Showing posts with label Runals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Runals. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Somers School

Somers School class photo - circa 1900
Note numbers are not in row number.  Lightly penciled numbers typically written on girls white bodices and on the boys on their tags or white shirts.

1.     (name missing)
2.     Cherille Runals Brehm LeMieux
3.     Ellen Runals Todd
4.     Ida Runals Meier
5.     Conrad Shearer teacher
6.     Mr. Jorden
7.     Harry Jorden
8.     Murtie Jorden
9.     Etta Fouk
10.  Lora Rodgers
11.  (blank)
12.  Florence Buswell
13.  Lucy Rodgers
14.  Kate Dery
15.  Kate Olk?
16.  Hazel Buswell
17.  Ellen Pedley
18.  Carrie Fouk
19.  Lotie Rodgers
20.  Ester Kohlman
21.  Mrs. Rodgers, Lora’s Mother
22.  Mrs. Blackman
23.  Mrs. Kohlman, Ester’s mother
24.  Clerance Northway
25.  Lillie Folk
26.  Willie Houchin
27.  Al Fouk
28.  (blank) Coleman
29.  Mr. Buswell
30.  (blank) Rodgers
31.  Nick Michels
32.  (blank) Wills
33.  Housekeeper for school lives by school
34.  George Taylor

Row 1: L-R 9 (girl), --, -- 25, --
Row 2: 7, 22, 26, --, --, --, --, 24, --, --, 36, --, 35, --
Row 3:  1, 28, --, --, --, --, --,--,--,--,
Row 4: 33, 8, 2, 20, 23, 21 --,  34, 17, 16, 22, --,--,--,
Row 5: 29, --, 30 (3 men then to girl), --, 4, 3, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, --, 10, --
Row 6: --, (woman behind tree), 19 (woman front of tree), 15, 32, --,31, 6, --,5, --,

(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)

Somers School class photo - circa 1896
In the bottom right corner of the photo is the name James Brehm.  He was a photo enthusiast with a dark room and he made this copy.  Ellen Runals and her sisters identified all the people.
Click on photo for enhanced view.
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)



















Runals Family Photos





Carrie and Frank Runals with Frankie
Circa 1885
Photographer Max Platz of 88 N Clark Street, Chicago at Rose Cottage
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)



Helen Charille Murray Runals and granddaughter Ellen Stryker Runals
Circa 1891
(Photo courtesy Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)



Ida Belle Runals, born 1887
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)



Eli Griffith Runals
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)





Arlene Runals and Orville Homan wedding photo
Dress first worn by Carrie W. Stryker Runals in 1881
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)


Charille Runals outside Willowbrook (Runals home)
Circa 1875
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)


Frank Runals
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)


Frank Runals, age 12, circa 1865
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted 2017)




Runal home also known as Willowbrook - Circa 1900
Two young girls on porch may be Ellen Stryker (middle name) Runals and her sister, Ida, both granddaughters of Eli Runals who purchased this home.  Ellen and Ida were the daughters of Frank Adelbert Runals and Helen Charille Murray.
Ellen lived here until she married John LeRoy Todd who worked at Nash Rambler for Mr. Jeffreys.  When Todd retired in the 1960's, he was in charge of International Sales, South America.
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)






Inside Willowbrook (Runals home)
(Photo courtesy of Jane Klotz, submitted July 2017)






Friday, November 2, 2012

Runals, Frank A. and Eli




Eli G. Runals
(Photo Courtesy:  Kenosha County Historical Society, Inc.)

Runals House
(Photo Courtesy: Kenosha County Historical Society, Inc.)

Runals House (hotel located on corner of Main Street and Wisconsin Street)
(Photo Courtesy: Kenosha County Historical Society, Inc.)


(Source:  Minnie Ozanne "My Memories"


Mrs. Eli G. Runals
(Photo Courtesy: Kenosha County Historical Society, Inc.)

Frank A. Runals

"Frank A. Runals well deserves representation in this volume as he is one of the leading citizens of Somers Township, Kenosha  County, and a representative of a family which has been prominently connected with the history of Southeastern Wisconsin since an early day.
He now resides on Section 25, where he owns a desirable property.  He was born in the City of Kenosha, March 7, 1853, and is the son of Eli G. Runals, who was born in New York in 1814.  When a small lad his father was left an orphan and thus thrown upon his own resources.  He learned the hatter's trade and with an uncle carried on a successful business in that line in the Empire State for a few years.
The year 1840 witnessed his arrival in Southport, Wisconsin here he soon engaged in business.  He was a wide-awake business man, public spirited and progressive and did much for the city.  He erected a number of business houses, including a hotel known as the Runals House, which was located where the Grant House now stands, and there engaged in the hotel business for a few years.  With other public enterprises he was connected.  He was one of the original members and was elected President of the Kenosha County Bank, one of the leading moneyed institutions of the county.
In 1857 he purchased the farm on which our subject now resides and greatly improved the place.  He set out an extensive orchard, containing excellent varieties of all kinds of fruit, and for four years successfully engaged in agriculture, when in 1864 he returned to the City.  About seven years later he again removed to his farm and spent his remaining days.
In 1864 Mr. Runals became engaged in the oil business at Pitt Hole City, Pa., which he carried on successfully for four years and then became a member of a wholesale hardware store in New York City, with which he was connected for three years.  He also owned and dealt largely in lands in Wisconsin, Illinois, Nebraska and other Western States.  He met with some reverses but was generally successful, and whether he made or lost in his ventures, went ahead just the same.  Reverses never discouraged him but rather stimulated him to renewed and greater effort.  In early life Mr. Runals was a Democrat but on the breaking out of the late war became a Republican.  A strong advocate of temperance principles, he afterwards identified himself with the Prohibition party but was never a politician in the sense of office-seeking.  Fair and honest in all his dealings, he won the confidence and respect of those with whom he came in contact and his death, which occurred November 7, 1890, was deeply mourned by many friends.
Mrs. Runals still survives her husband and is now living in Chicago.  In her maidenhood she was Miss Helen Charill Murray, a daughter of Eli Murray, and in her native State, New York, she was educated and grew to womanhood.  Frank A. Runals is their only son and the second of three children.  Ida Belle, the older sister, after acquiring a liberal education became the wife of Charles Weyl, of Chicago, and died in 1871.  The younger sister, Lily, was educated in Kenosha and Cleveland, Ohio, and possesses musical talent of a high order obtained at New York and Chicago.  The takes an active interest in the work of temperance.
Our subject, after attending the schools of Kenosha pursued his studies in Racine College and in the Ypsilanti Normal School.  Returning to his father's farm he devoted his time and attention to stock raising and agricultural pursuits, making this occupation his life work.
As a companion of life's journal he chose Miss Carrie Warburton Stryker, their union being celebrated in Kenosha, October 27, 1881.  A native of that city, the lady was there reared and educated.  She is the daughter of the late James M. Stryker, one of the most enterprising and prominent business men of Kenosha in its early days.  For many years he was connected with its leading interests; in later years being engaged in business in Chicago, where he died in 1887.  His wife still survives him and resides in Chicago.  Her maiden name was Ellen M. Brooks, daughter of Hon. John A. Brooks, of Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Runals began their domestic life upon the old homestead where they have since resided and their union has been blessed with four children - Frank A., Ida Belle, Ellen Eugenie Stryker and Helen Charill.
In politics Mr. Runals is a Republican on questions of national importance, but in local elections supports the men whom he thinks will best fill the office.  He has ever been an advocate of temperance principles.  Educational, moral and social interests find in him a friend, and among the best citizens of Kenosha County should be numbered Frank A. Runals, whose sterling worth well entitled him to representation in this volume."
(Source:  Portrait and Biographical Album of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Lake City Publishing Co., 1892, Chicago)




Partial 1861  Map of Somers Township
Section 25
160 E.G. Runals parcel

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Music in Somers


Music in Somers
Somers, from its start and early development, has taken and held a prominent place in the music field.
Perhaps many of us residing in Our Town today have almost forgotten those native sons and daughters whose musical talents added much to the artistic world.
Somers' own prima donna, Miss Charille Runals, known as Lily Runals, was born March 14, 1855.  Her early life was lived on the Runals Homestead, known as the Willowbrook farm in Our Town, and attended school at District No. 2, now Hillcrest School.
In early life she developed a sweet soprano voice and following her graduation from the Kenosha High School, she studied voice in Ohio, later going to New York, where she rapidly rose in public favor as a singer and poetic reader, and soon joined the Metropolitan Opera.  She charmed vast audiences with her rendition of her own arrangement of "The Sky Pilot", "Black Rock", and other beautiful stories.  As she sang the beautiful sacred songs and those immortal hymns, she made a lasting impression on her hearers.  Many of the older people of Our Town may recall when this prima donna came home on a visit and gave a concert at the Methodist Church.  Her rendition of "The Holy City" on this occasion has never been forgotten by those who listened.  She sleeps in a cemetery in Washington, D.C.
Florence Spencer Owen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Spencer, who came from the East in the early days, was  a school teacher, a teacher of music and was talented with a sweet soprano voice that thrilled her hearers for years.
The Jordan family was a family of music.  Miss Ann Jordan, a singing school leader, started many young people on a musical career.
John G. Mitchell, a son of a sturdy Scotch family, who came early, was a baritone of renown.  One of his favorite solos was "Rocked In The Cradle of The Deeps."  For years he was leader in the male and mixed quartet's Somers was so proud of.  He was a singing school master and started many of our young people in the music world.
And so on down the decades, our people have added much to the field of music.  The descendants of those pioneers are carrying on in the field of music - Mrs. Mabel Yule Longmore, Jay W. Rhodes, Mrs. Mabelle Cook Rhodes, Mrs. Eunice Bradley Bullamore, Mrs. Elizabeth Flett Felton."
(Source:  Photo of Lily Runals and information above, My Memoirs by Minnie A.G. Ozanne.  Copyright 1948 - Minnie A.G. Ozanne.  All Rights Reserved.)



(Source: Photo of Lily Runals and information above, My Memoirs by Minnie A.G. Ozanne. Copyright 1948 - Minnie A.G. Ozanne. All Rights Reserved.)

Somers Band Stand - Mitchell Park
Our first park was in the Village of Somers, and for many years band concerts and social activities were enjoyed at "The Mitchell Park" where a fine band stand was built.  The Third Somers Brass Band, under the direction of John G. Mitchell, and these musicians, Fred W. Leet, Adam Lytle, Robert and Burdette Burgess, Elmer Cooper, Sherman Gibbon, Anton Nelson, William Munroe, Maurace Gould, Delbert Bishop, and Ray Mitchell, the drummer boy, offered many fine entertainments.
Ray Mitchell later became leader of an Illinois State Military Band.  A story of the first and second bands organized in Somers is not available.



(Source: My Memoirs by Minnie A.G. Ozanne. Copyright 1948 - Minnie A.G. Ozanne. All Rights Reserved.)