Frances Luther Sisco

Frances Luther Sisco

Male 1870 - 1948  (78 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Text    |    Register

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Frances Luther SiscoFrances Luther Sisco was born 24 May 1870, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 25 May 1948, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried 28 May 1948, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    Frances "Luther" Sisco was born to Stephen and Mary Ann Johnson Sisco on Tuesday, May 24, 1870 in Nicholson, Pennsylvania. The US Federal census of 1880 confirms that Luther was living at home with his parents in Nicholson. Luther married Mary Mercy Phillips who was nine years his junior on August 25, 1895 in Factoryville, PA. Dorotha (Sisco) Thomas, Luthers grand daughter relates the story that Luther worked for Mary's father who owed Luther money. Since he couldn't pay, he gave Mary to Luther in payment. By 1900, the Federal Census shows Luther as married to Mary Phillips and having two children, Olin and Clara.

    Luther was a carpenter and bridge builder who worked on the Nicholson Railroad Bridge in Nicholson, Pennsylvania. His grandson, Leon Sisco recalls visiting him in a shanty village as he was building the bridge. In 1910, the US census shows the Sisco's living on Capwell Hill Road in Clinton, PA. In 1920, Luther and Mary, now in their forties were living alone on Silk Mill Road, Hallstead, PA. It is intereseting to note that their neighbors were the Elveys and Chidesters who would be their neighbors in other locations. In 1930, they were living on River Road with their thirteen year old grandson George "Lloyd" Jamison living with them as his mother Clara Sisco Jamison had died of the "Spanish Influenza" in 1920.

    In 1940, Luther and Mary were living on Road 710 (now Bogart Avenue) in Hallstead in the "Severson's" house that was purchased for them by their son Olin. Olin, Ethel and their three children were living down the dirt road in the home that the Luther was originally living in. See Olin Sisco's narrative for the reasons for the living arrangements.

    He possessed a bad temper. Luther died in Scranton, PA at the Moses Taylor Hospital.


    Buried:
    Rose Hill Cemetary

    Died:
    Age: 78

    Frances married Mary Mercy Phillips 25 Aug 1895, Factoryville, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA. Mary (daughter of Charles Harris Salsbery Phillips and Almira M. Gardner) was born 1 Aug 1879, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 20 Jan 1953, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 2. Clara Almira Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 30 Apr 1899, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1 Mar 1920, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 3. Arthur Harris Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 8 May 1904, Pennsylvania; died Mar 1986, Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States of America.
    3. 4. Olin Reece Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 26 Mar 1897, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 10 Oct 1965, Binghamton, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Clara Almira Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (1.Frances1) was born 30 Apr 1899, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1 Mar 1920, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    Clara died in the flu epidemic.

    Clara married George Lynn Jamison 13 Feb 1916, Pennsylvania. George (son of Henry Jamison and Lena Shoemaker Jamison Austin) was born 30 Oct 1896, Pennsylvania, United States of America; died 15 Apr 1967, Preston, New London, Connecticut. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 5. George Lloyd Jamison  Descendancy chart to this point was born 22 Sep 1916, Hallstead., Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 3 Oct 1984, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County.
    2. 6. Luther William Jamison  Descendancy chart to this point was born 7 Dec 1918, Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA; died 26 Nov 1998, Kirkwood, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Great Bend, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

  2. 3.  Arthur Harris Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (1.Frances1) was born 8 May 1904, Pennsylvania; died Mar 1986, Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States of America.

    Notes:

    Arthur was a severe asthmatic. He went to Arizona where he was better able to breathe. He got homesick for his family and came back east but could not breathe. Luther and Mary, his parents gave him their Ford touring car and placed all of the money that they had into a little bag and had Leotta hide it in her bra. They set out to Arizona on October 13, 1928 and arrived in Tucson on October 25, 1928. His parents and family back east heard very little from him after he left and then eventually never heard from him again. It was rumored that Arthur and Leotta divorced and that they remarried. They had a son.

    Arthur married Leota Wright. Leota was born 3 Jun 1906, United States; died 17 Jan 1970; was buried , Kingman, Mohave County, Arizona, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 7. Clara Joyce Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 3 Oct 1925, Scranton, Pennsylvania; died Jun 1987.
    2. 8. Shirley Elizabeth Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 2 Mar 1927; died 24 May 2000, Prescott Valley, Yavapai, Arizona, USA.

    Arthur married Ruby W. Rector [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 9. Michael D Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 4.  Olin Reece SiscoOlin Reece Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (1.Frances1) was born 26 Mar 1897, Nicholson, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, USA; died 10 Oct 1965, Binghamton, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Olin Reece Sisco was born on Friday, March 26, 1897 in Nicholson Township, Pennsylvania to Frances "Luther" and "Mary" Mercy (Phillips) Sisco. By April 15, 1910, at the age of thirteen Olin and his family were living in Factoryville, Pennsylvania on Capwell Hill Road. His father worked as a laborer and bridge builder for the Steam Railroad Company. By 1920, the US Federal census shows Luther and Mary living on Silk Mill Road Hallstead, PA. It is unknown when between 1910 and 1920 they relocated from Factoryville to Hallstead nor whether Olin had ever lived at the Silk Mill Road residence. The only indication that he may have lived in Hallstead is the family lore has it that Olin had to walked the family cow from Factoryville to Hallstead a distance of about thirty-one miles.

    Sometime around 1915, Olin must have heard about job availability at the Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company (aka EJ) and began working at one of the Johnson City, NY factories. There is a photo of Olin working at EJ as a teenager with Ellsworth Banker, Olin's future brother-in-law who was also from Hallstead. It is not known how or where Olin Reece Sisco and Ethel Mae Banker met. It may have been in Hallstead which is where Ethel lived or at the Endicott Johnson Shoe Company where they both worked. They were married on September 1, 1917 in Binghamton, NY at the parsonage of the Grace Baptist church. Ethel continued to work for the Endicott- Johnson Shoe Company until she and Olin began their family.

    On June 5, 1918, after one short year of marriage, Olin registered for the World War I draft as required by law and joined the US Army. His draft registration card indicates that he and Ethel lived at 28 Carhart Street in Johnson City, NY. It was there that they became friends with Eunice and Tom Watkins who lived in the apartment above them. They always joked that they could hear each others conversations through the bathroom walls. Eunice and Tom must have been good friends and neighbors taking care of Ethel while Olin went off to basic training. Olin never deployed as the war came to an end on November 11, 1918 now forever known as "Armistice Day."

    At some point between 1918 and 1920, Olin and Ethel moved a few short blocks over to 90 Endicott Road in the Village of Johnson City, Town of Union, NY. It was while living there that on February 25, 1920 that first daughter Dorotha Sisco Thomas was born. Three years later, Ethel delivered twins Leon Arthur and Leo Howard. Leo was born with a spinal defect. In a photo taken of the two infants, it was necessary to wire Leo's neck and head upright as he was unable to do so on his own. Leo died nine months after he was born which must have had an emotional toll on both Olin and Ethel. Dorotha remembers that the undertaker had a big car and she sat between her mtoether and father with baby Leo's casket lying across their lap as they drove to the Floral Park Cemetery to bury the baby.

    Sometime around 1923, perhaps just prior to the birth of Leo and Leon, Olin and Ethel had purchased a home at 6 Theron Street, Johnson City, New York, near what is currently the Riverside Drive traffic circle. The Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company provided employees with many benefits unknown in today's economy. Homes were built and sold at cost. Playgrounds, recreation halls for bowling, roller skating and dancing were provided. Hospitals and a medical plan which received world-wide attention and acclaim were established. An eight-hour day, one of the first in a large industry, and other benefits were inaugurated. They even provided each employee's child with their first shoes and each Christmas each year thereafter. The home on Theron Street was one of the Endicott Johnson built homes which Olin purchased for $3,000.00.

    The period from 1930 to the mid-1940's was the period of Great Depression in the United States. It was during this time of struggling economy that Olin's parents, Luther and Mary Sisco, were having difficulty maintaining and affording the small farm that they had in Hallstead, PA from the income generated from the crops grown in their fields. To help keep the farm, Olin moved his family in with his parents. They waited until June to move the family allowing Dorotha and Leon to finish the school year in Johnson City.

    Relations became strained between Olin and Ethel and Olins parents. Olin's mother despised Ethel and had threatened to do all that she could to sabotage the marriage. Olin gave his mother the choice of staying in their current home or moving into the former Severson's home. Mary chose the latter. Eventually, Olin purchased the family farm from his father and also purchased the home on the road above them from the Severson's for his parents to move into as shown in the 1940 federal census. He added more property to the farm from tax sales and in time had a large farm along Route 7 (Church Street) on the road that leads from Conklin, New York to Hallstead, Pennsylvania. The first piece of property that he purchased was along the main road and the creek. Olin's dream was for both he and his son Leon, to run the farm together. Olin must have rented the Theron Street residence out as Real Estate records show that he sold it on October 19th, 1942.

    Ethel would bake and can fruits and vegetables from their gardens, taking them to Johnson City to sell for extra income. The basement of the farmhouse was simply dirt floors with stones collected from the fields and creek beds stacked on top of each to provide some insulation from the dirt walls. Wood shelves were built along the walls to provide storage for canned goods and vegetables for the winter. The cool, dark and damp basements provided excellent storage for winter vegetables. Leon and Dorotha had to do the house and farm chores while Olin sold insurance.

    Olin was very stern and possessed a good business sense. In 1922, to provide the family with additional income Olin joined the Prudential Life Insurance Company and was a sales agent throughout the Binghamton, NY and Susquehanna, County, Pennsylvania area.

    He was well respected throughout the area for his business acumen and insights. Many people turned to him for advice on business matters. He retired from Prudential after his first heart attack. Olin was fiercely protective of his family making certain that everyone was provided for. Between January 1918 and December 1920 the world suffered from a major flu epidemic called the "Spanish Flu" that killed between 50 to 100 million people one of which was Olin's twenty-one year old sister Clara Almira who died on March 1, 1920, She left behind a husband, George Lynn Jamison and two children, four year old Lloyd and two year old Luther.

    After Clara's death, Lynn abandoned the boys. His WWII Draft registration in 1942 shows him living at 60 Hamilton Street New Haven, CT. Luther was sent to live his paternal grandparents believed to be in New Haven also and Lloyd was sent to live with his maternal grandparents Mary and Luther Sisco in Hallstead, PA. Luther ended up in a children's home in Connecticut. At that time a children's home was viewed almost like a juvenile detention center as opposed to an orphanage. Olin went to Connecticut and got him out. Unfortunately, Luther became a liability. He began to drink heavily. One day Lloyd got a call from the local Hallstead theater that Luther was there drunk and causing a disturbance. Lloyd went to get him but instead of taking him to Luther and Marys, he took him to Olins house. In the process of attempting to get him under control Olin slapped Luther in the house to get him to pay attention. Luther then attempted to punch Olin but missed putting his fist through the wall in the back room that served as Olin's office. Rather than repair the wall, Ethel simply hung a picture over the hole.

    On another occasion, Luther went to the Swift's slaughter house that was located across SR 1033 behind what is now the American Legion building. Olin had warned him not to go there because some of the animals to be slaughtered had diseases. Luther brought back pig cholera to Olin's pigs that he was growing for market.

    While living in Johnson City in their early married life, Olin and Ethel attended the First Baptist Church, Johnson City, New York. He served the church by teaching as a Sunday school class. The family later attended the Primitive Methodist Church in Johnson City. Sometime after he joined Prudential, he got away from the church until many years later after he suffered a heart attack. At that point he became active at the First Baptist Church, Hallstead PA eventually becoming a deacon. He would travel throughout the Southern Tier of New York and northeastern Pennsylvania to hear preachers. He purchased a portable reel to reel tape recorder to record their messages for greater insights and understanding of the scriptures.

    When first grandchild Yvonne Bonnie Sisco came along Olin planted a stand of pine trees in her honor across Bogart Street, then a dirt road with two ruts. Olin was an outdoorsman and enjoyed hunting, fishing on the Susquehanna River and gardening. He had two hunting hounds named Skipper and Tony that he kept outdoors even in the coldest weather because he didn't want to "ruin" them. At times the snow would accumulate to 24-36 inches, so deep that a path needed to be dug from the house to their dog houses near the detached garage in order to feed them. Only on a few extremely cold nights did he allow them into the house for warmth.

    Olin began smoking while working for Prudential. As a result of years if smoking he developed a "smoker's cough" better known as pulmonary edema. Olin suffered his first heart attack around 1960, eventually succumbing to atherosclerosis and severe myocardial fibrosis on October 10, 1965


    Buried:
    Lot 155 Section K Floral Park Cemetary Johnson City NY

    Died:
    Heart Attack

    Olin married Ethel Mae Banker 1 Sep 1917, Binghamton, Broome, New York, USA. Ethel (daughter of Nathaniel James Banker and Lila Ann Hinds) was born 23 May 1900, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 20 Feb 1972, Binghamton, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 10. Dorotha Mae Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 25 Feb 1920, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 2 Jan 2014, Thompsons Station, Williamson County, Tennessee, USA; was buried 9 Jan 2014, Binghamton, Broome County, New York, USA.
    2. 11. Lillian Maxine Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 28 Sep 1926, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 20 Feb 1949, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.
    3. 12. Leo Howard Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 9 Apr 1923, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 4 Jan 1924, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome County, New York, United States of America.
    4. 13. Leon Arthur Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point was born 9 Apr 1923, Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City, Broome, NY; died 20 Oct 2000, St Petersburg, Pinellas County, Florida; was buried 25 Oct 2000, Johnson City, Broome, New York.


Generation: 3

  1. 5.  George Lloyd Jamison Descendancy chart to this point (2.Clara2, 1.Frances1) was born 22 Sep 1916, Hallstead., Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 3 Oct 1984, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County.

    George married Emma Jean Oakley [Group Sheet]


  2. 6.  Luther William Jamison Descendancy chart to this point (2.Clara2, 1.Frances1) was born 7 Dec 1918, Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA; died 26 Nov 1998, Kirkwood, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Great Bend, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    After Luther's mother died of the flu epidemic, he ended up in a children's home in Connecticut. At that time a children's home had a bad reputation as being almost like a juvenile detention center. Olin drove from Pennsylvania to Connecticut and got him out. He became a liability. He began to drink heavily. Olin got a call from the local theater that Luther was at the theater drunk. Come and get him. He went to the slaughter house and brought back pig cholera to Olin's pigs that he was growing for market. Olin was slapping Luther to get him to pay attention and Luther put his fist through the wall.

    Luther married Rosamond Dickenson (daughter of Fred J Dickinson and Susie M Dickinson) [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 14. Francis Jamison  Descendancy chart to this point was born 8 Jun 1938, Hallstead Su, Pennsylvania; died 28 Apr 2001.

  3. 7.  Clara Joyce Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (3.Arthur2, 1.Frances1) was born 3 Oct 1925, Scranton, Pennsylvania; died Jun 1987.

  4. 8.  Shirley Elizabeth Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (3.Arthur2, 1.Frances1) was born 2 Mar 1927; died 24 May 2000, Prescott Valley, Yavapai, Arizona, USA.

    Shirley married Robert Leroy Eddy [Group Sheet]


  5. 9.  Michael D Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (3.Arthur2, 1.Frances1)

  6. 10.  Dorotha Mae Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (4.Olin2, 1.Frances1) was born 25 Feb 1920, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 2 Jan 2014, Thompsons Station, Williamson County, Tennessee, USA; was buried 9 Jan 2014, Binghamton, Broome County, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Chenango Valley Cemetery

    Dorotha married Lynn Thomas 18 Sep 1949, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA. Lynn (son of Ira Thomas and Minnie Delong) was born 12 Aug 1910, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 16 Feb 1993, Chenango Bridge, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Chenango Bridge, Broome, New York, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 15. John Reece Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 16. Michele Anne Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point

  7. 11.  Lillian Maxine Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (4.Olin2, 1.Frances1) was born 28 Sep 1926, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 20 Feb 1949, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Lillian died at 23 years of age of Kidney disease. She lived with Ellsworth Banker


    Buried:
    Floral Park Cemetary

    Died:
    Nephritis

    Lillian married Kenneth F. Bradley. Kenneth (son of Harry Bradley and Ira Bradley) was born 1925, New York; died 22 May 1948, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Chenango Valley, NY. [Group Sheet]


  8. 12.  Leo Howard Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (4.Olin2, 1.Frances1) was born 9 Apr 1923, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; died 4 Jan 1924, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Johnson City, Broome County, New York, United States of America.

    Notes:

    Leo was born with a spinal disorder. When the photo was taken of Leo and Leon as infants, they had to wire his head in an upright position to keep it upright for the photo.


  9. 13.  Leon Arthur Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (4.Olin2, 1.Frances1) was born 9 Apr 1923, Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City, Broome, NY; died 20 Oct 2000, St Petersburg, Pinellas County, Florida; was buried 25 Oct 2000, Johnson City, Broome, New York.

    Notes:

    Leon Arthur Sisco was the second child born to Olin Reece Sisco and Ethel Mae (Banker) Sisco on Monday, April 9, 1923 at the Wilson Memorial hospital in Johnson City, NY. Leon was a twin to Leo Howard, who was born with a spinal defect that took his life at nine months of age. At the time of Leons birth, father Olin was twenty-six and mother Ethel was twenty-three.

    Leon spent his formative years growing up at 6 Theron Street, Johnson City, New York. He attended elementary school in Johnson City.

    His grandparents owned a small family farm located on Bogart Street, Hallstead, PA and as the country was at the end of the Great Depression, they were having difficulty maintaining the farm financially. So, in early 1935, LeonĀ“s father Olin made the decision to move the family from Johnson City to the Hallstead farmstead to assist. Leon's parents waited until June when school was out for the summer before making the move.

    His sister Dorotha Sisco Thomas, relates a couple of stories that she remembers. In Hallstead, Leon and his grandfather Luther Sisco tended to chores on the family farm while Olin Sisco sold Prudential Insurance during the day. Olin never had more than three or four cows at a time. Leon and his grandfather had completed milking the cows and they had put the milk into the separator located in the basement of the home. At one point Leon did something that didn't suit his grandfather and Luther kicked Leon down the cellar steps with a pail of milk. Olin scolded his father for disciplining Leon saying that if there was any disciplining to do of his son that he would be the one to do it.

    Soon after moving to Hallstead, Pa, Leon got a dog and named him King. King would follow Leon everywhere he went. Leon told his mother that if he were ever sick and not able to do chores, just follow King because he knew where to go. The milk man that drove the delivery truck would intentionally get King to chase him. One day the driver deliberately ran over King. Leon found his best friend dead. Dorotha Sisco Thomas remembers Leon leaning against the kitchen counter crying saying that "My King is gone." He was very distraught at losing his best friend.

    While attending Hallstead High School, Leon met and fell in love with one of his classmates, Esther Louise Bailer. After school he would walk her from the school, located on Franklin Avenue, near the First Baptist Church to the DuBois farm on Harmony Road in Hallstead, Pennsylvania where her parents were the caretakers and the family lived.

    On December 7, 1941, Leon was milking the cows in the family barn. While milking, he had the Emerson box radio tuned to a music station when the news reports of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor were announced. After graduating from high school, Leon felt compelled to join the cause and on December 12, 1942 enlisted in the United States Navy. The day that he left from the Binghamton, NY train station bound for basic training in Albany, NY, he had left his dirty clothes on the bathroom floor having just taken a bath. Upon seeing his clothes his mother broke down and cried.

    While in the Navy, Leon was the signalman on supply ships and held the ratings of AS, Signalman Third Class (SM3c), Signalman Second Class (S2c), and Signalman First Class (S1c). He attended service schools at the US Naval Training Center in both Newport, RI and Noroton Heights, CT, SERVsch in Newport, RI, USN ACG Brooklyn, NY, USN ACG Treasure Island, San Francisco, CA and served on the ships USS Yucca and USS Thorn. He was honorably discharged in December 1945. Most of his travels were throughout South America and the South Pacific.

    When on leave, Esther would meet Leon in New York City. It was while on leave that on July 27, 1943, he and Esther were married at the First Baptist Church, Hallstead, Pennsylvania by Reverend Joseph B. Harrison. Leons son Terry Sisco has a notebook that contains the love letters that they exchanged throughout the war.

    After the war, they both worked in the Hershey Chocolate factory in Hershey, Pennsylvania. Leon had heard during the war that working for a utility provided consistent, secure work at good pay so he applied at the New York State Electric & Gas Company in Westover, New York. He started in 1946 as a laborer at the Goudy Station in Johnson City, New York, working on the coal piles moving the coal to the coal burning turbines. He advanced to pump operator in 1950, to turbine operator in 1951, to switchboard operator in 1955 and to unit boiler operator in 1968. He worked his way up through the ranks eventually becoming the foreman of the Goudy steam plant.

    Leon worked three jobs to support his family while the children were young. In addition to the electric company he also worked for the Pepsi-Cola company delivering soft drinks and then in evenings he would collect money that people owed for magazine subscriptions. Even though he worked long hours, he always spent time with the family on special outings such as visiting the Ross Park Zoo or weekends at the Chidesters cottage in Pennsylvania.

    On November 4, 1955, Leon and Esther signed a mortgage of $12,250 to purchase and build a home at 806 Douglas Drive, in the new and expanding suburbs of Endwell, New York. Both Leon and Esther were very active at the Berean Baptist Church in Endwell, New York. Leon helped to build the current structure on Farm-To-Market Road across from the Maine-Endwell High School. They enjoyed traveling and camping with other families of the church spending summers at the Chenango Valley State Park and Sherkston Shores in Canada.

    They purchased a mobile home at the Colony Park in St. Petersburg, Florida after retirement where they would spend the winter months near their son, Terry Sisco who lives in Tampa, FL. During summers, they spent time at Lake Timberline in St. Joseph, Pennsylvania where they permanently park their camper. In their retirement, Leon and Esther enjoyed traveling the country.

    In the late 1990's it was discovered that Leon had hepatitis C. Through the spring of 2000, Leon grew progressively weaker. He began kidney dialysis as his kidneys had begun to shut down. He wanted to get back to his home in Florida before the cold weather set in. It was only a short time after arriving in St Petersburg that on October 20, 2000 he passed away at 9:40 am with his entire family at his side.


    Buried:
    Lot 155 Section K Floral Park Cemetary Johnson City NY

    Leon married Esther Louise Bailer 27 Jul 1943, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania. Esther (daughter of Charles Bailer and Dora Maude Hobart) was born 2 May 1923, Otisco, Onondaga, New York, United States; died 7 May 2002, Johnson City, Broome, New York, United States; was buried May 2002, Johnson City, NY. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 17. Terry Leon Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 18. Yvonne Esther Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 19. Sandra Marlene Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Francis Jamison Descendancy chart to this point (6.Luther3, 2.Clara2, 1.Frances1) was born 8 Jun 1938, Hallstead Su, Pennsylvania; died 28 Apr 2001.

  2. 15.  John Reece Thomas Descendancy chart to this point (10.Dorotha3, 4.Olin2, 1.Frances1)

    John married Elrene Dorothy Roman (daughter of John Roman and Dorothy Standish) [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 20. Nathan Dwight Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 21. Christianna Elrene Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 22. David Reece Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 16.  Michele Anne Thomas Descendancy chart to this point (10.Dorotha3, 4.Olin2, 1.Frances1)

    Michele married David Hesse [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 23. Rachel Hesse  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 24. Joshua David Selley Hesse  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 17.  Terry Leon SiscoTerry Leon Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (13.Leon3, 4.Olin2, 1.Frances1)

    Terry married Lucinda Ann Youngs (daughter of Lester James Youngs and Mary Valeria McVicker) [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 25. Lacey Erin Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point

  5. 18.  Yvonne Esther Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (13.Leon3, 4.Olin2, 1.Frances1)

  6. 19.  Sandra Marlene Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (13.Leon3, 4.Olin2, 1.Frances1)

    Sandra married John Frederick Chauncey (son of William Chauncey and Irene Mary Moore) [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 26. Jennifer Robin Chauncey  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 27. Eric John Chauncey  Descendancy chart to this point