Cyrus WITWER

Birth:
18 Mar 1826
Earl, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Death:
16 May 1871
Stark, Ohio
Marriage:
22 Mar 1849
Notes:
                   Cyrus Witwer, born in Lancaster county, PA., March 18, 1826, worked on his father's farm in Pennsylvania until the year 1844. But, in the winter of 1843 and 1844, he was then 18 years of age, he went sleigh riding and as he had quite a spirited young team, they ran away with him and broke his right leg just above the knee, and as he was not quite grown yet it caused his right leg to be one and a half inches shorter than his left, thus anyone well acquainted with him could tell that it was him by the walk, at any distance that a person is possible of being recognized. When his brother Phares came home from the army, one. July 2, 1865, as he came to the house he saw Cyrus coming one-half mile from the house and he said right away that it was his brother Cyrus, and that he could tell him among a thousand men and a mile away by his walk, and he had not seen him for three years. As the family moved from Pennsylvania to Stark county, Ohio, in 1844, overland, Cyrus not being able to walk very much on his leg yet, he rode the lead horse of the four horse team they had hitched to the big "Conestoga wagon," as they called it, all the way from Lancaster across the Allegheny mountains to Stark county, Ohio. Here his father Abraham Witwer, "who had gone ahead of the procession in a top carriage with the mother and a few of the smaller children," had bought a 160 acre farm in the southeast corner of Summit county, Ohio, and they took possession of the farm as soon as the wagons reached there, about five days later.
Cyrus Witwer was a great singer and whistler, while on the saw mill you could hear him singing or whistling day or night, ever cheerful and apparently happy; always seemed to be light hearted, working away with an air of being satisfied with the world as he found it. I heard him tell many times that life was what you made it, why complain about things; take them as they come; try with a cheerful heart to avoid those things we do not like, pass them by; sing a nice song of Savior, who has done so much for me and you and the world will be better for it. He was a great admirer of hunting and fishing; those were his choice for recreation, and he spent many days going fishing, and when the water was low at the saw mill, many times he would get his gun and go to the woods, through the summer season.
Cyrus Witwer was a very devoted christian, a member of the Baptist Brethren. He being such a great friend of good singing, he always lead in the singing at church. Many of the younger members of the church said many times that to sing with him was such a delight because he did sing so nice and clear and so loud that you could always tell his voice clear and distinct above the other, and in that wat they could keep time with him in such unison that all felt it to be so grand in all being able to keep in such harmony.
On the last evening of his life he took the youngest daughters on his lap and they helped him to sing while he played on the melodian, and contrary to his general custom, that evening he was up until after 10 o'clock. The next morning at 5 o'clock he drew a long, hard breath, which awoke mother and she shook him, but of no avail; it was all over; he had a stroke of appoplexy. That was on monday morning, May 16, 1871. He was buried at Mt. Zion church yard. He left his widow with seven children, well provided for, but the blow was hard to them and many very ardent friends. For a long time after his death, at church when they would start to sing, they would burst into tears because they missed their leader so much in their singing. He was 45 years and 2 months old, and just when he was fixed so that he could have enjoyed life. He was contemplating a trip to California on that coming fall.
                  
Lydia CLIME
Birth:
10 Dec 1831
Berks, Pennsylvania
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Children
Marriage
1
infant WITWER
Birth:
17 Jan 1850
Death:
17 Jan 1850
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
                  
2
Daniel WITWER
Birth:
7 Jun 1851
Death:
1853
Summit, Ohio
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
                  
3
Birth:
14 Feb 1853
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
28 Mar 1872
Mishawaka, Indiana 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
Ananias Clime Witwer, born February 14, 1853, on St. Valentine's Day, in the southeast corner of Summit County, Ohio, in the large tow-story frame house of eight rooms, four rooms on first floor and four rooms on second floor, and I was born in the southwest room on the first floor.  When I arrived at school age, Aunt Anna Witwer, now Gross, took me along to school and I attneded school quite regularly and always kept up or a little ahead of my classes, especially in arithmetic, writing and grammar, which were my favorite studies.  In arithmetic I soon had the third of Ray's by heart, and became assistant teacher in arithmetic and studied Ray's higher but had to worry that through by myself on account that the teachers were not required to teach higher than Ray's Third.  One reason of my making good headway in arithmetic was that my father enjoyed to study arithmetic with me.  HE was running the saw mill, where he had to be figuring lumber in all different ways, and as I became quite proficient with the pen and in fact could write all of the letters of the alphabet before I knew them all, I entered the saw mill accounts into the ledger for him, when quite young and thus had an early training in bookkeeping, and in assisting my father in the way he was assisting me in keeping ahead of my class and also to be proficient in writing, and while quite young wrote the copies for the teachers, quite frequently assisting them and for my practice in writing serving a double purpose.  Also, if any of the scholars had an example they could not get, they gave three raps on their slate with the pencil and I would go and help them and thus leave the teacher free to go ahead with the classes.
In August, September and October of 1869, I attended high school at SMithville, WAyne County, Ohio, taking a preparatory course for civil engineering, and the winter following I was assisting Francis Subey, who was then teaching the Mount Zion school.  I attneded to the copies for the writing of the scolars and to the arithmetic and the lower class in grammar, and such other helps as he needed, and many of the scholars claimthat they learned more in arithmetic and writing that winter than they did in any other winter of their schooling.  In the spring or early summer, on May 16 1871, my father died, which changed our home and literally broke it to peices.  I assisted in the farm work, but as the hired man undertook to "boss" us boys, and in a way that our father never did, it was but a little while until the breach was so great that I was looking towards looking out for myself, and as I fell desperately in love with my cousin, Mary Ann Witwer, who had come for Marshal County, Ind., to visit with relatives in Ohio.  Accordingly when she and her sister Emeline went home I went along and we were married on March 28, 1872, in Wabash, Indiana.  We remained at North Manchester and I worked in this flourishing city attending bricklayers, carrying the hod, until the latter part of June, when we made a short visit to Marshal County, Ind., and on July 4 we arrived at my old home in Summit County, Ohio, and we set up house keeping in the west side of the house where I was born.
   We lived here until spring, when we moved half a mile north into the house that Uncle Phares Witwer built and sold to my father, and we bought it from the estate in the fall of 1874.  I sold this property to Isaac Witwer and we moved to Twin Lakes Marshall County, Ind., one-fourth of a mile south of the lakes, in the south room of the house, where we resided until April 1, 1875.  WE bought the Shoemaker property on the north side of the lakes, being half a mile north and about a mile east from where we lived.  We accordingly moved into this home at about the first of December of that same year.  My brother B.F. and sister MAry came to visit us and they stayed all winter.  In the spring my sister went back to Ohio, but my brother B. F. prevailed on me to go in with him to buy a farm together, and we went to looking around and bought a farm, or rather traded for it, trading my home on the farm, and we moved on the farm on the west edge of West Township, Marshal COunty, Ind., and moved on this farm of 160 acres in the spring of 1876.  We were farming together each owning a team and each was to have his cattle separate, and the like, but it was not long until B.F. had two teams and of course feeding off hte pile.  WE got along fine until the fall of 1877, late, rather about December, my horses took sick and died and then on March 10, 1878, B.F., got married and he notified me of the fact about New Years, and that he wanted to move on the farm.  Well, as I did not like farming anyway and had not team, I concluded I would try something else, so we moved to LaFayette, Ind., and gave B.F. possession.  He farmed until August or September, when he sold all the crops and our cane mill and everything he could turn into money and moved to Plymouth.
We were in LaFayette, Ind., down and out.  WE first moved into a small cottage on Sixteenth Street, for one month, then we moved to Wild Cat road and the Turnpke road, at the corner house; lived there until Sept 1.  We moved back into the city of LaFayette, on Sixteenth street, about one block east of where we first lived; lived there one month, when we moved into the house we first had, where we then lived until May 1, 1878, and here was where I learned the cooper treade, in the winter of 1878 and '79.  On the first of MAy we moved into the next house, one door north, where we resided until November 20, 1882, when we moved to Canton, Ohio, No. 128 Liberty Street.  We bought this house and lot for $500, on the installment plan, paid it by the month as we could.  Is 1890 we sold this property for $1125.00. We moved to South Cherry STreet, in Canton, Ohio, and bought an acre of ground on the corner of Charles Street and Gonder Avenue, where we built an eight-room house and stable and all other necessary out buildings, and I followed millwritght and carpenter work.  In 1893 the panic struck Canton good and hard on the 15th of June; for the rest of the year and all of the year of 1894 we had to live off of our property and were getting in debt.  In 1895 it was not very much better and we got to work at the pottery again for a couple months and it began to look a little encouraging when on the 11th day of Jly, at 7 o'clock in the evening, the pottery caught fire.  "It was set afire, but we can not prove it only on circumstances and words learned since,"  and it burned down.  There we were for the rest of that year and no work.  February 1 1896, we moved to Marshal COunty, INd., again, and on March 17, 1896, we moved into PLymouth, INd., on North Main Street, and is the fall we moved into the Lincolnheld house, near the High school building, where we lived until the first of May, 1897, when we moved to South Bend Ind., on the corner of Wayne and St. Louis Streets.  On October 19, 1897, we moved to Mishawaka, INd., on Fourth Street, and we bought a lot on East Sixth Street, and built ourselves a six-room house on this, and on December 28, 1897, moved into it.  On the 28th of March, 1901, we sold this property and bought a lot on West Sixth Street, the second lot west of Main Street, and built a nice house on this, and on March 28, 1903, we sold it.  Then we stored most of our household goods and just took what we didn't car for and moved to St. Louis, at 4067 Finney Avenue where we leased a flat at $19.00 per month, with an agreement of no raise in rent, during the World's Fair, and we helped to build the World's Fair buildings.  On June 16, 1904, we sold out our flat and we moved back to Mishawaka, Ind., on East Second Street and bought a lot on South Cedar STree, between Third and Fourth, No. 215 and 217 South Cedar STreet.  We built a store adn residence building combined with a ll modern improvements and we have a grocery and live fairly comfortably, and are making a living by sticking close to business and being too extravagant.  Here the old lady, my daughter, Hazel Elsie, and a hired boy are taking charde of the store and I help when real necessity calls for it.  But I am putting in faithful time finishing up this work.  This is my first effort and I hope you will excuse short comings and the common plain flow of language, which is mixed considerable with Pennsylvania Dutch, and don't forget to read my article of "We ich en bu war."
                  
4
David WITWER
Birth:
27 Oct 1854
Death:
1857
Summit, Ohio
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
                  
5
Birth:
25 Nov 1856
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
10 Mar 1878
 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
Benjamin Franklin Witwer... went to Marshal County, Ind., on December 4, 1875, and on April 1, 1876, moved with his Brother A.C. and family on the 160 acre farm on the west side of West Township, Marshal County, Ind., where he resided and united with Etta Bunnell in marriage, March 10, 1878.  In September, 1878, he moved to Plymouth, Ind., and on October 12, 1879, he moved to Michigan City, Ind.  Here he worked on the railroad until July 13, 1880, when he had his left foot taken off by an accident.  March 21, 1881, he moved to Albion, Mich., where he engaged in the bakery and restaurant business; moved to Kalamazoo, Mich., November 21, 1885.  From there he moved to Albion, Mich., December 1, 1886, and on January 26, 1887, he again removed to Kalamazoo, Mich., and lived there and prospered until some time in 1908.  He sold out and about April, 1909, he bought a bakery in Windsor, Ont., where he now resides.
                  
6
Birth:
20 Nov 1858
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
8 Nov 1877
Greentown, Ohio 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
Mary Ann Witwer, born Nov 20, 1858, in the southeast corner of Summit County, Ohio, married to Wm. H. Stover, November 8, 1877.  They were living in Summit County, Ohio, for a couple of years, then moved to Stark Co., near Marlboro, on a farm, where they resided for a good many years, farming.  A couple of years ago they sold their farm and bought a house and lot in Greetown.
                  
7
Birth:
16 Feb 1861
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
1883
Akron, Ohio 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
Cyrus Witwer, Jr., was born February 16, 1861, in Summit County, Ohio.  In the spring of 1876 he came to Indiana and made his home with his brother, Ananias, until in the spring of 1878, when he hired out to a farmer in the western part of Marshall County, Ind., until about September.  He went to Ohio agian, to Stark County, where he remained until he untied in marriage with Ida Alice Stoner, when they moved on the farm of the father-in-law, about a mile west of Zion CHurch, where they were farming for a number of years and then moved to Akron.
                  
8
Birth:
28 Dec 1863
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
17 Jan 1882
Greentown, Ohio 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
John Brough Witwer, born December 28, 1863, in Summit County, Ohio, was farming for some years and then had a general store in Greentown, Ohio, for some years and finally sold out and is now following carperter work.  He is a good, honest Christian; resides in Greeentown, Ohio.
                  
9
Birth:
19 Sep 1866
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
1883
Aultman, Ohio 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana Jerry Oliver.gtoliver@umich.edu
Lucy Clime Witwer, born in Summit County, Ohio, always lived near where she was born.  She has made a few visits in Indiana, and in different places, but always resided within two miles of where she was born.  She united in marriage with Herman Graybill and they bought a farm about two miles north of where she was born, and they have resided there ever since.  They have a lovely and nice place, and Herman is foreman in the tile factory at Aultman, Ohio.
                  
10
Birth:
4 Jun 1869
Summit, Ohio
Death:
Marr:
1885
 
Notes:
                   Witwer genealogy of America by Ananais Clime Witwer and Rev. Geo. Witwer  1909 So. Bend Indiana
Elma Witwer, born June 4, 1869, in Summit County, Ohio, was the baby of the family and knos but very little of her noble father, if anything, as she was but two years old when father died.  She also has beren residing within a close range of where she was born.  She united in marriage with William Boston.  They were farming for some years and some time ago they bought a hardware store in Greentown, Ohio, where they are doing quite a nice business in selling paints, hardware, farm implements, buggies, wagons, etc.  They are comfortably situated; live on the corner of the square, where they can see all that is going on, and the street cars pass their door, two each hour of the day, and is quite a pleasant place to live.
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Cyrus Witwer - Lydia Clime

Cyrus Witwer was born at Earl, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 18 Mar 1826. His parents were Abraham Witwer and Elizabeth Sauer.

He married Lydia Clime 22 Mar 1849 . Lydia Clime was born at Berks, Pennsylvania 10 Dec 1831 .

They were the parents of 10 children:
infant Witwer born 17 Jan 1850.
Daniel Witwer born 7 Jun 1851.
Ananias Clime Witwer born 14 Feb 1853.
David Witwer born 27 Oct 1854.
Benjamin Franklin Witwer born 25 Nov 1856.
Mary Ann Witwer born 20 Nov 1858.
Cyrus Witwer, Jr. born 16 Feb 1861.
John Brough Witwer born 28 Dec 1863.
Lucy Clime Witwer born 19 Sep 1866.
Elma Witwer born 4 Jun 1869.

Cyrus Witwer died 16 May 1871 at Stark, Ohio .