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Our Family Genealogy Pages

Louis Arthur WABER
 1882 - 1979

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  • Birth  11 Mar 1882  Van Buren County,Mi Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender  Male 
    Died  28 Jun 1979  Royal Oak,Mi Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID  I87676  Brainard (Brainerd) / Foster / Fish
    Last Modified  22 Jul 2003 00:00:00 
     
    Family  Hattie Antinica Besye VEDDER, b. 12 Aug 1884, Saint Augustine,Fl  
    Married  20 Oct 1909 
    Notes 
    • _STATMARRIED
    Children 
     1. Eleanor Alma WABER, b. 9 May 1911, Chicago,Ill
     2. Thomas Vedder WABER, b. 27 Jul 1920, Chicago,Cook County,Ill
    Family ID  F38253  Group Sheet
     
  • Notes 
    • Nickname: Arthur
      Cause of Death: stroke
      BIOGRAPHY: Heres a bio onL Arthur written by my grandfather:

      Dear Cousins:

      Since we shall not bewith you at this year's reunion, Jim and Faith McGregor asked me to prepare a mini-biography of my father that can be attached to the genealogical material which will soon be deposited in the Western Michigan University archives. It doesseem appropriate that someone describe the man who almost singlehandedly (andcertainly whole heartedly) developed our outstanding and historically importantWaber and Miller family records on which each individual descendent can construct his/her ongoing "tree" with confidence. Dad would want me to make a note here that we are not really Millers but Mullers, with an umlaut. OK with two dotsover the u which can also be rendered "Mueller". Except that the family long ago chose the English translation which stands by common consent. The importantpoint is that when researching the European church records we need to rememberthe German spelling. So much for my Preface. Now, with your permission, let metry to describe my father to future readers of the family files as well as themany younger cousins today who did not know him.

      LOUIS ARTHUR WABER (1882-1979)

      First let it be observed that a more important genealogical project is hard to imagine. The Millers and the Wabers were part of America's historic mid-19th century German immigration that had great impact on our nations development. And in terms of the sesquicentenial state state of Michigan in which they chose to settle, these are the log cabin pioneers of Van Buren County who tamed the wilderness before the state was even in its teens. It is a rare and valuablegift we are making to future Michigan historians and a priceless gift also toWabers and Millers of another century who will want very much to know when their ancestors came to America and what their lives were like. We have L Arthur ("Uncle Art") Waber, particualrly, to thank for assembling our genealogy with great attention to detail over a period of many years. The files speak for themselves. But who was he exactly?

      L Arthur was a man of exceptional heritage. I saw none of my grandparents (three of whom died in 1917) and his own mother diedwhen he was only 10. Yet I remember my mother's frequent description of her father in law, Thomas Waber, as a kind and pleasant man. And from her letters that survive we can tell that Anna Eliza (Miller) Waber was equally kind, pleasant, loving, and thoroughly Christian. Thomas and Eliza accordingly suceeded in raising children whose loving, sharing, constructive lives were a credit to theirparents. Daughter Alma, for example, who married John McGregor and lived for so many years on the old Waber farm after a period in Manton whose beautiful family again reflects such credit on the parents. Thomas LaVerne ("Uncle Verne"),a veteran of WWI, whose son Henry (by Mabel Kingsley Waber) has always been a joy to the family. James Warren (whose war was the Spanish American), who becamea distinguished inventor and the father of Dr. James Thomas Waber, scientist and university professor who participated in WWII's Manhatten Project. And therewas Paul Miller Waber, the very enterprising farmer who lived just down the road from the ancestral home, whose daughters Pauline and Marie (by Josie Champion) always have reflected that same loving good nature of Thomas and Eliza. "Art" thus was blessed with siblings who were good to their little brother and withaunts, uncles, and cousins by the dozen who knew and cared about him. All of which seems to provide the optimum "environment" in which to raise a genealogist!

      However L Arthur Wabers story is not quite that simple. Like his sister and his brothers each of whom chose a unique path in life, Dad, too, was "one ofa kind". Completion of primary grades at the one room "quail trap" school was followed by some further schooling in Grand Rapids
     

  
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