Obituaries

We now have over 7,000 obituaries collected about the interred here at Silverbrook Cemetery.

The obituaries are transcribed by the volunteers of the Friends of Silverbrook Cemetery from various sources.  If you see an opportunity for an addition or a correction, please email our obituary editor at obits@friendsofsilverbrook.org.

Kurty, Charlotte

Charlotte A. Kurty, 80, of Niles
May 9, 1933 — Feb. 27, 2014

Niles Daily Star, Published 9:01am Friday, February 28, 2014

Charlotte A. Kurty, 80, of Niles, passed away at The Timbers of Cass County in Dowagiac in the early hours of Thursday, Feb. 27, 2014.

Charlotte was born on May 9, 1933, to the late Walter and Ethel (Rowe) McKay in Owosso, Mich. After graduating from Ovid-Elsie High School, Charlotte wed the love of her life, Willard F. Kurty on August 15, 1953 in Ovid, Mich. Together they had four wonderful children. She was a homemaker her entire life, a wonderful cook and baker, and was a Michigan State Sports enthusiast. Charlotte’s greatest love was that for her family.

She is preceded in death by her parents, Walter and Ethel McKay; husband, Willard; daughter, Lisa Kurty; two brothers, C. Wayne and James McKay and two sisters, Doris Buysse and Lorraine Buchele.

Charlotte is survived by her children, Karla Schadler of Niles, Lee (Carol) Kurty of Niles, Willard I. Kurty of Niles; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

Funeral service for Charlotte will be held on Sunday, March 2, 2014, at 2 p.m. at Brown Funeral Home with a time of visitation one hour prior. A private interment will be held at Silverbrook Cemetery in Niles.

Those wishing to make a memorial donation in Charlotte’s name may do so to the Niles District Library General Fund at 620 East Main Street, Niles.

Memories, messages for the family or photos of Charlotte may be uploaded to her personal webpage at www.BrownFuneralHomeNiles.com/obituaries/Charlotte-Kurty.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Brown Funeral Home of Niles.

Allen, Charles L.

Charles L. Allen
May 24, 1828-Feb. 6, 1913

Niles Daily Sun, Friday, February 7, 1913, page 1, col. 1, microfilm Niles District Library

DEMISE OF CHAS. L. ALLEN

A pioneer resident of Niles and one of the oldest Masons in the city, Funeral Sunday.

Charles L. Allen, was born near Albany, N.Y., May 24, 1828. He came to Niles in 1844.  Oct. 17, 1847, he married Caroline Mittan, and the couple have resided in Niles ever since.  Fifty years and over, Mr. and Mrs. Allen have lived in the home where Mr. Allen did the evening of February 6.  he is survived by the widow, a daughter, Mrs. Frances LaPierre, a son, Charles J. Allen, and one grandchild, Guy M. LaPierre.

Mr. Allen was one of the oldest members of the Masonic Order, here, and the funeral services, to be held at the M.E. Church at 2 p.m. Sunday, will be in charge of the Masonic Fraternity.  Interment will be in Silver Brook cemetery.

 

Niles Daily Sun, Monday, February 10, 1913, page 1, col. 2, microfilm Niles District Library

FUNERAL OF C.L. ALLEN

Masonic Fraternity conducted Ceremony at Grave

The funeral services for the late Charles L. Allen were held Sunday afternoon at the Methodist church, Rev. R.A. Wright officiating.

The Masonic fraternity attended in a body and the commitment at Silver Brook cemetery was according to the impressive ritualistic ceremony of that fraternity of which the deceased had been an honored member for half a century.

Pastor Wright paid a fine tribute to the deceased and of the fine courtesy existing between the deceased and his wife during a matrimonial alliance covering a period of 68 years.

He referred to the remarkable transformation in this locality during the life time of the deceased, and said that more wonderful things had happened in the world's progress during his life time than in any five hundred years of the world's previous history.

Among those who attended the funeral from out of town were G.M. Lapierre of Battle Breek[sic], Mrs. Wm. H. Snyder of Dowagiac; E. Snoke, Mesdames Ordway, Briggs, Loane, Fred Miles and Miss Maud Bickford of South Bend and Mrs. Frank Mittan of Cleveland.

 

Allen, Sarah

Sarah Allen
June 13,1860*-Sept. 16, 1940

Niles Daily Star, Tuesday, September 17, 1940, page 1, col. 4, microfilm Niles District Library

MISS SARAH ALLEN, 80, TAKEN BY DEATH

Funeral services for Miss Sarah Allen, 80, who was found dead Monday night in her home, 639 Front street, will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 in the Price and Kiger chapel.

Miss Allen's body was found by neighbors who noticed the blinds closed and no sign of customary activity about the house.  Coroner William Pifer, who was called pronounced the death due to natural causes.

Miss Allen had gone to Silverbrook cemetery Sunday with her neighbor, Mrs. Emil Schrumpf. She complained of feeling ill when returning and stopped at the home of Harry Mansfield.  After a brief rest, Miss Allen and Mrs. Schrumpf returned to their homes.

She was born in Illinois in 1860, was never married and had no near relatives. She had lived in Niles most of her life and in earlier years had been a caterer.  She was a member of the Episcopal church.

The Rev. Harry L. Nicholson will officiate at services Thursday afternoon. Friends may call at the Price and Kiger chapel. Burial will be in Silverbrook.

* DOB from death record

Bonine, James Gordon

James Gordon Bonine
Aug. 15, 1874-March 3, 1934

Niles Daily Star, Saturday, March 3, 1934, page 1, col. 1, cont. page 2, col. 1, microfilm Niles District Library

Dr. J. Gordon Bonine Dies of Heart Attack

CASSOPOLIS DOCTOR SUCCUMBS SUDDENLY AT LOCAL HOSPITAL

Former State Senator Had Anticipated Returning Home in Few Days

 

Dr. J. Gordon Bonine, Cassopolis, former Republican state senator and until two months ago a member of the state liquor control commission, died at 7:20 o'clock this morning in Pawating hospital, Niles, from a heart attack.

Dr. Bonine entered the hospital here on February 21, and since has  been under the care of Dr. Clarence C. Gillette.  His condition was pronounced critical a few days later by Dr. John Slaymaker, specialist instructor from the Rush medical school Chicago, who was called for a consultation.  The heart trouble was complicated at the time with an attack of acute indigestion.

DEATH COMES SUDDENLY

Death came unexpectedly, however, this morning while breakfast was being prepared for the patient. He had hoped to leave the hospital within a few days. In fact, he had planned last Monday to go home some time this week, but had been pursuaded[sic] by his physicians against the move.  His body was taken to the Connelly funeral home in Cassopolis. He was born in Niles in the early eighties but had resided in Cassopolis and practiced medicine there for nearly 30 years.

He was a cousin of Dr. Fred N. Bonine, famous eye specialist of Niles.  Through inheritance and investments he became one of the wealthiest men in Cass county, being rated a millionaire. He was the owner of the famous Elk park farm, comprising 1,500 acres near Vandalia, where he kept of herd of elk that drew many tourists at all times of the year.

Mrs. Bonine left Cassopolis Friday for Marion, O., to visit a daughter who was to return with her to the family home, 329 East State street, Cassopolis. After receiving word of his death they started back today.

Dr. Bonine entered politics in 1930 when he announced himself a candidate in the primary election for Republican nomination for state senator in the Berrien-Cass senatorial district. He defeated E.W. Moore, a former publisher of the Herald-Press in St. Joseph, for the nomination. He won the senatorship in the general election Nov. 8, 1930, defeating William F. Morley, St. Joseph, the Democratic nominee. He was the Republican candidate again in 1932 but was defeated by Senator Leon D. Case, Watervliet publisher, who had previously been senator.

ON LIQUOR COMMISSION

Last year when 3.2. beer became legal, Gov. W.A. Comstock appointed form Senator Bonine to the state Liquor control board. When the board was reduced from 17 to five members in December, Bonine was among those dropped.

Dr. Bonine was considering being a candidate for congressman this year.

Shortly before entering the hospital here he had gone to Benton Harbor for a conference with John J. Sterling, mayor of that city, who was killed last week in an airplane accident in Utah.

Sterling himself had considered being a candidate again for the Republican nomination this year.  Dr. Bonine told these facts facts last Monday to Fred C. Franz, three times former sheriff of Berrien county, who went to the hospital to see Dr. Bonine for advice concerning his work as a district agent for the liquor control board.

Dr. Bonine told Franz that Sterling had told him he would not seek the nomination if Dr. Bonine intended to seek ti. Sterling was the center of a Republican factional row in Benton Harbor, opposing City Manager George Barnard, who is a former state senator and is being urged by friends to seek Republican nomination for congress.

Dr. Bonine was married in Niles in the late nineties to Miss Margaret Gates, daughter of a prominent Niles family. Her father, Eli Gates, was for many years a member of the Gates Brothers grocery store.

Surviving besides the widow are four adult children:

Elwood Bonine, Cassopolis, manager of the Elk park farm; Mrs. Gerald Fox, Ames, Iowa; Mrs. Clyde Morrison, Marion, Ohio, and James Gordon Bonine Jr., Engineering student at Purdue university.

Funeral arrangements are being held in abeyance pending arrival at the Cassopolis home of Mrs. Bonine and the absent son and daughters. It is understood that the funeral will be held in Cassopolis and that burial will be in Silverbrook cemetery, Niles.

Dr. Bonine was a graduate of the University of Michigan, Rush Medical college and other medical schools.  He was a member ...[illegible]. .. in Dowagiac. His parents were descendants of Quakers.

He also was a director of the First National Bank, Cassopolis.

 

Niles Daily Star, Monday, March 5, 1934, page 1, col. 4, cont. page 2, col. 1, microfilm Niles District Library

MASONS TO CONDUCT FUNERAL FOR BONINE

Ritual Services on Wednesday in Cassopolis Temple with Burial in Niles

Funeral services for Dr. J. Gordon Bonine, who died Saturday in Pawating hospital where he had been under treatment for 10 days for heart disease, will be held at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon in the masonic temple, Cassopolis. Burial will be in Silverbrook cemetery in Niles.

Backus lodge, No. 55, F. & A. M., Cassopolis, will conduct the ritual service.  Dr. Bonine was a member of the Medinah lodge in Chicago.  He also was a member of the Dowagiac lodge of Elks.

The body now is  at the home in Cassopolis and may be viewed there until the funeral Wednesday. Arrangements for the service were completed following the return Saturday of Mrs. Bonine from Marion, O., where she had gone Friday to be with a daughter Mrs. Clyde Morrison.

Mrs. Bonine had spent a part of Friday at the hospital here with the patient and left for Marion O., with her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Elwood Bonine, Cassopolis, to visit the daughter, Mrs. Morrison.  All three returned the BConine home in Cassopolis late Saturday.

Dr. Bonine was the son of Isaac B. and Alice Wilkinson Bonine, early Cass county settlers. He attended school in Vandalia and later was graduated from the Niles high school. He studied law and medicine at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and later attended Rush Medical college, Chicago, and the Physicians' and Surgeons college at the University of Illinois.

After completing his medical studies Dr. Bonine began practice in Chicago. He moved to Cassopolis in 1905 and continued medical practice there until his recent illness.

Dr. Bonine took pride in his vast land holdings between Cassopolis and Vandalia, and particularly in  maintenance of the elk park, a timbered pasturage tract of several hundred acres and a show place in Cass county. He maintained a herd of purebred Guernsey cows and about 200 heard of stock cattle, besides many sheep, horses and other stock.

His grandfather, James F. Bonine, settled in Penn township in the early 1840's and cleared and cultivated large tracts of land. The homestead was a station for the underground railway of pre-Civil war days.

 

Battles, Matilda

Matilda Battles
Oct. 18, 1859*-Oct. 2, 1940

Niles Daily Star, Thursday, October 1, 1940, page 2, col. 3, microfilm Niles District Library

Niles Ex-Resident, Mrs. M. Battles, Dies in Dowagiac

Mrs. Matilda Battles, 81, a former resident of Niles, died Wednesday afternoon at 3 in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Henry Griffin, Dowagiac. She had been ill three years.

Other survivors include a granddaughter, Miss Helen Griffin, Chicago; three great grandchildren, Mrs. Max Tompey and Laverne and Donald Griffin, and a niece, Mrs. Howard Mathews, all of Dowagiac.  Services will be conducted Friday afternoon at 2 in the McLaughlin funeral home in Dowagiac.

* dob from death record

Carr, Izora

Izora Carr
March 29, 1859-Sept. 26, 1940

Niles Daily Star, Friday, September 27, 1940, page 2, col. 4, microfilm Niles District Library

Mrs. Izora Carr, 81, Resident Here for 12 Years, Dies

A brief illness of heart trouble caused the death of Mrs. Izora Carr, 81, Thursday night at 7 in her home at 618 Clark street. Mrs. Carr became ill Thursday morning.

She was born in Cannon county, Tennessee, March 29,1859, and came to Niles from Manchester, Tenn., in August, 1928.  Survivors include three sons, Vance and Cleveland Carr, Niles and Char . .[illegible]. . Ark., and a daughter, Mrs. G.W. Miller, Manchester, Tenn. She also leaves 26 grandchildren. A daughter, Mrs. John Miller, Hartsell, Ala., died in 1926.

Friends may call at the Rutherford funeral home where services will be conducted Saturday afternoon at 2:30. The Rev. Floyd W. Johnston, pastor of the First Baptist church, will officiate.  Burial will be in Silverbrook cemetery.

Clark, Lillie Regina

Lillie Regina Clark 
Jan. 22, 1854-April 19, 1934

Niles Daily Star, Friday, April 20, 1934, page 1, col. 3, microfilm Niles District Library

Mrs. Lilly Clark, 80, Dies Thursday Night

Mrs. Lilly Regina Clark, 80, widow of the late Rodney Clark, drayman for many years in Niles, died at 11:15 o'clock Thursday night at the home of her son, Clyde Clark, in Berrien Township eight miles north of Niles.

Mrs. Clark had made her home for a number of years with her son after the death of her husband in Niles. She was born January 22, 1854,  at Corning, N.Y.

Surviving are two sons, Clyde and Loren, both of Berrien township, seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, one brother, I.D. VanGorder, South Bend, and a sister, Mrs. Jennie Reed, Elyria, New York.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 o'clock from the Price and Kiger funeral home in Niles. The Rev. A.E. Wright, Berrien Springs, will officiate. Burial will be in Silverbrook cemetery, Niles. The body will remain at the Price and Kiger funeral home until the hour of the funeral.