Thursday, October 29, 2009

John Straubhaar's parents and grandparents - coming to America

“My father, Jacob Straubhaar, was born January 21, 1876 at Niederstocken, Bern, Switzerland. He died on February 20, 1945 at Rupert, Minidoka County, Idaho and was buried in the Rupert Cemetery on February 24, 1945. My father’s parents were Jacob Straubhaar and Anna Elizabeth Strahm.

“My mother, Lena Blaser, was born July 14, 1873, at Langnau, Bern, Switzerland. She died on January 9, 1919, at Rupert, Minidoka, Idaho and was buried in Montpelier, Bear Lake, Idaho. Her parents were Christian Blaser and Anna Marie Gerber.

“My father and mother were married in the Logan, Utah Temple on October 26, 1899.

“My mother was 18 when she came to the United States. We have been told that since she spoke English as well as her native Swiss language that she helped at Ellis Island with the records of arriving Swiss immigrants. Lena’s brother Chris came to America first and worked in Chicago as a basket maker. Then came Alfred and Ernest and they settled for awhile in Bern, Wisconsin. When the brothers had saved enough money they sent for their mother and the rest of their brothers and sisters except for my mother Lena who, apparently, stayed in Switzerland with her father. Their father didn’t come to the United States. Lena came a year later.

“My uncle Alfred Blaser has researched his mother and father’s history and he writes as follows: Anna Marie Gerber (my maternal grandmother) was born February 10, 1841 in Frittenbach by Langnau, Switzerland, the daughter of Elizabeth Kuhni and Johannes Gerber. Their farm barely produced enough to feed their family. Anna Marie learned to read and write even though she rarely was able to attend school. She married Christian Blaser on August 12, 1864. They had seven children: Rosetta, Ernest, Robert, Christian, Lena (my mother), Maria and Alfred. Apparently, Uncle Alfred reports, Christian Blaser drank up his earnings and Anna Marie did dressmaking to support her family. Anna Marie was raised in the Lutheran Church and had attended the Methodist Church. When she heard the Mormon elders preach the gospel, she knew this was the religion for which she had been searching. She knew that she wanted to take her family to America. They embarked on the ship “The City of Rome” on May 14, 1899. They arrived at the end of their journey in Montpelier, Idaho on June 4, 1899. Anna Marie died on October 20, 1902. (Excerpted from Alfred Blaser’s story “I Remember Mother”).

“My father was quite young, about six, when he came to the United States with his family. A wealthy man in Montpelier, a Mr. Koonz, brought people over from Switzerland to work for him. To pay back their passage they worked for over a year milking cows and working in his dairy operation. My grandfather Jacob came over that way. He and my grandmother Anna Elisabeth had six daughters and one son, who was my father. Diphtheria and typhoid took three of the girls as youngsters. Rose, Mary, Elizabeth and Jacob, my father, were the surviving children.

“My grandfather, Peter Larsen, John Bauman and John Bischoff pooled their resources and started their own cheese making operation. My grandparents had 5 acres of ground in town. The cows were herded out on the hillside outside of town and brought back into town every evening. Hay and grain was raised and at harvest time horses and people tromped the grain on to canvas and then the straw was taken off the grain.

“Later on the grain was harvested with a Ringling Bros. contraption. About five teams of horses would go around in a circle which turned a tumbling rod which operated the thresher and a grain separator. Someone on the end stacked the straw. A binder pulled by horses cut the grain and tied it into bundles. These bundles were taken to the separator which separated the grain from the straw and chaff.

“I was sixteen when our family moved to Rupert, Idaho. We lived on a farm outside of town. A terrible flu epidemic hit the country in the winter 1918-1919 and everyone in the family came down with it except Mable. The doctor who came out to the house told my dad that I was so sick that I probably wouldn’t live until morning. I overheard him telling Dad that so I was determined that I would live. During the night our mother died. This was January 9, 1919. Hubert and I were 19 and 17. A light went out of our lives when our mother died.

“Dad married Sarah Fidelia Babbitt on May 21, 1920. She had a little girl named Pearl. They continued to live in Rupert. Dad and Fidelia had Lena Elizabeth, Edna Beth, Max Rudolph (who died as a baby), Della, Reva Marie, Ernest Lee and Joyce Arlene.

“My dad died on February 21, 1945. He and Fidelia and the younger children were living in Paul, Idaho. Dad had gone to a farm sale with two of his friends–one was Jake Kerbs. It was a very cold day and Dad must have gotten chilled. His friends thought he didn’t look well so they drove him home. He died in the car. He didn’t suffer a long illness in the hospital so that was a blessing for him. He was a good man and a good father and we missed him very much.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

John Straubhaar's brothers and sisters

“The children in our family were: Hubert Jacob Straubhaar, born July 18, 1900; John Joseph Straubhaar, born November 4, 1902; Vera Ida Straubhaar, born June 22, 1909; Maggie and Martha Straubhaar died in infancy; and Mable Straubhaar who was born December 21, 1913. We were all born in Montpelier, Idaho.

“Our sisters Vera and Mable were several years younger than Hubert and I. Vera was very bright and read everything available. She could have been a very fine teacher but when she was a teenager she became ill with infantile paralysis which crippled her left arm and leg. Mable was just six when our mother died.

“My sister Vera had to come to live with us in 1938. She had had a crippling illness when she was young but she was very intelligent and loved to read and she helped the kids with their schoolwork. She knew the correct spelling of any word and the definition. She lived with us until it came to the point where Beatrice couldn’t care for her physically so she went to live at Lasher’s Nursing Home on Caldwell Boulevard. She died January 3, 1975. Hubert died (?). He and his wife Anna were living in San Bruno, California at the time. My step-sister Pearl died November 21, 1958 and my step-mother Fidelia died November 1, 1973. My sister Mable lives in California. My step-sisters and my step-brother Ernest live in the Burley area. We don’t get together too often but I often think of them.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Hubert and I (John Straubhaar)

“When Hubert and I were young we would go out to help our Dad hay. My dad would lift us up on the hay by our suspenders with his pitchfork. We thought that was great fun.

“Since Hubert and I were close in age we were good friends. In the spring and summer months we enjoyed shooting marbles. I was a pretty good player and I won all of Alex Allenbach’s marbles. His mother came to our house and demanded I return what I’d won from Allen.

“In the winter Hubert and I enjoyed skiing on the hills above town. Our skis were homemade in school woodshop. The tips of the skis were steamed in boiling water in a wash boiler to curve up the front ends. Then they were weighted down until they dried. We wore our regular boots and we walked up the hills, but we probably had more fun than the kids who ski today.

“In the winter Hubert and I trapped muskrats and took the tails into Sam Lewis’s general store. We bought all our clothes at that store. We wore knee pants and long sox when we were young and we were so proud when our folks bought us our first long pants. My dad liked to dicker Sam Lewis down on the price of our clothes.”
-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Work in California (John Straubhaar)

“I finished eighth grade and didn’t go on to high school, which wasn’t uncommon in those days for farm boys. Work, except for topping beets, etc., was scarce around Rupert and I heard that California was the land of opportunity so at age 20, with no money for a train ticket, I hopped a freight train to San Bernardino. The trip took about ten days. Food was cheap: $.35 for dinner. Two other Rupert men, Marchant Newman and George Stoneaker traveled with me. We met two Jewish fellows who were going to Los Angeles to work for their uncle. They borrowed ten dollars from me later paid it back when we all met again in a pool hall. We all liked to shoot pool.

“At a stop in Nevada we were put off the train by railroad detectives so we walk down to a beet dump to catch another train–which turned out to be a cattle train. It was cold outside to ride on top so we got into a car full of steers. We each sat on a steer. In the morning when the train stopped a crewman opened the car to see if the cattle were all right. He told us to get off the train so again we had to look for another freight train headed for California.

“We wound up in Los Angeles. We looked for work and I found a job mixing cement with a construction crew. I started at 50 cents an hour, which was raised to 75 cents–good money for those days. We lived in a rooming house called the Piedmont Hotel at Main and Spring Streets.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Beatrice and I

“After a couple of years in sunny California, I moved back to Rupert. I fed sheep that winter and worked on a spud sorter. Then I worked for Bill Hunter farming for two years. I met Beatrice about that time. We were married on her birthday, July 28, 1925. Beatrice was 20 and had just finished high school. I was nearly 24. We were married at her mother’s house by her bishop. Her mother and brother-in-law cooked us a nice wedding dinner. Beatrice had been living with her mother, who was a widow, and her younger brothers Don and Vern and her younger sister Madge. Her dad had been killed in a runaway team accident when she was just sixteen.

“We rented a house in Rupert near Beatrice’s mother’s house and then in the spring of 1926 we rented Mr. Calderhead’s farm just a mile or so away. We had sold our Model T Ford as we needed the money, so we walked back and forth to town. Mr. Calderhead was a school teacher in Rupert. He had moved back to Indiana and asked me to run his farm for him.

“I was lucky at cards and soon after we were married I won $30.00 in a poker game. I gave it to Beatrice so she could buy a blue coat with a fur collar which she had on layaway at J. C. Penneys.”
-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Our Family - Our Children Are Born

“We bought twenty acres with a two room house on the property. We sold that place after a year as there was not enough ground to make a living. We then rented the Green Tree Ranch, a mile from Rupert, from Jerry Jones. Lois was born on October 1, 1929, Carol on August 28, 1932 and Jack on August 8, 1935. We moved out to Acequia on March 16, 1937 and Nola was born just a day after we moved out there. She was a St. Patrick’s Day baby.

“In March of 1945, we moved to Nampa. I had saved my money for years and we had enough to buy a small place. It was small farm off Madison Avenue out by the sugar factory. I worked for many years at the factory during campaign and in the summer I farmed. There wasn’t any row crop framing involved, just hay and grain and cows. I made some good friends at the sugar factory–one especially good friend is Maurice Hatch. Maurice and Jean live near us now in Nampa.

“Lois and Jerry were married in the Idaho Falls Temple on July 14, 1948 and our family was sealed together in the temple on that day. That was an important day in our lives.

“We sold our place out by the sugar factory in the spring of 1950 and in June we decided to try out our new Ford automobile by driving down to San Bruno to see Hubert and Anna. Carol did most of the driving and she did a good job even though she did hit a few jackrabbits. Hubert and Anna did a fine job of showing us around the San Francisco area. We took a boat trip around Alcatraz, went down to Fisherman’s Wharf and went to Santa Cruz to a beauty pageant.

“We rented a house in Nampa that summer, and then in August, 1950 moved out to a 30 acre place we had bought in Kuna. I was a small house but we added a back port and a small front porch and dug a basement out by hand. We had a nice garden there and a big front lawn and shade trees. Beatrice always planted a long row of zinnias right along the driveway next to the garden and they were beautiful all in bloom. In the backyard we had raspberries and a couple of fruit trees. We had friendly neighbors and the ward out there was large and the people friendly. We built a big new church building when we lived in Kuna and I did a lot of volunteer help on the building of it.

“Joe was born May 31, 1951 in the Nampa Mercy Hospital. The rest of the children had been born at home with the help of a doctor and usually a midwife. Fidelia had been so good to help at the time of the new babies being born. The Kuna Grade school was not far from our place so Joe didn’t have far to go for school. When the grandchildren came along Dan, Andy and Mark were close to Joe in age and they spent lots of weekends out at Kuna on the farm with Joe. The favorite place to play was down by the creek and when they were old enough a pastime was to float on inner tubes down Indian Creek.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990


Beatrice and I Move Back to Nampa


“We sold the place in Kuna in 1973 and bought a nice home in Nampa at 67 Canyon. We moved in December, 1973. Lois and Jerry had lived in the house from June to December when their house was ready to move into so we moved right in as they moved their things out. I don’t know what our neighbors thought about all the trucks and the furniture going out and then other furniture going in all in the same day. It was hectic but worked out all right.

“We haven’t made any major changes to our house except for new paint and new carpeting and flooring in the kitchen and bathroom and adding onto the patio in back. We put in an underground sprinkling and that is a big help. We have had a nice garden every summer and the whole family shares in the help and the produce. We live just a block from the church and not far from a supermarket and other necessary businesses. It’s in a good location and we have good neighbors. Lois and Jerry and Carol and Norman live nearby.

“Nola and Dale live out south of town and we see them often. Jack and Shirley live in Twin Falls and Joe and Sandy live in Michigan. We enjoying having them all home in the summer for a few days each year.

“Beatrice will be 85 on July 28, 1990, and I will be 89 on November 4, 1990. We celebrate our 65th wedding anniversary July 28, 1990 also. We have been happy together all these years and our children say they have seldom heard us argue. We have had extremely good health up until the past few years when some aches and pains have caught up with us. The Lord has been good to us and our children and for this we are thankful.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar
Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

John & Beatrice Straubhaar Family Reunion in 1966


Family reunion with Straubhaars, Thornes, Tillers and Starks in 1966.

John Straubhaar on Growing up in Montpelier

“There wasn’t much fruit grown around Montpelier except chokecherries, wild strawberries and service berries. Apples and potatoes grown there at that time were small and not as tasty as those grown in other parts of the state. Fruit peddlers came through Montpelier in covered wagons from Cache Valley. They brought apples and pears along with other types of fruit and vegetables in season. My folks would buy whatever the peddlers were selling and what the family didn’t eat my mother would can.

“In Montpelier when I was young the Latter Day Saint church services were spoken in Swiss German. On Saturday nights dances were held in the meeting house. Benches were pushed back against the walls and children too young to dance were put to sleep on the benches and floor on coats and blankets. The Tueller family had a band and played for the dances.

“I often went with my dad to pay our family’s tithing. It was paid “in kind” with hay, grain or livestock.

“When our mother did the washing, Hubert and I turned the washer handle to keep the agitator blades going. In the summer the washing was done outside and the wash water was heated in a kettle outside over a small fire. In winter the washing was done inside and water was heated in the wood stove reservoir.

“In the summertime we swam in the canal and we became pretty good swimmers. We had a gang of boys we played with. I remember our going up into Sam Lox’s hayloft to get some watermelons Sam had stored there. We lifted up the lightest person to get the melons and we ate them all the way home. Sam tracked us home by the trail of watermelon rinds and our dad had to pay $5.00 to get us off.”

-John Joseph Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

My parents (for Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar)

“My mother, Elvaretta Petersen, was born in Richfield, Utah on June 20, 1881. She had four brothers, Steven, Clarence, Owen and Lloyd. She had two sisters, Geneva and Nellie. Nellie died at the age of eleven from a heart ailment. Their parents were Mary Jane Riley and John Petersen.

My father, Parley Alexander Gardner, was born in Payson, Utah on February 10, 1872. There were fourteen children in the family but only ten lived to maturity. His parents were Julia Huston Pratt and John Gardner. Although both parents were raised in Utah, they met and became acquainted while my father was working for Grandfather Petersen at a railroad tie camp near Evanston, Wyoming. They were married at Evanston on September 21, 1900 by a bishop of the Church there. The first year of their marriage they lived in Rexburg, Idaho, going to Kilgore during the summer to haul logs for Grandpa Petersen. My oldest sister, Maybelle, was born in Kilgore, Idaho on September 6, 1901. Later that fall they moved back to Rexburg and purchased twenty acres where they resided the next five years. My brother Parley was born in November, 1903 but lived just fifteen minutes. He is buried at Rexburg. Two years later on July 28, 1905 I was born. That same year my folks moved back to Kilgore where they purchased a 360 acre ranch from Ernest Conrad. It was about half way between Kilgore and Spencer so was called the Halfway Ranch. It was ten miles either way. Spencer was on the railroad and Kilgore was in a valley where they raised hay and cattle. Mother says there was just one big room in the house and it was about half full of baled hay so the first winter we ate, slept, and played on hay bales. The following spring and summer they lined and shingled the house, put in more windows and a partition. A few years later they added a kitchen and two bedrooms and built a cellar under the kitchen. Dad built a nice big barn with a big hay loft where we put our winter’s hay. A creek ran just back of our house and fed into a large pond which was used for watering stock. This made a good skating pond in the wintertime. We had many good times skating and coasting in the winter and playing along the creek and on a rocky hillside about one-half mile from our house during the summer.

The nearest LDS church was at Kilgore and in those days we traveled in wagons, buggies and sleighs. Sunday School was at 10:00 am. Mother took a lunch along so we could stay for Sacrament meeting at 2:00 pm. Sometimes we were invited to dinner by people living near church. When there was a dance mother said they would dance all night, eat breakfast and go home by daylight. Children were put to sleep on the seats of benches. Our church was also a school until the new church building was built.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Growing up with my Brothers and Sisters

“My brother Bill, William Pratt Gardner, was born on October 28, 1907. Four years later on August 1, 1911 my youngest sister Julia Madge was added to the family. (Bill and I watched ever so closely for the stork but never saw him come). John Donald was born on August 25, 1917 and Vern Dwight on April 3, 1919. This completed our family. Don and Vern were born after our family moved to Lewisville, Idaho.My sister MayBelle and I attended school in Kilgore one year and in Spencer two years, driving a horse and buggy spring and fall and boarding out during the winter. One winter mother lived in Spencer and dad lived on the ranch but it was too expensive to keep two houses going. When I was in the fourth grade they built a small one-room school about two miles from our place. We attended this school for three years and the average attendance was usually under ten children. My older sister May went to high school at Lewisville where she stayed with my grandparents.

In 1917, Dad sold the ranch and moved to Lewisville where he bought a house and five acres of ground within the city limits. For three summers he still took the cattle back to the ranch during the summer. The summer I was sixteen I cooked for Dad, Bill and Joe Ericson who had cattle along with my Dads. They rented grazing land from Woods’ Livestock Company, the outfit which had purchased the ranch. I completed the 7th and 8th grades and also the first and second years of high school at Lewisville Midway High School.

In the spring of 1923 Dad and Mother decided to move to Glenn’s Ferry, Idaho where my uncle Owen lived. Leaving Bill and I to finish school, the rest of the family loaded our possessions into two covered wagons and started out. While they were camped at American Falls one night part of the chickens got out of the crate and they had to chase chickens through the sage brush. They camped out at the Burley Fairgrounds one night and Dad met a Mr. Miller who owned a farm where the present Burley Airport is located. Mr. Miller was looking for a renter so he and Dad came to a deal and my family never did go on to Glenn’s Ferry. Everyone was tired of traveling anyway. There was a small house on the property but Mr. Miller bought another two room house and had it moved and joined to the original house, making four rooms. Mother was always handy about fixing things up so she soon had windows and doors and cupboards where they should be.

A few more things I should add before I go any further. Along with skating in the winter at the Halfway Ranch, we learned to ski on homemade skis. I had a pair of bought skis at one time. I wore my regular shoes for boots. The snow was so deep we could ski right over the fences. The Fourth of July celebration was held in Kilgore in a valley area between two hills.

My dad bought his first, and probably only, car from a peddler who came through Spencer. Dad didn’t know how to drive and the peddler didn’t give any instructions so Dad drove the car home to the ranch without a single lesson. Bill and I were along for the trip. I don’t know what Mother said when we drove up but I’ll bet it was plenty!

Grandma Petersen came to help whenever Mother had a new baby. I remember doing the washing, along with Bill’s help, when Mother had Don. I also remember the mailman picking up cream at our place to take on in to DuBoise to sell for us. We paid him for his time.

Getting back to our move to Burley, Bill and I came on the train when our schools were out and Dad met us at the station. It was a dull summer as we didn’t know anyone except some people by the name of Lake who lived at the fairgrounds. I went with Orson Lake a few times that fall and winter. My junior year I attended high school in Burley.

On November 7, 1923, Dad was hurt when his team ran away after pulling out of a dry creek bed near the house. He was thrown out of the wagon on to the double trees and he was kicked by the horses. His neck was broken and he died two days later in the Burley Hospital without regaining consciousness. Mother sold the stock and machinery and moved into Burley. Dad had $1,000 of insurance. With the money, Mother bought a house in Rupert, Idaho. I finished out the year at Burley high school and then graduated from high school in Rupert in June of 1925. I stayed with some neighbors for the few weeks to finish the year in Burley.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

John and I are married

“During my senior year I met John Straubhaar and we went together until we were married on July 28, 1925 at Mother’s home with just our immediate families present. Ina and Ariel Bosworth were our attendants. My brother-in-law George Gable, MayBelle’s husband, baked our wedding cake at the café where he cooked. He and Mother cooked us a nice wedding dinner. I wore my graduation dress which was a peach colored silk and black satin slippers.Our first home was a furnished four room house three blocks from Mothers, which we rented for $10.00 per month. In the spring we rented our first farm from a school teacher, Mr. Calderhead. He sold the farm that fall and moved back East so we had to move again. We bought 20 acres with a small two room house on it-no barn, no well and no bathroom. We lived there about a year and sold the place. We then moved on to the Green Tree Ranch, a forty acre farm owned by Jerry Jones. The ranch was a mile north of Rupert. We lived there for eight years.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Our family in Rupert and Acequia

“Our daughter Lois Veneta was born on October 1, 1929 at Mother’s home in Rupert. Daughter Carol Jean was born on August 28, 1932, and son John Jay (Jack) was born on August 8, 1935. They were both born at home and both in the early hours of the morning when we should have been having breakfast. A Mrs. Johnson stayed with us when Carol was born. John’s step-mother, Fedelia Straubhaar, and my sister-in-law Mabel were with me when Jack was born. Women didn’t always go to the hospital in those days and the doctor’s bill was about $50.00. While we lived on the Green Tree Ranch, John’s brother Hubert lived with us and helped run the farm.In the spring of 1937 we moved to an 80 acre farm near Acequia, Idaho owned by Bill Cowell. A house was moved on the place, a barn, garage and corrals were built. The first year where there should have been lawn was an alfalfa patch. We set out berries and shrubs and had a nice garden. We moved there on March 16 and the following day Nola Fay was born, March 17, 1937. We had ordered a boy to even up our family but another little girl was welcome. We lived on this farm for eight years. Our children attended Acequia schools and we attended the Acequia LDS church. We enjoyed many good times while living there-picnics and fishing trips with our neighbors, the Claude Chuggs. It was a friendly community. While we lived there Vera, John’s sister, came to live with us. She came in 1938. John’s father died on Febuary 21, 1945 of a heart attack. It was a great loss to all of us when he died as he was a sweet, kind man and we loved him very much. He and his family lived at Paul, Idaho at that time. Our children had always enjoyed going to Grandpa Jake and Granda Fedelia’s house, especially at Christmas time, as they kept bowls of nuts around their house so the children could crack nuts and eat them. Fedelia was a very fine cook.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Our family in Nampa

“During the Second World War, John couldn’t buy a tractor and hired men were hard to find so we sold our livestock, horses and machinery to Jay Smith who had helped us with summer before and we moved to Nampa, Idaho on March 17, 1945, Nola’s birthday. We had hired a truck from Nampa to come for our furniture. The truck arrived before we were up as we had attended the St. Patrick’s dance the night before and we had slept in later than our usual early hour of getting up. It was snowing and we scattered among our neighbors for breakfast. We pulled out amid the tearful goodbyes of the neighbors and John’s family. If we hadn’t already bought a place in Nampa, I believe we would have back out and stayed right there in Acequia. Nola will never forget that birthday. We arrived at our new home ahead of the truck and sat around the cold empty house until a neighbor Mr. Long took pity on us and invited us over to their house for supper. The truck arrived around 9:00 pm. They had burned out a bearing in a wheel near Jerome. We then put up our beds and the cook stove. This was Saturday night. Sunday we had things pretty well straightened around and we looked up the schools on Monday. Lois would attend Nampa High School, Carol Jean would go to the Junior High, and Jack and Nola would attend Lakeview Grade school.It was a rather lonely spring and summer as we knew so few people and had no one to visit except Martin and Millie Teuscher in Boise. Martin was John’s cousin and the one who had urged us to come to the Boise area. Martin and John had attended another cousin’s funeral in Montpelier and at that time Martin had invited John and I to come to Boise and look the area over.

We started attending church at the LDS First Ward and soon met some people as nice as the ones we had left in the Acequia Ward. I was asked to work in the Primary as the second counselor. On January 12, 1947 I became Primary President and served in that calling for two years.

John went to work at the sugar factory which was just about one-half mile from our place. He worked there through each campaign for twelve years. Lois graduated from high school in May, 1947, and Carol from Central Jr. High that same year. Lois attended Nampa Business college right out of high school for eight months and then went to work for lawyer, Earl Reed. She finished her business course going to night classes. On July 14, 1948 she married Jerry Thorne (Jerrold Lewis) in the Idaho Falls Temple. We went with them and had our endowments and had our family sealed to us. This was something we had waited long years for but we had needed this occasion to fulfill our plans to become a celestial family.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Lois and Jerry Thorne

“Lois and Jerry lived in Provo, Utah for the next three years while Jerry finished school at Brigham Young University. Their first son, Mark Jerrold, was born August 1, 1952 at the Nampa Mercy Hospital. They were living in Payette, Idaho at that time. Jerry had gone to work for the Boy Scouts of America after college graduation as a District Executive for the Ore-Ida Scout Council. Their second son, John Michael was born August 25, 1956 in Klamath General Hospital, Klamath Falls, Oregon where Jerry had been transferred to the Modoc Area Council, BSA.”-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Carol and Norm Tiller

“Carol graduated from Nampa High in May of 1950 and Jack from Central Jr. High. This was the second time we had two children graduating in the same year. Carol was married to Normal Tiller on November 24, 1950 at the Herman Tiller home in Nampa. We had a reception for them at the church. Carol and Norman lived in Nampa until May 10, 1951 when they left for Valdosta, Georgia where Norman was stationed with the Army. They were later transferred to Victorville, California. Norman Andrew was born on December 29, 1951 at the George Air Force Hospital. After Norman was discharged they returned to Nampa to live. Norman began work at Consumers Market, his dad’s store. Danny Lee was born on October 30, 1953 in the Mercy Hospital and Tracy Ann was born on July 14, 1955 at Mercy Hospital. Rebecca Lynn (Becky) was born February 15, 1960 at Mercy.”-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Our family moves to Kuna

“We sold our farm in Nampa in April of 1950 and moved to town where we rented a house near the First Ward building. We bought a new Ford automobile and after school was out we did some traveling and visiting. We spent a week at Rupert, Burley and Pocatello. We went to Provo and visited Lois and Jerry. We spent a day in Salt Lake City seeing the Temple grounds and other points of interest. In June we took a ten day trip to San Francisco. Hubert and his wife Anna lived in the San Bruno area and they delighted in showing their part of California. We took in Chinatown, Fisherman’s Wharf and several parks. We attended the Ice Follies and a beauty contest at Santa Cruz beach. We waded in the ocean but only waded as the water was so cold. We had a boat-ride around the Bay area which included going under the San Francisco-Oakland bridge. Our whole family was along on the trip except for Lois.On August 28, 1950 we moved to a 30 acre farm one-quarter mile from the town of Kuna, Idaho. It was a small community very like Acequia and we made some good friends especially among the church members. Here was born our second son, Joseph Dean, at the Mercy Hospital on May 31, 1951. He came along to gladden our home after the others were pretty well grown. Nola especially made a big fuss over him.

My mother passed away in Pocatello, Idaho on March 31, 1965. Mother had made her home with my brother Don for a number of years before she died. She was a strong spirit. She had to be both a mother and a family to us children, and we feel she did a fine job.

John’s sister Vera hurt her knee and had to have an operation in January 1965. She spent several months in a nursing home in Nampa before she could walk again and never recovered enough to come back to live with us. She passed away on January 3, 1975. She was a courageous, very intelligent woman.

My sister MayBelle died in Pocatello on October 28, 1987. Her husband Alfred had passed away just ten years earlier on October 28, 1977. Their marriage had been solemnized in the Idaho Falls Temple. We had enjoyed her visits to Nampa to spend some time with us after she was widowed.

John retired from the sugar factory in 1966. He sold off the milk cows which lightened his work load immensely. We have always had a large garden and I have done a lot of canning and freezing. We enjoyed our years in Kuna. John worked quite a bit on helping build our new church building and it was dedicated November 1, 1964. I retired as a Primary teacher in November, 1964 and then worked as Junior Primary Secretary.

In the fall of 1964 we had some leveling done on our place in Kuna to make it easier to irrigate and to improve the lay of the land. It cost us $840.00 but the government paid $240.00 under a land improvement plan. Since we first moved to our place in Kuna we added a garage and granary and John and Jack and I hand dug a basement under the house. We built a utility porch in back and a front entrance porch. In July, 1964 we bought a new blue Plymouth Fury automobile from my brother Don. It was been our fourth new car in 39 years. Our first car was a Model A Ford in 1929, a Plymouth sedan in 1939, a Ford sedan in 1950 and a used Dodge in 1958. We also had a new pickup truck. John had farmed with horses for many years but in our later years on the farm in Kuna we had a tractor.”

Jack and Shirley Straubhaar

“Jack graduated from Kuna High School in May of 1953. That fall he entered Brigham Young University. After school was out that next spring he decided to enter training as an Air Force Cadet. He passed the necessary tests and left for Lackland Air Force Base at San Antonio, Texas. After his class graduated from there they were sent to Stallings Air Base in North Carolina where they took their flight training. Here they were weeded out because of different reasons pertaining to flying jets. Jack received his discharge and came home in April of 1956. On September 22, 1956 he married Shirley Holliday in a wedding at her parent’s home. On May 7, 1957 their little girl Dana Jacque was born in Mercy Hospital. They moved to Klamath Falls, Oregon where Lois and Jerry were living. Jack attended school at Oregon Technical Institute in 1957 and 1958. They moved to Logan where he finished at Utah State University from 1958 to 1961. He graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering in June of 1961. After graduation he went to work for the Idaho State Highway Department in Boise. Their son Scott Jay was born while they were living in Logan, April 27, 1959. Shirley worked at the Thiokol plant, a government plant making parts for atomic weapons, while Jack attended school. Eric Jon was born February 1, 1961 in Logan.”-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Nola and Dale Stark

“Nola graduated from Kuna High School in May of 1955 and spent the summer working at Yellowstone Park. That fall she attended Brigham Young University. She worked again the next summer at Yellowstone in the Reservation Department at Mammoth Hot Springs. In the fall of 1956 she entered nurses training at St. Alphonsus Hospital in Boise. She spent nine months, from March until December in Wichita, Kansas in special training for her nursing career. It was there that she met Dale Stark. They were married October 18, 1958 at Miami, Oklahoma. Another couple, good friends of theirs where married at the same time, Charles and Marilyn Campbell. The girls came back to Idaho to finish their training. Nola and Dale were sealed to each other in the Idaho Falls Temple on August 11, 1959. Nola graduated from St. Alphonsus at St. John’s Catholic Church in Boise on August 13, 1959. We had a reception for them on August 14 at the Kuna Grade School. That was a busy week for Nola and the rest of our family.Nola and Dale lived in Caldwell where Dale worked for a funeral home and then they moved to Bellingham, Washington where he worked for Jones Funeral Home. They decided to move to Logan so Dale could attend college. He graduated with his Bachelors Degree in 1965 from Utah State University. Their son David was born while they were in Logan on July 14, 1960. Jerry was born on October 10, 1962 in Bellingham. While they were in Logan, Nola worked the Logan LDS Hospital for three years. Dale worked for the Boy Scouts of America as a District Executive in Nampa and Payette, and then later for the State Department of Public Assistance in Payette.

Nola, Dale and family later moved to Nampa where Nola worked for Mercy Hospital and Dale taught in the Caldwell school system. They adopted Kimberly who was born May 13, 1968. She was sealed to them in the Salt Lake Temple in August, 1968.”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

John and I move back to Nampa

“We sold our place in Kuna in 1973. Jerry and Lois and Jon had move to Nampa in June 1973 and they lived in the house we had purchased in Nampa from June to December while they were having a house built in Nampa. They moved out of our house and into their new house, and we moved from our place in Kuna right in behind them. It is amazing we didn’t have some mix-up in our furniture! We have enjoyed our home at 67 Canyon in Nampa. It is just the right size for us. We have had new carpeting put in and Norman helped us put in a sprinkler system. We have a large garden spot and the girls have helped us the past few years to grow a nice garden. We live just a block from the church. Our bishop Darrel Fullmer lives right across the street from us. Our good friends Maurice and Jean Hatch live just a few houses away. We have nice neighbors all around us and Carol and Norman and Lois and Jerry live just around the corner and a few blocks up the street. The girls walk over often.In July, 1985 our children gave us a Sixtieth wedding anniversary celebration. It was held at Jerry and Lois’s home in their backyard. Many of our relatives from out of town and our good friends came by to see us. We are looking forward to our Sixty-Fifth anniversary this year. We have had much happiness in our married life. We have worked hard and stayed out of debt and have been honest with our fellow beings. We have taught our children the same principles and we have had love and unity in our home. Our Heavenly Father has been very good to us. We appreciate all our many blessings!”

-Beatrice Gardner Straubhaar

Excerpt from Straubhaar Family History, July 1990

Joe and Sandy's hippie wedding reception in California


For my parents wedding reception (Joe and Sandy Straubhaar) in California, a lot of the Idaho relatives came to visit them in Los Angeles. This picture features my mother’s parents Serge and Vera Ballif, my Aunt Nola and Uncle Dale Stark, my parents Sandy and Joe, my aunt Lois and uncle Jerry Thorne, my cousin Mark Thorne (and his former wife, Carolyn), and my Grandma and Grandpa Straubhaar.

I love all the beautiful 70’s dresses in this photo, especially the embroidery on my Mom’s dress.

-Julia (aka “Jill” Straubhaar) Mitschke

Dinyland — Car trip 1961 through Bliss


Growing up on the family farm was a lot of fun in many ways, but sometimes as a kid I envied my siblings, nephews and nieces who got to take car trips and go places for more than a couple of days at a time. It was hard for my Dad to get away from the cows, who had had to be milked every twelve hours or so. (He could get a neighbor to take care of them for a day or two but that was about it.)

So I treasured car trips away from the farm. We nearly always headed east to visit relatives in either Burley/Rupert or Pocatello, so we drove through a little town called Bliss quite often. Although it was pretty small, it became one of the places I remembered most fondly. I particularly remembered a little roadside attraction called Dinyland, which had big concrete dinosaurs that you could climb around on. This photo shows me and two of my nephews, Andy and Dan Tiller, sitting on one of them in 1961.

I also remember that Dinyland had a little tourist shop where you could convince your parents to buy a trinket or two. I think I got either an Indian tom-tom or bow and arrow on that trip.

My wife and kids love to stop in places like that, too. On a trip to L.A. a couple of years ago, Sandy insisted that we stop and see “The Thing” on I-10. It was bigger than Dinyland, which didn’t survive after the freeway passed Bliss by, but just as cheesy.

Boy Scouts


I have always been intrigued with the connection our family had to the Boy Scouts. Both Jerry Thorne and Dale Stark were professional scouters for a while, and many of the boys of various generations have been scouts and scout leaders.

I always liked the Scouts, getting out and going camping was fun. Earning the merit badges was fun, at least for most of them. Getting ready for scouts forced me to get over a serious childhood fear of the water that resulted from falling into ditches and rivers a couple of times.

This photo shows me with my mother at a Court of Honor in the Kuna LDS Chapel where I am getting my Life Scout rank. I was 12 or maybe 13, and sure look young.


My favorite experience was being on the staff at the Billy Rice Boy Scout summer camp in 1966. I got my Eagle Scout rank the year before, so I was eligible, and I wasn’t really old enough to earn much money at a summer job yet anyway. It was interesting to be away from home a little longer than I had before, to try out being on my own in a very structured, safe situation. It was a lot of fun to be outdoors nearly all summer. In retrospect, it also let let me try out teaching things to younger kids and finding out that I liked to do that. I taught basic stuff like local plants, cooking, and camping–helping kids pass off First and Second Class scout requirements–and the corresponding merit badges.

I also got inducted into the Order of the Arrow, which was something I had kind of fantasized about after reading about it in the Scout books. I remember being put on vigil and having to sleep the wrong way across a large rock, but, hey, I was only 15 and it seemed like a big adventure. It was also cool to be doing something that no leader or friend’s Mom (my friend DelRobin Thornton’s mother had pushed three of us pretty hard to get our Eagles, starting with Red Cross swimming lessons when we were only eight or nine) or anyone else had pushed me into. It was something new.

This photo shows me on the lawn at the farm in Kuna, wearing the summer dress uniform that I had bought to use on scout camp staff.

John & Beatrice Straubhaar at the White House, Washington D.C.

When Sandy and I lived in Washington, D.C. 1979-1983, Mom and Dad came out to visit at Easter in 1980. We were living in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with a long backyard that ran all the way back to some B&O (the one in the Monopoly game) train tracks. This photo shows Mom and Dad in our backyard, holding baby Julia (then not quite one).

The White House traditionally had an egg roll around Easter so we decided to take Mom and Dad, plus Julia, to the event. This photo shows Dad, Mom, Julia and me in front of the White House.

It was fun to get to walk around the White House lawn with a lot of people. Then, to our surprise, Jimmy Carter, the President came out, walking around and shaking hands. When he got to Dad, he told President Carter that “The last president whose hand I shook was Calvin Coolidge.” That amused President Carter and Dad was very pleased to shake his hand since he liked him.

They enjoyed the trip to D.C. We took them around to some of the main monuments and had some good times to talk. It was fun for them to see us in our first house of our own. (We had lived our first year of marriage in a government apartment in Brasilia, where I worked for the press section of the Embassy.) This photo shows Dad and Mom sitting in our front room by the fireplace, in front a tapestry of parrots we bought near Brasilia.


Dad was always a pretty handy guy and liked to help out with things. This photo shows him in our backyard at Maryland, helping me trim a tree. (The backyard was pretty wild when we bought the house and we were only begining to get it under control at the end of the four years we lived there.)