The H600 Project Genealogy DB

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501 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I76490)
 
502 [[
http://www.morrisfuneralchapel.ca/schedule.asp?id=1054
Obituary:
Hoar, Marion Isobel (nee Werry) ? At Strathaven Lifecare Centre on Tuesday, April 24, 2012 in her 91st year. Marion, beloved wife of the late Aldin Hoar. Loving mother of Tom Hoar, Jo-Anne McQuaid, Kathy Kuzemchak, Louise Hoar and predeceased by her sons John and William. Sadly missed by 10 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and 1 great-great-grandchild. Dear sister and friend of Helen White and the late Percy Werry. At the request of the family, a private service will take place. Cremation with interment of cremated remains at Bethesda Cemetery. The family would like to thank the 2nd floor staff of Strathaven Lifecare Centre for their compassionate care of Marion. As the church was an important part of her life, donations made in Marion's memory to the Tyrone United Church would be gratefully appreciated, and may be made through the MORRIS FUNERAL CHAPEL, Bowmanville (905-623-5480).

Her sister's obituary:
WHITE, Helen May (WERRY) -
Passed away peacefully on August 22, 2012.
Beloved wife of the late George.
Loving mother of Jean (Mike Kirkton), Lorraine (J.C. Rolland) and Marilyn (John Hancock).
Grandmother of Rod and Kyle McLean, and Gui and Leslie Rolland.
Great-grandmother of Jessica, Jeff and Cooper.
Great-great-grandmother of Alistriana.
Sister of the late Marion Hoar and Percy Werry.
A private family service will be held at the MORRIS FUNERAL CHAPEL, 4 Division Street, Bowmanville (905-623-5480).
Interment of cremated remains at Bowmanville Cemetery. 
Werry, Marion (I16352)
 
503 [[
http://www.myheritage.com/names/arlene_pascute 
Pascute, Arlene F. (I75774)
 
504 [[
http://www.newyorkroots.org/bookarchive/pioneerhistoryorleanscounty/ch20/bios2.html
Amos Randall was born in Ashburnham, Mass., January 3, 1788. He married Fanny Tabor in 1814. She was born in Shelburne, Vt., Feb. 11, 1793.
In 1814, they removed to Avon, and in the spring of 1815. settled in Kendall, on the farm now occupied by his son, Hon. Gideon Randall, where he afterwards resided, and died Aug. 28, 1830. Mr. Randall was a public spirited man, and entered zealously into every undertaking for the benefit of his neighborhood. He acted frequently as counselor and arbitrator among the settlers, to aid in arranging business matters, in which his neighbors need such help.
The first schoolhouse was erected on his land where the stone schoolhouse now stands.
The first cemetery in town was located on his farm and the first burials of the dead were there.
He was a Supervisor of the town of Murray before the county of Orleans was organized, or Murray had been divided into the several towns which now include its original territory. He left six children, viz.: Charles T., Gideon, who resides on his paternal homestead, Dr. James W. now a practicing physician in Albion, Fanny E, wife of O. M. Green, George W. and Amos S. 
Randall, Amos (I56004)
 
505 [[
http://www.oocities.com/gesawyer/button.htm
Children
i Iza Mae Button born 17-Oct-1876, Asaph, Tioga Co., Pennsylvania, Occupation: Seamstress/Midwife, married (1) 30-Jun-1897, Leonard Van Gorder, born ---Dec-1877, Ellenville, Ulster County, NY, (son of Alvord C. Van Gorder and Mary Louisa Helm) Occupation: Railroad Lineman, died 4-Jun-1905, Galeton, Potter County, PA, Buried: Middlebury Cemetery, Keeneyville, Pa., married (2) 3-Aug-1904, in Ansonia, Tioga Co., PA, Samuel Hoffey DeRemer, born 1880, Picture Rocks, Pa., (son of Eziekiel M. DeRemer, Jr. and Jane Smith) Occupation: Sawmill Worker, died 1924, Canadaiqua, Ontario Co., New York. Iza died 30-Jun-1955, Wellsboro, Tioga County, PA, Buried: Wellsboro City Cemetery, Wellsboro, PA.
ii Lulu Button born 21-Jan-1880, died 12-Jan-1882.
iii Leroy Button born 19-Sep-1883, Dakota., married Daisy R. Maybee, born 2-Apr-1893, died 25-Nov-1959. Leroy died 5-Jan-1968.
iv Nina Maude Button born 7-Oct-1886, married divorced, Rev. Carl Clinton Crippen, born 2-Jun-1892, Occupation: Methodist Minister, died ---Dec-1956. Nina died 1972, Wellsboro, Tioga County, PA.
v Leon L. Button born 27-Oct-1889, died 5-Oct-1906. 
Button, Alonzo F. R. (I46015)
 
506 [[
http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/news/article_efb9e050-b331-11df-958f-001cc4c03286.html
Rapid City Journal -Posted: Sunday, August 29, 2010
Sunday Special: Working the land
Jared Stearns wants to be a rancher just like his father, grandfather and the two generations of Stearns that preceded them.
At 8 years old, Jared knows one of the best places in his world is atop a horse straddling western South Dakota dirt, which is where he was on a warm afternoon in July.
"It's probably the best seat you can find out here," Jared said. "It's just about that. If you love the outdoors, then you're supposed to be out here."
Wearing a rancher's uniform - cowboy hat, boots, jeans and a plaid, button-up shirt - Jared, his dad and his aunt rode horses toward a skyline so big and open only rows of barbed-wire fence and cattle broke up the horizon.
Jared is the fifth generation of Stearns ranchers to work along that horizon. As it passed from father to son, a century's worth of labor transformed the original 1910 Stearns family homestead to the cow/calf ranch operating today.
Located southeast of Edgemont where the pavement turns to gravel, the Stearns ranch and its family will receive recognition Thursday from the South Dakota Century Farm program for its continued legacy.
In conjunction with the South Dakota Farm Bureau and the state Department of Agriculture, the century farm program honors ranches and farms that stayed in the same family for at least 100 years.
The Stearns' century of success does not intimidate Jared. If he had it his way, Jared would already be a full-time rancher, but his parents want him to celebrate about 15 more birthdays, and, to Jared's great displeasure, finish high school and earn a college degree.
He knows the life of a rancher is difficult, one that is never finished and continually foiled by bad weather and pesky wildlife. After eight years of watching his dad work, he also knows it's a way of life worth living.
"I think it's something the way my dad does it, because he does it pretty good," Jared said.
In Jared's mind, assuming the primary ranching responsibilities is inevitable, so until then, he is biding his time by developing his ranching skills.
His parents, Jerry and Melissa Stearns, are happy to accommodate their son's eagerness.
"He's so willing to do anything on the ranch," Melissa said. "He's definitely got ranching on the brain."
----------
The 127 Black Angus cattle started walking toward the open pasture gate as the three riders approached them on horseback, tromping through grass and weeds.
Jared rode Star beside his dad and aunt, a position typically held by his grandmother, Flora Stearns, but that afternoon, Jared helped move the cows and calves; it was his first pasture ride.
"If they don't want to go, you're going to make them, though. You're going to have to make them," Jared said.
Moved about every 30 days to greener pastures, the cows and calves started calling out to one another and lining up once they sensed the riders.
"They really know when it's time to go to a new pasture," Flora said as she watched from the sidelines as her son, daughter and grandson worked together.
Before long, the cow and calf pairs were filing toward their next home with the three riders bringing up the rear. Jared held strong at the back of the herd, while his dad and aunt occasionally rode up the ranks to narrow the girth of the parade.
The cattle plodded with little resistance to their new pasture, only stopping for a quick drink; it was Jared's horse that needed some encouragement.
An older horse, Star moves at her own pace. Flora and Melissa Stearns found an orange flyswatter and handed it to Jared to help keep Star on course.
"Get after her, Jared," said Flora, who operates a ranch with her husband, Dewane Stearns, next door.
Jerry Stearns and his parents typically shoulder the bulk of the ranch duties and work both ranches as one operation. Every Stearns does what he or she can to participate in the daily responsibilities, including Jared's two sisters Kaylen, 9, and Jana, 5.
As the three of them grow up, Melissa and Jerry said their children, the fifth generation on the ranch, will become great assets to the operation - especially once Jared's abilities catch up to his enthusiasm for the job.
----------
One hundred years came sooner than the Stearns expected.
"In a way, I guess it snuck up on us; we're always pretty busy here," Jerry Stearns said.
The earliest documents the family has access to date the ranch a few years later, but a conversation with a relative who has an interest in the family's genealogy revealed copies of homestead papers filed in May 1910.
Melissa Stearns packaged the family's application materials for the century farm program, and on June 25, the South Dakota Farm Bureau approved the Stearns ranch, and a letter arrived a few days later welcoming the family into the program.
"It's a great honor to be a part of it," Jerry said.
The Stearns' are one of 58 families being recognized Thursday for their century of hard work in agriculture, according to Julie Fritzsche, administrative assistant for the South Dakota Farm Bureau.
Fritzsche evaluates all of the program's applications for approval.
More than 2,400 farms and ranches in the state have been recognized as centennial operations since the conception of the program in 1984.
The families must prove their operations meet the four requirements of the program: consist of 80 acres or more, owned by a member of the same family for 100 years, proof of the original date of purchase and a legal description of the land.
This year, a new category of farms and ranches will share the Dakotaland stage at the state fair in Huron with the century farm families.
In conjunction with the 125th anniversary of the South Dakota State Fair, the program is recognizing 146 operations as quasquicentennial, or 125-year farms and ranches.
The farm bureau sent out letters to 690 century farms and ranches that joined the program in 1984 and 1985, Fritzsche said. With no guarantee that addresses were still current, family members still alive or the operations still in family control, Fritzsche did not know what sort of response to expect.
"We're thinking things look good," Fritzsche said. "We're happy to get whatever we can."
----------
John Franklin Stearns, the patriarch of the South Dakota Stearns legacy, arrived in Provo from Brewster, Minn., in May 1910 with one goal in mind: to stake his claim on federal land and start a homestead. Known by his middle name, Frank was 40 years old.
All 160 acres of his original homestead are still ranched by the Stearns family 100 years later. The dilapidated, original homestead house stands on the hill behind Jerry and Melissa Stearns' home.
Frank Stearns' wife, Annie, arrived by train seven months later with their five young children: Theodore, 7; Sadie, 6; Edward, 5; Arthur, 3; and Charles, 1.
The seven of them squeezed into a 16-by-24-foot, two-room tar-paper shack with no insulation, plumbing or electricity.
Both Flora Stearns and Melissa Stearns swear they would have hopped back on the train if they had been in Annie's position.
Annie's grandson, Darrell Hoar, the son of Sadie, remembers visiting his grandmother, a hard, serious but sincere woman.
"Like most of those early ladies, they went through so much, so much hardship, they didn't smile a lot; they were all business," Hoar said. "The hardship of just living, just to eat three square meals a day."
While the children were still young, Frank contracted typhoid fever, causing him to run deliriously through fields full of cactus in the middle of the night. Thinking he was insane, the sheriff threw him in jail after finding him 20 miles from home. A doctor diagnosed him with typhoid, and Frank was taken to a hospital in Hot Springs. Annie ran the ranch while Frank recovered. In 1927, Frank died from a bleeding ulcer at the age of 57. Annie outlived her husband by 23 years, dying in 1950 at the age of 82.
While Annie was still alive, her son, Ed Stearns, and his wife, Ida, took over the ranch in about 1933. Written in her own words, Ida explained life during the Depression in the Edgemont centennial book from 1989.
"Since we married during the Depression years, it was difficult for both of us. Many banks had gone broke, and with it being so dry, it was impossible to raise crops. The grasshoppers were extremely bad then, too," Ida Stearns wrote.
Electricity was installed on the ranch during Ed and Ida's ownership. Ed broke down wooden ammunition boxes from the Igloo army depot and used the lumber to build more barns and out buildings, some of which Jerry and Melissa use today.
After Ed died in 1975, Dewane and Flora Stearns leased the ranch for about 20 years.
"My mother wouldn't sell it to me; she was hanging on until the last minute," said Dewane, but he and Flora were able to buy his Uncle Charlie's place.
After Ida moved to Edgemont, she sold the ranch to Jerry Stearns in 1997.
"She probably could have sold it to anybody for more money than what I gave for it, but she said she wanted to keep it in the Stearns family," Jerry said.
----------
Melissa Stearns sprayed water on the 130-pound, freshly clipped sheep as the daylight dwindled on an August evening. The whole family was helping prep Kaylen's 4-H animals for the Fall River County Fair later that week. Kaylen's job was to soap the animal while her mom held the water hose, but she needed a little direction.
"Kaylen, come on; whose lamb is this?" Melissa said, and her daughter started scrubbing. "Go after it, babe."
The lamb, not so affectionately named Devil Child, was a challenge for everyone.
"I thought it would turn into something cute and pretty, but it turned into something devious," Kaylen said.
It is her first year in 4-H, and Kaylen is showing sheep, pigs and a 1,200-pound steer named Big Boy at county, regional and state fairs.
Kaylen knows that at the end of fair season, the animals she has cared for all summer and grown attached to will be sold and butchered. She is fine with it, but will miss Big Boy the most.
"He's going to come back home, and they're going to slaughter on the 24th, the day before I go back to school," Kaylen said. "It'll be kind of tough.
"You get money. It kind of hits the spot. I'm building up my college fund," Kaylen said.
Two times a day and all summer long, the family has looked after the project animals on the ranch. The additional animals create extra work for Melissa and Jerry Stearns, both former 4-H members.
"Ranching is a great way to raise a family. I think it shows the kids a lot of responsibilities and day-to-day life in general," Jerry said. "Maybe you start out at kind of a young age, but it shows them responsibilities."
----------
Jerry Stearns wound up and down the hay field, mowing down the golden-brown stalks later to be raked and rolled into bales by his mom and dad. All three of his children are looking forward to the day they can help operate the haying equipment.
As the summer sun dried out the ground, a number of round bales already dotted the landscape.
Flush from this year's heavy precipitation, the hay cut this year is expected to last about two to three years, at least twice as long as typical yields for their hay fields, Dewane Stearns said.
"This year is a very unusual year. I've never seen a year like this before," Dewane said.
"I've been out here for 45 years. Never have I seen a year like this - so much grass and hay."
The wet year follows about a decade of drought, with 2006 and 2007 sticking out as particularly dry years.
"We've actually cut our cow numbers in half just because of the drought. This year is an exception to the rule," Jerry said. "It's been a pretty tough go in the last 10 years for the ranchers."
The Stearns ranch is part desert, generating ideal conditions for cactus to grow and rattlesnakes to thrive - not an easy
ranching climate.
"It's probably the toughest place in the state of South Dakota, if you want my opinion on it," Jerry said. "We're always bumping heads with Mother Nature, I guess. If it's not the drought, it's blizzards or lightning fires."
Despite what seems like a constant struggle to survive as a ranch, no one is considering finding a new career.
"It's a way of life," Dewane said. "It's just in your blood. You know, it's just something you always look forward to; you don't make any money at it, but it's just something you like to do."
Like Jared, Dewane and Jerry both knew from a young age they wanted to continue living the ranching lifestyle.
"Working for yourself is the main thing there, and just the love for the outdoors and the animals," Jerry said "I love it, and I wouldn't trade it for anything."
If Jared changes his mind, and Kaylen and Jana choose other life paths, the 100 years of ranching history does not change Melissa and Jerry Stearns' view that their children will decide their own futures.
"I hope they do. It's their option. If they want to do, it they can; if not, that's fine, too. I'm not going to push them into it," Jerry said.
"It's easy to say that when you're young, but when they get a little bit older, I do hope they do decide to come back; but I'm not going to force them to." 
Stearns, John F. (I26652)
 
507 [[
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ilmaga/cass/cemetery/beardstown.html
Randell V. Sr. 29 Dec 1956 4 Oct 2005 (Married 29 Dec 1973)

Randell V. Hoar Sr.: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - October 6, 2005
Deceased Name: Randell V. Hoar Sr.
BEARDSTOWN - Randell V. Hoar Sr., 48, of Beardstown died Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2005, at his home.
He was born Dec. 29, 1956, in Jacksonville, N.C., the son of Ralph B. and Eleanor Duplisse Hoar. He married Venus A. Chisholm in 1973 in Sneads Ferry, N.C. A son, Randell V. Hoar Jr., preceded him in death.
Mr. Hoar worked at Cooper's Concrete in Beardstown.
Survivors: wife, Venus; son, Jeremiah Hoar of Beardstown; daughter, Stacy Haynes of Beardstown; two grandsons; and three brothers, Mitchell Hoar of Butte, Mont., and Rudy and Wendell Hoar, both of Rocky Point, N.C.
Graveside services: 10:30 a.m. Friday, Beardstown City Cemetery, the Rev. Steve Griffin officiating.
Sager Funeral Home in _Beardstown is in charge of arrangements. 
Hoar, Randell Sr. (I28792)
 
508 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I60414)
 
509 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I35630)
 
510 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I72755)
 
511 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I8193)
 
512 [[
http://www.virtual-memorials.com/main.php?action=view&mem_id=1258
Thomas Joseph Hoar
March 5 1916 - March 5 1984
Dear Daddy: It's hard for me to believe that you are "gone" from this earth for almost 25 years. I'm sorry that we weren't closer when you were alive- I regret that so much now! I've come to realize how much you meant to me now and how it's not too late to ever let you know... I realize how much mental anguish you were in at times in the situation that you lived with- I only wish that I realized it then... The fact that you "passed" on the same day that you were born, March 5th, that just happens to be my birthday as well. It shows me your passing was even more pre-planned and that you completed a full circle... Every year when "our" birthday comes I feel a special bond with you, but now that mommy is gone too I miss you even more. I just want to tell you, as you know, that I forgive you for all of your shortcomings and miss you more then you'll ever know. You were a good man and a good father and tried your very best. I'll always cherish the few very close times we had as father and daughter, I don't have to tell you what they are- we know. You told me I had so much potential and I'm trying to utilize that... And a special thanks for being around me so often and the "many" signs that you have given to me and continue to give me almost on a daily basis... I know you are a guide for me in this earthly life and I also know how lucky I am to have that gift bestowed upon me... And one that I will never take for granted~~ Ever!! And thanks for playing "matchmaker" in your latest endeavor on my behalf... It does NOT go unnoticed by me and only makes me smile more... :o) I know you're in Paradise as you used to say- what a time you must be having! You can float among the stars that you so intently studied whenever you want. That must make you smile! And I know it does... I just want to say that I love you daddy and I look forward to the day that we will be reunited once again. I'll run up to you on that beach with open arms, give you a big hug, and say, "I love you." I hope that mommy is with you then... What a reunion it will be!!! Have fun with Uncle Jack until then... That is way cool... All of my earthly and beyond love, Kathie 
Hoar, Thomas (I2067)
 
513 [[
http://www.virtual-memorials.com/main.php?action=view&mem_id=1259&page_no=1
Dear Mom,
You will be gone from this earth for almost twelve years now. And I really do miss you so much. It's still hard for me to believe that you aren't here physically- I still have times when something good or exciting in my life will happen and I run to the phone only to stop in my tracks and realize that I cannot "talk" to you, verbally anyway. It's so hard sometimes.
Your 90th birthday just passed on 12/13 and I thought of you the entire day, trying to smile and remember you when you were strong & healthy. I don't know if you realized how sick you were toward the end but know that I did everything that I could to help ease your passing. It was very difficult to watch. And when I walked into your room and you were "gone" I looked up and smiled and waved good-bye, hoping that you saw me. I realized that you were finally "free" to go to the Light and rejoice. It must truly be beautiful where you are. Although we never shared a mother/daughter relationship that was close, I hope that you are with me now when I think about you or talk to you. I dream of you sometimes- I had 2 or 3 dreams about you right around your birthday and wondered if you were "trying" to get through.
I love you mom, and can't wait to see you again when my time comes. I know that will be a long time from now as I've been told, but it will be good to see you again and smile and know that only good feelings and love will abound.
May you be at peace and I hope with daddy- he waited long enough for you. Please be around me at momentous times in my life- I want to share them with you and know that I can if you're "with" me. Until we meet again, I love you.....I hope that we meet at "The Garden Gate."
All of my love, Little Kate
Happy Birthday & Merry Christmas in Heaven.

Obituary:
BERNICE D. GUILFOYLE HOAR: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice
Record, The (Hackensack, NJ) - January 2, 1997
Deceased Name: BERNICE D. GUILFOYLE HOAR
BERNICE D. GUILFOYLE HOAR, 78, of Wood-Ridge, formerly of Hoboken, died Tuesday. Before retiring in 1979, she was a secretary for Sun Chemical Co., Carlstadt, where she worked for 11 years. She was a parishioner of Assumption R.C. Church, Wood-Ridge, and a member of its Rosary Society. Arrangements: Kohler Funeral Home, Wood-Ridg
Edition: All Editions
Page: l04

Her sister's obituary:
Record, The (Hackensack, NJ) and Herald News (West Paterson, NJ) - June 9, 2004
Deceased Name: GUILFOYLE
GUILFOYLE - Virginia of Wood-Ridge on June 7, 2004. Loving sister of the late Bernice Hoar (1996). Dear aunt to Kathleen Mautner of East Rutherford, Eileen deMatos of Hillsborough and Nancy Hoar of Kearny. Funeral Thursday 9 AM from Kohler Funeral Home, 280 Hackensack Street, Wood-Ridge. Mass 9:30 AM at Assumption R.C. Church. Interment St. Nicholas Cemetery. Visiting Wednesday 3-5 and 7-9 PM. 
Guilfoyle, Bernice (I37749)
 
514 [[
http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bangerter-1 
Bangerter, Lenore I. (I70307)
 
515 [[
http://www.worldvitalrecords.com/SingleIndexIndView.aspx?ix=cabi&hpp=1&rf=*,z*&qt=i&zdocid=188283
Surname: SCHNABEL
First Name: FREDERIC
Middle Name/Initial: K
Gender: MALE
Birthdate: 02 APR 1911
Birth County (in California): SANTA CLARA
Mother's Maiden Name: HVARD 
Schnabel, Frederick (I54077)
 
516 [[
http://www.worldvitalrecords.com/SingleIndexIndView.aspx?ix=cabi&hpp=1&rf=*,z*&qt=i&zdocid=603247
Surname: SCHNABEL
First Name: STELLA
Middle Name/Initial: L
Gender: FEMALE
Birthdate: 22 NOV 1919
Birth County (in California): SANTA CLARA
Mother's Maiden Name: HOARD 
Schnabel, Stella L. (I54078)
 
517 [[
https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE60230
"Peggy"
Paula/Margaret Hoar, daughter of Kenneth S. Hoar and Valetta Ruth Appleby, was born at
Shell Lake, Wisconsin 9 April 1925, She married at Pine City, Minnesota 4 January 1944,
Morris "Bud" Charles Mercier, son of Charles Mercier and Delphine Chartier. He was bom
a t Rice Lake, Wisconsin 8 August 1924, They were divorced at Eau Clair , Wisconsin 23
December 1951 and she removed t o Los Angeles, California with her daughter; living at 5312
Certeen Place, Apt, 21, North HoHywoed, C a l i f o m i a . Their daughter wasi-
809o 1. Paula Diane Mercier narried Vaughn Wamon Birdwell,


Obituary: Published in the Spooner Advocate 14 Jan 2006
Page: " Paula "Peggy" Mercier, 80, of Shell Lake, died on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006, at Spooner Health System Residential Care.
She was born on April 9, 1925, in Shell Lake to Kenneth and Valetta (Applebee) Hoar. She graduated, with honors, from Shell Lake High School and was prom queen. Paula attended Superior Business College, graduating sixth in her class of 84.
She had many friends and loved to dance. This is how she met her husband, Bud Mercier, from Rice Lake. During World War II while her husband was at war, she began to pursue her career.
Moving between Wisconsin, Chicago, and California, she became a very independent career woman, working in executive positions during the 1950s and 60s -? a feat rarely achieved by women during this era. Paula was very successful in her career, establishing new sales offices throughout America for various corporations.
When she moved to Los Angeles in 1962, she went to work for Budget Rent-a-Car. She was a key person involved in establishing this fledging company and instrumental in its success of becoming an international company. During her career, Paula was a single mom who also helped raise her granddaughter.
She returned to Shell Lake in 1980 to take care of her father after her mother died. Paula worked at Spooner Bank and then as a caregiver, before heart problems and Alzheimer?s disease forced her to retire.
She is survived by one daughter, Paula (Kevin) Kessler-Christensen, of Shell Lake, and one granddaughter, Kimberly Kessler, of Honolulu, Hawaii.
She was preceded in death by her sister, Jean Schullo.
The funeral was held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 10, at St. Alban Episcopal Church, Spooner. Rev. Robert Rodgers officiated.
Burial of cremains was in Shell Lake Cemetery.
Funeral arrangements were handled by Pockat Funeral Home of Shell Lake." 
Hoar, Paula (I9050)
 
518 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I19091)
 
519 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5577)
 
520 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I28236)
 
521 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I37899)
 
522 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I33982)
 
523 [[
https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE60230
L i l a B. Hear, daughter ef Jehn Woodworth Hear and J u l i a E. Ayers, was bora 13 November 1898.
She married 13 November 1922, Raymond Lyford, and t h e i r children werei-
1. Bernard Lyford, who died in infancy.
1 1 . Julia M. Lyford married, f i r s t , Henry E a r l , who died from p o l i o m y e l i t i s.
They had two sons and one daughter. She married, second, P h i l i p B o u t l e t t e,
and they had three sons and two daughters. 
Hoar, Lila (I34869)
 
524 [[
https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE60230
Lewis Bexter Hoar, son of John Woodworth Hoar and J u l i a TE. Ayers, died before 1974. He
married a t age 11, Elizabeth Stanhope, daughter of Lincoln Stanhope and his wife, Etta J .,
of Edmunds, Maine. Their sen wasi-
I . Lewis V. Hoar married Sarah Nelson. They were divorced} Sarah remarried
and teefc.the children with her and had t h e i r names changed to t h a t of her
second husband. Lewis never remarried. In 1958 he was l i v i n g In Lubee,
Maine.
 
Hoar, Lewis Jr. (I34874)
 
525 [[
https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE60230
Marvin James Hoar, son of Ralph Brawn Hoar and Vera Kerr, was bora a t Bangor, Maine 19
J u l y 1937, and was a U, S. n a i l c a r r i e r , of P, 0. Box 231, Bath, South Carolina, He marr
i e d 9 September 1959. Barbara Anne Brenner, bom a t Alexandria, Va, 5 April 1937. Their
c h i l d r e n werei-
1, Marvin James Hoar, J r . , born 24 September 1962.
11. Gena Virginia Hoar, born 3 June 1964,
i l l . James Brawn Hoar, born 23 November I965,
i v , Eva Anne Hoar, bom 9 January I968,


Obituary:
Mr. Marvin James Hoar Sr., 65, of Oxford Street, entered into rest April 25, 2003.
He was the beloved husband for 43 years of Mrs. Barbara Brenner Hoar.
In addition to his wife, he is survived by two sons, Marvin J. Hoar Jr. and James B. Hoar and daughter-in- law, Dana A. Baldride; three daughters, Gena V. Adams and son-in-law, W. Mike Adams, Eva A. McDonald and son-in-law, Brian S. McDonald and Victoria L. Brady; three grandchildren Ben and Grace Adams and Theron Hoar.
A memorial service will be held Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in the chapel of Hatcher Funeral Home.
Friends may call Tuesday from 5:30 until the time of service.
Hatcher Funeral Home, U.S. Hwy #1, Langley, S.C.
Sign the guestbook at AugustaChronicle.com
The Augusta Chronicle (Georgia)-April 29, 2003 
Hoar, Marvin Sr. (I37510)
 
526 [[
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Mary Margaret Hoar, daughter of Archibald Smith Hoar and Catherine Ferguson Dunn, was bom
a t Alsask, Saskatchewan 21 April 1917, She married 30 August 193*, Ernest Roderick He Farland,
who was bom a t Edmonton, Alberta 3 November 1903, He was the Chrysler-Plymouth distributor for Southern Alberta from 1937 t o I963. Subsequently he was President and Managing Director of an independent brewery based in Creston, 1. C,, r e t i r i n g in 1971 and becoming Chairman of the board. They lived in Nelson, 1. C., and t h e i r children were:
1, Patricia Anne Mc Farland, bom a t Lethbridge, Alberta 23 May 1950,
1 1 , Roderick Peter Mc Farland, bom a t Lethbridge, Alberta t October 1951, 
Hoar, Mary (I4074)
 
527 [[
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Maurice Raymond Hoar, son of Bernard Hoar and Vivian Washbume, was born 28 October 1928,
He d i d motor repair work, and l i v e d a t 1.5 Sunset Road, Old Saybrook, Conn. He married
Pauline P, S t l H , born a t Port Jefferson, Long Island, N. Y, 11 Hay 1924, Their daughter
wast-
1. Tammy Elaine Hoar, bom 12 March 1965,


Obituary:
The Hartford Courant 2002)
Maurice R. Hoar, 74, of Sunset Rd, Old Saybrook, died Monday (November 18, 2002) at Connecticut Hospice in Branford after a long illness. He was the husband of the late Pauline (Still) Hoar, born on October 28, 1928 in Lincoln, NH son of the late Bernard and Vivian Washburn Hoar. He lived in Old Saybrook for the past 60 years, graduated at Old Saybrook High School Class of 1947. He owned and operated Saybrook Electric Motor Shop in Old Saybrook for the past 36 years. He was an Army veteran serving in the Korean War also served with the Connecticut National Guard 246th Engineer Company in Westbrook. He is survived by two sons, Stephen Mercer of East Lyme, Charles Mercer of Old Saybrook; two daughters, Tammy Ponterella of Old Saybrook and Paula Stuart of Old Saybrook; a sister, Dawn Thomas of Old Saybrook and also 10 grandchilren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday, 11 a.m., graveside at Riverside Cemetery in Old Saybrook, friends may call at the Swan Funeral Home, 1224 Boston Post Rd, Old Saybrook, Wednesday evening, 6-8 p.m. Memorial donations may be made in his memory to the Connecticut Hospice, 100 Double Beach Rd., Branford, Ct 06405. 
Hoar, Maurice (I33844)
 
528 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5612)
 
529 [[
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Obituary:
HOARE. Oliver Chesley ? 70. Bible
Hill. died Thursday in Colchester Re-
gional Hospital. Born in Manganese
Mines. Colchester County, he was a
son of the late Chesley Baxter Hoare
and Emma Cassidy Wagstaff. He was
a a former employee of Cameron
y Farming Equipment and was involved
in the farming industry most of his
working life. He is survived by a
daughter, Eva. Halifax; two sons.
David. Valley. Colchester County, and
Harold. Vancouver; a sister, Jean
(Mrs Herbert Archibald), Kemptown.
Colchester" oounty; two grandchildren:
several nieces and nephews.
He was predeceased by his wife.
June: a brother. Fulton: agister. Stella:
two half-brothers. Roy and Hallett;
two half-sisters. Hazel and Viney.
The body is in Ettinger Kennedy Memonal
Residence, Truro; visiting 7-9
p.m Friday. Funeral service will be t
p.m. Saturday in the funeral home.
Rev. J. E. Tarrant officiating. Spring
burial will be in Bible Hill Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to the Nova Scotia Heart Fund
or the 
Hoar, Oliver (I2429)
 
530 [[
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S t u a r t Carlton Hoar, son of Forest Clayton Hoar and Ethel Daisy Clary, was born 22 September
1932. He married 15 June 1957. Muriel Peters, and t h e i r children wereii
, Michael Hoar, bom 23 August 1959.
11. Penney Hoar, bom 11 March 1962.
i l i a Steven Hoar, bom 16 January 1964. 
Hoar, Stuart (I12878)
 
531 [[
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Virginia "Jean" Marion Hoar, daughter of Kenneth S . Hoar and Valetta Ruth Appleby, was
bom a t Shell Lake, Wisconsin 15 September 1923. She married a t SheH Lake, Wisconsin 18
August 1942, Paul Jeffrey SchuHe ef Milwaukee, Wisconsin} and they were divorced in 1970.
He was bom a t Spoonor, Wisconsin 4 July 1923. and was Vice President of an Insurance Go,
Their children werei-
808, 1, Marion Jean SchuHo married Dennis Geiser.
1 1 . Valetta Maria SchuHo, born a t Spooner, Wisconsin 8 October 1946, was a
student in Nursing a t Deaconess Hospital, Milwaukee, prior to her engagement
t o John Eugene Gutowski, whom she married a t Hllwaukee, Wisconsin 18
Secember 1971. He was born 15 September 1947. 
Hoar, Virginia (I9049)
 
532 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I681)
 
533 [[
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/S51P-927 
Purple, Sarah (I70644)
 
534 [[
I had born Sep 6, 1920 
Horr, Philip Jr. (I32941)
 
535 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I33722)
 
536 [[
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Her step-father's obituary:
San Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA) - September 20, 2001
Deceased Name: CARROLL H. BOWERS
July 4, 1928-Sept. 16, 2001
Carroll H. Bowers, 73, of Jaffrey, N.H., died Sunday. She was born in Utica, N.Y., and was a travel agent. She was a president of the Larchmont, N.Y., Assembly and a member of Friends of the Jaffrey Public Library.
Survivors include her daughters, Betsy Dennison of Pompton Lakes, N.J., Kathryn H. Cihi of Norwalk, Conn., and Anne Falk of San Rafael; son, William W. Whitten Jr. of Deep River, Conn.; stepdaughters, Kathryn Verman of Charlotte, Vt., Emily Foley of Savannah, Ga., and Susan Horr of Sackets Harbor, N.Y.; mother, Dorothy E. Hunt of San Diego; and 14 grandchildren.
Online visitation: www.cournoyerfh.com.
Services: 10:30 a.m. today, First Church of Jaffrey, Jaffrey, N.H.
Donations: Friends of the Jaffrey Public Library, 38 Main St., Jaffrey, NH 03452.
Arrangements: Cournoyer Funeral Home and Cremation Center, Jaffrey, N.H. 
Bowers, Susan (I26878)
 
537 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I59141)
 
538 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I58631)
 
539 [[
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Babbitt, Nancy (I56676)
 
540 [[
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Reed, Isaac (I56675)
 
541 [[
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(Unknown), Pamelia (I56670)
 
542 [[
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Austin, John (I56669)
 
543 [[
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Bolton, Ada (I56665)
 
544 [[
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Cunningham, Mabel (I56663)
 
545 [[
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Cunningham, Shirley B. (I56662)
 
546 [[
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Cunningham, Ella (I56661)
 
547 [[
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Savage, Annie (I56657)
 
548 [[
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Cunningham, James (I56656)
 
549 [[
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Bolton, Thomas (I56653)
 
550 [[
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(Unknown), Matilda A. (I56621)
 

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