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From: Maggie Stewart-Zimmerman <>
Subject: [OHMEDINA-L] OHIO TALES [ Part 4]
Date: Fri, 15 Jan 1999 15:35:18 -0500


Continued from Part 3

THE GIRLS BOARDING SCHOOL BUILT IN 1910. It required a great deal of
work to repair the Stanton home to get it in readiness for the school,
having
to lay a
pipeline for several rods to connect with the Childrens Home water system,
and
to
overhaul the system in the house. At the expiration of ten days,
everything
was in
readiness for the school. The twenty-two girls and the teachers lodged in
the
building.
The exercises at the end of the term were held on the lawn. A large
barn
door was used for a platform on which the six girls graduating were seated.
With all the
inconvenient ways of getting along, the teachers thought that the scholars
made as good progress as they would have done in the old building.
There were two terms held before going to the new building the first
of
the year in 1911. This was a memorable experience, and enjoyed by all who
had
a part in conducting the school.

___________________________________________________________________

Recaps and additional data:

WILLIAM G. STEER, the author of the article above (from pages 125 to 131 of
The
Little Home Histories In Our Early Homes, Belmont County, Ohio), was the
son
of
JAMES STEER, JR. and MARY GREEN. His birth on May 13, 1856 was reported in
the meeting minutes for Short Creek Monthly Meeting, Jefferson County,
Ohio.
He married 1st LOUISA D. PICKETT on Apr 18, 1879 and married 2nd Eliza Hall
on
May 7, 1925.
~~~~~
JAMES STEER, JR., the father of WILLIAM G. STEER (and the son of James
Steer
and Ruth Wilson). He was born in 1827 in Colerain, Ohio and died Mar 2,
1917
in Belmont County, Ohio. [I apologize for not knowing my source for the
dates
of birth and death here. JLA]
~~~~~
WILLIAM GREEN (the father-in-law of James Steer, Jr.; the wife of James was
Mary Green)
~~~~~
SAM BETTS (a colored man employed by James Steer to drive oxen)
~~~~~
LEWIS NAYLOR (a cane-grower and Quaker residing at Sandy Ridge)
~~~~~
RUTH BAILEY (a cousin of William G. Steer who helped in the production of
molasses at the James Steer farm)
~~~~~
BENJAMIN HOYLE (bricks used in the primary schoolhouse built in 1835 were
made
on the Benjamin Hoyle farm. By the 1940 s, that parcel of land was known
as
the L. J. Taber farm)
~~~~~
SINCLAIR SMITH (some time after 1866 he, along with James Steer, donated
new
desks for the school house)
~~~~~
PETER SEARS, b. Apr 4, 1787 d. Jul 12, 1863 (prior to 1866, he lived and
died
in a
house that was later used as a school)
~~~~~
WILLIAM H. SEARS (a grandson of the Peter Sears identified above)
~~~~~
School teachers: ISAAC N. VAIL, THOMPSON FRAME, LINDLEY B. STEER,
LYDIA MILLHOUSE, MARY CALEB BUNDY, ELIZABETH SMITH LIVEZEY.
~~~~~
JONATHAN T. SCHOLFIELD (around 1860, he made a business of shredding corn
husks in his barn, then hauling them to Wheeling, West Virginia for sale as
mattress stuffing)
~~~~~
HENRY DOUDNA (in 1864, his home on Sandy Ridge was also the home of
Jonathan
T. Scholfield)
~~~~~
PERLEY PICKETT (a partner with William G. Steer in a corn husk shredding
business during the winter of 1880)
~~~~~
SARAH PICKETT WALTON (one of 18 "boarding school scholars" who crowded into
William G. Steer s wagon bed for a winter sleigh ride in 1880; apparently
the
only student of that ride still living when the above article was written
in
the 1940s)
~~~~~
WILLIAM PICKETT (father of Louisa D. (Pickett) Steer and father-in-law of
the
author, William G. Steer)
~~~~~
JAMES FRAME (a great uncle of William Pickett who claimed to have had
personal
contact with George Washington prior to and during the Revolutionary War)
~~~~~
WARREN E. PICKETT, Washington, Pennsylvania (possibly a brother of the
author s wife)
~~~~~
JOHN BUNDY b. Feb 17, 1813, d. Sep 18, 1898 (fifth child of William Bundy
and
Sarah Overman; was at the James Steer barn-raising when his brother,
Chalkley
Bundy, was injured)
~~~~~
CHALKLEY BUNDY b. Feb 24, 1823, d. Dec 1, 1866 (tenth child of William
Bundy
and Sarah Overman. Chalkley was injured in a accident at a barn-raising on
the James Steer farm in 1865. Although he seemed to recover from the
accident, it was blamed for his early death the following year)
~~~~~
DEBORAH H. (HANSON) BUNDY (second wife of Chalkley Bundy; married him Dec
7,
1864)
~~~~~
DAVID EDGERTON (suffered a badly-sprained ankle in an accident in 1879
while
engaged in moving a barn on the James Steer farm. The author, William G.
Steer, injured his spine in the same accident and was laid up for six
weeks)
~~~~~
Sources:
(1) "Little Home Histories in our Early Homes, Belmont County, Ohio",
pages
125-131.
(2) "Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy", Vol 4.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

THAT'S IT. THOUGHT MAYBE OTHERS WOULD ENJOY THEM TOO
Barb

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Maggie's World of Courthouse Dust & Genealogy Fever
http://www.infinet.com/~dzimmerm/mindex.html
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more than enough good luck.
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