Doris Jane BASHOR



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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Doris Jane BASHOR

    Family/Spouse: Melvin Joseph MCKENTLY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John Melvin MCKENTLY
    2. Kenneth E. MCKENTLY
    3. Sally Jane MCKENTLY

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Ernest George BASHOR was born about 1892 in Idaho; died on 01 Mar 1969 in Glendale, Los Angeles County, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Birth: 09 Sep 1891
    • Census: 1930, Living in Los Angeles, Los Angels Co., California
    • Occupation: 1930; Physician

    Ernest married Jane May SLOSSON on 08 Jun 1918 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California. Jane (daughter of Frank Abner SLOSSON and Nellie Miranda DYE) was born on 17 May 1894 in Albert Lea, Minnesota; died on 05 Jun 1988 in Los Angeles County, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Jane May SLOSSON was born on 17 May 1894 in Albert Lea, Minnesota (daughter of Frank Abner SLOSSON and Nellie Miranda DYE); died on 05 Jun 1988 in Los Angeles County, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Jennie
    • Census: 1900, Living with parents in Colorado Springs, El Paso Co., Colorado
    • Census: 1910, Living with parents in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Census: 1930, Living with husband in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California

    Notes:

    "George Slawson: An American Pioneer" by Harold D. Slosson. Frank Slosson's second daughter, who earned a doctor's degree, and now lives in an historic adobe.
    Jane was two years old when moved by her parents from Albert Lea to Colorado Springs. She was nine years old when they moved to California's San Gabriel Valley.
    In Monrovia's schools, Jane's scholastic record was outstanding. In only three years she completed the regulation four-year high school course. Then she earned her degree at the College of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons.
    In college days she became acquainted with a young student leader, Ernest Bashor. Since World War I had started, afte receiving his degree Ernest became a first lieutenant in the Medical Corps. These school-day friends were married in onrovia on June 8, 1918.
    Ernest lived an active, helpful life, always in command of each undertaking, brightening difficulties with humorous anecdotes. A few of his attainments were: in the professional field he had been a founder and a membe of Monte Sano Hospital's board of directors; member of the board of directors of Blue Cross of Southern Californa; and a president of the Los Angeles City Health Commission. In fraternal affairs he was chairman of the endowment board for Masonic Homes. In the service club, Kiwanis he had been district governor and lieutenant-governor, and a trustee of Kiwanis International. He was a past president of the Breakfast Club, and had been commander of his American Legion Post.
    Of particular interest to Dr. Ernest was helping youngsters in need, as in the McKinley Home for Boys at San Dimas. The "Bashor Cottage" now stands there to honor the Bashors' help.....
    Early California history came into the Bashor's lives - in 1784 Jose Maria Verdugo was granted the San Rafael Rancho in what is now the Glendale area. Jose's blind daughter, Cataline Verdugo, lived in an adobe in a canyon where a gigantic oak grew. In more recent years, Dr. Bashor rescued that historic adobe from the subdivider's bulldozer. He then restored the adobe with park-like grounds around it, as the Bashors' family living place.
    Finally, after a long, busy life, on Marc 1, 1969, Dr. Ernest Bashor passed away at age seventy-seven. Now Jane, with her many friends and family members paying her pleasant visits, still lives in the Catalina Verdugo adobe.....

    Children:
    1. Robert H. BASHOR
    2. 1. Doris Jane BASHOR
    3. Janet Ernestine BASHOR
    4. Ruth Nadine BASHOR was born on 01 Jul 1921 in Los Angels County, California; died on 28 Jan 1991 in Marin County, California.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Frank Abner SLOSSON was born on 20 Nov 1864 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa (son of John Marean SLOSSON and Jennie Roxy FINCH); died on 30 Jan 1919 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1880, living with parents in Kensett Twp., Worth Co., Iowa
    • Occupation: 1880; Works on the Farm
    • Census: 1900, Living in Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado
    • Occupation: 1900; Coal Miner
    • Census: 1910, Living in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Occupation: 1910; Real Estate Agent

    Notes:

    "George Slawson: An American Pioneer" - by Harold D. Slosson
    Frank was the adventurer, who, with his wife Nellie Dye, raised a family of six children. In spite of doing this, in his lifetime he was able to take part in many exciting things. Examples are holding down a Dakota timber claim, joining in the Oklahoma land rush, staking mining claims in Colorado's Cripple Creek gold camp, and developing sagebrush land near the Mojave Desert.....
    After completion of elementary school, for a time Frank went to Osage Academy, located in Iowa's Mitchell County. Finally he attended Iowa State University at Ames, which had courses in agriculture, engineering, mechanical arts, etc. While there, he was a membe of the National Guard. Still preserved is a badge he received reading "Best Drilled Company, College Battalion, I.A.C., 1885".
    Frank attended Iowa State University one year, it is known, and he may have gone there longer. Next, for three terms he taught school, with possibly a part of the time being in the Slosson country school....
    Frank teamed up with another young Northwood man, an old family friend believed to be named Atwood. These two ytoung men took adjacent timber claims, located somewhere in the Dakotas, not then divided into North and South Dakota. It was rugged country, too, with some Sioux Indians, it is believed, still in the area.
    Frank Slossn and young Atwood, living in cabins at adjacent corners of their respective "160s," did their cooking ("batching") together. It was an enjoyable period, but perhaps without the challenge of social contacts. After the prescribed year of work, Frank relinquished his claim and went back to Northwood.....
    Frank accepted a position in the Railway Mail Service tht had benn offered to him. He would travel on the train and see that the mail went through. Earlier, all mail had been sorted at the respective post offices along the railroad line. Time-consuming for the postmasters, that method had slowed down mail collection and delivery as well. Then came the concept of having trained men traveling on a special mail car. They would continuously sort mail picked up in bags stationed by the tracks. The sorted mail would next go into other bags which were tossed off at new stations in succession. This railway mail service, it is recorded, worked well from the start.
    Frank became a guardian and classifer of the U.S. Mail, with a chance to see that part of the country....
    Frank was granted a leave of absence from the railway mail service to go to Oklahoma. To enter the land race..... Troops stood guard on the borders of this land to hold back the horde of prospective settlers. Then, on April 22, 1889, at the prescribed hour, bugles blew, and the big Oklahoma land rush was one.....According to the plan of this land opening, the entrant had the option of lots or of land. Frank chose lots, going right where the train took him - to what turned out to be the center of Oklahoma City....
    Frank staked lots, camped on them, and held off all usurpers. He lived there for a while, probably "batching" in a tent. Around him in that immediate area almost instantaneously 15,000 people had come.....
    It was probably a month or two before Frank had sold out and returned to Northwood. Frank's position was still open, and he continued with the railway mail service for some years thereafter.
    Before going back to work for the railway mail service, he did have a moment of glory in this hometown of Northwood. After purchasing a new suit, it is recorded, he went around visiting old friends who immediately, in a grand welcome, dubbed him "Oklahoma." Frank was someone; he had participated in perhaps the greatest land rush of all time......
    He had a romance with a pleasant young Northwood woman by the name of Nellie Dye. A popular member of Northwood's first high school graduating class. Nellie was also an artist, using crayons and oils for painting portraits and landscapes.....Interested in poetry, too, Hamlet had been her junior class essay assignment. Additionally she played the organ, having, one of the old pump types with tremolo and other stops for various effects....
    Frank had an adventurour spirit and so, in 1894, after the depression of that year, he decided to leave the railway mail service... He decided to go to Colorado Springs, close to Cripple Creek.... Their new home, Colorado Springs, was over a mile high, the elevation being 5,980 feet....At first, according to Nellie in later years, they lived in La Verne, a place not now existent, on the Cripple Creek side of Colorado Springs. Here was born Harold Dye Slosson.... Eventually the family moved to their permanent home in Colorado Springs at 828 Spruce Street, near Mesa.
    Frank, having friends in Colorado Springs, and some savings, went into the business of selling real estate and mining stocks. This latter helped the prospector to commercialize his mineral discovery. One of his business cards shows "McGill & Slosson, Real Estate, Mining Stocks, Loans & Insurance," with its location at 107 South Tejon Street. For a time, also, he was associated with C.S. Wilson, with the Colorado Springs Board of Trade & Mining Exchange, listing these partners in their directory as members in good standing.....
    Partnership was common in those mining days.... He had a couple of mining claims with his father-in-law, Nelson T. Dye, in te rugged Tarrall area of Park County....In partnership with tow other Colorado Springs businessmen, mark L. Dorr and Alexander Merideth, Frank purchased some 160 acres just north of town....The partners soon surmised that down below the land surface was a layer of coal.....A Mr. Corley, who had come into the area with considerable means, leased the property from Frank and his associates on a royalty basis. A two-carpartment shaft was sunk some 477 feet deep, where they found the coal layers, as predicted...
    In 1903, for the best interests of their family, Frank and Nellie decided to leave Colorado to make a new start in California.... It was just in tiem, too, for here is a quote about what happened in Cripple Creek: "In 1903 and 1904, one of the bloodiest strikes in the annals of labor started the decline of the (Cripple Creek) Gold Camp. Miners moved their families over night from the terror, and fear turned lose in the district"...
    Finally the Slosson family came to the end of their travel at monrovia, California......On his arrival in Monrovia and for a while thereafter, Frank was associated with his brother, Charley, in the latter's real estate office on the main street in the center ot town..... Frank, however, had left the railway mail service in order to have his own independent business. Thus, after a time, he opened his own real estate office in Pasadena, nine miles west of Monrovia.....His first office was just north of the main street, close to a public park. Later he moved into a large, newly constructed office building on the main street, Colorado Avenue.
    Frank soon became associated with business groups. He was a member of the Pasadena Board of Trade, which played an important part in the growth and development of the city. He was also a member, taking an active interest in the pasadena Realty Board. Meanwhile, in his residence town, always loyal to his political part, for a time he was president of the Monrovia-Duarte Democratic Club......
    In 1918 came the great flu epidemic, one of the most disastrous of all time. And so it came about that on january 30, 1919, Frank Slosson - adventurer, developer, and father of six children - passed one, being laid to reast in Live Oak Cemetery in Monrovia.....
    Nellie was a member of the WCTU, having seen woe and sorrow caused by liquor in the Colorado miners. Additionally, always of first interest was her church, which fortunately was within easy walking distance. For many years she had been a regular member, serving on various commitees as well. Now, on the east wall of that church she had fathfully served for a half century, is located a beautiful stained glass window, the "Moses" window, which was dedicated to the memory of Nellie Dye Slosson in a special ceremony.
    Although Nellie, with her small frame, had appeared frail, nevertheless, she had a surprising amount of quick energy, with much endurance as well. She was also blessed with longevity, remaining active and mentally alert until just past her eighty-eighth birthday. Then she had a hip fracture, with complications from which she never recovered. And so, on August 20, 1953, she was called Home, with her buiral place being beside Frank in the Family plot in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia.

    Frank married Nellie Miranda DYE on 10 Oct 1889 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa. Nellie (daughter of Nelson Timberlake DYE and Martha Jane STONE) was born on 16 Aug 1865 in Wisconsin; died on 20 Aug 1953 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Nellie Miranda DYE was born on 16 Aug 1865 in Wisconsin (daughter of Nelson Timberlake DYE and Martha Jane STONE); died on 20 Aug 1953 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Fact: Daughter of Nelson Timberlake and Martha Jane (Stone) Dye
    • Census: 1900, Living with husband in Colorado Springs, El Paso Co., Colorado
    • Census: 1910, Living with husband in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Census: 1920, Living in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California

    Notes:

    Obituary Notice - Los Angeles Times - Aug 21, 1953

    SLOSSON, Nellie Dye, of Monrovia, loving mother of Harold D. Slosson of South San Gabriel, Ralph D. Slosson of Monrovia, Mrs. Will E. Janicki of Wilmington, Mrs. Ernest G. Bashor and Mrs. Horace A. Bashor of Los Angeles and Mrs. Claire C. Crawford of Santa Paula.
    Services Saturday 2:30 p.m. at chapel of the W.B. Temple Mortuary, Monrovia

    Children:
    1. Glaydice Lucille SLOSSON was born on 01 Jul 1899 in Colorado Springs, Colorado; died on 04 Dec 1971 in Los Angeles County,California.
    2. Dorothy Mildred SLOSSON was born on 26 Aug 1904 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; died on 02 Aug 1961 in Santa Paula, Ventura County, California.
    3. Ruth Marean SLOSSON was born on 03 Jul 1892 in Albert Lea, Minnesota; died on 06 Sep 1967 in Long Beach, Los Angeles County, California.
    4. Ralph Delano SLOSSON was born on 22 Oct 1901 in Colorado Springs, El Paso, Colorado, USA; died in Sep 1982 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California.
    5. 3. Jane May SLOSSON was born on 17 May 1894 in Albert Lea, Minnesota; died on 05 Jun 1988 in Los Angeles County, California.
    6. Harold Dye SLOSSON was born on 06 Mar 1896 in La Verne, Colorado; died on 24 Jul 1986 in Los Angeles County, California.