[Last updated: 22 March 2022]


Johan Friederich Stembel (Great-grandfather)

Frederick Stembel (Grandfather)

John Stembel (Father)

Joseph V. S. Stembel



JOSEPH VAN SWEARINGEN STEMBEL (1828-1920)


Mary and Joseph Stembel


Joseph was born in Middletown, Maryland, on July 28, 1828. He was the youngest of John and Elenor's 12 children (only six of whom survived to adulthood). Joseph was named after his mother's father, General Joseph Van Swearingen(1) (Van was his middle name rather than part of his surname). When Joseph was about 3 years old his family moved to Ohio, eventually settling on a farm southwest of West Liberty in Champaign County. Growing up, he attended private subscription schools (free public education did not yet exist).(2)

When Joseph was 22, he married Mary Magdalena Ziegler. Mary was born in Perry County, Ohio, the eldest of eight children. Her parents moved to Champaign County when she was 2 years old.(3) The Ziegler farm was located very close to the Stembel's farm. It seems likely the two families were closely acquainted and that Joseph and Mary knew each other since childhood. After their marriage, Joseph bought a piece of land, 128 acres, just west of his father's farm.(4) It was across the road from his wife's family farm and the house where she grew up. Joseph built a house and farmed the land. They lived there for the rest of their entire adult life.

A 1874 land ownership map shows the location of Joseph's farm. His father's farm, where Joseph grew up, was located to the east, where his siblings still owned their share of their parent's farm. The map also shows the location of the family's church, Wesley Chapel M. E. Church, which is where Joseph and Mary were eventually buried.

Joseph and Mary had eight children, all of whom reached adulthood and married. Mary was raised as a Lutheran, but she joined the nearby Wesley Chapel Church, where the Stembels worshiped, in 1855. All eight of her children attended the church as well. Joseph, however, did not join the church until 1911. This was Mary's final wish as she lay on her deathbed.(5) This illustrates Joseph's great affection for his wife of 60 years.

In 1901, Joseph and Mary celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. All eight of their children attended, as well as most, if not all, of their grandchildren. A family portrait taken that day included 53 family members! Joseph, though seated, appears to be a tall, trim man with full dark hair (at the age of 73) with a white beard 7 or 8 inches long. He has a granddaughter on his lap (see the photo on the home page).

50th Wedding Anniversary (1901). Standing L-R: Malissa, George, John, Mary, Catherine, Albert, William, Addie; Seated: Joseph, Mary.

In 1910 Mary and Joseph again celebrated their wedding anniversary with a huge family reunion. This was their 59th, and last, anniversary together. Joseph and Mary were both 82 years old. Seven of their eight children attended (their oldest, Malissa, had passed away eight years before). A newspaper account of that gathering reported there were 107 guests in attendance. Besides their seven children, there were 38 grandchildren, and 20 great-grandchildren.(6) Mary died six months later.

59th Wedding Anniversary (1910). Standing L-R: Mary, Albert, Catherine, William, Addie; Seated: George, (empty chair for Malissa-deceased), Mary, Joseph, John.

Joseph lived nine more years. During this time two more of his children died, George Oren and Albert. Joseph died in February 1920. He was 91 years old. Both Mary and Joseph are buried in the cemetery at Wesley Chapel. At the time of his death, Joseph was the oldest original settler in Champaign County.(7)

Wesley Chapel Church and cemetery, Wesley Chapel Road, southwest of West Liberty, Ohio.

Joseph and Mary Stembel's tombstone in Wesley Chapel Church's cemetery.


Joseph and Mary Stembel's eight children:

A. Malissa Stembel Emery. (1852-1902). Malissa was born June 7, 1852, near West Liberty. Ohio. Much of what I know about Malissa comes from the 1880 and 1900 census. Malissa married John W. Emery on New Years Day, 1874. John was 24, Malissa 22. They had nine children between the years 1875 and 1892. The first eight were girls; the ninth was a boy.

At the time of the 1880 census they lived on a farm in Harrison Township, Champaign County. Also living with them at the time was a 20 year old servant girl (Nancy Dewey), a 26 year old hired hand (John Egnar from New York) and the hired hand's mother.

In 1900 they still lived on a farm in Harrison Township. They had a hired hand, 20 year old Samuel Jenkins.

John died in 1901 at the age of 50. Malissa died a year later, leaving their children, aged 9, 11, 13, 16, and 18, orphaned. Both are buried in West Liberty's Fairview Cemetery.

John and Malissa Emery's children:

    1. Viola A. Emery Yoder.(1874-1905) Viola was known as "Ola". She was born December 26, 1874. She married Chris Yoder about 1893. Five children are shown in the 1910 census: Bertha, Gladys, Wilson, Catherine, and Edgar. The 1910 census presents us with a bit of a mystery. There is only one Chris Yoder in the 1910 census in Logan or Champaign County, and that is a Christionie Yoder (I believe Chris's full name was Christian E.). According to the census, this man's wife's name was Vera, not Viola, and she was 41 years old (Viola would have been 35 in 1910). Given the fact that people almost never overstate their age in the census, I believe Viola died sometime before the 1910 census, and that Chris remarried. This is reinforced by the ages of Chris's children: 16, 12, 9, 2, and 1. Note the seven year gap between the nine year old and the two year old. In fact, Viola did die before the 1910 census. She is buried in the Bellefontaine City Cemetery where her tombstone shows she died in 1905. She was just 30 years old.
    2. Mary Catherine Emery Wass.(1877-1940). Mary was born April 6, 1877. I'm told Mary went by the name "Mame." About 1894 she married John Wass. John was an electrician. They had three children: Lewis (known as "Emery"), Donald, and Mary. In 1900 they were living in Urbana, Ohio. In 1910 they were living in Owensboro, Kentucky, and in 1920 they were living in Greencastle, Indiana. Mary died May 24, 1940, and in buried in Plymouth, Indiana, in their Oak Hill Cemetery.
    3. Josephine Elvina Emery Butcher.(1879-1965) "Josie" was born June 22, 1879. She married Charles A. Butcher in November 1902. They had eight known children though it appears some died in childhood: Marion (male), a male baby (unnamed), Harold, Paul, Joseph, Geneva, Robert, and Theodore. In 1930 they were living in Springfield, Ohio. Charles died in Dayton, Ohio, on May 8, 1949. Josie died on September 14, 1965, also in Dayton. Charles and Josephine are both buried in Newson Cemetery, Christiansburg (Champaign County), Ohio.
    4. Carrie Leonard Emery Kaufman.(1881- ). Carrie was born September 8, 1881. On May 22, 1906, she married Earl S. Kaufman who was three years older than her. Soon after their marriage they moved to Colorado. They were living in Denver at the time of the 1910 census. By 1920 they were back in Ohio, where Earl was manager of a lumber yard in the town of Uniopolis (Auglaze County). They had four children according to census records: Earl, Maxine, Donna, and Ned. They lived in Uniopolis for most of their adult lives. I have no record of their deaths.
    5. Grace Malissa Emery Hanger.(1883-1974) Grace was born October 9, 1883, in Champaign County. Sometime around 1903 she married Arthur Garfield Hanger. In 1910 they were living on a farm in Champaign County. That same year they attended Joseph and Mary's 59th anniversary and family reunion. Census records show three known children: Henry, Bernice, and William. They were still farming in Champaign County according to the census records, but by 1930 they had moved to California, and residing in Redondo Beach, where Arthur worked as a gardiner for a country club. Arthur died July 18, 1966, in Los Angeles. Grace remained in California. She died March 12, 1974, in San Pedro.
    6. Ida Belle Emery Smucker.(1885-1925) My information about Ida and her family was provided by her great-granddaughter, Kristin Hall Sliwicki. Ida was born October 11, 1885. When she was 15 her father died. A year later her mother died. Ida, and her younger brother, Harry, were taken in by Lydia and David Smucker who lived in West Liberty, Ohio. The Smuckers had a son, John Oliver who was four years older than Ida. In 1905, John (who went by his initials, "J.O.") and Ida married. After the wedding they took up residence in nearby Bellefontaine, Ohio. According to Kristin, J.O. owned a music store and their home was always filled with music. He was also an undertaker, like his father, according to the 1910 and 1920 censuses. In 1910 Ida and J.O. attended her grandparent's (Mary and Joseph Stembel) 59th anniversary celebration and family reunion. Ida and J.O. had two children: David Emery (born 1907) and John Kirby (born 1909). David was Kristin's grandfather. He earned a degree in civil engineering at Ohio State University and went on to become Executive Vice-President of Operations for the Pennsylvania Railroad.

    Ida died of cancer on October 26, 1925, just days after her 40th birthday. She is buried in the Bellefontaine City Cemetery. J.O. remarried five years later.
    7. Eva Stembel Emery Funderburg.(1888-1947) Eva was born August 3, 1888, in Champaign County. When she was 12 her father died. A year later her mother died. At the age of 13 she was orphaned. She may have been taken in by her older sister, Josephine, and her husband. I suspect this because in the 1910 census Eva was living in Springfield, Ohio, where she was a 21 year-old, single, telephone operator. Springfield is located in the same county that Josephine's family was living in. Three years later Eva married Coral V. Funderburg. Coral had been married before and had two children by that marriage. Soon after they married, Eva and Coral moved to Michigan where they had a daughter, Constance. By 1920, they had moved back to Greene County, where Coral had been born. Coral was an electrician. Soon after the 1920 census, they moved to San Bernardino, California, where Coral's skill as an electrician were in demand. Eva died June 23, 1947, at the age of 58. Coral died January 9, 1973. He was 84.

    In 2009 I received an email from a grandchild (or step-grandchild) of Eva's who shared a few memories of her "Grandma Eva": "Grandma Eva was Aunt Connie's mother ["Connie" was Constance Funderburg]. She was a wonderful grandma. I used to stay with her over weekends sometimes. One time she took me to Thrifty Drug Store for lunch. We had salads, which I have always remembered, a half of head of really large iceberg lettuce with dressing. I didn't think I'd ever be able to eat it all. She also made the best deviled eggs. She used dry mustard in them with some vinegar along with the mayonaise etc. She gave me a lot of sheet music and I sang some of her favorite songs at her funeral. She was really up in the Eas[t]ern Star [the Order of the Eastern Star is a Freemason organisation open to men and women. It was quite popular in the late 19th and early to middle 20th century]."
    8. Harriet Ammanon Emery Werner.(1890- ) Harriet was born June 2, 1890. She was known as "Hattie" and "Amme". At the age of 11 her mother died (her father had died the year before) leaving her orphaned. It appears that she went to live with her sister, Grace, and her husband Arthur Hanger, on their farm in Harrison Township, Champaign County, Ohio, for that's where she was living in the 1910 census. She was an Army nurse in WW I. She was relieved from duty on June 12, 1919. According to a relative, she married Gustav Werner, a German brewer. Later in life she lived in Melbourne, Florida. She was described by a relative who visited her often as "Spunky and full of life."
    9. Harry Lewis Emery.(1892-1974). Harry was born on July 23, 1892. When he was nine his mother died. This came a year after a year his father died. So at the age of nine he was an orphan. He and his sister Ida were taken in by Lydia and David Smucker who lived in West Liberty, Ohio. Evidently, after his sister married in 1905, he went to live with the newly-weds, for in the 1910 census Harry was living with his sister Ida and her husband. He was attending school. A few years later Harry married Mary Detrick. According to census records Harry and Mary had just one child, John D. ("Jack"). They lived at various times in Bellefontaine, Dayton, San Antonio, and Los Angeles. Harry died December 28, 1974, in Los Angeles, California. Mary died a year later, also in Los Angeles. Both are buried in Fairview Cemetery, West Liberty, Ohio.

B. George Oren Stembel (1853-1914). George is the subject of a later chapter.

C. John Virgil Stembel (1855-1937). Joseph and Mary's third child, John, was born on July 23, 1855, near West Liberty, Ohio. He was educated in the public schools of Champaign County.(8) On June 29, 1879, he married Emma Barger. John was almost 24, Emma was 20. They had seven children, two of whom died young.

In the 1900 census, John and Emma were living in Union Township, Champaign County, where John was a Farm Laborer. Three of their children were living with them. In the 1910 census, John, Emma, and their youngest son Willie, were living with John's parents. His father, Joseph, was 81 and had turned the farm over to John.

While it appears John and Emma lived in Champaign County their entire life, a birth announcement in the 1898 Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper announced the birth of a child, gender unspecified, to a John and Emma Stemble, living at 1927 Logan Street. No other known Stembel family fits this birth announcement even though they had never been recorded living anywhere but in Champaign County. Also, a son born just a year earlier was born in Champaign County (though we don't have proof of that fact). Why John and Emma would have been in Louisville for this birth is a mystery. Adding to this mystery is the fact that in the 1900 census, Emma reported she had given birth to 6, not 7, children, 5 of which were still living.

John was a member of the Wesley Chapel Episcopal Methodist Church and the Masonic Lodge.(9) He died at the age of 76 on March 12, 1937; Emma died 5 months later.

John and Emma Stembel's seven children:

    1. Effie May Stembel.(1879-1880) Effie May was born in October 1879, but died just months later on March 31, 1880. We don't have a record of her birth, but we know what month she was born because her death was recorded in the 1880 Census Mortality Schedule which recorded her age at death (5 months old). She died of whooping cough. She is buried in the Concord Cemetery, St. Paris, Champaign County, Ohio.
    2. Addie Bessie Stembel Bishop.(1881-1970) Addie was born 13 March 1881. In 1900 she married Frank Bishop, who was about 15 years older than she (it may have been Frank's second marriage). Frank was a farmer. They lived in Champaign County all their life. They had no children. According to the newspaper account, Addie and Frank attended Mary and Joseph's 59th wedding anniversary in 1910.
    3. Maud L. Stembel Sigenthaler.(1884-1955) Maudie was born September 14, 1884. In October 1901 she married Gottlieb Seigenthaler. Gottlieb was born in Switzerland in 1792. He was 12 years older than Maudie. They had at least six children: Wilber, Gilbert, Marguerette, Minnie, Ruth, and Leona. All six married. Maudie and Gottlieb lived in Springhills, Ohio. In 1910 Maud and Gottlieb attended Mary and Joseph's wedding anniversary in 1910. Gottlieb died in 1949 and is buried in the Springhill Cemetery. Maud died in 1955 and is buried in King's Creek Cemetery (both are in Champaign County).
    4. Mattie Stembel Roberts.(1886-1938) Mattie was born in January 1886. On October 1, 1903, she married Clarence Roberts in the Grace Methodist Church, in Urbana, Ohio.(10) Mattie was 17. Clarence was 21. They had at least two children, Dorothy and Helen. Both lived to adulthood and married. Sometime before 1920, Mattie and Clarence moved the family to Springfield, Ohio. Mattie died in 1938. I have no record of Clarence's death.
    5. James H. Stembel.(1888-1915) James was born August 1888. In the 1910 census, James was working as a farm laborer. Soon after the census he married Ethel Journell. They had one child, Donald, who was born in 1913. James died soon after, on November 7, 1915.(11) In 1929, Ethel re-married, to William Hagenbaugh. In 1946, Donald married and had three known children. Ethel died in 1966.
    6. William Edward Stembel.(1897-1928). William was born in March of 1896. On December 23, 1916, he married Jessie Leota Mason . The wedding took place in the First Methodist Church in Urbana. They had one known child, a son, Edwin. Sadly, William died in 1928 at the age of 32. Jessie remarried a few years later. Their son, Edwin, married and had at least one child.
    7. [unknown] Stembel.(1898- ) We only know of this child, name and gender unknown, because of a birth announcement published in the September 24, 1898, edition of the Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper. The child was born to a John and Emma Stemble. It could only be our John Stembel. The child did not appear in the 1900 census, so we assume it died before the census was taken. However, in the 1900 census, Emma indicated she had given birth to six children, five of which were still living, which does cast some doubt on this being their child.

D. Mary Louize Stembel Kirkwood. (1857-1951). Mary was born March 2, 1857, near West Liberty, Ohio. In September of 1881 she married Robert Kirkwood, son of David and Mary Kirkwood. Robert was 31 years old, seven years older than Mary. He was a school teacher.

At the time of the 1900 census, Mary and Robert were living on West Beard Street in West Liberty, Ohio. In 1910 they attended Mary and Joseph's 59th anniversary. According to the newspaper account, they were now living in Urbana, Ohio.

Robert died in 1924, at the age of 74. Mary lived 27 more years. Sometime after her husband's death she moved to Columbus, Ohio, where she was living at the time of the 1930 census. She died in 1951 at the age of 94.

Mary and Robert Kirkwood's children:

    1. Ralph Van Swearingen Kirkwood.(1882-1930) Ralph was born in June of 1882. He married Laura Botcher sometime around 1907. He was an electrician. They had at least one child, Dorothy, born in 1909. By 1910 they had moved to Leavenworth, Kansas. The 1920 census recorded them in Jeffersonville, Indiana. Ralph died in 1930, at the age of 47 in Washington, DC.
    2. Laura Blanche Kirkwood Bishop.(1883-1962) Laura was born in October of 1883. She married William Irvin Bishop sometime around 1907. In 1910 they were living in Mansfield, Ohio. They had at least one child, Lucille, born in 1908. Lucille married John Sitterley and had two children. Laura and William moved to Columbus sometime before the 1920 census. Laura died in 1962. William died three years later.

E. Catherine Eleanor Stembel Duff. (1861-1940). Catherine was born March 9, 1861, near West Liberty, Ohio. She was known as "Ella." Catherine married John K. Duff on December 20, 1885. She was 24. I believe John was three years older than she. Ella and John attended Joseph and Mary's 59th wedding anniversary. The newspaper article indicated they were living in Rushylvania (Logan County), Ohio, at the time. Ella and John had three children, and lived in Logan County, Ohio, their whole lives.

In early censuses, her parents spelled her name with a C, Catherine. It appears that later in life she preferred to spell it with a K, Katherine.

John died April 22, 1936; Catherine lived four more years. She passed away on October 9, 1940, at the age of 79.

Catherine and John Duff's three children:

    1. Joseph L. Duff.(1886-1965) Joseph was born in November of 1886. In 1910 he attended his grandparent's 59th wedding anniversary. He was living at Belle Center, Ohio (Logan County) at the time. According to my records, Joseph married Edna Flickenger soon after 1910. They had 5 children and lived in Logan County most of their lives. Joseph was a mail carrier.

    Edna died in 1946. Joseph died in 1965. Both are buried in Fairview Cemetery, Belle Center, Ohio.
    2. Forest Duff.(1889-1935) Forest was born in May of 1889. He also attended his grandparent's wedding anniversary. The newspaper reports he was living in Springfield, Ohio. Soon after the 1910 census he married Ella Marie Brown, and they had at least six children. Forest was a farmer, and later worked for the railroad. It appears they lived in Logan County most of their lives. Forest died in 1935 and is buried in Fairview Cemetery, West Liberty, Ohio. Ella remarried.
    3. Leona Duff Miller.(1894-1955) Leona was born in April of 1894. She was just 16 at the time of her grandparents wedding anniversary, where according to the newspaper, she gave a recitation. Sometime before the 1930 census she married Robert E. Miller. He was about 18 years older than Leona and this may have been his second marriage. According to my information, they had no children. They lived most of their lives in Logan County. Leona died in 1955. Robert died a year later. Both are buried In Huntsville Cemetery, Huntsville, Ohio.

F. Albert Frederick Stemble(12). (1864-1916). Albert Frederick was born January 16, 1864, near West Liberty, Ohio. He was the sixth child born to Joseph and Mary Stembel. Little is known about his childhood. I assume he worked on his father's farm a few miles southwest of West Liberty, and attended school (the 1880 census says he attened school the previous year).

At the age of 18, Albert traveled to Missouri in 1882 with his cousins John and Lafe (Marcellus Lafayette) Stembel (see chapter on Oliver Stembel). John was 30 and Lafe was 26. It appears that Albert's stay in Missouri was brief, since a year later he was back home in Ohio. There he married Nettie Pine in 1883. He may have been contemplating a move to Missouri after his marriage, but he evidently felt conditions were better in Ohio, for that's where he lived the rest of his life.

Albert and Nettie had three children between 1884 and 1888. Sadly, Nettie died in 1892; she was only 29 years old. Albert, a widower at age 28, remarried three years later. His new wife was 21-year-old Olive Frey, known as "Ollie." Albert and Ollie had three more children. The last was born in 1901.

Albert demonstrated his independent spirit by legally changing his surname. Tired of having his name misspelled, Albert declared the 'Stembel' spelling to be old-fashioned (in his words) and legally changed the spelling to 'Stemble.' Since then, Albert's descendants have spelled their last name Stemble.

In the 1910 census, Albert's occupation was recorded as 'Farm Manager.' His farm was located in Harrison Township, Champaign County, Ohio.

Albert died in 1916 at the age of 52. Ollie lived 37 more years. In 1930 she was living with her daughter's family, Marie (Pearl) and Ralph Fretz. Ollie passed away in 1953. Albert and both of his wives are buried in Oak Dale Cemetery in Urbana, Ohio. Nettie was initially buried somewhere else but her remains were reburied in Oak Dale to be with Albert after his death. This move must have met with the approval of Albert's second wife, Ollie.

Albert Stemble's six children (with two wives):

    1. Ira Leroy Stemble. (1884-1942). Ira was born October 11, 1884. His mother died when he was seven-years-old. At the time of the 1900 federal census he was living with his grandparents, Joseph and Mary Stembel on their farm a couple of miles southwest of West Liberty, Ohio. They were in their 70s at the time. Presumably, Ira helped his grandfather on the farm.

    In 1910 26-year-old Ira attended Joseph and Mary's 59th Wedding Anniversary party. Soon after, he married Sadie Herron. They lived in Columbus most of their life, where Ira was a bookkeeper. In 1939, the Columbus City Directory listed his occupation as "Deputy County Clerk of Courts." Ira died in 1942. Sadie died a year later. Both are buried in Mifflin Cemetery, in Gehanna, Ohio. Ira may have spelled his last name 'Stembel' instead of Stembel like the rest of his family. That might be because he lived part of his childhood with his grandparents, who spelled the name -bel.
    2. Charles K. Stemble. (1886-1970). Charles was born in November 2, 1886, according to his Army enlistment papers. He was five when his mother died. He attended school through the eighth grade. He enlisted in the Army in 1918 and was honorably discharged as a corporal a year later. In 1920 Charles was working as a farm laborer on the farm of Frank and Alma Petty, outside Urbana, Ohio. Ten years later the 1930 census shows that Charles had married Alma Petty, and the two Petty children were living with them. I don't know if Frank died, or there was a divorce. The census shows Charles and Alma were now living in Springfield, Ohio. Both are working at a radio manufacturing company, Charles as an electrician and Alma as an assembler. Alma's maiden name was Alma Hurst. Sometime after 1935 they moved back to Urbana. In the 1940 census Charles was a packer at the Buckeye Incubator Company.

    My records show Charles died in 1970 at the age of 83. Alma died in 1975. Both are buried in the Oak Dale Cemetery in Urbana.
    3. Ethel M. Stemble Hess. (1888-1961). Ethel was born in August of 1888. At the time of the 1910 census Ethel was a dressmaker, one of six staff members living in a children's home in Urbana, Ohio. The home had 50 tenants aged 2 to 15. Soon after the census, she married Perry Hess. Ethel and Perry had three children. Perry was a farmer in Champaign County. They lived there their entire life. Ethel died in 1961, Perry died in 1965. Both are buried in Urbana's Oak Dale Cemetery.

    Ethel and Perry Hess's children:

      a. Richard Hess.(1912-2003) Richard was born April 14, 1912. In 1934 he married Ruth Newman. He was 22, she was 19. They had five children: Nancy, Sara, Richard (Dickie), Suzanne, and Vicky. In 1977 Richard married again, to Mary Soum. Richard died in 2003 and is buried in Urbana's Oakdale Cemetery.
      b. Donna Hess Imel.(1916-2006) Donna was born August 23, 1916. In 1937 she married Howard Imel. They raised four children in Urbana, where they lived all their life. Their children are: Janet, Bob, Don, and Charles. Howard died in 1993 at the age of 80. Donna died in their home in 2006. She was 90. This writer had the privilege of meeting Donna on a couple of occasions. She was a sprightly, active woman who enjoyed life and had a wonderful sense of humor. Howard and Donna are buried in Urbana's Oakdale Cemetery.
      c. Dorothy Hess Maggart.(1918-1999) Dorothy was born September 19, 1918. In 1941 she married Jack Maggart. They had at least on child, a son, Douglas (who married Donna Akey). They may have had more children. Dorothy died in 1999, Jack in 2006. Both are buried in Oakdale Cemetery.

    4. Marie Pearl Stemble Fretz Jenkins. (1896-1983). Marie was Albert's first child with his second wife, Olive. She was born in August of 1896, making her eight years younger than her next younger sister, Ethel. She usually went by the name Pearl. Sometime around 1920, after the census, she married Ralph W. Fretz. Pearl and Ralph had two children, Phyllis and Doris. In the 1930 census, they were living in Tremont City (Clark County, Ohio). Ralph was a telegrapher for a railroad company. They owned their house valued at about $1,800. Pearl's mother, Ollie, was living with them. Sometime before 1940, Pearl and Ralph divorced and Pearl married Paul Ray Jenkins. In the 1940 census, Pearl and Paul were living in St. Paris (Champaign County), Ohio. Paul was the proprietor of a recreation parlor. Pearl's two daughters from her first marriage were living with them. Pearl died in 1983 and is buried in Oakdale Cemetery.
    5. Dewey Fullwider Stemble. (1898-1948). Dewey was born September 2, 1898, in Champaign County, Ohio. He married Glenna Mae Hupp on March 15, 1919, in Covington, Kentucky. In the 1920 census Dewey was a farmer in Champign County, Ohio. Glenna and Dewey had two children, Dorothy (b. 1924), and Robert (b. 1926). By 1930 they had moved to Springfield, Ohio, where Dewey was a salesman for a stock fund.
    6. Harriet N. Stemble James. (1901-1973). Harriet was born on February 2, 1901. In 1920, after the census, she married Horace James, and they had at least one child, Horace, Jr. In 1930 it appears that Harriet and Horace either owned or worked at a filling station in Moorefield Township in Clark County, Ohio. The 1940 census confirms that they ran the filling station in northern Clark County. Horace died in 1970, Harriet died in 1973. Both are buried in Maple Grove Cemetery in North Lewisburg (Champaign County), Ohio.

Dewey died November 26, 1948, in Bellefontaine (Logan County), Ohio, in 1948. Glenna (affectionately called MeMe by her family) died September 30, 1986, in Logan County. Both are buried in Urbana's Oakdale Cemetery.

Dewey and Glenna Stemble's children:

    1. Dorothy Elizabeth Stemble Akey.(1924-2004) Dorothy was born May 28, 1924. She married Carl Akey on December 3, 1951. They had one child, a daughter, Kay. Dorothy lived in Lakeview (Logan County), Ohio, where she was an accountant. She has also served as Clerk of Stokes Township. Dorothy died May 20, 2004, at her daughter's home in Stevensville, Montana. She is buried in Urbana's Oakdale Cemetery. This writer had the pleasure of meeting Dorothy on a couple of occasions. She opened her home to me and shared information about her family. She also organized a Stembel/Stemble family reunion in 2003, shortly before her death. She was a generous, ebullient person.
    2. Robert Stanley Stemble.(1926- ) Robert was born on March 28, 1926, in Champaign County. He married Betty Littlejohn on July 5, 1949, in Covington, Kentucky. Bob, as he is known, and Betty have three children: John, Debra, and Douglas. Bob owns a farm in Lewistown, Ohio. The family owns a slaughterhouse as well. Robert died February 15, 2015, and is buried in Oak Dale Cememtery, Urbana, Ohio.

G. William Henry Stembel. (1867-1946). William was born February 27, 1867, near West Liberty, Ohio. He was Joseph and Mary's seventh child. William grew up on his father's farm. Little is known about his childhood.

William married Helen Baldwin sometime around 1885. They had two daughters, Florence and Ruth. Just two months shy of her 31st birthday, Helen died, leaving William with two young children (Ruth was just a year-and-a-half old). Two years later, William married Rhoda Fultz. They had a child: a son named David. David was born in Washington Court House, Ohio (I assume David and Rhoda were living there at the time).

At the time of the 1900 federal census--less than two years after David was born--William and Rhoda had moved to Newport, Kentucky. In 1910, they attended Joseph and Mary's 95th Anniversary. According to the newspaper account, they were still living in Newport.

William died September 26, 1946. He was 79. Rhoda died February 21, 1963, in Cincinnati, at the age of 87.

William Stembel's three children (two wives):

    1. Florence Bliss Stembel Woeste.(1887-1967) Florence was born May 26, 1887. Her mother died when she was eight years old. Her father remarried about a year later. Florence grew up in Newport, Kentucky, but from the age of 15 she showed up in the Cincinnati City Directory as a saleslady in local stores with a residence in Newport, which was just across the Ohio River.

    Sometime around 1911, Florence married Louis Woeste. Louis was about 5 years older than Florence. They had two children, Helen (born 1913) and Bonnie (born 1916). They lived in Newport for a time but moved to Cincinnati between 1920 and 1930. Louis died april 10, 1933. He is buried in St. Mary Cemetery. Florece died 34 years later, on January 3, 1967. Her funeral service was held in Mt. Washington, Kentucky, but her grave was not found on the Find-A-Grave website.
    2. Ruth Eloise Stembel Crumrine.(1893-1982) Ruth was born in December of 1893. Her mother died when she was just a year and a half old. Her father soon remarried, and they moved to Newport, Kentucky.

    About 1915, Ruth married Earl Crumrine. Earl was a farmer and later a farm implement salesman. They first lived in Covington, Kentucky, where their first child was born, and then moved to Champaign County, Ohio, and later to Cincinnati. They had eight children: Earl, Jr., William, Laura Jane, Mary, George, Bliss, Charles, and Sally. Earl died in 1949. Ruth died in 1982. Both are buried in Highland Cemetery in Fort Mitchell, Kenton County, Kentucky.
    3. David Maynard Stembel.(1898-1974) David was born September 28, 1898, at Washington Court House, Ohio--the first child born to his father's new wife, Rhoda. Soon after his birth they moved to Newport, Kentucky, where "Maynard," as he was known, was raised. After completing high school, Maynard attended the University of Cincinnati. He was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. In 1924 Maynard earned his degree. His thesis, titled "An Investigation of the Flux Distribution in a Pittsburg Polyphase Transformer" is available at the university's library.

    On January 20, 1926, Maynard married Dorothy Edwards. They had two children, but the youngest died as an infant. Their oldest child was David, Jr.

    Maynard became a steel company executive in Pittsburgh where he and Dorothy lived most of their life. Dorothy died December 17, 1970, in Pittsburgh, and is buried in Homewood Cemetery there. Maynard died 3 years later, on May 21, 1974, in Palm Beach, Florida. He was 75. He is also buried in Pittsburgh's Homewood Cemetery.

    David and Dorothy Stembel's child:

      a. David Stembel, Jr.(1933-1995) David was born in Pittsburgh on June 9, 1933. He attended the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, where he earned a degree in Naval Architecture. At the Academy, David wrote a biography of his cousin Admiral Roger Nelson Stembel as one of his assignments. After graduation he married Judy Stahr on August 3, 1956, at Larchmont, New York.

      David made the Navy his career. He advanced through the ranks, and eventually headed up the Navy's Guided Missile Frigate program. That was David's last assignment. He retired from the Navy in 1985 as a Captain.

      David's family lived in Silver Spring, Maryland (just a few miles from this writer). David was an avid gardener; he also served as the local high school's swimming team announcer. David died July 10, 1995, in Silver Spring and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery just a few feet from his distant cousin Adm. Roger Nelson Stembel. Judy continued to live in their Silver Spring home and work as a docent at the Hillwood Museum in nearby Washington, D.C. She now lives with a son.

      David and Judy Stembel's three children:

        1. David Stembel III.
        2. John Stembel.
        3. Wendy Stembel.

H. Addie Elizabeth Stembel. (1871-1954).

Addie was born June 10, 1871. She was Joseph and Mary's youngest child. Joseph was almost 43 years old when she was born. She was 19 years younger than her oldest sister, Mallisa. According to family historian, Dr. McLean, Addie journeyed to Missouri with her mother in the 1880s to visit her father's brother, Oliver, and his family.(13) It is not clear why Joseph did not join them. It's possible that since Mary lived near the Stembels as a child, she may have been a close friend of Oliver or his wife, Margaret. In any case, it must have been quite a rugged adventure for Addie who was barely in her teens at the time.

Addie married Samuel Brubaker in 1892. Addie was 21; Samuel was 27. They had three children, all daughters. Samuel and Addie owned a farm near Milford Center, just east of theChampaign County line. However, sometime in the middle 1930s, after over 40 years of marriage, Addie and Samuel separated.

It seems that Addie was the glue that kept the Stembel families in Ohio together. Her family reunions are legendary. Everyone I have talked to who knew her, speaks of her fondly. Addie died June 19, 1954. She was 83. She is buried in the Oak Dale Cemetery, in Urbana, Ohio.


Addie and Samuel Brubaker's children:

    1. Lucille Brubaker. (1893-1945). Lucille was born on November 7, 1893, in St. Paris (Champaign County), Ohio. As an adult she was a school teacher, but she retired from teaching in the mid-1930s and became a farmer for the last ten years of her life. She died at the age of 52 in Milford Center (Union County), Ohio. She never married. She is buried in the Oak Dale Cemetery in Urbana, Ohio.
    2. Elizabeth Marie Brubaker Totten. (1895-1984). Elizabeth was also born in St. Paris, on November 19, 1895. She married Robert Jarvis Totten. Robert was born in Pennsylvania and was significantly older than Elizabeth. He may have been married previously. Elizabeth was a school teacher. No children were born of this marriage. Robert died in 1937 at the age of 69. Elizabeth lived until 1984. She died in New Wilmington (Lawrence County), Pennsylvania, but is buried in Youngstown, Ohio.
    3. Beulah Blanche Brubaker Webster. (1898-1981).Beulah was born April 21, 1898, in St. Paris, Ohio, like her sisters. On June 12, 1929, she married David Webster, a close relative of Daniel Webster. They were married in Urbana, Ohio. Beulah and David had three children.

    David attended the University of Wisconsin, where he earned a Ph.D. Later, he took a position at Temple University, in Philadelphia, where he taught English Literature. After eight years of teaching, he became acting Dean of Men, and later became an Associate Dean for the College of Liberal Arts at Temple.

    Beulah died in 1981, in Medford, New Jersey. She is buried in Oak Dale Cemetery, Urbana, Ohio, not far from her birthplace. David moved in with his son, Guy, in New Jersey. He died May 29, 1988, at the age of 83.

    Beulah and David Webster's children:

      a. David Brubaker Webster. (1931-2018). David was born January 13, 1931, in Madison, Wisconsin. He married Phyllis Gray. They have four sons: David, Charles, Steven, and Peter. David taught Mathematics at George Washington University. He lived outside Washington, D.C. in Potomac, Maryland.
      b. Julie Fry Webster Reiff. (1933- ). Julie was born on May 23, 1933, in Madison, Wisconsin. On May 14, 1960, she married Harry Reiff in Moorestown, New Jersey. Julie is a children's librarian; Harry is a librarian and administrator. They have three children: Johanna, Victoria, and Philip. She and Harry lived in Philadelphia most of their adult life, but retired to New England.
      c. Guy Hutton Webster. (1937- ). Guy was born on August 23, 1937, in Madison, Wisconsin. He married Susan Westfall in 1967, but she died not long after the marriage. Guy later married Karen Ritsema on March 6, 1982. They have one child, Andrew. Guy is an architect and lives on a 144-acre farm in Medford, New Jersey, as of this writing.




    FOOTNOTES



    1. Sidelights on Maryland History by Hestor Dorsey Richardson. Tidewater Publishers, Cambridge, MD. 1967. p. 244. This book devotes six pages to the early Swearingen family. Gen. Joseph Van Swearingen is descended from Garret Van Swearingen who arrived in what is now New Castle, Delaware in 1657. He was part of a contingent from the city of Amsterdam who were taking over Fort Casimer from the Dutch West India Company.

    2. "History of Champaign County, Ohio" Vol II, p. 804. Author and publisher unknown.

    3. Ibid. p. 805.

    4. Ibid. p. 804.

    5. Mary Ziegler Stembel's obituary published on 24 January 1911. Probably from an Urbana OH newspaper. Original in the possession of Miriam Stembel Lawyer, Wheatfield, IN, 1983.

    6. "Wedding Anniversary is celebrated by Stembel Family", report of Joseph V.S. and Mary Stembel's 59th Wedding Anniversary. Date of article is unknown (probably June 1910). It is most likely from an Urbana, OH, newspaper.

    7. Ibid.

    8. "History of Champaign County, Ohio" Vol II, p. 805.

    9. Ibid. p. 806.

    10. Church records. Urbana Methodist Church, 1896 - 1914. Urbana OH. A copy can be found in the DAR Library.

    11. "History of Champaign County, Ohio," p. 805-806. This book gives the names of John's four children who were alive at the time of the writing (ca 1917). James was not listed.

    12. This is not a misspelling. Albert had his name legally changed to Stemble.

    13. Letter from Dr. W. McLean dated September 14, 1984.


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    Copyright. Oren Stembel, STEMBEL FAMILY HISTORY PROJECT (familyhistory.stembel.org).