bullet Eliza Jane PENTZ was born on 26 Feb 1840 in Western Head, Lunenburg County, NS. She was baptized in LL - Lunenburg Lutheran Congregation, Lunenburg County, NS. Parents: Peter PENTZ and Mary Ann.


bullet Eliza Jane PENTZ died in 1955 in Lunenburg Co, Nova Scotia. Parents: Joseph Lewis PENTZ and Elizabeth Ann WILKIE.


bullet Elizabeth PENTZ was born on 9 Aug 1787 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. Parents: Joseph BENNS and Elizabeth.


bullet Elizabeth A. PENTZ died aged 2 in Nova Scotia. Parents: Joseph Albert PENTZ and Elizabeth ROSS.


bullet Elizabeth Catherine PENTZ was born on 15 Oct 1784 in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. Parents: Johannes PENTZ and Anna Catherina KNELLER.

She was married to William MOSHER .


bullet Elizabeth Margaret PENTZ was born on 28 Aug 1832 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. She was baptized on 15 May 1833 in Trinity Anglican Church, Liverpool, NS. Parents: Martin PENTZ and Catherine CHANDLER.

She was married to Simeon CROUSE on 10 Jun 1851 in Crouse Town, Lunenburg "PL".


bullet Ella Jedidah PENTZ was born on 22 Mar 1883. She was baptized on 29 May 1883 in LL - Lunenburg Lutheran Congregation, Lunenburg County, NS. Parents: Simon PENTZ and Caroline MOSER.


bullet Ellen (Eleanor) M. PENTZ was born on 18 Apr 1846 in Nova Scotia. She was buried in 1907 in Mount Pleasant, Lunenburg, NS. She died on 31 Dec 1907 in Mount Pleasant, Lunenburg, NS. Parents: Michael PENTZ and Anna LOHNES.

She was married to Simeon CORKUM on 28 Jul 1869 in Anglican Church, LaHave Ferry, Lunenburg, NS. Children were: Elias S CORKUM, Charles CORKUM , Wilson R. CORKUM, Eber CORKUM, Albert CORKUM, Ella Tripheria CORKUM, Archibald CORKUM, Catherine Delilah CORKUM.


bullet Elsie PENTZ was living in 1948 in Mt Uniacke, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. She resided after her marriage in Dartmouth, Halifax County, NS. Parents: Orland A. PENTZ and Elizabeth M..

She was married to Jim BEATTIE. Children were: children BEATTIE.


bullet Elsie Aileen PENTZ was born on 20 Feb 1915 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Frank Merril PENTZ and Eva Catherine WENTZELL.

She was married to Gerald Victor FRALIC on 5 Oct 1939. Children were: Brenda Geraldine FRALIC, Lorne Alan FRALIC.


bullet Emily Jean PENTZ was born on 28 Oct 1882 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She died in 1948. The wedding of Emily Jean to Gilbert, on Christmas Day 1902, was written up in the local pape and a copy kept in the family bibler:

"Christmas over again, many hearts made glad, many sad from the memory of loved ones departed who were with them at the last Yuletide season. The day was bright and cheery, though the ground was bare, and the N.W. wind not warm by any means.

"The event of the day was the wedding of Miss Jean Pentz, eldest daughter of Fred Pentz, druggist, to Bert Frizzle, now of Sand River, Cumberland Co. The ceremony was at the Pentz residence on Prince St at 3 pm, and was witnessed by a large number of invited guests. They took the evening train east for Sand River amid the best wishes from hosts of friends for their future happiness."

Later, the couple moved to Port Huron, Michigan where they raised their family and passed away.



Parents: Frederick Edwin PENTZ and Emily Isabella MYERS.

She was married to Gilbert J. FRIZZELL on 25 Dec 1902 in Hantsport, Nova Scotia. Children were: Minnie Isabel FRIZZELL, Arthur FRIZZELL, Guy FRIZZELL, John FRIZZELL.


bullet Emma PENTZ Parents: Amos PENTZ and Emeline HOLDER.


bullet Emma PENTZ was born in 1857. Parents: Benjamin PENTZ and Lydia.


bullet Emma Adelaide PENTZ was born on 22 Jan 1886 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. She died on 24 Jan 1972 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: John Ambrose PENTZ and May Isabella (CHANDLER) MOUSER .

She was married to George Leslie CANN on 22 Feb 1941 in Ohio, Yarmouth County, NS.


bullet Ernest Edwin PENTZ was born on 12 Nov 1883 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He died on 4 Jan 1885 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Parents: Frederick Edwin PENTZ and Emily Isabella MYERS.


bullet Ethel PENTZ died in Feb 1979 in East Jordan, NS. Parents: Amos PENTZ and Emeline HOLDER.

She was married to Alonzo FREDERICKS. Children were: Amos FREDERICKS, Almon FREDERICKS, Mildred FREDERICKS, Norman FREDERICKS.


bullet Etta PENTZ Parents: John Simon PENTZ and Sophia PUBLICOVER.


bullet Eudavilla PENTZ was born in 1862 in Hants Co. Nova Scotia. She was living in 1921 in Newark, New Jersey, USA. Parents: George PENTZ and Sarah Elizabeth.

She was married to Mr ??HAWKLET.


bullet Eudora Ann PENTZ was born in 1868 in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. Parents: Richard Edwin PENTZ and Agnes Sophia CORKUM.

She was married to John E. ELVEY on 12 Sep 1888 in Dartmouth, Halifax County, NS. Children were: Ernest ELVEY, Ethel Agnes ELVEY, Everett Albert ELVEY.


bullet Eva Madeline PENTZ was born on 9 Apr 1913 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. She died on 18 Dec 1977 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Frank Merril PENTZ and Eva Catherine WENTZELL .

She was married to Charles Parker COLP on 27 Nov 1936. Children were: Borden Parker COLP, Donald Neil COLP, Nancy Gail COLP.


bullet Frank Merril PENTZ was born on 31 Dec 1878 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died on 12 Mar 1953 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: John Ambrose PENTZ and May Isabella (CHANDLER) MOUSER .

He was married to Eva Catherine WENTZELL on 26 Dec 1906 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Children were: Eva Madeline PENTZ, Elsie Aileen PENTZ, Victoria Isabella PENTZ.


bullet Frank William PENTZ was born on 26 Oct 1887 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He died on 2 Aug 1951 in Kingston, Ontario. He was the son of Frederick Edwin and Emily Isabella Pentz, nee Myers. It was a large family: Frank William was the fifth of their 16 children, the fourth of those nine who survived their childhood and the eldest son.

When he was about two or three years old, the family moved to Hantsport, and that is where his childhood was spent. On his eleventh birthday, his grandfather Richard Edwin Pentz died.

Following in his father's footsteps, Frank decided to become a druggist. He came to Toronto and became licensed by the Ontario College of Pharmacy, attending the 1909-1910 session and graduating with honours in the May. The subjects of the examination were as follows: Dispensing, Prescriptions, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Materia Medica and Botany.

You also had to apprentice for four years, and apparently Frank went to school in the day and then worked at a drugstore at night. His son Paul recalls him saying that the druggist would let him sit on the steps and study until a customer came in, he would get up and serve them and when they left go back to his studying.

After his graduation, he returned to Nova Scotia and on September 14, 1910 married Leena Pridham at Amherst, Nova Scotia. Their son Ted was born in 1911.

Frank began to run a drugstore, although whether this was the one in Hantsport or his father's new one in Shubenacadie, or ones in Ontario, I'm not sure.

A few years later, probably before August, 1915, Leena died of tuberculosis. Frank at this point was in Hantsport and working there as a druggist, with his mother most probably looking after his little boy.

Initially, Frank belonged to the Ionic Lodge No. 73 (Masonic) in Middleton, N.S. What was he doing in Middleton? Subsequently, he became a Royal Arch Mason on August 20, 1915. He also belonged to the Independent Order of Old Fellows in Hantsport, N.S. on May 1, 1916.

Frank eventually decided to return to Ontario. He settled in Windsor around 1917 and went about trying to get a drugstore of his own. It was in Windsor that he met Bessie Irene Sutor, whom he married on New Years Day, 1919. Bessie Irene had been working in a telegraph office there, and since he often sent telegrams to his family in Nova Scotia, they had met.

Frank's first drugstore was on the corner of Wyandotte and Hall Avenue, and it was named Pentz's Standard Drugs. The house his mother-in-law lived in was right behind it, just separated by an alley. He owned a total of thirteen drugstores in Windsor, all of which had soda fountains, and had a chain of six going at the time of the crash in 1929. Whenever he filled prescriptions, he gave out little medicine glasses, with "PENTZ'S STANDARD DRUGSTORE, BORDER CITIES, ONT.' written on them. In those days, there were fewer pills and so often medicine was in liquid form. The glass is marked in teaspoons, tablespoos and ounces. It also mentions that 60 drops equal one teaspoon. His sister Lottie, after completing her pharmacy course in Toronto, came to Windsor to run one of his drugstores for him.

Their large home was on 373 Moy Avenue, which was not far from Hall and Wyandotte but in a better area by the river. The house has now been torn down.

Besides owning the chain of drugstores, Frank also owned two apartment buildings, one on a corner, and a fairly large tobacco farm divided by a creek between Kingsville and Leamington. He bought it in the mid-20s and had it about three years. His family moved from Windsor to the farm, where there was a stone house to live in with a huge dining room and living room, and a wing for a nursery and a small room beside it for the nurse. In Windsor, the boys' nursemaid had been a girl named Annie. Edsel went to school in Ruthven, which was about three miles from the farm.

The Depression hit in 1929 and the Pentz family was hit hard, as were others in the business. In fact, two of Frank's friends who had drugstores committed suicide. Both were well-to-do men and friendly competitors of his. Frank lost his farm, and as no-one in his apartments could pay for their rent, he lost the apartments as well.

At the same time, his bank which had been so willing to extend him credit to open up his chain of drugstores began to call in their notes. Unable to raise the money, he was put into bankruptcy. In the end, he was able to salvage only a small amount of stock that had not been taken back by his creditors or sold to satisfy their demands. He managed to trade his big, black four-door car which he was so proud of for a truck, loaded all the stock on it, and set off for Highgate.

Family tragedy also struck in the same year, when his son Ted contracted tuberculosis, the same disease that killed his mother. Ted went into a sanitarium at Mimico Beach, and after being confined for six years, died in 1935.

In Highgate, Frank set up a drugstore with the remaining stock from the Windsor stores. At Highgate however, it was all barter in the store. If you didn't have any money, maybe you had some potatoes, or some beans. Frank liked to cook, and made good pork and beans. Porridge, beans, bread (but no butter) was a good part of their diet. Unfortunately, business was so bad in those times that after two years he was forced to close his store, and in 1932 he moved the family to Toronto to find a job.

In Toronto, they first rented a house in the West End on 95 Government Road, and then moved to a bigger house on 1425 Dundas St. W., which was so close to the other that the boys didn't have to change schools. Frank put up a sign on the door saying "Tourist Home", and that brought in a bit of extra money.

After that he managed to get a drugstore on Kingston Road, and the family lived above the store. (The store is now converted into a house.) As very few people had the money to pay for goods bought at the drugstore, Frank was forced to take a job as a salesman to supplement his income, as he had to pay his suppliers cash for new stock.

He sold the drugstore and opened another at 1180 Queen St E where they again lived above the store. (This is no longer a drugstore.) He had a hard time getting a business going there, as a lot of people wanted to charge things to an account and he couldn't afford to have that policy at his store.

Finally, seeing that it was too tough to try and stay in business during the Depression, he also sold that drugstore and moved to a rented house on 2 Glenfern Ave. in Kew Beach, and took a full-time sales position with Langley, Harris and Company.

Also, when Frank had first come to Toronto, he had been making and selling to other stores his own Javel water, which was used for bleaching. He collected loads of bottles and would fill each with the same amount to matter what the size. His son Edsel would help him to bottle it. It was called Quaker Javel Water, and because of the Quaker name he had to stop selling it.

Once while talking to his employer at Langley, Harris, Frank mentioned that he was from the Maritimes. The man knew the company was having a hard time selling down there, and so offered him a big raise if he would go home and represent the company there.

The move to Shubenacadie was made in August, 1940 and he was the company's Maritime representative for three years. He spent a lot of his time on the road and in hotels, as evidenced by the many letters he sent his wife and son Paul on hotel stationery. One common place to stay was the Admiral Beatty Hotel in Saint John, New Brunswick. He also spent a lot of time in Sydney, Nova Scotia. His cousin Ethel Neva Slade, nee Barron, recalls many dinners at her home with Frank when he was in town. He used to tell them that he was tired of being on the road so long, and so they would always have a nice meal for him when he came. When he stayed in Sydney on weekends, they used to go on picnics together. Frank was very entertaining, she said, and they used to have great talks around the table. There is a picture of Frank with her mother, his aunt Eudora Ann Pentz, which she is going to send.

In 1943 though, Frank took over the operation of his father's old drugstore in Shubenacadie from his sister Bertha when she became ill, and ran it until 1949 when her son Malcolm passed the pharmacy course and took it over.

At this point, Frank contacted the Ontario College of Pharmacy, wanting to come back to Ontario and find employment with a druggist. In a letter to his sons dated January 27, 1949 he says:

"I have decided to leave Nova Scotia. I don't seem to be able to get registered here. They seem to be putting me off and off from one meeting to the other. These meetings are six months apart, and I don't feel that I can afford, at my age, to take a chance.

"I have also decided to give up the wholesale business as I don't feel able to go out myself and it is hard to get a satisfactory man, so I'll be selling my extra stock, I expect, to The National Drug or The Provincial Drug and dispose of my property here in Shubenacadie. In fact, I have written my intentions to the Ontario College of Pharmacy. I also feel business is very dull in Nova Scotia. Thousands of men have been taken by the employment bureau for work in Ontario and other Provinces.

"We are all quite discouraged. Of course you know there is another drug store opened in Shubenacadie, but he isn't doing any business either.

"I will first have to cash in the best I can and may have to leave Mother here until I get settled in Ontario. I don't know how soon I will be able to get away, but I am hoping within a month, but it may not be until spring opens but just as soon as I can make the grade. Of course I will have to take a job in a drugstore, managing if possible, but a job.

"Mother and I both feel we should return to Ontario, getting located in a town or village in preference to a large city and get settled for the rest of our life, that is get a business of my own again..."

Frank moved to Collingwood in April 1949, and there he worked as a part-time druggist eight hours a day. He stayed for about a year, but got restles working under another person and moved to Kingston, where he finally managed to get a drugstore of his own which he named Kingscourt Drugs. In a letter to his son Paul dated November 21, 1950, he described the location of the new store:

"So I went ahead looking for a place to open up and have found the right place, no drug stores within six blocks, a new sub-division with over four thousand population and 700 houses to draw from. A small store 13 - 30 feet in the centre of the sub-division where so many druggists wanted to open, but it was all restricted to residence. This was the last place that a commercial store could be built and as I was always looking around I located it and have paid the first month's rent...

"Edsel was here Sunday and is greatly taken with the location and the ice cream man was up to look it over today and said it was a grand opening and would put an ice cream freezer (cabinet) in free, if I bought the cream from their firm. Mother is also greatly taken with the location.

"There was 350 war-time housing houses built and occupied and another 350 better houses built selling at $8,500 and $13,000 and 25 to 30 more of such houses being built. It is a real location and, no cheques being taken, it is there, that is the business, and I am in on it and the only drug store.

"...the store rent starts December 1st and I want to get in and started as soon as possible. It is a new store, near a new school house with 16 rooms, another four-room school house two blocks away, and most of the children have to pass here or near the store. This will give Mother and me just want we have always wanted, a good living and a sure business."

He ran the store for less than a year.

On August 2, 1951 Frank died of a heart attack at the age of 63. He is buried at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto.

Parents: Frederick Edwin PENTZ and Emily Isabella MYERS.

He was married to Lena Evelyn PRIDHAM on 14 Sep 1910 in Amherst, Nova Scotia. Children were: Edward (Ted) PENTZ.

He was married to Bessie Irene SUTOR on 1 Jan 1919 in Windsor, Ontario. Children were: Edsel Eckhardt PENTZ, Frank William PENTZ, Paul Edward PENCE.


bullet Frank William PENTZ Parents: Frank William PENTZ and Bessie Irene SUTOR.

Children were: Jerry Lee PENTZ, Kenneth Frank PENTZ, Steven Wayne PENTZ.


bulletFrederick Edwin PENTZ was born on 4 Nov 1862 in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. He died on 21 Sep 1932 in Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. He was the first child of Richard Edwin and Agnes Sophia Pentz, nee Corkum. When he was young, the family supposedly moved to Cape Cod, Massachusetts and then returned to Halifax when Fred was about eight. He had three younger sisters, Ida May, Eudora Ann and Maud, and one younger brother Richard.

Frederick met his wife Emily by chance one day when they were only about 18. Emily lived in Jeddore, a small town southeast of Dartmouth on the shore, and one day she came into port on her uncle's ship and docked in Halifax Harbour. Fred was working as a clerk in a drugstore down by the piers, and Emily just happened to go in. Fred always remembered that she had on a white dress with blue ribbons that day -- it was the first and last time he ever noticed what any woman wore! Emily's mother Mary didn't like Fred though, and that presented a problem. However, Emily was expecting in the summer of 1882 and the two of them eloped. They were married by licence at Garrison Chapel in Halifax, both giving their ages as 21 when they were actually 19 and 18. I think this is probably because it was the age you needed to be to get married without parental consent..

After his marriage and his first child was born, Frederick decided he would become a druggist himself and attended Dalhousie University, Halifax in 1883 and received his pharmacy diploma.

For about eight years after their marriage, Frederick and Emily remained in Halifax and had six children there. In 1889 they moved to Hantsport in Hants Co, where they would have another 10 children. It was a small town and their home was at 31 Prince St. down by the waterfront. Frederick set up his own drugstore on Main Street. At that time all pills and prescriptions had to be made from scratch with herbs, and the family had a large garden of them by their home. Many others would have had to be ordered.

Frederick was appointed mayor of Hantsport on March 2, 1908 and served until August 2, 1910. At this time, he stated that he was going to leave the town and so it would be his last meeting. The minutes for his years in office cover about 90 pages. His signature, taken from one of the documents, and a photograph of him taken in front of his drugstore in Hantsport will be scanned into this web site for viewing in the near future.

Jessie Borden, a Hantsport historian who was the same age as Frederick's daughter Lottie and her grade 4 seatmate, remembers at a minstrel show years ago in town that they said Fred Pentz was trying for a shilling worth of Pentz, but only got 10 Pentz! (A play on words.)

Frederick set up another drugstore in Shubenacadie, and I think that is where he went in 1910. It was thought that in 1914 the family moved there with him while his son Walter took over the Hantsport store. However, in an August 1915 letter to Frederick from his son Arthur, he tells him to "write Mother", which sounds as if they are not living together.

The Shubenacadie drugstore stayed in the family until fairly recently. After Frederick's death his daughter Bertha, who became a druggist in 1920 and was probably the province's first woman pharmacist, managed it until 1943, when she became ill and asked her brother Frank to look after it while her son Malcolm took the pharmacy course. Frank ran it until 1949 when Mack took over. After his death in 1973 his son David Etter took over, and only recently it has become a tea room and bakery. It is called Pentz's Place.

Frederick seems to have been an outgoing, ambitious person, not only for himself but for his children. Four of his eight adult children, Bertha, Frank, Walter and Lottie became pharmacists like him, with Walter going on to become a doctor and Frank later wishing he had done the same! It also sounds in his letter to his dad that Arthur was trying to become a pharmacist, too. I say he was outgoing and ambitious for many reasons; because of how he met his wife, had the nerve to elope, then put himself through pharmacy school with a young family, and the role he played in Hantsport, not only as mayor but helping the poor through his vocation, often giving those who could not afford them free prescriptions.

Frederick and Emily kept a huge family bible with records of their chldren's births, marriages and deaths, and used it as well to keep things such as newspaper clippings about the family, In Memoriam cards and photographs. The bible was passed on to his eldest son, Frank William, who gave it to his eldest son, Edsel. Ed's widow Bette now lives in Calgary, Alberta and has the bible. Her son Brian will soon be e-mailing me copies of the pages and enclosures to be posted on this page.

Frederick died in Shubenacadie in his 70th year. He had been very ill for several months and died of hemepligia. He is buried in the Riverbank Cemetery, Hantsport near his parents. His wife Emily, who died of pneumonia a year later while living in a nursing home in Dartmouth, is buried beside him. Also, there is a headstone commemorating their son, R. Arthur, who died in the war, and their six children who died in early childhood. It is not known where Ernest Edwin is buried. Parents: Richard Edwin PENTZ and Agnes Sophia CORKUM.

He was married to Emily Isabella MYERS on 22 Jun 1882 in Garrison Chapel, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Children were: Emily Jean PENTZ, Ernest Edwin PENTZ, Edith May PENTZ, Bertha (Bird) Eudora PENTZ, Frank William PENTZ, Walter Henry PENTZ, Nellie Frances PENTZ, Myrtle Grace PENTZ, Gladys Maggie PENTZ, John William PENTZ, Richard Arthur PENTZ, Agnes Mary PENTZ, Lottie Lawrence PENTZ, Kathleen Isabel PENTZ, Baby Girl PENTZ, Baby Boy PENTZ.


bullet Freeman PENTZ was born @1840 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died bef 1890 (c/b1875) in Shelburne, NS. There is a Freeman Pentz in the 1864-1877 death index who died in Shelburne Co. in 1875. Parents: Martin PENTZ and UNKNOWN.

He was married to Charlotte MCGILL.


bullet Gabriel David PENTZ was born in 1895 in Pentz settlement, Lunenburg Co, NS. He died @1980, in his 95th year in Pentz settlement, Lunenburg Co, NS. Parents: Joseph Lewis PENTZ and Elizabeth Ann WILKIE.

Children were: Greta PENTZ.


bulletGeorg PENTZ was born @1740 in supposedly Germany. Parents: Rudolph PENTZ and Johanna?.


bullet George PENTZ was born in 1838 in Nova Scotia. He died btwn 1871 and 19 Sep 1875. Parents: George James Millett PENCE and Sophia Pamela CORKUM.

He was married to Sarah Elizabeth . Children were: Eudavilla PENTZ, Judson A. PENTZ, Ada May PENTZ.


bullet George PENTZ

He was married to Lucinda WEIL before 1876 in Clearland, Nova Scotia.


bullet Gertrude Harriet PENTZ was born on 23 Jul 1925 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Arthur Graham PENTZ and Kate Velma MOUZER.

She was married to Frank JORY in 1958.


bullet girl PENTZ Parents: George James Millett PENCE and Sophia Pamela CORKUM.


bullet Gladys Maggie PENTZ was born on 30 May 1893 in Hantsport, Nova Scotia. She died on 28 Oct 1894 in Hantsport, Nova Scotia. Parents: Frederick Edwin PENTZ and Emily Isabella MYERS.


bullet Gladys Shirley PENTZ Parents: Leon Laurier PENTZ and Lulu Josephine GARDENER.

She was married to Robert RYDHOLM. Children were: Robert David William RYDHOLM, Linda Mary RYDHOLM.


bullet Gloria Elizabeth PENTZ was born on 31 May 1925 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Henry Boardman PENTZ and Verta Vashti CONRAD.


bullet Graham Arthur PENTZ was born on 17 Apr 1919. Parents: Arthur Graham PENTZ and Kate Velma MOUZER.

He was married to Dorcas DAVIS on 13 Jul 1940. Children were: Dianne PENTZ, Donna PENTZ, Virginia PENTZ, Judith PENTZ.


bullet Gregory PENTZ Parents: David Arthur PENTZ and Rose Marie HOLMAN.


bullet Greta PENTZ Parents: Gabriel David PENTZ.

She was married to Lawrence HIMMELMAN.


bullet Hannah Elizabeth PENTZ was born on 21 Sep 1830 in Nova Scotia. Parents: Jacob Ernst PENTZ and Hannah Elizabeth REICHARDT .


bullet Harold PENTZ was born on 15 Dec 1883 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died on 24 Jul 1963 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Joseph Parker PENTZ and Amanda MOUZER.

He was married to Bessie Gladys GODFREY.


bullet Harold Glen PENTZ was born in Jul 1892 in Jordan Falls, Shelburne County, NS. He died in 1908 in Shelburne, NS. Parents: Amos PENTZ and Annie May MATTHEWS.


bullet Harriet PENTZ was born on 12 Oct 1888 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Joseph Parker PENTZ and Amanda MOUZER.

She was married to Fred GRIMM .


bullet Harriet Eleanor PENTZ was born in 1866 in Lunenburg Co, Nova Scotia. Parents: Reuben PENTZ and Eleanor WAMBACK.


bullet Henry Boardman PENTZ was born on 8 Oct 1890 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died on 10 May 1979 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: John Ambrose PENTZ and May Isabella (CHANDLER) MOUSER .

He was married to Verta Vashti CONRAD on 1 Feb 1922. Children were: Ruby Yvonne PENTZ, Gloria Elizabeth PENTZ.


bullet Herbert James PENTZ was born on 19 May 1844 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. He died on 19 Jan 1845 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: John PENTZ and Lucy Bagley GRAHAM.


bullet Hilda Eugenia PENTZ was born on 16 Dec 1887 in Nova Scotia. She died on 16 Jun 1983. Parents: Joseph Lewis PENTZ and Elizabeth Ann WILKIE.

She was married to Robert Jordan CORKUM in 1911 in Nova Scotia. Children were: Creighton Robert Lloyd CORKUM.


bullet Howard Henrick (adopted) PENTZ Parents: Richard Oliver PENTZ and Ruth DAVIS.


bullet Ida May PENTZ was born in 1865 in Dartmouth, Halifax County, NS. She died in prob. Scots Bay, Kings Co. Nova Scotia. Parents: Richard Edwin PENTZ and Agnes Sophia CORKUM.

She was married to Sidney W. KAIZER on 19 Oct 1887 in Dartmouth, Halifax County, NS. Children were: Florence KAIZER, Reginald Austin KAIZER, Gladys KAIZER, Edna KAIZER, Clifford KAIZER, Lillian KAIZER, Charles Richard KAIZER.


bullet infant PENTZ died in Mt Uniacke, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. Parents: Ivan Edward PENTZ and Ida MCDONALD.


bullet Irma PENTZ was born on 24 Aug 1910 in Beach Meadows, Queens County, NS. Parents: Arthur Graham PENTZ and Kate Velma MOUZER.


bullet Ivan Edward PENTZ was born in 1873 in Mt Uniacke, Hants Co. Nova Scotia. He died in 1947. He was married and had a daughter. Parents: Edward Krein PENTZ and Maria BARRETT.

He was married to Ida MCDONALD on 14 Nov 1900 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Children were: infant PENTZ.

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