Descendants of Peter Delo

Notes


325. Fred Oliver Delo

Fred was Superintendent of Water Works in Duquesne, Pa. He was believed to have had six or seven children.


628. Marguerite Delo

Marguerite was in the Elizabeth City hospital in 1930, she was single.


Maude (Sabina) Delo

The 1880 Census Record showed that Sabina M. was a daughter of W. B. Delo. Maude and Sabina may be the same. Maude married James Delo, a
distant cousin, from Verona, Pa. This made her (uniquely) Maude Delo Delo. Aside from raising at least two of her own children, she raised Scott, her
sister's child.


Joseph Thieville

He operated a shirt factory in Fair Haven, Vt., while she taught music.


338. Charles Goodlin Delo

Charles Goodlin (December 5, 1866 - April 14, 1952) Charles was born in Salem Twp., Columbiana Co., Ohio. He was married to Amy Esther Gauby on January 28, 1892 by his father in Amy's home in Lisbon, Ohio.


341. Hope Miriam Delo

Hope Miriam (November 1873 - April 25, 1966) Hope was born in Richland Co., Ohio and married to John Edson Park Selig (October 4, 1872 - April 23, 1950) of Lawrence, Kansas an October 10, 1895 in Lawrence.


648. Delo Selig

Delo graduated with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Kansas University in 1929. Most of his career was as a labor relations supervisor


356. Oliver Delo

Was living in Blair, Altoona in 1910


358. Edward G Deloe

Edward was referred to in George Peter's will as Edwin. Edward wrote an affidavit for his mother to assist her in obtaining a Civil War Pension.


668. Mable A Delo

Mabel A. Reese Mars
Mabel A. Reese, 95, of Mars, died Saturday, Nov. 15, 2003, at LAS St. John Specialty Care Center, Mars. Born in Shippensville, Pa., on Sept. 7, 1908, she was the daughter of the late Charles Porter and Sarah Savilla Hartman Delo. She was a member of Old Union Presbyterian Church, Mars, and a member of the Willing Workers class at the church. She was a homemaker and a craft instructor at St. John Specialty Care Center. Surviving are a son, Walter Reese and his wife, Ruth, of Baden; a daughter, Mrs. Gerald (Thelma) Pearce in Florida; a son-in-law, Lloyd Weckerly of Mars; and a sister, Martha Slaugenhaupt of Apollo; also 13 grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Clyde Reese; a daughter, LaVonne Weckerly; a son, Ronald Reese; and six sisters and two brothers. Friends received from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the MCDONALD-AEBERLI FUNERAL HOME INC., 238 Crowe Ave., Mars. Additional visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the time of funeral services at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Old Union Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Peter DeVries, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Old Union Church Cemetery. Memorials may be made to the Old Union Presbyterian Church, 200 Union Church Road, Mars, PA 16046.


669. Dorthy M Delo

Front Row..Dorthy DELO Colwell, Ruth COLWELL Clark, Louise COLWELL Bunch. Back Row.
Herald & Jim Colwell, Joe Clark, Sam Colwell, George Bunch


Dorothy M. Colwell, 87, of Knox, died at 3:40 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 14, 1999, in Beverly Healthcare-Shippenville. Born Nov. 14, 1911, in Buckhorn, Knox RD, she was a daughter of Charles and Sarah HARTMAN DELO. She was married Sept. 17, 1928, to Russell W. Colwell, who died Feb. 13, 1981. Mrs. Colwell farmed along with her husband. She also had worked for eight years at Knox Glass Co. She was a homemaker. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Joseph (Ruth) CLARK of Sheffield; three sons, Jim Colwell, Sam Colwell and Harold Colwell, all of Knox; 13 grandchildren; 28 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren. She also is survived by two sisters, Mable REESE of Evans City and Martha SLAUGHENHAUPT of Vandergrift. In addition to her parents and husband, Mrs. Colwell was preceded in death by two daughters, Lois A. Colwell and Louise A. BUNCH; two brothers, Richard Delo and Charles Delo; five sisters, Zelda SHENK, Twila BAUM, Hazel CLARK, Viola MOYER and Cora TAYLOR; and one great-grandson, Jared Bunch. Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today in the William N. Ruper Mortuary in Knox. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the funeral home with the Rev. Lind Porter, pastor of the United Methodist Church at Providence, officiating. Interment will be in the Providence Church Cemetery.


672. Charles Delo

U.S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946 Record
about Charles Delo
Name: Charles Delo
Birth Year: 1919
Race: White, citizen
Nativity State or Country: Pennsylvania
State: Pennsylvania
County or City: Clarion

Enlistment Date: 19 Feb 1942
Enlistment State: Pennsylvania
Enlistment City: New Cumberland
Branch: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Branch Code: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA
Grade: Private
Grade Code: Private
Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law
Component: Selectees (Enlisted Men)
Source: Civil Life

Education: 1 year of high school
Civil Occupation: Tracktor Driver* or Truck Driver, Heavy or Chauffeur or Truck Driver, Light An asterisk (*) appearing after a job title indicates that a trade test for the particular occupation will be found in the United States Employment Service Manual, Oral Trade Test
Marital Status: Single, without dependents
Height: 72
Weight: 185


363. Israel Calvin Deloe

Cal, as he was known to his friends, was born in Clarion county, Pa. He married Ida Maytessa Shunk. They had six children, all premature. Three of the children were stillborn or died in infancy. Cal worked as a carpenter, cabinet maker, construction worker, sometimes a contractor and part time farmer. His early life was spent in and around Jefferson Furnace, Wig Hill, in Forest County, Pa. Later, Cal moved to Dunkirk, NY. Still later, Cal and Ida moved to Fellsmere, Indian River Co., Fl.
Cal and his son, Earl worked in building construction in Erie. They may have commuted the forty miles to Erie by the electric commuter train that ran between Buffalo and Erie. In any event, Cal and Ida moved to Feldsmere Fl. in or after 1912. Cal was a large man with the Delo hands. although he had the first joints of two fingers missing from a carpenter accident. He was a kind and loving man. After completing the work of the day, he would sit at a large table in the living room and, by gasoline lamp, he would read his Bible. while his wife. Ida, would sew or work on crafts. Every Sunday they would drive to the Methodist Church where Cal and Ida sang in the choir. Many times, after church services were over, the Minister would go to their house where Ida would have a roasted chicken diner which she had left in her fireless cooker while they were at church.
The "farm" was really an orange grove with a small two bedroom house, complete with outside plumbing (an out house) and a rather large wood stove complete with a cat asleep underneath. Cal and Ida lived in the house as compensation for caring for the grove for the absentee owner. Cal kept a cow, chickens, ducks, bees and Ida had a table garden.


366. Samuel Franklin Deloe

Samuel was born in Franklin, Venango Co., Pa., and like his father, became a blacksmith. He also married twice. His first wife was Mary E. Sole (1867 - June, 1895) whom he married in 1893. They had one daughter. His second wife was Etta May Hawkins (December 8, 1877 - March 1962) of Ritchie Co., W. Va. They were married on July 4, 1902 in Harrisville, W. Va. There were no children by this marriage. While in W. Va. Samuel became Sheriff of Elm Grove. His residences included Wheeling (1880s), Wilbur and Alma, Tyler Co. (1903), Morgantown (1927) and Mt. Morris, Greene Co., Pa. (1931). Prior to his marriage, Samuel joined the US Army and was the only Delo to have served in the Cavalry during the Indian Wars at the close of the 1880s in the Southwest (See Military). John is buried at Shinnston, W. Va.

On January 11, 1889, Frank enlisted at Wheeling, W. Va. He was a Private with the 2nd and 4th US Cavalry serving within the zone of Indian hostilities at Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (from May 28, 1889 to December 31, 1890) and at Ft. Wingate, New Mexico (from January 1891 to June 1892) He served a short two month stint at Ft. Wallawalla, Washington in 1890. On January 17, 1892 while exercising his horse it stepped in a prairie dog hole and threw him. He was discharged at Ft. Wingate on June 5, 1892. His description was given as 5’9”, blue eyes, brown hair, fair complexion and single. Frank may have put in more time with the females in the area than he did against hostile Indians, if his medical record is any true indication


679. Olive E Deloe

Olive E. married into the family of her stepmother. Her married name, therefore, was Hawkins. As of 1938, she resided in Middlebourne, W. Va. There were three children from the marriage.


Etta May Hawkins

Mr. Hawkins was born on a farm near Clarksburg, Har- rison County, November 25, 1878, and is a son of William and Nancy (Nuzum) Hawkins, the former a native of Taylor County, this state, and the latter of Harrison Coun- ty. The father became one of the successful teachers in the schools of Harrison County and was a gallant soldier of the Union in the Civil war, in which he served more than three years, in the command of General Sherman, he having been wounded in both legs and also injured by a saber stroke. After the close of the war he returned to Harrison County, and he continued as one of the honored citizens and representative farmers of that county until his death in 1907, his widow being still a resident of that county. Mr. Hawkins was an active member of the Meth- odist Protestant Church, as is also his widow, was a re- publican in politics, and was affiliated with the Grand Army of the Republic. All of the fine family of twelve children survive the honored father: Effie, wife of Syl- vanus Frum; May, the wife of S. F. Deloe; Edward Mar- shall, subject of this review; Anna, wife of Rev. Perry Null; Thomas, a blacksmith at McMechen, Marshall Coun- ty; Morton, a miner at MeMechen; Stella, wife of John Null; Nettie, wife of Albert Duty; Naomi and Miss Mat- tie; Everett, a miner in Ohio; and Muriel, wife of Rev. Arthur Null.


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