gilman Crane), who wasn' t the least bit musical uh, missed taking her home from church. So, he bought himself a little banjo, and she taught him the few notes on it, chords, so he could be in the stringed instrument band, too. And uh, that's how they started really going together seriously. Well, he was an electrician at the time when the mines were just first being electrified, if that's the right word. Anyway, he had to go out of town quite a bit. And uh, he had been going steady with mother for almost a year, off and on, on his different trips, when he'd come back. And he was in Columbus, Ohio. And she was getting just a little bit tired of waiting for him; just to see him when he comes home between the jobs he was on. So, when he was in Columbus, I don't know if she wrote him a letter, or if someone in the little string band told him, wrote to him, and said that she was getting very interested in a young man that had been taking her home after the practices. And that was enough to inspire my dad to buy a ring and send it home to her, and said, "Now, we're engaged." So, they were married shortly after that. But uh, that's a little story mother that told about how she urged him to get married. She was very shy, of course. And he didn't know that she was playing a trick on him, but it did the business anyway. After that, that was in Columbus, Ohio, that was um, his last job. Then, they moved to, they were married, and moved to Shawnee for his next job in the mine, and uh, that was where my sister Gladys was born. And uh, about two years later, after he finished that job, he went to Congo, Ohio. That was a big mining place. I mean, it had a big mine, but it only had one street in it. There was a church at one end of the street and a saloon at the other. And the miners lived in little mining shacks on either side of the street. And uh, that was where I was born. And when that job was finished, he uh, had to go to Delaware, Ohio. And uh, while he was there my brother, Bud was born. And uh, shortly after that, he uh, he had to go way to Illinois, to Joliet, Illinois, where they had a big penitentiary. And uh, he, he and his crew were putting electricity in that great big prison. And that was where my brother was born, that didn't live. And uh, after that job was done, he was um, first, he was uh, sitting, well, it was kind of the water and electric department in Rockford, Illinois. And uh, we were there just a very short time when my sister Betty was born. And uh, that's where all of our birth places were. (Now you can turn it off.....)

G. HEINZ:  Mom, would you tell a little bit about your own mother's life, before she became a Crane, when she was an Andrus?

Donald Arthur Price (1900-1974) Autobiography

Autobiography of Donald Arthur Price


Nickname - Don.....

Chief occupation or profession - Salesman and commercial artist.....
Date of birth - October 29, 1900.....
Birthplace - Denver, Colorado.....
First came to Michigan - 1904, to live in February, 1934.....
Father’s name - James Lincoln Price.....
Mother’s maiden name - Minnie Pearl Main.....
Sister - Isadora Minerva Sallows, 351 Spring Street, Harbor Springs,Michigan.....
Education - Lansing Public Schools and High School.....
Married - Dorothy Andrus Crane in Lansing, Michigan - February 9, 1922.....
Children      Donna                  Patricia          James           Dorothy
                   Harbor Springs     Petoskey       Los Gatos    Petoskey
                                                                    California

                There are several reasons for my life being molded as it is; love of outdoor living, love of nature, and because of my great love of pioneers (traditionally, Daniel Boone was a distant relative of mine, so all my life has had a strong influence on me), concentrated influence because of my great love of the West and the Colorado Rockies around me, and Denver (my friends called me “Denver Don,” “The Colorado Kid,” and “Rocky Mountain Red”).

                Arranged as near chronologically as possible, the foregoing and following constitute my autobiography.
                Five states lived in: Colorado, Michigan, California, Florida, Maine

                chronologically

                Newspaper carrier - Lansing State Journal - as a boy

Leslie Eugene Heinz (1920-1974)


Leslie Eugene Heinz
Les Heinz
Born:8 Mar 1920 Matchwood, Michigan
Died:30 Sep 1974 Petoskey, Michigan
Father:Frank Gottlieb Heinz Jr.
Mother:Mary Louise Higgins
Siblings:Floyd Leonard Heinz
Inez Marie Heinz
Carol June Heinz
Leslie Eugene Heinz
Lyle Kenneth Heinz
George John Weyenberg, Jr.
Married:13 Jun 1941 Harbor Springs, Michigan
Spouse:Donna Joanne Price
Children:Joanne Marie Heinz
Donald Leslie Heinz
Katherine Eileen Heinz
Debra Elizabeth Heinz
Leslie Eugene Heinz was born 8 March 1920 in Matchwood, Ontonagon, Michigan.

His parents are Frank Heinz, Jr. and Mary Louise Higgins.

His siblings are Floyd Leonard, Inez Marie, Carol June and Lyle Lyle Heinz. He also had a half-brother George John Weyenberg, Jr.

When he was about 18 months old, his father died. His mother married George Weyenberg and they heard that "good farm land" was available near Harbor Springs, so they moved to Harbor Springs, Michigan.  They lived on Spring Street in a house across from Fred Main's house. The Heinz family next moved out to a fruit farm on a road towards Cross Village.

When he was eleven his mother passed away. When he was about fifteen, Les joined the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps.), he worked in the Upper Peninsula planting trees during the summer. He sent most his earnings back home to help get through the Depression years.

Les married Donna Joanne Price on her Graduation day from High School, Friday, June 13th, 1941. Being Friday the 13th they did all the things which are supposed to cause bad luck: they walked under a ladder, broke a mirror, walked in front of a black cat and opened an umbrella inside a house.

Their children are: Joanne Marie, Donald L., Katherine Eileen, and Debra Elizabeth Heinz.

Les joined the Army-Air Force in WWII, his job was to string telephone wires in India, and China for the servicemen. In letters to home, Les spoke of the poor Chinese people and of a nice family with twin daughters who adopted him.  His letters always mentioned his love and loyalty to Donna and he wanted to be kept up on his children's progress. He had malaria and became very sick in India.