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

Notes


Cecil Boling


Hartford Courant
December 8, 1992

Cecil Boling, 84. of Naples, Fla. He was a graduate of M.I.T., class of 1932, and during much of his business career lived in the Hartford area. He was President of Dunham Bush, Inc., past president of the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, Air Conditioning Engineers, and past president of the Air Conditioning, Refrigeration Institute.

He is survived by his wife, Cathryn L. Boling; two daughters, Mrs. Gene (Joanne) Packwood of Florida, and Mrs. Suzanne Cross of California; six grandchildren; and great-grandchildren.


48141. James Miller Haskell

U.S., Adjutant General Military Records, 1631-1976
Name: James M Haskell
Report Year: 1917-1918
Service State: Ohio
____
Ohio Soldiers in WWI, 1917-1918
Name: James M. Haskell
Age: 25
Race: White
Birth Date: 31 Mar 1893
Birth Location: Somokov, Bulgaria
Enlistment Date: 27 May 1918
Enlistment County: Columbus
Enlistment State: Ohio
Enlistment Division: National Army LB 1
Comments: 158 Depot Brigade to 19 July 1918; Headquarters Company 335 Infantry to 2 Nov 1918; Headquarters Company 1 Pontoon Train Regiment 2 Depot Division to 5 Dec 1918; Co M 310 Infantry to Discharge Corporal 5 June 1918; Private 18 July 1918; Private, first cla


77636. Marilyn Margaret Palmer


The Daily News (Longview, WA)
June 9, 2007

Longtime Longview resident Marilyn Hoehne died in a Seattle hospital May 30, 2007, following several years of declining health. Mrs. Hoehne moved to Seattle last November to be closer to family members. She was 80 years old.

The oldest daughter of Alvin and Martha Palmer, Marilyn was born in Los Angeles. She grew up in the Los Angeles area and moved to the Northwest in 1944 when she was a freshman at Reed College in Portland. She met her future husband, former Longview Mayor Mark Hoehne, at Reed and they were married Dec. 21, 1946. Following their graduation from Reed, the couple moved to New Haven, Conn., for a time before relocating to Longview permanently.

In Longview Marilyn began raising her family and volunteering within the Longview community. The original idea for Toutle River Ranch came from her in 1959. She wanted to provide a home for adolescent boys who needed a safe place to live, go to school and have access to job training. Through Marilyn's efforts and after much planning with the local community, Toutle River Ranch opened with 12 boys in 1960.

Marilyn Hoehne remained the core of the Toutle River Ranch. When Mount St. Helens destroyed the original facility in 1980 it was rebuilt outside of Castle Rock in 1982. The new facility housed 40 boys and began to expand its services. Today the organization operates under the Youth & Family Link program. YFL serves boys and girls, pre-K through high school who live in Cowlitz County and need the program's help to better their lives. Mrs. Hoehne served on the YFL Board of Directors from 1959 until her death.

Her avocation for reading and lifelong learning led Marilyn to her long involvement with the Longview Public Library. She served on the Library Board of Trustees from 1987 through 1996. Following her service on the board, she served an additional six years on the Longview Library Foundatio

Intertwined with all of her other community activity was Marilyn's involvement at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. She joined the church in the 1960s and was active in the parish's life continuously until moving to Seattle. She served as the clerk to the St. Stephen's Vestry for almost 20 years and was involved in all facets of church life for more than four decades.

In her leisure time, Marilyn enjoyed cooking, gardening, playing bridge, traveling and reading. She often could be spotted walking along Lake Sacajawea with one of the family dogs. She and her family also spent many wonderful summer days at the family vacation home overlooking Puget Sound.

Mrs. Hoehne is survived by her sister, Joyce Mohun of Goleta, Calif.; four children, Joyce Graeper of Salem, Rick Hoehne of Tacoma, and Janet Hoehne and Eileen Riley, both of Seattle; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.


48149. Eldora Haskell


St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
August 24, 2007

Spiegelberg, Eldora Haskell, 92, died August 22, 2007 at the Convalescent Home in St. Louis.

Peace worker, activist, child psychologist, and teacher, she was an inspiration to all who knew her.

Wife of the late Herbert Spiegelberg; she is survived by her daughter Lynne Morgan and husband John; son-in-law Clarence Butler; granddaughter Britta Butler; husband Gabe and great-granddaughter Diana Gwen; granddaughter Kirstin Butler and partner Jeff Hopkins; grandson John Morgan; dear friend Wilda Dailey; and the many loving friends and caretakers who brought joy to her life. She was pre-deceased by her daughter Gwen Butler.


48150. Gordon King Haskell


Santa Cruz Sentinel
October 13, 2002

Gordon King Haskell, Born August 15, 1917, Philapopolis, Ottoman Empire (now Plovdiv, Bulgaria) Died October 4, 2002, Santa Cruz, California.

Social activist, writer, political organizer and raconteur, Gordon Haskell was born the youngest of ten children of Edward Haskell, a second generation Protestant Minister in Bulgaria, and his wife Elizabeth Frolich Haskell of Enenda, Switzerland.

Settling in California at the age of sixteen, he attended Voorhee's School for Boys, Occidental College and graduated from UC Berkeley. He worked on the Southern Pacific Railroad while active as a union organizer in the Independent Socialist League. He moved to New York City to serve as Editor of the ISL's newspaper, Labor Action, then as Director of Development for the New York and American Civil Liberties Union, and Care, Inc. After retirement, he continued in social activism with the Association for Union Democracy, served as Political Director for the Democratic Socialists of America, was active in Brooklyn, N.Y. and Santa Cruz, CA. serving in a variety of leadership roles and receiving numerous awards. He recently served as President of The Funeral Alliance of Monterey Bay Inc.

Godon devoted his life, both professionally and personally, to social and economic justice and equality. He thought globally and acted both globally and locally. His early devotion to social justice through social revolution evolved into a dogged determination to work in his own communities for obtainable and sustainable political and social change.

Until his death, Gordon maintained a youthful curiosity, especially about people. Young people and their ideas, from the conservative to the outlandish, fascinated him, and they were fascinated by him. At any occasion, he could be found in conversation with the most unlikely of partners.

He met his future wife of thirty-two years, Rachel, while she was stirring lemonade at a peace rally in St. Louis in 1969. He is survived by two children, Guy Haskell of Bloomington, Indiana, and Elisabeth Haskell of Sacramento, CA; step-children Garry Fathman of Portola Valley. Anthony Fathman of St. Louis, and Mary Fathman-Tnomas of Miami; ten grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.


Rachel Errett Gillum


St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
June 21, 2009

Haskell, Rachel Fathman (nee Gillum), St. Louis, MO passed away on June 8, 2009 at the age of 91. She was born on September 21, 1917 in Pike County, MO.

Rachel was a 7th generation direct descendant of Thomas Jefferson and inherited a fierce loyalty to family and country, becoming a political activist in the larger community. She taught by example and instilled her values in her children and grandchildren.

With her husband Stewart Fathman she raised a family in Clarksville, MO. She was an anti-war activist in St. Louis during the '60s and '70s, and a goto person in Brooklyn, NY ward politics into the '80s, and in California Rachel and her second husband Gordon K. Haskell were named "Democrats of the Year" for their work in the local, state and national arenas.

She formed enduring friendships at each stage of life. Rachel is survived by five children, eight grandchildren and one great grandchild. We will miss her greatly . In lieu of flowers, friends who want to remember her may contribute to a charity or public cause of their choice.


48151. Henry Cummings Haskell


BIOGRAPHY OF HENRY C. HASKELL 1902 - 1981.  AUTHOR AND EDITOR.
Author: Dory DeAngelo , Collection Info: Biographies, Date: 1999

Notes: Photo Source: Kansas City Star
Subjects: Haskell, Henry C.,
Item Type: Biography
Item ID: 34986

A "Renaissance man" is defined as one who has had a broad education, acquired profound knowledge, has a proficiency in a wide range of fields and benefits his community. Henry C. Haskell, playwright, author, editor and columnist for the Kansas City Star, musician, civic leader and philanthropist, certainly qualified for that description.

His father, Henry J. Haskell, began working for the Star in 1898 and by the time his son was born, had become editor of the newspaper. Young Henry's interest in the paper began at the age of two. As his father arrived home from work, his son would greet him by asking "What's the news?"

Henry C. Haskell graduated from Harvard in 1924. He traveled to France to study at University of Toulouse and later worked at the London Times, Manchester Guardian, Irish Times, and Glasgow Herald.  Returning to Kansas City in 1929, he became the foreign editorial writer for the Star. In 1938, Haskell was appointed art editor and assembled the newspaper's first special section to cover music, dance, visual arts, book reviews, criticism and features.

To celebrate the city's Centennial in 1950, Haskell and his friend and colleague on the editorial page, Richard B. Fowler, wrote City of the Future, a one hundred-year history of Kansas City.

Haskell's plays were produced at the Hollywood Little Theater, UMKC's experimental theater and the Missouri Repertory Theater. One year before he died, the University of Kansas presented his play, "The Sage of Emporia," about legendary newspaper editor, William Allen White.

Henry Haskell and Michael Berbiglia were instrumental in the founding of the Lyric Theater. Haskell also served on the boards of the UMKC Conservatory of Music, the Kansas City Art Institute, the Philharmonic, and the United Fund. In 1969 he was appointed by President Lyndon Johnson to the board of the National Council of the Humanities.

Henry C. Haskell's life was a life well lived.

Written by Dory DeAngelo

Sources

1. Kansas City Star, June 2 1969; July 13, 1977; July 23, 1981.
2. Kansas City Times, April 27, 1973.
3. Haskell, Henry C. and Richard B. Fowler. City of the Future: the Story of Kansas City 1850-1950. Kansas City, Missouri: Frank Glenn Publishing Company, Inc., 1950.


Lucy Alice Merritt O'Connell


The Leavenworth Times
April 3, 1931.

Major and Mrs. George A. O'Connell, of Fort Leavenworth, announce the marriage of their daughter, Lucy Alice, to Mr. Henry C. Haskell, of Kansas City, Mo., on Thursday, the second of April.

Mr. and Mrs. Haskell are spending their honeymoon in California and on their return will reside in Kansas City.


77643. Lucy Alice Merritt Haskell

Daily Record
May 7, 2013

Born May 13, 1932 in Kansas City, MO, Lucy A Haskell died March 29, 2011 in Morristown.

Lucy was 24 when she disappeared from the lives of everyone she knew. Her family searched for her for 56 years. First notified of her passing 2 years after her death, Lucy's 5 siblings seek clues to her past. Thus far they have found out that she graduated from Rutgers in 1983 with a Masters in Library Science. She worked every Saturday in the Children's Dept. at the Morristown Library until her 2007 retirement.


Lois Jeanette Ogren


The Kansas City Star (MO)
September 15, 2002

Lois "Lolly" Jeanette Ogren Haskell passed away peacefully at her home in Kansas City, MO on Tuesday, September 10, 2002. Memorial services will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, September 23, 2002, at the All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, 4501 Walnut St.

Lolly was born in Rockford, IL to Hildur Linnea Johnson Ogren and Oscar H. Ogren, both of whom were born in Sweden. After working several years in Chicago, IL, she moved to Kansas City where she married Henry Cummings Haskell on January 9, 1943.

Lolly was always active in social and cultural affairs. She founded the Midtown Preschool at Woodland Elementary School, a pilot for the Head Start program in Kansas City. She established the library at Douglass Elementary School. Later she was actively involved in the Greater Kansas City Bicycle Coalition and worked to promote bicycle education and bicycling as an alternative form of transportation. Lolly was an avid reader and supporter of the arts and of cultural events in Kansas City.

Lolly was preceded in death by her husband, Henry C. Haskell and by her sister, Marguerite Ogren Anderson. She is survived by her brother, Quentin Oscar Ogren of San Luis Obispo, CA; her children, Elizabeth H. Park of Memphis, TN, Ingrid H. Vrooman of Belle, MO, Tamme Haskell of Agoura Hills, CA, Judith H. Zernich of Pittsburgh, PA, and Harry O. Haskell of Guilford, CT; 12 grandchildren; and by six nieces and nephews.


77644. Elizabeth Cummings Haskell


The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
March 1, 2015

ELIZABETH HASKELL PARK, 70, of Memphis, passed away on January 18, 2015, at Methodist University Hospital. She was born in Kansas City, Missouri, on April 29, 1944 as the first of five children to Henry Cummings Haskell and Lois Ogren Haskell.

Mrs. Park lived life with enthusiasm. She was an avid traveler, scholar and a mentor to many. During her 32-year career with the University of Memphis Libraries, where she was a Professor and Head of Reference, she was known for always having an open door and for her constant willingness to help students, colleagues and educators. She was a passionate educator, speaker, author of numerous articles, and she was nationally respected for her expertise.

Betsy, as she preferred to be called and was known professionally, was a devoted wife, mother and grandmother who lived for her family and doted endlessly on her grandchildren. She loved cooking, music and literature. Every night she prepared a multi-course meal drawn from her wide familiarity with many international cuisines. She regularly hosted large dinner parties for friends, family, and colleagues. Betsy traveled extensively and was conversant in French and German.

She and her husband had lived as newlyweds in Senegal volunteering with the Peace Corps from 1966-1968. They also lived in Frankfurt, Germany from 1974-1979, and traveled extensively in Europe and Africa, as well as to South Korea, Vietnam, Japan and all over North America and Hawaii.

She received her undergraduate degree in psychology from Stanford University, a Masters of Library Science from State University of New York at Buffalo, and a Masters of Arts in Education from The University of Memphis.

She is survived by her husband of 48 years, Melburn Robert Park, her son Geoffrey Haskell Park, her daughter Carolyne Elizabeth Krupa, her daughter-in-law, Kerry Lynn Haseloff, her son-in-law, John James Krupa III; her grandson John Henry Krupa IV, three granddaughters, Luna Kathryn Park, Marie Elizabeth Park, and Catherine Elizabeth Krupa, and four siblings, Ingrid Vrooman, Tamme Haskell, Judy Zernich, and Henry Haskell.


Richard Clyde Vrooman


San Jose Mercury News (CA)
January 4, 1991

VROOMAN, Richard, 54, operatic tenor; Wednesday in Liberty, Mo., of a heart attack. Mr. Vrooman performed for more than 20 years, primarily in Europe. He later headed a company that marketed a line of luxury skin care products made at a clinic in Switzerland.


Charles Roland Summers


Charles Roland Summers was a lawyer in Oberlin, Ohio.  He served two terms in the Ohio State Legislature from 1927 to 1931.


77649. Thelma May Summers


Asbury Park Press
June 4, 1998

Thelma Hanawalt, 93, of Ocean Grove, died Monday at Jersey Shore Medical Center, Neptune. She was a member of St. Paul's United Methodist Church, and the Westfield United Methodist Church. She was a windeful mother to he son and her nephew, Barry D. Hanawalt. Born in Ohio, she lived in Ocean Grove for the past five years.

Her husband, Wilbur R. died in 1985. Surviving are a son, Norman, Stroudsburg, Pa.; and several nieces and nephews.


77650. Roland M. Summers


Roland M. Summers was a pharmacist.


Harriet Lena Cady


Harriet (Cady) Summers was an X-ray technician.


48156. Milo Ronald Hazel


Georgia, World War I Service Cards, 1917-1919
Name: Milo R Hazel
Gender:     Male
Birth Date: 28 Feb 1890
Birth Place: Lake Halen Fla
Enlistment Date: 25 Apr 1919
Age at Enlistment: 29
Residence Place: Atlanta, Georgia
____
The Atlanta Coinstitution
January 9, 1952

Funeral services for Milo R. Haskell, 61, of Route 1, Lilburn, who died Monday in a hospital here, will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday at Westview Funeral Home. Burial will be in Marietta National Cemetery.

Born in Lake Helen, Fla., Mr. Hazel had lived in the Atlanta area the past 25 years. He was an employee for the Veterans' Administration before retiring in December 1950.

Mr. Hazel was a veteran of World War I and was a member of the American Legion, Post No. 1, in Atlanta. He was also a member of the Royal Arch Masons in Luxomni, Battle Hill Masonic Lodge. and the Forty and Eight.

Surviving are his wife; a daughter, Mrs. William F. Johnstone [sic] of Boston, Mass.; a brother, L. C. Hazel of Tallahassee, Fla.; a grandson, Nicky Johnson of Tucker.


Anna Mary ...


The Atlanta Costitution
July 24, 1983

Hazel, Mrs. Anna M., 5240 Lilburnstone Mountain Rd., died July 22, 1983.

Survived by daughter, Mrs. Marie Hazel Rapillo, Winchester, Mass., grandson, Mr. Nicky Johnson and wife Beverly of Stonr Mountain, grandson, Mr. Scott Rapillo, Winchester, Mass., great-grandsons, Rodney Johnson and Bryan Johnson, Stone Mountain.


77653. Marie B. Hazel


The Boston Globe
January 4, 1987

Rapallo - Of Winchester, January 2, Marie (Hazel). Beloved wife of Anthony. Devoted motrher of Scott of Winchester and Nickey Johnson of Georgia.


Anthony Paul Rapallo


The Boston Globe
February 1, 2005

Rapallo, Anthony P. - Of Winchester, formerly of Somerville, January 30th. Beloved husband of the late Marie (Hazel) Rapallo. Devoted father of Anthony Rapallo and his wife Kristin (Stagliano) of Billerica.


77656. William Smith Hultz


Dicken Funerl Home and Cremation Service

William Smith Hultz, 90, of Elyria, died February 3, 2011at his residence.

He was born May 6, 1920 in Elyria where he was a 1937 graduate of Elyria High School and was a 1947 graduate of The Ohio State University with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering. He served as a sergeant in the US Army during WWII in Northern France and Germany. Bill worked at the former Hultz Heating and Air Conditioning Co., in Elyria and then was employed as an engineer with Ford Motor Co., in Detroit. After retiring he moved to Richmond, KY, returning to Elyria in 1997. He was a member of First United Methodist Church, Elyria, Elyria Lodge # 787 F.&A.M. and Richmond, KY Lodge # 25 F.&A.M. His hobbies included photography and woodworking in which he held a patent on a child's rocking chair and made old time wooden toys and he was also an enthusiastic Buckeye fan.

Bill is survived by a daughter, Suzanne M. (David) Bertke of West Carrollton, Ohio; grandchildren, Aubryann, Anndrea, Hannah and Megann Bertke; brother, Jack M. (Mary Jo) Hultz of Pittsford, New York; two nephews and a cousin Patricia Black of Avon Lake.

He was preceded in death by wives, Erna M. in 1989 and Joan J. "Jackie" in 1996; father, Roy E. in 1969 and Lola M. in 1988.


Joan Jacqueline Lewis


Lexington Herald-Leader (KY)
December 3, 1996

RICHMOND - Joan Jacqueline Lewis Hultz, 70, Bittersweet Drive, homemaker, wife of William Hultz, died of cancer yesterday.


Wayne Cuthbertson Black

Wayne Cuthbertson Black was a lawyer


77658. Phyllis Black


The Plain Dealer (Cleveland, OH)
January 17, 2010

Phyllis B. Collister (nee Black), 89, of Elyria, died Jan. 14, 2010.

She was a graduate of Avon Lake High School, The Ohio State University and received her teaching certificate from Kent State University. She had been a buyer at Halle Department Store, Cleveland and an elementary school teacher in Elyria.

Phyllis is the wife of the late Geoffrey V. Collister; mother of Scott, Bruce, Mark and Sue Collister; sister of Pat Black and David Black; daughter of the late Wayne and Lila Black.


Geoffrey Van Gorder Collister


The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)
January 5, 2002

ELYRIA - Geoffrey V. Collister, 83, of Elyria, died Friday, Jan. 4, 2002, at the Northridge Health Center, North Ridgeville, following a long illness.

He was born Sept. 12, 1918, in Painesville and graduated from Painesville Harvey High School in 1936.

He was a U.S. Navy veteran, serving in the Pacific Theater during World War II. He attended Purdue University and graduated from the Ohio State University in 1947 with a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering. He was employed by Chrysler Corp. from 1947 to 1960, and from 1961 until his retirement in 1978 he worked for NASA at the Lewis Research Center in Cleveland. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church, Elyria, and Plymouth Rock Lodge 47 F&AM, Plymouth, Mich. Among his hobbies was making clocks.

Survivors include his wife of 54 years, Phyllis Collister (nee Black); sons Scott B. and Bruce W. Collister, both of San Rafael, Calif., and Mark B. Collister of New York City; daughter, Sue Ellen Collister of New York City, and brother, William N. of San Leandro, Calif.

He was preceded in death by his sister, Virginia Benner.