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Friday August 3rd, 2001
Our first stop is St. John's Lutheran Church in Limestone to meet Betty Smith, the church secretary and keeper of the old church records dating back to 1855. What a great resource, details of every birth, baptism, confirmation, communion marriage and burial done at the church. Several names occur over and over again, Heuermann, Willms, Bruninga, Ojemann, Molchin. The books are very fragile, the edges of all the pages are damaged and most of the pages have torn away from the binding. I can't wait to read them next week. Paul and I walk the older section of St John's cemetery, locating several ancestors. A few stones are illegible, but I think I can make out B.H. Willms on one of them.
Next we head for the downtown library, so Paul can give me an overview of their holding. The Peoria County Genealogy Society has transcribed many old records. I love the old city directories, they date back to 1861. The cemetery grave inscriptions and the Illinois death index should prove beneficial.
Then it's off to Bartonville. My English/maternal family lived here (Hilton, Price, Leyland, Higgins, VanHouten). Paul drives me around to the places I can recall. Bartonville looks much different that I remember, it's getting older and a lot of places are gone, but I can still remember the fun we had visiting my grandma and playing around the alley and railroad tracks. Paul and I have dinner with my English cousin Norman Higgins-VanHouten, she is the only person I will see during this trip that I knew previously. I love Norma, she is so fun to be around and we can talk for hours.
Saturday August 4, 2001
Emma, (Behrend Willms > Elisabeth Willms-Molchin > Emma Molchin-Friemuth > Tracy Friemuth-Hartseil > Emma), Bob and their daughter Karline are so pleasant and welcoming. Emma owns the organ her grandmother Emma played, she had the organ refinished and it looks beautiful. Emma also has the broach shown in the photo of Elisabeth Willms-Molchin's portrait but she wasn't able to find it during our visit. I copied several of her old photos including:
We end our visit with ice tea and homemade zucchini bread, I must get the recipe, it was the best zucchini bread I've ever tasted.
Paul has a favorite pizza joint in East Peoria (Dan's Pizza), he's a fanatic about their pizza and ordered several to take back to Iowa. I would have to agree with him, it was a really good pizza, but I ate too much.
We finish the day by driving up Route 6 around the north side of Peoria, I'm surprised that the landscape is so hilly, it is a really beautiful area.
Sunday August 5, 2001
Next I journey to McNabb, Illinois, which is about 2 hours northeast of Peoria, and such a lovely drive through the farmlands. I'm meeting Chyrlie (pronounces Shirley) Delicath-Soltau (Behrend Willms > Annie Willms-Delicath > Charles Delicath > Christian Delicath > Raymond Delicath > Chrylie) and her uncle Norman Delicath (Behrend Willms > Annie Willms-Delicath > Charles Delicath > Christian Delicath > Norman).
Chyrlie drove down from Naperville with her daughter Melissa, Norman lives in McNabb with his second wife Betty. Chyrlie is the reason I found my link to the Willms family, we met online about a year ago, I knew my GG Grandmother was related to the Delicath's and Chyrlie provided the connection. We also met Naomi Hinz-Stanek (Behrend Willms > Inse Willms-Folkers > Martha Folkers-Wohlfeil > Agnes Wohlfeil-Hinz > Naomi) at the same time, unfortunately Naomi wasn't able to make the trip from Minnesota.
I had a wonderful time, Norm, Betty, Chyrlie and Melissa are great fun. Norm tells us stories about his grandfather crossing the Illinois river when it was low, by horse and buggy to perform plastering work on the east side, there wasn't a bridge back then. We look at old pictures and Chyrlie will copy 8 of them for me. Norm's daughter Bonnie has also worked on the family genealogy, I'm eager to share my information with her. I head back to Peoria around 7pm.
Monday August 6th, 2001
Juanita Shick-Vires (Behrend Willms > Elsabeth Willms-Molchin > John Molchin > Christian Molchin-Schick > Juanita) is the church treasurer, she just happened to come by and Betty introduces us, knowing we are related. Betty has a great love of family history and has done extensive work on her lines. She remembers the names that other researchers are looking for and she will pass on any information she finds. Juanita is first cousin's with JoAnn Brunk who I plan to meet later this week. Juanita suggests I call her aunt Frieda (JoAnn's mother) who lives in Bartonville.
At lunch, Betty drives me around the county side to show me the old Molchin house, the land Jacob Willms owned and the location of the original log cabin used for the first church services, located on the Ojemann's farm. The building no longer exists, a lot of the homes in the area have sadly been destroyed by the airport expansion.
Later I visit Betty Salter-Jones, (Behrend Willms > Rebecca Willms-Salter > John Salter > John Walter Salter > Betty), she still lives in Bartonville. She is very funny and has lots of stories to tell about John Jacobs farm and her father's as a coal miner in Bartonville. She doesn't have any pictures, the sadly burned in a house fire.
I spend the remainder of the day/evening at the downtown library.
Tuesday August 7th, 2001
The cemetery workers are here today and they have the original plot records. They help me confirm the location of Behrend and Imke's graves. The stones are very weathered so I was glad to have conformation. I would like to place ground plaques in from of the headstones so future genealogist will know where they are buried.
Frieda Henrich (Behrend Willms > Elizabeth Willms-Molchin > John Molchin > Frieda) invites me for a visit and she shares her pictures with me, including:
Juanita and Frank head home and I go to the courthouse. I check out the marriage books prior to 1916 and find marriages for Louise, Anne, Emma and Mary Salter. The genealogy volunteer introduced herself as she was leaving for the day (Pat Hickman), when I told her I was in Peoria from Maryland, she offered to stay and search for the records I wanted. I was so grateful to have the married names for the Salter girls. She gave me her e-mail address in case I needed any more help with my search. I spend the rest of the day at the library.
I spend the evening with my English side, Ron Dorey my mother's sister Janet's ex-husband. He still lives in the little brown house my mother lived in and later I lived in, it's next door to my Grandma Alice Price house. Her house belongs to someone else now, a couple and their 2 sons. I met the woman and she knew more stories about the house than I did. She cares about the house and the memories it represents. She invited me in to look around, of course it has changed but the smell was still present and I could still imagine the green wall to wall carper, grandma's character teapots from England, the paint by number of the last supper, the dust collectors above the living room cornices, grandpa's chair, pipe and ashtray, the picture in the back bedroom, her canned tomatoes in the cellar, fresh bread baking in the oven, the sound of the clock chimes (every 15 minutes all night long) and the train whistle in the distance.
The little brown house looks just the same inside and out. I had asked my uncle Ron if Grandma's hollyhocks still grew in the backyard but he said they hadn't for years. He did have three peonies though that grandma planted and he offered them to me for my own garden. I planned to go back the next day and dig them up. We had a nice talk and reminisced about grandma.
Afterwards I went to see Norma and stayed until midnight talking about her son Mark who recently died, genealogy, and family. When I asked if she had any old pictures of her parents she told me that she only had one wallet size photo, one of my favorites of them. I offered to enlarge it on a photo machine and to send her copies of the old pictures I have.
On to Bartonville to dig up the peony. It was a lot of work and took nearly and hour because the pine tree roots were twisted all around. I hope it survives and grows in my garden. Later I will cut off the leaves, wash the roots of dirt and pack it in my luggage. I went to say goodbye to cousin Norma and took her the enlargement of her photo which I'd framed, she loved it!
I left for my lunch with Elinor Anderson-Lawson (Behrend Willms > Rebecca Willms-Salter> John Salter > Opal Salter-Anderson > Elinor) She didn't know much about the other Salter's as they lived up in Chillicothe, she brought some pictures but could only identify a few of them.
My next visit was with Annie and Milton "Bud" Neptun. (Behrend Willms > Inse Willms-Folkers > Emma Folkers-Mellott > Martha Mellott-Neptun > Bud Neptun) Such nice people, so kind and willing to share information. Bud had a picture of Inse and John Folkers which they let me photocopy. They live only a few blocks from where Inse and John Folkers lived all those years ago. He has done a lot of research on the Folkers line. He also had a transcribed copy of Inse's midwife log. He owned the original and passed it down to his family. He offered to send me a copy. I can't wait to read through it, I'm sure it will have a lot of information.
I leave for East Peoria to meet Earl "Butch" (Behrend Willms > Rebecca Willms-Sunkin > Henry Sunkin > Earl Sunkin > Jack Sunkin > Butch) and Carol Sunkin. We have dinner at a Chinese Buffet, very tasty. They both have a sense of humor and are great story-tellers.
My last visit was to see JoAnn Brunk (Behrend Willms > Elisabeth Willms-Molchin > John Molchin > Frieda Molchin-Henrich > JoAnn Henrich-Brunk) and it turned out to be one of the best. Twenty-five years ago JoAnn was an avid genealogist. She had the St. John's Church records microfilmed, she transcribed the St. John's cemetery gravestones inscriptions. She has extensive documents and family group sheets for the Willms decendants - a goldmine! She zeroxed everything, we photocopied her old pictures including:
and she loaned me her copy of the church records on microfilm!!!
Her life and work doesn't allow much time for genealogy anymore so I told her I would become her successor and carry on the research. I enjoyed our visit very much, it was hard to leave but it was after midnight and I still needed to pack for the trip home tomorrow.
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