THE GOBLE FAMILY
NEWSLETTER
By Evelyn Goble Steen Subscription Rate: $10.00 for 2 years (4 issues) or
Free by E-mail
Volume 11, Issue 1, February
2004
Happy Valentines Day,
Our 2004 Goble reunion is only 5
months away. Please read the
information below and make your reservations.
If you would like to share a family event or story, please send it to:
Evelyn Steen, 36 Lake Meade Drive, East Berlin, Pennsylvania, 17316. GobleNews@aol.com
INSIDE
The 2004 Goble Family Reunion will be held in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania July 10, 2004. We have made arrangements with the Holiday Inn - Battlefield in Gettysburg. They will guarantee at least 40 rooms for our weekend in July. The room rate is $109.00 per night. I know that will seem high to many, but for a tourist town on the east coast it isn't bad. The Holiday Inn - Battlefield is 5 blocks south of Business Route 15 and very near the heart of town. Our accommodations are within walking distance of the National Cemetery where Abraham Lincoln gave his famous Gettysburg address.
OUR PLANS
We will meet in the ballroom at the Holiday Inn on Friday, July
9, 2004 during the afternoon and evening as cousins arrive. We will be able
to start setting up our displays Friday evening if we wish.
A continental breakfast is included with our rooms but there is a restaurant in the lobby that will serve a more substantial meal.
Saturday, July 10th we will gather in the ballroom starting about 9:00a.m. The first portion of our reunion will be meeting and greeting, attaching our nametags, looking at the displays and having our photographs taken.
We are planning a Civil War theme and encourage you to bring information about your Civil War ancestors to share. We would like information about your Civil War ancestor as early as possible so that we can locate the monument on the battlefield representing the unit/company they fought in. (We hope to visit the monuments on Sunday.)
A luncheon will be served in one end of the ballroom after which we will have our program and association meeting. I have already spoken to several cousins who would like to make presentations. We will dismiss late afternoon so some individual exploring of Gettysburg will be possible. We will either provide suggestions or arrange a planned guided tour. As the date draws closer the program of events will become more defined.
Sunday morning, July 11, we will meet for breakfast and say our goodbyes. The Holiday Inn will prepare a breakfast buffet for our group. This event is always optional. We may arrange a battlefield tour for Sunday afternoon if there is enough interest. Please let me know if you are interested in the breakfast and/or the tour.
Menu: Fresh fruit and
cereal, variety of fruit juices, ham, sausage, bacon, scrambled eggs, home
fried potatoes, waffles, French toast, buttermilk biscuits with sausage gravy,
baked apples, coffee, tea.
Cost: Adults $12.00,
Children 4-12 $6.00, Children under 4 complimentary.
RESERVATIONS AND COSTS
The reunion cost will be $25.00 per person. Children 12 to 6 will be $10.00 and children 5 and under will be free. This fee includes a luncheon on Saturday. The Sunday breakfast will be an additional cost for those wanting to participate.
Attached to this letter you will find a reservation form to fill out and return to the Holiday Inn. You may send a check or use a credit card to confirm your reservation. If you would prefer to phone the Holiday Inn you may do so by calling 717-334-6211. They do not have a toll free number we can use. If you want to arrange an extended stay, let them know at this time, if possible.
Menu: Beef, ham and baked chicken; salad
bar of lettuce, carrots, onions, tomatoes, green peppers, cucumbers, croutons,
and dressings; mashed potatoes, rice pilaf, broccoli, glazed carrots, baked
apples, rolls, butter, desserts and beverages.
MARK YOUR CALENDARS
Please also let me know of your intentions
by filling out the other attached form and returning it to me. If you have any suggestions or would like to
make a presentation, have a display or items of interest you would like to
share, let me know. Contact Evelyn
Goble Steen at 36 Lake Meade Drive, East Berlin, PA 27316, 717-259-7870 at GobleNews@aol.com or GobleNews@adelphia.net.
CAMPGROUNDS, B&BS AND OTHER HOTELS
For more information on accommodations contact the Gettysburg Convention & Visitors Bureau at http://www.gettysburgcvb.org/
THE NEAREST AIRPORTS
FROM HARRISBURG INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Exit airport
and follow airport road north to PA Route 283. Follow PA Route 283 towards
Harrisburg to Pennsylvania Turnpike Interchange #19. Follow Pennsylvania Turnpike West (Interstate 76) to the
Gettysburg Pike Exit, Exit 17. Follow
U.S. Route 15 South to any of the Gettysburg exits. (45 miles)
FROM BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Exit airport
and follow Interstate 195 North to Baltimore Washington Parkway North, Exit
#2. Follow Baltimore Washington Parkway
North to Interstate 695 North (Baltimore Beltway). Follow Interstate 695 North and signs for Towson to Interstate
795 North. Take Interstate 795 to MD
Route 140 towards Westminster At Westminster, pick up MD Route 97/PA Route 97
and follow to Gettysburg. (61 miles)
FROM WASHINGTON DULLES INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Exit Dulles
International Airport onto Dulles Airport Access Road (this is a toll
road). Follow Access Road to connection
with Interstate 495 (Washington Beltway). Follow Interstate 495 North towards
Frederick, MD, Exit #38. Follow Interstate 270 to Frederick, MD. At Frederick,
take U.S. Route 15 North and exit at the first exit across the Pennsylvania
state line (Steinwehr Avenue/ Business Route 15).
OR
Exit Dulles
International Airport at VA Route 28.
Follow VA Route 28 North to VA Route 7. Take VA Route 7 West towards
Leesburg. East of Leesburg, U.S. Route 15 Bypass intersects with VA Route 7.
Follow bypass around city and it will reconnect with U.S. Route 15. Follow U.S.
Route 15 North (and U.S. Route 15 North/U.S. Route 340 East) to Frederick, MD.
At Frederick, stay on U.S. Route 15 North and exit at the first exit across the
Pennsylvania state line (Steinwehr Avenue/ Business Route 15). (77 miles)
FROM RONALD REAGAN WASHINGTON AIRPORT
Exit airport
onto George Washington Memorial Parkway toward city. Follow the George
Washington Memorial Parkway to Interstate 495 (Washington Beltway). Follow
Interstate 495 North towards Frederick, MD, Exit #38. Follow Interstate 270 to Frederick, MD. At Frederick, take U.S.
Route 15 North and exit at the first exit across the Pennsylvania state line
(Steinwehr Avenue/ Business Route 15).
(86 miles)
FROM PHILADELPHIA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Exit airport and follow Interstate 95 North to Interstate 76 West, Exit #15. Follow Interstate 76 West to the Pennsylvania Turnpike Interchange #24. Follow Pennsylvania Turnpike West (Interstate 76) to the Gettysburg Pike Exit, Exit 17. Follow U.S. Route 15 South to any of the Gettysburg exits. (150 miles)
MAP
There
is as very good interactive map of Gettysburg at: http://www.gettysburgcvb.org/HTML/Maps/MapIndex.php
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http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~goble/homepage/index.htm
You can join the Association, order
the hard copy newsletter, and/or make a contribution by sending a check or
money order to:
Evelyn Goble Steen
36 Lake Meade Drive
East Berlin, PA 17316
Join
The Goble Family Association
You
are invited to join the Goble Family Association for 2004. There is a mail in membership form at the
end of this letter. We are looking
forward to a prosperous and rewarding genealogy and family experience in 2004
and hope to meet many of you face to face at our the Goble Reunion next summer
in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Volunteer
to help make our family association the best it can be.
James Irvin (11) Goble was born February 27, 1917 in Lerna,
Illinois. He was one of 9 children born
to Albert Clarence (10) Goble and Jessie Belle Eldridge. James/Jim married Mary Luella Morgan in 1946
and they had 2 children. Jim died
February 10, 2001 in Martinsville, Illinois.
The following was taken
from an interview Jim had with the Martinsville Gazette newspaper on June 5,
1995.[1]
Fifty Years Ago
GOBLE HELPED LIBERATE
EUROPE
The photograph is of Jim
Goble and his Army buddy, Carmel Denny.
Jim
Goble volunteered for military duty soon after the United States entered the
war but he was told to wait until his draft number of 51 came up near
Westfield. He registered for the draft
in both Coles and Clark counties.
Jim was assigned to a tank division because he knew
how to drive a truck. The job of his
tank platoon was to provide smoke screen for tanks. The smoke was actually white phosphorous. Jim said, “That was wicked stuff. Just a drop of that stuff could burn clear
through your arm.”
Jim was paid $21.00 a month. He said, “You didn’t have much left after
paying for your laundry and insurance.
Life insurance was $5.70 a month for $10,000 coverage.”
Jim was a little older than normal but
adds, “we had some guys in there forty-five years old. Some of them would say, we’ve got a boy in
the service. I aint no better than he
is, so I’m going to stay in !”
Jim trained stateside for two
years. He was at Fort Knox and Pine
Camp. His battalion had maneuvers in
Tennessee and the desert of California.
They had snow training in northern New York. “The first night I got up there we got eighteen inches of
snow. And that was in April! Then we came back to Texas. In Texas the division was divided into
smaller units. We were attached to
different infantry outfits overseas. We
went first with the 102nd that was in the Siegfried Line. Then they attached us to the 84th.”
Goble said that “the Siegfried Line
was a bunch of pillboxes. One pillbox
covered another pillbox so you didn’t have too much of a chance getting on the
blind side. They had artillery guns and
machine guns both. I think they were
twenty-some men that stayed in them, cooked in them and everything. They had an air pump that would suck air
through the concrete. If they were
closed up, one man would pump awhile and then the other man would pump.”
The Air Force was always bombing them
but they couldn’t hardly knock them out even with a direct hit. They were about four feet thick. They had dirt over the top of them. All you saw was the gun ports. You could be pretty close to one and
couldn’t see it.”
”Even before the pill boxes we
encountered the “dragon’s teeth.” These
were white reinforced concrete. They
were all up and down the line a hundred yards deep. The Germans had prepared the dragon’s teeth and pill boxes for
years with slave labor.”
Jim’s battalion crossed the English
Channel in flat-bottom LSTs. These were
the boats that would go up near the beach and drop off tanks and soldiers. “You had to wait till the tide came
down. About 300 yards out you dropped a
big anchor. You ran up on the
beach. It was supposed to be day. You dropped the door down, then you waited
till the tide came in to pull back off the beach. You had about four hours to land and unload.”
“Sometimes things didn’t work out as
planned. They got confused and the
timing wasn’t right. They went to drop
their door and it might be over the top of the tank. They drowned. There were
a lot of accidents.” “Some of
the tanks were intended to land in the water.
These were equipped with snorkels and the hatches were sealed. If the water was deeper than the snorkel,
these men were drowned. Many of the
landings were made at night, which made landing more difficult.”
Jim’s battalion fought next to the
English Army. “The English amused
me. We called them Dr. Pepper. At ten, two and four, they’d stop for
tea. It didn’t make any difference if
they were fighting like heck. Things
shut down and everybody got his tea out.”
“When the United States came ashore
at Normandy, the Germans were caught off guard. They had several divisions on maneuvers there but many of their
guys were home on furlough. They
figured they’d have a few days notice.
When we landed we landed with enough that we went in . We had to.
There was no turning back.”
Goble rode in a half-track, which was an
armored truck with wheels on the front and tracks on the back. It had quarter inch armor. A machine gun wouldn’t penetrate it. There was a gun mounted in the back with a
range of one mile.
Jim told how the guys on the front
didn’t take showers but once every six weeks.
“We took showers in our steel helmets. About every one you looked at was full of soap suds.” The guys that were five or ten miles back of
the lines could take showers regularly.
“There was always somebody on guard
while the others slept. While you could
sleep in your seat, the soldiers usually got out on the ground, dug a hole and
slept inside it.”
Jim wrote a letter that winter, “The
ground in the Ardennes was frozen so hard that eighteen jeeps and three half
tracks drove across a mine field laid by the Germans to hinder their advance on
Seilly. When the engineers cleared the
field the next day, they discovered that the paint had been worn off some of
the unexploded mines when the vehicles ran over them. What a lucky night for us!
There were 97 land mines in that road.”
A mine injured Jim later that winter of
1944 after the Battle of the Bulge. “We
were waiting to cross this river.
They’d cut the dam down south of us and flooded that whole river in
there and we couldn’t cross it.” “The
guy that brought our dinner up was in a jeep.
He decided he’d grease the u-joints on it. He ran the front wheels up on a couple of ammunition boxes. There was a block of wood sitting there and
he just picked it up and shoved it under the back wheel. That was a mine. When the u-joint wasn’t just right, he decided to spin his wheels
without taking the block out. He kicked
it in gear and gave it everything it had.”
“Four of them hit the door. I
watched everything turn real purple. It
set everything on fire in there. I was
the only one that got hurt in that deal.
I went into another part of the factory and they called the medics. They cut all my clothes off. Every stitch! I had little pieces of shrapnel all over me. Up my arms, my eyes, my legs.”
They took Jim out by ambulance. Seeing the factory on fire the Germans
attached. Two American soldiers were
killed. Goble was awarded a Purple
Heart.
Jim spent 60
days in the hospital. “It blew my ear drums out. I don’t have an eardrum on my left side.I can hear with my right ear but it’s getting pretty bad. The reason why the doctor kept me in the hospital so long was that he would go in there and acid on a swab and go around where the ear drum had been to keep it irritated so it would grow. Think that didn’t burn? One grew
back. The other didn’t.”
After his hospital stay, the Army could
have either sent Jim home or employed him in limited service. They chose limited service.
Look for
a story in our next issue about Jim Goble’s brother, Charles Joseph (11) Goble.
This article appeared in
the February issue of the “First Family News” – a Central Point,
Oregon church newsletter
Our “Unsung
Hero”[2]
“And
as for you brothers, never tire of doing
what is right”
2
Thessalonians 3:13
Max Goble is our ”Unsung Hero” for January. Here is a man who is totally unsung, but so deserving. Max is a man who has been a member of our church since 1924. Yes, he has been attending for 79 years. What an example! Max has been involved in all kinds of ministries in the past, including serving on the Church Board, ushering, and being a member of a prayer team, to name a few. Max helped build the church over on Holly Street. When the building was sold and the building project began here, Max was on board. He volunteered full time for one whole year and part-time another year helping erect this church on the hill. We are all benefactors of his hard, dedicated labor. Max is still a faithful, boosting, encouraging, attending member. He radiates the joy of the Lord. Max has never tired of doing what is right. Max, we thank you and congratulate you on your long tenure serving the Lord in this place. May grace and peace in abundance be yours.
Max’s
ancestry: Max Kenzle/Kenzel (11) Goble, Ernest Elzina (10) Goble, Irvin/Irwin
Green (9) Goble, William (8) Goble, Daniel (7) Goble, Benjamin (6) Goble/Gobel,
Daniel (5) Goble, Daniel (4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble,
Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi (William) Goble.
CARSTEN MICHA (14) MACPHERSON (held by
his grandmother, Barbara Volker, was born January 17, 2004 to Christopher (13)
Macpherson and Kimberly Ann Diaz. He weighed 9 pounds 7 ounces and is 20 1/2
inches long. Mother and baby are doing fine. He has two sisters; Bailey Sarah
and Harley McKenna. CONGRATULATIONS to the family.
Ancestry: Carsten Micha (14) Macpherson, Christopher (13)
Macpherson, Barbara Lee (12) Goble, William Ivan (11) Goble, Floy Ivan (10)
Goble, John (9) Goble, William (8) Goble, Daniel (7) Goble, Benjamin (6)
Goble/Gobel, Daniel (5) Goble, Daniel (4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel
(2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi (William) Goble. BRYNN RAE (15) COTTON was born to Amanda (14)
Beyer and her husband, Brent Cotton, on November 26, 2003, in Butte,
Montana. Brynn's ancestry: Brynn Rae Cotton(15), Amanda Beyer(14), Lougeina
Graham(13), Patricia Wadding(12), Books Clyde Wadding(11), Harriet Ceola
Blose(10), Martha Frances Goble(9), Robert(8), Isaac(7), Enos(6), Gersham(5),
Robert(4), Daniel(3), Daniel(2), Thomas(1). Source: Dick Wadding HAPPY BIRTHDAY Happy 90th Birthday to Francis
Edgar (10) Doughty who celebrated on January 10, 2004. Francis attended the
2001 Goble Family Reunion in Reno, Nevada traveling from New York and
entertained us with some of his historical stories. Francis's ancestry:
Francis Edgar (10) Doughty, Jennie "Grace" (9) Goble, Hiram Edwin (8)
Goble, Nathaniel (7) Goble, Eliel (6) Goble, Ezekiel (5) Goble, Jonas (4) Goble,
Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi (William)
Goble. Do you have a Civil War
ancestor? Was your ancestor at the
Battle of Gettysburg? Below is a list of Gobles and
Goble ancestors who fought at the battle of Gettysburg. We continue to look for more information on
these and other Civil War Gobles. If
you believe your Civil War ancestor was at Gettysburg, please provide as much
information as possible and we will be happy to do a search for data. German Tree Isaac G. Fleenor, died
July 2, 1863 in Gettysburg, PA. He
served in Company: I, Unit: 48 in the Virginia Infantry as a Private. He was a Confederate. (His mother was
Deida (Judy) Gobble) Harvey G. Fleenor, served
in Company I, Unit 48 in the Virginia Infantry as a Private. He was a Confederate. His brother was in the same unit and died in
Gettysburg. (His mother was Deida (Judy) Gobble) Thomas Goble Tree George William Houghton,
At the age of 18 he enlisted in Company H. 33d Regiment, NY Militia organized in advance of second call for
volunteers in August 1861 for three years, and served under General T. Pope,
General Joseph Hooker. He re enlisted
as a veteran Dec 24, 1863 and participated in the following battles: Chancellorsville, VA, Gettysburg, Lookout
Mountain, Mission Ridge, Ringold, Taylors Ridge, Atlanta, Savannah, and was
with Sherman on his famous march to the sea, also at the surrender of Johnson's
army and the grand review at Washington in 1865. (From "The Family of John
Houghton" page 401-2. (Second cousin of Sarah Houghton Goble) Charles Henry Houghton, He
enlisted about 1856 in Company H. 33d Regiment, NY Militia organized in advance
of second call for volunteers in August 1861 for three years, and served under
General T. Pope, General Joseph Hooker.
He re enlisted as a veteran Dec 24, 1863 and participated in the
following battles: Chancellorsville,
VA, Gettysburg, Lookout Mountain, Mission Ridge, Ringold, Taylors Ridge,
Atlanta, Savannah, and was with Sherman on his famous march to the sea, also at
the surrender of Johnson's army and the grand review at Washington in 1865.
(Second cousin of Sarah Houghton Goble) Floyd S. (8) Goble, Orange
Blossom Reunions in Gettysburg Text on back of picture: July 1,
1888. Orange Blossoms Regiment at Gettysburg. Note: The Middletown Volunteers
were recruited in August 1862, as part of the famous Orange Blossoms, the 124th
Regiment. They fought at Gettysburg, where half the men were killed or wounded.
The regiment was active until the end of the Civil War. it arrived home in
June, 1865. Ancestry: Floyd S. (8)
Goble, Thomas W. (7) Goble, Henry (6) Goble, George (Jacob) (5) Goble, Robert
(4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi
(William) Goble. Edward (7) Stidd, served
in Company B, the 151st Regiment, Pennsylvania volunteers, infantry -Fought at
Gettysburg. Ancestry: Edward (7)
Stidd, Sarah Sally Maria (6) Goble, George (Jacob) (5) Goble, , Robert (4)
Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi
(William) Goble. Alexander (9) Goble, Civil
War - 4th Corporal (Co. F, 63rd Reg. Pennsylvania Vol. Inf.) Battles of
Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Antietam, wounded in Natchetts Run. Ancestry: Alexander (9) Goble, Robert (8)
Goble, Isaac (7) Goble, Enos (6) Goble, Gersham/Gershom (5) Goble, Robert (4)
Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi
(William) Goble. Unknown Tree GOBLE, Jacob A. - ? - 10
October 1862 - Served as a Private from Pennsylvania where he claimed residence
in Upper Mt. Bethel. Recruited at Upper Mount Bethel for 9 months service.
Enlisted in G Co. 153rd Inf Reg. PA. Jacob A. Goble; wounded 7/1/1863
Gettysburg. Mustered Out at Harrisburg, PA on 24 July 1863. Died in Portland,
PA. - Civil War Index. (Possibly
Jacob Shipman (8) Goble from the Thomas Goble tree.) Goble, Jacob. Age 18
(1843). 55th Ohio Veteran Volunteer
Infantry. Entered Service 13 Sept. 1861. Served 3 years; Private Co. D;
captured 28 Oct. ‘64; Mustered Out 16 June 1865, at Camp Chase, O., by order of
War Department. VETERAN. (Possibly son of John/James Goble and
Lucinda Phillips.) GOBLE, James E - about
1842 - 20 February 1865 - Enlisted at Amboy, NY as a Private at age 23.
Promoted to Full 2nd Lieut on 21 March 1865. Served New York. Enlisted D Co.
193rd Inf Reg. NY. Mustered Out at Harper's Ferry, WV on 18 January 1866. Found
in "Civil War Soldiers from the Town of Amboy" having served
in the Battle of Gettysburg. - (src1)New York: Report of the
Adjutant-General, 1894-1906. (src2) the History of Oswego County, N. Y., 1789 –
1877, published by Everett & Ferriss, 1878 GOBLE, Oscar - ? - 10
October 1862 - Enlisted in Pennsylvania in G Co. 153rd Inf Reg. PA. Mustered in
October 10, 1862 and mustered out July 24, 1863. Served as a Private. Claimed
residence in Upper Mt. Bethel, PA. Died of wounds he received July 1, 1963 in
the Battle of Gettysburg at Portland, PA on 15 August 1863. - Civil War
Index, Records of the 153rd PA Cos F to K.
(Possibly the Oscar (8) Goble, son of Enos (7) Goble and Rebecca
Anderson of the Thomas Goble tree.) GOBLE, William - ? - 04
November 1862 - Served Pennsylvania. Enlisted in B Co. 165th Inf Reg. PA.
Mustered Out at Gettysburg, PA on 28 July 1863. - History of Pennsylvania
Volunteers, 1861-1865. Resources: GOBLE, JOANNA age 88, February 4, 2004. Wife of
the late Edward; mother of Jo Ann (Carlisle) Davis, Paul (Kathy) Goble and
Paula (Brian) Wark. Grandmother of Jim, Jeff and Kristen. Sister of Josephine
Dattero and Edward Byk. Visitation Friday at The Sterling Heights Chapel of
Bagnasco & Calcaterra Funeral Home, 13650 E. Fifteen Mile Road (at
Schoenherr) Friday 4-8 p.m. with Prayers Friday 7 p.m. Funeral Saturday 10 a.m.
from the funeral home with procession to St. Blase Catholic Church. Funeral
Mass 11 a.m. Entombment Resurrection Cemetery, Clinton Twp. In lieu of flowers
memorials may be made to the Michigan Humane Society or Michigan Animal Rescue
League in Pontiac.[3] MARGARET J. GOBLE HALL
Newburgh, N.Y. Margaret J. Goble Hall, a devoted wife and mother and resident
of the Town of Newburgh, entered into rest Saturday, January 24, 2004 at
St. Luke's Hospital. She was 66. The daughter of the late Leroy Goble and Mary
Hall Goble Mellor, Margaret was born April 16, 1937 in Ellenville, NY. She was
the wife of William M. Hall, Sr. for 50 years. Survivors include: her loving
and devoted husband, William M. Hall, Sr.; children: Margaret "Missy"
Snyder, Lance Hall, Marvin "Rusty" Hall, Sr., Christine
"Tina" Sczesny, Monte A Hall, Sr. and Tracy Hall; siblings: Marion
Kneisler, Eleanor Coutant, June McDonald, Nancy Chapin, Harold Goble, Lee Goble
and Rose Burns. Margaret is survived by 27 grandchildren, 18
great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. She was pre-deceased by
one son, William M. Hall, Jr. "Billy", two brothers: David and Leroy
and a sister Mary. Calling hours will be Thursday, January 29, 2004 from 4-8 PM
at Doulin Newburgh Funeral Home, Inc., 318 North Montgomery St. Cremation will
be at the convenience of the family. Donations may be made to the American
Diabetes Foundation, or a charity of one's choice. Arrangements under the care
of Doulin Newburgh Funeral Home Inc. Middletown, NY Times Herald Record CURTIS TUSSEY, JR. passed away Thursday, January
22, 2004 at 11:20 am. He was the husband of Freda Bernice Goble of our
German Goble tree. The funeral was held at Jones and Prestons Funeral home in
Paintsville, Kentucky. The Goble family ancestry is: Freda Bernice Goble,
Sheridan Goble, George Wesley/Van (Gobble) Goble, John M/B (Gobble) Goble,
Isaac Gobble, John George Gobble, Johann Friedrich (Frederick) (Gobble) Gabel,
Johann Friedrich Gabel, Hans (Johann) Jacob Gabel. ELSIE H GOBLE, 88, Andover Twp, formerly of Stillwater,
died 16 January 2004. Elsie Christina Hoffman, b 16 May 1915, Newton,
Sussex Co, NJ, d/o John V Hoffman and Ella J Decker, was the widow of Arthur
Goble, 23 Jun 1912-18 Jun 2000. They had two children, Arthur & Shirley, my
mother used to visit with Elsie. I believe Elsie was living with her daughter,
Shirley, in East Stroudsburg, Monroe Co, PA unless she went into a nursing home
in Andover, NJ. New Jersey Herald, Newton, NJ, dated 18 Jan 04 DAVID STARR (11) GOBLE, 34, of Earlville, died Thursday,
January 1, 2004 in Paw Paw, Illinois. Funeral services were held on
Monday, January 5th at the Rollo Congregational Church. The Rev. David Bateman
officiated. Burial was in the South Paw Paw Cemetery in Earlville. Mr. Goble
was born on May 1, 1969 in Kamloops, British Columbia. He was a 1987 graduate
of Paw Paw High School and was a member of the First Baptist Church in Paw Paw.
He was also a member of the Native American Interior Salish Tribe. Mr. Goble is
survived by his parents, Elliot and Betty (Luce) Goble of Earlville; two
daughters, Katelynn and Lyndsay Goble of Earlville; one son, Dakota Goble of
Earlville; one brother Jonathan (Theresa) Goble of LaPorte, Indiana; and one
sister, Melody (Don) Gladden of DeKalb. Our deepest sympathy to the family. David's
ancestry: David Starr (11) Goble, Elliott Ray (10) Goble, James Clifford (9)
Goble, William Mott (8) Goble, Timothy (7) Goble, Ezekiel (6) Goble, Ezekiel
(5) Goble, Jonas (4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas
(1) Goble, Willmi (William) Goble. SUSAN JOYCE (13) JOHNSON GILLILAN died on December 2,
2003 from breast cancer. She was born September 9, 1930 in Gary, Lake Co.,
Indiana to Eleanor Rexine (12) Choisser and Walter Dale Johnson who survive.
She married William "Bill" Joe Gillilan on May 10, 1986 in Vienna,
Wood, WV and they have one son, Gregory Neil (14) Gillilan who survive. Susan's
ancestry: Susan Joyce (13) Johnson, Eleanor Rexine (12) Choisser, Luella
Elizabeth (11) Williams, Grace A. (10) Goble, William Henry Harrison (9) Goble,
George Washington (8) Goble, David H. (7) Goble, Stephen (6) Goble, Stephen (5)
Goble, Daniel (4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble, Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1)
Goble, Willmi (William) Goble. GORDON MILLARD CLEMENT, husband of cousin Priscilla
Grace (11) Alden, passed away June 24, 2003 in Massachusetts from
mesothelioma cancer (caused from asbestos). He is survived by his wife
Priscilla; daughter, Marietta Elizabeth (Clement) Schwartz (Robert); sons
Robert Millard (Terry) and David Doughty Clement. Gordon and Pricilla attended
the 2001 Goble Family Reunion in Reno, Nevada. He will be missed. Priscilla's
ancestry is Priscilla Grace (11) Alden, Elizabeth Woodin Goble (10) Doughty,
Jennie "Grace" (9) Goble, Hiram Edwin (8) Goble, Nathaniel (7) Goble,
Eliel (6) Goble, Ezekiel (5) Goble, Jonas (4) Goble, Daniel/David (3) Goble,
Daniel (2) Goble, Thomas (1) Goble, Willmi (William) Goble. PERSONAL NOTE Dear family, I’m off to Alaska to help out when my 4th
grandchild is born. I will be there for
about a month. I plan to check my email
messages everyday; so don’t hesitate to contact me if you have questions. I look forward to seeing you in Gettysburg in July. Happy Spring! Love, Evelyn
Fill out and mail to Holiday Inn in Gettysburg. Download the PDF file.
Please let me know if you plan to attend the
2004 Goble Family Reunion in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Clip and mail the form below or download the PDF file.
Yes, I will be attending the 2004 Goble
Family Reunion in Gettysburg on July 10th.
Name:__________________________________________________________
Address:_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
Phone:_________________ E-Mail:________________________________
_____ Person(s) will be in my party @ $25.00 each. $_______
_____ Children between 12 – 5 @ $10.00 each. $_______
_____ Children under 5. $__Free__
Total enclosed $_______
I/we would like to attended the Sunday breakfast.___
I/we are interested in a tour of the battlefield.____
I will____ will not____ need table space for a display.
Return form to:
Evelyn Goble Steen
Goble Family Reunion
36 Lake Meade Drive
East Berlin, PA 17316
Join the Goble Family Association – 2004-2005
1 year for $5.00 _______ 2 years for $10.00. _____
Name_________________________________________________
Address_______________________________________________
Phone: ______________________
Email____________________
Mail to: Evelyn Goble Steen, 36 Lake Meade
Drive, East Berlin, Pennsylvania 17316 (717-259-7870)