Arline SLOSSON

Female 1895 - 1950  (54 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Arline SLOSSON was born on 16 Jul 1895 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California (daughter of Charles Eugene SLOSSON and Anna V. MCCULLOCH); died on 17 Apr 1950 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1900, Living with parents in El Monte, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Census: 1920, Living with husband and mother in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Census: 1930, Living with husband and mother in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California

    Arline married John Wilmer SNYDER on 20 Nov 1917 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California. John was born about 1896 in Pennsylvania, USA; died on 01 Nov 1939 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Arlene SNYDER was born on 10 Dec 1918 in Los Angeles County, California; died on 14 Oct 2012 in Ukiah, California.
    2. Donald LeRoy SNYDER was born on 08 Feb 1924 in Los Angeles County, California; died on 22 Nov 1979 in Mendocina, California.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Charles Eugene SLOSSON was born on 25 Sep 1860 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa (son of John Marean SLOSSON and Jennie Roxy FINCH); died on 12 Jan 1916 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, 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 El Monte, Los Angeles Co., California

    Notes:

    "George Slawson - An American Pioneer": by Harold D. Slosson - Charley, the small-town entrepreneur, went to California during the land boom of the 1880s. There, aided by his wife Anna, he started a number of enterprises.
    September 25, 1860 in Northwood, Iowa, Charles Eugene Slosson was born as the first child of John and Roxy Jane Slosson...
    Charley, as he was commonly called, commenced live on the Slosson's first, small farm, close in to the small town of Northwood where he started school.....
    In 1869, his parents took him as a nine-year-old boy to their new section-size farm southeast of the town....
    Sorghum was one of the crops raised on the Slosson farm. It is a tall-growing plant resembling perhaps corn or sugar cane. Further, like sugar cane its stalks are sweet, being chewed on for their pleasant taste. Again, it may be fed to stock or pressed to obtain sorghum syrup, popular on the breakfast table. At that time, men in the field cut the stalks using large knives,probably like a machete.
    When cutting the stalks in this way, Charley received a bad gash on his leg. The wound bled profusely, with Mary being greatly alarmed. The father, from a long frontier life, was evidently a good first aider; the flow of blood was staunched, and the cut healed without ill aftereffects. The point of this story (as told by Mary), ws that raming life could be rough, hazardous at times, as well.
    Butter, another farm product, was early made by the housewife in a hand-operated churn. John Slosson, the father, saw the advantage of a central milk collecting place, or creamery, as the efficient was to make butter. So with the help of Charley he built the first creamery in Worth County, and one of the first in the state.
    The creamery business did all right. Additionally, Charley had abstracted land titles, and had served as deputy county treasurer and auditor. But by the middle 1880s Charley found something else churning in his mind. A great land boom was starting in southern California; he wanted to go there and be a part of it.....
    He arrived sometime before December 1887.
    Not long after Charley's arrival he was serving as a deputy in the city clerk's office. In 1889 he was appointed city clerk, his promotion - according to Wiley's 'History of Monrovia' - being earned by "faiathful service and attention to business." In this capacity he remained until his resignation in 1897.
    ....Probably the resignation followed the press of personal business. Soon we fin there is the Slosson Livery Stable.
    C.E. SLOSSON, Proprietor
    Monrovia Livery, Feed and Sale Stables
    Horses and Crriages Bought, Sold and
    Exchanged
    Open Day and Night
    Contractors for Household Moving, All Kinds of Team Work

    For a time Charley had a prominent local man by the name of Cornes as his partner.....
    Meanwhile, Chrley had become the first notary public in the town, and had gone into the real estate business. His office was on Monrovia's main street, Myrtle Avenue, being on the east side between Olive and Orange. There Charley sold all classes of property, possibly his most import being the subdividing of the sizable Oak Park Tract on the east side of town. Two other subdivisions of Charley's were the Valle Vista and the Orange Avenue tracts......
    In Iowa, Charley had helped free the farm wife from the churning detail; now in California he helped release the housewife from washboard drudgery. With others he started the Monrovia Steam Laundry, possibly a successor to Chinese hand laundry, or to another laundry which had been there before. A commercial laundry was then needed, too, since this was before the days of the automatic washer and dryer; nor was there then electric power to run such units...
    Somewhat similar to this foregoing enterprise was the San Gabriel River Rock and Gravel Company, which Charley helped organize, serving as its president for some time....
    The townsmen organized the "Monrovia Rifles," sometimes called the "Monrovia Guards." Charley is listed as a volunteer on their roster.....
    Charley had helped organize Monrovia's first Board of Trade and had served as its secretary. But his greatest public service, perhaps, was in connection with water....
    In 1899 a committee of city trustees and prominent men, including Charley Slosson, was formed to study the water problem. Their recommendation for the purchase of Chapman water-bearing land was favorably acted on, with the water line being laid into town along what is now Foodhill Boulevard. This saved the day, with other water sources being located later. In 1903 Charley again served on a later committee which recomended further improvements at the Chapman wells....
    On October 2, 1889, Charley married Anna V. McCullough, who had been born July 3, 1860, in Kingston, Pennsylvania. Anna at that time was a popular young school-teacher.
    Initially the young couple lived in a frame house on North Encinitas Avenue. Subsequently, for some years this property was in various family hands. At about the turn of the century, Charley and Anna moved to a larger house on East Lime Avenue, just a block from the main street. Many social events were held there, including the entertaining of important dignitaries, such as congressmen. For a time Chrley served as a menber of the Republican Central Committee of Los Angeles County, having been on the executive committee for two years.
    Charley and Anna had one child, Arlne, born in Monrovia on Jul 16, 1895....
    Anna Slosson was honored as being a charter menber of the First Presbyterian Church, and singing for many years in its choir. She was also a charter member of the Monrovia Women's Club, serving as its secretary. Another cause she aided was the starting of the Monrovia Public Library.
    On Janue 12, 1916, Charley passed away in Monrovia, the town he had helped for so many years. There, also, Anne had passed away on November 3, 1937. they are buried in southwest Los Angeles where Anna's folks had a family plot, in an old, but beautiful cemetery called Rosedale.

    Charles married Anna V. MCCULLOCH on 02 Oct 1889 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California. Anna was born on 03 Jul 1860 in Kingston, Pennsylvania; died on 03 Nov 1937 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anna V. MCCULLOCH was born on 03 Jul 1860 in Kingston, Pennsylvania; died on 03 Nov 1937 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1900, Living with husband in El Monte, Los Angeles Co, California
    • Census: 1920, Living in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California
    • Fact: 1920, Lists as being a widow
    • Census: 1930, Living in Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California

    Notes:

    1920 Census for Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California lists the following living with Anna:

    Reed, Margaret, Aunt 61, widow
    Reed, Helen, neice, 21

    1930 Census for Monrovia Los Angeles Co., California lists the following living with Anna:

    Jean T. Dunwell, sister, age 74 (born in Pennsylvania) and a widow

    Children:
    1. 1. Arline SLOSSON was born on 16 Jul 1895 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; died on 17 Apr 1950 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California.