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1805 - 1888
Washington
Trickle
83
83
From the Stark County News, Thursday, 8 November 1888 Died at the residence of Erastus Foster, in Kansas City, Missouri, on October 10th, 1888, of inflammation of the bowels, Washington Trickle, aged 83 years, 8 months and 9 days. His death was unexpected. Some five weeks ago, he went to visit his only surviving child, Mrs. L.F. Mathews of Cowley County, Kansas and was on his way home, when he was suddenly taken ill and was only able to reach the residence of E.N. Foster in Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. Foster, with Dr. Barber, all old acquaintances (formerly of Elmwood), kindly cared for him, giving him every attention possible, but after an illness of only twenty hours, God took him. Washington Trickle was born twenty miles west of Baltimore, Maryland 1 February 1805. His father Christopher Trickle, moved west to Ohio with his family in the year 1811. During the war of 1812, he moved into the fort at Jeromeville, Ohio, with his family and died at that place in 1813, leaving a family of five sons and four daughters to the care of the widowed mother. Only two of this family are now living, Mr. Edward Trickle of West Jersey and Mrs. Julia Anne Sherburne of Toulon. On May 15th, 1828, Washington Trickle was united in marriage to Miss Elinor Smith at Ashland, Ohio, the ceremony being performed by Reverend James Haney, father of all the Haney preachers. They had eleven children, ten daughters and one son, all of whom, except Mrs. Lucretia S. Mathews, have with their mother, passed over the River. In 1835 he moved to Fulton County, Illinois and in 1836 removed to Stark county near Rochester, and from there to Elmwood, Illinois where he remained until a short time after the death of his wife, which occurred in 1883, when he removed to West Jersey and lived with his granddaughters and their father Mr. John Wiley, from whose house he was buried, October 17th, 1888. The funeral services were conducted by Reverend Miller, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church at West Jersey, in the church at Rochester, and the remains were laid to rest beside his wife and children in the cemetery at that place. A goodly number of neighbors and friends were in attendance. In 1828 he united with the Methodist Episcopal Church of which he was a faithful member for more than sixty years, being an official member most of the time. He was an earnest Christian worker and while loving his own church, he felt that other denominations were Christian people and his brethren. In earlier years his house was always a home for ministers and educational workers. He was an attentive and thoughtful husband, a kind father, and a good neighbor, always ready to aid those in need. He was resigned in all his afflictions; his last testimony in class meeting, a week before his death, was "Christ has been with me and is still with me. I feel my work is done and am only waiting patiently the call to come up higher." So passed away a good man. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, yea, and their works do follow them."
1807 - 1897
Edward
Trickle
89
89
Obituary: One by one the pioneers of Stark County are dropping out of the ranks of the great procession of human life. On the 20th day of the present month died our well-known fellow citizen, Edward Trickle, ninety years. He was born in 1807 and came to Illinois in 1836 with his wife and two children. His destination was Rochester, in Peoria County, where his brother-in-law, Therigood Smith then lived. Mr. Smith was the father of John E. and Ephraim Smith, well known to the people in this county. He afterwards purchased land in Essex Township in this County, upon which he resided until the time of his death. In the spring of 1837 he built a cabin and moved his family upon the land he had purchased. There are few men who have lived so many years upon the same farm. He endured the inconveniences and hardship of a pioneer life and as well enjoyed its pleasures. Time and industry brought their fruits of competence and ease, which were reasonably enjoyed. Mr. Trickle was an intelligent, upright and honest man; well esteemed by all who knew him and was liberal and helpful, not only to his own family but to many others who will hold his memory in kindly remembrance.
1879 - 1943
Harry
E
Trekell
63
63
He lived at the old home place at Wellington, Kansas. He was the twin brother of Mary Etna.
1872 - 1951
William
(W.A.)
Albert Trekell
78
78
WILLIAM ALBERT TREKELL FAMILY William Albert (Will) Trekell was born at West Union, Missouri, December 21, 1872. His father, Franklin Trekell, born July 12, 1840, at Independence, Missouri, and mother, Lizzie A. (Elizabeth Anne) Currell, born Aug. 5, 1844 at Shawnee Mission, Kansas, were married March 3, 1864, at West Union, Cass County, Missouri. To this union were born four girls and seven boys. William Albert was the sixth child. His younger days were spent at West Union and near Wellington, Kansas. In May, 1892 he graduated from Conway Normal College, Conway Springs, Kansas. Then after harvest and before the great race of September 16, 1893, he, three brothers and one sister made preparations for the "run" into Oklahoma Territory. His oldest brother, Thomas Edward, had made the run into Old Oklahoma, staking a town lot in Guthrie, and living there; he preferred to make the run into the "Strip" from the south side. Will preferred to make the run from the the south also, because he wanted a lot in Enid. He wasn't quite 21 years old and many people on the north line knew it. So, he crossed the "Land of Promise" on a train from Caldwell, to Hennessey the evening before the run and at noon the next day made the run on a train of cattle cars, numbering about 42, which hadn't "been cleaned since cattle were shipped in them." Will jumped off the train without considering its speed. In his own words, he said "I landed on the slope of the fill just south of the Elm Street bridge, went head-over-heels down the slope and landed sitting up in a patch of sandburs. I picked out a few before starting, though I might have run faster had I let them cling to the seat of my pants. I dashed southwest across the townsite looking for a lot to stake but people were everywhere, so close together I could see no opening until I thought I saw one west of the southwest corner of the Square. I stuck a stake there, and men on both sides yelled, 'Hey, you're in the street there.' Looking east and west of me, I saw no settlers, so decided they were right; I had staked in the street. I pulled my stake and dashed southeast across the block south of the Square and across Two Street. I could have staked a lot there but did not choose to stake in the low ground, so ran on across the railroad and, finding a place where claimants were not so close together, I demanded of two where the lots were they claimed. Each one walked to his claim, and I said I believed there was room enough between them for me, so stuck my stake there. It proved to be a good guess; I had staked a lot no one else claimed." A short time later, after Will was 21 and old enough to prove a claim, he bought a quarter section for $1 per acre, adjoining the quarter his sister, Laura, had staked southeast of Hunter; and they built a half-dugout on the line and lived together for a time. Later, he built a house on his quarter and met and married his first wife, Stella Arrena Connelly, a neighbor girl. Stella was born September 6, 1875 at Canton, Kansas, and they were married December 29, 1896, in Enid. Stella died Jan. 23, 1910 after 13 years and 25 days of marriage and the births of four children. CHILDREN of WILLIAM and STELLA TREKELL Edna Stella was born Jan. 30, 1898 at Hunter, and married Henry Landis Mauldin, December 24, 1928 at Medford, Oklahoma. She died of tuberculosis, Feb. 2, 1935 at Albuquerque, NM, leaving no children. She is buried in the Hunter Cemetery. Lester William was born June 23, 1899, at Hunter and married Gladys Myrtle Venable, July 19, 1926, at Stillwater, Okla. He died at Univ. Hospital in Oklahoma City and is buried in the Hunter Cemetery. Lester and Gladys had three children; Lester Conley, Everitt, and Norma Lee, all living. Gladys lives in Midwest City, Okla. Eslie, born June 20, 1901, died July 26, 1902, and is buried in the Hunter Cemetery. Bessie Gladys was born Oct. 9, 1903, at Hunter and married David Thompson, December 6, 1923 at Perry, Okla. To them was born one daughter, Martha Zoe. David is deceased and Bess is living in Oklahoma City. CHILDREN of WILLIAM and EULA ALICE TREKELL Will Trekell married Eula Alice Lindell September 2, 1929 at Kingfisher, Okla. She was born June 4, 1902 at Sayre, O.T., and died September 6, 1979 in Enid. To their union were born five children, William Allen, Erlin Raymond, Landis, Marilyn Jean and Larry. It is thought that Larry, at age 41 may be the youngest child of any of the original pioneers who made the run that September day in 1893. By Landis Trekell, Alva, Okla.
Marriage (eight children)
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1866 - 1922
Charles
Stephen
Trekell
56
56
He was a farmer near Nardin, Oklahoma.
1869 - 1926
Francis
Trustin
Trekell
57
57
He was a merchant at Enid, Oklahoma.
1875 - 1963
Franklin
Trekell
88
88
He farmed near Hunter, Oklahoma. Trekell, Frank Patent Book No. 1, Pg 238 Certificate No 727 Patent Date: 25 July 1898 Recorded: Washington DC, Oklahoma Record, Vol 1, Pg 210
1877 - 1938
Emory
Trekell
61
61
Later he moved to Liberal, Kansas. EMERY TREKELL, M. D. On the wall of his office at Harper hangs a diploma showing Doctor Trekell is a graduate in medicine from Northwestern University of Chicago. Immediately after leaving that school in 1910 be took up active practice in Kansas, and for the past three years has been looking after a very large and accumulating professional business at Harper. Doctor Trekell, though born at West Union in Cass County, Missouri, March 13, 1877, has some interesting historical family connections of early days in Kansas. He is of a family that came to the United States before the Revolution. His grandfather was a native of Illinois, and during the '50s came west to the Missouri border and settled near Fort Aubrey, Kansas. He had a farm there and was killed on his place at the time of Quantrill's raid. He had walked to Lawrence to notify the citizens there of Quantrill's coming, and on account of that act was ambushed and slain. Two of his brothers, one of whom was named Greenbury Trekell, were killed in the battle between the free state and slavery forces at Lawrence. Franklin Trekell, father of Doctor Trekell, was born near Toulon in Stark County, Illinois, in 1840, but when quite young moved to West Union, Missouri. In 1862 he went into the Union army and as a first lieutenant saw active service until the close of the war. He was one of the avengers of his father's death, raising a squad of men who went in pursuit of Quantrill, and it was Franklin Trekell who discovered Quantrill's muster roll in the saddle of a dead horse. With his squad of soldiers he also found the body of his slain father. After the war he engaged in farming in Cass County, Missouri, and in 1884 removed to Wellington, Kansas, and continued farming there until his retirement. He died at Wellington in 1906. He was a democrat in politics, a member of the Christian Church, and was affiliated with the Masonic fraternity and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. At West Union, Missouri, in 1861 he married Elizabeth A. Currell, who was born at Shawnee Mission in Kansas in 1844. Thus on his mother's side Doctor Trekell represents people who were in Kansas long before it became a territory and when all this country was given over to the Indians. His mother died at Wellington in 1905. The children were: Thomas E., owner of a ranch at Shattuck, Oklahoma; Charles S., a farmer at Nardin, Oklahoma; Clara, wife of Reece Lupton, who has a farm at Deer Creek, Oklahoma; Francis T., a merchant at Enid, Oklahoma; Laura, who died at Wellington in 1896, married in 1894 T. J. Anderson, now a farmer in Oklahoma; W. A., a farmer at Hunter, Oklahoma; Franklin, Jr., also farming land at Hunter, Oklahoma; Doctor Trekell; Harry E., who owns the old home place at Wellington; Mary E., twin sister of Harry, wife of A. O. Bachman, a farmer at Eddy, Oklahoma; and Bertha May, wife of David G. Demuth, a farmer at Yelton, Oklahoma. Doctor Trekell was educated in the rural schools of Sumner County, Kansas, graduating from the county high school there with the class of 1903. For one year he taught at Belle Plaine, Kansas, and then entered Kansas University, where he pursued his studies four years, and followed that with two years in Northwestern University Medical School at Chicago, graduating in 1910. For three years Doctor Trekell practiced at Milan, Kansas, spent one year at Argonia, and in 1914 located at Harper. His offices are in the Thompson Building on Central Avenue. He has served as president of the County Medical Society, and is a member of the State Society and the American Medical Association. Doctor Trekell is a democrat in politics, is affiliated with Harper Lodge No. 206, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Harper Lodge No. 195, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Harper Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen and the Chapter of the Eastern Star. Doctor Trekell is a member of the Christian Church. In 1912, at Beaver City, Oklahoma, he married Miss Mae Maple. Mrs. Trekell has the distinction of being the first white child born in Beaver County, Oklahoma. Beaver County is in the far western part of that state, in what is called the Oklahoma Panhandle. Doctor and Mrs. Trekell have one daughter, Dorothy Lenor, born April 20, 1917. A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, written & compiled by William E. Connelley, 1918
1839 - 1917
John
Sydner
Currell
77
77
1842 - 1907
Charles
J
Currell
65
65
1852 - 1929
Edward
Currell
77
77
1868 - 1958
Laura
May
Hoag
89
89
1875 - 1910
Stella
Connelly
Arrena
34
34
1902 - 1979
Eula
Alice
Lindell
77
77
Mary
Lucretia
Young
Mae
Maple
1887 - 1975
Pearl
W
Wood
88
88
David
G
Demuth
He was a farmer at Yelton, Oklahoma.
1823 - 1895
Christopher
T
Trekell
71
71
History of Cass, County, Missouri, 1883 The subject of this sketch [C. Trickle] accompanied his parents on their various moves and in Clay County, Missouri, started out for himself. His early life was a roaming one. In 1843 and 1844 he spent the time in Old Mexico, and till 1851 he went to Illinois and married Miss Agnes Dwire, a native of Ohio, who, with her parents, had moved to Illinois in 1833. In 1864 Mr. and Mrs. Trickle went to California and in 1865 came to Cass County, though the former had been here many years before. They have a family of four children: Thomas J, Alexander, Julia, and Elvira.
1833
Thomas
J
Trekell
Thomas Trickle, the brother of C. Trickle, was born in Indiana January 29, 1833. He was principally raised in Missouri, and in 1854 embarked in business for himself by entering some 320 acres of land in Cass County. During the war he served in Company A, Ninth Regiment Kansas Volunteer Cavalry. He was married in 1867 to Miss Mary J. Powell, of Cass County, Missouri, born in 1844. They have a family of five children: Mary E., Martha A., Emeline, Lewis L., and Rosa L. Mr. and Mrs. Trickle are church members.
Elosia
McRorey
1874 - 1949
Abbie
Francis
Currell
75
75
1878
Edna
M
Currell
1884
Emma
Lee
Currell
Robert
DeWitt
Roland
Anne
Daniels
1885 - 1962
Effie
May
Trekell
76
76
1888 - 1894
Eva
Trekell
6
6
1867 - 1949
Clara
D
Trekell
81
81
1880
Bertha
Trekell
Harvey
Trekell
Blanche
Trekell
Earl
Trekell
1906
Mary
Trekell
John
Trekell
Charles
Trekell
Herbert
Lucas
D. 1932
Rees
Lupton
He farmed near Deer Creek, Oklahoma.
Allan
Trekell
Loren
Trekell
Edith
Trekell
Carl
Trekell
1898 - 1935
Edna
Stella
Trekell
37
37
She had no children.
1899 - 1939
Lester
William
Trekell
39
39
1901 - 1902
Elsie
Trekell
1
1
1903
Bessie
Gladys
Trekell
She was living in Oklahoma City
Henry
Landis
Mauldin
Gladys
Myrtle
Venable
Lived at Midwest City.
Lester
Conley
Trekell
Everitt
Trekell
Norma
Lee
Trekell
David
Thompson
Martha
Zoe
Thompson
William
Allen
Trekell
Erlin
Raymond
Trekell
Landis
Trekell
Marilyn
Jean
Trekell
Larry
Trekell
Nellie
Trekell
1899
Milton
Emlin
Trekell
Howard
Trekell
Ray
Trekell
Frank
Trekell
Stella
Trekell
Effie
Trekell
Ina
Trekell
Wayne
Trekell
Ivan
Trekell
Homer
Trekell
Ruth
Trekell
Dale
Trekell
1917
Dorothy
Lenor
Trekell
1920 - 1945
Robert
Emery
Trekell
25
25
Jean
Trekell
Jesse
Lupton
Harold
Trekell
Helen
Trekell
Claude
Demuth
Olive
Demuth
Maynard
Demuth
Gail
Demuth
May
1901 - 1977
Millard
Forest
Buxton
76
76
Lois
1867 - 1919
Isaac
E
Creason
52
52
son of William M Creason & Christina Snyder
1895
Madaline
Creason
1898
Ruby
M
Creason
1900
James
F
Creason
1902
John E
Creason
1905
Kenneth
E
Creason
1907
Joseph
M
Creason
1910
Virginia
L
Creason
1912
Edna
F
Creason
1914
Margaret
E
Creason
1916
Emma
G
Creason
1919
Lowell
J
Creason
1883
William
E
Lindsey
Almeda
H
H B
Currell
1860
Mary
Jane
Christopher
1880
Verna
Frances
Currell
1882
Bertha
Alice
Currell
1885
Stella
Maud
Currell
1887
Forrest
Edward
Currell
1890
Ralph
Thomas
Currell
1892
Elizabeth
Atilla
Currell
1895
Roy
Sydner
Currell
1897
Irvin
Ray
Currell
1899
Paul
Gaither
Currell
Agnes
Dwire
Thomas
J
Trekell
Alexander
Trekell
Julia
Trekell
Elvira
Trekell
1844
Mary J
Powell
Mary
E
Trekell
Martha
A
Trekell
Emeline
Trekell
Lewis
L
Trekell
Rosa
L
Trekell
1796
Eliza
Treakle
1798
Mariah
Treakle
m. (1) Jacob Smith; m. (2) James Murphey.
1809
Juliann
Treakle
m. (1) Theragood Smith; m. (2) James M. Dennison, January 17, 1850, Tuscarawas Co., OH.
Elinor
Smith
Lucretia
S
Trickle
Smith
1796
John
Markley
~1763
Joseph
Markley
1767
Susanna
Wagerline
1829
Caroline
Markley
1818
Susannah
Markley
1819
Thomas
Markley
1821
Mary
Ann
Markley
1824
Joseph
W
Markley
1826
Aaron
Markley
1830
Frances
Markley
1832
Elizabeth
Markley
1835
Atilda
Markley
1836
Rebecca
Markley
1839
John
Markley
Jacob
Smith
James
Murphy
Theragood
Smith
James
M
Dennison
Bud
Currell
Clara
Matthews
1865 - 1927
William
Sherman
Buxton
61
61
Children George Elmer BUXTON b: 1 Nov., 1899 in near Englewood in Harper Co., Oklahoma Millard Forest BUXTON b: 21 Nov., 1901 in Harper Co., Oklahoma Hazel Jane BUXTON b: 10 Oct., 1903 in Harper Co., Oklahoma William Clifford BUXTON b: 24 March, 1906 in Harper Co., Oklahoma
1869 - 1948
Armintia
(Mintie)
Lee Fox
79
79
Father: William Henry FOX b: 14 Oct 1826 in Chatham Co,North Carolina Mother: Alvira Jane BARNES-STINSON-DIXON b: 26 Sep 1831 in Chatham Co,North Carolina
William
B
Buxton
Jane
V
Whellan
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