Laur Family and others

Genealogy of the Laur, Lauer, Soos families together with information on cities in Germany including Laichingen, Feldstetten and Machtolsheim.

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ROBERTS



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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  ROBERTS

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  ROBERTS, Homer Gene

    Homer married BEDELL, Joy Elizabeth [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  BEDELL, Joy Elizabeth
    Children:
    1. 1. ROBERTS
    2. ROBERTS, Gene Douglas


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  ROBERTS, W B
    Children:
    1. 2. ROBERTS, Homer Gene

  2. 6.  BEDELL, Douglas H was born on 17 May 1914 in New York (son of BEDELL, Henry E and WAGONER, Sarah); died on 3 Dec 1966 in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, NY.

    Notes:

    Niagara Gazette - 12/5/1966

    BEDELL-Douglas H., of 436 Ook St.,
    Youngstown, at Mt St. Mary's Hospital,
    Dec. 3rd, 1966. Age 50 years.
    Husband 'of Elsie. Father of Douglas,
    of Youngstown, N.Y., Mrs. H. G.
    Roberts of Ft. Sill, Okla., Airman
    First Class John H. Bedell of Warren
    Air Force Base, Cheyenne, Wvo.
    Son of Henery E. Bedell of Youngstown,
    N.Y. Brother of Mrs. W. K.
    Phillies of Baltimore, Md. Also survived
    bv 4 grandchildren. Funeral
    services Tuesday, Dec. 6th at 2 p.m.
    from the Hardlson Funeral Home,
    Ridge and 4th Sts., Lewlston, N.Y. interment
    in Oakland Rural Cemetery.
    The Rev. Albert French of St. John's
    Episcopal Church, Youngstown, N.Y.
    officiating. Friends may call 2-5 and
    7-9 p.m. today

    Douglas + Elsie L. Elsie was born on 11 Sep 1913 in New York; died on 27 Sep 2002 in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  Elsie L was born on 11 Sep 1913 in New York; died on 27 Sep 2002 in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, NY.
    Children:
    1. BEDELL, Douglas Harold
    2. 3. BEDELL, Joy Elizabeth
    3. BEDELL, John H


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  BEDELL, Henry E was born on 27 Nov 1886 in New York (son of BEDELL, William B and PHILLIPS, Amantha A); died in Nov 1982 in Baltimore, Baltimore County, MD.

    Notes:

    Niagara Gazette - 9/1972

    HENRY BEDELL, who is 86, believes he
    is the oldest resident of Youngstown. Or at
    least the oldest reside/it of the village
    (2,200 population) who was born there. In
    all, Mr. Bedell has spent 65 years of his live
    in the village and is a valuable living
    source of Youngstown's history.
    He is the only surviving charter member
    of the Youngstown Volunteer Fire Co. on
    Second Street. Mr. Bedell says that most of
    his original village friends are dead now,
    but he enjoys keeping busy - and that
    apparently agrees with him.
    "I have only been in a hospital to visit,
    never as a patient," Mr. Bedell boasted,
    adding^ that he's in excellent health and
    eats everything. He has to keep his
    strength up because he's also one of the
    most active villagers for his age. Mr.
    Bedell paints the exterior of homes in a
    housing development as a pastime, which
    he started at 78 - 10 years after
    retirement. The painter continues working
    from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. five days a week
    as he has for the past eight years.
    "I 'hit the sack' every night around
    midnight and am Up by 5 a.m. - even
    weekends when I don't work!"
    For the first five of the eight years Mr.
    Bedell worked for- the New York State
    Power Authority which set up the housing
    project of 111 houses built especially for
    men employed by the authority.
    "Before construction began, this area
    was a swamp filled with cattails," the
    painter noted. "Three years ago the
    company sold out to Northfield Properties
    IIIGVwhich has offices in Niagara Falls."
    AND IT MIGHT WELL BE that Mr.
    Bedell is the only survivor in Youngstown
    and the surrounding area who ever played
    pool with Robert Leech, a daredevil who
    went over the falls in a barrel in 1911.
    Ironically, Mr. Leech died after slipping
    on a fruit peel in England. -
    "Bobby owned and managed a pool
    room on Main Street, andhe liked to play
    pool with me because he always won," Mr.
    °Bedell laughs. "I haven't played since
    because my partners are dead. My other
    favorite sport is bowling, but I haven't
    played-in 20 years."
    The painter who has thinning white hair,
    and wears dark-rimmed glasses, has
    resided at 506 Westwood Drive,
    Youngstown, for the past nine years. He
    was reared in a house located on Oak
    Street which was demolished years ago.
    "MY PARENTS, the late William B. and
    Nancy Bedell, the former Nancy Phillips,
    were natives and long-time residents of
    Youngstown," Mr. Bedell said. "Dad was
    an area cabinetmaker most of his life, and
    Mom's mother, the late Mrs. Sadie
    Wagoner, was born in the old French
    Casstle at Fort Niagara, where officer's
    quarters were located at the time."
    Mr. Bedell attended the village's first
    schoolhouse for kindergarten through
    sixth grade, which was then located across
    from the present First Presbyterian
    Church on Main Street. He helped his
    father make cabinets and did odd -jobs
    until he was 19.
    "At 19, I jointed the Coast Guard in
    Youngstown (then called the Lifesaving
    Crew)," he recalled. "For years before
    joining, Coast Guardmen's patrols along
    Lake Ontario used to fascinate me. I'd
    always wanted to wear spyglasses and go
    on patrols."
    He remembered carrying torches if
    boats were in trouble and reporting it to
    the station so'the crew could rescue the
    victims. "There were no motorboats in the
    early 1900s only rowboats. I recall when I
    was a member of a nine-man crew and as
    part of our drill, the captain upset the boat
    by tilting a ladder that extended across the
    boat's bottom. Everyone got wet but the
    captain.
    "Out of the Coast Guard at 21, I did
    carpentry work on service quarters in the
    Quarter master Department at the Fort
    for six years," Mr. Bedell says. "I still
    remember swaying back and forth as Fort
    prisoners lowered me on a bolson chair -
    inch by inch - as I painted a 125-foot
    flagpole on the parade grounds. Since then
    it has been replaced by a smaller one in the
    same location."
    "I wouldn't care to paint it now, but I
    enjoyed it when I was younger," he
    chuckled.
    Years later when he and William May,
    another former Youngstown resident,
    were digging small trenches for street
    edge wooden forms for paving Main Street
    (it then was a dirt road,) Mr. Bedell put his
    pick through the skull of a buried Indian.
    He was buried on his back with his knees
    up.
    "Willy kept the tomahawk and a string
    of beads that slightly crumpled when he
    touched them," he said. "I kept the 12-inch
    diameter copper kettle which was buried
    between the Indian's legs. Unfortunately it
    was filled with arrowheads,'not money."
    Mr. Bedell kept the kettle, but lent it to
    his brother-in-law, the late Allen Bevier, of
    Niagara Falls.
    Mr. Bedell thinks it is the one on display
    at the French Castle at Fort Niagara.
    ANOTHER INTERESTING ITEM Mr.
    Bedell still owns is a cane in his home
    which his great-grandfather, William
    Bedell, whittled out of solid mahogany
    when he was taken prisoner during the
    War of 1812. It features a bullet shell at its
    tip and a knob at the top with a carved
    figure in between. His dad used to walk
    with it.
    "After assisting Dad with carpentry, the
    late George Winston of Youngstown andl
    operated the first garage in the Village -
    formerly a big barn on Main Street - and
    sold the first Model T's to Youngstown and
    area residents," Mr. Bedell boasts.
    When it folded, he worked at General
    Motors in Baltimore, Md., for 21 years.
    Mr. Bedell retired 19 years ago at 68, not
    65, because the union voted that he stay
    longer because he was popular and a
    competent worker.
    "As soon as I retired, though, I came
    home to Youngstown."
    LEANING BACK in an easy chair, Mr.
    Bedell sighed, "Youngstown isn't as much
    fun as it used to be."
    "From Lockport to Second to Main
    streets was all fruit trees, and Falkner's
    Park has replaced a large apple orchard,"
    he recalled. "Lockport Street used to
    feature a wagon shop, two blacksmith
    shops, a foundry for melting iron for
    casters, a bake shop and a meat market."
    Main Street's major attractions were
    four saloons, three grocery stores, a
    sawmill, an ice cream parlor, Leech's pool
    room, and the El Dorado Hotel which was
    built in 1890 and located on the Niagara
    River. With deep verandas three stories
    ^high that faced to the north and east, the
    structure teemed with tourists in the
    summertime. The whole edifice was ornately
    decorated with lattice work,
    spindles and curlicues patterned^fterihe
    florid style of architecture in the '90s. The
    building was torn down in 1935.
    All the original proprietors of the shops
    have since died or retiFed, and most of the
    buildings were knocked down and rebuilt.
    Youngstown's Main Street today consists
    of six apartment buildings, about 20
    homes, three restaurants,.three.taverns,
    two churches, two barber shops, two gas
    stations, a liquor store, a beauty shop and
    a grocery store and two separate buildings
    Svhere town and public accountant offices
    are located.
    "Lockport Street has a gas station, a
    drug store, a grocery store, funeral home,
    dry cleaners, laundromat, bank, post
    office, library, an insurance office, a
    Pierce Marine building and several
    homes," Mr. Bedell said. "Second Street
    has basically a church, an apartment
    building, about 30 homes and a fire hall.
    "There was an old mill yard on Second
    Street where the'firehall is today," Mr.
    Bedell said. "Lumber headings used to be
    piled up to dry in the yard, and men used to
    float much timber down the Niagara River
    from Lewiston." He remembers, too, when
    the weekly Youngstown News was
    published in an old stone structure at the
    bottom of the hill on Water Street. Edited
    by G. Oliver Frick for years, it folded up 67
    years ago.
    Just as the village newspaper is gone, so
    are the fish which used to abound in the
    Niagara River.
    "TODAY THERE'S NOT a fish in the
    river to catch. Years ago I saw fishermen
    bring in tons of all kinds," he remembers.
    "Once I made a mile motor boat run up a
    section of the river and caught 168 pounds
    of pike with 125 hooks', an anchor and a
    large netting. That's what I call fishin,'
    and I think water pollution and smelt
    eating the fish eggs is responsible tor
    killing the fish within the last 20 years."
    A past noble grand of the Old Fort
    Niagara Lodge of Odd Fellows to which he
    belonged for 55 years, Mr. Bedell doesn't
    belong to any clubs now. But he does enjoy
    gardening, as shown by his weedless
    flower garden and two huge, healty tomato
    plants.
    "I planted the tomatoes in June and
    have gotten a bushel off each so far, which
    is pretty good."
    Mr. Bedell's wife, the late former Sarah
    Wagoner, and his two children, the late
    Douglas Bedell and Dorothy Phillips of
    Baltimore, Md:, are all natives of
    Youngstown. He has five granchildren and
    13 great-grandchildren.

    Henry married WAGONER, Sarah about 1908. Sarah was born about 1884 in New York; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  WAGONER, Sarah was born about 1884 in New York; and died.
    Children:
    1. BEDELL, Dorothy H was born about 1909 in New York; and died.
    2. 6. BEDELL, Douglas H was born on 17 May 1914 in New York; died on 3 Dec 1966 in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, NY.



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