Showing posts with label Walter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walter. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Tombstone Tuesday: Henry Walter
Henry Walter was born on February 4, 1838.. He died on October 3, 1863, at the age of 25 years, 8 months. Oakland Cemetery records indicate that Henry Walter was a victim of drowning. An inscription at the base of the tombstone of Henry Walter reads:
In the midst of life we art in death.
Henry's tombstone was made by Sandusky resident J. V. Brost.
Labels:
Oakland Cemetery,
Walter
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Abishai W. Walter, Civil War Soldier
Abishai W. Walter is buried in Strong's Ridge Cemetery in Huron County, Ohio. He was a soldier in Company B of the 123rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Walter died on June 24, 1863 from wounds he received in battle at Winchester, Virginia on June 13, 1863. He was only 25 years of age. A flag beside his tombstone honors his memory.The military history of the 123rd Regiment of the Ohio Volunteer Infantry is found online at the Internet Archive.
Labels:
123rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
Walter
Monday, April 2, 2012
Urban A. Walter, Reformer of Railway Mail Service
In the 1900 U.S. Census, Urban A. Walter was age 18, and working as a Post Office clerk. He was residing with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Walter, and several siblings in Toledo, Ohio. The 1880 U.S. Census indicates that the Adolph Walter family had resided in Fremont, Ohio at that time, before Urban's birth. The following excerpt from the book THE TRAVELING POST OFFICE, by William Jefferson Dennis (Homestead, 1916), tells of Urban A. Walter's intense campaign to improve the conditions of railway mail clerk employees. His publication "Harpoon" featured articles which told of the unsafe and unfair conditions of many railway mail clerks.
According to the book MAIL BY RAIL, by Bryant Alden Long,(Simmons-Boardman, 1951) the "Harpoon" was a red and yellow bound, 32-page magazine, which featured these words on the cover: "A Magazine That Hurts— For Postal Clerks." One issue had on the cover the memorial tombstone to three clerks who burned to death, after a tragic train wreck. Railway mail cars were usually made of wood, and quickly erupted into flames if the train wrecked. Urban A. Walter exposed the fact that lodgings aboard the train were bug-infested, and occasionally there were rats found in the water supply.
Eventually Urban A. Walter developed tuberculosis, and he moved west for health reasons. Mr. Urban A. Walter died on October 14, 1919 in Denver, Colorado. He was buried in St. Joseph's Cemetery in Fremont, Ohio. The inscription of the tombstone of Urban A. Walter reads:
Dedicated to the Memory Of
Walter A. Urban
1881-1919
The Father of Steel Mail Cars
Erected by Railway Postal Clerks
An exhibit from the Smithsonian Institution National Postal Museum features a video which describes conditions of the clerks who worked for the Railway Mail Service at the end of the nineteenth century and early part of the twentieth century.
Labels:
Railway Mail Clerks,
Walter
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Wordless Wednesday: Strong's Ridge Cemetery
Labels:
Strong's Ridge Cemetery,
Walter
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





