Loading...
HomeMy Public PortalAboutShaw Family i aws brought tbrasher. by Maureen Kennedy Ruma Shaw was quite a woman. "She didn't need any male help, Lyle Shaw, her grandson, recalls. "She was independent." Most of what Shaw knows about Long Valley history he learned from his grandmother. Since his ,grandfather died when he was two months old, he relied on her reminiscences to put the pieces of the Shaw past together. The 10--Shaws listed-iii the telephone to voey. book are all descendants of two everyone else moved West," Lyle said. - brothers, Elmer and Clarence Shaw; w..z rain'e ... i �%V' who came from Illinois in the late portunity in the West, I guess. _1800s. Two years later Lyle's father, Art, Clarence was the first brother to get was born and the Shaws sold their Gold to Long Valley and he did it via an ox Fork land and bought a ranch on Paddy and a horse. By the time Elmer came, Flat Road. the railroad was in Boise. . I Ruma didn't let a son at the crawling Elmer and Ruma, who was from stage stop her from taking the team Missouri, homesteaded in the Gold and wagon for her -annual trek tc Fork area when they arrived in 18.90, Emmett for supplies. A four -day trip -Lyle said. one way, Ruma had to find a way to be "They came for the same reason sure Art, Shaw's. father, didn't crawl off into the bushes or get lost while she was unharnassing and tending the horses. "The way she apprehended him was to put a rope around his middle," Shaw said, explaining the rest of the rope was wrapped around a wagon spoke. "She was that way," Shaw said of her taking the trips without her husband. "She was independent... Grandma would rather do that then housework." The Indians used to migrate from the Snake River to somewhere at the South Fork of the Salmon for the summer to hunt and fish, Shaw said. Peaceful and wanting to trade for items such as vegetables, butter and milk, the In- dians would "come right in (the Shaw Elmer Shaw's thrashing outfit. The Shaws with their thrashink outfit. home). They didn't understand knoking or etiquette As they walked and looked around the house, he said, his - father; who `was just a' little guy in a cradle," - .would "bawl and bawl." "The squaws, they got a big kick out of that, Shaw ,was told. One night while the Shaws were living on what was to be Paddy F_ lat Road, Shaw's grandmother` woke up and proceeded to wake her husband because "she vowed the horses were fighting in the barn." Quite a ruckus apparently was taking place on Boulder ,Creek, stemming from a conflict between the cattlemen .and the local people, and three men shot all the cattle in a corral. Since the Shaws had to live off the land, they were always looking for something new, and most likely better. They knew the Roseberry to Warren mail carrier, Shaw said, and "he told them how much warmer it was on the foothills." So the Shaws sold the Paddy Flat land and homesteaded on Boulder Creek Road, southeast of McCall,. where the Shaw Ranch now is. They built a log home which later burned. They rebuilt, this time making •a frame home. Shaw and his wire l ots,N now Ave in part of the old ho whtc ur h' has }aeon nxodeimizei `a td'adde`z'' o His grandmother ha the s 'fit es' from New Meadows for tfie itarn of di,e second home. It was about f914 -and the � railroad only went as "far s as `New Meadows ; The.Ro land brothers b ebasrr► About10 years after = sbtrth; Elmer and Ruma liad`tw0 er sons.- Halley, who died when he was six or eight years old .moved " The 'Shaws also reared twq- foster children, Don and Frances Miller. In later years, Shaw said, his, grand- mother . would visit them and they would eome to visit - The ,T Shaws brought, J6 ;: fir t thrashing machine and steam engine. to 'Long Valley and transporting it must have been an experience. "Grandma 'spoke,bf the road being steep and narrow I and having to bring -that engine and separator up the Goose Creek grade," Shaw, said,, adding they, must have come troni Weiser. The machinery was big and wide, Shaw explained, and "it was quite a struggle with the curves and corners." "They had to really work to get it up here," Shaw said. "They had to use four head of horses -- that was a big outfit for that road." Art married Goldie Marie Sult, whose mother was Grace Hall, in 1919 and they had their first daughter, Arveretta, in 1921. A second daughter, Eva, was born in 1922 and Lyle, their only son, was born in 1924. His father was working for the forest service then and he was born in Mc- Call. "A midwife delivered me and a doctor was in the kitchen shining his shoes = that's what they tom me,-- Shaw said of his birth. Ruma and Shaw's uncle, nicknamed Chux, ran the ranch after his grand father died of a ruptured appendix, but in 1934 Art moved his family to the ranch "and they built them a home." Shaw went to the same two -room elementary schoolhouse his father did in the Elo district. When his father was in the school, he said, the boys all rhewt-.d tnharen- ... Shaws "They took knives, made holes in the floor and then would make a funnel out of a piece of paper," he said. "They disposed of the chewing tobacco by spitting through the funnel into the holes. That's what they told me. "The holes were there when I went to school." Getting to the school two miles away was via cross - country skis -- "we could cut across the fields" - or walking. Trips to town were also on skis or by horses and sleigh. As late as the 1950s, cars and pickups were left at the highway during the winter and skis or a sled would get them to and from the house. "The Elo district was our area and this is where we stayed," Shaw said of his youth. "We got to McCa!1 about twice a year." One incident that stands out in Shaw's mind involved a fishing jaunt with Bill Nelson and Ed and Bill Lockart when he was 15 years old. "Ed and I were two years younger," he said. "We were trying as hard as they but we were having no luck. They snagged a couple spawners. We proceeded to make a fire and cook them behind a spruce tree where no one would see us." Anyone catching fish then was prepared to cook them, he said, adding a second group of boys who joined then had a skillet. "Lo and behold, out from behind that Charlie and Laurence Sult haul logs on old cart to family mill. big spruce tree came the game war- den," he said. "Of course, I was in- nocent. "After passing the time of day, the game warden wanted to know who caught the fish. Bill Lockart admitted to catching two. That left two that weren't claimed." His cousin told them the law would go rougher on Nelson, who caught the remaining fish, since he lived out of state. He told the two younger boys "we ought to take the blame for those two fish who hadn't been claimed." z "I stepped forward and claimed the larger and Ed stepped forward and claimed the other," Shaw said. L The next day they were before the judge in Cascade and fined $9. The judge tried to auction their fishing poles back to them and eventually gave them to them, but kept their fishing hooks. I "When the boys got into the cour- , thouse, the judge sat and read," Lois 'said. "He made them_ wait and wait while he read. "I thought we--w' ere going to San Quentin," Shaw said. Shaw's father; -who also logged and tha _ fnr�St service, operated the ranch until 1942 ` when he. went to the shipyards in Portland. "I stayed, went to school and took care of the ranch, he said. "In 1943 I got my greetings from Uncle Sam._ I was a senior in high school. "They drafted two other fellows and myself out of the senior class in Don - nelly and we went to World War II." The Shaws had a little cabin in Donnelly and that is where he and his sister, Eva, stayed during the week. The went home for the weekends. e Since Elo was a neutral school district, Shaw explained, they had a choice of which high school to go to. "The school district paid our tuition to any high school district in the state," he said. Vegetables on aisptay in real estuae office window were grown on Clarence Shaw ranch. His parents never returned to Long Valley permanently after the war, Shaw said. After going to three places on the west coast during the war, they went to Mountain Home when it ended. His mother died in 1953 and a few years later his father retired. . After serving for two years in the Navy, Shaw got his discharge in 1945 and returned to McCall. "They warned me of readjustment," '-he said, adding he thoughi he would have no problem. "It was a bigger job than I ever anticipated." �: -.: :.. ,w. ,,.: Alter ail U C AZ-W tJ ng ! h ` � •r,w he explained, McCall seemed "kind of slow.";; . Shaw continued to take care of the ranch and in 1948 he married Lois Jean Shepherd from Willard, Ohio. They had four children -- Sharon Kay Hanshew, Kenneth Lyle Shaw, Benita Elaine Giltzow and Pat Shaw - and currently have four grandsons and three grand- daughters. Since his marriage, Shaw has built onto his grandmother's home, run the ranch and cut logs. "Ranching and logging -- that's been my - life," he said. .. r. Shaw family I � 4 l RELEASE OF TAPES TO IDAHO BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION'S ORAL HISTCRY PROJE ^T !C,- ,C�c%` on this dig, hereby give and grant to the Idaho State Historical Society and the Idaho Bicentennial Commission as a donation for such scholarly and educational parpcses as the Idaho Historical Society and the Idaho Bicentennial Commission shall determine, the tape recordings made today, and all literary rights therein. 0 1 J,�Z C,t]' —(signed' (witness) Leo `and Bertha Shaw with Joe Bennett and Doug Jones March 2, 1976 Page 1 JOE "This is an interview between Joe Bennett and Leo Shaw. This is March 2, 1976. I'm gonna ask you about family. Where your family come from Leo. First, when - -" LEO "Well, they came from Smithfield, Missouri, and in 1889. And uh - -" JOE 19mY? to LEO "Well, because this old man Roseberry had been out here, I don't know how old he was but anyway he'd been out here ya know, and he told them about what a nice valley it was. So they packed up and drove a mule team out. It took them about all summer to drive out here. In '30 I took them back, ya know, drove them back. The road was graveled, ya know, and we couldn't drive too fast, but we'd make in an hour just what they'd made in a day." JOE "You would? Well, that's the reason they came. Were they farmers there in Smithfield? What did your folks do, or were they just married, or what ?" 'LEO "Well, they lived there, I mean, well Irl, my oldest brother was two years old." JOE "Oh, he was born there." LEO "And Iva, I think she was a baby when they come." BERTHA "I thought she was born just after they got here." LEO "Well, maybe, I just don't know that." JOE "Ya don't know for sure whether she was or not."Well, how old is she Leo? Is she the same age as Nellie ?" LEO "I don't know, I just don't know, Joe. I should know how old she is, ya know. She's eighty - -" page 2 it JOE She's around ninety, isn't she ?" LEO "Well, getting up purty well. See, Roy is eighty -two I think or eighty - three. She's born between Rnoules and Irl. So she is getting toward ninety." JOE "And the reasons they came was just because they wanted to get out and settle in the west. And can you give me the names of some of your family and ages ?" LEO "You mean of the kids ?" JOE "Yeah" LEO "Well, there was nine of us, all total, and we was just about, average of two years apart. Or some of them was three. And it was quite remarkable, ya know, the first one that died was fifty years old." JOE "So they lived quite awhile. Yeah, I can remember when Roy come by over there one time, and I was picking peas and I said, 'Are you tired ?' He's got out there and to help and he acted like he was tired. And he said, 'Joe, we've had twenty- five set down at the table every meal all summer.' and he said they help so he can go fishing, but he said it makes it hard to. It was the only time I ever heard him complain." LEO "He never missed a fishing trip." JOE "Your own family, you have two boys, how old are they ?" LEO "Bob is thirty -six and Dave is going to be thirty -five the next birthday. They were born eighteen months apart and they're just in the three years." BERTHA "Then Barbara will be, well she was thirty - three. Is that right ?" LEO "About that" Page 3 JOE "Nell, Bertha, when did you come to this country ?" BERTHA "I was gonna look that up 'cause some one asked me the other day, and I can't remember. But it was around '35 or '36 I imagine." JOE "And you come up here to teach school? Where did you come from ?" BERTHA "Well, we'd been in Boise and, well originally, no I can't say that either. I was born in eastern Idaho, and then we dame down around Burley and Rupert and that country while I was little. Then I went to grade school in Boise and high school in Rupert." JOE "And where did you get your teachers degree ?" "FRTHA "fit Albion." "At Albion. Same as Ingrid." (Koski) i,ERTdA "Right." JOE "And you went to school, where ?" LEO "I went to high school over here except my senior year. I went to Emmett three different years." JOE "The high school." LEO "Well no, one year in high school. I graduated down there " cause I thought I might go to college. This wasn't accredited." JOE "And where did you go to grade school, where did you start ?" LEO "Here at Elo." JOE "At Elo, that's the first school you wont to." BERTHA "Didn't you any you went to Roseberry and walked home ?" LEO JOE LEO JOE LEO JOE I,to JOE LEO JOE LEO JOE LEO JOE LEO Page 4 "Well, that was in the fourth grade. The girls was down there going to high school. They took me down there and Rita and I run off and come home." "You weren't old enough to go to school when they had school over there in your homes." "Flo, that was here. In this house." "Oh, it was in this house instead of out there." "I think that was before old John S. Mackay had started living here. It might have belonged to him then but I know dad, he helped build this. He tongue and grooved the ceiling boards, ya know." 'bh, your dad did." "Yeah, so I don't know for sure whether - -" "That was John Suura Mackay. And he had a step -son Arvy." "Oh yeah, and Elmer and Wayne. Then he had them two kids John and Jenny." "And this is where they had the school before they lived here, or after." "Yeah, after they moved it off the ridge, they come down here until they got Elo built, Ithink." "Do you know how many years they had the school here ?" "I don't" 'Flag it one or two ?" "I don't know." "And your brothers and sisters, of course went here. Went to school here." "Yeah, this is where Roy quit school, ya know, he and old Jim Darkwood, the teacher, had a row. Roy quit school." Page S JOE "You say you went to Roseberry when you was in the fourth grade. ?" LEO "Yeah" JOE "That's the time you run off and got home. And the -1irls were going down there. Was there any school here ?" LEO "Yes, there was school here." JOE "But they were goin� to high school." LEO "Yeah, that's the reason they had me down there." BERTHA "Did you go back ?" LEO to I: -think so. When I run off in the seventh grade from Emmett they didn't send me back!" ?OE "You was the youngest one in the family, wasn't ya ?" LLO "No, my sister, Rita." JOE 'bh, Rita was the youngest. That's right, she was number nine." LEO "That's the reason we run off from Roseberry. She had trouble with her teacher, ya know, and was feeling down hearted so I brought her home." JOE "Well, it's only about twelve miles." LEO "It's about ten I thins." JOE "Well, what did your folks find when they came here and where did they homestead first, Leo ?" LEO "Well, this is the first homestead they took. It was kind of a deal down there. It wasn't a homestead." JOE "Oh, that was squatter's rights." Page 6 LEO "It was something they had before." JOE "I believe your dad told me one time they had a squatter's right." LEO "Irl, he knew what it was. I've heard him tell about it." JOE "Itzhink your dad told me. He said they didn't use their homestead right. Was they original homesteaders up here or did they get a relinquishment? Do you know? Did anybody file on that place before they did ?" LEO 'bh no" JOE "And they filed on that in '89 ya say ?" LEO "No, it was six years after. They lived down there six years, and it was so darned frosty they couldn't even grow a garden." JOE "That down there between Moulder and Willow Creek. Down there south of Donnelly. I wonder if there was quite a bit of timber there at that time. The Jack Pines and stuff." LEO "Well, I imagine." BERTHA "Did Irl say there waa{t too much? There was some big trees." LEO "A few big ones, just about like it is now." JOE "I worked down there for Steven Dowl and ball and there was lots of young trees. Once in a while a big one, so I suppose it spread." LEO "No, that's the reason I put that road in my notes there. Ya know when the folks moved up here, the main valley road come right between the barn and the house. Come up between Boulder Creek because of the mines up there, ya see. And it forks right there, and went to the mine,* or to the lake, see. And it come down and right down through grandma's place and come down and forded the Page 7 LEO creek right down here just below my fence. And then went over and wound over the ridge and then headed into the lake. And so when they fenced that off, when they moved in there, then they had to move the road. Anyway, it come about the same and they put a bridge in, right out here just above my barn, And I can still show where there were logs at the other end it was sitting on. And then went across up here through ?cokes'. Nobody had that, see. And then they never supposed anybody would claim that stuff. Of course when the Finns come in they blocked that off and first thing ya know they had to start following the county lines!" JOE "Well, this down here where you lived between Willow Creek that wasn't far from Gold Fork, either. And the Blankenships and those people were in there, too ?" LEO "The Blankenships were over more towards Roseberry." JOE "Where Davis and Coles and them were." LEO "But the Boydstuns were down there with the folks." JOE "Well, this minister, this Roseberry he's the one that homestead Roseberry townsite. Did he sell that old man Boydstun or did the old man Boydstun. Do you know? Anyhow, I know they alway$ig say the reason he didn't have a saloon there was because he had it in the deeds that they couldn't sell liquor on and of the property." LEO "I didn't ever hear of him ever coming back out here, After the folks seen him back there at Smithfield, I con't remember him ever being back out." Page 8 JOE "They got out here before the hard winter then." LEO "Yeah, it was an easy winter that first one. And then the next winter I think was the bad one." JOE "In '88 and '89 was when it was so tough." LEO "Did you see that piece about starving out in Long Valley? It was one of the Blankenship, Mrs. Henry Moores' sister wrote it, and that told about that time. And boy, they got hungry;" JOE "Ed Cole told me that his dad sent him and one of the Blankenslip's to Council after food, and each brought back a sack of flour and some other things. He said they had about eight pound packs. He was eighteen years old and they skied over the mountain, over the old Council road." LEO "She told about that I'm sure. See she was a Blankenship." JOE "He said his dad dished out the flour with a tin cup to the neighbors. They come out, their mother fed them and they come out and he said, 'You boys go in and get some sleep,' he said, 'You got to go back in the morning.' He said he pret'near cried." LEO "Viola Blankenship, that's Ira's daughter, I know her. She's one of my classmated down at Emmett, ya know. I told her, I said, 'My family's just a little better stuff than yours.' They didn't start laughing!" JOE "Well, they was mining quite a bit up there when your dad homesteaded." LEO "Yeah, there was quite a bunch of them up in there, ya know." JOE "Was there Chinamcn, or were they all white people ?" page 9 LEO "I don't believe the Chinamen were there." JOE "Were they over there earlier ?" LEO "Yeah, the old China cabin's right over there, ya know. Ya know where that was." JOE "Yeah, then your grandmother homesteaded here ?" LEO "Yeah, they came. We have a letter dad wrote back to Elmer." JOE "So Elmer come back afterwards." LEO "Oh yeah, dad he was the pioneer. Then they come, grandma and aunt Haddie. But they got four homesteads, and eventually, why, Elmer got Haddies' and dad got grandma's." r.TITA "I wrote this down, when we were visiting Roy. It said that Harriet, that's grandmother, came out about 1900. So that's several years afterwards." LEO "Dad was pretty well established." JOE "Well, did he mine any ?" LEO "No." 'JOE "Then he just farmed." ILEO "flay panned a few colors, ya know. I've watched gold rush after gold rush and I never staked a claim. I don't know, we just never was miners." BERTHA "It didn't get in the blood, I guess'." JOE "Well;1.what kind of a house did you build there first ?" LEO "Dad moved the logs from down there. It wasn't his. It was the one that someone had left, the logs, there see. lie moved them up here and that's still the old house." Page 10 JOE LEO JOE LEO ETi0 I LEO "I know you didn't used to have a well there. You drank the warm springs water." "Well, we did have a we. Dug a well, ya know, and lined it with rock. But eventually we got a ram and put it into that spring, and it still runs. But that old well, we used that when I was a kid, ]lather than pack water from the spring. It's quite a haul up that hill." "I know you used to have a chicken house down there you ran water through. Your folks used to raise lots of vegatables to sell at McCall." "Mom was a gardener, well, they both were, but she was expecially. She used to take a team, and me to hold the horses and we'd go over there and peddle vegatables over at town." "What kind of vegatables did you raise ?" "Just most all the root vegatables. Cabbage and cauliflower, turnips and carrots. Then for a long time after that the whole bunch of us furnished McCall. We'd bunch vegatables every morning, or every other morning. And delivered them over there. Then we got a job raising cauliflower for the Boise produce market. And back when money was money they'd give us ten cents a pound for what we could pur on board the train." "And you watered that with what, water from the spring. When did you build the dam up at Twin Lakes and bring the water down from there? Did you do that when you were gardening ?" "We gardened clear up to-- shoot, I don't remember. I was grown. We used to pica cabbage, winter cabbage. We'd just turn them upside down and plow two furrows around and one up on them and then shovel the second one on top. They just go ahead ripen in there and we'd go down there in the winter time and shovel the Page 11 LEO "narrow track and reach in under there and pull out them nice cabbages, and trim them out. Yeah, we'd sell them" JOE 'Vas there quite a bit of game here when your folks came ?" LEO 11110" JOE "There was lots of fish though, wasn't there ?" LEO "Yeah, my dad never fished and he never hunted. He killed a goose or two," BERTHA "Ye was a dreamer wasn't he? Wasn't he always wanting to go on west ?" LEO "Oh well, yes, South America, or Alaska or something, ya know. He was always thinking more migration. He was quite a dreamer!" JOE Nb ere are some of your brothers and sisters? Did they all leave the valley? Have they all left the valley except you ?" LEO "Two or three of them went to Oregon, but they didn't go very far. Oregon and down around the Caldwell country." JOE "How many of the nine children are left ?" LEO "There's five of us. Two boys and three girls." JOE "Who was some of your school teachers that you had here at Elo ?" LEO "I don't remember who was the first one but there was Ellie Scott. She'd the one that whelloped us. That was back in the one room days, ya know, They didn't have one room for very long. They had the entry at the north end, I remember. Then they built the other room. Ann Gardener and Kate McGinley,do you remember them? Mrs. McGinley is still over here at McCall." Page 12 JOE "I went to school with her. In Boise valley, Garfield school and her sister Peg." I LEO "She come up here, too." i JOE "The first teacher up on the ridge was Lizzy Coonrod wasn't it ?" LEO "I don't know whether she was the first one." I JOE "Someone else I was talking to said she was their first teacher." LEO "She was Lizzy Conaton after she got married." JOE "That's right, you raised some livestock I suppose. Cattle or something." LEO "Oh, -yeah, you bet. Horses, hogs of course, we cured about five hogs a year. There was hams and bacon. Another thing dad was know as'Potatoe Shaw' for a while. He raised a whole gob of spuds. No water or a thing, ya know, and they got long enough and big enough that they could rick them on their arm like stove wood. I remember the old pits, he pitted them. I can remember them and then next spring all they could do is feed them to the livestock. But they really raised spuds." JOE "I know the first summer we come up here my dad planted spuds over there on the George Scott place. He had water from the Clara Foltz mining ditch. Dad was was out there irrigating and your dad come over and said, 'I don't like to tell you this Mr. Bennett but you shoulda come over and put your spuds on my place cause they won't make anything out here.' Well they didn't freeze they made real good cause he watered them. I think you were one of the first ones to raise certified seed. What year was that you had your certified seed ?" LEO Now in the world did you know that? It was in 1927. That's the year I graduated from high school." ,r "Where did you raise those spuds ?" Page 13 LEO "I raised them up here. An acre." JOE "That's when Bennett was inspector." LEO "Yeah, I raised them as a school project." JOE 'Your folks came out here with a horse and wagon." LEO "Mules" JOE "One pair of mules." LEO "The old bones of old Molly are still over there. I think I could still find them." BERTHA "He had one here when his sister came a few years ago. She said, 'Can I take that home ?" "She took that home. She took that old bone home. She is still down around Bandon." BERTHA "So it got clear to the ocean." JOE "I thick they were dead when we got here. You dinally built onto that house though, didn't you? Because I know you built a long kitchen." LEO "They built that and the wood shed on the north end and then they built the bedroom and bathroom on the side of it." JOE "I remember that kitchen having a long table in there because there was so many that always stayed there with the Shaw's. I remember even Roy saying, 'You make your headquarters out at out place if you're coming to McCall.' and they did. Slept in the barn and everywhere. And there wasn't much game here but you used to do a lot of hunting and fishing, didn't you ?" Page 14 LEO "I did, but I was grown before I ever tilled a deer in this country. If they wanted to go hunting for deer in the fall they'd pack up and go to Buckhorn. Finally they got to hanging in up here around the mines and in on the side of that mountain. I went up there and killed my first deer. From then on they just kept getting thicker. Finally the elk started moving in just like the deer did. I don't know what happened, I don't know why there wasn't more deer. There just wasn't," JOE "I come over that Buckhorn trail when you had to go up over Cougar Creels and then come into South Buckhorn. I think it's South Buckhorn there was a cabin. They'd cut down a big pine tree and trimmed off the limbs for wood, and some- body had covered that pine tree with deer horns. Austin Goodman was talking about it and Bud Davis. I asked how all -those deer horsee got there. They said there was some men in there and they had forty head of pack horses and the big snow coming those deer drifted down in there and they killed them all and they packed out their hind quarters and their hams. Austin told me those two fellows took a six horse load of deer hides to Boise. So they were killing those deer and taking the meat to the miners in the Seven Devils at the time." LEO "Those horns was on Little Buckhorn right where that trail cut over. That's where we used to camp when we'd go in there. The cabin was over the hill on the main Buckhorn, that trapper's cabin. Right over the trail, that the only cabin I remember. I skied in there one winter with the Francis' boy and layed out in that cabin. They had a trap line. Christmas vacation, I was going to high school." Page 15 JOE "Well, did any of your family trap ?" LEO "Well no, not to speak of. I trapped probably as much as any of the." JOE "When you came in here did they have any kind of a church meetings at that time ?" LEO "I don't remember too much about it. I know when we was down at Emmett we'd always go to church down there." JOE "I remember when we first come in here they was holding Sunday school and they had a preacher at that church." END OF SIDE I«vm'O BERTHA "Camped right up under some trees." LEO "Yeah, right up under those trees up there by Mat Hills'. That's where they camped when they come. There's a spring up there, and they camped there. Roy remember that, that's what I say, if it was Roy that's telling it." DOUG "Do you know what year that was when the first Finns came ?" LEO "Oh, I thine; about 1900." JOE "It was a little before. John said he was five years old. Let's see he'd been dead how long? Fie was eighty some when he died." BERTHA "I have 1900 but they were just surmising." LEO "He was just about Roy's age. But Roy, he remember their camp." IJOE "But that is according to his obituary, around eighty when he died. He said he was five years old because -" Page 16 LEO "He and Roy were about the same age," JOE "And Roy's, you say he's eighty - two ?" LEO "Eighty-two or three." BERTHA "I couldn't find our family history. You know when you were asking about the family, here I was trying to find it." JOE "Well, Myrtle Davis, she said she was born when, '89?" MUG " *9, I think." JOE "So she would be eighty - seven." LEO "Roy is thirteen years older than I am." TOE My brother Ray Mould be, if he was alive, he would be eighty -eight this year. He's ten years older than I am." "You're nine years older than I am." JOE "Am I? I remember that big old gobbler your folks taxed to have. They had him for Thanksgiving, and they invited us over there for Thanksgiving. Must have been about the second or third year we were here, cause your mother cooked a, had a big old pumpkin. She had dressing from that turkey. I remember there was a whole got of us there for Thanksgiving. Then the girls put one of those drumsticks on the Christmas tree for me over there at the Star school. And had more fun about that, Mary and I forgot who all. dial it..." EO "Leola and Etta" _)E "When I opened that I couldn't believe it. Here was that big, old tu&ey leg." ?0 "That old turkey. I was just a little shaver. Page 17 JOLT LEO JOE LID JOE I LEO JOE "And he bit you." "No, I was the only one wasn't scared of it. Everytime he'd get after some of them girls, they'd holler for me. I wasn't a bit scared of that turkey. I didn't remember, but they told me. I wasn't scared of him, that the reason." "I remember Irl telling aboutr -well, w4here did they live when those people killed all those cattle down there in that corral there by Charlie.." "Uncle Elmer's were up at Maloney's and they said they could hear the reports and see the flashes of the guns, down there at Charlie Barker's place." "Charlie told me him and Bill, Bill had just got married in Payette, and left his wife there. They come up there at Charlie's that night and when they heard the shooting they run to the door, got out of bed and run to the door. Some guy was out there sitting on a horse watching the door. He pulled out a pistol and shot in the side of the door and said, 'You boys better go back to bed.' lie said it scared him to death he didn't think he was ever going to see his bride again! lie said, Charlie said, 'We went back to bed!' And the next morning there was fifty-six or fifty -eight head of big steer been shot. And Irl told about, he must of gone to the Bell school or something, he told about them eating their lunch, they'd dare each other to eat the lunch on one of those dead steers." "The first school I remember of him talking about going to was that one down in Sorenson Flat, right south of the gravel pit, Lake Fork gravel pit. Right down on the lower end of that flat." "Oh there was a school in there ?" Page 18 LEO "Yeah, that's where the kids first went." JOE "Down there where the Wilsons used to live." LEO "I don't know who lived down there." JOE "Ya know Johnny McMurren married the Wilson girl, Her folks had a homestead right down in there. South side of that Lake Fork road there the gravel pit''. The county gravel pit you mean," LEO "Yeah, it's right on down in the lower ind of that flat." JOE "They used to have a house down there." LEO "I,neve.r was doum in there. That's where Roy went to school before he was old enough," JOE "What was that school called? I got to tell Mary Thurston." LEO "I don't know, They called it the Sorencon Flat, ya know. I remember that's what they called that flat, and that where they went to school. Roy he was looking at a book, a school book, and there was a picture of a chicken and he raid, 'H -E -N, chicken;' That was quite a joke;" JOE "Patterson and I went over to here awhile back to help Mrs. Thurston. She wanted to know where all the schools was and put them on a map. And we got ready to go and he happened to think,rabout the one his mother taught just east of Cascade across the river. There was a log schoolhouse, and he said, 'Oh, I forgot the one. I think it was the first school in the valley, my mother taught in. She either dome out here in 1990 or '91. She taught either two or three Page 19 JBE "terms of it before she got married. The Scott kids from Scott Valley rode their horses to school. "' LEO "The school down there, they just had it in the summertime. So I suppose how this one was out here. Mom, the historian is out. She's always trying to correct them!" BERTHA "You see how far I got. I have three or four pages. I've got piles of stuff that I've sorted out. This is about his folks." JOE "Oh, Ivy she lives in Bandon does she ?" LEO "Yeah" JOE 'Mien my mother went back east, she must have went back in 1911 and 1912. Because dad said, 'Now if you kids want to learn to dance you'll have to do it while your mother is gone' because she didn't believe in dancing. His family danced. So Ivy and Didel Himmel, she was the oldest girl, they taught me how to dance." BERTHA "Gladys, I believe, told me that Iva helped her make her wedding dress ?" JOE "I think so." LEO "Mom, get those pictures. I got some pictures from Ettas' girl, they had beets Ettas' and they're quite the pictures. I don't':know whether you ever met Cecil Dugger, he come up here visiting the boys." JOE "I haven't heard that name in a while. Was he a relative of yours ?" LEO "No, the boys met him when they were down there. We just ran into these the other day and I'k like to have this one renewed. I think a person can, can't they ?" Page 20 JOE "Probably" LEO "That's Rita and I at the Fourth of July celebration." JOE "This is over there at the old race track." LEO "I'll tell you where that was. They had a picnic down there west of the Lake Fork saw mill, over there, what was those peoples names? They lived right over there just as you go up out of that creek bottom. What was their names? You knew the old lady down at Boise." BERTHA "Kimball" LEO "Yeah, Kimball. Had a picnic down there and that's where that was taken was down there, sure. That's Roy and Cecil Dugger." ";7)E "Roy and Cecil Dugger and the girls is, this is uh..." UO "Nellie Drigg and Mary." JOE "And Mary." LEO "Now that's an old timer!" JOE "That's his brother and this is his sister, Nary. And this is Nellie Harp. Nellie Driggs was her --her brother and her dad got poisoned someway, they thought." LEO "Yeah, food poisoning up at the mines." JOE "Her mother married Joe burst and as you go up- -have you been up Boulder ?" DOUG "Yeah" ,93E "Ya know where you pass Shaws up here and go around a bunch of Quaken Asps.." LEO "Up where that orchard is, that was the old Hurst orchard." DOUG "Oh yezh" } Ptge 21 " JOE "That was the old Hurst place, and he married Nellies' mother." BERTHA "Here's Boydstuns' store." `JOE "Here's historical Lardo.'W'ho's on the porch? Boydstun and who else? This is Boydstun here. he wore a mustache, I don't know who that other guy is. Hard telling. See Boydstun, his wife was a Cole. Cole's and the Davis' and the Blankenship's all homesteaded down, up toward Gold Fork. Over east there, in there. They're buried in that Holm cemetery, a lot of them. Ed told me the way they saved their cattle. Their dad would get them up at 2 :00 when the snow froze and they'd take them out and stick them under a pine tree here and another under a pine tree there. There's been good grass the year before, and they pastured them all over that hillside. Up there in them yellow Dines. Miss Slayer, she taught over there." 'LEO "Who ?" JJE "Suzie Slayer. It says; Interior of W. Boydstun store Lardo, Idaho, Payette Lakes. People like to see. People in store left to right: Sam Shay:, and Miss Slayer, that's the school teacher. She taught the summer we come up here and Iva Shaw, that's your older sister. And Lena Wilson and Myrtle Shaw, that was Sams' wife. Lena Wilson married Johnny McMurren. They had the first W.M. land. He had a homestead over there by us, right across the corner from the house. Built a log house there where Dory and Ivy owned it. You know he got put in the pen for something. He learned to be a watch maker. He sold that place to Collins when he come in here." END OF SIDE THREE AND INTERVIEW t (. Fannie Isabel Coonrod, Whc, Pass- ed hwar at her home in Lang Valley, scar McCall, May 23, war horn in - .Cherokee County, Kansas, wt Decerr:- btr S►, I&6. She was 73 yeart, of age. (OW March 7, 1886, at the age A A. she was married to Clarence Shaw, Arid three year, later, in 1W), they came west to settle in Long Valley. They had with them on this trip, which was trade by mule teats, their j little boy, III, then a little over a year old, During the course of this journ- ey which took three momba, Ur. 1 Shaw became sick with mountain t ilever, and his wife drove the team.; Tliry first settled in the vicirtiiy o 3' what is now Donnelly, i,ut three ' or 1 four years later movers to their pres- ent location. At the time they cable to Long Valley, there was no one lining tit what is now McCall, an.t l only a few- families ill Long Valley. s The native grasses and trees were unobstructed b>- fences or roads. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw raised a fam ily of nine children, al; of whom are still living and settled witli tarsi :.i :)f their own. It was a h -ime r pioneer :,ensc of thrift anti u...:.... h tract, ristic western hospitaht , at-. -vith iii sincere reliious interest. 4ir. ,:)1 w ...ts raised in the Christian Cl,.:cil and later becarue deeply in rest .i in Christian Science. The tamily irequently gathered around the ,-LNa,i piano to sing hymns to- geth, Conditions of life in a front- ier h, nit are .lever easy, espcciaft fui` t;te -,lit and rrvther, But Mrs Sh„iar srceesaiully raised all of her hors a, d girls, biinging them to m•.n hood acid nvomanitood. In this far there is a tribute t, her life aro. ctalu nt than any which might bt i made with words. it was a joy to er. during the last days of her il! ties;, to have all her sons and daugh- ter., as well as a number of her grandchildren with her- . During the 51 years that Mr. and Mrs. Shaw hate lived in Long Valley, thev have seen it develop i. om virtuaily untamed wilderne-s to a valley of farm, and thriving towms. By their steriing qualities anti their friendiines,, they have won a host of friends from among the people who 1 have come it populate the valley, Cmretaee Shaw, a Long Valley •'.'.:,RK,,' : ;.,war -� pioneer, died at hid home near Mc- Cali, November e, He waq born h ,= Indiana on Decewbe-r 6 and lackec just a. month of bcin3 84 years of age As a boy, Mr. Shaw lived in Min a- I ttf WIN CYn March 7. when he was 28, he married FAnn1e Isabel Coon- 28, l nnie rod, and for 54 years, or until ht-r death in 1940. the two lived happily I CC�C tngethe The oldest eon. Clarence Irl R11a1 o was born on C)otober 7. 1887, while Mr and Mrs. Shaw were still in , 4 n •Uj fl W 1` Missouri, In 1889. before the boy was i two yaws old; the Sbaw8 set out ! • y t LN from Joplin, Missouri, in a __.�_. covered wagon polled by a mule tram. arriving in Long Valley in July, j 18W On the way out, Mr. Shaw had mountain fever, but his wife carried on durinir his illness, and they ar rived safely and in good health. j The family first stopped at Rose-, herry, where they lived for a number of years Nubile there, _Mr. Shaw was i wiperintendent of a Sunday School, which used to nieet around at the different homes in the community. Homasbetader Mrs, Shaw was taken with an at- tack of heart trouble early in the spring, which has pro%en increasingiv serious. She i:: s•irvived b a brother, Thomas J. Coonrod, of Emmett, by four sons, five daughters, 34 grand• children and ?(' great grandch�i•lren Her son., and daughters, in the order 1 of their age, are: III Shaw, of McCall; Iva Long, of t Bandon, Oregon: Knowles Shaw, of Shelley Idaho; RON, Shaw, of McCall; Mary Nelson, of Homedale, Idaho; Leola Loc:kart, of McCall: Etta Nye, of Portland, Oregon; Leo Shaw, of t McCall, and Nita Dotson of Caldwell. Services for Mrs. Shaw were '.,eld on Sunday, May 26, at the Community Church, with Reverend A. 1). Weage in charge, and with Rev. A. M.uhonen c assisting with a service in Finnish. After sevoral years at RoA.- .berry, Mr. Shaw homesteaded at tine plact- where his homy is now located. fl,, and Mr. putala, who nssistcd hi-n. rleared the place of aspen tree, grabbed there out by hand. Tc, so- rure money to purchase land ani: �,quipment. he freighted goods by mule team from Boise and 00.1wP11 to Warren. In the early dava on the anch he was famous for the pota`- nPS that he raised, eveft rr- rROt.ing the L )rig Valley product around C'aM well, to the men who were engaged in putting in Irrigation ditrhes. This wsa a time of hanrN- and joy 0118 activity for the growing family Mr and Mrs. Shaw were h'+th sin- . rerety religious people. Mr Shaw always sppreciated good alneina. end at this time, when Jame? Dalkwoai was the teacher of the Eilo school,' the plIvils came uo to the Shs ;w home to "eirWing school.' T_:ickin7 a musi- epl Instt•rtment, Mr. Shaw - o "'•ti :,.me- thp -leas instruct them fiy note. Mr• and Mrs. Shah lived to see all of their nine chili ­r haPff" reed. Wltrn his hr•toved comna.ni •i tf rrnre then f'fty years passrd on. he endured the loss quietly. His ill- ness IPft him weaker. bl,: he elways WPIcOr.,C visit" "; :,nd d1q- cussed ertrrent events with interest and Intelligence. Yer was n. man of deep religious faith and serSouanras. He na+ :eft to ,ws immndlate family and to tube ^Ont- n1unity, the ieRacy of a worthy e�r amrlc He sowed weds of sobierty i and industry, yet on tine Shaw hone stead there waa always a place and a ready welcome for the stranger u-ho might be stranded or in need of Help. As in the case of Mrw. Shnw, f ilia were. ter •.irtnes of the nioneer: , lnte-grity. hospitality, a sincere re- linus faith. Are we, in this age of Vi-eater case and more speed, forgai ing these basic virtres of our demo- j craw? If so, tine memory of his life !, and that of others who have had n part in building this (ountry. abould ,nil us to a renewed loyalty to out 5m Held rlaence Shaw! Vallev Pioneer Nine Children $ur'vf1e JIr. Shaw• is survi%ed by his nine children, as follows; Clarence Irl Shaw, of MCCa.I: Iva Maude Long, of Bullards. Oregon; Wrioweles Dan-1 ier Ahaw, of Blackfoot; Roy Samuei Shaw, • _)f MI�C$01: Mary Pf,aa Nolaon, of ITomodale; I.eola Juanita Lock - Bart. of McCall: Anna Etta Nye, of Portland, Gregor.; T-,eo Squire Shaw, of McC albs and Nina. Mar harita. Dotson, of Caldwell. He also has X, grand children and Y8 great grand- i children. Ail of the children were I present at, tire. funerni services which I were cond,,eted by Rev. A. D. Weage, under the direction of tile Robb Mortuary. On F", Vin.,,, Yu y 28, Roy Show and Ild Sf aw and Ae.iA m;ivea, S' and Yvonne, had an ia.&Aview wt,.& Settrf fla/uaood and M2,, %huWjon. %heee a/ce /random lactA Aha,4 came out: /Aen lip .Shwv =4 9 mo" o. d Ai4 %t4en;64 .je-t e& ,jou -&vej, Donnell . F, & a fourth of � dy ce. e6/ra�on, ramie d)c(a.l6mi U ad .lum6e/c 1`4A Ae dance �a. 4 e.tc. W. Yo/ch fia j .C.iv.c nc on Ae fila cfaue Ll place in /893; o; en o.Cd j e4tle w we2e %ed lflcCa4 Ia l Shaw, '�a C e ��, �ary and L.a y A' n, (fan ' e and Relzbe/r t 'Io/ch. the /wad J"m S%uaw i&ac6yvj tv amen jo zded Ae /cive/c 17 .timea. I/c l Shaw .lea/uzed .to aead 1/wm pa peao on the cabin ua.U. F. o/ra Ack a Ll taught. Ae Shcuv,j came f om Kanaaj, neat the Mijjou/r,i vo/rdea. �ac/zw66.i ,j weae nume/rouj aaw ,j,j Ae plain, and Aeka dog /wuted 9./w"e. %prrr Cooniwd, I/r l',j uncle (Lej;ta',j uncle by ma/c/u.age). Me moihe/c plzovided vege a6.le4, wt )-d and garden; the /aid ea game, geese a.lvng Ae a i.ve/r, and /ran axu4. l2ee+np &ng M4 poJ4.i.6.le; .Card urea x`1.25 an acre, 6wt tt eae u.aj no ca,,h. "i4 ja -iAe/c upoAhed a,4 Sa.lu6/ua, 400h pay in IlouA uAi..ch he jo Z When .they /can out oaf .to6acco, ihey would imo %e ar rq weed. S haw and (; a Glace ccci, in ?.cha.t .cam nort, lrlcCa4 Ae .Cop jolt the Awmni U whiff wA whe/ce .the oL' 6aluz w4 by ;&e .Cake. �. Cope. and .lo4,4 thAee e'� i L- laen wi;& di.rA;&en is n ea/c .the f u.l,on of ace (wea.t ,fide o� Labe fonh ). L.Z5, ie Cope. and rrnrviied &neha/rt o " Council. 2.ich mine a.i Labe Cam, loot Alzn',d C2eek, mined i,4 ou.t. lheze we/ce 700 people a-t Labe Ci tg. iJ v4 /H &W up and maj4a c/%ed 50 % ence j &e/w; 8a/rhelt4 did Ae flame f o/c 50 ohn Cox /irvm lexa4 urt4 ma/wAaU lo/c h.e fouAA oaf Yu,C., ce.Ce6/uz- ti.on. A:cOouqa�4 ao)d castle a,� Ca.Cdu/e U I-o/c 70 a pound. Shannon and h,i j dog Queen d/cove the cattle ove/c .the moun;la.in.. Sam Shmw /can the Labe 11o"e (rLv66cy ,M4 UAe/ze C�.Cen',j Ktichen 44 noun%; had a feed ,j,&L le 6ei nd. Rory helped ca vw wa;�e2 1iwm .the .lake. %he &,l Land houae uric 6u.i l.t 6g !lank §oul. Dupe 2o6binj came a; .fame time aj %obe&tj, wAo j�aAied Ae %a eite Laze] 5 P in La/rdo. Adt an took ii oven. t,a.CCace j.&a ed iAe Lone Ua.GLeu Advoea,e at' ?o ,jeb". Levi Kim!dU j aAJ-ed Ae l./an Wych TmPA. Rev. 8. H. Smith. Mzo. Bonny) jic ed 6elnw Do+zneUy; ,raj the fiAj.� p4eachea o/c teachea a.i &je6elmy. �/ranrrm .Shaw, having jpeni d'u y ;to Octo6e/t in the wagon, gave 6.c./cih .io a q 'A) .in Decem6en. The Sam Shaw family - 2 Archie Emmons had a saloon; St. Cyr was the gunman type. He had a team to go to the mines. They quarrelled. Cole House. Davis from Hoff from Collins from Taylor;' Star school near Davis ranch. (McCall) Sunbeam Hardin. Early Finn families: Harala, a scout, settled below Gold Fork. Ed Poro camped where Nokes' place is, Nasi on the corner. They came from the coal mines in Montana. The first school was north of Wright's , Timber Ridge. The second winter there was one cow for three families; they felt wealthy. The first term of school was at Ed Heacock's house; the second and thrid were at Timber Ridge, Aunt Lizzie Coniston taught. Homesteaded Beaver Meadows above Van Wyck. 76 te3Ynd0 "eC i', Kq -3' Shaw Tom and Mary Catherine Shaw will cele- brate their 50th wedding anniversary at a buffet reception the evening of Dec. 30. The Shaws were married Jan. 26, 1946, in Los Angeles, Calif., and returned to McCall after Tom was discharged from the Navy. They started in the registered Hereford business upon their return to Idaho. Tom served as President of the Idaho Cattle Association and the Ameri- can Hereford Association. The Shaws ranch outside Notus, and also have a ranch in Cascade. Their family includes Dean and Linda Pettinger of Twin Falls; Tim and Tina Shaw of New Plymouth; Greg and Cleo Shaw of Parma; 10 grand- children and one grandson -in -law. , MARCH 12, 1936 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shaw .Celebrate Golden Wedding On Saturday March 7, the ranch. home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shaw was the scene of a happy family reunion when their children and their fam ilies gathered their to lielp cel- ebrate the golden wedding an niversity of this pioneer couple Mr. and Mrs. Shaw came to Tdaho 48 years ago. Leaving Joplin, Mo., two years after em barking upon their life's -jour, ney together, they° xraeled overland with a eov,erfcl'�wag!�p and a span of .,mules; Lakin'' three. months to fuiigiAQr way to their new home in the ,west: They, settled near Roseberry, living there about six years and then moved to the ranch where they have since resided. There were nine children born to this union, all of whom Were included in the thirty pres- ent at this joyous affair. The age of the oldest child is 49 years and that of the youngest, 17 years; Mr. Shaw is 78 years -)f age and Mrs. Shaw 69. A bouteous wedding feast was served at a_beautifully decorat- ed table at which were seated Nor: and "Mrs. Shaw, their_ nine ,hildren and T. J. Coonrod of Emmett, the only.living brother of Mrs. Shaw. During the course' of the dinner speeches were made by all, which brought bac for memories.. of ", pioneer ; d`the happy days.o od:' `- In the evening additional guests arrived bringing the to- tal number of exactly fifty. The evening was a pleasant one, the elder members remained in- doors and spent the time visit- ing while the young; people en- joyed a,ski party. Refreshments were served upon the return of the young people. It was due to road conditions that all of Mr. and Mrs. Shaw's friends were not present at this celebration. Many beautiful gifts were re -' ceived from relatives an d friends as a rememberance of this joyous occasion and all car-, ried the best of wishes for many ! more years of happy married bliss for this estimable coulpe. The children attending are as follows: Irl Shaw and wife Yvonne of McCall. I Iva Long and husband D. A. of Bandon, Ore K. D. Shaw and wife Genieve of McCall. Roy Shaw and, wife Lora of' McCall. Mary Nelson and husband Eddie of Huston, Idaho. Leola Lockart and husband Art of McCall. .Etta Nye and husband Bill of Vancouver, Wash. Leo Shaw, of McCall, who is i the only single member of the family. Rita Dotson and husband Clifford of Nampa, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw have been blessed w.Lth thirty -two grand- children and six great grand children. _ Samuel Shaw, whose father was Hamilton Shaw, was born around 1,830 in Indiana. He died around 1895 in Smithfield, Missouri and is also buried there. He married and they had one daughter, named Nan. Samuels wife died when Nan was a young girl. He then married Harriet Henry in 1855 in Vigo Co., Indiana. She was born April 1, 1839 in Indiana and died October 8 or 9, 1930 in McCall, Idaho. Samuels daughter Nan married Trim Jones and they had 3 children, Amos Jones, Pearl Jones and Ivah Jones. After Samuel died Harriet & her daughter Hattie, came to Idaho to join her sons Clarence, Elmer and Samuel Shaw. Harriet is listed in the Idaho 1900 Census. The following articles appeared in the Cascade News, Cascade, Idaho, October 1930. Pioneer Women Passes Harriet Shaw, 91, pioneer of Long Valley, passed away at her ranch home in the Elo District, Wednesday afternoon. She leaves a large family of children & grandchildren, many of them living in & near McCall. The body is resting at the Robb Mortuary in Cascade. Funeral services will be held at 1:00 Sunday at McCall. Interment in the Spinks Cemetery. Article Mrs. Harriet (Grandma) Shaw, died last Wednesday at the ranch home of Clarence Shaw at the age of 91. Iier own homestead adjoining that of her sons was one of the first ones settled in Valley County. Her family settled about her. Sam Shaw of Portland attended the funeral held at McCall, Sunday. Interment was made in the family lot at the Spink Cemetery. Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Shaw were touring in Illinois visiting rela- tives and were unable to get back for the funeral. Obituary Harriet Shaw was born April 1, 1839 and died at the home of her son north of Roseberry, Idaho, October 9, 1930 at the age of 91 years, 7 months and 7 days. She was married to Samuel Shaw in Vigo, County, Indiana in 1855. To this union seven children were born, four of whom have preceded her in death. She carne to Idaho with her family and settled in Long Valley as one of its earliest settlers. She is survived by one daughter, Mary Tweedy of Vermillion, Illinois and two sons, Sam Shaw of Dalro, Oregon and Clarence Shaw of McCall. Besides these she leaves 17 grand- children and 41 great grandchildren. Funeral Services were conducted by Rev. John Schenck at McCall. Interment in the Spinks Cemetery. I. Clarence Shaw 6 Dec 1857 Terri Haute, IN 6 Nov 1941 McCall, ID II. Mary Alice Shaw 29 Nov 1862 Elbridge,IL 15 Jan 1946 Terre haute, II"i III. Elmer Frank Shaw 1865 Joplin, MO 1924 McCall, II) IV. Harriet (Hattie) Shaw 19 Jan 1871 IN 7 Nov 192.3 McCall, ID V. Danny Shaw 1872 IN Died when very small. VI. Samuel Richard Shaw 17 Mar 1873 IN 26 Dec 1937 Troutedale, OR VII. Baby Shaw Died when very small. I. Clarence Shaw married Fannylsabel Coonrod on 7 Mar 1886. She was born 9 Dec 1866 Columbus, Kansas & died 23 May 1940 in McCall, Idaho. A. Clarence (Irl) Shaw 10 Oct 1887 Smithfield, MO 1 Nov 1969 McCall, ID B. Iva Maude Shaw 29 Dec 1889 Roseberry, ID C. Knowles Daniel Shaw 19 Jan 1892 Roseberry, ID 28 Sep 1959 Caldwell, ID D. Roy Samuel Shaw 20 Apr 1894 Foseberry, ID 21 Jul 1979 Caldwell, ID E. Mary Rose Shaw 20 Oct 1897 McCall ID F. Leola Juanita Shaw 20 Mar 1900 MCCall, ID 7 Oct 1973 Bozeman, MT G. Etta Anna Mrytle Shaw 2 Nov 1902 -McCall, Ill 2 Sep 1957 Portland, OR H. Leo Squire Shaw 24 Sep 1906 McCall, ID 7 Feb 1980 Boise, ID I. Rita Nina Shaw 4 Apr 1909 McCall, ID A. Clarence Irl Shaw married Nellie Ellen Scott 24 Apr 1907. Born 18 Dec 1887. Div. 1. Dorothy Mildred Shaw 14 Mar 1909 1915 a 1. Dorothy married Ben Allen Kenvon 26 Dec 1928. Born 7 Feb 1904. a. Rita Aileen Kenyon 11 Nov 1933 b. Larry Bruce Kenyon 29 Jan 1936 a. -Rita married Paul Geuy 3 Aug 1956. Born 4 June 1935. aa. Laura Elizabeth Geuy 10 Nov 1961 bb. Kristin Ann Geuy 18 Oct 1966 b. Larry married Hazel Hudson 16 Aug 1961. Born 25 Aug 1941. Div.1961 cc. Steven Scott Kenyon 11 May 1962 b. Larry married Wilma Pugh 9 June 1963. Born 10 May 1935. dd. Shawn Allen Kenyon 3 Dec 1964 Clarence Irl Shaw married Yvonne Ann Kurbwausa12 Jan 1906. Born 14 Aug 1893 & died 7 or 8 Mar 1971. b. John Benjamin Chandler 13 Iva Maude Shaw married Dora Allen Long 15 Oct 1906. Born 15 Oct 1884 & died 17 Sept 1962. May 1938 d. 1. Thelma Iva Long 26 Oct 1907 2. Elsie Josephine Long 9 Jul 1909 3. Joseph Clarence Long 8 Mar 1911 13 May 1956 4. Leo Charles Long 11 Jun 1914 5. ..Mary Niarquita Long 4 Sep 1916 6. Leola Margareta Long -15 May 1920 7. Donald Allen Long 25 Jan 1922 8. Irene Frances Long 2 Oct 1924 9. Shirley Hope Long 7 Aug 1926 10. Patricia Harriet Long 18 Jul 1930 1. Thelma married George Benjamin Chandler 26 Nov 1927. Born 13 June 1904. a. Dorothy Genevive Chandler 12 Jun 1934 b. John Benjamin Chandler 13 Jan 1937 c. Leonard Frank Chandler 11 May 1938 d. Donald George Chandler 2 Apr 1940 e. Marjorie Iva Chandler 21 Aug 1950 a. Dorothy married William Jackson Thomas 27 Dec 1958. Born 4 July 1933. aa. Lyn Marie Thomas 7 Aug 1963 bb. John Chandler Thomas 6 Jul 1965 cc. Sara Lee Thomas 6 Nov 1967 dd. Ruth Erin Thomas 13 Jun 1974 b. Benjamin married Marjorie Dockton 21 June 1958. Born 27 Mar 1937. ee. Kurt Donavan Chandler 13 Aug 1959 ff. Tami Bethene Chandler 19 Sep 1961 gg. Marlys Renee Chandler 17 Jan 1963 hh. Darcie Janelle Chandler 3 Nov 1966 c. Leonard married Gwendolyn Smith 23 Dec 1961. Born -17 Mar 1943. ii. Loril Dawn Chandler . 23 Jan 1963 jj. Craig Leonard Chandler 8 Aug 1965 d. Donald married Roberta Mullicken 28 June 1962. Born 10 Oct 1943. kk. Marcia Denise Chandler 3 Apr 1963 11. Mark Donald Chandler 14 Jul 1965 mm. Michael Robert George Chandler 13 Jul 1970 1 K 2. Elsie Josephine married Guy Oral Nelson 15 Sept .1927. Born 17 Apr 1902. f. Jack Allen Nelson 10 Dec 1928 g. Jean Iva Nelson 12 Dec 1932 f. Jack married Barbara Neidemier 15 Sept 1952. Born 6 Feb 1928. nn. Micheal Allen Nelson 12 Sep 1953 oo. Roberta Louise Nelson 1 Jun 1956 pp. Bruce Andrew Nelson 25 Sep 1957 qq. Rebecca Lynn Nelson 5 Oct 1964 nn. Michael married Louise Dec 1972. Div. aaa. Tracy Lynn Nelson 26 May 1974 nn. Michael married Connie Caskey Bronson 6 Mar 1977. Born 6 Dec. bbb. Brian Bronson 8 Jul. 1971 ccc. Jason Bronson 30 Apr 1975 ddd. Jennifer Nelson 5 Sep 1979 oo. Roberta married Mark Kincaid 11 Aug 1979. Born 12 Dec 1955. g, Jean married Phillip Watkins Sept 1964. Born 26 Nov 1938. rr. Phillip Nelson Watkins 18 May 1965 ss. Phyllis Le Jean Watkins 25 Jul 1966 tt. Priscilla Jo Watkins 26 Apr 1969 uu. Pamela Jean Watkins 23 Nov 1970 3. Joseph Clarence married Camilla Moore 4 hIay 1935. Born 22 Dec 1916. h. Willis Allen Long 22 Feb 1936 i. Joseph Clarence Long 28 Dec 1937 j. John Robert Long 11 Sep 1941 h. Willis married Eleanor Bogel 29 Nov 1958. Born 28 Mar 1938. vv. Matthew Wade Long 11 Feb 1962 ww. Boyd Scott Long 24 Jan 1963 xx. Kimberly Dawn Long 26 Sep 1966 yy. Julie Ann Long 29 Nov 1967 j. John married Donna Partch 28 Oct 1962. Born 7 Dec 1941. zz. Jo Di Ann Long 15 Mar 1966 aa. Jill Diane Long 8 May 1969 bb. Robert Gerald Long 12 Mar 1972 4. Leo Charles married Dorothy Pennington 1 June 1947. Born 14 Jan 1920. k. Raymond Paul Long 20 Apr 1948 1. Lois Ruth Long 7 Aug 1951 m. Larry Lee Long 14 Jun 1952 5. Mary Marquita married Henry Sell 15 Oct 1933. Born 29 Jan 1908, and died Dec 1979. Div. 1970. n. Joseph Henry Sell 17 Oct 1936 24 Dec 1978 o. Carol Evelyn Sell 7 Mar 1940 o. Carol married Charles Gieselman 16 Feb 1963. Born 8 Apr 1927. cc. Frank Henry Gieselman 13 Feb 1960 dd. Laura Kay Gieselman 11 Feb 1968 ee. Douglas Joseph Gieselman 19 Apr 1970 Mary Marquita married Thor Jamsgard 1 Mar 1980. 6. Leola Margareta married Kenneth Clyde Hultin 5 June 1937. Born 22 Mar 1913 & 3 died 2 Oct 1943. p. Merrilie Christine Hultin 2 Jan 1939 q. Janet Ann Hultin 1 Apr 1941 r. Thomas Leo Hultin 2 Sep 1943 p. Merrelie married Thomas Lee Williams 29 June 1959. Born 28 Dec 1934. ff. Eugene Garth Williams 26 Aug 1962 gg. Mark Lloyd Williams 30 Jan 1964 hh. Timothy Lee Williams 23 Oct 1965 q. Janet married Maurice Martin 8 May 1958. Born 10 Dec 1938. Div 1962. ii. Randal Kenneth Martin 19 Aug 1959 ii. Randal married Crystal Calloway 6 Jan 1980. Born 7 Apr 1957. q. Janet married Arthur Charboneau 19 Mar 1965. Born 15 Nov. 1925. jj. Steven Scott Charboneau 5 Dec 1965 r. Thomas married Patricia Ann Taylor 15 Jan 1971. Born 24 Oct 1950. kk. Kenneth Ivan Hultin 26 June 1971 11. Erik Paul Hultin 1 Apr 1973 Leola Margareta married Ted Ivan Hultin 31 May 1945 . Born 19 Mar 1907. s. Jerrold Kenneth Hultin 31 Mar 1947 s. Jerrold married Carol LaVon Smalley 6 Sept 1969. Born 23 Dec 1946. mm. Travis Elliott Hultin 30 Mar 1972 nn. Tracy Lerene Hultin 7 Apr 1980 7. Donald Allen married Betty Denise Ponsness 19 Nov 1944. Born 15 Apr 1923.Div 1975. t. Dennis Michael Long 29 Aug 1945 u. Diane Marie Long 5 Jun 1948 v. Judy Ellen Long 23 Oct 1956 t. Dennis married Felice Veronica Le Ann Hill 30 June 1973. Born 17 Nov 1952. U. Diane married Patrick DeLapp 2 July 1966. Born 1 Mar 1946. oo. Michael Patrick DeLapp 4 Jun 1968 pp. Allison Marie DeLapp 23 Aug 1971 v. Judy married Greg Miller 4 Aug 1979. Born 8 Dec 1953. Donald Allen married Lois Holcomb 4 Aug 1980. Born 20 Sept 1928. 8. Irene Frances married Frederick E. Berry 12 Dec 1942. Born 18 Sept 1910. w. Bonnie Louise Berry 28 Mar 1947 x. James Frederick Berry 8 Oct 1948 y. Marie Thelma Berry 31 Dec 1949 w. Bonnie married Donald R. Widerberg 16 Mar 1970. Born 14 May 1946. qq. Jody Marie Widerberg 11 Feb 1976 rr. Arne Lucas Widerberg 16 Sep 1979 x. James married Debra Johnson 3 Dec 1966. Born 17 Dec 1951. Div 1974. ss. James Kurt Berry 24 May 1967 tt. Kevin Ellsworth Berry 26 Jul 1969 uu. Jerome Chadwick Preston Berry 27 Sep 1971 y. Marie married Jerry Calame 6 Aug 1968. Born 22 Dec 1947. Vv. Stephen Wayne Calame 29 May 1969 Ww. Sonja Marie Calame 20 Sep 1977 9. Shirley Hope married Clinton B. Johnson May 1922. Born 14 Jan. Div 1947. 4 z. Clinton Benheart Adams 22 Mar 1943 Z. Ben married Peggy Marie Smith 28 Sept 1961. Born 2 Nov 1945. xx. Tammy Marie Adams 14 Dec 1963 yy. Jeremy Adams ShirleyMarried Robert Adams May 1953. Born 4 Jul. . Div 1964. a. 'Fred Warren Adams 22 Feb 1954. b. James Robert Adams 27 Mar 1955 Shirley married Herbert Ashton 4. June 1965. 10. Patricia Harriet married Phillip Russell Staten 31 Dec 1947. Born 8 Aug 1923. c. Kathleen Yvonne Staten 17 Jan 1948 d. Ronald Phillip Staten 29 Nov 1950 e. Donna Jean Staten 17 Jan 1952 f. Dee Madison Staten 23 Dec 1958 C. Kathleen married Edmond Smith 1 Jun 1968. Born 7 Nov 1947. bb m• Jennifer Rene Smith 4 Dec 1973 et m. Jason Aaron Smith 24 Feb 1976 d. Ronald married Peggy Brown 24 Oct 1970: Born 7 Mar 1952. 8� ib. Samuel Noan Staten 21 Jan 1972 ep so. Shay Anne Marie Staten 19 Oct 1973 e. Donna married Thomas Brown 25 Mar 1972: Born 25 Mar 1949. { dd. Tricia Ann Brown 15 May 1973 �q sr. Joshua Thomas Brown 25 Mar 1975 f. Dee married Cathy Stryker 25 Mar 1978. Born 15 Apr 1959. 6� U. Amy Mellissa Staten 13 Aug 1980 C. Knowles Daniel married Genevieve Marquita Kitto 15 Dec 1913. Born 14 play 1886 & died 1 June 1969. 1. Marjorie Mildred Shaw 2 Aug 1916 1. Marjorie married Jack Jaeger 26 Dec 1932. Born 5 June 1914. a. Carol Elaine Jaeger 30 Jan 1937 b. Jack Daniel Jaeger 8 Sep 1946 a. Carol Married John Ray March 30 Jan 1956. Born 11 Jan 1936. Div 1972. aa. Linda Ray March 20 Oct 1956 bb. Stephen Lawrence March 14 Jan 1961 as. Linda Married Will Brannon 3 Jul 1975. Born 18 Jun 1956. a. Carol married Robert Dahlberg 11 Jan 1973. Born 26 Jan 1937. b. Jack married Karen Ahlstrom 12 Feb 1966. Born 2 Feb 1943. Div 1976. cc. Shane Arthur Jaeger 25 Aug 1966 b. Jack married Karen Gabica 29 Feb 1980. Born.20 May 1950. D. Roy Samuel Married Lora Beatrice (Sis) Coonrod 19 June 1915. Born 4 Nov 1898 & died 5 Jan 1973. 1. Mary Mildred Shaw 21 Nov 1915 7 Apr 1973 2. John Henry Shaw 14 Nov 1917 3. Evelyn Lora Shaw 18 Dec 1921 4. Thomas Everett Shaw 26 May 1926 1. Mary Mildred married Arthur Asselin 15 Mar 1938. Born 9 Apr 1905 & died 5 2 June 1958. Vid 1953. a. Carolyn Kay Asselin 18 Jan 1939 b. Arthur Roy Asselin 13 Mar 1942 c. Erinest John Asselin 17 Apr 1943 b. Arthur married Julie Katherine Goodell 30 Oct 1965. Born 3 Sept 1947. aa. Steven Shaw Asselin 15 Feb 1967 bb. Kent David Asselin 2 Apr 1970 c. Erine Married Sharon Louise Schermer 30 Sept 1967. Born 18 Apr 1948. cc. Tammy Louise Asselin 28 May 1969 dd. Kevin Valentine Asselin 14 Aug 1971 1. Mary Mildred married Robert Kennedy Shaw 26 July 1954. Born 9 Oct 1918. d. Mary Virginia Shaw 19 Jun 1955 d. Mary married Elzie Jay Pulliam 28 July 1973. Born 26 Nov 1952. Div. ee. Caleb Jay Pulliam 6 Aug 1975 d. Mary married Bruce C. Cardwell 6 Sept 1980. Born 19 Feb 1954. 2. John married Molly Gereldine Fitzgerald 7 Apr 1940. Born 5 Oct 1917. e. Mildred Ann Shaw 16 Feb 1941 f. Thomas Gerald Shaw 8 Feb 1944 g. Susan Lyn Shaw 30 May 1954 e. Millie married Larry Dean Sawyer 1 Jul 1960. ff. Michael Dean Sawyer 11 Nov gg. Lorie Ann Sawyer 1 Sep f. Tom married Vickie Lee Dodd 12 Apr 1965. Bo hh. Mindie Lee Shaw 15 Apr ii. Amy Lyn Shaw 26 Dec Born 14 Nov 1940. 1960 1962 ^n 4 May 1945 died 2 Mar 1973. 1970 1972 f. Tom. married Ruth Anne Tipton 28 Nov 1974. Born 3 Feb 1953. g. Susan married Steve Beitia 8 Jun 1974. Born 25 Sep 1950. jj. Becki Noel Beitia 14 Apr 1977 kk. Brian John Beitia 5 May 1979 3. Evelyn married Leon Eugene Goodman 26 June 1946. Born 11 Dec 1919. h. Peter Leon Goodman 10 Aug 1949 i. Penny Lynn Goodman 21 Nov 1950 j. Robert Roy Goodman 11 Jan 1953 k. Dennis J. Goodman 2 Dec 1954 i. Penny married Tom Bell 2 Oct 1976. Born 13 Oct. 1948. 4. Thomas married Mary Catherine Feltman 26 Jan 1946. Born 6 Oct 1927. 1. Linda Marie Shaw 26 Jul 1947 m. Timothy John Shaw 5 Nov 1948 n. Gregory Lee Shaw 19 Feb 1950 1. Linda married A. Dean Pettinger 14 Jun 1969. Born 9 Aug 1942 11. Nicholas Dean Pettinger 12 Feb 1971 mm. Brenda Marie Pettinger 29 Sep 1972 nn. Jeremy Thomas Pettinger 13 Jun 1974 oo. Marcus James Pettinger 25 Aug 1976 6 m. Tim married Tina Sayles Moore 11 Jul 1969. Born 3 Mar 1951. pp. Terri Ann Shaw 11 Jun 1970 qq. Thomas Lee Shaw 11 Jul 1976 rr. Lisa Marie Shaw 12 Feb 1979 n. Greg married Cleo Marlene White 5 Sep 1970. Born 11 Aug 1952. ss. Tucker Joe Shaw 22 Jul 1973 tt. Samuel j. Shaw 30 Oct.1976 uu. Jaime Marie Shaw 12 May 1978. E. Mary Rose married Elmer Edward Nelson 2 Apr 1916. Born 14 July 1896 & died 12 Apr 1976. 21 Jun 1941 23 Jan 1957 1. Clarence Edward Nelson 11 Dec 1916 2. Yvonne Iva Nelson 25 Dec 1918 3. Maryanna Nelson 24 Mar 1920 4. William Emary Nelson 4 Feb 1922 5. Allen Noble Nelson 18 Dec 1924 6. Theodbre Royal Nelson 24 Nov 1926 23 May 1979 7. Daniel Joseph Nelson 21 Aug 1930 8. Edgar Earl Nelson 3 Feb 1933 9. James Leon Nelson 14 Apr 1935 10. Winifred Rose Nelson 13 Sep 1938 1. Clarence married Lorena Mae Kingery 14 Aug' 1939. Born9 Apr 1919. a. Edward Lee Nelson 21 Jun 1941 23 Jan 1957 b. Charles William Nelson 23 Sep 1942 c. Norman Leroy Nelson 12 Dec 1947 d. Nancy Ethel Nelson .30 Aug 1950 e. Daniel Clarence Nelson 28 Mar 1953 30 Jul 1973 b. Chuck married Jill Marie Neilson 14 Aug 1960. Born 21 Mar 1942. aa. Edward Christian Nelson 14 Dec 1961 bb. Jerald Lee Nelson 26 Nov 1963 cc. Sandi Marie Nelson 11 Jun 1966 c. Norman married Gayle Ann Wordsworth 24 Sep 1971. Born 29 Oct 1949. dd. Robert Carl Nelson 11 May 1972 ee. Chrysti Kay Nelson 4 Feb 1975 d. Nancy married Del Ziegenbein 19 Mar 1973. Born 3 Sept 1942. e. Danny married Cynthia Lou Chapin 27 Nov 1971. Born 2 Sep 1952. 2. Yvonne married Harold Andrew Hill 20 Jun 1936. Born17 Aug 1917. f. Constance Yvonne Hill 11 Jul 1937 g. Harold Richard bill 13 Jan 1939 h. Fred .Allen Hill 14 Oct 1940 i. Lola Shareen Hill 11 Nov 1942 j. Laree Ann Hill 4 Dec 1946 f. Connie married John Willis Clark 5 Sep 1959. Born 23 Nov 1937. ff. James Raymond Clark 5 Aug 1960 gg. Mdrilyn Diane Clark 28 Feb 1962 hh. Scott John Clark 24 Jul 1965 ii. Jay Phillip Clark 21 Apr 1968 jj. Camille Elizabeth Clark 18 May 1970 kk. Judith Constance Clark 9 Nov 1976 g. Dick married Catherine Joyce Lewis 14 Aug 1959. Born 12 June 1941. 11. Glenda Yvonne Bill 23 Aug 1960 mm. Gordan Harold Hill 20 Sep 1961 nn. Gary Leland Bill 24 Dec 1962 11. Glenda married David Griff Jenkins 21 Jun 1980. Born 29 May 1959. h. Fred married Constance Jean Applebee 1 Jun 1963. Born 10 Jul 1944. oo. Cynthia Jean Hill 24 Feb 1964 PP. Cheryl Lynn Hill 23 May 1967 qq. Candice Marie Hill 20 Apr 1972 rr. Cary Andrew Hill 29 Apr 1974 i. Shareen married Donald 0. Freeman 17 Mar 1959. Born 11 Feb 1943. ss. Kristy Joann Freeman 10 Nov 1959 tt. LaDonna Shareen Freeman 24 Nov 1960 uu. Bryon LeRoy Freeman 3 Mar 1963 ss. Kristy married Glen Duane Rapacon 28 Jul 1979. Born 15 Oct 1959. tt. LaDonna married Ruben Garcia 27 Jun 1980. Born 18 Mar 1959. j. Laree married Walter James Maendl 23 Aug 1968. Born 15 Dec 1946. vv. Jeffry Shawn Maendl 11 Sep 1971 ww. Eugene Lee Maendl 13 May 1973 xx. Sonia Sharpen Maendl 3 Apr 1975 3. Maryanna married Warren Otto Langer 9 Aug 1939. Born 1 Feb 1915. k. Lynwood Warren Langer 1 Jan 1941 1. Harold Arthur Langer 18 Sep 1944 m. Jonathan Edward Langer 18 May 1952 k. Lyn married Celeste Ellyn Porter 4 Feb 1962. Born 24 Sep 1942. yy. Darrel James Langer 18 Jul 1963 zz. Ellyn Rose Langer 24 Jun 1966 1. Art married Gloria Elaine Deckert 6 Aug 1966. Born 15 Oct 1943. aa. Daniel Arthur Langer 17 Aug 1973 bb. Christopher Eugene Langer 25 Dec 1975 cc. Brian James Langer 10 Jun 1978 4. Bill Married Mary Ellen Courmier 5 Feb 1943. Born 15 Dec 1922. n. Kathyrn Marie Nelson 3 Jan 1947 o. Carolyn Sue Nelson 19 Jan 1949 p. Debra Kay Nelson. 15 Jul 1956 n. Kathy married Randal Wayne Jacox 28 Dec 1968. Born 23 Mar 1944. dd. Teri Marie Jacox 29 Jul 1969 ee. William Eugene Jacox 6 Jun 1972 o. Carolyn married Ronald Glaze 14 Feb 1968. Born 3 Dec 1948. Div 1971. ff. Adina Leann Glaze 13 Mar 1971 Carolyn married Ron Harry Morgan 27 May 1971. Born 31 May 1942. Div. Carolyn married Lou Brock Nov 1979. p. Debbie married Donavan Roy Beckwith 6 Dec 1976. Born 1 Oct 1951. 5. Allen married Helen Marie Pullen .19 Jul 1944. Born 19 May 1926. 7 �% . q.. Anna Marie Nelson 30 Aug 1947 r. Margaret Karen Nelson 2 Jan 1949 s. Lola Alene Nelson 25 Jul 1951 t. John Allen Nelson 18 Jan 1956 r. Karen married Jerry Leon Sprenge 1 16 Aug 1967. Born 30 July 1947. gg. Amy Kristine Sprengel 10 Dec 1969 hh. Angela Kay Sprengel 29 Jan 1970 s. Lola married James Sherman Macklin 5 May 1972. Born 21 Sep 1946. 6. Ted Married Ila Mae Smith 23 Oct 1948. Born 27 Apr 1928. u. Kenneth Floyd Nelson 17 Feb 1950 v. Mary Beth Nelson 22 Mar 1952 w. David Ray Nelson 19 Jun 1954 x. Martha Kay Nelson 2 June 1956 U. Kenny married Elizabeth Jane Bortle 15 Dec 1972. Born 13 Feb 1951. ii. Jennifer Diane Nelson 1 Jul 1975 jj. Thomas Roy Nelson 31 Oct 1977 kk. James Erwin Nelson 21 Apr 1979 v. Beth married Floyd Allen Lenhart 4 Sep 1976. Born 25 Jan 1953. 11. Summer Rose Lenhart 24 Aug 1977 w. David married Sherri Jane Jensen 17 Jul 1973. Born 27 Dec 1951. mm. Ketsy Lynn Nelson 2 Sep 1977 7. Joe married Donna Alza Tarr 27 Jun 1948. Born 14 Sep 1930. y. Stanley Joe Nelson 2 Jun 1949 z. Victoria Louise Nelson 8 Aug 1955 y. Stan married Jeanne Kay Lowder 6 Aug 1969. Born 7 Jan 1952. Div. nn. Angeline Kay Nelson _ 23 May 1970 Stan married Georgia Stewart 18 Aug 1975. Born 29 Sep. oo. Melissa Condra " 1 Oct 1971 pp. Penny Condra 15 Jan 1973 qq. Troy Justin Nelson 10 Jan 1977 rr. Amy Lynn Nelson 14 Jan 1980 z. Vicki married Chester Charles Rosenberger 24 Nov 1979. Born 2 Oct 1952. 8. Edgar married Mary Elizabeth Hand 1 Jan 1953. Born 11 Jul 1932. a. Dennis James Nelson 5 Sep 1955 b. Connie Louise Nelson 13 Nov 1957 c. Donald Edgar Nelson 13 Nov 1957 d. Eric Edward Nelson 14 Jan 1961 e. Stephen Eugene Nelson 18 Aug 1966 c. Donald married Debbie Kay Emmons 5 Jun 1976. Born 28 May 1957. ss. Ryan Lee Nelson 6 Jun 1977 tt. Tera Dawn Nelson 15 Nov 1980 9. Jim married Constance Mae Anderson 8 Jun 1957. Born 10 May 1935. f. Tamera Lynn Nelson 3 Mar 1960 g. Lisa Ann Nelson 22 May 1963 h. Shelly Joan Nelson 9 Oct 1965 10. Winnie married Roy Junior Sorrell 25 Mar 1972. Born 29 Mar 1933. i. Janeen Rose Sorrell 22 Nov 1980 F. Leola Juanita married Arthur William Lockart 1 Dec 19 1. Lillian Hazel Lockart 18 Aug 2. William Chester Lockart 8 Mar 3. Clarence Edwin Lockart 27 Dec 4. Mary Lorraine Lockart 8 Sep 19. Born 31 Oct 1892. 9 1921 1923 1924 19 Jun 1979 1932 1. Lillian married Oscar M. Scrogham 18 Oct 1940. Born 19 May 1914. a. Ona Mae Scrogham 27 May 1941 b. Rex D. Scrogham 25 Feb 1945 a. Ona Mae married Jeffery James Roberson. 8 July 1960. Born 8 Aug 1936. Div. aa. Jeffery Lee Roberson 16 Sep 1961 a. Ona Mae married Russell Eugene Cadenhead 3 Feb 1968. Born 4 Jun 1948. bb. Del Eugene Cadenhead 27 May 1968 cc. Rex Sterling Cadenhead 12 Feb 1971 b. Rex married Colleen Stace 25 Jul 1976. Born 13 Nov 1956. dd. Austin Robert Scrogham 7 Feb 1977 ee. Arthur. Lee Scrogham 18 Sep 1979 ff. Daniel D. Scrogham 18 Sep 1979 2. Bill married Ellen Ione Wixsom 29 Jun 1947. Born 20 Jul 1929. c. William Robert Lockart 14 Jul 1948 d. John Thomas Lockart 21 Oct 1950 e. Susan Ellen Lockart 15 Dec 1952 f. Richard Glenn Lockart 12 Sep 1954 g. Peggy Anne Lockart 9 Aug 1962 C. Bob married Jeanette Whipple 19 Jun 1971. Born 25 Aug 1946. gg. Thomas William Lockart 14 Aug 1972 hh. Tarri Ann Lockart 5 Sep 1975 d. John married Irene Ruth Shears 1 Oct 1977. Born-3 Apr 1954. e. Susan married Jack L. Story 10 Apr 1976. Born 4 Jan 1951. ii. Brent Arthur James .3 Jan 1974 f. Richard married Gladys Ione Ernst 28 Sep 1974. Born 25 Jul 1952. jj. Bradley Everett Lockart 13 Dec 1977 3. Ed married Joan Harvey 22 Aug 1947. Born 14 Jan 1931. h. Sandra Joan Lockart 29'Jul 1948 i. Terri Lynn Lockart 14 Feb 1952 j. Edwin Clay Lockart 24 Nov 1957 k. Cynthia Yvonne Lockart 28 Apr 1960 h. Sandra married Bob Jackson 17 Mar 1979. Born i. Terri married Gil Dyke 1 Jul 1978. Born 4. Lorraine married Jesse Vernon Cline 6 Aug 1953. Born 5 Jun 1933, & died 2 Oct 1961. 1. Greta Junita Cline 13 Dec 1953 m. Arthur Bertan Cline 11 Mar 1955 n. Jessie Lorraine Cline 11 Dec 1957 o. Jay Dee Cline 12 Sep 1959 p. William Scott Cline 5 Jul 1961 1. Greta married Micky Craig Born n. Jessie married Larry Banks. Div. 10 kk. Sativa Banks 28 Dec 1973 4. Lorraine married Gerald Eugene Sigler l Nov 1962. Born 5 Jan 1924. Div. q, Norm Eugene Sigler 27 May 1963 Lorraine married John Tondevold in 1974. Born r. Karl Arthur Tondevold Feb 1975 G. Etta married Evererd LuVern Nye 2 Nov 1920. Born 5 Sep & died 21 Apr 1971. Div 1945. 1. Helen Isabel Nye 22 Sep 1922 2. Roy LuVern Nye 3 Sep 1923 3. Merle May Nye 25 Jun 1926 4. Verl Fay Nye 25 Jun 1926 25 Jun 1926 1. Helen married Howard (Bud) Roger Pratt 23 Nov 1944. Born 25 Dec 1921. a. Karen Frances Pratt 24 Jan 1950 b. William Howard Pratt 9 May 1955 a. Karen married Michael Scott Kealey 30 Aug 1968. Born 18 Apr 1949. aa. Patricia Kathleen Kealey 25 Dec 1968 bb. Jeffrey Michael Kealey 4 Sep 1971 b. Bill married Denise Faye Soli 23 Jul 1976. Born 6 Jul 1957. 2. Roy married Doris Rae Sharpless 8 Sep 1944. Born 6 Oct 1920. Div 1948. . c. Roy LuVern Nye Jr. 1 May 1946 1971 Roy Sr. married Alice Faye Jenkins 29 May 1965. Born 8 Oct 1940. d. Roy Lynn Nye 9 Apr 1968 e. Cindi Marie Nye 29 May 1975 3. Merle May married Jack Jones 21 Nov 1946. Born 6 Aug 1920. f. Lynne Marie Jones 21 Jul 1957 g. Thomas Lewellyn Jones 2 Jul 1959 H. Leo Squire married Bertha Elizabeth Heyman 25 Dec 1938. Born 1 Sep 1911. 1. Robert Leo Shaw 28 Jan 1940 2. David Clarence Shaw 21 Jun 1941 3. Barbara Ann Shaw 22 Dec 1942 1. Bob married Mary Frances Feather 14 May 1966. Born 23 Oct 1946. a. Joseph Robert Shaw 25 Feb 1968 b. Daniel David Shaw 22 Dec 1969 c. Owen Richard Shaw 9 Nov 1972 2. Dave married Jean Ann Thun 10 Dec 1966. Born 25 Mar 1944. d. Bradley David Shaw 15 Nov 1970 e. Tori Lee Shaw 10 Nov 1972 3. Barbara married John Winston Henson 23 Aug 1964. Born 1 Nov 1942. Div 1965. f. Elizabeth Marie Henson 14 May 1965 Barbara married Dale Gene Hill 12 Apr 1966. Born .7 May 1940. g. Donna Kathleen Hill 10 May 1969 h. Lee Andra Lynn Hill 25 Mar 1974 I. Rita Nina married Cliffordmarion Dotson 3 Dec 1927. Born 23 Nov 1906 & died Dec 30 1980. 1. James (Happy) Edwin Dotson 12 Apr 1941 2. Dixie Arlene Dotson 11 Apr 1944 1. -Jim married Bell Daggett 10 Oct 1972. Born 23 Sep 1945. Div 1974. a. Rhonda Louise Dotson 5 Jun 1973 Jim married Betty Lou Daggett2 Nov 1974. Born 5 Sept 1947. b. Anita Marie Dotson 9 Feb 1976 c. Della Fay Dotson 20 Dec 1979 2. Dixie married Merlin Gene Glanzman 21 Mar 1965. Born 9 May 1944. d.. Benjamin Troy Glanzman 15 Jan 1968 e. Corrinna Michalle Glanzman 20 May 1969 f. Lona Lee Glanzman 3 Oct 1970 g. Bethony Carmel Glanzman 27 Apr 1978 h. Jonathan Jay Glanzman 4 Oct 1979 II. Mary Alice married John Tweedy 31 Oct 1880. Born 16 Feb 1858 & died 8 Dec 1927. A. Charles Arthur Tweedy B. Carrie Lillian Tweedy C. Viola Rose Tweedy 31 Aug 1882 25 Jul 1960 14 Aug 1890 9 May 1979 29 Jun 1895 A. Charles married Mary Aetna Briscoe 4 Oct 1918. Born 27 Nov 1888 & died 17 Sep 1969. B. Carrie married Homer Cloyd Forster 3 Mar 1914. 1. Florence Ivah Forster 2. Charles Howard Forster 3. Floyd Arthur Forster 4. Edna Mae Forster 5- Donald Shaw Forster 6. Lillian Jean Forster Born 26 Feb 1891 & died 19 Nov 1974. 6 Mar 1915 10 Jul 1917 22 Jan 1920 15 Jun 1921 10 Dec 1923 30 Oct 1930 1. Florence married Lincoln Paul Bush 7 Feb 1943. Born 13 Sep 1909. 2. Charles married Viola Cermack 12 Nov 1948. Born 8 Nov 1926. a. Pamela Ann Forster 29 Nov 1949 b. Charles Howard Forster 7 Mar 1952 a. Pam married Robert Cavanaugh 8 Jun 1974. Born 3. Floyd married Anna Teresa Kindlein 27 Aug 1946. Born 4 May 1919 & died 9 Apr 1980. C. Katherine Anne Forster 3 June 1947 d. Nancy Jo Forster 25 Oct 1951 e. John Arthur Forster 21 Sep 1955 c. Katherine married Kenneth Mager 24 Jun 1967. Born 11 Jul 1942. aa. Kristie Lynn Mager 25 Jan 1969 bb. Kenneth John Mager 21 Jul 1971 d. Nancy married Robert Pacetti 16 Apr 1977. Born 31 Aug 1949. CC. Nicholas Allen Pacetti 28 Sep 1978 4. Edna married Raymond Joseph 19 May 1956. Born 11 Jul 1923. Div 1979. f. Edward Raymond Joseph 30 Nov 1956 g. Carol Anne Joseph 27 Jan 1960 h. Paula Jean Joseph 26 Jun 1961 f. Edward married Pamela Collins 31 Mar 1979. Born dd. Shannon Lee Joseph 10 Sep 1979 g. Carol married David Berryhill 6 Jun 1976. Born ee. Carrie Ann Berryhill 20 Aug 1976 11 5. Donald married Anna Marie Burgess 3 Jun 1944. Born 5 Oct 1924. i. Donald Allen Forster 15 Mar 1945 3 Dec 1977 j. Keith Leon Forster 8 Jun 1947 C. Viola Rose married Harvey Sherman Sprague 24 Aug 1931. Born 5 May 1875 & died 13 Sep 1947. Viola married Richard Jacob Henley 24 Mar 1951. Born 5 May 1900 & died Sep 1971. III. Elmer married Ruma Rebecca Tina Wise 29 Jul 1890. Born 4 Dec 1870 & died 1951. A. Arthur James Shaw 31 Jan 1892 9 Dec 1958 B. Halley G. Shaw 1894 1902 C. Elmer (Shux) Shaw 31 Aug 1905 29 Jun 1949 A. Arthur James married Goldie Marie Sult 28 Jan 1920. Born 2 July 1902 & died 15 Sep 19 53 . 1. Arvaretta Marie Shaw 3 Jan 1921 8 Feb 1953 2. Eva Mae Shaw 1 Apr 1922 3. Lyle Arthur Shaw 17 Jun 1924 1. Arvaretta married Herman Francies Coonrod 13 Jun 1942. Born 2. Eva Mae married Martin Cameron 1940. Div 1956. a. Robert Dennis Cameron 21 May 1942 b. Judy Marie Cameron 8 Oct 1943 a. Robert married Dorothy Hill 21 Nov 1962. Born 26 Jul 1939. aa. Robert John Cameron 9 Jan 1965 bb. Patrick Cameron 24 Jul 1966 b. Judy married Edward Angin cc. Kenneth Angin dd. Richard Angin ee. Jimmy Angin Born 12 Feb 1927. 23 Oct 1964 21 Aug 1966 20 Jan 1969 2. Eva Mae married Virgil L. Keithley 22 Oct 1960. Div. 1972. 3. Lyle married Lois Shepard 18 Jun 1947. Born 11 Feb 1930. c. Sharon Kay Shaw 24 Jan 1949 d. Kenneth Lyle Shaw 11 Mar 1950 e. Benita Elaine Shaw 21 Sep 1951 f. Patricia Ann Shaw 22 Mar 1953 c. Sharon married Randy Hanshew 28 Oct 1972. Born 22 Sep 1950. ff. Stephine Dawn Hanshew 4 Mar 1974 gg, Hanshew 1975 f. Pat married Kenneth Wayne Adair 5 Jun 1971. Born 16 Dec 1952. hh. Jeremy Lyle Adair 20 Jan 1972 ii. Troy Wayne Adair 19 Jul 1974 A. Arthur married Lenore Reed Born C. Elmer (Shux) married Elva Ellen Fergusen 9 Dec 1933. Born 17 Dec 1911 & died 13.Oct 1967. 1. Dariene Ruth Lawson Shaw 28 Aug 1930 2. Eleanor Lora Shaw 24 Dec 1934 3. Elmer (Howard) Shaw 28 Apr 1938 4. Carolyn Rene Shaw 9 Dec 1941 5. Caroline Rebecca Shaw 9 Dec 1941 1. Darlene married Carrol Edwards 7 Sep 1946. Born 4 Oct 1919 & died 13 May 1968. 12 a. Eugene Dee Edwards 22 Dec 1947 13 b. Janice Kay Edwards 21 Apr 1949 a. Eugene married Martha Ann Mills 9 Dec 1967. Born 10 Aug 1949. aa. Echo Ellen Edwards 10 Aug 1969 bb. Leland Carrol Edwards 7 Aug 1970 cc. Eugene Dee .Edwards II 11 Apr 1977 1. Darlene married Fred Kyser 25 Oct 1969. Born 16 Sep 1929. 2. Eleanor married Nathaniel (Nat) Wright 22 Nov 1952. Born 7 Oct 1932. c. Dale Nathaniel Wright 19 Oct 1953 d. Andrew Arthur Wright 1 Feb 1956 e. Robin Elmer Wright 5 Nov 1959 f. Nedra Rene Wright 7 Sep 1962 3. Howard (Sonny) married Donna Mae Brown 26 Aug 1961. Born 18 Jul 1942. g. Wayne Howard Shaw 22 Aug 1962 h. Theresa Anne Shaw 2 Jul 1968 4. Carolyn married Harold D. York 27 Jun 1964. Born 21 June 1943. i. Brett York .9 Jan 1966 j. Danny Lee York 19 Feb 1968 k. Dana Diane York 25 Sep 1970 1. Nikki Deeann York 26 Sep 1973 5. Caroline married Leroy Breuer 5 Sep 1964. Born 5 Dec 1943. m. Monty LeRoy Breuer 11 Aug 1965 n. John Daraen Breuer 8 Dec 1968 o. Karrie Lynn Breuer 25 Oct 1971 p. Christopher Paul Breuer 2 Apr 1976 VI. Samuel Richard married Myrtle Ellen Driggs 7 May 1896. Born 4_Jan 1878 & died 4 Mar 1965. A. Letha Alice Shaw B. Ethel Lula Shaw 16 Feb 1897 10 Apr 1966 2 Aug 1899 Niar 1971 A. Letha married Hubert Sherman Dayton 5 Jul 1917. Born 10 May 1895 & died 20 Dec 1947. 1. Zola Ethel Dayton 22 Jun 1913 2. Arden Preston Dayton 10 Feb 1920 28 Jul 1971 1. Zola married Kenneth Dean Burkholder 23 Oct 1965. a. Linda Joyce Burkholder b. Darlene Gail Burkholder C. Kenneth Dean Burkholder d. Dennis Lee Burkholder e. Dale Robert Burkholder f. Darryl Rollin Burkholder 16 Jul 1933. Born 19 Aug 1915 & died 19 Jul 1941 8 Sep 1943 1 Nov 1945 26 Jan 1949 2 Dec 1956 2 Dec 1956 a. Linda married Eugene Stewart. Div. aa. David Eugene Stewart 26 Feb 1960 bb. Tamera Letha Stewart 9 Oct 1961 cc. Kimberly Bernice Stewart 13 Jan 1963 Linda married Harris Thompson 19 Jun 1970. Born 27 Sep 1918. J . b. Darlene married Gary Schell. Div. dd. Dwayne Adam Schell 5 Feb 1965 ee. Debra Ellen Schell 26 Oct 1966 b. Darlene married Daniel Froese 22 Jun 1973. Born 25 Dec 1951. ff. Dawn Noele Froese 19 Jun 1976 gg. David Daniel Froese 10 Apr 1978 C. - Kenneth married Laurel Leone Morris 5 Jul 1969. Born 13 Dec 1949. Div. hh. Jamie Lynne Burkholder 25 Feb 1971 ii. Wendi Leone Burkholder 31 Jul 1973 C. Kenneth married Jeanne Rae Herzog 7 Sep 1977 . Born 4 June 1957. d. Dennis married Susan Gayle Nelson 5 Aug 1967. Born 17 Jun 1949. e. Dale married Holly Dawn Humphrey 6 Jul 1980. Born 2. Arden Preston Dayton married & had one son. g. Arden Preston Dayton Jr. 4 Feb 1962 B. Ethel married Alvin Royle 3. J.C. Royle Born & died 15 May 1920 3. J.C. married Joanne Born h. Patty Royle i. Robin Royle h. Patty married Born 14 9. Shirley Hope n}arried Clinton B. Johnson Aby 1922. Born 14 Jan. Div 7 -947. Z. Clinton Benhart Adams 22 Mar 1943 z. Ben vurried Peggy Marie Smith 23 Sep 1961. Born 2 Nov 1945. xx. Tammy Marie Adams 14 Dec 1963 yy. . Clinton BcW-iart Adams 23 Nov 1976 29 Nov 1.976 zz. Jeremy Adams xx. Tammy carried Ronald Grant Dykes 6 Dec 1980. Born 3 Sep 1961. Shirley married Robert Adams May 1953. Born 4 Jul 1922. Div 1964. a. Fred Warren Adams 22 Feb 1955 b. James Robert Adams 27 Mar 1956 b. James nurried Carla Gayle Williams 4 Jul 1978. Born aa. Lois Manta Adams 17 Aug 1980 Shirley married Herbert Ashton 4 Jun 1965. Born 5 Jul) 19,", ( Groups Page PIONEER FAMILY - Members of the Shaw family pose during Sunday's 93rd Annual Pioneer Picnic held at The Barn At Roseberry, located at the Valley County Museum complex one mile east of Donnelly. In front is Geri Shaw, 97, of Emmett. Behind her, from left, are Bob Shaw, Brad Shaw, Skeeter Shaw, T.G.'Tom° Shaw and David Shaw, who presented a program about the family's history in Valley county. Page http: / /www.mccallstamews .com/pages /groups _page.php 8/21/2014