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Pages tagged "Lumberman"


Clark, Lorell Dee

Posted on C by Dorene Lorenz · November 29, 2023 9:52 PM

Primary Name: Bevan, Lorell Dee

Filed as: bevan_lorell_dee

Also known as: Lorell Clark; Lorell Grant; Lorell Yancy

Occupation / Association: Charter Member, Juneau Igloo Auxiliary No. 6; Fox farmer; Hotel manager; Boeing riveter during World War II

Born: May 14, 1886, Douglas, Kansas

Died: April 17, 1970, Seattle, Washington

Parents: Thomas Bevan; Georgina Trontla Bevan

Spouse: Frank Edwin Clark (m. June 8, 1904, Portland, Oregon; d. January 17, 1926); David M. Grant (m. November 28, 1928; d. 1938); Jack Yancy (m. ca. 1940; annulled ca. 1941)

Children: William Z. Clark

Associated places: Douglas, Kansas; Yale, Washington; Portland, Oregon; Juneau, Alaska; Kake, Alaska; Southern Washington; Kelso, Washington; Seattle, Washington; Lebanon, Oregon; Arcata, California; Anchorage, Alaska

Keywords: Lorell Dee Bevan, Lorell Clark, Lorell Grant, Lorell Yancy, Juneau Igloo Auxiliary No. 6


Biography

Lorell Dee Bevan was a Charter Member of the Juneau Igloo Auxiliary No. 6.

She was born on May 14, 1886, in Douglas, Kansas, the daughter of Thomas Bevan and Georgina Trontla Bevan. Lorell spent her childhood on the family farm in Yale, Washington.

At the age of sixteen, she worked as a cook at a lumber mill. She married the mill manager Frank Edwin Clark on June 8, 1904, in Portland, Oregon. Their son, William Z. Clark, was born in Washington in 1906.

The family moved to Alaska in 1918 and operated a fox farm on an island southeast of Juneau. Frank Clark died on January 17, 1926, in Kake, Alaska.

Lorell and her son William moved to Juneau, where she met David M. Grant. The couple became engaged on November 17, 1927, in Juneau, and were married on November 28, 1928. They later moved back to a farm in southern Washington. David Grant died in 1938.

Lorell later moved to Kelso, Washington, where she managed a hotel. Around 1940, she married Jack Yancy, but the marriage was annulled about a year later.

During World War II, she moved to Seattle to live with her son and worked for Boeing as a riveter on B-25 bombers. In 1950, she moved to Lebanon, Oregon, to work as a housekeeper for her brother Jessie. They later moved to Arcata, California, where Jessie died.

She later moved to Anchorage, Alaska, to live with her son and his wife. After her son died, she moved back to Seattle.

Lorell died on April 17, 1970, in Seattle, Washington.


Sources

1900/1910 U.S. Federal Census, Mineral, Washington; 1920 U.S. Federal Census, Juneau; Biography from Will/its Family Tree, Ancestry.com; Alaska Daily Empire, December 1, 1928

Lorell Dee Bevan Lorell Clark Lorell Grant Lorell Yancy Bevan Lorell

Tags: Lorell Dee Bevan, Lorell Clark, Lorell Grant, Lorell Yancy, Juneau Igloo Auxiliary No. 6, Juneau Alaska pioneers


Whitner, George H.

Posted on W by Dorene Lorenz · October 26, 2023 11:31 PM

Primary Name: Captain George H. Whitney

Filed as: Whitney, George H.

Born: October 22, 1859 – Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada

Died: January 5, 1936 – California

Spouse: Grace L. T. Walters (married April 2, 1918, Seattle, Washington)

Occupation: Local Inspector of Hulls, Steamboat Inspection Service

Affiliation: Charter Member, Juneau Men's Igloo No. 6

Associated places: Saint John, New Brunswick; San Francisco, California; Sitka, Alaska; Juneau, Alaska


Biography

Captain George H. Whitney was a charter member of the Juneau Men's Igloo.

Whitney was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada on October 22, 1859 and went to sea at a young age. He came to the United States in 1875 and later came to Alaska from San Francisco in 1898 when he was transferred to the Sitka office of the Steamboat Inspection Service.

In 1912, the office was moved to Juneau, where Whitney was placed in charge as Local Inspector of Hulls. He served in that position until his retirement in 1928.

He married Grace L. T. Walters in Seattle, Washington, on April 2, 1918.

During his sixteen years in Juneau, Captain Whitney was active in the Scottish Rite Masons and served as a director of the First National Bank. He also held interests in the Ketchikan Power & Light Company, a proposed pulp and paper plant on the Speel River, and chrome mining ventures in south-central Alaska.

Captain Whitney died in California on January 5, 1936.


Sources

  • Pioneers of Alaska Men’s Igloo No. 6 Biographical Sketch
  • Alaska State Library Historical Collection, PCA 300

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