Showing posts with label Chester Washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chester Washington. Show all posts

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Emil and Rosalia Muench's Photograph Collections: Emma

You'll find pages 1, 2 , 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 in the archives at the right. Some of the photographs on them were in Ottillie "Tillie" Leeson's estate, and others were copied from collections shared by her siblings and nieces and nephews who lived in Canada.

EMMA was born on March 19, 1915 at the Muench homestead near Bigford, Saskatchewan, about 16 miles southeast of Swift Current, Saskatchewan, in the Bigford District, eastward a few miles on the S.E 1/4 of Section 34, Township 13, Range 11. She grew up there until she was 13 years old.


In 1928 the family sold the homestead and moved to Chester, Washington, near Spokane. In 1931 her parents traded their farm there for a farm at Trochu, Alberta, about 100 miles north-east of Calgary. There she helped at home, and with the farm work. She also hired out to other families when she had time. When her mother suffered a stroke she went home to care for her.


In 1944 her parents were again on the move, this time to Abbotsford, B.C. When they sold that place and moved to Chilliwack, Emma decided to go and join them. She got a job at a restaurant there. But she came back to the Muench farm near Trochu to help with the harvest. In 1948 while she was on her way back to Trochu, her mother passed away.


Her brother, Reinhold met her at the bus in Calgary, and they flew back to the coast. She stayed there to be near her father until he remarried. She moved back to Alberta, and there she met her future husband, Paul Sterling.


When she went to help Olga, Paul Sterling began to court Emma in earnest. They were married on June 11, 1952. They moved to Lousana, about 30 miles north, where they farmed and during this time their 2 children, Terrill and Karl were born. In 1958 they moved to a farm near Three Hills. In 1970 they moved to the Kelowna area' and in 1974 bought an orchard at Oliver, B.C. about 80 miles south of Kelowna. Emma really enjoyed their life there. She passed away after a long fight with cancer on April 25, 1986.





Emma, kneeling with her big doll, and younger
sister, Olga, on their parents farm near Chester,
Washington
Emma Muench on parents farm near Trochu, Alberta, Canada
Emma on the front porch of her parent's house

Reinhold Muench was in the armed services when this picture
taken with his sister, Emma

 


Emma in 1947 at her parent's home in Chilliwack, British
Columbia, Canada

Sisters Emma (L) and Olga (R) with their brother Bob's wife,
Leola (middle) in Canada 1948

Emma (nee Muench) and Paul Sterling's weddinig party
June 11 1952

Sister.Tillie, Vanda, Emma and Olga in Canada, 1966

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Emil and Rosalia Muench's Photograph Collections: Richard

You'll find pages 1, 2 , 3, 4 and 5 in the archives at the right. Some of the photographs on them were in Ottillie "Tillie" Leeson's estate, and others were copied from collections shared by her siblings and nieces and nephews who lived in Canada.

Unfortunately, I have no photographs of Richard "Dick" Muench. However, below is a sketch of Dick's life.

RICHARD "Dick" was born April 18, 1908 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada to Emil and Rosalie Marion (ne: Herr) Muench.  Dick was two years old when the family moved onto a homestead about 16 miles southeast of Swift Current, Saskatchewan, on the S.E 1/4 of Section 34, Township 13, Range 11, in the Bigford District.

During the 1918 flu epidemic, when Dick was about ten years old, his teacher, Miss Sloan, got it first. Dick got so delirious he thought the house was tipping over because his sister, Wanda, swept all the dirt by the stove.

Like all of the children, Dick worked hard on his parents prairie farm, helping to clear the land of rocks, plant shelterbelt trees, milk cows, feed pigs, raise chickens and in their grain harvest. After completing eight grades of school at the local school, his father and mother allowed him to attend higher education in normal school in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.
 
Family legend has it that Dick got more pleasure from music and card games than he did from studying, so his father promptly removed him from school and brought him back to the farm to work – and declared that he wasn't supporting any more such foolishness. Henceforth, none of his children would attend school beyond the eight grades available in the one-room school three miles from the homestead.

Dick remained in Canada until after the harvest before joining his parents, who in 1928 had moved to Chester, Washington. He never returned to Canada. Dick found work in Spokane and married Marion Heath (born in 1916.) They had three sons, Larry (ca. 1936), Alan (ca. 1938) and Kenneth (ca. 1940.)
 
Robert 'Bob', Richard 'Dick', and Rienhold Muench

Dick worked for Inland Empire Freight, a transport company in Spokane. He was intensely interested in his job and very patriotic. Every July 4th, which is America's Independence Day, Dick always brought flares from the company and set them off in place of fireworks. Dick loved children and gardening. He and Marion kept a succession of foster children for many years.

Dick was a great handy man, a good mechanic, and a wonderful husband and father, too. He died of a heart attack January 16, 1954, after shoveling snow when he came home from work. In 1966, Marion also died of a heart attack at their home on 24th Avenue in Spokane.

Larry was killed in a motorcycle accident near Seattle, Washington. He left a wife and one son. Kenny and Alan continued to live in Spokane and work there. As of 2002. Kenny worked at Spauldings Wrecking yard.