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Johannes Groetzinger
(Cir 1807-1849)
Christina Sophia Margaretha (Margaret) Hartmann
(1812-1901)
Unknown Urmson
John George Winters
(1840-After 1926)
Jane Urmson
(1845-After 1923)
William H. Winters
(1863-1921)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Ella Henry

William H. Winters

  • Born: 1863, Ohio
  • Marriage (1): Ella Henry on 17 Mar 1886 in Ocheltree, Chase County, Kansas
  • Died: 1921 at age 58
  • Buried: Mount Washington Cemetery in Independence, Missouri
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bullet  General Notes:

Research of James W. Straw - KCMO Postal service employee. He gave the Post Office Clock to Eugene William Straw at his one year birthday. The clock is with James William Straw.
He was the oldest brother
Known as Will

Chase County Courant, Cottonwood Falls, Kansas Mar 25, 1886
Winters & Henry
To be married at the residence of the Bride's father at Ocheltree, Kansas on the evening of Mar 17th 1886. Mr. W H Winters of this city to Miss Ella Henry of Ocheltree. Strong City Independent.

Transcribed from History of Wyandotte County Kansas and its people ed. and comp. by Perl W. Morgan. Chicago, The Lewis publishing company, 1911
WILLIAM H. WINTERS. - The present incumbent of the office of finance clerk, or cashier of the Kansas City post office, has been a resident of the Sunflower state since his boyhood days and is one of the sterling citizens contributed to this commonwealth by the fine old Buckeye state. He was born at Warren, the judicial center of Trumbull county, Ohio, in the historic old Western Reserve, and the date of his nativity was July 5, 1863. He is a son of John G. and Jane (Urmson) Winters, the former of whom was likewise born in Ohio, a representative of a pioneer family of German extraction, and the latter of whom was born near Sharon, Pennsylvania, of English lineage. They now maintain their home in Kansas City, Kansas, where the father is living virtually retired, after long years of earnest and effective endeavor in connection with the productive activities of life. He is seventy-one years of age and his wife sixty-seven at the time of this writing, in 1911. The marriage of the parents was solemnized at Hubbard, Trumbull county, Ohio, and in that state the father continued to follow his trade, as an expert blacksmith, until June, 1878, when he removed with his family to Kansas, having been promoted to this action on account of his impaired health. For the first two years he was engaged in farming in the vicinity of Solomon City, Dickinson county, and he then removed to Strong City, Chase county, where he established himself in the general merchandise business. He built up a prosperous enterprise and continued to be identified with the same for a period of about twenty years, after which he resided on a farm in that county about three years. By reason of his advanced age he finally disposed of his farm and in 1904 he established his home in Kansas City, where he has since lived retired, in the enjoyment of the rewards of former years of toil and endeavor. He is a man of sterling character and both he and his wife hold the unqualified esteem of all who know them. He is a stanch supporter of the cause of the Republican party and has been identified with both the Masonic fraternity and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows for more than forty years. Of the ten children, seven sons and two daughters are now living.
William H. Winters is indebted to the public schools of his native state for his early educational training and he was fifteen years of age at the time of the family removal to Kansas, where he continued to attend School at intervals for a few years thereafter. He here assisted in the work of the home farm and later in the mercantile establishment conducted by his father at Strong City. In that village he thereafter served for three years as clerk in the depot of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, and, coming to Kansas City, he was employed for three years as a street car conductor. He was then appointed deputy city clerk, and in this position he served efficiently for a term of three years. On the 1st of July, 1902, he was appointed to his present office, that of cashier or finance clerk in the Kansas City post office, and that he has ably handled the work assigned to him needs no further assurance than that afforded in his continued tenure of the position, which is one of distinctive trust and responsibility. He has gained a wide acquaintanceship in the metropolis of Wyandotte county, and here it may well be said that his circle of friends is limited only by that of those who know him.
In politics Mr. Winters gives an unqualified allegiance to the Republican party, and he has been affiliated with the time honored Masonic fraternity for more than a quarter of a century. He is identified with the various York Rite bodies in his home city and has also received eighteen degrees in the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite.
The year 1886 gave record of the marriage of Mr. Winters to Miss Ella Henry, who was born in Pennsylvania, and who was a child at the time of the family removal to Kansas. At the time of her marriage she was a resident of Springhill, Johnson county. Mr. and Mrs. Winters have two daughters: Ada and Grace.


DOB POB census records

1880 Ottawa, Ottawa County, KS
J. G. Winters c1841 OH
Jane c1846 OH
William c1863 OH
George c1865 OH
Ella c1867 OH
Liddie c1871 OH
Frederick c1873 OH
Mary c1877 OH
Arthur c1879 KS

1900 Kansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas
William H. Winters July 1863 OH
Ella L. Feb 1864 PA
Ada M. Dec 1886 KS
Grace F. Sep 1888 KS

1920 Jackson County, Missouri
W. H. Winters 1864
Mae R. 1870


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William married Ella Henry, daughter of Unknown Henry and Unknown, on 17 Mar 1886 in Ocheltree, Chase County, Kansas. (Ella Henry was born on 4 Feb 1864 in Clarion, Pennsylvania, died on 9 Jul 1913 and was buried in Mount Washington Cemetery in Independence, Missouri.)




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