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1701
Poem written by David Wendel Zentmeyer
Poem written by David Wendel Zentmeyer
The poem indicates the location of Johannes Zentmeyer's cabin in Cave Spring, and 'Miami' refers to the Little Miami River in Warren County, Ohio where David settled near his uncle George Zentmyer.
 
1702
Portrait of Nona Zentmyer
Portrait of Nona Zentmyer
 
1703
Postcard from John Stewart Santmyer to his father John Barnett Santmyer
Postcard from John Stewart Santmyer to his father John Barnett Santmyer
Image courtesy Lisa Valentine
 
1704
Priscilla Zentmyer Kinch Obituary
Priscilla Zentmyer Kinch Obituary
 
1705
Probate filing for Elizabeth Picken Hobart
Probate filing for Elizabeth Picken Hobart
This document supports the fact that Stella and Dr. Edward Wood did not take custody of Frank and his sisters and move them to Sedalia, Missouri until after their mother's death in 1896.
 
1706
Probate Petition
Probate Petition
Robert died intestate, that is without leaving a will. In this petition, his son Harry Strahorn asks the court to allow him to administer the estate, estimated to be $120,000, or $3,000,000 in today's dollars.
 
1707
Proctor's Ledge, Salem Massachusetts
Proctor's Ledge, Salem Massachusetts
 
1708
Rachel Marlow Headstone
Rachel Marlow Headstone
 
1709
Rachel Marlow Obituary
Rachel Marlow Obituary
 
1710
Rachel Santmyers Marlow
Rachel Santmyers Marlow
 
1711
Rachel Santmyers Marlow family
Rachel Santmyers Marlow family
 
1712
Railroad Accident
Railroad Accident
 
1713
Ration Book
Ration Book
World War II Ration Book for Marian C. Zentmire
 
1714
Rebecca Jane is buried next to Thomas Foster Strahorn
Rebecca Jane is buried next to Thomas Foster Strahorn
 
1715
Rebecca Vaught Santmyers
Rebecca Vaught Santmyers
 
1716
Rebecca Vaught Santmyers Headstone
Rebecca Vaught Santmyers Headstone
 
1717
Reburial record for the Wallaces
Reburial record for the Wallaces
From Mt. Moriah Cemetery to West Laurel Hill Cemetery on 18 Apr 1908.
 
1718
Record of Civil War Service for Miles Zentmyer
Record of Civil War Service for Miles Zentmyer
 
1719
Record of George Zentmyer's employment prior to 1937
Record of George Zentmyer's employment prior to 1937
The Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 established pension payments for retired railroad employees. Benefits were calculated on total years of service, so employees were required to document railroad employment prior to 1937.

George was a Train Dispatcher in Las Vegas for the Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad, nicknamed the Salt Lake Route, for about two and one-half years. This line was 50% owned by the Union Pacific until April of 1921, when the UPRR acquired the remaining 50%.
Image courtesy Gary Zentmyer
 
1720
Record of J.D. Brutsche's Civil War service
Record of J.D. Brutsche's Civil War service
From the History of Camden County, Missouri, Part 1, Goodspeed Publishing Company 1889, p.331
 
1721
Record of Jakob Gochnauer living in Kohlhof, Neukirchen, Germany
Record of Jakob Gochnauer living in Kohlhof, Neukirchen, Germany
From Pages 19 and 28 of the Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe, beginning in 1685. Hans Gochnauer had died in 1717, and Jakob was supporting his mother in the years prior to Jakob's emigration in 1728.
 
1722
Record of land purchase by Abraham Lowman in Buffalo Township in 1818
Record of land purchase by Abraham Lowman in Buffalo Township in 1818
In the History of Armstrong County
 
1723
Reformed Cemetery, Aaronsburg
Reformed Cemetery, Aaronsburg
 
1724
Reigart Santmyers Obituary
Reigart Santmyers Obituary
 
1725
Replacement Headstone at Mudbrook Cemetery
Replacement Headstone at Mudbrook Cemetery
Photo courtesy Barbara Richardson Smith
 
1726
Retirement letter
Retirement letter
Congratulating Arthur on forty years of service to the USDA.
 
1727
Rev. Peter Hobart Memorial
Rev. Peter Hobart Memorial
Another view.
Photo by Gary Zentmyer
 
1728
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Bernhard
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Bernhard
These 3" x 5" cards were initially prepared to serve as an index to Samuel Penniman Bates' "History of Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-1865," (Harrisburg, 1869-1871). The Office of the Adjutant General later expanded the scope of the cards by transcribing onto them data found on the original Civil War Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1861-1866 {series #19.11}.
 
1729
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Jacob
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Jacob
These 3" x 5" cards were initially prepared to serve as an index to Samuel Penniman Bates' "History of Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-1865," (Harrisburg, 1869-1871). The Office of the Adjutant General later expanded the scope of the cards by transcribing onto them data found on the original Civil War Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1861-1866 {series #19.11}.
 
1730
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Jacob Santmyer
Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card for Jacob Santmyer
These 3" x 5" cards were initially prepared to serve as an index to Samuel Penniman Bates' "History of Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-1865," (Harrisburg, 1869-1871). The Office of the Adjutant General later expanded the scope of the cards by transcribing onto them data found on the original Civil War Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1861-1866 {series #19.11}.
 
1731
Richard Cruet in the 1810 US Census
Richard Cruet in the 1810 US Census
In Lower Paxton, Dauphin, Pennsylvania
Ages are correct for Richard Crewitt and Elizabeth Berryhill Crewitt
 
1732
Robert and Carrie Adell Green Strahorn
Robert and Carrie Adell Green Strahorn
 
1733
Robert and Mary Santmyers
Robert and Mary Santmyers
Image courtesy Ron Santmyers
 
1734
Robert Anderson Zentmyer
Robert Anderson Zentmyer
A young man, it is not clear what the significance of the uniform was.
 
1735
Robert Anderson Zentmyer
Robert Anderson Zentmyer
A more mature view.
 
1736
Robert Edmund Strahorn
Robert Edmund Strahorn
 
1737
Robert in the 1850 US Census
Robert in the 1850 US Census
Living in Marion, Decatur Co., Indiana with Robert Burton, Sarah Burton's uncle, and his wife Lucy
 
1738
Robert Randolph Santmyers
Robert Randolph Santmyers
Image courtesy Ron Santmyers
 
1739
Robert Robison, formerly Robertson
Robert Robison, formerly Robertson
 
1740
Robert Strahorn - The Sphinx
Robert Strahorn - The Sphinx
From the Zentmyer Collection. This cartoon depicts Robert as "The Sphinx," as he was known in the early 1900s. In his own hand, Robert (RES) describes, in the third person, how he got the moniker. The Harriman - Jim Hill fight refers to the struggle for control of the railroad business in the Pacific Northwest. $30mm in 1900 would be over $800mm today.
 
1741
Robert Strahorn and North Coast Railroad's McKeen Car
Robert Strahorn and North Coast Railroad's McKeen Car
From the Zentmyer Collection. This self-propelled McKeen car was one of two purchased by the North Coast Railroad in 1910. Robert is circled in yellow. McKeen cars had the distinctive "wind-splitter" pointed aerodynamic front end and rounded tail. The porthole windows were also a McKeen trademark. But the McKeen car had no reverse gear, so backing up required the operator to reconfigure the camshaft to a set of reverse cams, and then re-start the motor in the opposite direction.

And this, from author John W. Lundin: "Gary, when (Edward H.) Harriman toured France by automobile in 1903, he wondered why a version could not be adapted to run on rails as a commuter car on lines lacking enough business to warrant full train service. Harriman asked William R. McKeen Jr., UP's chief mechanical officer, to work on the project. McKeen came up with the idea of a self-propelled vehicle powered by a gasoline engine that could do forty to sixty miles an hour on sustained runs at a lower cost than steam or electric-powered vehicles. It was tested in March 1905, and evolved over the next year into a model twice as long with sealed porthole windows that kept weather out and allowed stronger body construction. It was called a "submarine on wheels" and UP put them into use on regular routes throughout its system. They were used for over a decade but fell into disuse after WW II. They left a legacy, however. The McKeen car was an inspiration for the streamliners that (son) Averell Harriman developed for UP during the 1930s."
 
1742
Robert Strahorn Obituary
Robert Strahorn Obituary
Published in the Chicago Daily Tribune, 27 May 1903
(See corrections in 'Notes' above)
 
1743
Robert Strahorn's Binoculars
Robert Strahorn's Binoculars
From the Zentmyer Collection. Personalized with the initials RES on the case. These were given to Gary Zentmyer in 1995 by Nellie Bryant, the widow of Thurlow Bryant, who according to Nellie was Robert's best friend at the time of his death, and who transported Robert's remains from San Francisco back to Spokane for burial.
 
1744
Robert Zentmeyer
Robert Zentmeyer
 
1745
Rosedale Cemetery on Washington Blvd., Los Angeles, was renamed Angeles Rosedale Cemetery in 1993.
Rosedale Cemetery on Washington Blvd., Los Angeles, was renamed Angeles Rosedale Cemetery in 1993.
Image courtesy Gary Zentmyer
 
1746
Ruby Shannon Garland Strahorn
Ruby Shannon Garland Strahorn
 
1747
Ruth Robertson in the 1850 US Census in Shores Reed, Stokes, North Carolina
Ruth Robertson in the 1850 US Census in Shores Reed, Stokes, North Carolina
Living with Elisha and Eliza Rierson and their family.
 
1748
Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church, Kissel Hill, Pennsylvania
Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church, Kissel Hill, Pennsylvania
Kissel Hill is an unincorporated community located in Warwick Township in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States. Kissel Hill is located just south of Lititz.
 
1749
Salome's Headstone, reverse side 'IST·ALT·WORDEN·61·JAHR,' Was 61 Years Old
Salome's Headstone, reverse side "IST·ALT·WORDEN·61·JAHR," Was 61 Years Old
Located in southwest corner of
Union (White Oak) Cemetery, Penryn, Pennsylvania
Photo by Gary Zentmyer
 
1750
Samuel Dale House
Samuel Dale House
Samuel Dale, (1741-1804) a prominent early politician in the area, lived on an estate about four miles from the Buffalo Presbyterian Church. His house is currently a museum operated by the Union County Historical Society. Dale was a Scots-Irish immigrant like Nathaniel, and also an Elder at the Buffalo Church, so the two were certainly acquaintances. The docents at the Dale house told me that the Presbyterians valued education very highly, and were thus not adverse to slave labor so as to afford time to read and study, as opposed to the Germans, who generally worked the land personally. And while Dale was indeed a slave owner, there is no evidence that any Strayhorns owned slaves in Union County or anywhere else. The docents claim that the Buffalo Church congregation were referred to as the "Silk Church People" by non-Presbyterians.
Photo courtesy Gary Zentmyer
 

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