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.

Corwin, Maude (Zimmerman)

Maude Corwin
1847-Aug. 17, 1920

Former Niles Resident Dead

The body of Mrs. Reuben Corwin of Dowagiac, who died on Saturday at St. Joseph Hospital, Mishawaka, was brought to Niles this afternoon and taken to the Troost Brothers undertaking chapel where private funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Burial will occur at Silverbrook cemetery.

Mrs. Corwin was formerly Miss Maude Zimmerman, a daughter of Richard Zimmerman who died here seven months ago. She was 33 years of age. She is survived by her husband, four children and by four brothers. The latter are Elmer and Walter Zimmerman of Niles, Alfred of Iowa City and Wilbur of Cleveland. Alfred and Wilbur are expected in Niles this evening.

Submitted by family member; publication details unknown 

Corwin, Mary A. "Orletti" (Geyer)

Mary A. Orlettie Corwin (Geyer)
1878-Oct. 28, 1931

Death of Mrs. Athur Corwin

Mrs. Orlettie Corwin, 1890 Hickory Street, Wife of Arthur Corwin, died on Wednesday afternoon at 4 o’clock in their home from a stroke of paralysis suffered more than four months ago. Mrs. Corwin was 53 years of age, residing in Niles for the past 12 years coming her from Boyne City. She is survived by her husband who is a contractor and builder and by four children who are Mrs. Fern Jones of Roseland, IN, Heston and Violet Corwin of Niles and Mrs. Gladys Burdue, also of Niles, and by a sister and four brothers as follows, Frank Geyer, Petoskey, Heston and John Geyer of Boyne City, T. J. Geyer of Lansing and Mrs. Ellen McLean of Galien. The funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 from the Troost and Augustine Funeral home on N. Second Street. Burial will be made in Silverbrook Cemetery.

Submitted by family member; publication details unknown

Corwin, Arthur Melville

Arthur Melville Corwin
October 26, 1878-May 6, 1944

Niles Daily Star, Monday, May 8, 1944, page 2, col. 5, microfilm Niles District Library

Arthur Corwin Funeral Tuesday.

Services for Arthur M. Corwin, 65, of 304 Water street, who was found dead beside his car at 11:30 Saturday morning near Seventeenth and Maple Avenue where he was working on a carpenter’s job  at the time, will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 in the Pifer Funeral Home, the Rev. J. Kenneth Hoffmaster, pastor of the first Methodist Church will officiate. Burial will be in Silverbrook Cemetery.

Death was believed to have occurred at 9:30 Saturday morning and was believed caused by a heart attack.

He was born Oct. 26, 1878 in Boyne City, and came to Niles in 1919.

Surviving are the wife, Claudia; three daughters, Mrs. Gladys Burdue and Mrs. Violet marks, both of Niles, and Mrs. Fern Jones, Roseland, Ind.; a son Heston Corwin, Niles; 18 grandchildren and two brothers, Earl Corwin, Niles and Lon Corwin, Nebraska

Corwin was past commander of the Knights of Pythias and past president of the Carpenter’s union No 1033.

 

Niles Daily Star, Wednesday, May 10 1944, page 2, col. 3 microfilm Niles District Library

CORWIN RITES

Services for Arthur M. Corwin, 65, of 304 Water street, who was found dead Saturday morning, were conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 in the Pifer funeral home by the Rev. J. Kenneth Hoffmaster. Pallbearers were Don Dennison, R.L. Vernier, George White, H.E. Cross, William DePoy and Harry Fellas. Burial was in Silverbrook cemetery.

Cleland, Andrew J.

Andrew J. Cleland
1823-1909

Death takes A.J. Cleland

Pioneer resident of Berrien County passes away.

Mrs. James E. Harder today received a telegram from Minneapolis, conveying the sad intelligence of the death of her father, Andrew J. Cleland who passed away this morning.’

Mrs. Cleland, who was in his 87th years, was a son of Martin Cleland, a native of New York, who came to Niles in 1932 and remained for two years, after which he removed to a farm in Bertrand township where he lived till 1858 when he returned to Niles with his family. He then engaged with his sons, in the manufacture of fanning mills and safes. In 1862, Andrew purchased the fanning mill business, and for many years conducted an extensive manufactory of fanning mills, safes and other agricultural implements. He was for several years a member of the common council and prominently connected with the political and business life of the city.’

Mrs. Cleland is survived by four children, Herbert Cleland and Mrs. Fred H. Bacon of St. Louis, Mo, Vincent Cleland of Minneapolis and Mrs. James Harder of Niles.

The remains of the late Mr. Cleland will be brought her for burial. Funeral announcement hereafter.

   *****

J. Cleland an Early Settler

Reminiscence full of historical interest.

Came to Niles in 1885

Typical Pioneer in spirit-Public Service in This city Limited to council

 

The death of Andrew J. Cleland at Minneapolis, and his burial in Niles last Thursday, marks the passing of a pioneer of the community whose life has been closely identified with the city’s development since its earliest day.

At the time of his death he was one of the few men living whose connection with Niles dates back to the first decade of its existence, and he enjoyed the distinction of being the oldest living member of the Presbyterian Church of Niles, a congregation with which he allied himself in April 1846.

Mrs. Cleland had in the later years of his life contributed frequent articles to the Niles papers, relating to the early history of the city. These reminiscences were full of historical interest, but seldom made reference to his own association with the development of the village and city of Niles. Infrequent contributions from his pen illumined interesting passages of his own life. 

Early in 1835. Mrs. Cleland came to Niles with his parents from Chatauqua, New York. At that time he was in his thirteenth year, his birth occurring in Chautauqua county, August 22, 1822. the family came to Niles at the time of the Indian reservation lands were being opened west of the city. Martin Cleland, the father of Andrew J. Cleland, and efficient mill-wright and builder had gone through to the new town of Chicago the previous years, and on his way back to New York he fixed upon claim near Niles to which he determined to move his family the following year.

Starting from New York State in February with ox team and heavy camping wagon, the family of pioneers made a 40 day journey through what was to a large extent unsettled country.

They reached Niles after a journey full of hardships, and settled in the village of Niles for the summer and following winter. Andrew Cleland drove a four ox team out into the wooded country towards Edwardsburg during the summer, the 12 year old boy doing a man’s work toward securing building material for the growing village.

The family moved to the new farm west of Niles the next spring the Indiana, who occupied the claim, moving peaceably for the gift of some provision. The statement is made, although there are no records at hand upon the matter, that the Cleland house was build partially from logs that formed a part of the old Carey Mission house built on the Carey Mission in the early part of century. The family lived with peaceable Indiana as neighbors and with hungry Indians as frequent callers at the kitchen door.

Andrew Cleland was married in March 1848, to Mary Barron, daughter of Dr. Jabes Barron a resident of in the country School, and had had a year of education at the local academy which brought to Niles some of the advantages of the University of Michigan of which it was a part. He secured added advantage of tutoring form the country school master, who for several years made his home at the Cleland farm house.

Mrs. Cleland, four years after his marriage, moved back into the limits of Niles, and began the manufacturing business which continued up to the time of his retirement from active work a few years ago. He built and sold throughout the central western county thousands of provision safes, an article that at that time took the place of the refrigerator in the growing western country. H. D. Donmall, the present freight agent of the Michigan Central at Niles, received from Officials at Chicago a curio in the shape of a freight bill made out b y Mr. Cleland in 1864, for the shipment of a car load of these safes from Niles to Calumet, now known as Kensington, near Chicago.

With the aid of his sons, Mr. Cleland continued in the manufacture of these his father had manufactured for many years. In 1873 he started a foundry in Niles, known as the Valley City Iron Works. The business was well launched and promised a big enterprise for Niles, when fire wiped out the entire plant, causing a total loss, and forcing the Clelands to devote their entire energies to the lines of manufacture which they had previously established themselves.

Operations were taken up in the northwest in 1885, distributing headquarters being established at Mankato, Minn. For several years the Niles plant turned out the grain cleaners sold in the new northwestern wheat country, but a factory was subsequently stated at Mankato later moved to Minneapolis, where it is now conducted by A.V. Cleland.

Andrew J. Cleland did not lose his identity with Niles during his business operations in the Northwestern states. He retained his legal residence her and voted her. In his later years he looked upon Niles as his home, and spent a great portions of his time here. He was a strong republican, and a man of great force in both his business and personal life. He was the typical pioneer in sprit, a man who had overcome and tamed the forces of nature in the early days of western development and who had thereby built for himself a character which mad him a leader among men.

His public services in Niles was limited to several years of connection with the city council, and to participation in the Political conventions and gatherings of the days when he was actively identified with the city’s affairs. He retained a deep interest in national affairs up to the time of his death, and had a broad grasp of public questions and policies.

Mary Cleland, his wife, died in Niles in 1896. They had four children, all of whom survive the father. They are Mrs. James E. Harder of this city; Mrs. Frederick H. Bacon of St. Louis, Andrew Vincent Cleland of Minneapolis, and Herbert W. Cleland of St. Louis, Mo.

Clatterbuck, Hannah Elizabeth

Hannah Elizabeth Clatterbuck
February 15, 1860-December 25, 1925

Niles Daily Star, Monday, January 4, 1926, page 4, col. 1, microfilm Niles District Library

FUNERAL SUNDAY


Funeral services for Mrs. Hannah Elizabeth Clatterbuck, were held Sunday afternoon at the Troost and Augustine chapel, Rev. O.R. Gratton officiating.  Burial took place in Silver Brook cemetery.  Those from out of the city who attended the services were Daniel Guodle and daughter, of Accanum, Ohio; Mrs. Frank Wright and daughter, of West Alexandria, Ohio, and Mrs. Wilbert Burk, of Greenville, Ohio.  Mrs. Clatterbuck was a daughter of Isaac and Rebecca Paul. She was born in Rockingham county, Virginia, February  15, 1860, and died on December 31, 1925. Nine children, sixteen grandchildren, five great grandchildren, a half brother and one sister survive.

also submitted by a family member, publication details unknown

Funeral services for the late Mrs. Hannah E. Clatterbuck, 224 Parkway, will be held at 2 o’clock Sunday afternoon at the residence and at 2:30 at the Troost and Augustine Chapel. Rev. O.R. Grattan of the First Methodist Church will officiate. Burial will take place in Silverbrook Cemetery.

Mrs. Clatterbuck died Thursday forenoon of heart disease at the age of 64. She is survived by nine children, five sons, Ray, Harland, Carl, Glen and Charles and four daughters, Elsie Trimble, Dessie Wright, Ferne Burke and Bertha Stiles.

Clark, Elnora C. (Mandler)

Elnora C. Clark
July 5, 1885-March 17, 1978

Edwardsburg – Mrs. Elnora C. Clark, 92, of Edwardsburg died Friday in the Schato Nursing Home, Dowagiac, after a long illness.

She was born on July 5, 1885 in Minneapolis, Minn., and had lived in the Edwardsburg area since 1928 coming from South Bend.

On August 30, 1905, she married Cade H. Clark, who preceded her in death in 1950.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. F.T. (Martha) Fleisher of Baroda; four sons, Charles Richard and Robert of Edwardsburg, and Edgar of Warsaw, Ind.; a brother, John Mandler, South Bend; a sister, Mrs. Mary Eulitz, South Bend 18 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Monday in the Pifer Chapel of the Swem-Smith Funeral Home. Burial will be in Silverbrook Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 9 a.m. Monday until services.

Cheney, Cora Georgia (Wilson)

Cora Georgia (Wilson) Cheney
May 17, 1892-May 2, 1945

Niles Daily Star, Thursday, May 3, 1945, page 2, col. 3, microfilm Niles District Library

Mrs. Cheney, 52, Dies Wednesday

Mrs. Cora Georgia Cheney, 52 of 1408 Silverbrook Avenue, died at 10:10 a.m. Wednesday in the home of her sister-in-law in Kalamazoo. She had been ill for a year.

Born in Iowa May 17, 1892, Mrs. Cheney had lived in Niles for 35 years.

Surviving are her husband, L.D. Cheney; three sons, Lyle Cheney of Sheppard Field, Tex, Leonard Cheney of Camp Blanding, Fla, and Burton Cheney in the South Pacific; four daughters, Wanda Cheney and Mrs. Ernest Havener, Niles, Mrs. Alvin Hartline, Galien and Mrs. Charles Schau, Dayton; two sisters, Mrs. May Holmes, Glenwood and Mrs. Eva Foote, Jackson, and a brother, George Wilson, Joliet, Ill.

Friends may call at the Kiger funeral home where services will be conducted by the Rev. Theo Eisen, followed by burial in the Silverbrook Cemetery. Arrangements are incomplete awaiting word from her son.

 

Niles Daily Star, Friday, May 4, 1945, page 2, col. 2, microfilm Niles District Library

Around the Town:  CHENEY RITES

Funeral services for Mrs. Cora Georgia Cheney, 52, of 1408 Silverbrook avenue, will be conducted at 2 p.m Saturday in the Kiger funeral chapel by the Rev. Theo Eisen.  Burial will be in Silverbrook cemetery.  Mrs. Cheney died Wednesday in the home of her sister in Kalamazoo.