Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Uncle David: Tall, Dark, and Handsome! (52 Ancestors #5)

My grandfather emigrated from Wales with his parents in 1878.  David Richard Gill and Ellenor Morrison had six kids—five boys and one girl.  My Uncle David Richard Gill (1894-1963) is one of this first native-born generation in my family.  He carries the family tradition of son with the same name as father, grandfather, and great-grandfather; his son and grandson.  All of the other sons have their mother’s maiden name as their middle name.

Uncle David Richard Gill was born February 25, 1894, in … Ogden?  Salt Lake City?  He lists Salt Lake on his WW I draft registration and Ogden on his WW II draft registration.

Six-year-old schoolboy David lives with his family at 147 7th West Street, Salt Lake City.  The 1910 census puts 16-year-old David at 824 Hoyt Ave, as an “apprentice tire maker” and “driver”.  A 1912 city directory lists 18-year-old David as chauffeur, living at 824 Hoyt Avenue, about the same time that John Jacob Astor went down with the Titanic.

Somehow, David makes his way to the Snake River basin – a country of wide, arid plains and rolling hills, bordered by high mountains.  The Snake River is the boundary between Idaho and Washington.  David lived in Lewiston and Nez Perce, Idaho; Clarkston and Highland, Washington.  Lewiston is in Nez Perce County; Nez Perce is in Lewis County, Idaho; Clarkston and Highland are across the Snake River in Washington.  Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery named these places.  The Lewiston ferry crossed the river until 1913, when the tolls were removed from the Lewiston-Clarkston bridge in 1913.

At the outbreak of World War I, the United States pursued a policy of non-intervention, but was eventually drawn into it.  President Wilson called for war and the U.S. Congress declared war on April 6, and passed the Selective Service Act on May 18, and 2.8 million men were drafted.

David registered for the draft, June 5, 1917.  His World War I draft card
23 years old; Home address City Hall, Lewiston; car tire repairman, Kaddatz Tire Vulcanizing Co at 311 Main Street, Lewiston; single, tall, slender, blue eyes, light hair. 
One week later, he marries local girl Mable Adams on June 12, 1917, in Nez Perce, Idaho.  The war ended in summer 1918, and David and Mable head back to Salt Lake City, where a 1919-city directory places them at 258 N 8th West, with his parents.  The 1920 census places David, Mable and their 2-year-old daughter, Geraldine, with his parents in Salt Lake City; he’s 25, a mechanic at Karl Winger auto shop.

The couple is in Clarkston, Washington, in 1929, where 11-year-old Geraldine dies January 18, 1929.

The 1930 census lists David and Mable on 8th Street in Highland, Asotin County, WA; he’s a Fireman. 

David marries Katherine Shepler on March 17, 1934, in Spokane.  He’s 40, she’s 30.  In 1940, they own a home at 301 5th Avenue with 2-year-old Richard David (aka Dee Richard Gill, 1938 - 2009).

As with WWI, the United States stayed out of World War II until the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941.  Although he’s 42, David has to register for another draft.  His draft registration card:
Idaho; April 27, 1942; 301 5th Ave, Lewiston; telephone 292 R, 47 YO, spouse, Mrs. Kathryn S Gill; Employer, City of Lewiston, City Hall, Idaho.  5’11-3/4, 158 lbs, blue eyes, dark brown complexion; burn on inside left leg, scar on upper lip.  He signs the card “D. Richard Gill”.
David was a member of the Lewiston Fire Department for 38 years, retiring in 1959 as chief of the department.  A post in the local paper reports David in the ER for a "laceration on face", which could explain the scar on upper lip.

David died on May 25, 1963, 69 years old, in Lewiston, Idaho.  He is buried in the Normal Hill Cemetery, where he and wife Kathryn (1906-1994) share a red granite double monument along with Stacy Jean - wait, who’s Stacy Jean – haven’t found any information.  She was born after David Richard died.

Kathryn was a member of Order of Eastern Star, Daughters of the Nile, past president of Ladies Auxiliary of Western Fire Chiefs and secretary to the Idaho State Senators in 1965.  The two symbols above her name are the five-pointed star, the symbol for the Order of the Eastern Star (letters OES around the star); the scimitar and rose, the symbol for Daughters of the Nile - an International fraternal organization for women who are related by birth or marriage to a Shriner or Master Mason. 

David was a Freemason (square and compass with the letter G). I do not know what the little cross with rose and leaves represents.  

The single rose above Stacy Jean represents purity or death in childhood.

My summer road trip will be to Lewiston.  It's beautiful country with loads of history.

1 comment:

  1. Stacy Jean was Dee Richard Gill and Margaret Jean Gill's third child who passed away because she contracted meningitis in a doctor's waiting room. So did my brothers. The boys survived.
    David Richard Gill is my oldest brother (Shanghai),
    Steven Frank Gill is my older brother (Salt Lake City),
    Kristen Lee Gill, now Thompson (Seattle) is my older sister,
    and I am Kathryn Gill (Seattle)

    Here is Dee's obituary
    http://lmtribune.com/obituaries/dee-r-gill-mesa-ariz/article_2f2d1895-80c4-5d0d-a4c8-bc17f7ed8855.html

    Here is Jean's obituary
    http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/seattletimes/obituary.aspx?pid=171629854

    We had Gill relatives in Salt Lake - George and Inez Gill. He had a photography studio on the other side if the Eagle Gate. We visited them often.

    There was another George (?) Gill that maybe owned a BMW dealership in SLC. I was fascinated by his blue bird tattoos he got in WWII.

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