Descendants of William Hascall of Fontmell Magna (1490-1542)

Notes


31489. Ida A. Stevens


The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 88
                  page 313
                  [p.313] Mrs. Ida Stevens Weed.
                  DAR ID Number: 87999
                  Born in Westport, N. Y.
                  Wife of Albert Weed.
                  Descendant of Elnathan Stevens, as follow
                  1. Charles A. Stevens (b. 1835) m., 1858, Agusta Hasca
ll (1841-72).
                  See No. 87998.
Obituary
unknown newspaper
Following a prolonged illness, Mrs. Albert Weed, one of Ticonderoga's most highly esteemed women, surcomed at her home early Sunday morning. Mrs Weed was brought home about two weeks ago from a Boston hospital, where she underwent treatment for several weeks in a futile attempt to regain her former health. While her death was not entirely unexpected, her passing is a distinct shock to Ticonderoga. where she spent the greater part of her life, and where her devotion to the church, hospital and child welfare gave her a position in the comunity munity which few women attain.
Ida Stevens Weed was born in iWadhams, but early in life she moved with her family to Ticonderoga,where she married Mr. Weed a few years later. With the exception of her brief childhood residence in Wadhams, Mrs. Weed spent her entire life here.
She was President of the Women's Auxhiary of the Moses-Ludington member and valued worker in the Church of thew Cross, and for the past few years Mrs. Weed had been intensely interested in Child Welfare work, and in Ticonderoga. It was largely through her untiring efforts that this cause was successfully furthered in Ticonderoga. ! Besides her husband, Mrs. Weed is survived by one daughter, Mrs.  Bernard Malaney, of Auburndale, Mass, one sister, Mrs. Walter French; a half sister. Miss Gertrude Ticonderoga. and her step-mother, Mrs Charles Stevens, and a half brother, Allen Stevens all of Ticonderoga.
Funeral services were held in the home Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, Rev. P. A. Paris officiating,
internment was in Mt Hope.


Albert Weed


Albert, son of Joseph Weed, was born at Ticonderoga, Jan. 10, 1857
He was educated in the public schools and the Union Free Academy at Ticond
eroga. He worked for a time at the trade of carpenter and for some three years in the pulp mill at Ticonderoga. He then learned the drug business, and from 1892 to Sept. 1909, was in partnership with his brother, Alexander H. Weed, under the firm name of Weed Brothers, druggists. He has been in the fire insurance business in addition to his other avocations since 1887, in the firm of Weed & Burleigh. He is also a partner in the firm of Stevens & Weed, dealers in clothing, Ticonderoga. He was a director of the First National Bank of Ticonderoga for a number of years. In politics he is a Republican, and he has taken a prominent part in public affairs. He was supervisor of the town, 1891-93; member of the board of trustees of the incorporated village of Ticonderoga; member of the assembly in 1895-96. Since 1901, when he was appointed by President McKinley, he has been postmaster of Ticonderoga. He is a member of Mount Defiance Lodge, No. 794, Free and Accepted Masons; of Carillon Chapter, No. 290, Royal Arch Masons, Ticonderoga; of De Soto Commandery, Knights Templar, of Plattsburgh; of Oriental Temple, Mystic Shrine, of Troy. In religion he is an Episcopalisn. Mr. Weed married, October, 1884, Ida Stevens of Westport, N.Y., daughter of Charles A. Stevens. Children: Charles, born 1888, died 1894. Marjorie, July, 1897.

Former Mayor of Ticonderoga


31492. Edward Herbert S. Hascall


St. Albans Daily Messenger
June 1, 1888

A Rutland dispatch of the 31st ult. says: Herbert Hascall, aged 22, an engineer on the Bennington and Rutland railroad, while assisting to make a flying switch at Danby at 6:30 this evening, fell from the top of a car and three cars passed over him, killing him instantly. The body was brought home here.

He leaves a widow. He has been married only four weeks. He is the fourth in his family to meet death on the railroad.


31497. Robert Charles Hascall

New York Times

Gastonia, NC, February. 6, (UP) - Robert C. Hascall, telegraph editor of the Gastonia Gazette, died in his hotel room today of a heart attack. He was 57 years old. He has been an active newspaper man in the South and East for thirty years.
_____
The Gastonia Gazette
February 7, 1949

Robert C. Hascall, 56, telegraph editor for The Gazette for the past year, died suddenly Sunday Morning following a heart attack in his room at a local hotel.

Mr. Hascall, a conscientous, hard-working newspaperman, had been in the business for the last 30 years, ever since his discharge from the Army following World War I.

He served as editor of the Sayre(Pa.) Times for 19 years and since that time has worked on the Cumberland (Md.) News, The Suffolk (Va.) News-Herald, The Washington Times-Herald, and the Kannapolis Daily Independent. He came to the Gazette from Kannapolis.

He was a native of Vermont, the son of a prominent Rutland jeweler. All the members of his immediate family are dead with the exception of a son, George, of Washington D.C., and a brother Tom, of Richmond, Ind.

Mr. Hascall, during his work with The Gazette, made many friends in Gastonia. He was actively affiliated with the Republican party in Gastonia, serving as publicity director of The Young Republican Federation of Gastonia. In addition to his desk work on newspapers for 30 years, he had been a local correspondent for the United Press in several localities before coming to Gastonia.

A man of pleasing disposition, Mr. Hascall loved newspaper work and tackled it with a fervor and zeal which would have done credit to a man much younger in years. He kept in close contact with the national political picture and was an expert on world affairs. His daily work at The Gazette consisted of handling all Associated Press wire news and selecting stories which made up the front page each day. With his wide newspaper experience, he was an ideal man for the job, which requires concentration and craftmanship.

Mr. Hascall spoke often of his hobbies, which, in the early part of his life, consisted of hunting and fishing in Vermont. Due to the nature of his work, he was forced to give up these activities to a great extent in the last few years but he spoke of these and similar recreations often.

During the first world war, he served overseas in the Corps of Army Engineers and saw action in combat. Later, he was in the Army of occupation at Coblenz. He became active in American Legion affairs at Sayre, Pa., while serving as editor of the paper there, and was at one time commander of the Sayre post. During his tenure, he was a leading figure in the organization of a drum and bugle corps composed of youngsters of high school age and adopted this activity as one of his hobbies.
_____

The Gastonia Gazette
February 8, 1949

Mr. Hascall, The Gazette's telegraph editor, had been dead five or six hours when the maid opened the door of his hotel room Sunday morning about 8:30. She called for help, and an examing doctor fixed the time of death at about 2 a.m. The veteran newsman had complainded Saturday that he was feeling bad, but appeared in good spirits when he talked to friends on the street late Saturday afternoon. He lived alone in his hotel room.

His newspaper friends from Gastonia, Kannapolis and Washington D.C., were to pay their last respects today at brief rites. Mr. Hascall's only brother, Tom, of Richmond, Ind., arrived Monday night to take charge of arrangements. Mr. Hascall also leaves a son, George, 21, who lives in Washington, D.C.

The Gazette's employees were to be honorary pallbearers, and active pallbearers were to be  David Gillespie, Lyle Edwards, Sam Carpenter, Harry Morrison, Ken Alexander, and T. H. Wingate, managing editor of The Kannapois Daily Independent. They were the men worked side by side with Mr. Hascall during the last year and a half.

Prior to joining The Gazette staff, Mr. Hascall was on the staff of the Daily Independent, and before that worked for newspapers over the Eastern seaboard. He had been a newsman for more than 30 years. He was a native of Rutland, Vt.
____
U.S., Headstone Applications for Military Veterans, 1925-1963
Name: Robert C Hascall
Birth Date: 3 Aug 1892
Death Date: 6 Feb 1949
Cemetery: Hollywood Cemetery
Cemetery Location: Gastonia, North Carolina
____
New York, Abstracts of World War I Military Service, 1917-1919
Name: Robert C Hascall
Birth Place: W Rutland VT
Birth Date: abt 1887
Service Start Date: 26 Feb 1918
Service Start Place: Tompkins Co, New York
Service Start Age: 31


54526. George McClelland Hascall

Tributes

George Hascall was born on September 10, 1927 and passed away on Monday, January 29, 2018.

George was a resident of Pensacola, Florida at the time of passing.

He was a service technician at Washington Gas Company, attended Plainview Baptist Church and served his country in the Army Reserve
____
George M. Hascall - Pensacola Memorial Gardens Pensacola Memorial Gardens

George M. Hascall • January 29, 2018 Mr. George Hascall age 90 of Pensacola, Florida died Monday, January 29, 2018 at Rosewood Rehab.
____
Find-a-Grave

Mr. George Hascall age 90 of Pensacola, Florida died Monday, January 29, 2018 at Rosewood Rehab.

Mr. Hascall was born September 10, 1927 to Robert Hascall and Agnes Carpenter. He was a service technician at Washington Gas Company, attended Plainview Baptist Church and served his country in the Army Reserves.

He is survived by a son Kirk Hascall of Pensacola, Florida.


Joan Ann Wines


The Washington Post
October 17, 1986

Hascall, Joan Ann. on October 15, 1986, in Elizabeth City, NC. formerly of Falls Church, VA. Wife of George M. Hascall, Mother of Marcie Vita, of Virginia Beach, VA; Kirk D. Hascall of Virginia Beach, VA, one sister Eleanor Grimes of Marshall, VA; two brothers, Ernest Wines and Donald Wines of Waldorf, MD. She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, Earnest Wines.


31499. Thomas Henry Hascall

Service record
U.S.N.R.F.
Enr. April 9, 1917 at New Haven Ct.
Act. duty August 25, 1917
Sta: Sect. Base, 3rd Nav. Dist., Brooklyn N.Y. to September 1917.
Inactive duty Sept. 17, 1917.
Recalled : July 10, 1918.
Sta: Nav. Tng. Cp., Pelham Bay Park, N.Y., to Sept. 12, 1918; U.S.S. "Granite State" to Oct. 25, 1918; Hdqrs., 3rd Nav. Dist., New York, N.Y., to Nov. 11, 1918.
Grades: 2/c Machinists Mate 555 days; 1/c Machinist Mate 23 days
Disch.: Apr. 8, 1921, Hdqrs.,  3rd Nav. Dist., New York, N.Y.
_____
U.S., Adjutant General Military Records, 1631-1976
Name: Thomas Henry Hascall
Report Year: 1919
Service State: Vermont
____
The Rutland Daily Herald
November 21, 1964

Funeral services were held Friday at 2 P.M. at the Congregational Church chapel for Thomas H. Hascall of West Rutland who died Wednsday by the Rev. Donald Morgan. Bearers were Roy E. Carpenter, Erwin A. Butterfield, Neile D. Bradley, George F. Jones, Robert G. Morse, and Guy B. Townsend, all of Rutland. The color guard were Val Drzewiczewski, James A. Urbano, Wilbur C. Nelson, and Ted Pawlacyk. Flag folders were Matthew J. Kenney and John H. Phalen. All are members of the American Legion Post 87 in Rutland.


Edna VanSickles

Rutland Daily Herald
October 5, 1979

Edna VanSickels Hascall, 78 of Sheldon Towers died Thursday at The Rutland Hospital.
She was born on June 1, 1901 in New Haven, Conn., daughter of Frederick and Lillian (Forbes) VanSickels. Most of her life had been lived in Rutland. Mrs. Hascall was a member of Grace Congregational United Church of Christ. She was an avid bridge player, having enjoyed the game for many years.

Survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Charles (Edna) Conner of Rutland, Mrs John (Mary) Bahlman of Albuquerque, N.M., and Mrs Gerald A. (Jean) Cole of Tempe, Ariz.; 10 grandchildren; and eight great grandchildren. Her husband, Thomas H. Hascall died in 1964.


54528. Jean Palmer Hascall

Women Air Force SVC Pilots WWII

Author : Jean Hascall Cole (44-W-2).
Title : Women Pilots of World War II
Publisher : University of Utah Press, 1992.
_____

THE PHOENIX GAZETTE
July 15, 1993

Jean Hascall Cole, 71, of Flagstaff and Chandler, a retired author and editor, died July 11, 1993. She was born in Rutland, Vt., and was a member of the Women's Air Service Pilots during World War II. She also was a former KAET-TV (Channel 8) employee, wrote ''Women Pilots of World War II'' and edited the ASU Graduate College Research News.

Survivors include her husband, Gerald A.;daughters, Wendy Singleton and Sally Mooney; sons, Tom, Steve and Jeff; one sister; and five grandchildren.

Services are pending. Contributions: WASP Memorial Scholarship Fund, 8262 Polo Trail Place, Westchester Place, Ohio 45069-1783. Flagstaff Mortuary.


Gerald Ainsworth Cole


Arizona Republic
June 25, 1999

Gerald Ainsworth Cole, 81, of Chandler, a retired professor emeritus of zoology at Arizona State University, died June 22, 1999. He was born in Hartford, Conn., and was World War II Army veteran.

Survivors include his daughters, Sally Mooney and Wendy Singleton; sons, Jeff, Tom and Steve; sister, Phyllis Deming; and five grandchildren.


54529. Mary Elaine Hascall

The Rutland Daily Herald

Mary H. Bahlman, 57, died Monday at her home in Albuquerque, N.M. Mrs. Bahlman was born in Rutland and lived in Albuquerque for 33 years.

Survivors include her husband John J. Bahlman; two sons, Gene Bahlman of San Diego, Calif., and John Bahlman of Seattle Wash.; a daughter Sue Martinaz of Mesa Ariz.; two sisters, Edna Conners of Rutland and Jean Cole of Flagstaff Ariz.; and five grandchildren.


31500. Amelia Ecklor Huntington


Winona Daily News (Winona, Minnesota)
April 26, 1965

Durand, Wis. (Special) - Mrs William Arthur Gillmore, 90, died at St. Benedict's Community Hospital Saturday at 4:40 p.m., where she had been a patient a few weeks. Previously she had been at Marycrest Rest Home.

The former Amelia Huntington, she was born here Jan. 18, 875, oldest daughter of William H. Huntington, who started the Pepin County Courier, one of the first newspapers in Durand, and his wife Jane Ecklor, who had come here with her family before the Civil War.

She attended the University of Wisconsin and taught in the Durand schools. She was married Nov. 4, 1903. She was one of the organizers of the Durand Woman's Club; secretary of the library board; a member of the common Schools of Pepin County group; served on the school board, and belonged to the Eastern Star.

Surviving is one son, William, Durand, one daughter, died in 1916. Her husband died Feb. 8, 1959 at Phoenix, Ariz., and was returned here for burial.

Burial in Forest Hill cemetery.


William Albert Gillmore


Winona Daily News (Winona, Minnesota)
February 9, 1959

Durand, Wis. (Special) - William A. Gillmore, 80, Durand IGA store owner, died Sunday evening at Phoenix, Ariz., where he and his wife were vacationing with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Gillmore, Durand. They had been there since the first of December.

Mr. Gillmore, in ill health, a year, was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gillmore. He founded the IGA store here, known first as Gillmore's. Retired, his son had run the business in later years.

Mr. Gillmore id survived by his wife, his son and a brother, Edward Durand.


31507. Samuel LeRoy Huntington


New York Passenger Lists
Ship Mauretania from Cristobal, Canal Zone, arrived New York 16 Mar 1933


Edith Blend


New York Passenger Lists
Ship Mauretania from Cristobal, Canal Zone, arrived New York 16 Mar 1933


54534. Joanne B. Huntington


The Buffalo News
August 23, 2009

COATES - JoAnne H. Age 81, of the Town of Tonawanda, at home August 21, 2009. Born in Plattsburgh, NY, retired after working 30 years at Thomas Edison School. She enjoyed swimming and gardening, was a member of the Women's Health Initiative and the Brighton Fire Co. Ladies Auxiliary.
Beloved wife of the late George J. Coates Sr., the mother of George Jr. (Melanie), Richard (Rita) and Karen (John) Collins. She was a loving grandmother of Madelyn, Christina, Katherine, Alex, John, Richard and Chelsea.

Funeral services and interment in Elmlawn Cemetery will be held privately.


54537. Betty Ann Hall


U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006
Name: Betty Ann Naessens
Service Info.: PVT US ARMY
Birth Date: 8 Oct 1924
Death Date: 20 May 1998
Relation: Wife of Naessens, August Oscar
Interment Date: 27 May 1998
Cemetery: Riverside National Cemetery
Cemetery Address: 22495 Van Buren Boulevard Riverside, CA 92518
Buried At: Section 20a Site 3770


August Oscar Naessens


U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006
Name: August Oscar Naessens
Service Info.: PVT US ARMY WORLD WAR II
Birth Date: 7 Dec 1922
Death Date: 6 Feb 1986
Service Start Date: 19 Jan 1943
Interment Date: 10 Feb 1986
Cemetery: Riverside National Cemetery
Cemetery Address: 22495 Van Buren Boulevard Riverside, CA 92518
Buried At: Section 20a Site 3771


54541. Fred Lewis Hall


The State Journal-Register (Springfield, IL)
December 13, 2001

MULBERRY GROVE - Fred L. Hall, 80, of Mulberry Grove, formerly of Springfield, died Monday, Dec. 10, 2001, at St. John's Hospital.

He was born May 4, 1921, in Rockford, the son of William H. and Maude Elizabeth Herring Hall. He married Shirley V. Peters in 1944 in New Haven, Conn.

Mr. Hall attended one room country schools and Frank L. Smart High School in Davenport, Iowa. He owned and operated a heating business in Bettendorf, Iowa, and was heating engineer and salesman for Booth and Thomas Inc. in Springfield from 1956-86. During that time, he was manager of the Vandalia branch for a time, retiring in 1986.

He was a member of Greenville Free Methodist Church since 1974, a member of American Society of Heating and Cooling Engineers, charter member of OKAW Valley Amateur Radio Club, Flying Boat Amateur Radio Society, serving as net control from 1998-2000. He spent 35 years in Scouting, serving as a Scout master. He was in Order of Arrow. He also was a former Bond County Republican precinct committeeman.

Survivors: wife, Shirley; three sons, William Lewis Hall of Long Island, N.Y., Nicholas P. Hall of Oregon, Wis., and Mike David Hall of Gig Harbor, Wash.; two sisters, Dorothy A. Armstrong of Aledo and Ruth H. Bracking of Poway, Calif.; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.


54544. Patty Lou Hall


Feather River Bulletin
April 1, 1981

A mass of Christian Burial was held yesterday for Lake Alamor resident Patty Lou Lopez, 49, who died at her home last Saturday. A native of Iowa, she had lived in the area for five years and operated the Knotty Pine Reesort with her husband. She moved to the area from Torrance, in Souther California.

Survivors include her husband Reuben of Lake Alamor; son Gregory of Lake Alamor; daughters Janet of Lake Alamor and Beverly Tyler of Los Angeles; mother Maude Hall of San Diego; brother Red Hall of Illinois; sisters Dorothy Armstrong of Illinois and Ruth Bracking of San Diego; and three grandchildren.