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He grew up the son of a difficult taskmaster, following in the tradition of Houpt men. Writes James A. Ward in That Man Haupt, the "family was dominated by a stern and exacting father who became increasingly irritable as his health deteriorated and his eyesight failed... Before classes Herman was expected to shave his father, black his boots, and read him congressional speeches from the newspapers. Noon and after-school hours were reserved for waiting on customers in [the] grocery store." Herman was 12 years of age at his father's untimely, humiliating death and went to work to support his widowed mother and siblings. The sad loss of a parent appears to have been kept quiet in the family with nothing much more appearing in print everafter. Many decades later, when Herman wrote his reminiscences, all that his biographer and editor Frank Abial Flower said about the matter was that "His father, Jacob Haupt, died in 1828, leaving a widow and six children." In 1836, Herman first came to Gettysburg, PA to help identify a route for the Gettysburg Railroad across South Mountain and thence to Hagerstown, MD. He spent 10 years in the town, and took on additional duties as professor of mathematics and engineering at Pennsylvania College. He and Cecelia purchased a spacious home, named "Oakridge," and arranged for his brother Jacob to be hired onto the faculty of the local Oakridge Select Academy and his sister Mary to the teaching corps of the local Female Seminary. Herman on Aug. 30, 1838 was united in matrimony with 17-year-old Ann "Cecelia" Keller ( ? -1891), daughter of his pastor Rev. Dr. Benjamin and Catharine Eliza (Craver/Schaeffer) Keller of Gettysburg, PA. At the time of the marriage, she was said by the Harrisburg Telegraph to be "the belle of Gettysburg. Her lovable disposition, constant cheerfulness and bright mind made her a great favorite in social circles, so that when [Herman] led her to the altar he was regarded as a most fortunate young man. She was then only 17, but together the happy couple started life and they traveled hand in hand..."
Together, the couple produced a brood of 11 children -- John Sterigere Haupt, Jacob Benjamin Haupt, Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt, Mary Cecelia Haupt, Ella Catherine Chapman, Adelaide Rosalind Haupt, Dr. Herman Haupt Jr., Charles Edgar Haupt, Frank Spangler Haupt, Alexander James Derbyshire Haupt and Grace Hermania Haupt.
Herman displayed an early aptitude for bridge design and construction based on the proper calculation of the strength of a trussed bridge. He deminstrated that he could create an iron arch counterbrace that would maintain upward stress in a force equal to heaviest of railroad loads. From 1847 to 1861, he served as chief engineer and board director of the Pennsylvania Railroad. During that time he recognized an up-and-coming talent in Thomas Alexander Scott, promoting him to assistant superintendent. Scott later served as U.S. Assistant Secretary of War under President Lincoln and was named as president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Scott in turn mentored an immigrant teenage telegraph office boy Andrew Carnegie, and brought him into his private office as secretary/telegrapher. When Carnegie at age 17 met Herman for the first time, in 1853, the future steelmaker felt he was the "first 'great man' I ever knew." For a time the Haupts resided in Harrisburg at Front and Locust Streets and also on Market Street. He was profiled in Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography, which reads that in 1847, he
In the spring of 1857, he was engaged to complete construction of the Southern Vermont Railroad. He used his sons Jacob and Lewis on the project, and it was completed in early 1859. The Haupts as a family relocated to Cambridge, MA in 1859 as the tunnel project was taking more and more of Herman's time. They rented a sizable, three-story, rambling frame house across the street from the home of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882), widely popular for his works "Paul Revere's Ride," "The Song of Hiawatha" and "Evangeline," among others. Herman gained fame during the Civil War as a railroad engineer and gained the nickname "Lincoln's railroad man" and "wonder worker" for an ability to reconstruct bridges over rivers and valleys in very short times so that railroads could safely cross. He was known for aggressively tearing down buildings and cutting trees if the wood could be used for bridge supports.
After the Second Battle of Bull Run, in late August 1862, he was given the rank "brigadier general" for his remarkable use of the rails despite a Union loss. He used the title for the rest of his life. Among the learnings of that battle was that the "army made overwhelming demands on an ill-equipped single-tracked road," writes biographer James A. Ward. "Haupt was convinced that they could only be met by operating trains on a rigid schedule without the telegraph and absolutely free from the specious interference of military officers." Herman was with Burnside during the disastrous Battle of Fredericksburg in December 1862, watching the slaughter from the general's headquarters. He could not have known that at least 10 of his distant Younkin cousins from western Pennsylvania and beyond took part in that fight, with five wounded and injured. Then as the Battle of Gettysburg loomed in late June 1863, Herman successfully predicted where the Confederate army under Robert E. Lee would select the site on which to fight. He also is known to have toured the battlefield days after the horrific bloodbath. He considered his greatest Civil War accomplishment his "interpretation of Lee's movements and his warnings of the concentration at Gettysburg," writes Ward. But Herman's tenure with the military ended on Sept. 12, 1863. Refusing to sign his officer commission paperwork, not wanting to be locked into the formal rigid military structure, he was dismissed by Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. He returned to Massachusetts during the war to try to salvage some of his lost investment in the Hoosac Tunnel project. He never returned to government service. His biographer Ward says that his chief wartime achievements were "his ability to create a workable organization, train it, then give it only general direction, allowing his subordinates leeway in method.. [He] proved the feasibility and the absolute necessity of rail transportation for highly mobile armies in the field."
Back in Massachusetts, Herman continued to face stonewalling in his attempts to be compensated for his tunnel work. In 1869, seeking other sources of income, he purchased a 108,000-acre tract in Giles County, VA, near Newport. The acreage included a hotel which he named the "Mountain Lake Hotel" and was where he installed his son Jacob to manage. But the son was inept as a business man, and the hotel ended up costing Herman thousands of dollars each year plus taxes. He tried to bring his Massachusetts rail firm, the Troy and Greenfield Company, back to life. When it was reorganized, he named his son-in-law Frederick Chapman as clerk and treasurer and overall personal representative. Herman ran out of patience and funds and in November 1872 used his connections with the Pennsylvania Railroad to be named to the management of Piedmont Air Line Railway, which commanded a salary. His mission to was to oversee completion of the rail line between Atlanta and Richmond, controlled by the Pennsy. He became dissatisfied with his role with the company and ended his term there the first of January 1876. He then was tapped by be chief engineer of the Producers Union to design and construct a 230-mile right of way from Butler, PA to Ann Arundel, MD. It became the world's very first long-distance pipeline carrying crude oil, creating a revolution in the industry that toppled the railroads' monopoly of the trade.
Then in 1881, he received another substantial opportunity as general manager of the Northern Pacific Railroad. The family relocated in April 1881 to St. Paul, MN, where the work was based. The line of 6,800 miles of main line and spurs ran from Wisconsin to Washington and Oregon and was completed in 1883. To mark the occasion, President Ulysses S. Grant hammered the final "golden spoke" on Sept. 8, 1883, in a ceremony attended by former President Chester A. Arthur, Civil War Gen. Philip Sheridan, Sioux warrior chief Sitting Bull, and President Lincoln's son Robert Todd Lincoln, among other VIPs. But the fallout was savage. Herman was heavily criticized by one of his senior partners for wasteful spending, and he duly resigned on Nov. 1, 1883. Herman immediately accepted the presidency of the Dakota and Great Southern Railroad. The line ran from Grand Forks, ND in a southwesterly direction to Tower City, ND and thence southeast to Sioux City, IA. He left the position in June 1885, after about a year-and-a-half. The Haupts marked their golden wedding anniversary in 1888 at their summer home at Spring Lake, VA. Recruited by Rev. Dr. J.G. Butler, they were influential donors to a legacy project, new Lutheran church erected at the corner of Maryland Avenue and Ninth Street Northeast in the District of Columbia. Sadly, Cecelia died before the project could be completed. She passed away in April 1891, bringing to a close her and Herman's marital union of 53 years' duration. Burial was in Philadelphia's Laurel Hill Cemetery. The church was was dedicated on Oct. 3, 1892, in memory of Cecelia's father and named "Keller Memorial Lutheran Church," located at 9th and Maryland Avenue, Northeast. The first pastor was Rev. Charles H. Butler. The church was pictured in a February 1922 edition of the Washington (DC) Herald along with the story of the Haupts' "splendid liberality."
Herman outlived his bride by 14 years. He was the author of Reminiscences of General Herman Haupt, 1901, largely a recounting of his wartime experience based on his extensive collection of memories and military telegrams. During that time he made his home with his daughter M. Cecelia Haupt in the Concord Apartments in Washington, DC and endured heart disease. He suffered the untimely death of son Jacob Benjamin Haupt in 1903. Sadly, while riding in a Pullman car on the Pennsylvania Railroad on Dec. 14, 1905, en route to his home in Washington, he was stricken at Jersey City. Word was telegraphed to his son Lewis in Philadelphia to meet him and take him home. Reported the Philadelphia Inquirer, "Speeding across the meadows to the Newark Station on the 8.29 train, the General sank back and very gently passed away. But a few minutes before he told Conductor Buckley he did not want to die on the train." He surrendered to the angel of death in his son's arms. The remains were brought to Philadelphia for funeral services in the home of his son Lewis and possibly also at St. Stephen's Evangelical Lutheran Church at 40th Street and Powelton Avenue. The Inquirer said in an obituary that "Up to the time of his death the General was the oldest living graduate of the [U.S. Military] academy." Interment was beside his wife at Laurel Hill Cemetery. Circa 1970, their granddaughter Susan (Haupt) Adamson cooperated with Dr. James A. Ward of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga who was writing a biography about Herman. Said the Gettysburg Times, "The bases for Ward's research are the approximately 9,000 personal papers of Haupt held in the archives of Yale University's library and a series of interviews with Haupt's granddaughter, an active octogenarian, who lives in Washington, DC. The granddaughter, Mrs. Susan Haupt Adamson, in her collection of Haupt's memorabilia has numerous photographs, scrapbooks and letters sent to her grandfather by such famous men as William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt, Andrew Carnegie, and Booker T. Washington..."
~ Son Jacob Benjamin Haupt ~ Son Jacob Benjamin Haupt (1842-1904) was born on April 20, 1842 in Gettysburg, PA. He was baptized in infancy 15 days later on May 5, 1842 in St. James Evangelical Lutheran Church of town. He was trained in his father's profession as a civil engineer and in the spring of 1857, with his father and brother Lewis, began a project to complete construction of the Southern Vermont Railroad. The work was finished in early 1859. Then in 1863, his father opened a machine shop in Philadelphia and installed Jacob as manager, including a contract to build a new type of rock-boring drill to be put into use at the father's Hoosac Tunnel project in Massachusetts. On Nov. 8, 1866, Jacob tied the knot with Mary Elizabeth Ziegler (May 18, 1846-1911), a native Philadelphian and the daughter of Charles and Catharine A. Ziegler. Four known children of this union were Charles Herman Haupt, Edward Haupt, Catharine "Katie" Sturdevant and Anna Cecelia Haupt. Unfortunately, the Philadelphia machine shop failed in the fall of 1868. The father again invested in Jacob's career in manufacturing "spiral furnaces" which also went belly up. James A. Ward, the biographer of Jacob's father, says Jacob was an "inept manager."
Federal census records for 1870 and 1880 show the Haupts in Philadelphia, on 32nd Street, with Jacob engaged as a civil engineer. At some point the family relocated to Virginia, where Jacob's father owned a 108,000 acre mountain hotel resort called "Mountain Lake Hotel." Jacob was installed there as general manager. But among his mistakes was ill-advisedly purchasing a large quantity of oysters and threw them into a creek where they all disintegrated and rotted, leading to a large financial loss. The father then had him plant watermelons. In all, the father lost $10,000 in helping Jacob make a go of life and business. Jacob in his final years was plagued with what doctors called "acute mania" and "alcoholism" and in 1902 was admitted to the Western State Hospital. There, he died at the age of 62 on Oct. 13, 1904. The cause of death was ruled "paresis" -- a softening of the muscles. Interment was believed to have been made in the hospital's burying ground. No newspaper obituary has been found. Mary survived for another seven years, making her home at Fairview, NJ. She passed away at the age of 65, on July 31, 1911. Services were conducted in her home in Fairview and in Christ P.E. Church in town, with burial in Monument Cemetery in Beverly, NJ. A death notice in the Philadelphia Inquirer instructed mourners that "Carriages will meet the 12.10 train from Market St. Wharf, Philadelphia, at Riverside, N.J." Son Charles Herman Haupt (1867-1937), perhaps also using a middle name of "Ziegler," was born on Aug. 13, 1867 in Philadelphia. He was an alumnus of the Towne Scientific School at the University of Pennsylvania. Charles exchanged marital vows with Florence Carruthers Harkness (1870-1860). Three known children in their brood were Charles Harkness Haupt, Norris W. Harkness Haupt and Marjorie Apthorp Studerford. Charles for many years assisted his uncle Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt on the faculty of the Towne School. At the birth of their son Charles in 1898, the Haupts were in Cleveland, OH. Then in 1900, he was hired by the Atlantic Refining Company and rose to become chief engineer of the Standard Oil Development Company, a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. He is known to have assisted in the construction of Standard Oil's large Bayway Refinery. They made a home in Washington, DC in 1919 and later in Elizabeth, NJ at the address of 777 Salem Avenue. Charles retired in 1933 when the company mandated retirement at age 62. For the last 25 summers of their lives, the Haupts vacationed in Portland, ME. He served as chairman of the board of trustees of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, chairman of a fire prevention committee of the American Petroleum Institute and held memberships in the Suburban Golf League and Military Order of the Foreign Legion. Reported the Portland (ME) Press Herald, "He was also interested in art. He did some sketching himself and attended many art exhibits in New York and Philadelphia. He read much, although his subjects were mainly technical writings." Sadly, Charles died at home on April 10, 1937. His obituary in the Philadelphia Inquirer said that funeral rites would be held in the family church in Elizabeth followed by burial in Philadelphia's Laurel Hill Cemetery.
Son Edward Haupt (1869-1947) was born on March 24, 1869 in Philadelphia. In 1894, at the age of about 25, he wed Charlotte "Maud" Wistar (Sept. 22, 1869-1943), originally from Baltimore. They were the parents of Caspar Wister Haupt. As of 1937, their residence was in Chicago, and in 1943 in the Windy City's North Shore Hotel. Sadly, Maud surrendered to the angel of death in Evanston at age 73 on Sept. 3, 1943. An obituary in the Chicago Tribune said she "was a descendant of the Wistar family which established the glass industry in the United States at Salem, N.J." Edward passed away in Evanston, IL at the age of 77 on Feb. 6, 1947. Burial was in Monument Cemetery in Beverly, NJ.
Daughter Katherine "Katie" Haupt (1876-1967) was born on Oct. 23, 1876. She married Charles Sturdevant Jr. (Oct. 30, 1868-1943), son of Charles and Sarah (Stewart) Sturdevant. They put down roots in Philadelphia. Their final address was in Cobb Creek Nursing Home at 2747 South Muhlfeld Street in Southwest Philadelphia. Sadly, at the age of 75, Charles was stricken with a cerebral hemorrhage and respiratory failure and passed away in Philadelphia on Nov. 4, 1943. Interment was in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd. Katharine lived on for another 24 years. She suffered from diabetes and a duodenal ulcer and, after it ruptured and peritonitis set in, she died on June 12, 1967. In the Philadelphia Inquirer, the family asked that any memorial gifts be made to St. Mary's Hall Scholarship in Burlington, NJ. Linton H. Studdiford was the informant for her official Pennsylvania certificate of death. Daughter Anna Cecelia "Anne" Haupt (1879-1961) was born in 1879. Evidence suggests that she was joined in wedlock with Alexander D. Robb (Oct. 4, 1878-1936), a native of Kimberton, PA. Two sons they bore together were Alexander D. Robb Jr. and Edward H. Robb. Alex was a graduate of Phoenixville High School followed by Lehigh University. He spent 33 years of employment in the field of electric power and light, joining the Canadian Niagra Power Company, Ltd. in 1903 as a mechanical inspector. Then in 1906, he was promoted to assistant superintendent and then in 1918 as superintendent of the company's Niagara plant. Continuing his career ascent, he was tapped to be assistant to the president in 1921 and after four years given the title of vice president. then in 1933, in the grip of the Great Depression, he was elevated VP and general manager of Buffalo, Niagara & Eastern Power Corporation. At the height of his working years, he also was president and director of Niagara, Lockport & Ontario Power Company, Canadian Niagara Power Company, Niagara Electric Service Corporation, Niagara Junction Railway and as VP and director of Niagra Falls Power Company, Buffalo General Electric Company and Tonawanda Power Company. He held memberships in the Buffalo Athletic Club, Buffalo Launch Club, Lotus Club of New York City and Niagara Club of Niagara Falls. The marriage is believed to have ended in divorce, with him marrying again to Marjory Hill ( ? - ? ). Anne Cecelia's homeplace for decades was in Buffalo, NY and then at 255 West Girard Boulevard in Kenmore, NY. She died on May 26, 1961. Her obituary appeared in the Buffalo Courier Express. Her funeral was conducted in the Episcopal Church of the Advent. Former husband Alex passed away in Niagara Falls Memorial Hospital at the age of 58 on Oct. 27, 1936. His funeral services were held at St. Peter's Episcopal Church, by the hands of his pastor, Rev. Charles N. Tyndell and Rev. Philip W. Mosher.
~ Son Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt ~
Son Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt (1844-1937) was born on March 21, 1844 in Gettysburg, PA. He was trained in his father's profession as a civil engineer and went on to a career of renown. In the spring of 1857, with his father and brother Jacob, he began a project to complete construction of the Southern Vermont Railroad. The work was finished in early 1859. At the age of 16, on the eve of the Civil War, he served as a level rod holder in Massachusetts during his father's famed Hoosac Tunnel construction project. His father served as a high-ranking Union Army officer during the war and asked President Lincoln and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton to appoint Lewis to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Lewis and his father later jointly owned land in Mayville, Jamestown and Mandan, ND during the years that his father was president of the Northern Pacific Railroad. On June 26, 1873, at about age 29, Lewis married Isabella Christina "Belle" Cromwell (1852-1912). In sending out wedding cards, they included the editor of the newspaper in Austin, TX where he once had been stationed under the command of Gen. Canby. Five offspring they bore together were Lewis H. Haupt, Bessie M. Haupt, Florence Urner, Susan Adamson and Mrs. A. Lodge Oliver.
Lewis became employed by the University of Pennsylvania as a professor of civil engineering and authored many related textbooks. His profile in Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography states that Lewis:
During his time in Nicaragua, his nephew Thomas Jefferson Haupt Archambault was chief engineer and also served as a member of the Nicaragua Canal Commission. Many years later, in 1949, Archambault's sister Anna "Margaretta" Archambault donated a set of 23 photographs, some damaged and faded, to the Library of Congress depicting the Commission's work in Nicaragua. Additional of his books were A Move for Better Roads (1891) and The Transportation Crisis (1907). Lewis also was interested in his Haupt genealogy. In 1925, he arranged for an entry in the book The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy by Frederick Adams Virkus. The note shows his lineage from 1738 immigrant Sebastian Haupt to their son Johann Henry married to Catharine Younken. He died in Bala Cynwyd at the age of 92 on March 10, 1937. Son Lewis Herman Haupt Sr. (1889-1956) was born in 1889 in Philadelphia. He was a 1909 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, receiving a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering. He then taught at his alma mater for two years. Lewis tied the marital cord with Margaret Sweeney ( ? -1979). Their brood of six offspring included Marjorie Lucas, Jane Keogh, twins John Edward and Lewis Herman Haupt Jr., Thomas F. Haupt and Isabelle M. Haupt. Sadly, twin son John died in infancy. At one time Lewis Sr. was employed in Palmerton, PA by the New Jersey Zinc Company. He went on to be a longtime project engineer with the design division of DuPont Company in Wilmington, DE. His memberships included Phi Delta Theta, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, DuPont Country Club, University Club and University of Pennsylvania Alumni Club. In about 1929, they relocated to Hillcrest and settled at 313 Springhill Avenue. The Haupts attended the Calvary Episcopal Church. After an illness of six years' duration, he passed away at home at the age of 66 on Feb. 24, 1956. Services were led by Rev. John W. Haynes in Calvary Episcopal Church in Hillcrest, with an obituary printed in the Wilmington Morning News. The family asked that any memorial gifts be made to the Delaware Heart Association. Margaret lived for another 23 years, with her final home at 1 Mahaffy Drive, Ridgewood near Wilmington. She died on May 28, 1979 at the age of 80. Her mass of Christian burial was conducted in St. Helena Roman Catholic Church in Bellefonte, with burial in the cathedral cemetery.
Daughter Bessie May Haupt (1879-1966) was born on Sept. 5, 1879. She never married and devoted her life to teaching piano. Her residence was at 238 Belmont Avenue in Bala Cynwyd, PA, and she had a cottage known as "Fagwood." With her health in decline, she was admitted to the Mary J. Drexel Home in nearby Lower Merion Township. At the age of 86, burdened with hardening of the arteries, she suffered a heart attack and succumbed to the spectre of death on May 11, 1966. The funeral was held at the Home, with a brief death notice appearing in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Her remains lie in eternal repose in West Laurel Hill Cemetery. Daughter Florence B. Haupt (1883-1957) was born in 1883. She wed Dr. Martin Harley Urner (Oct. 7, 1879-1963), son of Henry Clay and Maria (Harley) Urner of Cincinnati, OH. Two known daughters were Isabella Webster and Elizabeth Hufnal. Martin was a World War I veteran, having held the rank of major in the Air Force Medical Corps. The pair first lived in Cincinnati, where for 35 years he specialized in eye, ear, nose and throat care. He was president of the Advent Canoe Club and Walnut Hills YMCA and senior warden of the Church of the Advent. He also helped found the Murphy Memorial Clinic. Then in 1939, they retired and moved to Charlottesville, VA, making a dwelling-place in the early 1950s on Blue Ridge Road. Florence is known to have been a member of the Huguenot Society of Pennsylvania and Historical Society of Pennsylvania. She also enjoyed visiting gardens in Newtown, PA and Wilmington, DC. Martin served on the World War II draft board in Charlottesville, giving of his time as senior warden and vestryman of Christ Episcopal Church. He also held memberships in the Farmington County Club, English Speaking Club and Colonade Club. Sadly, at the age of 74, Florence died in a Charlottesville hospital on Dec. 8, 1957. An obituary was published in the Charlottesville Daily Progress and the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Funeral rites were conducted at Christ Church, Charlottesville, with the body transported to Bala Cynwyd to sleep for the ages in West Laurel Hill Cemetery. Martin survived her by six years with an address of 1613 Kenwood Lane. He died at age 83 on March 19, 1963. The Times-Dispatch ran an obituary.
Daughter Susan Haupt (1885-1974) was born on April 26, 1885. On June 7, 1914, she tied the marital cord with Col. Keith Frazee Adamson (March 23, 1884-1979), son of Dr. H.K. Adamson. They exchanged their vows at the Church of the Holy Communion at Chestnut Street near 22nd Avenue. Keith was a 1905 graduate of the State College in Lexington, KY, obtaining his degree in mechanical engineering. He went on to a long career in the U.S. Army. The couple's dwelling-place in 1951-1956 was in Warrenton, VA and in 1970 in Washington, DC. Circa 1970, she cooperated with Dr. James A. Ward of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga who was writing a biography of her famed grandfather Gen. Herman Haupt, eventually entitled That Man Haupt. Said the Gettysburg Times, "The bases for Ward's research are the approximately 9,000 personal papers of Haupt held in the archives of Yale University's library and a series of interviews with Haupt's granddaughter, an active octogenarian, who lives in Washington, DC. The granddaughter, Mrs. Susan Haupt Adamson, in her collection of Haupt's memorabilia has numerous photographs, scrapbooks and letters sent to her grandfather by such famous men as William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt, Andrew Carnegie, and Booker T. Washington... Mrs. Adamson's apartment house neighbor, until she died recently at the age of 91, was the daughter of General Philip Sheridan, the famed Union general." Sadly, Susan passed away on July 28, 1974. At the age of 94, Keith died on Jan. 20, 1979. Burial was in the hallowed soil of Arlington National Cemetery. Daughter Edna Haupt (1887-1968) was born on Aug. 28, 1887 in Philadelphia. She married Alfred "Lodge" Oliver (June 12, 1886-1945), a native Philadelphian whose parents were English immigrant Alfred Oliver and his American wife Elizabeth R. Lodge. The pair's only child was Anne MacCaughern. Lodge was engaged as a candy maker in the confectionary business over the years. They shared a home in Bala Cynwyd at 435 State Road. Edna was an active volunteer with the American Red Cross and in October 1935 was pictured in the Philadelphia Inquirer for her work with colleague Jean Crego to pack and ship hundreds of braille books to blind children across the nation. With his health plummeting due to hardening of the arteries, Lodge was admitted in 1943 to the Veterans Administration Hospital in Caln, Chester County and stayed for the remaining nearly 20 months of life. There, at the age of 60, he died on March 27, 1945. The remains were lowered under the sod of West Laurel Hill Cemetery. The widowed Edna outlived her husband by 23 years. Sadly, she contracted multiple sclerosis circa 1948 and endured the disease for the rest of her life. During that era she lived in Wayne, PA in 1951 and later in St. David's Park Apartments. Her final residence was in the Caley Nursing Home in Radnor. She surrendered to the angel of death on Jan. 25, 1968. Burial of the remains was in Old St. David's Church Cemetery. Her daughter signed the official Pennsylvania certificate of death. In a Philadelphia Inquirer obituary, the family requested that any memorial contributions be made to the Society for Crippled Children and Adults.
~ Daughter Mary "Cecelia" Haupt ~ Daughter Mary "Cecelia" Haupt (1846-1911) was born in 1846. She resided in Philadelphia and was single for her entire life. For some years in the 1890s and early 1900s, she and her father shared living space. They were building a house in St. Paul, MN in 1893 and then in 1905 dwelled in the Concord Apartments on K Street in Washington, DC. She is known to have traveled to the 1893 World's Fair. As her health failed, she was admitted to Lansdale Hospital in Montgomery Township. Montgomery County. There, having contracted gangrene of the lung which lingered for two months, she died on May 1, 1911. There was no informant on the death certificate, and thus no details about her life. Burial was in Philadelphia. Under the terms of her will, she bequeathed $500 to each of her nephews and nieces. In a dispute over a controversial codicil to the will, her estate was tied in up litigation for years in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. ~ Daughter Ella Catherine (Haupt) Chapman ~ Daughter Ella Catherine Haupt (1848-1918) was born on July 23, 1848. On Nov. 13, 1873, in Philadelphia, she entered into marriage with Civil War veteran Frederic Lord Chapman (May 23, 1848-1934), originally from Cambridge, MA and the son of Francis L. and Lucy A. Chapman. Officiating was Rev. Dr. Charles W. Schaeffer. Their wedding announcement in the Boston Globe asked that no cards of congratulation be sent. Their four children were Dr. Herman Haupt Chapman, Lucy Lord Chapman, Eleanor Hassel Relf and Marion Norton McQuade. Frederic stood 5 feet, 8½ inches tall, and weighed 190 lbs., with a light complexion, hazel eyes and light hair. During the war, he served in Capt. Charles Walcott's 12th Unattended Company of Massachusetts Infantry, enlisting in Boston on May 16, 1864. He served for a term of three months and was honorably discharged on Aug. 15, 1864. In the years after the war, Fred was named by his father-in-law as clerk and treasurer of the Troy and Greenfield Railroad Company in Massachusetts in an attempt to recoup sizable compensation and expense reimbursements related to the construction of the Hoosac Tunnel. The Chapmans stayed in Cambridge until the first of the new year 1883, when they pulled up stakes and relocated to St. Paul, MN. There, he was employed as general agent for the Northern Pacific Coal Company, with his father-in-law serving as general manager and brother-in-law Herman Jr. also involved. Then in 1885, Fred and Herman Jr. jointly filed to incorporate the American Patent Rights Insurance Company in St. Paul to protect their inventions against infringement.
At one point he sold coal for the Holmes & Hallowell Coal Company, dealing in bituminous and anthracite products from Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. In April 1926, he retired from the position. Frederick was awarded a soldier's pension on May 25, 1910. [Invalid App. #1.390.685 - Cert. 1.161.165 - C #2.468.063] Ella died in in or near St. Paul on Feb. 28, 1918. Burial was in the city's Oakland Cemetery. Frederic outlived his wife by 16-plus years and in May 1918 endured the heartbreak of the senseless death of daughter Lucy in a vehicle accident. In the late 1920s, Frederic is known to have spent part of the year in residence in the Ashland Hotel and then, when it closed, moved to the Commodore Hotel in St. Paul. For a time he stayed with his brother Frank in Minneapolis but "went all to pieces," his daughter Marion said. "He got so that he would shake his hands, and say, 'What will I do! What will I do!" He was so depressed there that at times he would not speak. As one of his daughters was in an insane asylum, it was feared he might be becoming mentally ill, but he pulled through. There was a dispute about that time over whether he was eligible for a pension increase from $72 to $90. A special investigator came to interview him and his daughter Marion who was his caregiver and power of attorney. The investigator wrote:
He was only able to sit up in a chair for no more than half-an-hour per day, and could no longer dress or cleanse himself. He was only able to feed himself oatmeal and toast and drink tea, coffee or water. He passed away in or near St. Paul on July 17, 1934. Daughter Eleanor Hassall Chapman (1877-1946) was born in Oct. 1877 in Massachusetts. She married Herbert Kemper Relf Sr. ( ? - ? ) in St. Paul on June 6, 1900, with her uncle Rev. Edgar Haupt officiating in ceremonies held at St. John's Episcopal Church. The wedding was announced in the St. Paul Globe. Herbert was an 1899 graduate of the University of Minnesota. The pair went on to become the parents of Herbert "Kemper" Relf Jr., born in about 1901. Their marriage dissolved in divorce, and in 1910 Eleanor and son lived in her parents' household, with her earning income as a private duty nurse. In 1920, still under her father's roof, she had no occupation. The angel of death spirited her away in Kandiyohi County, MN two days after Christmas 1946. Funeral rites were held at St. Mark's Church, with burial following in St. Paul's Oakland Cemetery. The Minneapolis Star printed an obituary.
Daughter Lucy Lord Chapman (1876-1918) was born in June 1876 in Massachusetts. She moved to St. Paul, MN with her parents. Lucy is known to have graduated from a preparatory school in St. Paul in 1895 and the University of Minnesota in 1899. Then at age 23 in 1900, in St. Paul, she was marked as "at school" in the year's United States Census. She became a school teacher and worked in that occupation in 1910. As of 1918, she taught history at Humboldt High School in St. Paul and lived at 593 Holly Avenue. On the tragic day of May 7, 1918, she drove a group of high school students to an event in Northfield, MN. When her vehicle became stalled in mud near Rosemount, another driver "tied a rope from his machine to Miss Chapman's machine... Miss Chapman had alighted and was knocked down when the cars moved." She was rushed to St. Luke's Hospital where she died later in the day. An obituary appeared in the Los Angeles (CA) Evening Express with the headline, "Teacher Run Down by Own Auto Succumbs." Son Dr. Herman Haupt "Chappie" Chapman (1874- ? ) was born in Oct. 1874 in Massachusetts. He was an 1889 graduate of the University of Minnesota and then in 1904 obtained a master of forestry degree at Yale University. His first professional position was with the U.S. Forest Service. He joined Yale's forestry school in 1906 and then in 1911 was named Harriman professor of forest management, continuing for decades until retirement in 1943. Among his books were Forest Valuation (1914), Forest Mensuration (1921), Forest Finance (1926) and Forest Management (1931). Said the Hartford Courant, he "was an early supporter of the state park movement in Connecticut, and upon the creation of the State Park Commission in 1913 was appointed by the Governor as one of the original members. In 1921 he was influential in broadening the scope of the Commission to include forestry, which had formerly been under the Experiment Station in New Haven. He continued as a member of the reorganized Park and Forest Commission, succeeding Lucius Robinson as Chairman from 1938 until 1943; and serving as Vice-Chairman from 1943 to 1944, he completed his long and useful term as commissioner in 1947." Among his forestry interests were public recreation, camping and fishing, fire protection, and landowner education. He held terms as chairman of the Forests and Wild Life Commission and president of the Wild Life Federation of Connecticut. He is known to have helped create state parks such as Hammonasset, Sherwood Island and Rocky Neck. He also helped to conserve the forests of the Chippewa nation in support of Chief Forester Gifford Pinchot in the administration of President Theodore Roosevelt. Active in the public administration of forests, he opposed a move to transfer the Forest Service out of the Department of Agriculture, and fought the idea of moving large tracts such as the Olympic National Forest to the Parks Service, on the argument that "much of the area was better suited to timber production than to recreation," said the Courant. He has also taken a prominent part in the fight against the western stock men to gain possession a large areas in the national forests for their own selfish interests." The University of Minnesota awarded him with an honorary doctorate in 1947, saying he had "influenced the course of forest conservation in the United States as profoundly as any single man." In 1949, he received the Schlich Memorial Medal from the Society of American Foresters in recognition of his work, only the fifth man at the time to be so recognized. That same year, he chaired the 7th Pacific Science Congress held in New Zealand. He researched and collected his grandfather Haupt's business and personal correspondence, financial and legal papers, and writings, and then authored an unpublished biography. He donated these documents, photographs, additional family correspondence, diaries, and other papers to Yale University. Daughter Marion Norton Chapman (1879-1965) was born on April 18, 1879 in Cambridge, MA. She was a kindergarten teacher circa 1905-1908, living at 11 Story Street, Cambridge and in St. Paul, MN. On a passport, she was described as 5 feet, 7 inches tall, with a broad and high forehead, dark eyes, straight nose, firm mouth, square chin, black hair, clear complexion and oval face. She was single at age 41, in 1920, and lived with her father and sister and engaged as a social worker in St. Paul. Marion tied the marital cord with accountant John J. McQuade (Aug. 9, 1873-1944). As of the mid-1920s, she made a home at White Bear Lake, MN and had a room in the Commodore Hotel in St. Paul. There, she was employed in the county treasurer's office. At that time, she also was a caregiver for her elderly father, and in 1926 arranged for a special nurse to provide even more hands-on services. The couple is marked in the 1930 federal census enumeration in St. Paul and in the 1940 census in San Diego, CA. Sadly, John died in San Diego on Dec. 30, 1944. The widowed Marion made her home in 1946 was in LaJolla, CA. She passed away in San Diego on Sept. 25, 1965. ~ Dr. Herman H. Haupt Jr. ~ Son Dr. Herman H. Haupt Jr. (1852-1925) was born on May 7, 1852. He stood 5 feet, 6 inches tall, had a high forehead, blue-grey eyes and a strgith nose, fine straight mouth, pointed chin and oval face. Herman apparently was married, but to whom? He is known to have been the father of Herman H. Haupt Jr. Herman made a residence in Bala Cynwyd and served as assistant librarian at the University of Pennsylvania until 1890. His legal residence in 1895 was in Evanston, IL, at 1300 Davis Street. Circa 1896 he lived in Europe. Said the Philadelphia Inquirer, he "was also a lawyer and a mechanical engineer. He made his home chiefly on Long Island." At the death of Herman's father in 1905, the Philadelphia Inquirer said he was "practicing law in New York." Other sources state that he was a physician until retirement, when he moved to Miami in about 1913. Circa 1918, he kept an address in New York City of 122 West 11th Street. Herman is known to have taken several boat trips to Puerto Rico in 1918 and 1923 to "attend to legal business," he wrote. At the age of 73, in Miami, he was swept away by the grim reaper of death on July 23, 1925. An obituary was published in the Inquirer and the Miami News. The body was shipped back home for interment in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd. He sleeps in the same plot as his parents. Son Herman H. Haupt Jr. dwelled at East Setauket, NY in 1925. He was named in his father's 1925 obituary in the Miami News. ~ Son Rev. Dr. Charles "Edgar" Haupt ~ Son Rev. Dr. Charles "Edgar" Haupt (1854-1942) was born on Aug. 25, 1854 in Philadelphia. He migrated to Minnesota in 1882, at the age of 28. Edgar was twice-wed. His first spouse was Mary Bell Griffith (April 1, 1855-1885).
They bore an only daughter, Isabelle Griffiths Haupt. Sadly, Mary Bell died two days after giving birth, on Nov. 28, 1885, with the baby dying the day before, at age one day. Mother and child were laid to rest in Oakland Cemetery, St. Paul. His second bride was Alexandra V. Dougan ( ? -1931). The pair became the parents of Paul H. Haupt, Samuel E. Haupt, Rev. David R. Haupt, Theodore Haupt and Alma Cecelia Haupt. Edgar and his brother Frank launched the Haupt Lumber Company in 1883 and it enjoyed growth in the ensuing years. But he was called into Christian ministry, and became rector of the Church of the Messiah in St. Paul. Then from 1903 to 1907, he was vicar of St. Mark's Episcopal Church and then co-rector of the congregation to 1910. Also from 1908 to 1910, he served as superintendent of Wells Memorial Settlement House. In time Edgar was named archdeacon of the Minnesota Episcopal Church, where he is said to have "accomplished wonders" and a leader in religious education. In 1917, he opened the Breck School for boys in St. Anthony Park near Minneapolis. The school classes were first held in a private home and then moved to a new location at 2477 Como Avenue. He always was interested in the Church Home of Minnesota, a home for the aged connected with the Episcopal movement. Sadness cascaded over the family when Alexandra died at the age of 68, on Dec. 8, 1931, as a patient in St. Luke's Hospital. The widowed Edgar lived for another 11 years. He and son Theodore traveled by car from St. Paul to Lincoln, NE in April 1932 to attend and officiate the marriage of son Samuel. He remained at the school until resigning in 1938. He died on June 10, 1942. Burial was in Oaklawn Cemetery, with funeral rites conducted in St. Matthew's Church. An obituary appeared in the Minneapolis Daily Times. In his memory, the Breck school established a scholarship program. Son John "Paul" H. Haupt (1895-1976) was born on March 31, 1895 in St. Paul, MN. He served in the U.S. Army during World War I. Paul does not appear to have married or reproduced. He lived in St. Paul, MN in 1931. He eventually established a longtime home in South Dakota. Paul was in Hot Springs, SD in 1956 and in Rapid City, SD as of 1970. He died in April 1976, at the age of 81. Funeral services were held in the Protestant Chapel of the Hot Springs Veterans Administration Center, presided by Chaplain William Wintz. The remains were interred in Black Hills National Cemetery. An obituary in the Rapid City (SD) Journal said he was "survived by a brother, Theodore Haupt, New York City." Son Samuel Edgar Haupt (1903-1970) was born on Nov. 27, 1903 in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He was a 1925 graduate of Carleton College in Northfield followed by an advanced degree from the Harvard College Graduate School of Business Administration. On April 8, 1932, in the bride's home in Lincoln, NE, he entered into marriage with Helen Miller Anderson (1906-1996), daughter of Charles Barney Anderson. In announcing the happy event, officiated by the groom's father, the Minneapolis Journal said that the bride "wore a gown of antique ivory satin. Cartridge pleating ornamented the gown at the shoulders and at the waistline. The long skirt extended into a four-yard court train finished in scallops." Helen was an alumna of the University of Nebraska and Prince School of Store Service Education in Boston. The newlyweds' first home was at 2259 Carter Avenue, St. Anthony Park in St. Paul. They became the parents of two sons, Charles H. Haupt and Samuel T. Haupt. Within a few years, the family relocated to Lincoln and stayed for good. There, in 1934, Samuel accepted a position with the Miller and Paine department store, launching a 34-year career in which he was elevated to vice president and secretary-treasurer. Active in the community, he was president of the Lincoln Better Business Bureau and in 1959 treasurer of the Lincoln Centennial Corporation. He also was secretary of the original Pershing Municipal Auditorium Advisory Board and a trustee of the YMCA in Lincoln, receiving an award of merit from the TMCA in 1952, and was active with the American Cancer Society's Lancaster County Chapter. His memberships included the St. Matthew Episcopal Church, Chamber of Commerce, University Club and Lincoln Country Club. In retirement, they moved to Sun City, AZ. At the age of 66, Samuel died on Oct. 5, 1970. An obituary was published in the Lincoln Star. The body was shipped in Lincoln to rest for all time in Wyuka Cemetery.
Son Rev. David "Richard" Haupt (1897-1978) was born on April 3, 1897. Richard served as an artillery officer with the U.S. Army during World War I. He was a graduate of the University of Minnesota and Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, MA and entered the Episcopalian ministry. He served as director of the YMCA Boys Camp at Green Lake, Chisago City, MN in 1922 and held a lifelong interest in activities of the "Y.". In late 1924, he was ordained in St. Matthew's Episcopal Church in St. Paul at the corner of Carter and Chelmsford Avenues. By 1926, he was at the Gethsemane Episcopal Church and active in leading summer camping for the Minneapolis YMCA. He resigned in 1926 to join the staff of Calvary Episcopal Church in Columbia, MO with the additional assignment of student ministry at the University of Missouri. Richard married Pauline ( ? - ? ). They were the parents of Frederick Edgar Haupt. At some point the couple divorced, and she married again to Charles S. Finkelson, moving to Lakeland, FL. Richard remained in Columbia circa 1931, and often was quoted in news stories based on his sermons. He was elected to the Columbia YMCA board of directtors in 1928. At some point he moved back to Minnesota to lead St. Paul's Episcopal Chruch of Owatonna, MN and was there in the 1950s. In 1957, at the age of 59, he moved to Pittsburgh, PA, where he accepted the position as assistant rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church of Mount Lebanon, considered at the time "as the fastest growing Episcopal congregation in the country," said the Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph. Then in 1962, he was hired as associate rector of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh's Wilkinburg community. Over the next five years, he also served as pastor of Grace Church in Mount Washington and of St. Timothy Episcopal Church in McKees Rocks. He retired in 1967. His final eight years were spent at St. Barnabas Home in Richland Township. He died at age 80, in Suburban General Hospital, on Jan. 20 1978. An obituary was printed in the North Hills News Record. Interment was in Sewickey Cemetery, with Episcopal Bishop Rev. Robert B. Appleyard presiding over the funeral rites.
Son Theodore Gilbert Haupt (1902-1990) was born on Oct. 11, 1902 in St. Paul, MN. Interested in pursuing a career as an artist, he studied at the Minneapolis School of Art for two years and then accepted a scholarship to the Academie Julien in Paris under the tutelage of Andrew L'Hote. He moved to New York in the 1920s, renting an apartment on East 10th Street. He is known to have been a prolific artist for The New Yorker magazine, generating 45 cover designs between 1927 and 1933. Said the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, he "has had several one man shows in New York and other cities, and has exhibited in many museums and group shows throughout the U.S., including the Chicago Art Institute and Whitney Museums. He also is represented in a number of public and private collections." Arts Magazine once said that he "obviously makes up his images from his own head, and they are just about as imaginative as they possibly could be." The Great Neck (NY) Tribune observed that his "merit is more than originality. These forms have compelling power, with erotic, surrealistic suggestions." In 1942, he was joined in marriage with Miriam Diehl ( ? - ? ), a school teacher. Two adopted children in this family were Gloria Haupt and Maricella "Mari" Haupt. They lived at Lake Peekskill, NY until 1948 when they relocated to a Mexican artist's community known as San Miguel de Allende. Sadly, Miriam passed away in the 1960s. The widowed Theodore and the girls moved to Hawaii in about 1969, and he often exhibited there at the Foundry Gallery. A later migration was to New York's Westbeth Artist's Community in Greenwich Village. He died in Indianapolis from heart disease on June 13, 1990. Today his artworks are preserved in the collections of the Museum of the City of New York, Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), Finch College Museum, New York University, University of Pennsylvania and University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Daughter Alma Cecelia Haupt (1893-1956) was born on March 19, 1893 in St. Paul, MN. She was a 1911 graduate of West High School in Minneapolis. She went on to earn a degree in 1919 from the University of Minnesota School of Nursing and furthered her post-graduate studies at Johns Hopkins. For three years, from about 1921 to 1924, she was superintendent of the Visiting Nurse Association. Then in September 1924, she began a position in Austria as director of public nursing. The Minneapolis Star Tribune said that in moving to Europe, "Miss Haupt's headquarters will be in Vienna, from which point she will supervise 100 public health nursing stations. The work is under the general direction of the Commonwealth fund of New York and is an outgrowth of the American Relief Administration organization." By 1931, she returned to the United States and settled in New York where her brother Theodore, an artist, was living. She is known to have attended her brother Samuel's wedding in Lincoln, NE in 1932. Alma devoted her career to nursing and was employed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company as director of nursing services. In 1948, she published the 26-page book Two Pioneers of the Haupt Family. Her final residence was in San Francisco. At the age of 62, she passed away on March 16, 1956. Burial was in Oakland Cemetery in her hometown of St. Paul. An obituary appeared in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. ~ Son Frank Spangler Haupt ~ Son Frank Spangler Haupt (1856-1914) was born on Dec. 3, 1856 at Chestnut Hill, PA. His birthday erroneously also has been given as June 1, 1859. He was an 1882 graduate of Harvard College, having taken an eight-year course, and excelling at hurdle-racing. He established himself in 1881 in St. Paul, MN. On June 25, 1885, in the home of her parents on Summit Avenue in St. Paul, Frank was joined in wedlock with Carol Nichols Dean (1861-1930), a St. Paul native and the daughter of pioneering railroad man William Blake Dean, considered a founder of St. Paul. Rev. David R. Breed presided, and the happy event was announced on the pages of the St. Paul Globe, which said "It was a quiet, family wedding, but extremely elegant. The bride, richly attired, stood with the groom, and Miss Lelia Dean and Mr. Frank Chapman before a massive bank of brilliant blooms during the ceremony, and fragrant flowers throughout the apartments." The known offspring of the couple were John Nichols Haupt, Dorothea Haupt, William Dean Haupt Sr., Herman Haupt and Frederic Chapman Haupt. Carol was an alumna of Wellesley College. The Haupts spent the first 10 years of their lives in Minnesota in the Albert Lea community. In 1883, Frank and his brother Edgar jointly opened a retail lumber company at 251 University Avenue, Haupt Lumber Company. A news article noted that it maintained three lumberyards in town, including one on the line of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railroad. "There are extensive sheds and buildings necessary to the business," said the Minneapolis Star Tribune. "The company deals in soft pine lumber of all grades, sash, doors, blinds, windows, shingles, lath, building paper and all material usually kept in stock in the business. The yards employ 10 men. Business is good and shows a very satisfactory increase over last year's trade." He and a number of others incorporated the Northwestern Building of St. Paul in 1888. In 1902, they relocated to Redlands, CA, operating an orange plantation there as of 1905. Their address in 1914 was on Terracina Avenue. Having become seriously ill, Frank pursued treatments at several sanatoriums, but without relief. So in the summer of 1914, he decided to take his own life. And on Aug. 16, 1914, during dinner at home with his wife and family, said the Los Angeles Times, he "left the table, went to his room upstairs, and shot himself through the heart with a shotgun. Death was instantaneous, and when the family, disturbed by the report, reached him a minute later, he had breathed his last." The body was shipped to St. Paul to sleep under the sod of Oakland Cemetery. A brief notice of his death was printed in the Boston Evening Transcript. Caroline outlived her husband by 16 years and lived at 461 West Avenue 56. Then in 1917, she endured the death of 13-year-old son John at California Hospital. The boy's remains were transported to St. Paul for interment. Carol remained in the Los Angeles area, moving to Highland Park, with a final address of 134 South Avenue. She held memberships in the Los Angeles Wellesley Club and Highland Park Presbyterian Church and widely known as a biblical scholar. Sadly, she passed away on Oct. 31, 1930. An obituary in the Redlands Daily Facts reported that she had been "a resident of Redlands for many years and owned the Jensen ranch on Terracina boulevard. She was active while here in the work of the Presbyterian church and her husband passed away while they lived here." The Highland Park News-Herald added that she had been a "resident of California for 28 years" with death occurring "after an illness of two years. She had been confined to her bed the last six months." His pastor, Rev. Earle Pierce Cochran, presided over the funeral. Son John Nichols Haupt ( ? -1917) died at the age of 13 on April 23, 1917 at California Hospital. A brief death notice in the Los Angeles Evening Express called him the "youngest son of Mrs. Carol Dean Haupt and the late Frank S. Haupt..." The body was shipped to St. Paul for burial. Daughter Dorothea Haupt (1897-1974) was born in 1897. She was a graduate of Occidental College. Dorothea lived with her mother in Highland Park, CA in 1920 and in Alhambra, CA in 1930. Circa 1935, she taught at the John Adams Junior High School in Highland Park. On July 30, 1935, in a ceremony in Reno, NV, Dorothea tied the knot with John W. Comfort ( ? - ? ). An announcement of the wedding, in the Highland Park News-Herald, said the groom "received his education in Minnesota." The Comforts were in Los Angeles as of 1939 and in New York in 1964, likely the town of Glen Head, Long Island. She was a longtime school teacher. Sadly, she passed away suddenly in San Diego on May 30, 1974. Burial was in Roslyn (NY) Cemetery in Nassau County. A brief death notice appeared in print in the San Francisco Examiner. Son William Dean Haupt ( ? -1964) was born on (?). He came to California in 1916. William lived in Eagle Rock, CA in 1939 and later put down roots in Alhambra, CA. He married and produced three children -- Barbara Wilson, William D. Haupt and Sidney B. Haupt. William was active in the community as a master of the South Pasadena lodge of the Masons, South Pasadena Commandery, South Pasadena Order of Eastren Star, Mark T. Lee Chapter of the Royal Arch Masons, and Al Mainikah Shrine Temple. Their home in the early 1960s was 5912 Monte Vista Street, Los Angeles. William died on Feb. 27, 1964, with an obituary appearing in the Los Angeles Times.
Son Herman Haupt Sr. ( ? -1939) was born in Albert Lee, MN. He relocated to California in his youth, and attended Redlands College and Occidental College. He made his dwelling-place in Hollywood, CA circa 1930. A newspaper once referred to him as a "clubman and investment broker." He wed Florence Koller ( ? - ? ). They dwelled at 747 North Orange Drive and were the parents of a son, Herman Haupt Jr. Herman Sr. was an elder of Immanuel Presbyterian Church and belonged to the Hollywood Kiwanis Club, Sons of the Revolution and the Royal Legion. Sadly, he passed into the arms of the angels on April 29, 1939 in Good Samaritan Hospital. Rev. Herbert Booth Smith preached the funeral sermon, held in the family church, with an obituary appearing in the Los Angeles Evening Citizen News. Burial was in Ontario, CA.
Son Frederic Chapman Haupt (1896-1968) was born on March 6, 1896 in Albert Lea Township near St. Paul, MN. The local Times-Enterprise announced the birth, saying "He has a lusty pair of lungs and tipped the scale at 9 pounds. May he live long and prosper." In the autumn of 1919, he was united in matrimony with Hollis Mae Nix ( ? - ? ), daughter of E.J. Nix of Tacoma, WA. One known daughter in this family was Jacquelin Pegg. They put down roots in Vista, San Diego County, CA by 1934, with him elected as a trustee of the Oceanside-Carlsbad Union High School District. He moved up to the District's presidency but resigned in January 1936. He operated some sort of orchard and in 1936 made news when installing an overhead irrigation system in his grove. He was a partner with John R. Pegg in the Vista Service Station and Pegg Bros at Vista, and when that dissolved in March 1940, he took over the entire business operation. Later, they lived in Eagle Rock near Los Angeles and in 1964 in San Diego. He died in 1968. The remains were lowered under the sod of El Camino Memorial Park, San Diego.
~ Son Rev. Alexander James Derbyshire Haupt ~
Alexander spent his boyhood in Cambridge, MA, in his parents' rambling, three-story house across the street from famed poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. When he was seven years of age, Alexander was enrolled in the Chestnut Hill public school near Philadelphia, PA. Then at age nine, the family moved to the city, and he continued his scholastic studies graduation from Philadelphia Central High School. On June 10, 1885, in nuptials conducted in Reading, Berks County, PA, Alexander at age 27 was united in matrimony with 23-year-old Ida Louise Boyer (Oct. 25, 1861-1951). Together, they produced seven children -- Margaret Cecilia Werner, Edith A. Bossart, John Boyer Haupt, Ida L. Haupt, George Edward Haupt, Henry Harpster Haupt and Rev. James Alexander Haupt. Alexander was a Lutheran Church pastor in St. Paul, MN and described as "a great lecturer who commands attention not only in religion as such but on the family life, eugenics." His credentials were published in Who's Who in America. He was profiled extensively in Rev. J.C. Jensson's book American Lutheran Biographies (Milwaukee, 1890).
From 1884 to 1907, he was pastor of the first Lutheran mission in St. Paul, MN. He then spent three years in Pittsburgh as superintendent of Luther Inner Mission. During that time, in 1907, he received a doctor of divinity degree from Pennsylvania College of Gettysburg in recognition of his accomplishments as a clergyman, social servant and inner mission worker. In 1910, he went to Albert Lea, MN to lead the Salem English Evangelical Lutheran Church. His career continued to evolve in 1914, when he accepted a position as social service director of the League of Protestant Women in St. Paul and in 1917 when tapped to be head of the church federation. Then in 1921, he was named executive secretary of the Home Protective Association of St. Paul, serving until a move to Grand Forks, becoming secretary of the Lutheran Colony of Mercy and special probation officer of the juvenile court. The Grand Forks Herald once reported that:
Alexander's final assignment was in 1927 to pastor the Zion Lutheran Church of Horicon, WI. There, he died in Sept. 1934 from the effects of double pneumonia. Funeral services were held in St. Paul. Ida Louise outlived her spouse by many years. In 1944, she suffered the tragic death of her daughter Margaret from burns in a freak accident. She died in 1951. Daughter Margaret Cecilia Haupt (1890-1944) was born on July 14, 1890 in St. Paul, MN and grew up in Albert Lea Township, MN. She became familiar with the work of Christian missionaries through her father's dear friendship with Rev. Horace G.B. Artman, who died in the field in India. Margaret was a 1907 graduate of Mechanic Arts High School and the Kindergarten College of Pittsburgh. She focused her life's work as a missionary, and in 1910 was "called by the general council board of foreign missions to take up work among the girls and women of India," said a newspaper. In September 1911, in company with Rev. and Mrs. E. Neudoerffer, Agatha Tatge, Rev. Frederick W. Schaeffer and Rev. Oscar Victor Carl Werner Sr., she sailed for India on the North German Lloyd passenger ship George Washington to begin "their future field of work at Rajahmundry, Madras Presidency," reported the Albert Lea Tribune. "The best wishes of many of our towns people go with this young missionary." At the time, Oscar was pastor of a church in Freeport, RI. A year later, in October 1912, she and Oscar were wed, possibly in Rajahmundry. Oscar was a native of Brooklyn, NY who had spent part of his childhood in Germany. He attended Wagner College, graduated from Philadelphia's Lutheran Theological Seminary, and obtained his bachelor of science from Columbia University. He was ordained in 1909 and served as pastor of a church in Freeport before receiving the call to venture overseas.
Daughter Edith A. Haupt (1888-1943) was born in May 1888 in Albert Lea Township near St. Paul, MN. At the age of about 27, on Nov. 4 1915, she was joined in marital union with Harold A. Bossart (1880-1974) of Pittsburgh. The ceremony took place in the home of Edith's parents, with her father leading the exchange of vows. News of the marriage was printed in the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Albert Lea Tribune, which said that "The wedding gown was fashioned on simple lines and the bodice was cut decollete and with short sleeves. The girdle was of white satin. Her long tulle veil was caught with a bandeau of silver, she carried a shower bouquet of bride's roses [and] wore a bracelet of sapphires set in platinum, a gift from the bridegroom." The newlyweds' first home was at 138 East Winifred Street. Their three known children were Margaret Elizabeth Spaniol, Theodore Herman Bossart and an unnamed infant son. The Bossarts made a dwelling-place in St. Paul at 856 Deppe Street. Grief cascaded over the family in 1924 when their son Theodore and unnamed infant both died. Sadly, Edith she died at the age of 55 in late December 1943. Her remains sleep for the ages in St. Paul's Oakland Cemetery. Harold outlived her by more than three decades and remained in their longtime residence. He passed away in mid-December 1974 at the age of 94.
Son John Boyer Haupt (1895-1961) was born in April 1895 in St. Paul. He was a World War I veteran. John dwelled in Minneapolis in 1944 and for 33 years in Edina, MN at 5209 Halifax Avenue South. He married Mabel ( ? - ? ). The two sons in this family were John Haupt and Charles Haupt. Sadly, at the age of 65, he died on Jan. 16, 1961. The remains were lowered into honored rest in Fort Snelling National Cemetery, with an obituary appearing in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Daughter Ida L. Haupt (1896- ? ) was born in March 1896. Nothing more is known. Son George Edward Haupt Sr. (1896-1965) was born on March 20, 1896 in St. Paul, MN. He studied at the University of Minnesota where he had two years of military infantry experience. At the age of 21, when registering for the military draft during World War I, he disclosed that he was living in St. Paul and employed as a chainman by the Northern Pacific Railway Company in Montana. Circa the fall of 1923, he wed Nebraska native Gladys Marie Larson (1900- ? ), daughter of Harry C. Larson. Their two sons were George Edward Haupt Jr. and Gary Haupt. They lived in Omaha, NE in the 1921-1926 timeframe. As of 1940-1942, George Sr. was employed as an organist by the Third Church of Christ Scientist, and had a home address of 2522 Foster Avenue. When the federal census enumeration was made in 1950, George was now working as secretary of the local YMCA. He is believed to have died in New Haven, CT on May 7, 1965.
Son Henry Harpster "Hiene" Haupt (1903-1970) was born in 1903 in St. Paul, MN. His wife was Katharine Rose "Kay" Magers (1913-1986). She brought a stepson to the union, Dudley Mudge Ryan. The couple's two children of their own were James B. Haupt and Barbara Nacol. As of 1944, their home was in Minneapolis -- later in Kenworth near Chicago -- and in 1958 relocated to Arizona. He was a longtime director and Chicago branch office of the advertising giant Batten, Barton, Durstine and Osborn (BBDO). He also was a director of the First National Bank of Arizona and held memberships in the Arizona State University Foundation and Paradise Valley Country Club. He died in Scottsdale, AZ at the age of 66 on Sept. 4, 1970. Burial was in Scottsdale's Green Acres Memorial Park, with an obituary appearing in the Arizona Republic. Son James moved to Seattle -- son Dudley to White Bear Lake, MN -- and Barbara married (?) Nacol and settled in Blytheville, AR.
Son James Alexander "Jimmie" Haupt (1891-1970) was born in 1891 in St. Paul. Showing an early aptitude for vocal and instrumental music, he sang alto in a boy's choir at age 11 and studied organ and piano. He moved to New York City in young manhood where, from 1924 to 1957, he was "a pioneer announcer for Graham McNamee, one of the early leaders in the field of radio," said the Orlando (FL) Sentinel. "He was conductor of the NBC Concert Hour and Oratorio Society. He was also production director of the American Album of Familiar Music and General Motors Symphony with Arturo Toscanini conducting." He had an excellent tenor voice and at one point was a soloist for churches in Birmingham, AL and was founder of the city's University Glee Club. James first was united in matrimony in 1921 with Chicago native Eleanor Gage (Aug. 22, 1901-1930). They bore two children together -- Shirley Jean Picerno and Norman J. Haupt. James and Eleanor may have separated or divorced as she was living in Maywood, IL at the time of her untimely death on Feb. 22, 1930. Later, he tied the knot with Ruth ( ? - ? ). By 1957, him having left or retired from NBC, they made a homeplace in Ormond Beach near Daytona, FL. The angel of death spirited him away in Ormond on Dec. 6, 1970. The remains were shipped to Maryland for burial in Suitland's Cedar Hill Cemetery.
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