| Sources |
- [S1127] Ancestry.com, Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1964, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2014;), Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission; Harrisburg, PA; Pennsylvania (State). Death Certificates, 1906-1968; Certificate Number Range: 105901-108450.
Record for Isabella Anna Arnold Kellogg (13) facts
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Isabella Anna Arnold Kellogg in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1968
Name: Isabella Anna Arnold Kellogg
Gender: Female
Race: White
Age: 25y 8m 17d
married
occ: waitress, lunch room
ssn: 192-14-1999
Birth: abt 1921 Emporium, Pennsylvania
Death: 28 Dec 1946
Roulette, Potter, Penna
cause: Haemorrhages resulting from gun shot wound under left breast, left of median line (12 guage shotgun shell agent)
homicidal
166
signed: Walter E. Tayler, Coroner
Coudersport
Father: Thomas Henry Arnold
b: New Brunswick, Canada
Mother: Lorena Jeanette Reed
b: Emporium, PA
Spouse: Harry Kellogg
inform: Mrs. Clara Chase
Roulette
burial: 1-1-1947
Sanford Court,
Emporium
Cert: 107915
Source Citation
Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission; Harrisburg, PA; Pennsylvania (State). Death Certificates, 1906-1968; Certificate Number Range: 105901-108450
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1968 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Pennsylvania (State). Death certificates, 1906-1968. Series 11.90 (1,905 cartons). Records of the Pennsylvania Department of Health, Record Group 11. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
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PA death cert 19461228- Isabella Arnold.jpg 20230122GHLn-
Isabella Anna Arnold Kellogg in the Pennsylvania, U.S., Death Certificates, 1906-1968
Name: Isabella Anna Arnold Kellogg
Gender: Female
Race: White
Age: 25y 8m 17d
married
occ: waitress, lunch room
ssn: 192-14-1999
Birth: abt 1921 Emporium, Pennsylvania
Death: 28 Dec 1946
Roulette, Potter, Penna
cause: Haemorrhages resulting from gun… |
- [S1993] Newspapers.com: Potter Journal Leader Enterprise-, 02 Jan 1947, Thu • p.1 Murder-Suicide in roulette orphans 4-year old Nancy Kellogg, as father kills mother, then himself. 20230122GHLn-.
Harry Kellogg (1) fact
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Murder-Suicide in roulette orphans 4-year old Nancy Kellogg, as father kills mother, then himself.
CLIPPED FROM
The Potter Enterprise
Coudersport, Pennsylvania
02 Jan 1947, Thu • p.1
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BYwetzupdoc · 22 Jan 2023
Wounds Estranged Wife, Midnight Quarrel Bodies Found in Home of Brother-in-Law -- Tragedy Orphans 4-Year-Old Daughter Asleep in Upstairs Room -- Wife Lives Seven Minutes After Being Shot in Abdomen -- Murderer Dies Instantly From Shotgun Wound in Head.
A Roulette murder and suicide Saturday night left pretty little four-year-old Nancy Kellogg with out a mother or father.
Harry Kellogg, 25, shot his estranged wife, Isabella, 24, in the abdomen with a 12-gauge shotgun and then, as his sister-in-law knelt at the side of the dying woman, shot himself in the head. He died in stantly.
Mrs. Kellogg lived scarcely long enough to cry out, "Harry, you shouldn t have done it!"
The tragic drama for little Nancy was enacted shortly before midnight in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Chandler, Railroad and Fourth Streets, as the child slept in an upstairs room.
The shooting occurred in a down stairs hall and front room used for storage. Police fixed time of Mrs. Keilogg's death as about 11:40 o'clock, that of her husband about five minutes later.
Mrs. Keilogg's body lay face down In a hall leading from the front door to the living room. The body of Kellogg was still In a sitting position on a child's overturned sled in a room on the left of the hall and at the front of the dwelling. The gun was balanced on the toe of his left boot. It contained one empty cartridge.
Mrs. Kellogg and her husband had not been living together. She and her daughter roomed In the Chandler home. Mrs. Chandler, a sister of the slain woman, and her husband were asleep in a nearby room when the argument which preceded the shooting began.
The sequence of events leading up to the fatal shooting, as narrated to Corp. George Auten and Pvt. Robert D. Baughman by Mr. and Mrs. Chandler and substantiated by others, follows:
Kellogg, an edger at the Clair Elliott Lumber Co. near Bradford, stayed away from work Saturday to "spend his Christmas bonus," he told friends. He was in the Roulette House, a barroom and dance hall at 7:00 p. m. when Mrs. Kellogg who was employed in Hilde's Diner left work for the day.
As she passed the tavern, Kellogg stepped out and accompanied her. Although estranged, they were on more or less friendly terms. He visited her at Chandler's at intervals.
They began a violent argument which continued after they reached her home. Kellogg left for the home of his brother Clayton, where he and a friend and fellow-worker, John Palmatier, had a room, about 7:30 o'clock. Clayton's home is lo cated on Main Street, about seven blocks away by the street. Harry often waded the river and went home across lots, saving four or five blocks' walking.
About 9:00 p. m., Mrs. Kellogg went to the home of Pauline Back us, a close friend who was at one time married to a brother of Harry Kellogg. She suggested going 'downtown to see whats going on. Mrs. Kellogg told the friend that she was frightened and feared something would happen.
On the way, she confided that in the argument earlier in the evening "Harry said he would get even if he had to kill me.
The two women went Into Roulette House and sat down at a table in the pavilion. Soon after Harry came to the table and renewed the argument with his wife. When he went back to the bar, the women fled. On the way to the diner, they met a sister of Miss Backus and warned her not to tell Mr. Kellogg where they had gone.
A man friend of Miss Backus join ed the two women at the diner. About 11:30 the three left the diner to make a delivery in a friend's car. Mrs. Kellogg left the car, stating that she had to get home to her daughter. She left for home walking.
In the meantime, Harry had left the barroom. Seeing Miss Backus' sister, he inquired after his wife. The girl replied that she hadn't seen her.
Kellogg then went back into the tavern only to emerge a few minutes later at 11:30 with Palmatier. The former insisted on going to their room. When Palmatier protested that it was too early to go home, Kellogg shouted that he had "something important to attend to and it can't wait!"
Irvin Chandler was awakened sometime before 11:40 by an argu-ment in the hall. He remembered hearing Mrs. Kellogg beg to be permitted to go to "my baby." As he was rising to dress, Mrs. Kellogg walked through the hall to the living room and apologized to Mr. Chandler for the commotion. She then went back through the hall, closing the door.
An Instant later, Mrs. Kellogg screamed, "Harry has a gun!" Before Mr. Chandler could reach the hall door he heard a shot. Opening the door, he saw the woman lying on the floor. He left by a side door to summon a physician.
Mrs. Chandler, also formerly married to one of the four Kellogg brothers, rushed to the side of her sister. Mr. Kellogg stood in the dimly lighted room opening onto the hall, "just looking." He then reloaded one barrel of the double-barrelled Folsom gun said to have been issued to the slain woman's father when he was a member of the Royal Northwest Canadian . Mounted Police and ended his own life.
Evidence indicated that Kellogg had fired one shot at his wife and missed. The shot blasted a hole in the wall along the stair. Two empty shell cases were found on the floor near the body.
About three feet of stair railing and stair post had been broken off, apparently in a scuffle.
Police are inclined to the belief that Kellogg went directly to his room from the tavern, got the gun, then proceeded to the Chandler place by the short route across the river. He was wearing hip-length boots. The fact that Mrs. Kellogg had not removed her coat or galoshes lends credence to the belief that she hadn't been home long when her husband arrived. If he didn't precede her, it was also conjectured that he might have been waiting inside the house for her to return. He was believed to have had the key Mrs. Kellogg had reported missing. A key is still In : the lock on the outside.
Police expressed the belief that Kellogg, who had been drinking, and who was extremely jealous of his wife, went beserk when she spurned his entreaties to go back to him. A neighbor of the couple told Pvt. Baughman that Kellogg had told her following a previous reconciliation with his wife that "I am lucky to have her back." He said at that time he was going to quit drinking.
Friends of the couple were quick to point out that Kellogg had no reason to be jealous of his wife. Her behavior was said to be exemplary.
Mrs. Chandler, grief-stricken, told officers that Mrs. Kellogg had been her only attendant at her marriage Christmas Eve in Port Allegany to Mr. Chandler.
Previous to her marriage, Mrs. Chandler and her sister and Nancy had occupied an upstairs room. Another family lived downstairs.
The dead couple's daughter was still asleep when Mr. Chandler went to her room. Shielding her eyes he carried her downstairs past the bodies of her parents and outside to his car. On the way to the home of neighbors, where she spent the rest of the night, Nancy asked where she was being taken. When told, she again fell asleep.
News of the tragedy spread rapidly. One of the first to arrive on the scene after the officers was the dead man's father Albert Kellogg, a driver for Susquehanna Chemical Corporation.
Friends of Mrs. Kellogg revealed that she had planned to institute divorce proceedings against her husband Monday. His arrest on Oct. 8 charging non-support was nullified when Mrs. Kellogg withdrew the warrant.
A well-known Coudersport family is seeking to adopt Nancy. In the meantime, she is staying with the Chandlers.
Scott Sterner Being Treated At Hospital
Scott Sterner, who has been In ill health for some' time, was taken to , the Potter County Memorial Hospital for medical attention Thursday. Sunday he was removed to the Warren State Hospital for further treatment.
Clipping location on The Potter Enterprise page 1
CLIPPED FROM
The Potter Enterprise
Coudersport, Pennsylvania
02 Jan 1947, Thu • p.1
wetzupdoc Member Photo
BYwetzupdoc · 22 Jan 2023
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At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
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- [S2282] Ancestry.com, Newspapers.com Obituary Index, 1940-1955, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Lehi, UT, USA; Date: 2019;), The Potter Enterprise; Publication Date: 9 Jan 1947; Publication Place: Coudersport, Pennsylvania, USA; URL: https://www.newspapers.com/image/275554512/?article=7e50683f-393d-45e1-98a7-8c74f212f47f&focus=0.2511173,0.18583286,0.36645737,0.28787145&xid=3355.
Record for Harry Kellogg (11) facts
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Funeral Services for Harry Kellogg and Isabella Arnold Kellogg
CLIPPED FROM
The Potter Enterprise
Coudersport, Pennsylvania
09 Jan 1947, Thu • p.8
wetzupdoc Member Photo
BYwetzupdoc · 22 Jan 2023
ROULETTE Tuesday, January 7 Funeral of Mrs. Kellogg This community was saddened by the murder and suicide Saturday night, December 29, about mid night when Harry Kellogg shot his wife and then ended his life. Isabella Anna Kellogg was born at Emporium, April 11, 1921A and was the daughter of Thomas and Lorene Arnold. She was married to Harry Kellogg September 2 1940, at Port Allegany. She and WHERE WILL IT STRIKE NEXT? The polio germ is no respector of age. Year after year adults as well as children are attacked by the dreaded disease. Join the March of Dimes! Your dimes and dollars will make it possible for paralysis victims to receive curative treatments! Join the Coudersport Service Station MofCH DIMES JANUARY 15-30 her family had been respected rest dents or Roulette. Mrs. Kellogg was a graduate of the Roulette High School In 1940 and was a member of the Girls Bowling team of Roulette, and had friends on every side. She had been employed at various places and at the time of her death was employed at the diner of Mrs. Am thor on Main Street. She is survived by her four-year- old daughter, Nancy Lorene Kel logg; two sisters, Mrs. Raymond Chase and Mrs. Irving Chandler of Roulette and three half-broth ers and sisters, Joseph Arnold Ralph Arnold and Thomas Arnold of Emporium; Blanche Reading, Mrs. Olie Hopkins and Mrs. Mary Manus of Emporium. Funeral services were held Wed nesday, January 1, at 1:00 p. m. at the home of her sister, Mrs. Ray mond Chase, Center and Second Street. The Rev. P. L. Mitchell of' ficiated. Interment was in the San ford Cemetery at Emporium. Services at Funeral Home Harry Kellogg was born in Swed en Township, September 5, 1920, and was the son of Albert and the late Edna Reed Kellogg. He was married to Isabella Arnold, Sep. tember 2, 1940, at Port Allegany. He is survived by his daughter, Nancy Lorene Kellogg, his father, Albert Kellogg, and three brothers, Clayton, Alvm and Albert, all of Roulette. Funeral service was held at the Gardner Funeral Home Tues day, December 31, at 2:00 p. m. and interment was in Lyman Cemetery. The Rev. F. L. Mitchell, pastor of the Baptist Church, officiated. The bearers were Buddy Hoak, Paul Kistner, Lewis Casini, Clayton Kellogg and Albert Kellogg.
Clipping location on The Potter Enterprise page 8
CLIPPED FROM
The Potter Enterprise
Coudersport, Pennsylvania
09 Jan 1947, Thu • p.8
wetzupdoc Member Photo
BYwetzupdoc · 22 Jan 2023
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Kellogg & Arnold funerals News_19470109PottEntp8 20230122GHLn-
Funeral Services for Harry Kellogg and Isabella Arnold Kellogg
CLIPPED FROM
The Potter Enterprise
Coudersport, Pennsylvania
09 Jan 1947, Thu • p.8
wetzupdoc Member Photo
BYwetzupdoc · 22 Jan 2023
ROULETTE
Tuesday, January 7
Funeral of Mrs. Kellogg
This community was saddened by the murder and suicide Saturday night, December 29,… |
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