KinNextions
Known Family as of Jan. 21, 2006 (Public Version)


William W. WINTERS [Parents] was born 1866 in Brighton, Cass, Iowa. He married Lulu Belle HARRISON on 1891.

1910 census: Iowa, Cass, Brighton, 18-Apr-1910
Winters, William 46 Iowa, NY, NY 19 years of marriage
      , Belle   38 Iowa, Indiana, Kentucky 19 years of marriage, 1 of 2 children living
      , Ruby    18 Iowa, Iowa, Iowa

1920 census: Iowa, Warren, Allen, 2-Jan-1920
Winters, W. W.  54 Iowa, WN, WN
      , Belle  45 Iowa, Indiana, Missouri

1930 census: Iowa, Warren, Carlisle
Winters, William W. 64 Iowa, NY,NY  married at 25
       , Lulu, B.   56 Iowa, Indiana, Missouri married at 17
Harrison, Samuel H. 79 Indiana, PA, Iowa father-in-law

Lulu Belle HARRISON [Parents] was born 1872 in Iowa. She married William W. WINTERS on 1891.

They had the following children:

  F i
Ruby E. WINTERS was born 1892 in Brighton, Cass, Iowa.

Theron WINTERS [Parents] was born Sep 1840 in New York. He married Caroline M. (WINTERS) on 1865.

1880 census: Iowa, Cass, Brighton Township, District 30, 1-Jul-1880
Winters, Threon W.  41  NY, VT, Canada
      , Caroline M 41  NY, VT, VT
      , William W. 14  Iowa, NY,NY
      , Ora M       5  Iowa, NY,NY

1900 census: Iowa, Cass, Brighton, 2-Jun-1900
Winters, Theren W.   Sep-1840 59  married at 36  NY,NY,France
      , Caroline M. Mar-1840 60  married at 36  NY,NY,NY
      , Ora A.      Nov-1874 25  Iowa, NY,NY

1910 census: Iowa, Cass, Brighton Twonship, 16-Apr-1910
Winters, Theron W.   69 45 NY, VT, CA French  wagon maker
      , Caroline M. 69 45 NY, MA, NY  2 of 4 children living.
Morrison, Ora A.     34  9 Iowa, NY, NY
       , William T. 41  9 Iowa, NY, OH  mail carrier
       , Mary L.    1 6/12 Iowa,Iowa, Iowa

Caroline M. (WINTERS) was born Mar 1840 in New York. She married Theron WINTERS on 1865.

They had the following children:

  M i William W. WINTERS was born 1866.
  F ii Ora A. WINTERS was born Nov 1874.

Lorenzo WINTERS [Parents] was born 2 Jun 1838 in New York. He died 20 Jul 1901 in Sultan, Snohomish, WA and was buried in Sultan Cemetery, Snohomish, WA. Lorenzo married Angeline Gertrude MICHENER on 1869.

Lorenzo Winters is buried in Sultan Cemetery in Snohomish, WA.
WINTERS, Frank L. 1866 18 Feb 1939
WINTERS, Lorenzo L. 2 Jun 1838 20 Jul 1901
WINTERS, Sarah Jane 1869 6 Nov 1946

Lorenzo is the brother of Mary Elizabeth Winters who married Benjamin Franklin Warren and they lived in Sultan, WA c1890.

Name: Frank Lyndon Mckeever WINTERS (Adopted son of Lorenzo)
Given Name: Frank Lyndon Mckeever
 Surname: Winters
 Sex: M
 Birth: 25 Dec 1866 in Fairview, Shelby, IA
 Death: 15 Feb 1939 in Sultan, Snohomish, WA

Name: Sarah Jane MILLS
 Birth: 22 Mar 1869 in Shelby Co, IA
 Death: 6 Nov 1946 in Sedro Woolly, Skagit, WA

1870 census: Iowa, Shelby

1880 census: Iowa, Cass, Brighton, 1-Jul-1880
Winters, Lorenzo L. 42       NY, VT, Canada   bee keeping
      , Angie      36 wife  OH, OH, OH
      , Frank M. (adopted son) 13 Iowa
Winters, Theron W.  41  NY, VT, Canada
      , Caroline M 41  NY, Vt, VT
      , William W. 14  Iowa, NY, NY
      , Ora M.      5  Iowa, NY, NY

1900 Census, WA, Snohomish, Sultan River, 2-Jun-1900
Lorenzo is living with his son Frank Winters. Lorenzo's wife has deceased.
Winters, Lorenzo, Jun-1839, Wd, NY, Canada (Fr.), Vermont

Angeline Gertrude MICHENER [Parents] was born 16 Jun 1844 in Morrow County, Ohio. She died before Jun 1900. Angeline married Lorenzo WINTERS on 1869.

1900 Census, WA, Snohomish, Sultan River, 2-Jun-1900
Lorenzo is living with his son Frank Winters. Lorenzo's wife has deceased.

MRS. A. G. M. WINTERS
Angie Gertrude Michener, a well-known pioneer teacher of Shelby County, was born in Morrow County, Ohio, June 16, 1844. Her father, Daniel Miçhener, belonged to the Society of Friends, and was noted for his genial disposition, his integrity of character, and his devotion to the cause of education. Death called him to the other side when the subject of this sketch was less than two years old. Her mother, Mary (Havens) Michener, was of good Presbyterian stock, in whose family ministers and physicians predominated. When a child Angie G. Winters and her only sister were taken by their mother to Indiana, which was then considered the wild west, and settlers had to endure many hardships. Schools were few and very inferior, but the mother, being a woman of unusual ability and liberal education, did much for her children to supplement their limited educational advantages. When twelve years old Angie became lame from blood-poisoning.

When thirteen years old her parents removed to Tipton, Iowa. Here were better schools, but owing to her lameness, which lasted five years, she could attend school but little. Always a lover of books, she determined not to be left behind in the race for knowledge. Studying at home, with the assistance of her mother, she kept far in advance of other girls of her age, often studying hard to divert her mind during hours of extreme pain. In quite early childhood Angie determined to be a schoolma'am, and as she grew older she realized more and more the dignity and responsibility resting upon those who mold the plastic minds of youth. During her career as a teacher she was very conscientious, trying to educate the heart as well as the head. Being full of a missionary spirit, she did a great deal of evangelistic work wherever she taught school. Inheriting a talent for nursing the sick, she was in great demand in cases of sickness and accidents. One time she was called to treat a case of delirium tremens, and another time to stop a serious hemorrhage. In the spring of 1861 she came to Harlan, where she taught her first school in the old brick school-house. The wages received were $10 per month, with the privilege of boarding around, a favor not accepted. No two pupils had the same kind of text-books; new ones could not be procured nearer than Council Bluffs, and most of the patrons were too poor to buy new ones, so the teaching was principally oral. In the fall of 1861 Miss Michener began teaching what was known as the Waterbury school, in Fairview Township; but exposure brought on rheumatic fever, from which she did not recover until the following June. The next ten years found her in the school-room.

In 1869 Miss Michener was united in marriage to Lorenzo L. Winters, a well-known farmer of Clay Township, a genuine Christian gentleman. Being wedded to her profession as an educator, Mrs. Winters continued teaching for two years. Her husband then went into business in Atlantic, Cass County. Here Mrs. Winters took charge of a class in Sabbath-school, superintended a Band of Hope, and taught a mission school in her own house. Always a strong advocate of total abstinence and equal suffrage, Mrs. Winters early identified herself with the woman's temperance movement. One of the first fruits of the great tidal wave of temperance that followed the woman's crusade, was the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, in which Mrs. Winters was a leading spirit. A writer of some note, and having contributed to a score or more of papers, a fluent speaker, she now consecrated her talent and much of her time to the temperance cause. This she was enabled to do, having a husband in perfect sympathy with her, and having no children with whom to divide her time and attention.

In 1882, when the Dakota fever was at its height, Mr. and Mrs. Winters bade adieu to Cass County, Iowa, and journeyed to the land of the Dakotas. Here they began pioneer life anew, living for a time in a sod shanty on a claim which was called Glen Rose. In less than a month after taking possession, Mrs. Winters had gathered the children from three families, constituting the settlement, into a Sunday-school in her sod house. Fortunately it was a large one, for as the country settled rapidly the Sunday-school grew accordingly, people coming from every direction for miles around. For two years she resumed her place at the teacher's desk. One winter she rode two miles to school, where she would have to wait for a fire to be kindled every morning, with the thermometer often indicating twenty-five to thirty-five below zero. During all these years she had not forgotten the temperance cause, but with tongue and pen had done much to advance its cause.

Mr. Winters' failing health demanding lighter occupation, they left their ranch and took up their residence in Miller, Hand County. Here was an organization of the W. C. T. U., with which Mrs. Winters immediately united. She edited a temperance department of the Hand County Republican, and organized and superintended a Band of Hope. During the local option campaign of 1887, Mrs. Winters and a Mrs. Williams, of Miller, were employed by the County Temperance Alliance to canvass the county in the interests of prohibition. Their meetings were successful; besides the regulation campaign speeches, Mrs. Winters gave temperance chalk-talks. Mrs. Williams was a fine vocalist, and this accomplishment added greatly to the interest of the meetings. Soon after Mrs. Winters was appointed lecturer and organizer for the W. C. T. U., a position of more honor than pay.

Mr. and Mrs. Winters, having no children, have adopted two children, a son and a daughter, and have given them all the advantages possible. Mr. Winters' health continuing poor, they were advised to seek a milder clime, so they went to the Ozark region in western Missouri. In 1888 Mrs. Winters gave some temperance lectures and chalk-talks in Shelby County. At present she divides her time between the care of her husband and evangelistic work, hoping that at the last it may be said of her, "She hath done what she could."

Source: 1889 Biographical History of Shelby County, Iowa, pp. 305-306

They had the following children:

  M i Frank Lyndon McKeever WINTERS was born 25 Dec 1866 and died 15 Feb 1939.

Daniel MICHENER died 1846. He married Mary HAVENS.

Mary HAVENS married Daniel MICHENER.

They had the following children:

  F i Angeline Gertrude MICHENER was born 16 Jun 1844 and died before Jun 1900.

William? WINTERS was born about 1745 in Connecticut.

1820 census: NY, Clinton, Plattsburgh
Winters, William m: 320001 10010 03
males:   <10 10-15 16-17 18-25 26-45 >45
         3    2     0     0     0    1
females: <10 10-15 16-25 xxxxx 26-45 >45
         1    0     0           1    0

He had the following children:

  M i Erastus WINTERS was born 1803/1804 and died after 1880.

Solomon PROCTOR was born 1 1814 in SC. He married Mary Gordon WEATHERLY.

Mary Gordon WEATHERLY was born 1820 in SC. She married Solomon PROCTOR.

They had the following children:

  F i
Annie PROCTOR was born 1840 in SC.
  M ii William A. PROCTOR was born 26 May 1846 and died 8 Sep 1923.
  M iii
Alexander PROCTOR was born 1851 in SC.
  F iv
Adelia PROCTOR was born 1853 in SC.
  F v
Jackaline PROCTOR was born 1855 in Marengo Co., AL.
  M vi
Charles Cornelia PROCTOR was born 1859 in Marengo Co., AL.
  M vii
Major PROCTOR was born 1860 in Marengo Co., AL.
  F viii
Viola PROCTOR was born 1862 in Marengo Co., AL.
  F ix
Cora PROCTOR was born 1864 in Marengo Co., AL.
  F x
Mattina PROCTOR was born 1864 in Marengo Co., AL.
  F xi
Bella PROCTOR was born 1867 in Marion Co., FL.

William A. PROCTOR [Parents] was born 26 May 1846 in SC. He died 8 Sep 1923 in Marengo County, Alabama and was buried in Friendship Baptist Cemetery, Marengo County, Alabama. William married Elizabeth Catherine AUTREY on 25 Feb 1883 in Marengo County, Alabama.

Other marriages:
(PROCTOR), Sarah

William is assumed to be the father of Mary Alice since:
1. Noah Autrey and Solomon Proctor were neighbors in 1860 Marengo AL
2. Nathan was the son of Noah
3. Mary Alice Proctor is either the daughter of Solomon, or his son, William
4. 1870 records for Solomon Proctor in FL indicate he was not the father of Mary Alice.


Need to check Civil War records for William Proctor.

Residence: 1860 Clayhill, Marengo County, Alabama

1880 census: AL, Marengo, Pinehill, 21-Jun-1880
Proctor, William Self M Male   W 32 SC SC SC Farmer
      , Sarah   Wife M Female W 34 AL SC SC Keeping House
      , Carrie  Dau S Female  W 12 AL SC AL At Home
       , Alice   Dau S Female  W 10 AL SC AL At Home
      , Mettie  Dau S Female  W  6 AL SC AL
       , Leona   Dau S Female  W  4 AL SC AL
       , Willie  Dau S Female  W  2 AL SC AL

Elizabeth Catherine AUTREY was born 23 Oct 1856. She died 5 Sep 1942 in Marengo County, Alabama and was buried in Friendship Baptist Cemetery, Marengo County, Alabama. Elizabeth married William A. PROCTOR on 25 Feb 1883 in Marengo County, Alabama.

They had the following children:

  M i
John L. PROCTOR was born 1 Jul 1885 in AL. He died 26 Feb 1960 in Marengo County, Alabama and was buried in Friendship Baptist Cemetery, Marengo County, Alabama.
  F ii
Zina Lydia PROCTOR was born 16 Aug 1890 in AL. She died 30 Mar 1926 in Wilcox County, Alabama and was buried in Enon Cemetery, Pine Hill, Wilcox County, Alabama.

George JENKINS was born 1810. He married Judy (JENKINS).

Info on George b. 1810 and Judy received from Cordia Todd cordia5211@bellsouth.net

1840 census: GA, Ware
Jinkins, George age (30-40)  m:110001  f:10001  <- This makes George b. 1800-1810

1850 census: GA, Ware 10-Sept-1850
Jenkins, George  40 GA
      , Judy    24 GA
      , William 15 GA
      , Reuben  14 GA
      , Eliza   11 GA
      , Maria    9 GA
      , Perl     7 GA
      , Harriet  5 GA

In 1860, William is married to Indiana Brown and Harriet is living with them. No info on other family members.

Judy (JENKINS) was born about 1816. She married George JENKINS.

They had the following children:

  M i William W. JENKINS CSA was born 1835 and died about 1863.
  M ii
Reuben JENKINS was born 1836 in Ware, GA.
  F iii
Eliza JENKINS was born 1839 in Ware, GA.
  F iv
Maria JENKINS was born 1841 in Ware, GA.
  M v
Joel JENKINS was born 1843 in Ware, GA.
  F vi Harriet Eliza JENKINS was born Aug 1845 and died 1917.

Eli ROMAK [Parents] was born 19 Sep 1913 in Alameda, CA. He died 29 Jul 1981 in Lafayette, Contra Costa, California. Eli married Patricia A. (ROMAK).

Patricia A. (ROMAK) was born 20 Sep 1919 in WA. She died 8 May 1972 in Contra Costa, CA. Patricia married Eli ROMAK.


George W. CASTEEL [Parents] was born 1841 in Ohio. He married Eveline (CASTEEL).

Eveline (CASTEEL) was born 1841 in Ohio. She died Y. Eveline married George W. CASTEEL.

They had the following children:

  F i
Mary J CASTEEL was born 1864 in Iowa.
  F ii
Nancy A CASTEEL was born 1866 in Iowa.
  M iii
Jesse CASTEEL was born 1868 in Iowa.

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