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He was a veteran of the Civil War. John learned his father's trade as a potter. In young manhood he pushed further west and settled near Lafayette, Tippecanoe County, IN, where he farmed and continued his pottery work, likely in collaboration with his brother Cyrus. In 1860, he and his mother resided together in Rainsville, Warren County, IN, with his occupation marked "Potter." On May 1, 1862, when he was 24 years of age, he was united in holy matrimony with Marietta Victoria King ( ? -1906), a native of Saratoga, NY. At the time, the bride was a teacher in the Battle Ground Seminary north of Lafayette. The seven children of this union included William Ellsworth Younkin, Clarence Lincoln Younkin, Jennie Deitz Younkin, Samuel DeWitt Younkin, John King Younkin, Charles Franklin Younkin and Marietta "Adora" Yeck. During the Civil War, on May 10, 1864, John joined the Union Army and was placed within the 135th Indiana Infantry, Company E. He served for a term of 100 days and received his discharge on Sept. 29, 1864. He mustered out of the army in Indianapolis.
The community of "Battle Ground" where they resided was named to commemorate the 1811 Battle of Tippecanoe, in which Indiana forces under the command of Indiana Territory Gov. William Henry Harrison defeated Native American warriors led by Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa. The federal census enumeration of 1870 shows the Younkins in Tippecanoe County, with a post office of Chauncey, and near a historic battlefield. At that time, John continued his trade as a potter. John at the end of 1879 applied for a military pension as compensation for his wartime injuries. It was approved, and he received a monthly government check for the rest of his long life. [Invalid App. No. 333.429 - Cert. No. 263.251] Before the children were grown, wrote J.K. Younkin, "they moved to Nebraska, 1881 -- then afterward to Kansas." On April 29, 1890, at the Wakeeny Land Office, John is known to have been issued a tract of 160 acres in the southeast quarter of Section 15, Township 17 South, Range 20 West in Rush County. His land-grant certificate was signed by President Benjamin Harrison. Their first homeplace in Kansas was at McCracken, KS. He and his son Clarence, a young carpenter and stone mason, are believed to have helped build out the towns of McCracken and LaCrosse, KS. John joined the local Rush Post of the Grand Army of the Republic, a veterans organization. Then in 1892, after about a decade, they moved to a near Great Bend, with their residence northwest of the town. Sadly, Marietta suffered a paralytic stroke in February 1906 and lingered for several weeks. Death finally spirited her away on March 6, 1906. An obituary was published in the Great Bend Weekly Tribune, which said "She lacked but a month of being 67... Mrs. Younkin was a devout christian and a member of the M.E. church. She took a great deal of interest in church work, was a power for good in the community and she will be missed by old and young. The sympathy of the entire community is extended to the bereaved family." Funeral services were conducted in the family church.
The widowed John only remained alone for just under nine months. On Dec. 1, 1906, he wed Charity M. (Smith) Henderson Howard (1842-1923) of Cissna Park, IL. The ceremony was held at the parsonage of the Methodist Episcopal Church, by the hand of Rev. D.T. Summerville. The marriage was reported in the Great Bend Daily Item. She had been married twice before and was the mother of six. How the pair met is not yet known. John generated income in 1910 as caretaker for a local cemetery, and living in their household that year was Charity's 16-year-old grandson Ernest Howard. In October 1919, at John's 82nd birthday, his children and relatives gathered at his home near Great Bend, with some traveling from as farm away as LaGrande, OR. Said the Great Bend Tribune, "An elegant dinner was prepared, photos taken and auto rides over the city. All retired late in the evening having enjoyed the occasion. His daughter, Mrs. Yeck from Oregon was formerly a Barton county school teacher and had not been home for twelve years."
Second wife Charity passed away on Nov. 5, 1923 after 17 years of marriage. U.S. Census records for 1930 show John, age 92, residing in Great Bend with his widowed daughter Jennie Riley and 22-year-old grandson Willis Younkin. John was cleaved away by the grim reaper of death in Great Bend on Oct. 26, 1932. His remains were lowered into the sacred soil of Great Bend Cemetery. ~ Son William Ellsworth Younkin ~
When he was 24 years of age, on Nov. 13, 1887, he was joined in wedlock with Mary Jane "Jennie" Honderick (Aug. 4, 1863-1956), a native of West Point, Lee County, IA. The ceremony was held in Pleasantdale, Rush County, KS, by the hand of F.F. Bernstorf. Nine children of this coupling were Clara Rae Younkin, Florence Edna Younkin, Ralph Edison Younkin, Donald John Younkin, Harold Younkin, William Jennings Bryan Younkin, Marietta E. "Marie" Younkin, Charles W. Younkin and Willis Honderick Younkin. The family was plunged into grief when son Harold died in infancy in July 1895 in LaCross, KS and again in 1910 at the death of nine-year-old Marietta. The girl's remains are known to sleep for the ages in Wild Mead Cemetery in Nickerson. Their home in 1906 was in Galatia, KS. William earned a living over the years as a farmer and public education official. He passed away in Miami, FL at the age of 67 on Nov. 1, 1930. The remains were shipped back to Kansas to sleep in the soil of LaCross Cemetery.
Jennie lived on for another 26 years. She relocated to Kansas City in about 1940 and then in 1954 moved into the home of her married daughter Clara Rae Cummings at 4330 Brooklyn. She held a membership in the Northeast Presbyterian Church. After what the Kansas City Star called "a brief illness," death took her away in Kansas City on Jan. 4, 1956.
Daughter Florence Edna Younkin (1890-1942) was born on July 30, 1890. She was an alumna of Reno County High School and for several years taught in the Kansas rural schools. At the age of 29, on June 25, 1920, she was joined in the holy bonds of marriage with John August Hahn ( ? -1975). The wedding ceremony was conducted in her parents' residence in Nickerson, KS, by the hand of Rev. D.M. Yetter. In announcing the happy event, the Nickerson Argosy said that the "bride was beautifuly [sic] gowned in white organdy and carried a bouquet of pink roses. Only a few intimate relatives and friends were present. After the ceremony a dainty luncheon was served." The article added that John was "a prosperous farmer of the western part of the state" and that the newlyweds would first reside near Dodge City. A trio of daughters was produced by the couple -- Florence Widener, Ada Mae "Amy" Frye and Dorothy Balentine. Sadly, Florence died in Ellinwood, KS on June 28, 1942 at the age of 51. The widowed John appers to have remained in Ellinwood for the balance of his years. After what the Great Bend Tribune called "a long illness," he died in Hamilton County Hospital in Syracuse, KS at the age of 86 on May 5, 1975. He was survived by eight grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held in the Immanuel United Church of Christ, led by Rev. L. James Koch, with interment following in Lakin-Comanche District Cemetery. Daughter Florence Hahn married Derrill Widener and in 1975 was in Bristol, CO -- daughter Ada Mae "Amy" (1925-2008) wed Richard C. Frye and moved to Columbus, OH -- and daughter Dorothy tied the knot with G.A. Balentine and settled in Avondale, CO. Son Ralph Edison Younkin Sr. (1893-1970) was born in 1893 in McCracken, KS. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War I. In 1922, he moved to Kansas City, MO. He taught school in young manhood and later switched careers to be an installer for Western Electric Company. Ralph held a membership and served as an elder in the South Presbyterian Church. He also belonged the local Marlborough lodge of the Masons, Order of Eastern Star, Marlborough Golden Age Club and 20th Ward Republican Club and was an advisor to True Kindred. Ralph first was joined in wedlock with Florence Abbott (1891-1996), daughter of Rilla Abbott. Their five children were Rilla Jane Lonsbrough, Patricia Ann Schorr and Margaret Abbot Chiles, Dr. Ralph Edison Younkin Jr. and Betty Lee Younkin. The marriage dissolved in divorce. Ralph married again in 1954, at age 60, to Dasie Belle (Harding) McMillen ( ? - ? ). Their address in Kansas City in 1956-1970 was 1426 East 77th Street. He made a living as a painting contractor. Sadly, as a patient in Baptist Memorial Hospital, suffering from chronic lymphatic leukemia, he died at age 77 on May 24, 1970. The Kansas City Times published an obituary, in which the family asked that any memorial gifts be made to the family church. Interment was under the sod of Mount Moriah Cemetery. Former wife Florence lived in Springfield, MO in 1964 and eventually moved to Granada Hills, CA over the ensuing years. Her mother having died at age 109 in 1964, Florence reached her own 100th birthday in 1991. Death enveloped her at age 105 on Nov. 10, 1996. An obituary in the Springfield (MO) News-Leader said that she "will be remembered for her loving deeds and kind concern for family and many friends in Kansas City, Springfield, and California." Her remains were returned to Missouri for burial in Robberson Prairie Cemetery, with a memorial service held in the First Baptist Church of Reseda, CA.
Son William Jennings Bryan Younkin (1897-1978) was born on Aug. 22, 1897 in Otis, KS. He was named for the famed three-time presidential candidate who was a champion of the common people. In 1927, in Cincinnati, OH, the 29-year-old William wed Marie E. Leslie (1895-1968), daughter of James W. and Molly (Turner) Leslie of Huntington, WV. The pair did not reproduce and remained together through the ups and downs of more than four decades. Their home address was at 327 Lincoln Avenue in Beach City near Dover, OH. For many years, he was employed as superintendent of Beach City Light & Water Company. On the fateful day of Sept. 27, 1944, he received "back and head injuries sustained ... when a power pole on which he was working broke and fell on him," reported the Massillon Evening Independent. "Younkin was strapped to the pole when it broke, causing him to fall about 20 feet. As he fell a crossbar of the pole struck him on the head." In 1962, William was honored by his employer with a dinner in the Legion Home for 25 years of service, Marie died in Massillon City Hospital at age 73 on July 24, 1968. Her obituary was printed in the Dover Daily Reporter, which said "she was a resident here 36 years. She was a member of the United Methodist Church, Pythian Sisters and Daughters of America." Her funeral was held at the Second Street United Methodist Church, led by her pastor, Rev. Dean Roush. He lived for another decade in the town of Navarre, OH. William passed away at the age of 80 on Feb. 2, 1978. They sleep at each other's side in South Lawn Cemetery in Beach City, Stark County. Son Charles W. Younkin (1903-1999) was born on Aug. 7, 1903. He married Virgie Tucker ( ? -1988), originally from Fort Lauderdale, FL. Their only child was Charlene Ambrose. They made their dwelling-place in the 1950s in Miami and circa 1957 moved to Lake Placid, FL, putting down roots for good. As of 1964, their home address was on Lake June Road. Virgie was a member of the First Baptist Church of Lake Placid and the local chapter of the Order of Eastern Star. Sadly, at the age of 81, Virgie died on June 26, 1988. An obituary was printed in the Tampa Tribune. Charles survived his bride by 11 years. In 1993, he and his brother Willis traveled to Somerset County, PA to attend the Younkin Reunion-East. He passed away into the arms of the heavenly host on Dec. 29, 1999. Daughter Charlene married R.N. Ambrose and relocated to Richmond, VA.
~ Son Clarence Lincoln Younkin ~
He moved in boyhood to West Lafayette where he attended school. Still in his youth, he accompanied his parents to Nebraska and in 1882 joined them in another relocation to Kansas. There, he endured "many hardships in pioneer life," said the Younkin Family News Bulletin. "Learning the carpenter and stone mason's trade, [he] helped build McCracken and LaCrosse..." In Rush County, KS, on July 29, 1886, the 21-year-old Clarence tied the knot with Emma A. Parr (1870- ? ). The ceremony was conducted by Rev. D.W. Nay at the residence of E.T. Parr in Hampton. Together they became the parents of seven -- Arletta M. Younkin, Vivian M. Younkin and Jessie D. Younkin plus four who died young. The Younkins dwelled in Topeka in 1906 and were members of the Christian Church. In Topeka, he was employed in the shops of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, and eventually was promoted to foreman of its bridge and carpenters department. His and Emma's marriage appears to have ended in separation or divorce. Clarence pulled up stakes again and migrated to California and thence in 1916 to Miami, FL. He married again to Bessie ( ? - ? ).
He was a writer of long letters. In one missive to his brother Charles in the late 1930s, from Miami, Clarence wrote the following snippets:
Clarence elaborated on the reunion dispute in a letter to his brother, saying it was Charley's lady friend-cousin Luella Shepard who was the cause. He wrote that "I did not like her. Well at the picnic this Luella represented or the sponsor also acted as Preacher & curses like a pirate at Charlie's. She should be so prominent as to take up valuable time with her prayers & songs. Then I was sitting down in 3rd row & as people began to leave she or Frank invited me on platform & told me I could only have 2 or 3 minutes..." He added that his main trouble with Charley was that he only gave $2.50 to the reunion fund, "all I had to spare at that time." But the 1939 visit to Kingwood had a positive effect in Clarence's understanding of their ancient family history connections.
The original of this letter is preserved today in the Minerd.com Archives. His final dwelling-place was at 1726 Northwest Ninth Avenue, with a membership in the First Presbyterian Church. Clarence passed away in Miami, FL at the age of 75 on April 30, 1941. Burial was in Graceland Memorial Park. His obituary was published with his photo in the very last edition of the YFNB (June 30, 1941). Daughter Arletta M. "Arlie" Younkin (1896-1975) was born in about 1896 in Topeka, KS. She tied the knot with Clarence L. Finegan ( ? -1943), an Ohio native and the son of George Finegan. Together they produced a daughter, Ida Mae Thomas. She relocated from Kansas to the Los Angeles area in about 1922 and stayed for good, a span of 53 years. Their longtime address was 10118½ Alexander Avenue in South Gate, CA. Clarence belonged to the Zion lodge of the Masons in Detroit, while Arlie held memberships in the Emanuel Shrine 15, Rising Light chapters of White Shrine and Order of Eastern Star. While at home on the fateful day of June 20, 1943, the 53-year-old Clarence passed away. Rev. F.L. Bennetts led the funeral rites, with an obituary appearing in the South Gate Press. Arlie outlived him by more than three decades. Sadly, at the age of 79, she died in a South Gate hospital on Jan. 12, 1975. Her obituary was printed in the Press. Jointly officiating her funeral were Rev. Stan Crews and members of the Emanuel Shrine 15. The remains were placed into eternal repose in Inglewood Park Cemetery. Daughter Ida Mae was a 1948 graduate of South Gate High School. She attended Los Angeles City College, with plans to major in education, but "gave it up in favor of modeling for Haggerty's in Downtown Los Angeles," reported the South Gate Daily Press-Tribune. She married Jim Thomas of Long Beach and lived in La Crescenta, CA in 1975. Daughter Vivian Marie Younkin (1898-1984) was born on March 4, 1898 in Topeka, KS. (She later claimed her birth year was 1901.) Circa 1923, in Huntington Beach, CA, she won a bathing beauty contest. Later that year, she relocated to Miami to live with her father and stepmother, and was pictured in a related article in the Miami Herald. She was first married (?) Wilson ( ? - ? ). In 1929, at the age of 31, she was joined in wedlock with real estate operator Victor "Earl" Irons (Jan. 23, 1895-1993), a native of Kingwood, WV. Earl was a 1919 graduate of Yale University who also studied at West Virginia University. A profile of Earl in the Miami Tribune in 1925, which included a pen and ink portrait, said that:
They dwelled at 1045 Northeast 133rd Street in Miami in 1930. The second marriage was troubled, and the pair separated by 1933, with Earl moving back to Boston and Vivian staying in Miami. She made national news when she traveled to Boston to see her husband and then went missing right after Christmas 1933. Earl told police that he "had not seen his wife since she left a Boston hotel saying she was going to drive to New Bedford to visit friends." She was found the next day, said the Miami Herald, when she was "found in the room of Miss Iona Alexander, a nurse, and expressed surprise that her husband had reported her as missing. She said she had motored to New Bedford from Boston on December 26 to visit Miss Alexander and had become sick and decided to stay with the nurse." The paiir divorced in 1938 in Dade County Court. Vivian remained in Miami and in 1940 earned a living as a head waitress in a restaurant and took on a co-worker as a roomer. She also worked in real estate sales at that time. In 1947 she made news in the gossip columns of a California newspaper when driving from Miami to South Gate, CA to visit her sister Arlie Finegan. She eventually relocated to South Gate where she appears to have lived the balance of her life. Vivian died in Los Angeles on June 24, 1984. Daughter Jessie Dietz Younkin (1900-1987) was born on June 17, 1900 or 1902 in Topeka, KS. After the breakup of her parents' marriage, she made her way to Colorado as a teenager. There, in Pueblo, the 17-year-old Jessie tied the marital cord with 19-year-old Harry J. Miller (1898- ? ). They exchanged their marital vows on May 1, 1917, before justice of the peace Cornelius J. Hart. Two known daughters were Vivian Ethel Miller and Marjorie Jane Miller, both born in Colorado. The couple divorced by 1930. Jessie and the girls moved into the household of Marvin M. Craig where she worked as a housekeeper. In time she wed Marvin (1885-1963), a Kentucky native who was a water company salesman in Los Angeles. The Craigs moved by 1935 to Tiptonville, Lake County, TN, sharing a home with Marvin's aged father, and Marvin working as manager of a cafe. Then in 1950, they were in South Los Angeles, with him continuing as sales agent for a bottled water company. As a widow, her home in 1975 was in Whittier, CA. She died in Los Angeles County on May 22, 1987. ~ Jenny Deitz (Younkin) Riley ~
She moved to Kansas at age 16 with her parents, first settling in McCracken, Rush County. When she was 20 years of age, on Jan. 26, 1888, she entered into marriage with Solomon Harris Riley (1866-1924). The happy event was held in McCracken, Rush County, KS, officiated by Rev. C.H. Gramby. Three known sons of this union were John Earl Riley, L. Roy Riley and Ivan Harris Riley. Solomon had moved from Illinois to Wichita at age 18, circa 1884, and then returned to Illinois after a year. Two years later, circa 1887, he came back to Kansas and settled in Sumner County, teaching school for several years. Then following marriage, the family again pulled up stakes and moved to Illinois, and in 1890 came to Kansas once more and settled in Portland, KS in 1890. Said the Wichita Eagle, "During this time he became known all over the state as a foot racer. Although he weighed more than 200 pounds and was never officially timed, 'old timers' say he has run the 100 yard dash in 10 seconds at various fairs, community picnics and other gatherings." A tornado in Wellington destroyed their home and virtually all of their belongings, but no one was hurt. Circa September 1893, the family made plans to move to the newly opening Oklahoma Territory, and Solomon took part in the "run" to claim a tract of land near Salt Fork. Said the Wichita Beacon, "He got hold of 160 acres, but when he went to file he discovered he was ineligible for the land. He owned 160 acres in Kansas. 'He came back laughing about it,' Mrs. Riley recalls. 'He said there was a Sooner on the land, so he turned it over to him." Jenny once walked across town to listen to a speech by Populist candidate William Jennings Bryan, who thrice ran unsuccessfully the U.S. presidency in 1896, 1900 and 1908. Many years later, she couldn't recall a word that he had said. The family survived another disaster on March 31, 1898, when a tornado blew down their house near South Haven, KS. Then in 1903, floodwaters from Chisholm Creek "lapped at the Riley doorstep" on their block of East Douglas Street, said the Wichita Beacon. Circa 1904, they settled on a farm near Kechi, north of Wichita. As of 1906, the Rileys dwelled in nearby Valley Center, KS. Jenny kept as a souvenir a fragment of glass from a framed "near nude" picture that had jung above the bar in a local saloon that temperance activist Carrie Nation shattered on one of her crusades. Said the Beacon, "Mrs. Riley hastily explains that she wasn't in the saloon when Carrie came, and she didn't follow Carrie there. She was at home where a homemaker should be," and the shard was brought home by one of their sons. There is evidence to suggest that the couple separated, as neither was named in the other's newspaper obituaries. A final move for Solomon was to Wichita in 1907, with him earning a living in the restaurant and real estate businesses and operating a hotel at 227 West Douglas Avenue. Grief blanketed the family when Solomon died in a Wichita hospital on Oct. 7, 1924. An obituary in the Eagle called him a "pioneer farmer of southern Kansas and Wichita" and said that in his last "few days of his life he spent clipping accounts of the records [son] Ivan had made in Europe and at other track meets from newspapers." Burial was in the Old Mission Cemetery. The widowed Jenny in 1930 lived with her elderly father and 22-year-old nephew Willis in Great Bend. Then in about 1936, she was in Los Angeles at the start of the year and in Wichita by the end. She held a membership in St. Paul's Methodist Church. Her final address was 115½ West 10th Street, Wichita. At her 82nd birthday, she was pictured and featured in a Beacon article headlined "82-year-old Wichitan Recalls Stirring Events in This State." On the fateful day on Nov. 20, 1951, Jenny went shopping in Wichita and stopped for lunch in a department store. As she was eating, she suffered a massive heart attack and died. The remains were laid to rest in Old Mission Cemetery in Wichita. An obituary in the Eagle said she was survived by her two sons and brother John K. Younkin. Son John Earl "J.E." Riley (1892-1973) was born on Jan. 22, 1892 in Portland, Sumner County, KS. On June 29, 1913, when he was age 21, and she 18, he was united in matrimony with Enid Eva Watkins (May 8, 1895-1990). Two children born into this family were Lewis Riley and Onah Margaret Steele. They dwelled in Clay Center, KS circa 1920, where he was manager of the Williamson Milling Company. In 1924, his home was in Sapulpa, OK. John lived in Wichita in 1951 at the address of 1515 or 1550 North Emporia, operating a dairy supply store. Their final address together was 1550 North Emporia. He died in Wichita at the age of 81 on April 2, 1973. Burial was in the city's Old Mission Cemetery, with Rev. Louis Gant leading the funeral service. A brief funeral notice was printed in the Wichita Beacon. Son Leroy Anderson "Roy" Riley (1888-1967) was born in 1888. He made a home in Los Angeles in 1924. He relocated to San Antonio, TX in about 1940 and spent the remaining 26 years of his life there. Leroy was employed by the U.S. Defense Department as an accountant at Kelly Field, later renamed Kelly Air Force Base. He eventually retired from the position. Leroy was joined in wedlock with Ila W. Guy (1901-1989). She brought a stepson to the union, Talmage M. Guy. They dwelled at 307 East Mistletoe in the mid-1960s and belonged to the Trinity Baptist Church. Leroy passed away at the age of 78 on Oct. 1, 1967. Rev. R.F. Wideman presided over the funeral rites, and burial was under the sod of Sunset Memorial Park. The San Antonio Express-News ran an obituary. The widowed Ila survived for another 22 years. The spirit of death whisked her away in 1989.
Son Ivan Harris Riley (1900-1943) was born on New Year's Eve 1900 in Wichita. He was a graduate of Newton High School, where he starred in track and field. He then enrolled at Kansas State Agricultural College where he ran in competition in the Missouri Valley Conference. In 1923, still at Kansas State, he joined the Illinois Athletic Club so that he might be eligible to compete in the U.S. Olympics. While in pre-Olympics competition Aug. 25, 1923, in Detroit, he set a record in the 440 yard intermediate hurdles and third place in the 120-yard high hurdles, and then broke his own record in the 440 on Sept. 1, at the Chicago National Amateur meet. Said the Wichita Beacon, "There was no hurdler in that part of the country to compare with him, so he ran against time." He qualified for the Olympics at a meet in September 1923 at Yankee Stadium in New York, where he took first in the 440-meter low hurdle and second in the 220 meter high hurdle. Reporting on his accomplishment, the Clay Center Times said "Riley is rated as one of the six greatest hurdlers of this country." Then in the spring of 1924, he captured first in the 400-meter hurdles in the Classic Penn Relays in Philadelphia. The 1924 Summer Olympics officially opened in Paris on July 5, 1924. One of Ivan's teammates was Johnny Weissmuller, who captured three gold medals in swimming and a bronze in water polo and reached greater fame in the movies portraying Tarzan. Among his competitors were British runners Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell, whose story was portrayed in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire. The Boston Globe pictured Ivan in a profile in late May 1924, saying:
In his 400-meter hurdle race in Olympic Stadium in Colombes, on July 6, 1924, Ivan took a bronze medal, finishing behind teammate F. Morgan Taylor of Grinnell College and Filen of Finland. Reported the Associated Press, "the huge stands were sparsely occupied. Upon returning home Ivan completed his degree at Kansas State. But that fall, in October, he endured the death of his father. Ivan became an architect immediately after college and in late October 1924 was employed in Chicago by Schmidt, Garden and Martin, a firm specializing in hospital designs. He continued to enter races on the side. Ivan was joined in wedlock with Geneva Hollis ( ? - ? ). They were the parents of Ivan Harris Riley Jr. later settled in Harlingen, TX. In 1933, he was the architect in charge of design and construction of the State of Texas' exhibit at the Chicago World's Fair. Then in 1943, he served as secretary-treasurer of the building contractor Hawley-Riley Inc. and supervised construction of emergency housing for the government in Stamford, TX. Ivan died at the age of 42 on Oct. 28, 1943. Interment was in Sunset Memorial Park in San Antonio.
~ Son Samuel DeWitt Younkin ~ Son Samuel DeWitt Younkin (1869-1936) was born on Nov. 6, 1869 in Lafayette, IN. On Dec. 10, 1889, in Topeka, he was joined in the bonds of marriage with 18-year-old Ida Anna Spencer (1874-1905). News of their marriage license was published in the Topeka Daily Capital. Together they became the parents of four daughters -- Mae Adora Younkin, Ada Carol Younkin, Edith Olive Younkin and Ethel Maud Younkin. Samuel in 1897 served as secretary of the Topeka post of the Salvation Army. In a letter to the editor of the American Bimetallist, printed Feb. 5, 1897, he wrote that "In a recent copy of your paper I find where some ignorant peerson has made a great blunder in his judgment. As an American Citizen I have adopted in my Platform three (3) things. First Loyal to my God, 2nd Loyal to my Country, 3rd Loyal to my home or family. As a son of a Veteran, and a Soldier for Jesus Christ, I have been taught to love the stars and stripes, and regard them as an emblem of Liberty, and what I may pen in these few words I believe I speak the sentiments of 68 as Loyal and as brave a people as ever went forth to war, in days gone by, namely The Salvation Army in this city. Having been a member in this city alone for 8 years I know where of I speak." At Christmas 1897, the family is known to have traveled to Great Bend to celebrate the holiday with his family. But despite his high-sounding self-image, Samuel led a double life in Topeka and was married to two women at the same time. Reported the March 27, 1899 edition of the Topeka Daily Capital:
From that time on, said a newspaper, she was "left to care for herself and four small children." She joined the Protected Home Circle, a fraternal life insurance company. She also sued for divorce in September 1904 in the District Court of Shawnee County. Grief cascaded over the family when Ida died on March 15, 1905. Added the news story, "The ladies of the lodge cared for her and her children for some time before her death and a large number of them attended the funeral which was conducted by the lodge." Her remains were laid to rest in the city's Topeka Cemetery. As of 1905, Samuel lived in Kiowa. Still smitten with Virgie, otherwise known as "Virginia Bell Davis" (1877- ? ), the pair were wed on May 9, 1905. The nuptials were conducted by the hand of Probate Judge Gleason, in his offices in Medicine Lodge, with Deputy Treasurer Warren attending as a witness, "to see that the ceremony was performed with befitting dignity," said the Barbour County Index. Five children of the pair were Mary "Virginia" Brown Hilliard, Samuel Jerome Younkin, Charles Franklin Younkin, Kenneth Davis Younkin and Maxine Delores Ellis. They lived in Topeka, KS in the early-to-mid-1910s, at 306 Van Buren Street. But the second marriage was troubled, and in May 1915 Virginia brought a legal claim against him on charges that he "abused her on numerous occasions," said the Topeka State Journal. "One night, she recites, Younkin drove her from their home. Clad only in her night clothes, the woman says she ran barefooted to the home of a neighbor, where she sought shelter. The wife says Younkin is a persistent user of morphine..." They apparently reconciled, with two more children born after the dispute. In time, the family settled in Great Bend. For reasons that may only been inferred, Samuel chose not to attend his father's well-publicized 85th birthday party in 1922. Sadly, the couple died less than a month from each other. He passed first, suddenly in Topeka, on April 23, 1936. Daughter Mary Virginia and son Kenneth of Nevada City traveled to attend funeral services. Said the Pomona (CA) Progress-Bulletin, "Mr. Younkin, who had planned to visit his children here within a few weeks, apparently was in good health, and his death was entirely unexpected." Virginia Bell followed him into eternity on May 16, 1936, at the age of 59. Burial was in topeka Memorial Park Daughter Mae Adora Younkin (1892-1989) was born on April 27, 1892 in McCracken, KS. At the age of 18, about 1910, she entered into marriage with 22-year-old Nelson Clay Boyd (Aug. 14, 1890-1946), a native of Clay Center, NE. Nine children borne of this family were Mitchel Nelson Forest Boyd, Charles William Spencer Boyd, George Russell Thurston Boyd, Frederick Jacob Boyd, Harrison Lee Boyd, Donald L. Boyd, Emma Jean May Boyd, Robert Earl Clay Boyd and Arthur Lewis Samuel Boyd. Sadly, their son Charles passed away in 1917 at about age two and daughter Emma Jean died in 1934 at about year years of age. When Nelson was required to register for the military draft during World War I, they lived in LaJunta, CO, and he worked as a window, house and carpet cleaner at the county jail. The federal census enumeration of 1920 places the family in Topeka, with Nelson working as a packer in a flour mill. During the decade of the 1920s, the Boyds pulled up stakes and relocated to San Diego, CA. There, in 1930, Nelson generated income as a sign painter. As of 1936, the Boyds were in Pomona, CA, at the address of 1093 North Gordon Street. Nelson continued in the trade of painting contracting into 1940, working with his teenage sons Frederick and Harrison. Their address in the mid-1940s was 142 Oberg Street, San Dimas, CA. The family belonged to Trinity Methodist Church of Pomona. At the age of 55, Nelson died in Pomona on July 5, 1946 after a weeklong illness. Rev. Frank Butterworth preached the funeral sermon. An obituary in the Pomona Progress-Bulletin said he "came to California 29 years ago from Wichita, Kans., and five years ago moved to San Dimas. He was well known thruout this vicinity, having been one of the owners of A.B.C. Paint company." Mae Adora survived him by more than four decades. She died in San Luis Obispo, CA on Sept. 30, 1989. Her remains sleep for all time in Pomona Valley Memorial Park. Daughter Ada Carol Younkin (1895-1995) was born on Christmas Day 1893 or 1894. She grew up in Topeka. Ada in April 1913 entered into marriage with Norris J. McCall ( ? - ? ). Their known children were Manford Leroy McCall, Betty J. McCall, Opal Mae Mongold, Margaret Simon, Keith McCall and Lawrence McCall. The McCalls resided in McLouth, KS and then in about 1931, during the Great Depression, relocated to Meriden, KS. They held a membership in the Meriden United Methodist Church. Ada celebrated her 100th birthday in 1994. Sadly, she died just 23 days later, on Jan. 17, 1995. Her remains were lowered under the sod of Meriden Cemetery, with Rev. Lawrence R. Fry leading the funeral rites. An obituary was printed in the Oskaloosa Independent and numbered the headcount of her survivors as seven grandchildren, 19 great-grandchildren and seven great-great grandchildren. On her grave marker are the words "In God we trust." Daughter Edith Olive Younkin (1895-1969) was born on Nov. 2, 1895. She tied the marital cord with Heber Dean Jennings (Jan. 24, 1893-1972), originally from Perry, KS and the son of Walter W. Jennings. Their known offspring were Walter D. Jennings, Edward H. Jennings, Riley W. Jennings, Tracy M. Jennings, Beulah Marker and Edith Louise Bailey. Heber at age eight had been badly burned in an explosion of an air-tight heating stove, but survived. They moved to Bonner Springs, KS in 1947 and stayed for good. Heber was a longtime truck driver for Lone Star Industries. The family belonged to the local Christian Church. Death swept her away at age 72, in Bonner Springs, in Sept. 1969. Burial was in Oak Ridge Cemetery in Perry, KS. Heber endured for another three years. He was stricken by a heart attack and died at home on May 3, 1972. He was survived by 21 grandchildren and 30 great-grandchildren. An obituary in the Valley Falls (KS) Vindicator said he had "spent most of his life in Perry and Bonner Springs." Daughter Ethel Maud Younkin (1899-2003) was born on Feb. 9, 1899 in Topeka. On May 25, 1918, she first tied the marital cord with Asa Martin Smith (1896-1977). The marriage ended in divorce. She and her married sister and brother-in-law, Mae and Nelson Boyd, traveled together to Arizona in 1929. It's said that their car broke down in Tucson, and that Ethel had to find a job to help pay for the repairs. When the Boyds continued their trip to California, Ethel stayed in Tucson. Then on Christmas Eve 1938, in Tucson, she wed a second time to Elbert Giles "Al" Grantham (1904-1977). The couple put down roots in Tucson and produced a family of three -- Bonnie Ruth Favro, Marlyn Kay Glenn and Alan Giles Grantham. The Granthams moved in 1943 to Williams, AZ, where they ranched and their children could attend a good school. Said an obituary, Ethel Maud "loved ranching and gardening, and kept the yard at the ranch blooming with beautiful lilacs, hollyhocks and lilies. Her hard work in the vegetable garden during the summer months was enough to sustain her family through winters after canning much of the food." Sadly, Al passed into eternity in 1977 from the effects of cancer. Burial was in Mountain View Cemetery in Williams. Ethel lived on by 24 years, with their son Alan taking over the ranch. She reached her 100th birthday in 1999, and lived for another four years. She was gathered away by the legion of angels at age 104 on March 1, 2003. Daughter Mary "Virginia" Younkin (1901-1983) was born on June 24, 1901 in Hutchinson near Topeka, KS. She entered this world at 7½ lbs. At the age of 23, on May 1, 1925, she wed James Brown ( ? - ? ). Her home in 1936, using the name "Brown," was in Nevada City, KS. She later was joined in wedlock with Joy "Baldy" Hilliard ( ? -1958). The couple did not reproduce. Joy was a U.S. Army veteran of World War I and belonged to the Ben Ali Temple of Shrine. Virginia "worked as a psychiatric technician at the former DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn for 10 years," reported the Grass Valley (CA) Union. "She lived in Grass Valley and Nevada City for 50 years. She belonged to the Eastern Star Chapter No. 13 of Nevada City and the Grass Valley Senior Citizens Club [and] her favorite hobby was crocheting." Joy was a well-known road contractor specializing in access roads, and for a period of time earned a living with the U.S. Forest Service. They dwelled five miles north of Nevada City along the Downieville Highway, although during the workweek she lived at the hospital. On the fateful morning hours of Oct. 3, 1958, the 61-year-old Joy was found dead at home. It was determined that he had died the night before of natural causes, while reading a newspaper. Said the Grass Valley Union, "Neighbors and acquaintances contacted the sheriff's office when they noted that the stock had not been fed, doors were locked and Hilliard had not been seen lately. Sheriff's deputies were forced to beak in a rear door and found Hilliard in a reclining chair in the living room." Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Cedric Porter. Virginia survived him by 25 years. She died in a local hospital at the age of 83 on July 20, 1983. Her cremains were placed into eternal repose in Forest View Cemetery.
Son Samuel Jerome Younkin (1906-1993) was born on May 28, 1906 in Great Bend. His weight at birth was 9 lbs. At age 23, circa 1930, he first wed 20-year-old Blanche I. ( ? - ? ). They are shown together in the 1930 United States Census, living in Virgil, KS, with him working as a house carpenter. He migrated to Southern California in the early 1930s and in 1936 was in Pomona, CA at the address of 742 San Francisco Street. He was employed in the mid-1930s by Pomona Pump Company. On Jan. 25, 1936, he married Helen Lucille Waller ( ? - ? ), also of Pomona. They exchanged their vows at the Week Kirk O' the Heather in Glendale, with Samuel's sister Mary "Virginia" Brown traveling from Grass Valley to attend as a bridesmaid. Rev. Clifford A. Cole, of the Central Christian Church of Glendale, presided. The Pomona Progress-Bulletin reported that the "bride wore a gown of white crepe, fashioned with long sleeves and high collar, and a full length tulle veil. She carried a bouquet of gardenias, white sweet peas and lily-of-the-valley." One known son of the couple was Jerry Younkin. When the census again was taken in 1940, Samuel and Helen were in San Jose, Los Angeles County, with him employed in a pump factory as a machinist. His employer in 1947 was the Fairbanks-Morse Pomona Pump Works. He made his home in 1983 in Pomona. Samuel died in Rancho Cucamonga, CA on June 30, 1993.
Son Charles Franklin Younkin (1915-1999) was born on May 2, 1915 in Topeka, KS at the address of 306 Van Burean Street. Dr. Crabb assisted in the birth, and the news was announced in the Topeka State Journal. As of 1936, he lived in Salem, ID and in 1943 in Long Beach, CA. He was employed in the early 1940s with the Douglas Aircraft plants in Santa Monica and Long Beach, CA. He served in the U.S. Armed Forces during World War II, with postings in Greensboro, NC, Texas and California. Charles does not appear to have married or reproduced, and spent his life "traveling," said the Reno (NV) Gazette Journal. He was a longtime psychiatric technician at DeWitt State Hospital in California and for some years served as chaplain for the American Legion of Gross Valley, CA. Charles was in Cool, CA in 1983 and moved to Carson City, NV in 1997. Sadly, on New Year's Eve 1999, he died at Carson City Hospital. His obituary was published in the Gazette-Journal. The remains were cremated. Son Kenneth Davis Younkin (1916- ? ) was born on Aug. 18, 1916 in Topeka at the address of 420 Van Buren, with Dr. Marshall assisting. He weighed 8 lbs., and his birth was announced in the Topeka Daily Capital. He relocated as a young man to Nevada City, CA. Kenneth wed Norma ( ? - ? ). One daughter of this union was Valora Lee Boot. Kenneth joined the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II, training at Kearns, UT. He is known to have lived in Soda Springs, CA in 1983 and in New Jersey in 1999, and to have worked for the U.S. Department of Forestry. Kenneth's final dwelling-place was in Ewa Beach, HI. There, at age 90, he died on Sept. 26, 2006. An obituary appeared in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Daughter Maxine Delores Younkin (1920- ? ) was born on May 15, 1920 at 1128 Kansas Avenue in Topeka. She weighed 8½ lbs., with Dr. Clark assisting in the birth. She grew to womanhood in Topeka and then, after her parents' deaths when she was 16, relocated to live with a sister in Nevada City, CA. Her first spouse was (?) Coe ( ? - ? ). Then on Jan. 26, 1947, in Reno, NV, she tied the marital cord with (?) Ellis ( ? -1986). In all, she was the mother of Samuel Coe, David Coe, Ellwood Ellis, Dana Schimmerman and Terry Yeager. Maxine was employed at one time as a psychiatric technician at Dewitt State Hospital in Auburn, CA. Said the Casper (WY) Star-Tribune, "she was once an avid swimmer and won many blue ribbons. As a young adult she played baseball on a women's team. During World War II she did calligraphy for a sign company and was said to have 'maintained that art through her beautiful handwriting'... [She was] full of spunk and straight forwardness, but with a heart full of love for her children and family." Their home was in Lander, WY. Death spirited her away in Lander Valley Medical Center, at the age of 79, on Aug. 19, 1999.
~ Son John King "J.K." Younkin ~
Son John King "J.K." Younkin (1872-1953) was born on June 15, 1872 in Lafayette, IN. He moved to Great Bend in 1893 at the age of 21. John attended Central Normal College. He wed Edna C. Verbeck (Nov. 20, 1881-1969) on Dec. 28, [year?]. She was a native of Great Bend, KS. Eleven offspring were born into this family -- Clarence Roy Younkin, Marion Willis Younkin , John Kenneth Younkin, Harold Arthur Younkin, Earl Franklin Younkin, Edna Marian Younkin, Goldie Pearl Younkin, Marietta Elizabeth Younkin, Paul Younkin, Chester Raymond Younkin and Dorothy Adora Younkin. Six of the children died in infancy -- Marion and John (1908), Earl (1911), Edna (1913), Goldie (1914) and Dorothy (1926). John taught school for several years and was employed as county clerk. As of 1906, at the death of John's mother, they made their homeplace at Great Bend. Then in 1918, he began working for the U.S. Post Office until retirement in 1937. John also was a historian of the Younkin family and served as an officer for the Kansas Younkin Reunions, held in Wakefield, Clay Center and Junction City during the 1937-1941 timespan. The advent of World War II appears to have been the demise of these gatherings. He also was a member of the Odd Fellows lodge. He relocated in 1943 to Southern California and for the balance of his life lived in West Los Angeles at the address of 2244 South Bently Avenue. He joined the Knights of Pythias lodge of Santa Monica. The angel of death cleaved John away in Los Angeles at the age of 80 on March 1, 1953. The body was shipped to Great Bend for funeral services conducted by Rev. Cecil Swindle in the First Christian Church and then burial in Westwood Memorial Park. Edna outlived her husband by 16 years. She passed into the arms of the awaiting angels in Sonoma, CA at the age of 87 on Sept. 16, 1969. Son Clarence Roy Younkin (1904-1975) was born in 1904. He grew up in the Great Bend area and was a longtime employee of Armour Creamery. Clarence and the family later settled in El Centro, CA. He was married and the father of Donald Younkin. At the age of 70, the angel of death cleaved him away in Scripts Memorial Hospital in LaJolla on Aug. 30, 1975. The funeral service was conducted in El Centro. His obituary was printed in the Great Bend Tribune.
Son Harold Arthur Younkin (1909-2004) was born on June 4, 1909 in Great Bend, Barton County, KS. He made his permanent home in the town of his birth. He resided at home with his parents in 1930 and 1940, working as a farm laborer in 1930 and hoisting engine operator in 1940 for a building company. When he was 32 years of age, Harold was united in matrimony on May 30, 1942 with Glenda Pfister (1907-1987), the daughter of Robert B. and Minnie Pfister of Great Bend. The couple did not reproduce. Harold was a veteran of World War II, attaining the rank of master sergeant in the U.S. Army. After he returned home, he secured a position as a rural mail carrier, launching a career of more than half a century in his hometown. Their address in 1960 was 912 Morphy Street. Both were very active with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, including his service as general commander of the Patriarchs Militant in 1976-1977 and hers as president of the International Association of the Ladies Auxiliary to the Patriarchs Militant. She was pictured in a March 21, 1965 edition of the Great Bend Tribune, receiving the regalia of new membership in the Rebekah lodge. At age 83, Harold took part in an annual Odd Fellows ceremony conducted at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. The pair belonged to the First Christian Church of Great Bend. As well, he gave of his time as grand officer of the Encampment of Kansas from 1964 to 1965, D.C. of Kansas in 1960-1965 and was a member of the American Legion, Barton County Farm Bureau and National Letter Carriers Association. Sadly, Glenda died on Oct. 30, 1987. The widowed Harold lived for another 17 years. He traveled to his ancestral Somerset County, PA in 1992 to attend the Younkin Reunion East and was photographed holding an antique Younkin branding iron. While there, he also was given the opportunity to attend a meeting of the Kingwood lodge of the Odd Fellows and was guest speaker, as noted in the Somerset Daily American. Sadly, at the age of 95, Harold passed away on Sept. 26, 2004 in Central Kansas Medical Center in Great Bend. Services were held in the First Christian Church, with his pastor Rev. William F. Johnson presiding. An obituary appeared in the Wichita Eagle.
Daughter Marietta Elizabeth Younkin (1916- ? ) was born in 1916 in Great Bend. When she was about 22 years of age, in 1938, she first married Byron J. Huffman (1915-1976) in her hometown. Their three known children were Lt. Donald Lee Huffman, Alan/Allen B. Huffman and Gretchen Huffman. The Hoffmans lived with Marietta's parents in 1940, with him earning a living as an electrician. During World War II, the Huffmans moved around, to Nebraska and then California. The Huffmans' dwelling-place in 1953 was in Glen Ellen, CA, apparently in a house that they built together. After raising her children, Marietta went back to work as a medical secretary for several physicians before joining a hospital staff as a medical transcriber. Sadly, Byron passed away in 1976. In time she wed her husband's widowed cousin, Kenneth Showalter ( ? - ? ). Kenneth relocated from Kansas to California to begin their married lives. In 1991, she remained in Glen Ellen and by 2004 had moved to Healdsburg, CA. Marietta in her spare time enjoyed "Oil painting, wood carving, cooking gourmet dishes, gardening, crocheting, knitting and sewing -- creating anything beautiful," she wrote in the January 1993 edition of the Younkin Family News Bulletin. "I also like hiking and biking." for 25 years, she also served as a church organist. In 2012, Marietta at age 96 published a 128-page memoir entitled Marietta's Stories: From Kansas to California, Memories of My Life. A description of the volume says that it "tells entertaining and informative stories of her life adventures. A girl born into an era before immunizations and antibiotics when many children die, including six of her siblings. Her family struggles through the Great Depression, her brothers' fight in World War II, and she is uprooted from the security of hometown and extended family to accompany her husband. Motherhood, relocations, and unexpected anguish follow, along with newly discovered joys and insights."
Son Paul Robert Younkin (1919-2012) was born on March 19, 1919 in Great Bend, Barton County, KS. Paul served in the U.S. Army during World War II and achieved the rank of staff sergeant. He attended college in Kansas, Los Angeles Pierce Community College and the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). After a relocation to California, he met his future wife Annabelle Harmon (April 26, 1923-2014), originally from Mullinville, KS. They entered into marriage after only three months of dating, and their union endured the ebbs and flows of an extraordinary 70 years together. The only child of this family was Debbie. Paul built his career as a longtime aerospace engineer with McDonnell Douglas Corporation, making a home in Reseda, CA in 1953. Annabelle also worked for McDonnell Douglas for a time as a secretary. He belonged to the Masons and they to the Baptist Church, and in his spare time liked to fish, hunt and follow sports. Annabelle was active in their church "and loved Jesus," said an obituary. "She was a seamstress and a gardener. She will always be remembered for her beautiful paintings and her amazing cooking." Later, they migrated to a home in Redding, CA by 2004. Paul and Annabelle are known to have traveled to Salem, OR in 1998 for the Younkin Reunion-West, where they met the founder of this website. Paul filled an entire table with old paper memorabilia of the family including a full set of the original Younkin Family News Bulletin newspapers from the 1930s. Graciously, he donated a few duplicate copies of the YFNB so that they could be placed within a master compilation and later republished in book form. In March 2012, he was spirited away into the heavenly host at the age of 93 as a patient in Shasta Regional Medical Center. An obituary appeared in the Redding Record Searchlight. Annabelle outlived her husband by two-plus years. She surrendered to the angel of death at age 91, as a patient of Marquis Care Shasta, on July 19, 2014.
Son Chester Raymond Younkin (1921-1991) was born on July 19, 1921 in Great Bend. Chester was employed in Wichita with Beech Aircraft Corporation in 1941. He stood 5 feet, 7 inches tall, weighed 146 lbs. and bore a J-shaped scar on his right shin. In 1942, at the age of about 20, Chester was joined in wedock with Blanche "Lucille" Jensen (Aug. 23, 1918-2001), a native of Bode, IA and the daughter of postmaster J.P. Jensen. In announcing the wedding, the Humboldt (IA) Republican said it was "a beautiful ceremony...." The pair did not reproduce. Chester joined the U.S. Air Force during World War II, enlisting on Aug. 24, 1942, and with deployment to the Pacific Theatre. He served until an honorable discharge on Nov. 14, 1945. Early in their marriage the couple dwelled in El Centro, CA and then in 1950 relocated to Great Bend. There, Chester spent his career as owner of Chet's Jewelry Store at 1911 Lakin and as an agent for American United Life Insurance. Circa 1954, he was a candidate for city council for the first ward on the Democratic ticket. He also was engaged in 1970 as a hay buyer for a new alfalfa pellet plant in town. Their address for years was 2106 McKinley. Chester died at the age of 69, in Hays, Ellis County, KS on May 14, 1991. The funeral was conducted in Great Bend's St. Mark's Lutheran Church. Burial was in Great Bend Cemetery. Lucille survived her husband by a little more than a decade. She surrendered to the angel of death on June 1, 2001. ~ Son Charles Franklin Younkin ~
He moved to Kansas in 1884 at the age of 10 and attended the common schools of Barton County. He then took collegiate and business classes at Central Normal College and went on to teach in the local rural and high schools. At one time he was appointed acting county superintendent of public instruction and then spent two years as deputy clerk of court. He also earned a living working in banks of Pawnee Rock and Hoisington. Three days after Christmas 1909, at the age of 35, Charles tied the marital cord with Nannie Silvey Wilson (Aug. 30, 1886-1981). The wedding was held in Hoisington, KS. Nannie and Charles are mentioned in a profile of her father, George Parker Wilson, in the 1912 book, Biographical History of Barton County, Kansas. The six known children of this marriage were Charles "George" Younkin, Wayne Wilson Younkin, Dwight Willard Younkin, Frances Victoria Younkin, Merrill Vernon Younkin and Patricia Ida Mae Younkin. In about 1908, Charles was elected to political office and served several terms as Barton County Clerk. Said a newspaper at one re-election,
The Younkins' residence for their married lives together was in Great Bend, KS. When receiving an invitation to the inaugural Younkin National Home-coming Reunion in 1934, to be held in Somerset County, PA, Charles wrote back to the event planners. His letter explained "that the family first came to New York from Holland in 1647 and later to Bucks County, Pennsylvania, eventually migrating to Somerset County," said a related article in the Younkin Family News Bulletin. After that reunion concluded, the YFNB publisher Charles Arthur Younkin wrote to cousin Mamie (Younkin) Prather in Dodge City, and she replied saying that "the John Dietz Younkin father of Chas. F. Younkin of Great Bend Kans. and her father Singleton Younkin were cousins and that the above Chas. has the best information of the Kansas Younkins. She tells me there are 150-200 of them there." Death spirited Charles away at the age of 68 on July 3, 1942. Nannie lived for another nearly four decades. At her 79th birthday,, in 1965, a family picnic was held at Lake Barton. In reporting on the event, the Great Bend Tribune said "It was the first time that the C.F. Younkin Clan have all been together in 20 years. Approximately 24 grandchildren and 11 adults attended the picnic..." She passed away in Great Bend on July 21, 1981, at the age of 94.
Son Charles George Younkin (1910- ? ) -- a.k.a. "C. George Younkin" -- was born on Oct. 13, 1910 in Great Bend. He was an alumnus of Great Bend High School and a 1935 graduate of Washburn University and studied at Southeastern University in 1936-1937. He became a prominent American historical archivist, with a focus on Native American history. From 1935 to 1951, he served with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, DC, interrupted by service during World War II. George in 1951 was tapped to join the branch archives at the National Archives and Records Center at Fort Worth, TX. He served until 1975 and was named chief of the branch. He also was a regional archivist serving Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas during the 1968-1975 timeframe until retirement. George was the author of the 1969 book, Historical and Genealogical Records of the Five Civilized Tribes and Other Indian Records. He was an archival consultant from 1975 to 1998, advising such groups as the Kiowa History and Research Association of Carnegie, OK, as a member of the executive committee of the Boy Scouts of America in Fort Worth; the Governor's Advisory Committee for the Aged in Tarrant County; and the Tarrant County History Commission. In recognition, he was named a Fellow of the Texas State Genealogical Society. George on Dec. 27, 1939 married Ruth Ward (Oct. 28, 1915- ? ), daughter of Jesse Ray and Henrietta (Gebhart) Ward and originally from Ogden, UT. The four known children they bore together were Karen Postma, Eleta Marie McEvoy, Cheryl Younkin and Chip G. Younkin. In 1991, he invited Younkin Reunion East founder Donna (Younkin) Logan to meet him in Philadelphia, where he was scheduled to speak at a seminar. Recalled Donna, "After the seminar we drove to Bedminster, Bucks County, Pa. I had great fun showing him all the 'points of interest' that Dad and I had seen just the year before. I am not sure when the reality hit Dr. Younkin, but I am told that the night he got back to Texas, he was on the phone until 2 a.m. calling all of his cousins telling them where he had been and what he had seen." George wed a second time to Nann Totten ( ? - ? ). His final home was in Fort Worth, TX. He died at the age of 87 on Jan. 2, 1998. He was pictured in his obituary in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Son Wayne Wilson Younkin (1913-1988) was born on Oct. 3, 1913 in Great Bend, KS. He ws a graduate of Great Bend High School. When he was 24 years of age, on Feb. 26, 1938, he entered into marriage with Loretta Agnes Murphy (May 7, 1914- ? ). The ceremony was held in her hometown of Hoisington, KS. The pair produced three sons -- twins Richard Wayne Younkin and Robert Joseph Younkin, and Stephen Patrick Younkin. Wayne was employed as a personnel manager for Boeing in Wichita. He then made a move to Torrance, CA, where he became a missile specialist with North American. At their 25th wedding anniversary, they made a trip to Hawaii. The Younkins are known to have returned to Great Bend in 1971 to celebrate his mother's 85th birthday and traveled to Washington DC and Great Bend to visit relatives in July 1975. Wayne died in Torrence at the age of 74 on March 2, 1988. Son Richard received a law degree and at one time was a judicial officer with the California Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board. As of 1975, he was completing his master of law degree at Georgetown University Law Center with plans to join the law firm of Parker and Dalley in Pomona, CA. Son Dwight Willard Younkin (1915-1991) was born on Feb. 26, 1915 in Great Bend. He was an alumnus of Great Bend High School. In 1940, he wed Margaret Mary Lyons (1922-1985). A foursome of known sons of the couple were Timothy Younkin, Charles Younkin, Arthur Younkin and Terrence David Younkin. Dwight earned a living as a farmer and well tester for Gulf Oil Company. They lived in Chase, KS in 1965-1978. At age 76, Dwight passed away on May 1, 1991, in Great Bend. An obituary appeared in the Wichita Eagle and the Dodge City Southwest Kansas Register. Rev. Fr. Gerald Hammeke officiated the Rosary service conducted in St. Patrick Catholic Church, Great Bend. Daughter Frances Victoria Younkin (1917-2012) was born on Feb. 10, 1917 in Great Bend, KS. She was a graduate of Great Bend High School. On New Year's Eve 1939, in Great Bend, she tied the knot with Wilson C. Fox (1914-1987). Together they bore a family of four -- Philip Fox, Michael Fox, Judi Fox and Vickie Rondeau. Wilson is known to have served overseas during World War II. Said the Great Bend Tribune, Frances "was a telephone operator for Southwestern Bell Telephone for thirty years. Mrs. Fox was a lifetime Great Bend and was a member of First United Methodist Church, Church Chancel Choir, United Methodist Women, Sweet Adelines, Telephone Pioneers, and the Kansas Writers Association." Sadly, Wilson passed away on Sept. 3, 1987. Frances lived for another quarter-century as a widow. She died in Great Bend Regional Hospital at the age of 95 on Dec. 18, 2012. Her funeral was led by Rev. Lennie Maxwell, at the First United Methodist Church. Interment was in Great Bend Cemetery.
Son Merrill Vernon Younkin (1925- ? ) was born on Feb. 2, 1925 in Great Bend, KS. He was a 1943 graduate of Great Bend High School and went on to serve with the U.S. Navy during World War II. During the war, he was posted to the USS Wallace L. Lind (DD-703) until 1946. Just three days before Christmas 1946, he was united in matrimony with Dorothy Kerbs ( ? - ? ). The couple's two children were Keith Younkin and Jayne Younkin. Merrill used the GI Bill to received a degree from Wichita Business College and then joined the Boeing Company in Wichita as an industrial engineer. His career at Boeing spanned 37 years, including a promotion into management in 1951 and a transfer to Everett, WA in 1968. Among the aircraft he and his "The Incredibles" colleagues helped fashion were the 747 airliner, as well as the B-47 and B-52 bombers and other commercial aircraft up to the 767. His final position was as senior director of industrial engineering at Renton, WA. Merrill retired in 1987 and with Dorothy took many retirement trips in their motor home and spent their winters in Palm Springs. He was active with the Boy Scouts of America leadership and gave of his time on the executive management council of the United Way of Snohomish County. Among his memberships were the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Lynnwood Elks 2717, American Legion Post 66, Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3070, and St. Matthew Lutheran Church. A lifelong hobby was coin collecting and he belonged to the American Numismatic Association and Society of Paper Money Collectors. With a passion for genealogy, he dug deeply into his Younkin roots and attended the 1991 Younkin Reunion-East in Somerset County, where he met the founder of this website and together were advocates for organizing the hundreds of branches into an organized, systematic tree. He and this website's founder also attended the 1998 Younkin Reunion-West in Salem, OR. Merrill was the author of a 2007 book about his in-laws, Passage to Freedom: a Story of the Kerbs Family, an account of Friedrich Kerbs (1832-1899) of Russia and his wife Eva Catherine Schick (1838-1919). Sadly, Merrill passed away on Aug. 16, 2007 at the age of 82. His obituary was printed in the Seattle Times. Funeral rites were held in the Edmonds Lutheran Church, and burial followed in Edmonds Cemetery. Circa 2008, daughter Jayne contributed valuable content for a reprinting of the original Younkin Family News Bulletin series of newspapers of the 1930s and early '40s. Daughter Patricia Ida Mae "Pat" Younkin (1927-2019) was born on Jan. 22, 1927 in Great Bend, KS. She was an alumna of Great Bend High School. When she was 20 years of age, on Jan. 25, 1947, she tied the knot with Hiram Joseph "Hi" Baxter Jr. (May 28, 1923-2011), a native of Larned, KS and the son of Hiram Henry and Katherine "Mae" (Simmons) Baxter. Their vows were exchanged in Great Bend. Five children born to this couple were Jeffrey Lynn Baxter, Charles Joseph Baxter, Nancy Kathryn Baxter, Lori Anne Underwood and Alan Eric Baxter. Hiram was a 1941 graduate of Sublette High School, where he played basketball on a squad that won the Class B state championship. During World War II, Hiram served with the U.S. Navy, attached to the U.S. Marine Corps, as a medical corpsman. The Baxters appear to have spent their entire married lives in Great Bend. For 32 years, he was employed as a U.S. Post Office letter carrier. After retirement, he went to work for Barton Community College as a mailman, continuing his career by another decade. They held a membership in the First United Methodist Church, and Hiram belonged to the Americal Legion's Argonne Post, was president of the Great Bene Evening Lions Club and business manager for the Lions State Convention. Patricia was business manager for the family church and a member of the United Methodist Women and Philanthropic Educational Organization Sisterhood. She also was active on the board of the local library, was Great Bend High class president for two years, a leader with the Cub Scouts and Girl Scouts and president of Panther Parents. Said an obituary, Hiram "enjoyed big band dances, yard work, walking, being outside and vacationing in the mountains." Grief blanketed the family when the 87-year-old Hiram succumbed to the spectre of death on May 9, 2011. Patricia endured for another eight years. She passed away at age 92, as a resident of Woodhaven Care Center in Ellinwood, KS, on Oct. 22, 2019. Her funeral was led by Pastor Morita Truman. Their remains rest in the sacred soil of Great Bend Cemetery. ~ Daughter Marietta Adora "Dora" (Younkin) Yeck ~
In a wedding ceremony held in Florence, KS on May 22, 1900, the 23-year-old Marietta was joined in wedlock with 26-year-old teacher Putnam Yeck (March 10, 1874-1938). The nuptials were held in the home of her parents in Great Bend, by the hand of Rev. A.J. Bixler of the First Methodist Church. In announcing the marriage, the Great Bend Beacon said:
Putnam was a native of near Sandoval, Tyler County, IN. At the age of four he migrated to Kansas with his family. The six children born into this union were Grace Beatrice Barton, Paul Yeck, Elsie May Gugle, Alta Josephine Yeck, Lloyd Oliver Yeck and Anetta Blanche Yeck. The family resided in Wallowa, OR in the 1910s. They were plunged into mourning at the death of daughter Alta in Wallowa at age 3 years, 11 months on May 15, 1911 from acute gastrointestinal intoxication. Putnam's first teaching assignment was in the spring of 1894 southeast of Florence, KS. At the end of the terms, said the Florence Bulletin, "he has already demonstrated that he is of the stuff of which successful teachers are made." Then in the fall of 1895, he was assigned to the school in district 106 south of town. He is known to have joined the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War and in July 1898 trained at Chickamauga Park in Lytle, GA. At the time of marriage, he taught at the Sunnyside School. He also appears in 1902 to have performed part-time railroad work, later changing full time to that business. He was promoted to fireman in late 1902 and assigned to a post in Emporia, KS. At some point he was elevated to engineer on the Santa Fe Railroad branch. His name often was in the gossip columns of the Florence Bulletin for his work comings and goings. Then in March 1907, working on the yard engine in Wichita, he resigned, with plans to relocate to Oregon. They settled in Elgin, OR and in 1917 moved to LaGrande, OR and stayed for the balance of their long lives. While in Elgin in 1908, Marietta was badly injured in a housefire. While trying to save her baby, she "fell into the flames," reported the Shoshone (ID) News-Press. "Her hair was burned off and her scalp seriously burned. She is in a serious condition." Fortunately she recovered. Putnam earned a living for years at the Mt. Emily mill. He served as grand of the local lodge of the Odd Fellows and commander of the James E. Page Camp of the Spanish American War Veterans. Marietta was active in her own right in the community and in 1928 was elected president of the local Women's Christian Temperance Union. She also was involved with the women's auxiliary of the Spanish American War Veterans, the Relief Corps and the Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War. Their address over the years was at 1502 V Avenue, LaGrande. Sadly, he died the day after Christmas 1938, in Walla Walla Veteran's Hospital, after a long illness. An obituary was published in the La Grande Observer, saying "He has been an active citizen of La Grande and will be mourned by a host of friends." Marietta outlived her spouse by nearly a decade and suffered from chronic kidney disease. She passed away at the age of 71 on June 23, 1948. The Observer said in an obituary that she was "a 41-year resident of Union county and prominent La Grande clubwoman..." Rev. Henry K. Gernhardt, of the LaGrande Methodist Church, presided over the funeral rites. Daughter Grace Beatrice Yeck (1901-1950) was born on April 16, 1901 in Florence, KS. She was not quite six years old when she and her parents relocated to Oregon. Grace was a 1921 graduate of LaGrande High School In September 1921, she first wed William "Arthur" Barton ( ? -1940). They were the parents of Aleene Barton, Garnet Rae Barton and Buena Jean Barton. Their dwelling-place in 1938 was in Shevlin, OR, and in 1940 Arthur is believed to have been employed by the Shevlin-Hixon Lumber Company. Sadly, Arthur died in May 1940. After two years as a widow, Grace married again to Lester C. Kramer ( ? - ? ) of Bend, OR. She held a membership in the Bend lodge of the Rebekahs, Bend Toastmistress Club, Oine Forest Grange and local Presbyterian church. Within the Grange, she held positions as a juvenile matron, Oregon state juvenile lecturer, Oregon state juvenile district representative and home economics chair. At the age of 49, Grace passed away at Charles Hospital in Bend, OR on Nov. 2, 1950. Burial was in Elgin, and an obituary appeared in the Bend Bulletin.
Son Paul Yeck (1903-1967) was born on April 11, 1903 in Florence, KS. If he married, he does not appear to have reproduced. Paul made his address in 1938 at 1502 V Avenue in La Grande, OR. He is known to have made a 2,000-mile driving trip in the spring of 1939 to see the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington State. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army, and was placed in Company D of the 71st Engineering Battalion. Paul remained in LaGrande as of 1950. He died in Walla Walla, WA at the age of 64 on Dec. 15, 1967. The remains sleep in eternal repose in Elgin (OR) Cemetery. Daughter Elsie May Yeck (1905-1987) was born on June 10, 1905 in Kansas. She was a 1923 graduate of LaGrande High School. She then taught for several years, including in 1929 in the Pine Grove School. Elsie was a member of the Oliver P. Morton Relief Corps of the Grand Army of the Republic, an organization for the benefit of Union veterans of the Civil War. Then in 1932, at the age of about 28, she married Harold Eugene Gugle (May 12, 1903-1980), originally from Dayville, OR. Elsie and Harold did not reproduce. They resided in Malheur County, OR in 1935 followed by a relocation to Lapine, Deschutes County, OR. The federal census enumeration of 1940 shows the Gugles in Lapine, with him laboring in the logging industry. Shortly thereafter they moved to Shevlin, OR, where they were inaugural members of the Shevlin Home Extension Unit in 1942. As of 1947-1950, the couple lived in Harper, Malheur County, and now earning a living as farmers. Harold died in Deschutes County at age 76 on April 5, 1980. Elsie survived as a widow for another seven years. At the age of 81, Elsie died in Deschutes County, OR on Jan. 22, 1987. Burial was in Deschutes Memorial Gardens. Son Lloyd Oliver Yeck (1910-1986) was born on March 3, 1910 in Elgin, Union County, OR. Dr. E.D. McKenney assisted in the birth. On Nov. 11, 1933, Lloyd at age 23 tied the marital cord with 23-year-old Bernice A. Ingerson (Dec. 9, 1909-1988) of LaGrande, OR. The pair does not seem to have reproduced. They resided on Lake Street in La Grande in 1938. When the federal census enumeration was made in 1940, the Yecks' dwelling-place was in Ontario, Malheur County, OR. Lloyd at that time worked as a carpenter's helper with a state bridge crew. He also registered for the military draft in 1940 and stated their address as Johnday, Grant County, OR, employed by the Oregon State Higway. By 1948, they had moved to Pendleton, Umatilla County, OR, and remained for good. Lloyd's occupaton in 1950 was as an office clerk for the state highway commission. The angel of death cleaved Lloyd away at the age of 76, in Pendleton, on Oct. 15, 1986. Bernice followed him to the grave in Sept. 1988. Daughter Annetta "Blanche" Yeck (1912-1994) was born on Jan. 28, 1912 in Wallowa, OR. She moved in girlhood to LaGrande and was an aluma of LaGrande High School. Unmarried, she made a home with her brother Paul in 1938. She was active with the Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War in the mid-1930s. Blanche was joined in wedlock with Carl William Battrick (Feb. 22, 1897-1971), a native of Johnston, OH and the son of Ellsworth T. and Lizzie Battrick. He had been married before and brought a trio of stepchildren into the second union -- John Emmet Battrick, Calvin Edward Battrick and Lillian May Goodwin. The couple themselves did not reproduce. They dwelled for decades in LaGrande, where he operated Carl's Taxi Service until retirement in 1961. Their address was 1502 V Avenue, and they belonged to the Grande Ronde Community Church. Sadly, Carl died at age 74, in LaGrande, on Nov. 6, 1971. Rev. Paul O. Jewell, pastor of the First Methodist Church, presided over the funeral rites. Interment was in Island city Cemetery. Blanche outlived him by 23 years. Death spirited her away at Wallow Memorial Hospital in Enterprise, OR, at the age of 82, on July 9, 1994. Burial was in Island City Cemetery in Union County, OR.
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