Haefner, Amelia H.

Female 1864 - 1950  (86 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Haefner, Amelia H. was born 24 May 1864, Giard, Clayton County, Iowa, USA; died 17 Oct 1950, Washington, Washington County, Iowa, USA; was buried 19 Oct 1950, Concord Township, Hancock County, Iowa, USA.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    She was buried in the Concord Cemetery.

    Died:
    The following is a transcription supplied by Frances Gretchen (Klein) Leenerts of an obituary for Amelia (Haefner) Wellemeyer which she reported had appeared on 25 October 1950 in the Garner Leader [of Garner, Iowa].

    Graveside services were held at Concord Cemetery Thursday for Mrs. Ed Wellemeyer, 86, former Garner resident, who died in the Washington County hospital, Washington, Iowa, on 17 October. Funeral services were conducted at Washington October 18 by the pastor and the assistant pastor of the Washington Methodist Church. One of Mrs. Wellemeyer's favorite solos, "The Twenty-seventh Psalm" was sung at the service. Mrs. Wellemeyer was born Amelia Haefner on 24 May 1864 in Giard, Iowa. She was the daughter of Charles and Mary Horney Haefner and was reared and educated in the schools of Clayton County. She was married to Edward M. Wellemeyer 27 June 1889. The first years of their married life they lived on a farm west of Garner, later moving to Garner where they resided until the death of her husband in 1931. Since then she has made her home most of the time in the homes of her children, spending many winters in her son's home, and the summers with her daughter. The past four years she has lived in the home of her daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Foster Bickell of Washington. Mrs. Wellemeyer was a member of the German Methodist Church and her greatest interests were music, flowers, her home and her church. She was able to attend church services until the past two months. She has been declining for two years and seriously ill ten days before her death. Survivors include her daughter Viola and son Elmer of New York City and four grandchildren.

    Amelia married Wellemeyer, Edward Mathew 27 Jun 1889, Giard, Clayton County, Iowa, USA. Edward (son of Wellemeyer, Henry Frank and Fiegenbaum, Christine Elisabeth) was born 16 Nov 1860, Wapello Township, Louisa County, Iowa, USA; died 23 Feb 1931, Washington, Washington County, Iowa, USA; was buried 26 Feb 1931, Garner, Hancock County, Iowa, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 2. Wellemeyer, Agnes Viola  Descendancy chart to this point was born 29 Aug 1890, Hancock County, Iowa, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. 3. Wellemeyer, Elmer Haefner  Descendancy chart to this point was born 25 Mar 1895, Hancock County, Iowa, USA; died 25 May 1963, New Jersey, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Wellemeyer, Agnes Viola Descendancy chart to this point (1.Amelia1) was born 29 Aug 1890, Hancock County, Iowa, USA; died Yes, date unknown.

    Agnes married Bickell, Wilbur Foster 10 Jun 1915, Klemme, Hancock County, Iowa, USA. Wilbur (son of Bickell, John and Frölich, Martha) was born 27 Aug 1891, Froelich, Clayton County, Iowa, USA; died Jul 1967, Iowa, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 4. Bickell, Amelia Verna  Descendancy chart to this point was born 22 Dec 1917; died Yes, date unknown.

  2. 3.  Wellemeyer, Elmer Haefner Descendancy chart to this point (1.Amelia1) was born 25 Mar 1895, Hancock County, Iowa, USA; died 25 May 1963, New Jersey, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: a chemical engineer in the oil industry.

    Notes:

    Occupation:
    The following is a transcription supplied by Frances Gretchen (Klein) Leenerts of an article for Elmer H. Wellemeyer which she reported had appeared on Wednesday, 1 August 1951 in the Garner Leader.

    Elmer H. Wellemeyer, one time Garner farm boy, who is now vice-president of Cities Service Oil Company, is the subject of a lengthy article in the current issue of the Cities Service Company magazine. Wellemeyer was graduated from Garner High School a few years before World War I. Upon graduation he taught Liberty Township School Number Two, according to his cousin, Arthur Wellemeyer of Klemme. Elmer Wellemeyer is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wellemeyer of Garner. His mother died at Washington, Iowa in October of 1950, and is buried in Concord Cemetery here. His father died several years ago. He has one sister, Viola Bickell of Washington, Iowa. The magazine article is an old fashioned success story of a farm boy who made good in the big city. We quote "Picture a pre-machine-age farm, circa 1910. The only tractor a sway-back horse. The only milking machine, a small boy named Elmer -- his hands already muscular from the job of milking eight cows night and morning -- farm life was no bed of hay in those days. 'I had college dinned into me -- oh, as far back as I can remember,' says Wellemeyer. 'Dad had a flock of brothers -- a bishop, a publisher, a professor, a musician and a merchant. Mother said what they could do I could do. Since everybody agreed that chemical enginering held the promise of a big future, I went to Iowa State to see if they could make a chemical engineer out of me.' This was Iowa State's first class in chemical engineering, and according to Wellemeyer probably its best. For the students not only made wallboard out of cornstalks and extracted acid from cornstalks, but set up the equipment for their experiments. It was here that Wellemeyer made his first analysis of lubricating oil. 'Today's oil engineers seem to think they are doing something new when they road-tested lube oils in one of the first automobiles in my part of Iowa -- and I wrote my first major thesis on the results.' World War I snatched Elmer from college. When the war ended, he finished at Iowa State, answered a newspaper ad for a chemical engineer, and his work as an oil man began in earnest. He invented and patented several stills, to expedite his work of analyzing Mexican crude oil. He was then given a job as chief chemical engineer of a refinery in Tampico, Mexico. But halfway to Tampico, he was transferred to Good Hope, Louisana where he first came in contact with Cities Service. Later he was asked to take over the laboratory of the refinery of a Cities Service subsidiary. In 1931 he was sent to India to check on the interests of a company connected with Cities Service. After his India assignment, he returned to Texas and Louisiana, where he opened the Houston office of Cities Service. During World War II Wellemeyer's executive capacities were instrumental in setting up a new refinery on the Gulf coast to produce aviation gasoline for the government. He was noted for his ability to slash through red tape. After the war he was sent to New York and became assistant to Hi Brandli, vice-president in charge of the Cities Service export department. Soon Brandli was made general manager of the company, and Wellemeyer was elected vice-president. As a vice-president Wellemeyer's secretary characterizes him with one word: determine. No use telling him a thing can't be done, because he'll step right in and prove you are wrong by doing it himself. His methods are often unorthodox -- but they work. Wellemeyer starts his day at 4:30 a.m. by helping milk cows on his New Jersey farm before going to his city office. Once a farmer, always a farmer, Wellemeyer states. He launches into an enthusiastic description of his dairy farm, its head of Guernsey cows, 40 head of beef cattle -- and his Reserve Champion bull of the state of New Jersey last year. Wellemeyer's son, William, is his farm manager, with very able assistance from his younger son, John. 'My daughter, Marilyn, has the brains of the family. Four colleges offered her scholarships. She chose to finish at the Sorbonne -- on another scholarship.' Elmer Wellemeyer has a genius for friendship. An incident is recounted which shows he was a vocational ag teacher in his own way, back at Liberty number two. He was teaching eight grades in a one-room schoolhouse for the salary of $52.80 a month. When the time came to teach arithmetic, he threw away the book -- literally. He reasoned this way: his boys were farm boys and would probably be farmers all their lives. So he took them out to a cornfield and taught them arithmetic by the number of rows of corn, number of stalks to a hill, number of ears to a stalk. He opened account books for the boys, borrowed money for them (on paper of course) and set them up in business. This was long before the days of earn-as-you-learn, remember?"

    Elmer married Hess, Edith. Edith died Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 5. Wellemeyer, Marilyn Ruth  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 6. Wellemeyer, William Robert  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 7. Wellemeyer, John Charles  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Bickell, Amelia Verna Descendancy chart to this point (2.Agnes2, 1.Amelia1) was born 22 Dec 1917; died Yes, date unknown.

  2. 5.  Wellemeyer, Marilyn Ruth Descendancy chart to this point (3.Elmer2, 1.Amelia1)

  3. 6.  Wellemeyer, William Robert Descendancy chart to this point (3.Elmer2, 1.Amelia1)

  4. 7.  Wellemeyer, John Charles Descendancy chart to this point (3.Elmer2, 1.Amelia1)