Showing posts with label Vader Wash.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vader Wash.. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Theodore H. Hoss


The final entry in the Reeves Family Album is the funeral card for Jennie's father-in-law.

Theodor Hubert Hoss, my great-great grandfather was born in Ahrweiler, Germany Sept. 22, 1824 (he and Jennie shared birthdays!). Catholic Church records indicate the Hoss family had lived in that town for several generations.

The story is passed down that Theodore was the son of a vineyard master and came to the area of Cassville, Wisconsin in 1854 to avoid the Prussian military conscription. However he was drafted into the Union Army during the Civil War, where he mostly served guard duty in the South. His only military exploit, we are told, was that shot a pig while on sentry duty.

After the War the family tried making a living in Northeast Nebraska but after locusts destroyed their crops, they headed to Washington Territory in the mid-1870s.

Theodore attempted to grow a vineyard in the area of present day Vader, Washington but the climate was not grape friendly. By the 1880s he joined his sons in the booming new town of Centralia, Washington, where he made a living in woodworking, mostly as a cooper.

Those who knew him told me he was gentle soul who maintained a thick German accent throughout his life. The only time anyone saw him get excited or angry was when he discussed politics with another German relative, August Amler. The two would shout and yell, but since the conversation was in German, no one knew exactly what the topic was about!

He died in Centralia Jan. 28, 1908 and is buried in the Pioneer Cemetery.


This concludes the album. To see the entire collection, simply use the Reeves Family Album tag.

Monday, May 27, 2013

Morty Comix # 2576





Morty Comix # 2576 was tucked into a picnic table at a park in Vader, Washington. Alert readers will note it was near this spot I left Morty Comix # 2430 last year.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Morty Comix # 2565






Morty Comix # 2565 took advantage of a flaw in an information kiosk on the Interstate 5 exit for Winlock, Washington. One of the metal display sheets had a "wow" in it, just inviting a Morty Comix to jump in there, where I suspect it will remain for years.

I imagine on a totally clear day, which we don't really have too many of here in Bezango, WA, this site offers a great vantage point for viewing what is left of Mt. St. Helens.

Hard to believe, but Winlock was actually a hotspot for Communist activity back in the 1920s-1930s.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Monday, September 3, 2012

Phone photo 1905

Cowlitz Landing

"At this place Hudson's Bay Company traders from Puget Sound loaded furs in canoes for transport to the Columbia River in the years 1836-1846. Then American settlers came up the river by bateau, barge and raft. A landing was built on the donation claim of F.A. Clarke and a hotel on the adjoining land of E.D. Warbuss. American settlers held a convention here in 1851 and petitioned for a new U.S. Territory north of the Columbia River. Steamboats came in 1858. They served the Cowlitz Valley until 1917."

"Erected by the Washington State Highway Commission."

My own ancestors may have landed here in the mid-1870s. This historic marker is within a stone's throw of the biggest "EAT" sign on Interstate 5 in Washington.



Friday, August 31, 2012

Morty Comix # 2430





Morty Comix # 2430 was left in the doorway of a historic city jail in a park in Vader, Washington.

It was near this spot one set of my great-great grandparents were the first in my family to arrive in Washington, in the mid 1870s.

While I was at this little park taking a break from driving I became acquainted with three repo men who said they were on the track of a guy in the area who was wanted by the FBI. They were Seattle guys out in the sticks who definitely were out of their comfort zone. It was actually pretty funny. Welcome to Bezango WA 985.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Phone photo 588


EAT
Vader, Washington

It was just a bit north over the county line in Lewis County not far from this ancient giant EAT sign (just as easily seen on Interstate 5 today as it was when it was displayed on the Oregon Trail during the time this little cafe served the pioneers), that my ancestors first settled in Washington Territory in the mid-1870s.