| Sources |
- [S743] Public Member Trees, aa good photos & records, Database online. George WEIMER, good bio.
Record for Sarah G Weimer George W. Weimer, bio and obit in 'Notes'
20180828HAv, re-worked:
Biography George Weimar
GEORGE WEIMAR, farmer, P.O. Williston, son of George and Margaret (Lehman) Weimar, was born in Alsace, France (now Germany), November 27, 1816.
In 1830 he came to America with his parents, who located at Roulette, Potter county, where they engaged in farming and spent the rest of their lives; their children were
-George and
- Eve.
His father's second wife was Eve Wiederich, and their children were
- Michael,
- Barbara,
- Mrs. Margaret Manning,
- Mrs. Sally Jackson,
- William A.,
- Frederick,
- John and
- Mrs. Dorcas Marsh.
The subject of these lines made his home with his parents until nineteen years of age, when he began to work for farmers, and in 1836 bought a tract of wild land on which he located in 1842. This he cleared and improved, and now has one of the best farms in Pleasant Valley township.
He was married in 1842, to Laura, daughter of Burrel Lyman. Their children are
- Sarah (Mrs. Roscoe Stearns),
- Otis,
- Willis,
- Ella (Mrs. Dr. Stearns, of Port Allegany, Penn.),
- Mary (Mrs. F. Robinson of Liberty township, McKean county),
- Nellie (Mrs. Amos Palmer, also of Liberty township),
- Nettie (Mrs. Lewis Yentzer, of Roulette, Penn.),
- Lottie (Mrs. Miles Rice, also of Roulette), and
- Roscoe.
Mrs. Weimer died in 1884.
In politics Mr. Weimar is a Democrat. In 1836 he bought corn at $3 per bushel, which was brought on pack horses eighty miles from Jersey Shore, and paid for it by cutting wood at seventy-five cents per day..
Source: Biographies from Hebron, Clara, and Pleasant Valley Townships, Potter Co., PA.
Submitted by: Barb Hyde.
n2zhf
n2zhf originally shared this to Mayer Family Tree
?19 Sep 2009 ?story
caccyber1
caccyber1 added this to Campbell Family Tree
?13 Oct 2010
A Famous Woodsman Dead
George Weimer Walked 70 Miles In the Forest in a Day-Ran Down a Deer..
ROULETTE, Pa., March 6.-George Weimer,. aged 90, died last Monday on his farm near this place, where he had lived for seventy years. He was the last of the pioneer woodsmen and raftsmen of the Allegheny and Susquehanna headwaters, and was famous as a pedestrian and runner in his early days. Once, being on a rafting trip down the river, he walked from Jersey Shore to Roulette, 70 miles, between breakfast and early bedtime, or in about IT hours, over a rough and hilly wilderness road, with a stop of only an hour for rest and refreshment during the entire journey. The reason he made it, he always explained by saying:
"I had always called on my girl that right of the week, and I wasn't going to let a little matter of 70 miles fool me out of it that night." The girl he travelled too far to see was the daughter of Burrill Lyman of Roulette, and she soon afterward became his wife.
Laroy Lyman of Roulette shot at a deer in the hills back of that place one day, and called on Weimer to fetch one of his dogs. The dog would not follow the deer's track, and Weimer himself took after the HAM*. When Weimer started the dog took the track and went ahead and overtook the deer, a buck. The deer fought the dog and scared it eo that when Weimer came up it would only keep at its heels, the deer having started on again. Weimer followed the deer over ridges, down hollows, across streams and through swamps and tangled thickets, giving it no rest, and at last drove it into the open and toward the Allegheny River. The deer at last entered a field that lay between the woods and the river. There Weimer caught it. Lyman's shot' had not hit it. The dog came lagging and panting in a few minutes afterward and lay down in a fence corner, tired out.. Weimer cut the deer's throat and carried the carcass nearly a mile t o a farmhouse. He had run the deer, as near as could be calculated b y t h e turnings and twistings of the course, not lees than 11 miles. Leaving the deer at the farm t o be called for, he over the hills, 7 miles. He arrived there an hour ahead of his dog.
Weimer, when he married and settled on the farm, worked in the woods or on the river in the winter. When he rafted down the Susquehanna the rafts were, as a rule, run to Columbia, about 200 miles. The return trip could be made by stage and canal, but Weimer always walked it, thus, he declared, saving both time and money.
The New York Sun March 1904.
tclyman
tclyman originally shared this to Lyman Family
?14 Dec 2013 ?story
The New York Sun March 1904
?1904 ?Roulette, PA
caccyber1
caccyber1 added this to Campbell Family Tree
?20 Feb 2014
20180828HAv, re-worked:
Biography George Weimar
GEORGE WEIMAR, farmer, P.O. Williston, son of George and Margaret (Lehman) Weimar, was born in Alsace, France (now Germany), November 27, 1816.
In 1830 he came to America with his parents, who located at Roulette, Potter county, where they engaged in farming and spent the rest of their lives; their children were
-George and
- Eve.
His father's second wife was Eve Wiederich, and their children were
- Michael,
- Barbara,
- Mrs. Margaret Manning,
- Mrs. Sally Jackson,
- William A.,
- Frederick,
- John and
- Mrs. Dorcas Marsh.
The subject of these lines made his home with his parents until nineteen years of age, when he began to work for farmers, and in 1836 bought a tract of wild land on which he located in 1842. This he cleared and improved, and now has one of the best farms in Pleasant Valley township.
He was married in 1842, to Laura, daughter of Burrel Lyman. Their children are
- Sarah (Mrs. Roscoe Stearns),
- Otis,
- Willis,
- Ella (Mrs. Dr. Stearns, of Port Allegany, Penn.),
- Mary (Mrs. F. Robinson of Liberty township, McKean county),
- Nellie (Mrs. Amos Palmer, also of Liberty township),
- Nettie (Mrs. Lewis Yentzer, of Roulette, Penn.),
- Lottie (Mrs. Miles Rice, also of Roulette), and
- Roscoe.
Mrs. Weimer died in 1884.
In politics Mr. Weimar is a Democrat. In 1836 he bought corn at $3 per bushel, which was brought on pack horses eighty miles from Jersey Shore, and paid for it by cutting wood at seventy-five cents per day..
Source: Biographies from Hebron, Clara, and Pleasant Valley Townships, Potter Co., PA.
Submitted by: Barb Hyde.
n2zhf
n2zhf originally shared this to Mayer Family Tree
?19 Sep 2009 ?story
caccyber1
caccyber1 added this to Campbell Family Tree
?13 Oct 2010
A Famous Woodsman Dead
George Weimer Walked 70 Miles In the Forest in a Day-Ran Down a Deer..
ROULETTE, Pa., March 6.-George Weimer,. aged 90, died last Monday on his farm near this place, where he had lived for seventy years. He was the last of the pioneer woodsmen and raftsmen of the Allegheny and Susquehanna headwaters, and was famous as a pedestrian and runner in his early days. Once, being on a rafting trip down the river, he walked from Jersey Shore to Roulette, 70 miles, between breakfast and early bedtime, or in about IT hours, over a rough and hilly wilderness road, with a stop of only an hour for rest and refreshment during the entire journey. The reason he made it, he always explained by saying:
"I had always called on my girl that right of the week, and I wasn't going to let a little matter of 70 miles fool me out of it that night." The girl he travelled too far to see was the daughter of Burrill Lyman of Roulette, and she soon afterward became his wife.
Laroy Lyman of Roulette shot at a deer in the hills back of that place one day, and called on Weimer to fetch one of his dogs. The dog would not follow the deer's track, and Weimer himself took after the HAM*. When Weimer started the dog took the track and went ahead and overtook the deer, a buck. The deer fought the dog and scared it eo that when Weimer came up it would only keep at its heels, the deer having started on again. Weimer followed the deer over ridges, down hollows, across streams and through swamps and tangled thickets, giving it no rest, and at last drove it into the open and toward the Allegheny River. The deer at last entered a field that lay between the woods and the river. There Weimer caught it. Lyman's shot' had not hit it. The dog came lagging and panting in a few minutes afterward and lay down in a fence corner, tired out.. Weimer cut the deer's throat and carried the carcass nearly a mile t o a farmhouse. He had run the deer, as near as could be calculated b y t h e turnings and twistings of the course, not lees than 11 miles. Leaving the deer at the farm t o be called for, he over the hills, 7 miles. He arrived there an hour ahead of his dog.
Weimer, when he married and settled on the farm, worked in the woods or on the river in the winter. When he rafted down the Susquehanna the rafts were, as a rule, run to Columbia, about 200 miles. The return trip could be made by stage and canal, but Weimer always walked it, thus, he declared, saving both time and money.
The New York Sun March 1904.
tclyman
tclyman originally shared this to Lyman Family
?14 Dec 2013 ?story
The New York Sun March 1904
?1904 ?Roulette, PA
caccyber1
caccyber1 added this to Campbell Family Tree
?20 Feb 2014
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