Strauther Straud Edward FIELD

Birth:
4 Feb 1873
Death:
17 May 1937
Stockton, Ca
Burial:
Lodi Cemetery, Lodi, Ca
Marriage:
17 Feb 1902
Notes:
                   Notes:  Information from Stan Field my uncle.  Stan had several letters that had belonged to Wilbur Tracy Field Sr. (Stan's Dad and my grandfather).  Strother may also be spelled Strauther.  Stan found that Strother and Mertie Mae had lived in Hapier, Missouri at one time.EXTRACT FROM HATTIE SCHRAM
Strauther or Straud as he was often referred to in northwest Missouri is referred to as Strauther in the Gone Home Book .  He married Myrtle Glass from Holt Co. Missouri.  She had brothers and sisters living in Forest City, MO and Oregon, MO.  Myrtle died in 1919, soon after her fourth son Glen who died at childbirth.  Wilbur was the youngest son at 7 years of age when his mother died.   He was left with the Glass grandparents and remained there for a year and a half.  As Strauther was married to his second wife by the time they left for California in 1925, I would suspect that Strauther married his second wife about 1921, about the time Wilbur returned to the family.
When Staud went to California in 1925 with his brother John Francis Field, he had remarried Myrtle Harness and all of the family, Myrtle, Harry, Howard and Wilbur, went with him.
Strauther admired and thought a great deal of one of his mothers sisters, his Aunt Hattie Babb.  He named his last child Hattie after her memory.  I imagine that he knew her when he spent the year and one half at his grandfather and grandmother home.
Strauther bought his own butcher shop and cut meat for many of the years he was in California.  While working around a construction site he was hit in the head by a falling board and rushed to the doctors where he was diagnosed with a concussion.   He died five days later without ever regaining conscious.
                  
Myrtle May GLASS
Birth:
10 Jul 1885
Mound City, Mo
Death:
14 Jun 1919
Forrest City, Holt, Mo
Burial:
15 Jun 1919
Forest City, Mo
Notes:
                   EXTRACT FROM HATTIE SCHRAM
Myrtle Glass Field died soon after her fourth son was born and according to Paul Field, Myrtle had tuberculosis and that along with influenca was the cause of her death.   The fourth son Glen did not live.
Mertie, as listed on the death certificate, was attended by Dr. J.C. Tracy of Mound City, MO., from June 6th, four days after the birth/death of her fourth son and again on the 10th of June.
                  
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Notes:
                   Harry, who was the oldest son of Strauther, took care of his birth mother Myrtle Glass during the later years of her life.  As she had tuberculosis he was exposed to the disease early in his life and because he took care of his mother he was repeatedly exposed.   When he arrived in California at 20 years of age, Harry had developed a serious case of tuberculosis and the doctor told him he was in terrible shape and he might not live.  He was placed in the Brethart Sanitorium where he gradually recuperated.
Harry worked a the Superior Molding Company where they made windows.  Sometimes Paul Field, a nephew would stop by and talk a short time to Harry through a window which opened against a railroad track. Later he made concrete blocks and sold them to builders.  According to Paul Field, Harry accepted God while he was in the sanitorium and served God for the rest of his life.  He was in a nursing home for several of his later years and when he would go home or to a daughters house for a weekend or a few day he would always ask to be taken back to the nursing home for Suday in order to teach his Bible Class at the Nursing Home.
                  
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Notes:
                   Wilbur Tracy Field was likely born in Missouri and lived there until he was 16 years old.   Wilbur's mother Myrtle Glass, was from Holt County. She developed Tuberculosis and died in 1919 when Wilbur was 7 years old. His father took him to live with his grandfather Glass.  This came about at same time that the youngest brother, Glen an infant died (June 4, 1919) and a few days later (June 14, 1919) Myrtle died.
Straud, Wilbur's father married a second time in MO.  His second wife's name was Myrtle Haness. The family moved to California in 1925 with one of Strad's brothers, John Francis Field, and his four children. They moved in a truck with hard rubber wheels.   The only time Wilbur went back to MO. was for his grandparents funeral.
According to Paul Field, a nephew of Strauthers and a cousin to Wilbur, the second wife of Strauther was a terrible person, threatening and mean.   Hattie Schram, one of Wilbur's daughters, said that she only found out about her father having a step mother the last year of his life.  When asked about his stepmother, he said that was a bitter time. He did not speak kindly of his stepmother and did not want to discuss her again.
Wilbur worked with the U.S. Engineers building tunnels and working with Huge drills.  He was with Southern Pacific, Western Pacific and the Canadian Pacific among others.   Just prior to or in the early days of WW II he was a dispatcher for the railroad relative in conjunction to the 72000 men at Camp Beal.
Later in the war Wilbur worked at Mare Island, CA. on the construction of ships as a welder in the shipyards.  He developed a specialized tool that was used extensively to weld in areas that a person could not readily get into.  He worked on submarines Sunfish, Telosa, Telavev, Whale, Wahoo and Salmon.  He and a fellow worker, Curley Randus, were the last two workers to leave the Wahoo before the navy crew boarded and she went to sea.  The Wahoo was sunk on the maiden voyage with a loss of all of the crew.
In addition to submarines, Wilbur worked of Submarine Tenders, the Sarry, Bushnell and the Gilmore.  He had the opportunity to shake hands with Franklin Delano Roosevelt on two different occasions and was on the same train as Harry S. Truman on their way to Sparks, NV.
After the war Wilbur worked for the Espy Corporation and was on a rotary snow remover when the train was called to rescue the City of San Fransisco train trapped in deep snow while trying to go through Emberless Gap the 50's.  There was an article (Donner Pass Snow Bound) occurring in Life Magazine about 1952.  Although badly injured in the accident he assisted in helping numerous others that were injured and needed assistance in exiting the train.   The rescue train became trapped by an avalanche that killed several of the crew and he was injured for 89 hours, prior to being reduced themselves.   His injuries included neck, back, shoulder, arm and his right leg.  He was hospitalized for 16 and 1/2 months.
After the injury Wilbur was unable to work for the railroad again. He went to work for Harrads Casino in Reno and worked in security and as a Special Policeman from 1958 to 1977.  In 1968 he married his second wife, Ruby, in Sacramento and they lived in Lake Tahoe where Ruby worked at the John Renalds Drug Store.
Wilbur liked to fish and hunt and had done both through the mountains of Northern California, Washington, Oregon and Southern Canada.
Information from Hattie Schram(Wilbur's daughter).   December 2003
                  
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Strauther Straud Edward Field - Myrtle May Glass

Strauther Straud Edward Field was born at 4 Feb 1873. His parents were James Young Field and Nancy Ann Adeline Smith.

He married Myrtle May Glass 17 Feb 1902 . Myrtle May Glass was born at Mound City, Mo 10 Jul 1885 daughter of Wilson Jacob Glass and Alice Emmer Lambert .

They were the parents of 5 children:
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Strauther Straud Edward Field died 17 May 1937 at Stockton, Ca .

Myrtle May Glass died 14 Jun 1919 at Forrest City, Holt, Mo .