WEBER, George

WEBER, George

Male 1893 - 1919  (26 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  WEBER, George was born on 16 Jul 1893 in Glen Arm, Sangamon, Illinois, USA (son of WEBER, Charles Eldridge and NUCKOLLS, Laura May); died on 20 Nov 1919 in Battle Creek, Calhoun, Michigan, United States; was buried on 24 Nov 1919 in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Mechanic
    • Cause of Death: Complications from operation. Death ceritificate cause: Cerebral Embolism / Secondary: General Perintonitis


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  WEBER, Charles Eldridge was born on 29 Jul 1855 in Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 22 Nov 1901 in Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, USA.

    Notes:

    From Find a Grave page:

    Died, Friday, Nov. 22, 1901, in Lincoln, Neb., of appendicitis, Charles E. Weber, aged 44 years. Mr. Weber had gone to Lincoln on a visit when he became ill. He was a resident of Pawnee, where he was well known. Mr. Weber is survived by two sons, and two daughters, Eldridge, George, Edith and Mabel Weber; also two brothers and two step-brothers. They are George P. Weber and B. R. B. Weber of Valpariso, Neb., and Dr. D. A. Drennan and Gilbert C. Drennan of Springfield. The remains will be brought to Springfield this morning and will be taken direct to Oak Ridge cemetery where the interment will be made. IL State Journal, Springfield, IL 11-24-1901

    Died:
    Died, Friday, Nov. 22, 1901, in Lincoln, Neb., of appendicitis, Charles E. Weber, aged 44 years. Mr. Weber had gone to Lincoln on a visit when he became ill. He was a resident of Pawnee, where he was well known. Mr. Weber is survived by two sons, and two daughters, Eldridge, George, Edith and Mabel Weber; also two brothers and two step-brothers. They are George P. Weber and B. R. B. Weber of Valpariso, Neb., and Dr. D. A. Drennan and Gilbert C. Drennan of Springfield. The remains will be brought to Springfield this morning and will be taken direct to Oak Ridge cemetery where the interment will be made. IL State Journal, Springfield, IL 11-24-1901

    Charles married NUCKOLLS, Laura May. Laura (daughter of NUCKOLLS, James M and DRENNAN, Nancy) was born on 13 Nov 1862 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 1 Oct 1949 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  NUCKOLLS, Laura May was born on 13 Nov 1862 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA (daughter of NUCKOLLS, James M and DRENNAN, Nancy); died on 1 Oct 1949 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 4 Jun 1880, Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Census:
    Nuckholls, Laura / White / Female / Age 17 / Stepdaughter / Born in Illinois / Father born in Illinois / Mother born in Illinois

    Children:
    1. 1. WEBER, George was born on 16 Jul 1893 in Glen Arm, Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 20 Nov 1919 in Battle Creek, Calhoun, Michigan, United States; was buried on 24 Nov 1919 in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.
    2. WEBER, Joseph Eldridge


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  NUCKOLLS, James M was born on 28 Dec 1836 in Sangamon, IL USA (son of NUCKOLLS, Charles D and WILSON, Mary); died on 24 Aug 1866.

    James married DRENNAN, Nancy on 22 Sep 1859. Nancy (daughter of DRENNAN, William and ANDERSON, Margaret L) was born on 29 Nov 1840 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 15 Aug 1923 in Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  DRENNAN, Nancy was born on 29 Nov 1840 in Sangamon, IL USA (daughter of DRENNAN, William and ANDERSON, Margaret L); died on 15 Aug 1923 in Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1876, Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA
    • Census: 4 Jun 1880, Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA
    • Census: 15 Jun 1900, Ball Township, Sangamon, Illinois, USA
    • Residence: 1906, Glen Arm, Sangamon, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Census:
    Bennington, Nancy / White / Female / Age 39 / Wife / Occupation Keeping House / Born in Illinois / Father born in South Carolina / Mother born in South Carolina

    Census:
    Bennington, Nancy / Head / White / Female / Born Nov 1840 / Age 59 / Marital Status: Widowed / Children Born 4 / Children Living 1 / Born in Illinois / Father born in North Carolina / Mother born in Virginia / Occupation Landlady / Can read / Can write / Owns house with no mortgage

    Children:
    1. 3. NUCKOLLS, Laura May was born on 13 Nov 1862 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 1 Oct 1949 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.
    2. NUCKOLLS, Ella was born on 5 Feb 1861 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 20 Aug 1866 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.
    3. NUCKOLLS, Infant was born on 15 Sep 1865 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 22 Oct 1865 in Sangamon, IL, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  NUCKOLLS, Charles D was born on 2 Mar 1805 in Grayson County, VA USA.

    Charles married WILSON, Mary on 10 Mar 1832 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA. Mary was born on 3 Jan 1812 in Buncombe County, NC USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  WILSON, Mary was born on 3 Jan 1812 in Buncombe County, NC USA.
    Children:
    1. 6. NUCKOLLS, James M was born on 28 Dec 1836 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 24 Aug 1866.

  3. 14.  DRENNAN, William was born on 15 Oct 1798 in Pendleton Dist, SC, USA (son of DRENNAN, William and THOMAS, Mary); died on 28 Sep 1876 in Sangamon, IL, USA.

    Notes:

    History of William Drennan and Mary Thomas in Sangamon County, IL

    William and Mary were married about 1790. Six of their children were born in the Pendelton district (South Carolina), and they moved to Caldwell county, KY, about 1803, where they had six children. In the fall of 1817, they moved to Illinois, first stopping on Wood river, about two miles from Alton, in Madison county. Their destination was the San-ga-ma country, but it was more economical to remain idle that winter than to move up, and thus incur the necessity of hauling provisions for themselves and stock. Early in 1818 William Drennan, his half brother, Joseph Drennan, his son-in-law, Joseph Dodds, and George Cox, left their families near Alton, and, with their teams, farming implements, provisions, and all the young men and boys belonging to the families who were able to assist in making a home, started, piloted by a white man named William Moore, who had belonged to a company that had been over the country before, in fighting the Indians. He was called an Indian Ranger. Arriving at Sugar creek, they took a day or two for exploring, and on March 10, 1818, drove to the spot on which William Drennan built his cabin and which proved to be section 32, town 14, range 5 west, when the government made its survey. It is on the northwest side of Sugar creek, and about twelve miles nearly due south of Springfield, and near where the Sugar creek Cumberland Presbyterian church now stands. Immediately after their arrival they built two cabins. One was occupied by George Cox alone. The other was occupied for the summer by William and Joseph Drennan and Joseph Dodds. That was the one spoken of as belonging to William Drennan. As they had not the slightest idea of cultivating the prairie, these three men agreeed to clear all the land they could in one body, and have a crop from it that year in common, with the understanding that before another year they were all to work together until an equal sized piece was cleared for the other two. They cleared the timber from about fifteen acres, fenced it, plowed as well as they could among the roots and stumps with a little short wooden mould board plow, and planted it in corn and pumpkins. The soil in the timber was very light -- so much so that in some places they would almost sink in over their shoes. In fencing this land, they inclosed about three-fourths of an acre of prairie. After they had plowed and planted their crop, one of the men suggested that it was quite a waste to have that under fence and nothing growing on it, and proposed that they break it up and plan something on it. In order to make sure work, they uncoupled one of their wagons, hitched four horses to the forward wheels, and fastened their wooden mould board plow to the axle. They soon found this was a failure.

    Try as they would, the plow would not center the sod, and they reluctantly gave it up. While they were taking off the team and plow, one of the boys, full of fun and mischief, took up a hoe and began to shave the grass off, saying he could break the prairie with his hoe. That suggested an idea to one of the men, and he, also, took a hoe and began shaving the grass. It was the work of but a few minutes to remove the sod from a spot several feet in diameter. He then called one of the othermen, and proposed that, as they were well advanced with their work, and there were seven or eight of them, and all had hoes, that they call all hands together , and shave the grass from the whole piece, plant something on it, and see what would be the result. The man spoken to first, laughed at the idea as ridiculous, but after studying a moment, he fell in with it, and the men and boys were all called up, and the grass shaved off, holes dug, and corn and pumpkin seed planted. They did not tought it any more; that killed the grass. The crop was fully twice as much in proportion to the area, as that planted among the stumps, and the next spring it broke up the nicest of any land they had ever seen. This taught them an important lesson, and caused them to make greater exertions to induce some one to invent a plow that would break up the prairie. I have this account from the venerable William Drennan, who was one of the young men that assisted in doing the work, and who has lived in sight of the spot to the present time. Several years elapsed before a plow was invented that would do good work at breaking. In the mean time the early settlers continued clearing their land, that they might have it to cultivate, and were always uneasy for fear their timber would be exhausted.

    There can be but little doubt that the same labor required to destroy the timber on one acre would have shaved the grass from two acres, with no better implements than a hoe. They could, by that means, have had better land to cultivate, twice the quantity of grain raised, and saved their timber, but the probability is they never thought of it. After the provisions they brought with them were exhausted, one fo their number would return south, load a couple of horses with provisions, salt, and other indispensibles, in regular pack saddle style, and bring them to their new home. The distance was between sixty and seventy miles. They brought cows in the spring, and had plenty of milk. Wild honey was abundant, and Mr. Drennan told the writer that two of their number would cut down a hollow tree where bees had stored their wealth, and with a few hours work, would bring in from two to five gallons of honey. While they were doing this, others of their number would be looking for more bee trees, so that they always had four or five trees ahead, and knew just where to go when they needed more honey. For meat, they would hunt as the necessitieis required, some times one, and often all would hunt. In warm weather they would take venison, the breast of turkeys and geese, cut the meat into thin slices, sprinkle a small quantity of salt on it, and dry it on a frame work of sticks about three feet hight, setting the frame in the sun, with a smouldering fire underneath. In this way the meat would soon be cured, and ready for use at any time. This they called jerked meat, a considerable supply of which could be kept on hand. Fresh meat, jerked meat, milk, honey and bread, constituted their bill of fare during the first summer. As trips were made back and forth, some fo the younger sons and those who had families were brought to the new settlements. After the crops were cultivated, the men who had families returned to them, leaving the unmarried men and boys to take care of the property. The four men who came up in the spring, all brought their wives and childern in the fall of that year. Mr. Cox arrived first, Joseph Drennan next, and, William Drennan, with his son-in-law, Joseph Dodds, came together, arriving Dec. 3, 1818. Of the twelve childeren of William Drennan, Sen.---

    Mattie, born in South Carolina, married in Kentucky.

    Samuel

    William, born Oct 15, 1797, in Pendleton district, SC, came to Kentucky, and from there to Sangamon county with his father, arriving March 10, 1818 in what is now Ball township. He was married May 30, 1822, in Sanagamon county to Margaret Anderson. They had twelve childern, all born in Sanagmon county, viz: James A., born Aug 6, 1828, married Dec 8, 1853, to Rachel Cannan. They have six children, Jannetta F, Mary E, Robert W, Minnie W, Ira and Frederick, and reside in Ball township, five miles northeast of Auburn. Samuel, born Oct. 30, 1829, went to the Pacific coast in 1852, and was married there May 28,1868 to Lousia Fernald, who was born April 4, 1839 in North Berwick, Maine. They have three children, Edith A., Mabel L, and Dora A, and reside in Santa Cruz county, Ca. John T, born Jan 14, 1832, enlisted August 9, 1862 at Chatham, in Co. I, 73d Ill INf, for theree years. He was wounded at the battle of Chickamauga, Sept 20, 1863, lay five days on the battlefied, before medical aid was given. He recovered, but is permanently disabled. He was dischard on account of physical disability, June 16, 1864, and resides with his parents in Ball Township...

    "History of the Early Settlers, Sanagamon County, Illinois, "Centenial Record"" 1876

    William married ANDERSON, Margaret L on 30 May 1822 in Sangamon Co, IL. Margaret (daughter of ANDERSON, James and FLETCHER, Nancy) was born on 28 Mar 1806 in Rockbridge, VA, USA (Alt Botetourt Co, VA); died on 28 Aug 1881 in Sangamon, IL, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  ANDERSON, Margaret L was born on 28 Mar 1806 in Rockbridge, VA, USA (Alt Botetourt Co, VA) (daughter of ANDERSON, James and FLETCHER, Nancy); died on 28 Aug 1881 in Sangamon, IL, USA.
    Children:
    1. DRENNAN, James Anderson was born on 6 Aug 1828 in Sangamon, Illinois, USA; died on 15 Aug 1903 in Glen Arm, Sangamon, Illinois, USA.
    2. DRENNAN, Samuel was born on 30 Oct 1829 in Chatam, Sangamon, IL, USA; died on 7 Sep 1891 in Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California, USA; was buried on 10 Sep 1891 in IOOF Cemetery, Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz Co, CA.
    3. DRENNAN, John Thomas was born on 13 Jan 1832 in Sangamon, IL, USA; died on 4 Feb 1906 in Fresno, California.
    4. DRENNAN, William was born on 7 Mar 1833 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 27 Sep 1864 in G H Jefferson Barracks, Jefferson, Cole, MO USA; was buried in Jefferson City National Cemetery, Jefferson City, Cole, MO USA.
    5. DRENNAN, Martha Anne was born on 25 Apr 1835 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 24 Aug 1888 in Sangamon, IL USA.
    6. DRENNAN, Rebecca was born on 3 May 1837 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 16 Nov 1917.
    7. DRENNAN, Margaret Lacky was born on 30 Jan 1839 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 18 Sep 1884.
    8. 7. DRENNAN, Nancy was born on 29 Nov 1840 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 15 Aug 1923 in Pawnee, Sangamon, Illinois, USA; was buried in Sugar Creek Cemetery, Ball, Sangamon, IL USA.
    9. DRENNAN, Robert Neely was born on 20 Sep 1843; died on 20 Jan 1860.
    10. DRENNAN, Francis Newton was born on 5 Jul 1845 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 7 Jan 1914 in Butler, Bates, MO USA; was buried on 16 Jan 1914 in Oak Hill Cemetery, Butler, Bates, MO USA.
    11. DRENNAN, Mary Elizabeth was born on 24 Mar 1847 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 31 Mar 1919 in Springfield, Sangamon, Illinois, USA.
    12. DRENNAN, Emily Jane was born on 18 May 1851 in Sangamon, IL USA; died on 4 Apr 1923 in Hot Springs, Tulare, CA USA.



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