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Honoring Burrton's Pioneers & Settlers
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Bailey |
Bailey, Joanna
Belle (Gaw). (Obituary) Joanna
Belle Bailey, 93, died Nov. 4, 2001, at Hutchinson Hospital. She as born
July 17, 1908, at Burrton, the daughter of Roy and Bertha Elenor (Wilson)
Gaw. A longtime resident of Lyons, moving from Burrton, she taught school
in Lyons and Rice County, and retired in 1973, after 16 years as Deputy
City Clerk of Lyons. She graduated from Burrton High School in 1926 and
Sterling College. She belonged to Lyons Christian Church, Order of Eastern
Star Queen Esther Chapter and Rebecca Lodge Crystal Chapter, both of Rice
County, the Association of Retired Teachers, and was a gray lady for Lyons
Hospital District. On May 26, 1929, she married John Ernest Bailey at
Great Bend. He died Dec. 3, 1967. Survivors include: a son, Roy Edward,
Galveston, Texas; a daughter, Renae Colle, Sterling; five grandchildren;
and 13 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by: a brother,
Wilson Gaw. Funeral service will be at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Elliott Mortuary
Chapel, Hutchinson, with the Rev. Will Best officiating. Friends may call
from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday at the mortuary. Burial will be in Burrton
City Cemetery. Memorials may be sent to the Lyons Council on Aging, in
care of the mortuary. |
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Baker |
Baker,
Jim & Jan.
Article by Amy Leiker (Ark Valley News)
Jim Baker
fondly remembers the first time he saw his future wife, Jan. “That was it
for me,” he said. He caught a glimpse of her across a crowded
library filled with laughing teenagers and chaperons as she walked in the
door of the freshman dance at
Burrton High School in Burrton. The song “Baby, It’s Cold Outside”
floated in the air from the record player, and everyone swayed to the
twinkling melody’s unforgettable tune. Jan’s silky hair shimmered, and Jim
didn’t take his eyes off her. “I said, ‘Man,’” Jim recalled, catching his
breath as if he could again see the chestnut-haired girl across the stacks
of library books and his classmates. “Wow.”
That was 56 years ago. He and Jan are high school sweethearts with an
unwavering devotion to each other. Now, the silky-haired girl’s
chestnut locks are silver. Her smooth ivory skin has a few faint laugh
lines from years of giggling at Jim’s and the kids’ jokes. Jim’s jolly
voice has aged a bit over the years, but his infectious laugh still booms
when he hears a good joke. They still lounge on their plush living
room sofa in their Valley Center home, holding hands and giggling. Since
they started out in life 50 years ago, Jim and Jan have built a business,
raised three children and made church, family and Wichita State University
baseball the top priorities in their lives--in that order. Later this
year, the couple will celebrate half a century of marriage. Their journey
together was triggered by that fateful night, a six-year courtship and a
little engagement ring that Jim offered to Jan 50 years ago. The time has
been magic, Jim said. Just like the night he first noticed Jan.
She was born August 28, 1935. He was born May 8, 1933. They both grew up
in Burrton, visited the same dairy where they could trade an egg for an
ice cream cone, and attended the same schools for years. Somehow they
never noticed each other until the freshman dance. Jim and Jan’s
first date was a simple drive with some acquaintances from their high
school. Jim asked a female friend to convince Jan to take a car ride with
her and a friend. Jan agreed, without knowing that the smart-alecky boy
who had seen her across the room at the freshman dance just days before
was sitting in the back seat. Jan rode anyway, but the date ended early
when Jim tried to take Jan’s hand in his own. “I just thought that that
was terribly, terribly aggressive,” Jan reminisced with a touch of humor
in her voice. “You were such a smart aleck,” Jan told Jim. “Had I known
you had been in the car, I wouldn’t have gotten in.” But Jan said everyone
expected the two to eventually date and grow old together. Jan decided Jim
was “all right” after his steadfast pursuit. “I guess it was expected, and
it just worked out,” she continued.
Jim left Burrton to pursue a college education at Hutchinson Junior
College--now Hutchinson Community College--in 1951 after his graduation.
He joined the ranks of young American boys set on devoting their lives to
U.S. interests overseas. He signed on with the Army as a soldier. Shortly
after that, the Army called 20-year-old Jim to active duty. He was sent
half of a world away from his family’s Burrton home and Jan. Two
years Jim’s junior, Jan stayed in Burrton to finish her high school
studies while the boy she’d come to love picked up the pieces of war-torn
Korea in 1953 and 1954. The war was over by then, Jim recalled, but the
country’s reconstruction had just begun. “It was the aftermath, mopping up
stuff,” said Jim. He returned to the States in 1954, armed with valuable
life experience and a small engagement ring.
At Burrton’s tiny First Christian Church, in front of the community that
had raised the pair and the close friends they’d gained over the years,
Jim and Jan Baker were married. The wedding date was Dec. 5, 1954.
Everybody in town showed up, Jan and Jim remembered. “There was
nothing else going on that day! So everybody just showed up,” Jan
explained. “Everyone had an investment in us. But that’s how it is in a
small town.” Six months following the couple’s huge community wedding in
small-town Burrton, Jim accepted his discharge papers from the Army. He
was ready to finish the education he’d started at Hutchinson Junior
College just a few years before and pave his way to becoming a successful
estate and financial planner and family man. The second phase of Jim’s and
Jan’s lives started during the fall of 1955. Jim went back to school but
this time paid for courses at Wichita State University. Jim sought a
bachelor’s degree in business administration and a life as a successful
insurance businessman.
He and Jan had moved away from small-town life in
comfortable Burrton in August 1955. They relocated to Wichita, where Jim
worked for Cessna Aircraft Company while studying at the college. He
finished his term at WSU in three years. He had a degree, a wife, a
toddler daughter--born just one year after the couple’s winter
wedding--and a 40-hour work week with Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company.
Over the next several years, the family uprooted and moved across the
Midwest. The Bakers lived in Philadelphia for a year in 1964 while Jim
trained to take over insurance agencies. Jan stayed home to raise their
7-year-old daughter, son--born in 1959--and youngest daughter, who was
born just two years earlier. A year before the Pennsylvania move, the
Bakers uprooted their family and relocated to Denver. Their young son,
Darren, needed treatment for an asthma complication. Jan said he
eventually outgrew the problem. But the Bakers’ goal always was to get
back to Kansas, Jan said, near family and friends who had been their
support system since the pair first met in 1949. “Family is so important
for support,” she continued. The couple returned to Kansas in 1965. That
year, Jim started work as a general agent for the Penn Mutual Life
Insurance agency in Wichita, where he hired and trained agents. Jan
continued raising children, keeping house and supporting her husband’s
expanding career. In 1970, Jim became the vice president of Alexander
Hamilton Life Insurance Company, an independent life insurance company.
And just 10 years later, he started Baker and Associates, his own estate
and financial planning practice in Valley Center. Jan and Jim’s oldest
daughter, Debi Moody, works for her dad at the small firm, run out of her
parents’ basement. Another room on the lower level houses Jan’s oil
painting studio. Debi and her husband, Jimmie Moody, live in Valley
Center. The Bakers’ youngest daughter, Darla Cook, lives in Newton. Their
son, Darren Baker, resides in Wichita.
Moving from town to town in 50 years of marriage required a support system
that Jim and Jan had in place for each other. That involved Jim’s
willingness to work hard to provide for his family and Jan’s desire to
forgo a career outside the home, opting instead to spend 50 years as a
wife, mother and homemaker. But in that support system, too, both are
careful to include their strong relationship with God. If not for their
faith in God, Jan might have lost Jim to a severe heart attack in
December. Just a year shy of their 50th wedding anniversary, Jim suffered
a heart attack that stopped his heart five times. “He was code blue five
times. They lost him five times,” Jan explained. “We are really grateful
to the Lord because he is the one that really gave me back my life,” Jim
added. Just a few months ago, Jim’s cardiologist said his heart had
totally healed. And one week ago, Jim’s eyesight was fully restored. The
heart attack had caused temporary blindness. As part of their God-driven
support system, the Bakers faithfully attend Valley Center Assembly of
God’s early Sunday morning services. But their faith is rooted deeper than
their own good will and family. The Bakers take an interest in others’
children, too. Jim and Jan extend their faith to the younger generation
through their work with Immanuel Outreach Centre Church of God in Christ
Scholarship Ministries of Wichita. The couple helps find funds for the
scholarships that typically go to inner-city Wichita kids who might not
have a chance to attend college without help from the community. This
year, six high school seniors--mostly inner-city kids, Jan said--received
the scholarships. The Bakers’ granddaughter, Betsy Moody--a 2004 Valley
Center High School graduate and varsity softball player--was one of the
scholarship recipients. “We’ve always supported the scholarships as best
we could financially,” said Jan. Even in the midst of operating a
business, housekeeping, homemaking, spending quality time with God and
keeping Jim’s diet free of too much salt and those delectable cookies Jan
is known for around her neighborhood, the Bakers manage to find time for
fun.
Jan is an aspiring artist. She said she’s “done a little bit of everything
art-wise,” including oil painting, calligraphy and watercolor painting.
She doesn’t have any formal training in art and didn’t dabble with paints
in a high school art class.
Burrton High School didn’t have one in 1953. Jan is a self-taught
painter who can manipulate splotches of color on a blank canvas into the
life-like masterpieces that she proudly displays on her cozy living room
walls. She loves to paint landscapes, pets and even a few family
portraits. Jan said she could spend hours in her studio. “I go down and
turn on the TV for noise so I don’t have to listen to the business, and I
can lose myself for hours,” she continued. “I look up and go, ‘Oh! I’ve
forgotten to eat!’” “She’s an excellent artist,” Jim interjected. “She
always accepts a challenge.” When the Bakers can get away from Baker and
Associates, their eight grandchildren, one great-grandson and the children
who live on their block, Jan and Jim travel. They’ve seen the world,
including Denmark, Switzerland, China and South Africa. And they try to
catch every WSU Shocker baseball game they can. Jim has hunted large game
extensively in North America, including bears in British Columbia and the
Northwest territories. His favorite hunting tale to tell is of his polar
bear crusade in the tundra of Alaska. Sometime in the 1970s--Jim doesn’t
recall quite when--he flew to Alaska, landed on the frozen sea in an
airplane and stalked the great snow-furred giant. He proudly displayed his
polar bear’s fur for years in the Bakers’ Valley Center homes. “It was the
most memorable hunting experience, for sure,” Jim explained. “It’s a
little dangerous.” Today, Jim and Jan are enjoying the quiet of their
Valley Center neighborhood, reminiscing about old times and sharing
memories from their 50 years together. “I don’t know where the years
went,” Jan said. “But the next 50 is going to be better than the last,”
Jim added.
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Barnes |
Barnes, Armistead &
Inez. A. L. Barnes, aged 79,
pioneer of this section, widely known and unique figure in the history and
development of Lake Township, passed away this (Thurday) morning at the
home at 9:00 o'clock. Mr. Barnes was a native of Kentucky and served as a
Confederate veteran of the civil war. He migrated to Kansas in the '70's,
settling on the farm near Patterson where he continued until 1910 when he
retired and the family moved into Burrton. Funeral services will be held
from the home Saturday at 10:00 a.m. Interment will be made in Star
Cemetery. - Burrton Graphic. (The Newton Kansan, Newton Kansas.
September 7, 1923, Page 6). Mr. Barnes was born in 1843 and died
September 6, 1923. His wife, Inez G. Barnes, was born in 1850 and died in
1938. Their daughter, Flora M. Barnes, was born in 1869 and died in
1928. All are buried together in Star Cemetery south of Burrton, Kansas.
Barnes, Flora M.
Flora M. Barnes, daughter of Armistead
& Inez Barnes, was born in 1869. She died in 1928 and is buried with
her parents in Star Cemetery south of Burrton, Kansas. |
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Bether |
Bether, Jason. Jason
Riley Bether, 27, died Feb. 2, 2009, in rural Reno County. He was born
July 1, 1981, in Hutchinson, the son of Terry Allen Bether and Debra Jean
Ratzlaff. He was a 2000 graduate of Buhler High School and a 2004 graduate
of Hutchinson Community College. A lifetime area resident, he worked in
the maintenance department for six years at the Kansas State Fair Grounds.
He was baptized at Trinity United Methodist Church. He was a Greensburg
cleanup volunteer, member of the Eagle Scouts - Troop 306, Devil's Ditch
Renegade reenactment group and Kansas Cosmosphere Boy Scout merit badge
volunteer. Survivors include: a son, James Riley Bether, of the
home; his father, Terry A. Bether, Hutchinson; his mother and stepfather,
Debra J. and Ronald Hagen, Hutchinson; a half brother, Joshua Allen Bether,
Iowa; a half sister, Heather Kae Pitts, Bentley; a stepbrother, Richard
Hagen, Aurora, Colo.; two stepsisters, Sandra Hagen, Denver, Colo., and
Jennifer Hagen, Lawrence; grandparents, Donna J. Bether, Buhler, George
and Betty Ratzlaff, Hutchinson; uncles and aunts, John and Nancy Bether,
Hutchinson, Beth Bether, Colorado, Cheryl and Ritchie Webster, Greensburg;
and numerous nephews, nieces and cousins. He was preceded in death
by his grandfather, John Riley Bether.
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Feb. 6, at Elliott Mortuary Chapel,
Hutchison, with the Rev. Pat Ault-Duell presiding. Friends may sign the
book from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday at
the mortuary. Burial will be in Burrton Cemetery, Burrton.
Memorials may be sent to the James Riley Bether Education Fund in care of
the mortuary, 1219 N. Main, Hutchinson, KS 67501. Visit
www.elliottmortuary.com to leave personal condolences for the family. |
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Bird |
Bird, Dorothy
(De Bruler). Dorothy Elizabeth
Bird, 92, died March 24, 2009, at Promise Regional Medical Center,
Hutchinson. She was born Nov. 8, 1916 in Burrton, the son of John and Anna
Westerman De Bruler. She was a retired school teacher, teaching in a one
room school house in Reno County, Greensburg and Mullinville. She earned a
degree from Hutchinson Community College and a B.S. degree from St. Mary's
of the Plains, Dodge City. Dorothy had lived in Rural Reno County,
Hutchinson, Wichita, Greensburg for over 50 years, returning to Hutchinson
after the tornado in 2007. She was a lifetime member of N.E.A., KNEA,
several sororities, Greensburg United Methodist Church, UMW, and the
Greensburg chapter of P.E.O. In June 1944, she married Paul A.
Bird in Hutchinson. He preceded her in death Aug.4, 2002. She is survived
by: one son R.P. Bird, Hutchinson; and a sister Rosemary Love, Hutchinson.
She was also preceded by a brother John De Bruler and a sister Caroline
Rayl. Memorial services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at Elliott
Mortuary Chapel with Pastor Luke Helmuth presiding. Graveside services
will be 2 p.m. Thursday in Fairview Cemetery, Greensburg, with Pastor
Terry Mayhew presiding. Memorials are suggested to the Greensburg United
Methodist Church in care of Fleener Funeral Home, 514 S. Main, Greensburg,
Kansas, 67054.
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Blades |
Blades, Albert & Rosella (Long).
Blades, Charles. May
11, 1894 to Jan. 16, 1895. Charlie was the son of Albert Blades. Buried in Burrton
Cemetery, Block 3 Lot 101 Grave 3.
Blades, Geneva. Sep. 27, 1878 to Dec. 27, 1883. "Died of
diphtheria, Thursday morning, Geneva, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Blades." (Burrton Monitor, Dec. 28, 1883. Page 3). Burial in Burrton
Cemetery Block 3 Lot 101 Grave 4. |
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Bogner |
Bogner, Floyd Sr. Floyd
C. Bogner Sr., 92, died Feb. 10, 2008, at his home in rural Burrton. He
was born Aug. 9, 1915, near Haven, the son of Mike and Minnie Girk Bogner.
A lifetime resident of the Burrton community, he was a farmer. He
belonged to the Pleasant Grove United Brethren Church and was a charter
member of the Kansas Organization of Commercial Fish Growers. On Feb. 14,
1936, he married Ruth Stoughton in rural Burrton. She died Oct. 5, 1999.
Survivors include: two sons, Floyd Jr., Burrton, and Lloyd, Holland,
Mich.; two daughters, Juanita Silvey Anderson, Hutchinson, and Wanda Meier
of Burrton. Private graveside services were held on Feb. 11, 2008, in
Valley Township Cemetery, rural Burrton, with Chaplin Peter Hartman
presiding. Memorials may be sent to the church of the donor's choice, in
care of VanCampen-Ott Funeral home. P.O. Box 217, Haven, KS, 67543. |
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Booth |
Booth, William & Mary.
"Died, on Monday the 19th of September, of typhoid fever, Mary, wife of
William.S. Booth of this city. Age 49 years, 2 months and 19 days. The
sorrowing family have the sympathy of the entire community." (Burrton
Monitor, Sept. 23, 1881. Page 3). Mary is buried in Burrton Cemetery,
Block 3 Lot 61 Grave 4. William Booth is not buried with her. |
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Boster |
Boster, Richard.
Richard A. Boster, 71 died March 29, 2008, in Hutchinson. He was
born Sept. 27, 1936, in Larned, the son of Darrell W. and Elda M.
Wonsetler) Boster. Survivors include: brother, D.W. "Wayne" Boster,
Wichita; and sisters, Jan Duncan, Wichita, and Rochelle Boster, Newton.
Memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Friday at Burrton United Methodist
Church, Burrton, with the Rev. Frank Morgan presiding. Visitation
will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Wednesday with the family present from 6:30 to 8
p.m. at Kaufman Funeral Home, Halstead. A private inurnment will take
place in Burrton Cemetery. Memorials to Kansas State University School of
Veterinary Medicine or Burrton United Methodist Church. |
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Brawner |
Brawner, Lowell. Lowell
B. Brawner, 56, died October 14, 2008, at Hospice House, Hutchinson. He
was born July 25, 1952, in Hutchinson, the son of Leo B. and Virginia L.
Bacon Brawner. He was a graduate of Haven High School and Hutchinson
Community College Vocational Auto Mechanic School. A resident of the
Burrton & Haven area in Reno County all of his life, he was a farmer and
rancher, he worked for Consolidated Rebuilders, and was a station manager
for McVay's Full Service Station. He was also the former owner of Aero-pac
Paint Distributors. He organized and sang with the Rapid Fire Country
Western Band. He was a member of the Fairview United Methodist Church,
Nickerson. He served in the Air National Guard for 6 years. Survivors
include: his mother, Virginia, Haven; two sons, Jeff Brawner, Haven, and
Matt Brawner, Haven; a brother, Craig Brawner, Hutchinson; two sisters,
Bonnie Hollingsworth, Oklahoma City, Okla., and Anita Norton, Hutchinson;
and four grandchildren, Bailey, Brooke, BrieAnn, and Avery. He was
preceded in death by his father, Leo. Funeral will be at 2 p.m. on Friday
at Penwell-Gabel Funeral Home and Crematory, Hutchinson, with Pastor Nancy
Proffitt presiding. Visitation will be from 1 to 9 p.m. Thursday, with the
family present from 6 to 8 p.m. that evening, all at the funeral home.
Burial will be in Penwell-Gabel Cemetery and Mausoleum, Hutchinson.
Memorial contributions may be sent to the Fairview United Methodist
Church, Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church, or Hospice of Reno County,
all in care of the funeral home. |
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Brewer |
Brewer, Charles & Mabel.
Charles Harold Brewer was born June 29, 1901 in Burrton, born to
William David & Clara May (Mackie) Brewer. Charles married Mabel
Muriel Murchison on September 2, 1934. |
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Brewster |
Brewster, Norman.
Norman Brewster enlisted as a private in Co. L, 3rd Ohio
Cavalry in September, 1861. He served three years and four months, was
present at battles of Stone River, Iuka, Perryville, Rowlets station,
Chicamaugua, Missouri Ridge, Lookout Mountain, and was in the advance with
the command which released Burnside from his bad fix at Knoxville, Tenn.,
was also in many skirmishes, was gradually promoted to 1st Lieutenant.
(Our Old Soldiers, written by A. Perry, G.A.R., published in the Burrton
Monitor, Friday September 22, 1882. Page 2). Norman Brewster died in
1906 according to cemetery record, which gives no additional detail. He
is buried in the Burrton Cemetery, Burrton, Kansas, Block 1 Lot 112, Grave
2.
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Brown |
Brown, Frank & Sarah.
Frank E. Brown enlisted January 1864 as private in Co. H, 35th
Wisconsin Infantry. Served over two years. Fought at Spanish Post,
Alabama, Mobile, and numerous other skirmishes on Tombigbee River and
other places under Gen. Conby in the department of the Gulf and now has
one of the best farms in Harvey County. (Our Old Soldiers, written by
A. Perry, G.A.R., published in the Burrton Monitor, Friday September 22,
1882. Page 2). Frank E. Brown was born January 16, 1846 and died
January 9, 1926. He was married to Sarah E. Brown (Apr. 17, 1854 - Dec.
7, 1951). Frank & Sarah are buried in the Burrton Cemetery, Burrton
Kansas, Block 3, Lot 117, Graves 4 & 5. |
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Bryant |
Bryant, William.
William Bryant enlisted March 1864 in Company F, 1st Michigan Volunteer
Infantry. Served about one year. Was in engagements at North Ann and
Cold Harbor, was wounded at Cold Harbor, June 3rd 1864 in left arm by a
minnie ball causing a permanent injury. (Our Old Soldiers, written by
A. Perry, G.A.R., published in the Burrton Monitor, Friday September 22,
1882. Page 2). |
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