Waterloo Region Generations
A record of the people of Waterloo Region, Ontario.

Noah Stauffer

Male Cal 1852 - 1878  (~ 26 years)


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  • Name Noah Stauffer 
    Born CALC 3 Aug 1852  , Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Gender Male 
    Rsrch. Note
    • TWO STAUFFER MYSTERIES -- SOLVED
      Two Michigan Stauffers have been a mystery for me--one for several decades and the other only since the Internet came along. I knew about the first one from his cemetery headstone, while the other one kept popping up as I looked at links related to my ancestor Samuel Stauffer (1844-1899). A year or so ago I found out about the first one, and I just figured out about the second one as I studied some new sources and put together pieces of information.

      LITTLE BROTHER NOAH
      In the Bennett Cemetery in Ottawa County northwest of Grand Rapids, Abraham and Magdalena Stauffer are buried. Their son Samuel and his wife Roxy are buried on the other side of a large Stauffer monument. All four are my ancestors. Quite nearby is a sandstone obelisk headstone that intrigued me for many years. It is for a couple named Noah and Nettie Stauffer, who both died quite young. I remember many years ago my mother and I wondering who that young couple could have been, why they had died so young, and whether they were connected to our Stauffers.

      When Jo Kelly sent me the descendency chart on Abraham, based on her work on the history of Chester township, I found on the very first page a Noah Stauffer listed as a son of Abraham and younger brother of Samuel and George. And his wife's name was Jennette! The data on him came from the Ottawa County Death Records, and it is confirmed in the 1860 census where Noah is listed as an 8-year-old in Abraham's household. He was born in Canada in 1851, so he would have been just three the year the family moved to Michigan.

      He married his Nettie on October 22, 1876 when he was 25. Less than six months later, on April 4, 1877, she died of consumption (tuberculosis). What the gravestone hadn't told us was that six months later, on September 30, Noah married again, to a girl named Sarah Chase. And just a year after that--on September 20, 1878--Noah himself died of something called spinal fever, probably meningitis or typhus. We'll never know why we hadn't heard mention of him in the family, nor why he isn't listed in some family Bibles that contain data on that generation, except that he died about ten years earlier than anyone else of our then-known people in his generation.
      COUSIN SAMUEL T.
      So who in the world was this other Samuel Stauffer that I kept running into on the Internet? Despite the facts that he was born in Canada, that censuses place him in Chester Township, Ottawa County, and he is even buried in Bennett Cemetery quite near "our" Stauffers, he was clearly not my Samuel. For one thing, he was ten years older, and his name was always accompanied by a T. Most of all, in the censuses he had an entirely different family. So who was he?

      It wasn't until recently when I began delving into the families of my Samuel's aunts and uncles who also moved to Michigan that I got some clues of who this other Samuel Stauffer might be. I now believe he was the fifth of Isaac and Jane Stauffer's eighteen children (Isaac was Abraham's oldest brother). So the two Samuel Stauffers were cousins!

      How well did these cousins know each other? It is hard to say in the beginning. Samuel T. was 19 or 20 when his uncle Abraham moved his family away from Waterloo, Ontario, to Kent County, Michigan. After that, Samuel T. married someone named Mary and had two children. Somewhere between 1862 and 1867, his family also made the move to Michigan. We don't know if he went first to the Caledonia area south of Grand Rapids where others of the extended Stauffer family had settled, including three of his brothers. What we do know is that by the time of the 1870 census he was in Chester Township with his cousins Samuel, George, and Noah and his Aunt Magdalena (Uncle Abraham had died in 1866).

      Why Samuel T chose to go there instead of where his brothers were (and eventually his parents) is one of those things we will doubtless never know. It is one of two things that suggest to me that in some way Samuel T had a bond with his uncle's family. I discovered another fact most interesting to me: October 24, 1865 my Samuel married Roxana Wells. Two years later when Samuel T. and Mary's third child was born a girl, they named her Roxana, which was definitely not a Stauffer-type name. So it appears our Roxy had a namesake!

      In the years that followed, Samuel, who was a carpenter, and Mary had three more children--Emma, Willie, and Clara. Right between Roxana and Emma, in 1868, Samuel and Roxy had a baby girl whom they named for his Grandmother Esther. It's fun to imagine those three second-cousin girls having fun growing up together, perhaps attending the school on 15th Street where some of us present-day teachers in the family have sat on the steps and had our picture taken. (The Last time I was there, the school had been torn down and nothing was left but the chimney.)
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      From a Hawkins Photo Album
      Sadly, Samuel T. died sometime in 1881 when he was only 46. His two Canadian-born sons were 19 and 23. Roxana and Emma were young teens, while Willie and Clara were just nine and seven. They laid Samuel to rest in the burial plot next to the one where his Uncle Abraham had been buried fifteen years earlier. I find in that simple fact another hint that by that time the families may have been close.

      Abraham was the only Stauffer in the cemetery for a dozen years until his son Noah died at 27. Eighteen years after his cousin's death, just six weeks before the turn of the century, my Samuel would take his place on the other half of Abraham's plot. Magdalena would find hers beside Abraham not long into the new century, and Roxy would complete that quartet in 1909. Samuel T's Mary outlived them all, not dying until 1916 when she was 77.

      After having that mysterious guy flirt with me around the Internet for several years, finding now that he is family--and was all along--is a strange feeling. But I'm delighted that my two mystery guys have indeed turned out to be family, and I can't wait for my next visit to Bennett Cemetery.
      \f3
    Eby ID Number Waterloo-25140 
    Died 20 Sep 1878  Chester, Ottawa, Michigan Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Buried Bennett Cemetery, Harrisburg, Ottawa, Michigan, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Person ID I25140  Generations
    Last Modified 7 Nov 2024 

    Father Abraham Groh Stauffer,   b. 21 Sep 1814, Speedsville (Waterloo Township), Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 23 Sep 1866, Grand Rapids, Kent, Michigan, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 52 years) 
    Mother Magdalena Shupe,   b. 8 Sep 1820, Wilmot Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 23 Jun 1901  (Age 80 years) 
    Married 1843  Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Family ID F1473  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Sources 
    1. [S1345] Michigan Deaths and Burials, 1800-1995.
      Noah Stauffer
      Gender:Male
      Death Date:20 Sep 1878
      Death Place:Chester, Ottawa, Michigan
      Age:27
      Birth Date:1851
      Birthplace:Canada
      Marital Status:Married
      Father's Name:Abraham Stauffer
      Mother's Name:Magdeline Stauffer

    2. [S3231] Find A Grave, Cemetery, B., America, N., County, O., & Cemetery, B. (1852). Noah Stauffer (1852-1878) - Find A Grave Memorial. Findagrave.com. Retrieved 15 May 2018, from https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/88293497/noah-stauffer.

    3. [S13] Vit - - ON, Waterloo - Wellington District Marriage Register Part 1 1840-1852, Rev'd Frederick W. Bindemann, Minister of The German Evangelical Protestant Lutheran Church, At Greenbush, Waterloo Township, Halton County, 1 Sept. 1843 to 1 July 1844 report 32.
      Abraham G. Stauffer, Shoemaker, to Magdalena Shupe, both of Waterloo. Wit. John Stauffer, Farmer and Benjamin Shupe, Farmer, both of Waterloo.

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - CALC 3 Aug 1852 - , Ontario, Canada Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - - Bennett Cemetery, Harrisburg, Ottawa, Michigan, United States Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth