John Snyder went west [to Northern Idaho] in 1901 -- [Mar 1, 1901] and homesteaded on Fords Creek [according to Marie Pritchard Snyder Sterling]
139 John Wesley Snyder was number seven in the Snyder Family. He went West as a young man (after 1900 census) to the Fraser area of Idaho. He was a resident of the Ford’s Creek and Fraser area for forty-two years. He was a farmer, served on the school board, and was good in more fields than one. He helped with the sick. He helped the animals. He was in fact an all-around man, a man of may gifts, which was a help in any community.
61 After Mary’s death he married Jessie Lee [Jordan] Pritchard at Orofino, Idaho [7 years later].
[After Mary’s death, John returned to West Virginia and tried to marry Mary’s sister, Myrtle. Not quite sure or the dynamics of this relationship . . . perhaps it is as simple as Myrtle not wanting to leave West Virginia for Idaho . . . but, John returned to Idaho alone. I know she was very close to her sister, Hattie and brother, Wilbur. - Craig Cooper Snyder, from various sources including my dad, Milton Lee Pritchard Snyder]John W. Snyder’s (J.W. Snyder) farm was in Four Mile Corner [originally called Schmidt's Mill Road], near Fraser, Idaho . . . add to this that the farm was in the Johnstown Elemetarty school area of Fraser, Idaho (Johnstown School no longer exhists) [from Milton Lee Snyder, ccs’s dad]
55Mary Jane Snyder, born about 1843 near Harman, West Virginia, was a sister of Sampson Snyder, who organized the Swamp Dragons. In 1865, she married Martin Van Buren Bennett, another member of the Swamp Dragons. On March 12, 1901, thirty-three Dry Forkers, including Jane and her husband, came down out of that area to Hendricks where they changed trains and embarked on a mass migration to Orofino, Idaho. Jane died in Greer, Idaho, about 1928. Others in the mass migration were:
Abel N. Long, age 82; Charles E. Long, son of Abel, and his family; W. P. Teter and his family; Asa Harman; and three sons of Sampson Snyder, Sampson Jr., Albert, and
John, and their families. Sampson Snyder was born August 19, 1840 and died March 6, 1910. He did not go to Idaho. He married Elizabeth Bonner and lived near Harman. They had twelve children, seven of which migrated to Idaho.
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John W. Snyder, Dies; Funeral Sat.
[Lewiston Tribune][540 Park St Lewiston, ID]
Funeral services were held Saturday in Lewiston for John Wesley Snyder, 86, who passed away at his home at 540 Park St., Lewiston April 27. Death was due to a heart ailment.
Mr. Snyder was born February 23, 1874 at Harmon, West Virginia and came to the Fraser area as a young man. He moved to Lewiston from Weippe in 1943 after he had retired from farming.
Mr. Snyder was a resident of the Fords Creek in the Fraser area for 42 years before moving to Lewiston. The farm he lived on near Weippe is now owned by Wallace Smolinski. He served for many years on the school board, was always called in time of sickness and acted as veterinarian in the area.
In 1898 he married Mary Cooper at Cumberland, Maryland who passed away in 1926. He is survived by his second wife, the former Jessie Lee Pritchard whom he married at Orofino, Dec. 31 1933.
Other survivors include two daughters: Myrtle Snyder, Lewiston and Mrs. Virginia Stocking, Seattle; a son, Willard, Spokane; three stepsons and five stepdaughter; two brothers, Henry of Lewiston, Blaine of Harmon [WV] and a sister, Mrs. Nettie Harmon.
Fourteen grandchildren, 23 great grandchildren and one great, great grandchild also survive.
He was a brother of the late Samson Snyder, and the father of Mrs. Roy Cochrell, who died in 1952 and a son, Milton Snyder, who died in 1943.
Rev Earl Lake of the Lewiston Orchards Methodist Church conducted the last rites with internment in the Fraser Cemetery.
Pallbearers for the Fraser committal were Lee Bennett, Gary Bennett, Lester Whaley,
Howard Rukgaber, Earl Thornton, and Andy Schlader.
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JOHN SNYDER PASSES AT 86John Wesley Snyder, 86, 540 Park St., died at his home of a heart ailment at 6:50 p.m. yesterday. He was a retired rancher, his retirement dating from 1943 when he moved to Lewiston from Orofino.
Mr. Snyder was born Feb. 23, 1874, at Harmon, W. Va., and moved to the Orofino area in 1943.
In 1898 he married Elizabeth Cooper at Cumberland, Md. She died in 1927.
He married Jesse Lee Jordan at Orofino Dec. 31, 1933. She survives.
Other survivors include Myrtle Snyder, Lewiston, and Mrs. Virginia Stocking, Seattle, daughters; a son, Willard, Spokane; 14 grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren, one great-great-grandchild and five stepdaughters and three stepsons. Two brothers, henry of Lewiston and Blaine of Harmon, and a sister, Mrs. Nettie Harmon of Harmon, also survive.
The funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Brower-Wann Chapel, the Rev. Earl Lake of the Orchards Methodist Church officiating.
~~Lewiston Morning Tribune, dated 28 April 1960
Chris Bringman - Jan 9, 2010 View |
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61John Wesley Snyder (2/23/1874-4/27/1960) was born at Harman, West Virginia, the son of Captain Sampson and Elizabeth (Bonner) Snyder.
He was number seven in the Snyder Family. He went West as a young man to the Fraser area of Idaho. He was a resident of the Ford's Creek and Fraser area for forty-two years. He was a farmer, served on the school board, and was goo d in more fields than one. He helped with the sick. He helped the animals. He was in fact an all-around man, a man of many gifts, which was a help in any community.
He married Mary Cooper (12/19/1880-10/8/1926) in 1898.
She was the daughter of Elijah and Hannah Susan (Bible) Cooper. They were married in Cumberland, Maryland.
After Mary's death he married Jessie Lee Pritchard at Orofino, Idaho, Dec. 31, 1933.
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Mary E. Cooper Snyder’s grandson Roy M. Cochrell had this to say about his grandparents who had moved to Fraser, Idaho:
“Much could be said about their lives in the frontier Idaho. The Cochrell children have many fond memories of their grandparents and the part they played in their lives. Granddad Snyder was a man who always had time for young and old alike. He was always sent for when neighbors or family had sickness, whether it was human or animal. Instinctively he always knew what to do and many lives may be credited to his prowess. His wife Mary was kind, gentlewoman and a helpmate to her husband in every area. She was a good mother and never did I hear my mother, Nola, talk of her without shedding tears. She was the oldest child, she remembered much about their early frontier life and often fascinated us with her stores about it. The work and struggles of their life in the wilderness area cannot be underestimated. One can only hold them in high esteem for lives spent in building a home and raising the family in the circumstances they did it in.”
Retired to 509 Park St., Lewiston, Idaho
Jessie was born on the ranch her dad owned, which later bacame the town of Job, West Virginia
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Jessie’s Obituary in the Lewiston Tribune --
JESSIE LEE JORDAN, b. April 05, 1885, Randolph County, WV; d. March 01, 1969, Lewiston, Nez Perce, ID; m. WALTER ICEN PRITCHARD.
SEATTLE - Mrs. Jessie Lee Snyder, 83, a former Lewiston resident, died Thursday at Seattle, where she had resided the last eight years.
Mrs. Snyder was the widow of the late John W. Snyder, an Orofino farmer and a Lewiston resident for 17 years until his death in 1960.
She came to the Lewiston area in 1924 with her husband, the Rev. Waller Pritchard, a United Brethren and Methodist minister. They were married at Harmon
[sic], W. Va.
[actually in nearby Gladwin, WV], in 1901
[actually in 1902]. He died and she was married to Snyder at Lewiston. They lived near Fraser, east of Orofino, until moving to Lewiston in 1943.
She was born April 5, 1885, at Job, W. Va., one of 16 children of Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Jordan.
Survivors include five daughters, Mrs. Otis (Lee) Cochrell, Bellevue, Wash.; Mrs. Willard
(Agatha) Snyder, Spokane; Mrs. T. O. (Anna) Gramholm Everett; Mrs. Emmell (Clara) Bonner, Pierce, and Mrs. Albert (Marie) Sterling, Lewiston; three sons, Sheldon S. Pritchard and Torrey T. Pritchard, both of Seattle, and W. Gordon Pritchard, Yakima; one step-daughter, Mrs. Frank (Virginia) Stocking, Seattle; one step-son, Willard Snyder, Spokane; a brother, Zan Gordon, Orofino; 32 grandchildren and 56 great grandchildren.
The funeral will be Friday at 11 a.m. at Butterworth's Funeral Home at Seattle. Burial will be at Sunset Hills Cemetery, Bellevue.
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186Lee Pritchard Cochrell, 79, passed away peacefully March 18 in Bremerton, Washington. She was born December 31, 1921 in Camdon-on-Gaully, West Verginia to Jessie Lee Jordan and Walter Icen Pritchard. At the age of two her mother moved her and her sister Blanche to Weippe, Idaho. She graduated there from high school in 1940.
Lee is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Ron Otis and Patty McPhee Cochrell of Poulsbo, Washington and a granddaughter, Yricia Lee Cochrell and many much loved nieces and nephews.\She was preceded in death by her husband of 59 years, Otis John Cochrell, four brothers, Donald, Sheldon, Torry and Gordon Pritchard and four sisters, Marie [Alice] Sterling, Clara Bonner, Anna Grandholme, and Blanche Agatha Snyder. Lee married Otis in 1940 in Orfino, Idaho. The couple moved to the Seattle area after he was discharged from the service and then moved to the Bellevue/Medina area in 1953.
Lee was a devoted mother and loving wife. She was very active in many social activities , a member of the Christian Science Church and a member of the Eastern Star. Lee enjoyed the arts, travel and investing. She had an artistic flare was was expressed in her handwriting, love of colors and her drawings. Her love of horses and siamese cats defined her. Since the death of her husband in 1999, she has been living at Clearbrook Living Center in Silverdale, Washington near her son. A memorial service to celebrate her life was held at Green's Funeral Chapel at Sunset Hills in Bellevue Saturday.
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187Residence date: 1930
Residence place: Cathcart, Snohomish Co., Washington