2. Harry St.Clare WHEELER
(1)(2)
(3) (photo)
was born on 23 Jul 1899 in Newville, CA. He died on 21 Apr 1939 in Corning,
Tehama Co., CA. He was buried on 24 Apr 1939 in Corning, Tehama Co., CA. (Sunset
Hill Cemetery) "Remberances" by daughter Claire: "Our Dad was
strong and worked hard in and at his 'Wheeler's Pump & Plumbing Shop.' He
was a happy, jolly person. He liked to tell stories and play practical jokes.
Everyone in town loved him. He belonged to the American Legion and carried
the flag in every parade. Except for when he marched with the Drum and Bugle
Corps (he played the bugle).... He was creative. He designed and built several
boats ... built the surf board ... The first were speed boats... As he gained
weight, he built an inboard motor boat. He was too heavy for the small speed
boat. He could draw cartoon characters, build anything."
After he got out of the Navy (in 1919), married and started a family, he found
it difficult (in the early 1920s) to find work to support his growing family.
He found work driving tractor and doing equipment maintenance for the large Kimball
Ranches in Ventura, CA (Sep 1923). He moved his family down to Ventura just
after his son Andrew was born in Jan 1924. The family returned to Corning in
1926 and lived in the "old tank house" behind the Wheeler home. He
then worked for the family's plumbing, pump and sheet metal business, eventually
taking it over. The family lived in the Sixth Ave. home until moving into the
old Wheeler house on Solano St. He was Commander of the Corning American Legion
during the year they built the Corning Verteran's Memorial Hall on Solano Street.
His son Andrew remembers that St. Clare liked to tell stories and joke. He
was generous and it seemed everyone owed him money. He did many jobs for barter
(e.g., the family dog Hansel was part payment for a pump).
The following 2 newspaper articles are from the "The Corning Observer":
Saturday, April 22, 1939, Vol. 73, No. 94, page 1.
DEATH OVERTAKES ST. CLARE WHEELER; CITY OF CORNING MOURNS LOSS OF FAVORITE SON;
FUNERAL TO BE HELD MONDAY P.M. Veteran's Memorial Hall Is Selected For Last
Rites.
On Monday Afternoon Residents of Corning were shocked and deeply grieved when
word flashed over the community late yesterday afternoon that St. Clare Wheeler,
one of Corning's favorite sons had passed away suddenly. Death came at 3:15
at his home where he had been ill during the day. Although his physician had
advised Wheeler to remain in bed, for a short time he was at his place of business
directing some rush work. He was stricken with a sudden heart attack and expired
before aid could be summoned. St. Clare Wheeler is a native Californian, born
in the old town of Newville, July 23, 1900 (sic). When a small boy the family
moved to Corning where the late Andrew J. Wheeler entered the plumbing and sheet
metal work. His three sons grew up, were educated and entered business with
their father. St. Clare, second son, is a graduate of the Corning high school
and at the entering of the United States into the World War, enlisted in the
Navy Air Service. He served overseas at Brest and St. Lazaire and when the Armistice
was signed was one of the crew to bring back one of the large German liners.
He is a charter member of Raisner Post, No. 45, American Legion, and served
as Commander several years ago. He is also a member of Corning Lodge, No. 305,
I. O. O. F., and the First Christian church. St. Clare Wheeler was a big hearted
man, who was loved by a large circle of friends, and he will be sadly missed
by his family and friends. In 1920 he was united in marriage to Miss Doris Birch
of Orland, to which union four children were born, Miss Clair, senior in the
high school, Andrew, Janice and Keith. Two brothers, S. A. Wheeler of San Jose,
and Hilton Wheeler of Sacramento, and a number of uncles and aunts, survive.
His father passed away many years ago and on March 15, 1939, his mother, Mrs.
May Belle Wheeler, passed away suddenly at her home here.
Funeral Monday --- Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock
at the Memorial Hall, with Rev. Herbert Werner, pastor of the Presbyterian church,
officiating, and interment will be in the family plot beside his parents in Sunset
Hill. Members of Raisner Post will be pallbearers, color bearers and will sound
taps.
Tuesday, April 25, 1939
RITES OF ST. CLARE WHEELER LARGELY ATTENDED
The Memorial Auditorium was filled to overflowing yesterday afternoon for the
funeral service of St. Clare Wheeler, a favorite son of Corning and a charter
member of Raisner Post, No. 45, American Legion. Legionnaires and members of
various Auxiliaries came to Corning from other towns to pay tribute to a young
man who numbered his friends by his acquaintances. Rev. Herbert Werner of the
Presbyterian church delivered a eulogy to his memory, reading passages of scripture
from the 14th Chapter of John, his subject being "Let Not Your Heart Be
Troubled". Music was provided by the high school quartet composed of Harold
Swiggett, Merton Morris, Robert Clark and Victor McLane, who sang "Beautiful
Isle Of Somewhere" and "This Way Of the Cross Leads Home", Miss
Evelyn Kees accompanist. Mrs. George A. Hoag with Mrs. E. J. Poole pianist sang
"Face To Face". The casket was draped with the American Flag. Color
bearers were Al Greenberg and George Hawker; guards, Ray Holden and Frank B.
DeFries; Casket bearers, John L. Moran, Harry R. Jenkins, Newton Isaac, G. R.
Armstrong, Glen Case, and Henry Gumble. Taps were played by William Sheppard
and Paul Fallows. St. Clare Wheeler will be sadly missed by his 'Buddies: in
Raisner Post where he was a ardent worker. His happy good nature made him a
general favorite with both old and young. Not only will he be missed by the
Legion but by his host of friends. His wife and children and other relatives
have the deepest sympathy of the entire community in their loss.
The following is from A HISTORY OF THE WHEELER FAMILY AND ITS CORNING PLUMBING
SHOP (Wagon Wheels, Fall 1998): " When A. J. Wheeler retired, his oldest
son, Gus, took over the business. After a few years Gus left Corning to work
for a pump company in the San Jose area. The business was then taken over by
the next oldest son, St. Clare ("Sainty"), with the youngest son, Hilton
("Wooky"), working at the shop periodically. St. Clare remodeled the
shop moving the original shop back from the street and built a new front show
room with the front door set back and angled display windows . Just behind
the show room was a small bookkeeping office, a room for pipe fittings, and a
room for job design, layout and estimating. The rear of the building was a large
barn-like shop with the ground floor housing sheet metal racks, metal and pipe
working machines (e.g., metal brakes, forming tools, pipe threading machines),
work benches, tool racks, metal working chemicals and a layout area. At one
time the Wheeler shop had the longest metal brake in Northern California. Above
the work floor, an L-shaped mezzanine was for storage and this was where the
main equipment motor used to power the belt driven machines was located. Also
on the mezzanine, for a time, an electrician by the name of Mr. Ford had an electrical
business. In coordination with the plumbing shop business, Mr. Ford would wire
service poles and control boxes for the pumping turbines. He performed other
services from wiring houses to selling light bulbs. The fenced-in back yard
of the shop had racks holding different sizes of pipe on the sides. There was
usually found the large Dodge truck with chain-link fence on the sides and metal
top. This truck, equipped with pipe racks and vises, was used to hold and carry
the heavy equipment and materials used in installations and repairs. Across
the field to the west of the shop, was a fenced-in storage or "bone"
yard where large items were stored. As electric deep-well pumps came into wider
usage, sales, installation and repair of pumps accounted for more of the business
than windmills. The windmills that were installed were then made elsewhere and
assembled on-site by the shop crew. The sheet metal works continued to construct
tanks, water troughs and smaller items. With plumbing coming into the house
from the "outhouse," the shop sold and installed all household plumbing
fixtures and supplies. One of St. Clare's largest jobs was installing the water
tower for Corning (which still stands today). In addition to being known as
an inventive and generous businessman, St. Clare was active in early Corning
civic and social life. As a veteran of World War I, he was active in the local
American Legion, playing in their drum and bugle corps, and was Commander the
year the Corning American Legion Memorial Hall was constructed. He was also
a member of Corning Lodge, No. 305, I. O. O. F., and the First Christian church."
He was married to Doris Marjorie BIRCH on 7 Aug 1920 in Orland, Glenn Co.,
CA.
3. Doris Marjorie BIRCH
(4)(2)
(5) (photo)
was born on 24 Mar 1901 in Orland, Glenn Co., CA. She grew up in Orland, graduating
from Orland Grammar School 8 Jun 1916 and Orland Joint Union High School 4 Jun
1920. The caption underneath her photograph in the High School Yearbook ("Copa
de Oro," p. 6) reads, "Though Doris Birch is quiet, As the robin in
winter time, We're glad to count her as, One of the twenty-nine," indicating
that she was a shy teenager. Doris often recounts her early childhood years
with the remarks about how she always resented the fact that her mother worked
and she (Doris) was raised by hired girls. Her happiest times were with her
father. He was the one that took her on walks and they picked wildflowers together.
He is said to have scolded the hired girls if Doris was crying, saying "A
happy child is a good child." . Mae Birch was 34 when Doris was born.
She was an only child for 9 years. She speaks of her mother having spoken of
herself as being just a "broken down nurse."
When Doris married St. Clare Wheeler in 1920, they honeymooned across Highway
36 to the coast and the redwoods. She remembered buying bananas in Hayfork,
near where they camped the first night (Red Bluff to the Coast being a 2 day
trip in those days). Her firstborn was a daughter, Claire. Then Andrew was born
and a stillborn daughter after which Doris was told not to have any more children.
Disregarding this she had two more: Janice and then Keith. She was determined
to be an at-home mother for her own children. And so she was. So much so that
when St. Clare suddenly died in 1939, she had done very few business transactions,
not even grocery shopping. She also never drove a car. (There had been a fatal
automobile accident when they lived in Ventura that convinced St. Clare that
women should never drive. ) In a noble effort to pay off the creditors of the
plumbing business, she entrusted "Uncle Gus" to help her who in turn
made a poor job of it, and she was forced to end the business with no profit.
At that point she took in laundry and other people's children. She speaks of
being the first baby-sitter in Tehama County. This was a particularly difficult
time for Doris. She tells the story of approaching the Welfare Agency for aid,
being scrutinized, and made to feel like dirt. She was persuaded to allow her
oldest son, Andrew, to join the Navy. This was in 1941 and Andrew was then stationed
at Pearl Harbor. She had gone on an outing to see Shasta Dam being built Sunday,
Dec. 7, with Mr. Pryne, Janice and Keith. She saw the newspaper headlines as
they were driving through Red Bluff and Mr. Pryne took her directly to her mother's
in Orland. Doris recalls being very sick with the news. It was several weeks
before she received news of Andrew's survival. Doris took care of her aging and
ailing mother who had broken her hip for the last several years of her life trading
off with her brother, Tennant, and his wife, Dorothy. During the 1950's she
went to work seasonally at the Olive Plant in Corning. She married John Carter,
a widower, 30 Nov 1958. John was a long time olive grower in Corning and worked
in the olive plants as a mechanic. They were married for 12 years until John's
death of heart failure. Doris lived alone after John's death until Jan 1994
when her sight and memory had failed to the extent that she needed to be in a
care home setting. In 1997 she broke her hip requiring hospitalization. She
returned to the care home in Corning only to break her pelvis in Jan 1998. She
was then placed in a skilled nursing facility in Williams, CA. In November of
1998 she was given the diagnosis of "late stage Alzheimer's disease."
She was a long time member of the American Legion Auxiliary, Raisner Unit #45,
and Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). As a youth she attended the Orland
Methodist Church but later joined the Corning First Christian Church where she
continued active membership until her failing health prevented further attendance.
The following is from A HISTORY OF THE WHEELER FAMILY AND ITS CORNING PLUMBING
SHOP (Wagon Wheels, Fall 1998): "In 1939, at the age of 39, St. Clare died
suddenly from a heart attack. His wife, Doris (who had been raised in Orland
and descended from the early Glenn County families of Birch and Cushman), tried
to continue the business. Jim Holland did the trade work, and her brother-in-law,
Gus, returned to also help out. Doris was not much of a businesswoman but was
able to pay off all of the debts before she sold the business around 1940 to
Stanley Roush, an owner of a local olive plant. After the Wheeler family was
out of the plumbing shop business, Doris returned her focus to raising her four
children and started many years of doing child care locally. Later she worked
in Roush's olive plant and in 1958 married John Carter, a local olive plant mechanic
and olive grower."
Children were:
i. Marjorie
Claire WHEELER (photo) was born on 11 Jul 1921
in Orland, Glenn Co., CA. (PRIVATE)
ii.
Andrew Tennant WHEELER (photo) was born on 4 Jan
1924 in Orland, Glenn Co., CA. (PRIVATE)
iii.
Dorothy (stillborn) WHEELER was stillborn on 13 Sep 1929 in Corning, Tehama
Co., CA. She was buried in Corning, Tehama Co., CA. (Sunset Hill Cemetery)
iv.
Janice Marie WHEELER (photo) was born on 15 Aug
1932 in Corning, Tehama Co., CA. (PRIVATE)
1 v.
Osborn Keith WHEELER.