Mary Dorothy PENCE was born on 26 Dec 1816 in Chester, Lunenburg County,
Nova Scotia. She died in 1866. . Parents: John Ernst
PENCE and Esther Cleverly ETTER.She was married
to David EISENHAUER on 21 Jan 1840 in Baptist Church,
Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia. Children were:
Ellison D EISENHAUER, Joseph EISENHAUER,
Pryor EISENHAUER, Silas EISENHAUER,
Josiah EISENHAUER, Mary EISENHAUER,
Howard Edward EISENHAUER, John EISENHAUER,
James Noble EISENHAUER.
Mary
Elizabeth PENCE was born in 1806 in Nova Scotia.
The marriage record reads Elizabeth Pence.
The family appears on the 1871 Eastern Passage census, #95. George Bowes is 71,
born in NS, C. of E., of German origin and a farmer. Elizabeth is 64 years old.
Children at home are Jane, James, Matilda, Sarah and Charles. At #96 is George
Bowes, 38 with his family, who could be George's son from a first marriage, and
at #97 is John and Rosanna Pence, Elizabeth's brother..
Parents: Georg Adam PENCE and
Catherine Barbara LEY/LOY.She was married to
George BOWES on 9 Sep 1843 in Dartmouth, Halifax County, NS. Children were:
Jane BOWES, James BOWES
, Matilda BOWES, Sarah BOWES
, Charles BOWES.
Matilda
Blanche PENCE was born on 7 Nov 1897 in Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick.
She died on 24 May 1965 in Fort Myers, Florida. Parents:
Charles Lewis PENCE and Jessie Marie WELCH.
She was married to Thomas Austin KNOWLTON.
Matilda
Caroline PENCE was born in 1844 in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. This might be
the Caroline Pence who married Wm Collins in 1864. Parents:
William PENCE and Matilda Caroline POWER.
Maynard
PENCE was born @1866 in Nova Scotia. Parents: George
James PENCE and Margaret.
Paul
Edward PENCE was born on 30 Jul 1926 in Windsor, Ontario. He died on 19
Oct 1981 in Toronto, Ontario. Paul Edward Pence was my father. He was born July
30, 1926 at his parents' home on 373 Moy Avenue, Windsor, Ontario, the third
son of Frank William and Bessie Irene Pentz. He had an older brother Ed, who
was 5 years old at the time, and a brother Frank who was only 13 months older.
When he was still very young, the family moved from Windsor to a large tobacco
farm between Kingsville and Leamington. The boys had a whole wing of the big
stone house to themselves as a nursery, complete with a room for their nursemaid,
Annie. We have a picture of Annie, Frank and Paul when the boys are toddlers,
sitting on the grass at the farm. On the back of the photo their mother has written,
"Two of my most prized possessions, with their nursemaid Annie." One
of Dad's earliest memories, which must have been when he was only 2 or 3, was
having great fun running underneath the horses on the farm!
In 1929, the family moved to Highgate. As a result of the Depression, my grandfather
had lost his chain of drugstores in Windsor and had had to sell the farm. In
HIghgate they were close to my grandmother Bessie's family, her sister May in
Cedar Springs and her sister Elma Bratt and her family in Highgate. Elma's son
Neil was just a year older than Paul, and the two of them and Frank did quite
a bit together.
Grandfather set up a new drugstore in Highgate and his boys naturally were given
the role of delivering the goods. Dad recalled that often a customer would ring
up the store after hours for an item and over one of them would have to go to
deliver it.
Money was tight in those days. The boys remember their father saying, "Give
me your shoes!" as soon as the weather got warm, and the boys would go barefoot
through the summer and until the first frost came. When they did wear out the
soles of their shoes, they had cardboard placed at the bottom as a quick solution
to the problem. As in all families, clothes were handed down the line and so
Dadl, being the youngest, rarely got anything new.
In 1932 the family, including their dog, moved to Toronto. During the eight years
that they spent there, the family moved five times! Most of the moves were within
the neighbourhood though, so the boys could stay at the same school.
In the summer of 1940, my grandfather Frank's job as a salesman took him back
to Nova Scotia and the family moved down to Shubenacadie where Frank's sister
Bertha and her family were. To Dad, who had just finished grade 8 and had been
looking forward to going to high school at Malvern Collegiate in Toronto, a large
school with lots of sports teams and clubs, having to go to the small school
in Shubenacadie was quite a disappointment. Nicknamed "Wellsford Academy"
by the students, it was a three-room schoolhouse heated by a coal stove. Two
of its rooms were designated for the public school, and the third room was the
high school.
Dad and some friends put out a magazine each quarter, in which he was the jokes
and horoscopes editor and the cover artist. He kept them all his life! He was
also a good runner, and went to Halifax for a few years to run in the track meets
there. The 100-yard dash and the 440 relay were his races.Dad's first few report
cards were not too spectacular, but steadily improved to the year he graduated.
His first job was in Shubenacadie when he was 14 or 15, and he worked at a saw
mill cutting the "bark" for the trees into firewood. He would then
load it onto the trucks, ride with them to their destination and then unload
it all there.
Hunting and fishing were good down in Nova Scotia, and the boys liked to go out
and see what they could get. Rabbits were often caught, and Dad once shot a snowy
owl, which he had stuffed and which we still have. As a child I used to like
to feel how sharp the beak and claws were, and put my finger in the hole in its
side where the bullet had been! Sunday dinner at home was usually a pork roast
Dad got his driver's licence in Shubie when he was 16 years old, and as it turned
out never even had a test. It was the fellow who worked at the gas station who
was the official tester, and when Dad went in one afternoon to ask him to take
a ride with him, he was told, "Aw, I've seen you drive around town with
your Dad. You're okay."
As soon as Dad finished high school, he was determined to go back to Toronto,
and his brother Frank wanted to go with him.. One of the boys' uncles, Bern Foster,
offered to try and get them jobs at the Halifax Herald instead, so they could
move there but still be close to their parents. Bern was the editor of the Truro
News, and he knew the editor of the Halifax paper. They decided against it though,
and left for Toronto on July 3, 1944. We have a photo of the two of them standing
outside Union Station the day they arrived, happy as a lark.
In Toronto, Frank and Dad shared a rooming house and both went to work for different
stockbrokers. Paul was with Thomson and McKinnon, and it seems he tried dabbling
in the stock market a bit himself. I take it he wasn't successful, because one
of the things my mother says he always told her was never to play the stock market!
He worked there for a number of years, taking night-school courses at the same
time.
It seems that the boys' parents were keen for them to continue their education,
and tried to follow up on some ideas for them. Bessie wrote away to the Ontario
Agricultural College on behalf of Frank, who at one time had said he might want
to be a fruit farmer like his uncle, George Smith. He had worked on the farm
one summer, driving a truck. They also wrote to Mount Allison on Dad's behalf,
asking if they had an architectural course. Besides knowing from the high school
newsletters that Dad liked to draw, perhaps the fact that his Aunt Dot's husband
was the famous architect P.R. Pereira, who designed the lions that guard the
entrance to the New York Public Library when he was only 19, was an inspiration.
In any case, Mount Allison didn't have a course, but the University of Toronto
did. For some reason though, perhaps because far fields always seem greener,
Dad wrote down to the University of Texas inquiring about their program. He was
accepted for the fall session in a letter dated October 7, which said he would
need to be down in Texas on October 28th to start.
Two days later, Dad sent a telegram to his parents, which we still have, telling
them, "The stars in the night shine bright above, up in the sky in Texas,"
that he had quit his job and was going to Texas and to send any extra cash! The
next day, he handed in his resignation letter to Thomson, McKinnon, a copy of
which we have.
However, the story doesn't have a happy ending. His parents were apprehensive
but supporting, and sent him a cheque for $25. When he got to the border, he
found that he had to post a $500 bond to enter the country, and he didn't have
the money. He was turned back, and had to return to Toronto and eventually go
on unemployment insurance while looking for another job.
I think it was at this point that Dad decided he wanted back in the east end
again, where he had lived before in the late 1930s with his parents. He saw an
ad in the paper for a big home on Beech Ave which was owned by Doc Jones, a dentist,
and went down to see them. Mrs Jones said when he arrived that they had just
rented it out, but liked Dad's looks and said they had another room, so he took
that one.
The deciding factor in what would be Dad's career path was the man who was renting
the other room in the house. He was studying to be a CGA, and when Dad would
go in and help him with his math at night, he said that he should take the accounting
course as well. Dad did sign on, and became a CGA in 1961. Apparently I was very
noisy as a baby though when he would have to do his studying, and so in the summer
months I would be put in the pram at the bottom of the garden! He always regretted
though not taking the conversion exams to become a CA shortly afterwards, as
the two then split and career advancement became very different for the two groups.
He was always adamant that I should become a CA, and I did become part-qualified.
Dad had a great time living down in the beaches. He loved tennis and joined the
Kew Beach Tennis Club, where he met his great friend Alan Waters. Dad wanted
to be good enough to play in tournaments, and asked the instructor there if he
would teach him. Apparently he was told that he was too old though, and so the
dream was passed down to me. I started to play tennis when I was six, and went
on to play tournaments in my teens and now club tennis as the mother of three
small children..
Dad and Al Waters and some of their friends started going up to Muskoka on weekends
together. They would go up to Bala to hear the bands play at The Kee, and then
sleep in their car in the parking lot of the Bala Hotel. They also had a good
time at Milford Manor and Dad kept banners and photos that were taken there.
An accident happened up in Muskoka one weekend when he was young though which
was to change his life in more ways than one. After partying and drinking one
night up there, Dad was walking through the woods when he tripped and fell, his
glasses breaking and some of the glass going into his left eye. He was taken
to hospital and told that they could not save the eye and that it would have
to be removed. Dad, whose Mother had been religious but who had not been so himself
to any great extent up until that point, prayed all night that it could be avoided,
and said that he would never drink again if only his eye could be saved. The
next morning, when the nurses came to get him for the operation, they looked
at his eye and then called one of the doctors in. After looking at the change
in it from the day before, he said the operation would no longer be necessary,
and Dad, true to his word, never had a drop of alcohol from that day on. He
had no sight in the eye though, and so as a result of his cancer later in life
which took the sight of his right eye, he became blind.
When my grandfather moved back to Ontario to Collingwood in 1949, Dad would go
up on weekends to visit him. They and Frank would also sometimes go up to Napanee
to see Ed and Bette and his new little daughter Bunny. We have lots of photos
of those times.
Dad met my mother, Joan, at a church youth group down in the Beaches in July
1953. He kept from that day on the piece of paper he wrote her name and phone
number on. They married on November 5, 1954 with Al Waters as the best man, and
drove down to Florida for their honeymoon. They first lived for three years in
an apartment in Don Mills, at Lawrence Ave and Don Mills Road, which has now
been torn down. They then moved to 9 Terrington Court, Don Mills, a new house,
in 1954. Dad, after having moved 13 times by the time he was 20, said that he
would never move again, and he never did. His brother Ed bought a house just
a few minutes away, on Tadcaster Place. Frank went to live in Scarborough when
he got married.
The brothers and their families didn't really get together that often, although
Grey Cup day at Ed's was a tradition when he made all of his elaborate hors d'oeuvre
trays and then his traditional spaghetti sauce.
Holidays every year, both before my parents had children and after, were spent
up in Muskoka, at a different resort most times. My first memory is actually
of being at Paignton House when I was three, running back and forth over a tiny
bridge with Dad waiting for me at each end. Other years were at Fern Resort and
Lakeland Lodge. Many of their friends, like the Hawkas and the Crosbys, they
met at the resorts.
In 1971, Dad realized his dream and bought land to build his own cottage on,
on Long Bay, Lake Rousseau. It was the last piece of land left on the bay, at
the end with a sandy beach. The cottage was built in 1972, and we went there
every weekend in the summer.
Dad worked for a while at Dominion Catering., then went to work for Manufacturers'
Life Assurance at their head office down on Bloor St. near Yonge in Toronto.
I remember the huge Christmas parties they used to have for all the employees'
children, and that the year I was 10, I got a manicure set from Santa there.
I had never seen one before, and was enthralled!
The only other memory I have of Dad working down there was that one day, when
I was 12, I went to lunch with him at Tanaka of Tokyo, which was at Bloor and
Bay. It was a Japanese resturant where you sat around a huge table with 8 other
people and it had a grill in the middle.The chef grilled your order in front
of you, with knves and pepper mills flying. I had only been to three restaurants
in my life before going here; to Sloane's in Gravenhurst when we were going back
and forth to the cottage, to the Swiss Chalet on birthdays, and just before this,
to the cafe at the Inn on the Park for my 12th birthday lunch, where I had a
Rueben sandwich for the first time. This was really something!
Dad was first diagnosed with skin cancer that winter, and would suffer from it
and endure many operations until he passed away nine years later in October,
1981. This may have been the impetus to leave Manufacturers and run his own insurance
business, since he had always wanted to be his own boss. At Manufacturers he
was a trouble-shooter, and that job took a lot out of him.
He bought a small business from Ron Hutchison and had his office down in the
basement of our house. He ran it for a couple of years, but then became too ill
and had to sell it.
Dad loved to eat, and when I was a teen I started to do all the cooking and tried
lots of different recipes for him. Most were successful, but one that stands
out that was not was the beef and ham roulades, which called for a clove of garlic
and in which I put the whole head.
My Dad went to church every Sunday from the time I can remember. He had great
faith throughout his illness, and always believed that he would pull through.
Besides his prescribed medication and alternative medicines, he followed a strict
diet later on, despite his above-mentioned love of food. He went to many church
meetings and saw many healing ministers, becoming well-known in the Toronto Anglican
church community. His spirits were almost always high and his outlook always
positive. It was not until the night he died that he admitted he was not going
to make it.
The little things I remember about my dad: Playing with him as a child on his
bed weekend mornings, and him always saying, "Don't touch my nose!"
His favourite song was, "Taking Care of Business," by Bachmann Turner
Overdrive. He loved being up at the cottage. He was so happy watching me play
in my first tennis tournament, even though I lost to the top seed in the first
round 6-1, 6-0. He told me he had had no idea I could play so well. He loved
to smoke cigars when I was young, and every birthday and Christmas my brother
and I would give him a huge round can of cigars. I guess he stopped smoking when
he became ill. He had white, white skin which never tanned, just turned red.
We always insisted he had black hair, and he said it was dark brown. Dad always
had to have a bacon sandwich for breakfast on Saturdays and Sundays. He had to
have his dinner at 6:00 sharp each night. He read the Toronto Star every evening,
and watched Johnny Carson each night at 11:30 before going to bed. In the only
dream I've ever had about my father since he died, he was sitting in the living
room watching that show, and I could hear him laughing out loud as he always
did.
I remember long conversations almost every day with my Dad the last year he was
alive. I was in my first year of university at the University of Toronto and
living in residence. We talked about everything I was doing, and he was always
so interested and lively. You would never have known he was sick. That summer
I was travelling out west, and made a phone call home one day to find that Dad
had been taken to hospital. When I called him there, he sounded as upbeat as
usual, saying that they had just admitted him so that he could put on a little
more weight. He never came home, though.
Just recently I looked through a box of things Dad had kept. I had always remembered
seeing letters from his father to him in his big square desk downstairs, and
I had transcribed them, 8 or so of them, years ago, letters from 1949-1951. In
this box though were another 20 or so, starting in 1940 when the family moved
down to Nova Scotia. Maybe he kept every letter that his dad ever sent him. Some
from his mom were in there, too, and letters from the University of Texas, the
CGA accepting him into their program, telegrams sent, his father's initialled
wallet, newsletters from high school, letters from friends, photos, a Milford
Manor banner, some very worn shoes, a pipe and some Waterford pens his mother
had sent him on birthdays. I will keep the box as is.
Parents: Frank William PENTZ and
Bessie Irene SUTOR.He was married to Joan Marie
DOWTHWAITE on 5 Nov 1954 in Toronto, Ontario. Children were:
Carole Joan PENCE, David Brian PENCE.
Rachel
PENCE was born @1851 (19 yrs old in 1871 census) in Hants Co. Nova Scotia.
Parents: William PENCE and
Matilda Caroline POWER.
Sarah
PENCE died before 1891 census in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Parents:
William PENCE and Matilda Caroline POWER.
She was married to George CROWELL in 1874 in Windsor,
Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Children were: Walter CROWELL
, Arthur CROWELL, Moady CROWELL
, Harry CROWELL, George CROWELL
, Pearl CROWELL, Franny CROWELL
.
Sarah
Sophia PENCE was born on 2 Apr 1802 in Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia.
It is possible that Sarah Sophia is the mother of Mary Anne Pense, born 1818
in Halifax. Her descendants say that she was related to a prominent Nova Scotian
politician, and that her family ran an inn in Sackville, which is close to Mt
Uniacke where it is known that Anna Pence, Sarah's stepmother, ran an inn in
1838. The prominent Nova Scotian politician might be Mr Uniacke. Also, in her
will, Anna Pence leaves one dollar to her stepgranddaughter, the child of Sarah
Roue. She is not named, however, and I haven't yet found out if Sarah and George
Roue had any daughters. Parents: Jacob Ernst PENCE
and Susannah CROSBY.She was married to
George ROUE 1838 (marriage bond). Children were:
daughter?.
Sophia
PENCE was born in 1808 in Nova Scotia. Parents:
Georg Adam PENCE and Catherine Barbara LEY/LOY
.
Sophia
Catherine PENCE was born in 1781 in Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia.
She died in 1783 in Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia. Parents:
Conrad PENCE and Barbra Elizabeth PREPER.
Susanna
Elizabeth PENCE was born on 25 Aug 1813. She was baptized on 1 Nov 1813
in DRC Lunenburg. Parents: Georg Adam PENCE and
Catherine Barbara LEY/LOY.
Susannah
Dorothy PENCE was born on 22 Aug 1807 in Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova
Scotia. Parents: Jacob Ernst PENCE and
Susannah CROSBY.
Thomas
Robert PENCE was born in 1861 in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Parents:
William PENCE and Matilda Caroline POWER.
William
PENCE was born on 14 May 1809 in Chester, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia.
He died on 14 May 1884 in Ardoise, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. He was a farmer.
He was born in of Windsor Road.
30 Oct 1834 at Ardice Hill by Rev. R. McLean, Mr Wm Pence/Miss Matilda Power,
both of Windsor Rd. (NS newspaper)
His name appears in the 1838 Twp of Windsor, Hants Co. census. William is recorded
as a labourer with a family consisting of 1 female under 6, 1 male over 14 and
1 female over 14. Parents: Jacob Ernst PENCE and
Susannah CROSBY.He was married to
Matilda Caroline POWER in 1834 in Ardice Hill, Nova Scotia. Children were:
Catherine Barbara PENCE,
Barbara Elizabeth PENCE, Margaret PENCE,
James Alexander PENCE, Matilda Caroline PENCE
, William John PENCE, Edward
Shaffer PENCE, Rachel PENCE,
Charles Lewis PENCE, Andrew Samuel PENCE,
Esther PENCE, Sarah PENCE,
Thomas Robert PENCE.
William
PENCEHe was married to Emma. Children were:
Edith J. PENCE.
William
E. PENCE This person is listed in the 1838 Twp. of Windsor, Hants Co. census
as a labourer with a family consisting of 2 females under 6, 1 male over 14 and
1 female over 14. He could be the Adam William, son of Jacob Pence and Susannah
Crosby, b.1803
William
John PENCE was born in 1846 in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Parents:
William PENCE and Matilda Caroline POWER.
William
Tobias PENCE was born in 1786. He died ?31 Oct 1822 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
This could be the William E. Pence whose death was recorded in a Halifax newspaper
in 1822. It could also be the William George Pence whose will was probated in
Halifax Co. in 1828. He was a butcher in Halifax, had a wife named Mary and three
children, George, Mary Anne and Jane. Parents: Conrad
PENCE and Barbra Elizabeth PREPER.
Marianna/Maria
Anna PENCE/PENTZ was born on 1 Sep 1822 in Nova Scotia. She was baptized
on 25 Jul 1827 in TALP - of Joseph and Elizabeth (widow) of Beach Meadows. She
died on 6 Sep 1901. Parents: Joseph PENTZ and
Maria Elizabeth REINHARDT.She was married to
Martin TEEL @1843 (no record found) in Nova Scotia. Children were:
Elizabeth Ann TEEL, Lydia Jane TEEL,
Samuel Edward TEEL, James Abner TEEL,
Martin M. T. TEEL, Mary Ellen TEEL,
Elizabeth Jane TEEL, Infant son TEEL,
James Mahlon TEEL, Ada Elizabeth TEEL.
Catherine
Elizabeth PENN was born on 12 May 1810 in Lunenburg, Lunenburg Co. Nova Scotia.
She was baptized on 10 Jun 1810 in ZLL. Parents: Thomas
PENN and Christina Catherine MEHLMAN.
Thomas
PENNHe was married to Christina Catherine MEHLMAN
. Children were: Catherine Elizabeth PENN.
Elizabeth
PENSEShe was married to John Frederick SLOTT
20 Nov 1798 (marriage bond) in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Hannah
PENSEShe was married to Jacob LINTELIP on
15 Jun 1784 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Susannah
PENSEShe was married to A. Christian SCHULTZ
on 3 Jul 1798 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Mary
Eva PENTZ (WDW)She was married to John Jacob DOLF
on 23 Mar 1794 in SJAC, Lunenburg, NS.
Ada
May PENTZ was born in 1869 in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. She never married,
and in 1921 when her grandfather's estate was settled, she was living in Massachusetts.
In 1929 when her mother died, she was living in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
Parents: George PENTZ and
Sarah Elizabeth.
Agnes
Mary PENTZ was born on 8 Mar 1898 in Hantsport, Nova Scotia. She died on
2 Mar 1900 in Hantsport, Nova Scotia. Parents: Frederick
Edwin PENTZ and Emily Isabella MYERS.
Alexander
PENTZ Parents: Lewis B. PENTZ.
Alfred
or Albert PENTZ died in 1873 in Hantsport, Hants Co. Nova Scotia.
Alice
Sylvia PENTZ Parents: Walter Henry PENTZ and
Elizabeth B. BARTEAUX.Children were: Richard Walton
Jr MOULTON, John Albert Bruce MOULTON,
Judith Elizabeth MOULTON, Garth Scott MOULTON
, Joanne Edith MOULTON, James
Andrew Fraser MOULTON, Jane Irene MOULTON.
Amos
PENTZ was born on 11 Dec 1847 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died
on 5 Nov 1922 in Shelburne, NS. Parents: Martin PENTZ
and Mrs WILLIAMS.He was married to
Emeline HOLDER. Children were: Emma PENTZ,
William PENTZ, Ethel PENTZ,
Lyman PENTZ.
He was married to Annie May MATTHEWS
on 27 Oct 1891 in Jordan River, Shelburne Co., NS. Children were:
Harold Glen PENTZ, Arthur Gordon PENTZ,
Leon Laurier PENTZ, Ruby Luella PENTZ,
Donald Elmer PENTZ.
Andrea
PENTZ Parents: Russell Leon PENTZ and
Madeline Kate THOMAS.
Ann
PENTZ was born in 1862. Parents: Benjamin PENTZ
and Lydia.
Ann
PENTZ was born in 1861 in Newfoundland. Parents:
Thomas PENTZ and Catherine.She was married
to Thomas MCGUIRE on 18 Jan 1887 in Roman Catholic
church.
Ann
Amelia PENTZ was born in 1842 in Nova Scotia. Parents:
George James Millett PENCE and Sophia Pamela CORKUM
.She was married to Thomas Ainsley MCDONALD on
2 Feb 1872 in Hantsport, Hants Co. Nova Scotia.
Anna
Catherina PENTZ was born on 15 Mar 1769 in LaHave, Lunenburg County, NS.
She was baptized on 23 Mar 1769 in St John's Anglican, Lunenburg, NS. She died
in Mar 1854. The information on this line came from Paul Randall's page, accessed
through Lunenburg Co. genweb page. Parents: Johannes PENTZ
and Anna Catherina KNELLER.She was married to
Crafft Ludwig WAMBACK on 30 Nov 1786 in Zion Lutheran,
Lunenburg. Children were: Anna Catherine WAMBACH
, Anna Maria WAMBACH, Katharina
Maria Elizabeth WAMBACH, Johann Ludwig WAMBACH
, Johann Jacob WAMBACH,
Joseph WAMBACH, Johann Philip WAMBACK,
Louisa WAMBACH, Georg Friederich WAMBACH,
Christine Elizabeth WAMBACH, Gerhardt WAMBACH
.
Anna
Catherina PENTZ was born on 15 Jan 1794 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. She was
possibly married to a Charles Smith, an executor of her father Martin's will
made in 1845.
Parents: Johann Martin PENTZ and
Maria Elizabeth SPEIDEL.She was married to William
Charles SMITH on 20 Dec 1810 in SJAC, Lunenburg, NS.
Anna
Christina PENTZ was born on 22 Aug 1811. She died on 20 Apr 1873. According
to the 1871 heads of household index on Chris Young's page, T. Ritcey is in Riverport.
In fact, there are about 20 Ritcey families in Lunenburg Co. then, and all but
two are in Riverport. Parents: Johann Martin PENTZ
and Maria Elizabeth SPEIDEL.She was married to
Johann Thomas HENRITCY on 2 Sep 1834 in Methodist
Church, Lunenburg, NS. Children were: Christina HENRITCY
, Thomas HENRITCY.
Anna
Gertrudt PENTZ was born in 1775 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. She was baptized
on 27 Aug 1775 in DRC Lunenburg. She died on 10 Oct 1858 in Lunenburg, Nova
Scotia. The children of this marriage came from the Jost family webpage, accessed
off the Lunenburg Co website. Parents: Johannes PENTZ
and Anna Catherina KNELLER.She was married to
John Philip JOST on 25 Oct 1796 in Zion Lutheran,
Lunenburg. Children were: John George JOST,
Maria Anna JOST, George Henry JOST,
Susanna Catherine JOST, William Henry JOST,
Susanna Sophia Charlotte JOST, Elizabeth JOST
, Maria Sophia JOST, Maria
Louisa JOST, John Benjamin JOST,
Johann Philip (Samuel) JOST.
Anna
Margaretha (Peggy) PENTZ Parents: John PENTZ
.She was married to John George Michael CORKUM
on 19 Dec 1822 in Methodist Church, Liverpool, Queens, NS. Children were:
Edward Christopher CORKUM, Sophia Maria Catharine
CORKUM, Elizabeth Margaret CORKUM,
Frederick Enos CORKUM, Maria CORKUM,
William CORKUM, Elizabeth Ann CORKUM.
Anna
Maria PENTZ was born @1734 in supposedly Germany. Parents:
Rudolph PENTZ and Johanna?.She was married to
George HIMMELMAN on 16 Oct 1753 in St Paul's Anglican,
Halifax, NS. On Roll II. The roll reads "Anna Maria Benzen", the "en"
merely being the German feminine suffix, the bride's family name given as "Benz".
Probably the "Anna Maria" is Amelia, a misunderstanding by a muster
clerk taking names down by ear. Also, Amelia appears no longer with her family
on any other list after this time. Children were: Catherine
Barbara HIMMELMAN, Peter HIMMELMAN,
Maria Barbara HIMMELMAN, Anna Maria Margaret HIMMELMAN
, Anna Catherine HIMMELMAN,
Ludwig HIMMELMAN, Anna Maria HIMMELMAN,
Johann Michael HIMMELMAN, Elizabeth HIMMELMAN
, Sophia Katharina HIMMELMAN,
Elizabeth Barbara HIMMELMAN.
Anna
Sophia PENTZ was born on 7 May 1786 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. She was baptized
on 31 May 1786 in DRC Lunenburg. Parents: Johannes PENTZ
and Anna Catherina KNELLER.
Annie
PENTZ died in 1876 in Lunenburg Co, Nova Scotia.
Antoinette
PENTZ was born in 1873 in Lunenburg Co, Nova Scotia. Parents:
Reuben PENTZ and Eleanor WAMBACK.She was married
to Philip E. ROSS. Children were:
Edith A. ROSS.
Archibald
PENTZ was born in 1853. Parents: Benjamin PENTZ
and Lydia.
Arnold
Roger PENTZ died on 17 Aug 1906 in Mt Uniacke, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. He
was buried in Mt Uniacke Cemetery, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Parents:
Orland A. PENTZ and Elizabeth M..
Arthur
Gordon PENTZ was born on 15 Mar 1894 in Jordan Falls, Shelburne County, NS.
Parents: Amos PENTZ and
Annie May MATTHEWS.He was married to Susie Bernice
TURNER on 22 Aug 1922 in Middleton, Nova Scotia. Children were:
Donald Gordon PENTZ, Jean Elizabeth PENTZ,
Robert William PENTZ.
Arthur
Graham PENTZ was born on 2 Dec 1846 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS.
Parents: John PENTZ and
Lucy Bagley GRAHAM.
Arthur
Graham PENTZ was born on 15 Apr 1881 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS.
He died on 26 Feb 1971 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents:
Joseph Parker PENTZ and Amanda MOUZER.He was
married to Kate Velma MOUZER on 14 Feb 1907. Children
were: Kathleen PENTZ, Irma
PENTZ, Kathleen Enid PENTZ,
Graham Arthur PENTZ, Gertrude Harriet PENTZ.
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