Selected Families and Individuals

Notes


Michael Pastelak

Sources conflict on spelling of surname:
Pastelak -- Snider
Pastalac -- Schockling

Sources also conflict on year of death:
25 Nov 1969 - Snider, Schockling
Nov 1968 - Social Security Death Index

Social Security number issued in Pennsylvania prior to 1951.


Lola Amelia Schockling

Researcher Roger Schockling (first cousin of Lola) recalls: Roger and Lola stayed overnight with grandma many Monday nights from school, riding the bus to Blackstones and walking down over the hill.


Glenn Gilbert Geldmacher

Sources conflict on spelling of surname:
Geldmacher -- Snider
Geldmaker -- Schockling


Lola Amelia Schockling

Researcher Roger Schockling (first cousin of Lola) recalls: Roger and Lola stayed overnight with grandma many Monday nights from school, riding the bus to Blackstones and walking down over the hill.


Glen Gayle Geldmacher

Glen Geldmacher is a welder who lives in Clyde, Ohio. He is not married.


Francisco E. Trinquero

Frank was raised in Panama. He served in the navy in South America and later in the United States Navy. He was an electronics engineer for EEG. He worked as a systems engineer on radar and sonar systems.


Elizabeth Jane Schockling

Betty worked as a cosmetic clerk for Peoples Drug, which was bought out by CVS. As of 1997, she was working in cosmetic merchandising. Last known address (1997), Rockville, MD.


Frank Louis Seibel

In 1930, Frank Siebel (sic) (42) and his wife Minnie (39) owned a home worth $5500 at 6431Dean St. in Pittsburgh, PA. Living with them were their children Leonard (14), Rita (12), Paul (10), Carl (8), Frank Jr. (5), Mary C. (6), Joseph (3 yrs. 7 mos.), and Harold (1 yr. 10 mos.). The oldest four children attended school. Frank's parents were born in Germany. Frank worked as a pumper for the water department. Like most of their neighbors, the Seibel family did not own a radio set.

Dates of birth and death (from Social Security Death Index) have not been proven.


Elizabeth Schockling

Nineteen year old unmarried Minnie Elizabeth Schockling did not live with her parents and siblings at the time of the 1910 census.


Isadore John Schockling

As a young child, Dory Schockling got appendicitis shortly after John Roman Schwallie succumbed to it at age 9 in 1907. Dory asked his mother if he was going to die like Roman Schwallie did.

Isadore Schockling's obituary appeared on page 2 A of the Zanesville Times Recorder on 09 Aug 1966:

Isadore J. Schockling, 74, of Fulda, Noble County, died at 3:30 a.m. Monday (Aug. 8) at
Good Samaritan Hospital following a long illness. He was a son of August and Catherine
Miller Schockling and was born March 27, 1892. His wife, Barbara, died May 22, 1962.
He was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church and its Holy Name Society.
Surviving are four brothers, Harry and Edward of Braddock, Pa., Leonard of Swissvale,
Pa. , and Steven of North Carolina; and three sisters, Mrs. Emma Noll of East Mike, Mrs. Ida
Gerst and Miss Mary Schockling, both of Cambridge.
Services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Mary's Church in Fulda with Rev. Fr.
J. J. Donaldson officiating. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited
at 8 p.m. today at Estadt Funeral Home at Caldwell where friends may call.


Anna Barbara Craft

On 9 Aug 1883, the "Fulda" column of the Caldwell Citizens' Press reported the following:
Birth -- To Peter and Martina Craft, a daughter


Leonard August Schockling

In 1930, 18 year old Leonard Shockling lived and worked on the family farm with his widowed mother and two older siblings in Enoch Twp., Noble County, Ohio.

Social Security # issued in Pennsylvania prior to 1951. According to the obituary of his brother, Ignatz, Leonard was living in Braddock, PA in 1963. His brother Isadore's obituary places Leonard in Swissvale, PA in 1966. The obituary of his sister, Emma Noll, states that Leonard lived in Churchill, Pa. in 1972.


Susanna Odlivak

Sources conflict on last name:
Okilovak -- Snider, citing church records at St. Mary's in Fulda
Odlivak -- obituary, Schockling

As a young woman, Sue worked in Grays Dress Shop in Caldwell, Ohio. One day, as Sue was dressing the show window, Len Schockling parked along the curb and put money in the meter. Sue said, "There is the man I'm going to marry." People familiar with the couple said that Sue persued Len until she hooked him.

Sue continued to work in dress shops after the family moved to the Pittsburgh area.


Obituary:

Susan Odlivak Schockling, 81, of Swissvale, formerly of Churchill, a devoted
wife, mother and friend, died Thursday, Dec. 19, 1996. Wife of the late
Leonard A.; mother of Leonard C. of Swissvale, and Mary Elaine Durkac and
Linda Romansic, both of Illinois; grandmother of Amy and Beth; and sister of
Mary Wagner of New Jersey and Eva Odlivak of Pennsylvania. She was a mem-
ber of the Churchill AARP, member of the Flutterwheels and Footloose Square
Dance groups, and an accomplished bridge player. Friends received from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the Thomas L. Nied Funeral Home Inc., 7441
Washington Ave., Swissvale. A vigil service will be offered Sunday at 8:30
p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Monday at 10 a.m. at the
Word of God Parish, St. Anselm Church, Swissvale. Memorial donations may
be directed to the Food Bank of the Word of God Parish, 7446 McClure Ave.,
Swissvale, Pa. 15218.


Andrew S. Schockling

In 1930, Andrew S. (28) and Mary A. Schockling (24) lived on the farm of Mary's aunt and uncle, Louisa and Nicholas Kullman in Stock Twp., Noble County, Ohio. Nicholas is listed as the head of household and owner of the farm.

Andrew's farm was on Sorg Hill by Rado Ridge. One time, Andrew was plowing with a team of horses when the double-tree broke. He had the reins around his waist, and was pulled across the plow, injuring his eyes on the plow beam.


Mary Agnes Bing

Mary A. Bing is listed in the 1910 census in the household of her uncle, 45 year old Nicholas Coleman and his wife, Louisa (38). Mary Bing is also listed in her father's household (in Monroe Co.) in the 1910 census.

According to the 1930 census, Mary Bing Schockling was employed as a servant for a farm family.

From The Republican Journal (Caldwell, OH newspaper) 15 Jan 1919
Edna Singer and Mary Warner spent Sunday with Mary Bing.
(Edna Singer and Mary Warner were first cousins.)

According to Sister Marie Hohman, Mary Agnes Bing was raised by her aunt and uncle in Noble County. After her marriage, Mary Agnes (Bing) and Andrew Schockling lived with Mary's aunt and uncle -- Nicholas and Louise (Bing) Coleman -- in the 1930s and 40s. They were neighbors of Sister Marie's grandparents, John Maurice Hohman and Theresa Heil Hohman. The families had adjoining farms and visted each other often. Sister Marie believes that Andrew and Mary Agnes did not have any children.