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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BRUNNER, Jacob C

Male 1860 - 1918  (~ 57 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  BRUNNER, Jacob C was born in Mar 1860 in Canada; died on 5 Jan 1918 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.

    Notes:

    Buffalo NY Courier - 4/2/1918

    Michael Mucha, who was motorman
    on the Buffalo & Depew car, wrecked
    at Weibel's curve early in January,
    when three men were killed and se-
    eral others injured,, pleaded ot guil-
    ty to an indictment charging man-
    slaughter, second degree, when ar-
    raigned before Justice Emery in su-
    preme court yesterday.
    Mucha is charged with respondibility
    for the deaths of Martin P. Smith,
    Anthony Yurecki and Jacob Brunner.
    MRs. Brunner, reccently was awarded
    a verdict against the Buffalo & Depew
    railroad for the death of her hus-
    band.

    ALSO

    Buffalo NY Courier - 1/6/1918

    Investigation into' the cause of the
    wreck yesterday morning* when a trolley
    car of the Buffalo & £ epew Ra 1-
    way company Jumped the track and
    rolled into a field just insid's the limits
    of Depew, causing the death of three
    men and serious if not fatal injuries to
    several others, will.be made by county
    officials.
    Justice of Peace Higgim of Depew
    will hold an Inquest at 10 o' clock Tuesday
    morning' at which ;Deputy Medical
    Examiner Cook, county officials and'a
    score of witnesses will appear. Officials
    of the company also willl attend and
    give their version of the accident.
    The Victims
    The dead:
    Martin F. Smith, twenty-four years
    old, whose parents conduct a hotel at
    'Union road and Genesee'street; head
    crushed.
    Anthony Yurecki,, thirty years old,
    of Forks; fractured skull and Internal
    Injuries; died a few minutes after being
    taken to the German Deaconess
    hospital; body at. morgue. .
    Jacob Bruner, laborer, No. 18 Rogers
    avenue, Buffalo.
    Those at German Deaconess hospital
    are:
    Alois Schiesel, fifty-one years old. of
    Union Road; In a critical condition.
    William Hicks, forty-six years, old,
    of No. 977 Northampton street; internally
    injured and cut on the body.
    Gustave Eittlinger, forty-two-years
    old, of Forks, who was serlously injured.
    Albert Leaser, twenty years old,;No.
    2396 Bailey avenue; fractured skull and
    spine and Internal injuries; condition
    critical.
    Five were taken to the hospital and
    latter taken home. They are:
    Frank Fotos, fifty years old, of
    Forks, N. T.: George Obers , forty-two
    years old, of No. 86 Nevada street; Arthur
    Harrnik, twenty-one years old, of
    Forks; John Draszskiewics, twentynine
    years old, of Forks, and Walter
    Zobowski, nineteen years old. of Forks.
    Those given first aid at the scene and
    sent home: Edward Granse, Andrew
    Hill; F.L.Schulmberg,, Forks; Robert
    Beinig, No. 413 Goodyer avenue; Leo
    Haas, Montana street; Frank Brittling-
    er, Cheektowaga; Charles Hausner, No.
    373 Urban street; August Pauly,, No. 145
    St. Louis avenue; Hugh and John Kin-
    sella, No. 14 Moeler avenue; Victor
    Gangloff, Union road, and Arthur
    Dorn, No. 245 Landon street; Schulm-
    berg was a brother-in-law of Martin
    Smith, the dead man. All were cut
    and bruised, but none was seriously
    hurt.
    On "Death Curve"
    The wrecked car,, No. 21.,, with thirty-
    six passengers, all on their way to work
    at the Gould Coupler plant and; the
    New York Car Wheel works in Depew,
    left the city limits at Genesee street
    at 6:20 o'clock.
    The car reached the curve. a thirty-
    degree turn,'-twenty minutes later;wlth
    i t s brakes set and power off, according
    to the motorman. The company had
    issued rues for all motormen to sow
    down and have their power under con-
    trol at this curve, considered most dan-
    gerous of all points on the line.
    But the rails were sippery and the
    car left them, the body parting fro
    the trucks. The trucks remained up-
    right beside the car line.
    The car body got momentum from
    the raised tracks, which are three feet
    above ground level at this particular
    curve,, ad went whirling into two tele-
    grap hpoles fifty feet away. Both were
    snapped off clean and a sub support-
    ing pole spintered.
    The otorman, Michael Mucha, was
    still in his vestibule when the car
    smashed into the teleraph oles and
    his escape is considered miraculous.
    He received mminor injuries to his right
    hand and forehead while the conduc-
    tor,, Leo Siwinski, was injured in the
    left hip and left leg. Both live in De-
    pew. There is a danger ight at the
    curve, wich ordinarily can be seen at
    a distance, but the heavy fog made it
    indistinct
    Dr. R.L.Stratton of Depew was
    quickly on the scene of the accident.
    He gave the men first aid. A second
    trolley car arrived a few minutes later.
    The wunded men were put in this and
    taken to the ciity line where the am-
    bulances had been summoned.
    The three victims were horribly
    crushed beneath a heap of wreckage.
    When the bodies of Smith and
    Brunner were removed from beneath
    the debris with the aid of jacks, life
    was extinct. They were sent to the
    morgue by Deputy Medical Examiner
    Cook.
    The second trolley car, in which the
    wounded were taken to the hospitals
    and home, was in chare of J. Mc
    Nichols,, motorman, and Albert Martin,
    conductor. Both ive in Depew. Traf-
    fic was tied up for three hours.
    Superintendent's Statement
    The general supintendent of the
    Buffalo & Depew can find no reason
    for the disaster. The company will
    make a thorough investigation, he says..
    "It looks llike one of those deviish
    mishaps which one sometimes meets
    in forty-six years of railroading," he
    stated last night.
    "We instruct all our men to slow
    down when they go down grade or make
    a sharp turn. All signs show that
    Mucha did this.
    "The track was in excellent condi-
    tion at this point. It was brought upp
    to the mark with new ballast last
    summer
    "The car trucks of No. 21 were in
    first class shape. A New York public
    service commission expert examined
    track and trucks today and seemed
    satisfied that the disaster was due to
    neither.
    "The only mark on the trucks after
    the accident was one broken casting.
    Contact with the frozen ground after
    the wreck snapped it.
    "Mucha is a highlly efficient man and
    temperate. He slept in our car barn
    last night. I frequently rode on his
    car and found him invarably a man
    in perfect control of his car. Our in-
    structions specifically state that mo-
    tormen must slow down at down grades
    and have their car under the most
    perfect control. An examination of the
    motor after the accident showed that
    Mucha had the brakes set."

    Jacob married BERGMAN, Marie C about 1899. Marie was born in Jun 1870 in New York; died on 11 Mar 1950 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. BRUNNER, Sidney was born in Feb 1900 in New York; and died.
    2. BRUNNER, Jacob B was born about 1903 in New York; died on 17 Jul 1939 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.
    3. BRUNNER, Clarence Henry was born on 1 Aug 1904 in New York; died on 7 Jun 1967 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.
    4. BRUNNER, Marian E was born on 30 Nov 1906 in New York; died in Mar 1985 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.
    5. BRUNNER, Joseph L was born about 1911 in New York; died on 22 Oct 1957 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.
    6. BRUNNER, Katherine L was born on 11 Jan 1913; died on 13 Aug 1994 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY.

Generation: 2



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