USA > California > San Bernardino County > Ingersoll's century annals of San Bernadino County, 1769-1904 : prefaced with a brief history of the state of California : supplemented with an encyclopedia of local biography and portraits of many of its representative people > Part 72
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102
HENRY RABEL
691
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
HENRY RABEL was born near Hanover, Germany, August 2nd, 1826. In 1845 he emi- grated with his parents to America and settled in Lebanon, Ill. After the death of his par- ents he removed to St. Louis Mo., and there, on October 8th, 1849, married Miss Elizabeth Hoadway, of Tennessee.
Early in 1850 Mr. Rabel with his young wife started for California with a train com- prising a hundred families, nearly all of whom drove ox teams. Mr. Rabel, however, started with horses. They reached Salt Lake, September 17th, and having lost one of their horses were advised not to undertake to cross the Sierras so late in the season. They therefore stopped in Salt Lake eighteen months before continuing their journey. In the spring of 1852, being well outfitted, they again started for California and reached Shingle Springs, now Placerville in July. Mr. Rabel engaged in milling, mining and stock raising and was very successful. In the spring of 1857, Mr. and Mrs. Rabel came to Southern California and Mr. Rabel bought forty acres of land adjoining Rabel Springs, being the first settler in that neighborhood. A year or two later he bought the eighty acres where the springs are located. About 1870 he purchased a large tract of land in the San Jacinto valley which he devoted to cattle raising. He also purchased land in the vicinity of Santa Ana and took his family there to reside for several years.
Early in the eighties, Mr. Rabel made a visit to his old home in Illinois and while there had a very severe spell of illness from which he never recovered. In the spring time of 1885, he became so ill that he was removed to Los Angeles for medical attendance, but he gradually failed and on July 8th, 1885, passed away. Mr. and Mrs. Rabel had a large family. as follows: Mary M., now Mrs. Webster : Emily R., Mrs. Carter ; Isabella A., Mrs. T. J. Wilson ; Frederick H .. Timothy D., deceased; Hiram D., and S. J., deceased. Mrs. Rabel died January 15th, 1905.
HIRAM D. RABEL son of Henry Rabel, deceased, and Elizabeth Rabel, was born July 9th, 1863. He attended school at the Warm Springs district school and also at Santa Ana, in Orange county, Cal.
July 19th, 1885. Mr. Rabel married Miss Lydia Pool. Mr. Rabel is the owner of twenty acres of land adjoining the Rabel Springs property. where he now resides. Mr. and Mrs. Rabel have no children.
FREDERICK H. RABEL, son of Henry Rabel, deceased, and Elizabeth Rabel, was born April 26th, 1867. He received the advantages of a good local schooling and grew up on the home farm at Rabel Springs.
In 1878 Mr. Rabel married Miss Caroline Fitzhugh, daughter of Samuel Fitzhugh, a pioneer of San Bernardino county. Mr. and Mrs. Rabel own a very comfortable home ad- joining the Rabel property where they now reside. They have no children.
AMBROSE HUNT, of Colton, was born at Norfolk, England, June 27th, 1828. His father was a brick-maker by trade. He married Miss Elizabeth Worba and they both lived to a good old age in Norfolk. Ambrose Hunt lived at home until about 1852, and learned the trade of brick-maker, mastering it in all its details. He was ambitious to travel. Emigration from England to Australia was heavy in those days and he first thought of going to Australia, but finally decided to come to America. He joined the crew of the American ship "Golconda," in the port of Liverpool and came to New Orleans. The voyage was stormy and of unusual length. Immediately upon his arrival he took passage up the river to Keokuk, lowa. There he obtained employment upon the public improvements then in progress and assisted in leveling the precipitons bluffs and aided in laying the foundations of that city. The place at that time was little more than a landing place for passengers for California and the west- eru country. On June 21st. 1853. Mr. Hunt joined a party of immigrants, largely from Eng- land, who had landed at Keokuk, and with them came to Salt Lake where he settled near Nephi City. Later a party consisting of Isaac Bessant Captain James Singleton. J. Bebeck, William Watts, W. Whitby, Henry Goodsell. James Whitworth, George Cooley, Sidney Mee. was formed to come to California and Mr. Hunt joined them. They came over the southern route and through the Cajon Pass, reaching San Bernardino in 1857.
Mr. Hunt found employment of various kinds and acquired a team of oxen and a wagon. with which he freighted lumber from the mountains. Subsequently he purchased the ranch which had been originally located and somewhat improved by Jerome Benson, on which Fort Benson was located. Later Mr. Hunt formed a partnership with Geo. Cooley, and under the firm name of Hunt and Cooley, they purchased lands on the banks of the Santa Ana near the present site of Colton, and engaged extensively in diversified farming. This partnership. which proved to be an amicable and profitable one, lasted until 1888. Since its dissolution, Mr. Hunt has lived in comparative quiet at his home near Colton.
Mr. Hunt has been twice married, his first wife was Miss Sophia Wood, of Norfolk, Eng-
MRS ELIZABETH A, RABEL
693
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY.
land. She died at the Fort Benson home, December 30th, 1891, leaving five children-Alfred Hunt who died in 1899, at the age of forty-three, leaving a wife and two children : Harriet, Mrs. James Dundon, living in Arizona : Sophia, Mrs. Timothy Brushingham, of Pomona ; Annie, the wife of Robert Deakins, of Colton, and Isaac, living in Arizona. July 10th, 1898, Mr. Hunt married Mrs. Mabel L. Brown, a daughter of Thomas Raney. Hrs. Hunt is a native of Le Seur county, Minn., and has one son, Donald Brown Hunt, a grandson of the late John Brown, Sr.
ANDREW RUBIO, of Upland, was born November 30th, 1847, in the old Alameda street home of the Rubio family, three miles below Los Angeles. He was the son of Jose and Juana Marron Rubio, both belonging to old and distinguished Spanish-Californian families. Don Jose, a man of enterprising character, freighted goods between Los Angeles and San Pedro, with ox teams; later he freighted to Holcomb Valley, where he owned a store. He was one of the first contract freighters employed by the United States government to deliver army supplies to Fort Tejon. He was the first man to succeed in driving teams over the mountains to the Caribou mines, British Columbia ; he took with him a band of horses and mules, but being unfamiliar with the climatic conditions of that region, became snowbound in the mountains and lost his stock. He returned to San Pedro penniless after this venture. Later he became the owner of the La Brea rancho, an extensive tract of land lying west of Los Angeles and was one of the pioneer horticulturists. He imported from Italy, at an expense of $500.00 each, the first Eureka lemon tree and the first blood orange tree in Southern Cali- fornia. He was also the importer of the Muscatel grape vine cuttings, seting them out on his Alameda street property, propagating them and controlling their sale for a long time. In 1859 Don Jose was a candidate for Lieutenant Governor of the state but was defeated by John G. Downey.
Andrew Rubio received a common school education in Los Angeles. He grew up in the most exciting and romantic period of the history of that city and was acquainted with the leading Spanish and American pioneers of Southern California. He lived in Los Angeles until 1881, then went to Idaho and found employment in the silver mines of Bodie. Later he returned to California and purchased from Chaffey Bros, a tract of unimproved land at Etiwanda, which he improved and at the same time worked for the Chaffees. He next entered the employ of Frankish and Starum and for sixteen years was manager of their large and important interests in North Ontario. During this time extensive developments were un- dertaken and carried to completion. Mr. Rubio superintended the construction of the tunnel system that supplies Ontario and adjacent territory with water, and in that connection operated the first diamond drill ever used in water development in Southern California. He built and occupied the first house put up in North Ontario. As manager for the Company he was instrumental in planting the double row of pepper trees lining Euclid avenue for a distance of seven miles. In the meantime he invested his savings in land about North Ontario and Cucamonga and is now occupied in developing and improving his own property. He is also the owner of oil property in Orange county. Mr. Rubio's family consists of him- self, wife and eight children.
JOHN ANDRESON, Sr., of San Bernardino, was born in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. in 1834. In 1850 he came to America, sailing around Cape Horn to the Peruvian Guano Islands and returning to London, England. In 1852 he again came around the Horn and after six months in the Argentine Republic, came to California. He continued a sea-faring life for a number of years, being engaged in coasting and finally becoming a vessel owner in the Bay of San Francisco. In 1861, he left the sea and entered into a grocery business in San Francisco; but this proved too confining for his health and he sold out in 1863 and went to Arizona. Here for a number of years he engaged in prospecting and mining. At last he located at La Paz, then a prosperous mining town, and in company with a man who under- stood brewing, opened a small brewery. In three years he had made a small fortune and returned to his native land to visit. On his return to America, in 1871, he settled in San Bernardino which has since been his residence.
He purchased an acre of land on the northwest corner of E and Third streets, on which was located a small brewery which had been established by M. Suverkrup, a pioneer resident, Mr. Andreson increased the capacity of the establishment until he was making thirty barrels per day, when he sold the business in 1884. In the meantime he had erected a brick block on the property which he retained. In 1887, he put up the Andreson block, a three-story brick, which was then one of the best buildings in the city. It was occupied by the St. Charles Hotel and contained eighty rooms aside from the offices and stores on the first floor. In 1888, in company with H. L. Drew, he built the postoffice block on the corner of E and Court streets, which with the fixtures and furnishings cost some $60,000. Mr. Andreson was
694
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY.
one of the large stockholders in the Stewart Hotel and one of the organizers of the Farmer's Exchange Bank, of which he was a director, and since the death of H. L. Drew, has been president. Aside from his large personal affairs, Mr. Andreson has always been closely identified with all important movements for the betterment of San Bernardino city and county. He has served several terms as supervisor and as city trustee, and has been promi- nent in assisting in all public affairs.
Mr. Andreson married Miss Knapp,, a native of Pennsylvania; they have three sons and two daughters.
JOSEPH P. FULLER, deceased, who was a resident of Colton, was born November 3rd, 1834, at Gosfield, Canada. In the fifties he came westward and spent some years in Oregon and Washington, and in 1860 came to San Bernardino county. Here he carried the express between San Bernardino and Holcomb valley during 1861-62, and then located in the Yucaipe valley where he raised potatoes. Later he settled at San Juan Capistrano, but his health failing here hc removed to Colton. Here he made heavy investments and built a large house on J street and a dwelling on A street. He died here November Ist, 1894, at sixty years of age.
He was married July 4th, 1861, to Miss Alameda Rouse, a native of Colchester, Canada, born March 14th, 1843. Her father, Samuel, joined the Mormon church and went to Nauvoo and later to Salt Lake, where he followed his trade of blacksmith and was noted for his manufacture of cow bells. He came to San Bernardino in 1857 and purchased a mill which in 1859 he sold to Nathan Meeks, and which for many years was known as the "Meeks' Mill." Later Mr. Rouse removed to Humboldt county and engaged in stock rais- ing. There he was murdered for his money.
Mrs. Fuller has eight living children-Albert of Santa Ana, Alice, Mrs. Edwin M.bbott. of Los Angeles; Adolphus, of Tucson, A. T .; Prescott, Colton ; Laura, Clara B., Jessie and Dora, now Mrs. J. M. Tully, Colton.
OCTAVIUS DECATUR GASS, of the Yucaipe valley, was born in Richland county, Ohio, February 28th, 1829. His father, John Gass, was a native of Virginia and a farmer. The news of the discovery of gold in California induced Mr. Gass to start for the gold mines via Baltimore, in a sailing vessel around Cape Horn. A part of the cargo of this ship was portable houses, which one, Gillman, was taking to San Francisco. Here they sold at high figures and Mr. Gass' first work on this coast was in unloading these houses, for which he received ten dollars per day. He began mining in the placers of El Dorado county and has spent most of his life in mining in California, Arizona and New Mexico.
In 1853-54 he was zanjero of the city of Los Angeles, and he was a member of the first Masonic lodge instituted in that city. In 1858-59 he was interested with Daniel Sexton and others in the Temescal tin mines and lost very heavily in that venture, as many others have done.
He went to Arizona and served two terms in the legislature of that territory, in 1869 being president of the senate, while representing Mojave county as senator. In 1884 he returned to San Bernardino county and located in the Yucaipe valley where he is now developing quartz claims that promise good returns.
Mr. Gass married Miss Mary Simpson of Las Vegas rancho, Nevada, by whom he had six children, Fenton M., located at Redlands Junction ; Perry P. and Florin A., twins, now located in San Francisco; O. D. Gass, Jr., of Avalon, Catalina Island; Lela, Mrs. Joseph Slaughter, of Corona ; and Ina, Mrs. W. Hollenbeck, of Pasadena.
JOHN TAYLOR, of San Bernardino, was born in Ohio, February 24th, 1830, the son of John and Louisa Hendrick Taylor. His school days were passed in Texas, to which state his father moved in the fall of 1830. At the time of the battle of the Alamo, fearing a raid in the locality, the family went across the Sabine river and located in Louisiana. In 1849 the Taylor family moved to Bell county, Texas, then on the extreme frontier, and engaged in stock raising. Mr. Taylor later located in Comanche county when it was organ- ized and was the first county treasurer of the new county. He was also a member of Captain Collins' company of Texas Rangers.
In 1864, Mr. Taylor came to California and located on the Santa Ana river at Rincon. Here he resided almost continuously until 1892. He was then elected Public Administrator and moved into San Bernardino. He built a residence on E street but sold it and pur- chased ten acres at the corner of Highland avenue and G streets. He still owns the Rincon ranch which comprises about one thousand acres, principally cattle range.
Mr. Taylor married Miss Margaret Reed, January 15th, 1857. They are the parents of nine children, all living-Leolin, Leon, Ela, Isaac, Herma, Clyde, Clarence, and Viola, Mrs. Grant Kirby, of Corona.
695
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
JESSE MAYHEW, who died in 1885, at the age of 66, was one of the best known California pioneers of his time. He was a native of Alabama, and was born on the Tom- bigbee river.' In 1849, in company with the late Robert Carlisle, William Rhubotton and others, he started for California, making the slow and dangerous journey with an ox team, by the southern route. He first went to the mining camps of the Russian River valley. Also engaged for a while in brickmaking at Marysville. He followed many other occupations in the early days of California, being at one time the owner of a stage line, hotel and black- smith shop. He owned land, raised and dealt in stock; bred and sold horses, noted for their speed. In 1860 he came to Los Angeles and engaged in stock raising. He lived at San Gabriel for a number of years and ranged cattle on the present site of Pasadena city and Raymond Hotel. In 1866 he located on the Rincon grant, purchased 2,200 acres of land of Mrs. Robt. Carlisle, and began stock raising on a large scale, operating between Southern California points, Denver, and Forts Bridger and Laramie. In partnership with John G. Downey he also did extensive freighting for the U. S. Government between San Pedro and Wilmington and Arizona points. In 1879 he located at Downey and followed dairying until his death. He married Eunice Caroline Clay, an accomplished woman, and near realtive of the illustrious Henry Clay of Kentucky. She was born in Perry county, Alabama, February 13th, 1830, and died at Oceanside, California, January IIth, 1894. They were married Feb- ruary Ioth, 1847. and were the parents of nine children, of whom James, Theodore, Frank, and Mrs. Matty Clark now reside in California.
SAMUEL C. PINE, Sr., late of Rincon, was born in St. Lawrence county, New York, July 30th, 1825. His father, Joseph Pine, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and was a son of a Revolutionary patriot who took part in the Battle of Lexigton. Joseph Pine emigrated to the frontier of the Western Reserve in 1833, and located in Ohio, where his son, Samuel, grew to manhood.
After lumbering in Illinois, Samuel, in 1850, equipped a train and crossed the plains to the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains in Wyoming Territory. Here he established a trad- ing post and engaged in stock raising until 1858, when he again moved westwart to California,
SAMUEL C. PINE, Sr.
MRS. SAMUEL C. PINE
and located in San Bernardino county. He first settled in Yucaipe valley where he raised stock. He also erected and operated the first saw-mill in Little Bear valley. In 1867, he purchased a squatter's claim adjoining Chino Grant. The title to this was not clear and it required several years and considerable expense to acquire a patent from the United States. This property he brought under a high state of cultivation, planting fruits of many varieties and also farming extensively. He made this his home until his death, in 1897, and his widow still occupies the old homestead.
Mr. Pine married Jane, daughter of John and Ellen Morrison, of Buffalo, N. Y., in 1855. They had five sons, all of whom live in this vicinity, Samuel, Edward, Edwin, Myron and Dudley.
696
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
SAMUEL PINE, Jr., was born in Utah, December 26th, 1856. He came to California with his parents in 1858 and lived with them and shared his father's labors until 1877, when he purchased a farm of 129 acres two miles east of his father's place and in 1878 was married to Miss Beatrice, the daughter of John and Mary Gregory, of Juapa. He resided on his farm
SAMUEL PINE, Jr.
MRS SAMUEL PINE
until 1884, when he moved to San Diego county and purchased a farm where he engaged in ranching. In 1897 he returned to his Rincon property, bought additional land, bored an artesian well and engaged in dairying and in general farming. Mr. Pine served as road
JOHN GREGORY
MRS. MARY GREGORY
overseer for six years in San Diego county, and in 1902 he was elected a member of the Board of Supervisors from the fourth district, in San Bernardino county. Mr. and Mrs. Pine have four children-Rena Belle, attending Pomona College at Claremont : Samuel J., Mark and Loraine.
EDWARD PINE was born at San Bernardino, July 26th, 1860. He is the son of the late Samuel Pine. He and a twin brother, Edward, were the third born of the family.
697
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
He is a farmer by occupation and farms twenty-five acres of alfalfa and green land on the Rincon grant, adjoining the family seat. He married in San Bernardino, January Ist, 1898, Annie Bell, daughter of J. D. Gilbert, Esq., one of the pioneers of the San Bernardino valley, and they have three children-Gilbert, Edwin and Beryl.
MYRON PINE is the son of the late Samuel Pine. He was born in San Bernardino county and is said to be the first American child born on the Rincon grant, May 22nd, 1868. In 1891 he married Agnes Lester, a daughter of the venerable Edward Lester of the Rincon grant. Mr. and Mrs. Pine have four children, Hazel G., Myrtle G., Ivy G., and Marie F. He is a farmer by occupation.
JAMES T. MAYHEW is a well-known farmer of Chino. He was born in Yuba county, February 5th, 1855. Like his father, he has passed through all the vicissitudes incident to the life of a pioneer. He married December 25th, 1876, Eliza, daughter of John Gregory, a sketch of whom appears elsewhere in this work. They have two children-Clay and Alice.
CHRISTIAN KURTZ, late of San Bernardino, was born in Wurtemburg, Germany, in 1836. When a young man he emigrated to America and, for a short time, settled in the state of Michigan; he then removed to Illinois, and later to Wisconsin, where he remained until 1857. After the Mountain Meadow massacre in Utah in 1857, believed to have been perpetrated by the Mormons, Mr. Kurtz joined an expedition which was sent by President Buchanan to punish this out- rage and, if possible, prevent further atrocities of like character. He remained in service at Camp Floyd, in Utah, for five months.
In 1858 he came to San Bernardino, then a fron- tier town. During the years following his arrival on the coast he traveled extensively over the Pacific slope and had many exciting adventures and experi- ences until 1864, when he located permanently in San Bernardino. Having learned the baker's trade in the Fatherland, he established himself in this business in his new home and soon became a snc- cessful and enterprising business man. He invested heavily in real estate, of which the Southern Hotel formed a part, and eventually gave up his business to take charge of the hotel which he successfully managed until his death, Mary 14th, 1894. Mr. Kurtz had experienced all the hardships of a pioneer in a new country and had won success where many others failed. He was a man of excellent qualities and was a highly respected citizen of San Bernardino.
In 1871 Mr. Kurtz married Mrs. Margaret Egan CHRISTIAN KURTZ of San Bernardino. They had two daughters who are living-Mrs. Dora Kurtz Buchanan, of Pasadena, and Mrs. Kathryn Tuthill, of Santa Barbara. Mr. Kurtz was an active member of the Masonic fraternity and of the I. O. O. F., and a con- sistent member of the Lutheran Church.
THOMAS CADD, of San Bernardino, was born at Preston, Buckinghamshire, England, June 8th, 1831. His father John Cadd, was a thrifty farmer and his mother, whose maiden name was Ann Bedford, a most excellent housekeeper.
In 1847, when Thomas Cadd had attained his sixteenth year, and had received some education, the entire family emigrated to Australia, then an unexplored country, and located on a farm at Port Hadley. With them on the sailing vessel from Liverpool went Thomas Stuchberry and family, whose daughter Mary, became Mrs. Thomas Cadd, July 8th. 1850. After eight years' residence in Australia, Mr. Cadd and his family embarked for California, and after a passage fraught with danger and disaster, including the loss of the vessel near Honolulu, S. I., landed in San Francisco in 1855. Soon after arrival they took steamship to San Pedro, and proceeded to their destination, San Bernardino, which is still their home. Mr. and Mrs. Cadd were the parents of nine children: Jane, wife of Bart Smithson: Rich- ard B. (deceased) ; Ann Elizabeth, (deceased) ; Thomas: Lucinda, wife of Joseph Harris ; Albert ( deceased) ; George Henry ; Rose Ann, now Mrs. Henry Beggs, and Alvin E.
698
HISTORY OF SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
CHARLES CARROLL CLUSKER was born in Richmond, Madison county, Kentucky, March Ioth, 1810. He was the son of John and Annie Hart Clusker, one of Scotch descent and the other of Irish parentage.
Mr. Clusker went to Cincinati in 1843 and there, at the outbreak of the war with Mexico, he enlisted in the Ist Regiment of Ohio Volunteers. This regiment was assigned to Gen. Taylor's command and was at the battles of Brownsville, Matamoras, Vera Cruz. Chapultapec, Monterey, Cerro Gordo, Buena Vista, and City of Mexico. At the close of the war the regiment was mustered out in Cincinnati. While in Mexico he had heard much of California and after his return to Ohio, he, with five other men, determined to visit this, then little known and far distant country. They took passage down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to Little Rock, Ark., there they outfitted for the overland journey by way of Santa Fe. They found plenty of game along the route and although they saw many Indians, they experienced no trouble with them. They reached Los Angeles, then a little adobe town, in the spring of 1848. There the company separated and Mr. Clusker, after about two weeks, turned about and alone re- turned to Cincinnati by the route over which the party had traveled.
When the report of the discovery of gold reached the East in 1849, Mr. CHARLES CLUSKER Clusker, with three friends, again set out for California, this time by way of Independence, Mo., and the north- ern route, through the Truckee Pass to Sacramento. He located his first mine at Coloma, El Dorado county, where Marshall had first discovered gold. For thirty years thereafter Mr. Clusker was a typical prospector and miner. His experience covers nearly all the Central California mining region and all of the different mining operations and processes in itse. He made fortunes-and lost them with equal fortitude-sometimes he had wealth in hand, always he posseseed wealth in prospect. In 1864, he went to Arizona and worked on the old Vulture stamp mill at Wickenburg for six years.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.