James Wesley Banker

Male 1840 - 1918  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  James Wesley Banker was born 10 Jan 1840, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 19 Jan 1918, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

    James married Ann E Banker 1865. Ann was born 1839, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1902; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 2. Arthur Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born Dec 1883, Pennsylvania, United States of America; died 1948, Owego, Tioga County, New York, United States of America; was buried , Candor, Tioga County, New York, United States of America.
    2. 3. Weslake (Wesley) J Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 10 May 1874, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1942; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.
    3. 4. Leon Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 10 Mar 1877, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 30 Sep 1935, New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
    4. 5. George H. Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1867, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1881; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    5. 6. Minnie Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born Sep 1867, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1939, Vestal, Broome, New York, United States.
    6. 7. Nathaniel James Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 7 Jul 1873, Pennsylvania; died 25 Jun 1925, Easton, Northampton, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, PA.
    7. 8. Alson A Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1869, New York; died 1879; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    8. 9. Wesley Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1871; died 1873; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Arthur Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born Dec 1883, Pennsylvania, United States of America; died 1948, Owego, Tioga County, New York, United States of America; was buried , Candor, Tioga County, New York, United States of America.

    Arthur married Ida E. Banker. Ida was born 1873, New York, United States of America; died 1950; was buried , Candor, Tioga County, New York, United States of America. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Weslake (Wesley) J Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 10 May 1874, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1942; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Wesley Banker Tombstone http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=128693df-bac5-4e14-9166-b3a6780ba3ad&tid=11714637&pid=-412810012

    Weslake married Kittie M. Kittie was born 1875, United States; died 1929; was buried , Johnson City, Broome, New York. [Group Sheet]


  3. 4.  Leon Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 10 Mar 1877, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 30 Sep 1935, New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, United States.

  4. 5.  George H. Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 1867, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1881; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

  5. 6.  Minnie Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born Sep 1867, Great Bend, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 1939, Vestal, Broome, New York, United States.

    Minnie married Otto Kinney 1891. Otto was born Apr 1869, Illinois. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 10. Aringten Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point was born Jun 1892, Illinois.
    2. 11. Ollie Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point was born Dec 1895, New York.
    3. 12. Fred Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point was born Aug 1897, New York.

    Minnie married . Unknown [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 13. Elsie M Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1906, United States.
    2. 14. Frank S Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1904, United States.
    3. 15. Annie A Kinney  Descendancy chart to this point

  6. 7.  Nathaniel James BankerNathaniel James Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 7 Jul 1873, Pennsylvania; died 25 Jun 1925, Easton, Northampton, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, PA.

    Notes:

    James Banker Killed in Train Wreck
    Sisco Family GenealogyTerry Sisco

    Each year the Primitive Methodist Church of Johnson City, New York set aside a special Sunday in June to celebrate Childrens Day and the date selected in 1925 was Sunday, June 14. Ranked somewhere after Christmas, Easter, and Thanksgiving, Childrens Day was a special celebration to recognize and honor the children of the church. The childrens choir would sing. Memorized Bible verses would be recited by kids too young to understand the full impact of their message. Some of the older children even got to read something that they had written in Sunday school about their faith.

    It was also a day for parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles to marvel at how much cuter, taller, smarter or prettier their child was compared to the others. The week leading up to this special day was spent memorizing lines and rehearsing parts.
    There should be no doubt that there is something truly special about granddaughters, especially first granddaughters. On this particular Sunday morning, number Six Theron Street in Johnson City, New York was full of energy and excitement. First child, first grandchild and first niece, Dorotha Sisco was about to make her debut in the childrens program.

    Like a favorite doll, Dorothas two aunts, Lillian and Lorena Banker spent an inordinate amount of time curling and fixing her hair, making certain that she would be the cutest girl in the five-year-old class. Ethel Sisco appreciated her two sisters help dressing Dorotha. She and husband Olin had their hands full getting two year old Leon dressed and ready for church.
    Dorothas grandparents James and Lila Banker had spent the night as they wouldnt have missed this performance for the world. James, a conductor for the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western (D, L & W) railroad line was elated that his schedule worked out so that he could enjoy the festivities and family time together. That is, until sometime after breakfast.
    With no phone of their own, the Sisco's relied on their next door neighbor who had a phone to relay messages. At approximately 8:45 a.m., the neighbor came over and advised James that there was an emergency call for him. He had left the neighbor's number as an emergency contact number for work. The caller advised him that he was needed immediately to fill in over the next few days for a fellow conductor who had fallen ill.
    The eastbound passenger train was known as Extra 1104. It was called Extra because it was a non-scheduled special run of German-Americans on an excursion from Chicago, Illinois to Bremen, Germany.

    Each year travel agent Leopold Neumann arranged this trip of mid-western Germans to visit the fatherland from which they or their ancestors had emigrated years earlier. The D, L & W train would take them to Hoboken, New Jersey where they would board transatlantic steamer, "Republic" awaiting to take them the remaining distance to Bremen. The designation of "1104" was given because this was the number permanently assigned to the massive steam engine.

    Trailing behind Engine No. 1104 were two coaches and five Pullman sleeping cars, all of steel construction. All 182 passengers, mostly from Chicago were aboard and the porters were loading the final bags for the Monday, June 15, mid-morning departure. The Chicago travel agency had nailed large banners on the sides of the cars emblazoned with "See the Old Country Again."

    Under the grey Chicago skies that threatened rain, one can imagine the care-free group of German-Americans leaning out of the windows waving good-bye as No. 1104 and its seven cars gradually strained and shuttered as it pulled away from the station.

    Leaving Chicago, the excursion travelled westward through Buffalo, New York. The drizzle grew into a heavy rain by late-afternoon as the train entered the Binghamton, New York area. The bad weather was probably never noticed by the passengers now a few hours into the excitement of their adventure. Children were likely running through the aisles or exploring their little sleeping compartment on the Pullmans. Some of the adults were perhaps sitting around in the coach cars in animated discussion about finally returning to the old country. Others stared out the windows enjoying the panorama as the train swept along the scenic Susquehanna River, passing by the lush green farmlands and crossing one of the marvels of modern engineering, the historic Starucca Bridge in Lanesboro, Pennsylvania.

    The rains subsided about twenty miles down the tracks from Binghamton in New Milford, Pennsylvania. Within forty-five minutes the train would be making a stop in Scranton for fuel and a fresh crew.

    Two experienced railroad men took charge of the train at the Scranton station. Up front, Engineer Loomis was in charge assisted by a fireman whose job it was to shovel coal into the firebox of the engine, maintain the steam pressure of the boiler and to keep the cylinders on the drive wheels oiled while the train was underway. Conductor James Banker, now into his second day filling in for the ill co-worker was responsible for the seven cars, the D, L, & W employees, the cargo and most importantly, its passengers. He was assisted by a head brakeman along with a flagman by the name of Judge who was stationed in the rear of the train. There were also several porters on the Pullman sleeping cars.

    This final portion of the trip would take them southeast from Scranton through Moscow, Gouldsboro, and Pocono Summit. It would then continue down through the Delaware Water Gap at East Stroudsburg crossing the Delaware River exiting Pennsylvania into New Jersey. From there it would head on an easterly route through Hackettstown, Morristown and on into Hoboken where the passengers would board their awaiting ships. The rains intensified as the train left Scranton at approximately 10:15 pm.

    Hackettstown, New Jersey is nestled among the historic Revolutionary War farm towns and villages with names such as Great Meadows, Liberty and Washington. It marks the halfway point between the agrarian tranquillity of Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania to its west and the modernity of New York City fifty-two miles to the east.

    The same storm front that drenched Binghamton hours earlier stretched all the way east to the Atlantic Ocean. Hackettstown was hit with a violent thunderstorm the evening of Monday, June 15. A lick of lightning made a direct hit on the Williams and Hibler Lumberyard (now the site of Blue Ridge Lumber). The ensuing fire, fuelled by the stacks of lumber lit the dark night sky of Hackettstown like a flickering candle lights a darkened room. Most of the townsfolk worked unsuccessfully to quell the blaze that eventually burned the lumberyard to the ground. Yet, unbeknownst to anyone, the storm had also set the stage for another, more deadly disaster.

    The Rockport Crossing is the point where the D, L, & W track crosses rural Hazen Road in Rockport, New Jersey. In 1925, the state completed the purchase of 492 acres for a pheasant farm where Hazen Road slopes steeply towards the tracks.

    Joseph Snyders house sat about three and one-quarter miles from the Hackettstown train station not far from the Rockport Crossing. Having spent most of his evening watching the lumberyard blaze from his home, Joseph was surprised when he looked at his pocket watch and it read 2:23 a.m. On his way to retire for the evening he could see the headlamp of Extra 1104 approaching from a distance. As it got closer he noticed that the tender, the small car just behind the engine that carries the supply of coal seemed to be oddly derailed.

    The recommended speed for trains through this section of track is seventy miles per hour. Due to the poor weather, Engineman Loomis was travelling at approximately fifty miles per hour when his engine No. 1104 began to derail from the track twisting out of control. There was no way for him to see or know that the torrential downpour had washed debris across the track at the Rockport Crossing. With the tracks covered with five to six inches of dirt and gravel there was nothing to keep the steel wheels of the front engine truck, the first set of wheels of the engine on the tracks. At 2:24 a.m. the engine ploughed through the crossing but the pony tender with its wheels off the track clutched the frogs of a switch derailing the engine and causing the coach cars to jump the tracks and begin a staccato bone jarring tap dance along the wooden ties of pine and oak.

    The forward inertia twisted and tossed the steel frames of the cars as if they were mere toys. Loomis never had time to apply the brakes. At 2:25 am, on the morning of Tuesday, June 16, 1925, engine 1104 came to rest on its side. The first two cars, the coach cars filled with fifty people decoupled and came crashing across the steam engine.

    The first car came to rest across the boiler of the engine while the second coach car came to rest across the rear of the boiler. The impact of the collision practically ripped all of the steam fittings and valves away from the boiler permitting the pressurized steam and hot water to spew upward like a geyser into the two passenger cars resting above. A New York Times article later appropriately dubbed the first coach car as the Death Car.

    Joseph Snyder sounded the alarm by telephone and then, with his wife rushed to the aid of the victims. Lyman Gulick, another farmer rode half clad in his automobile to Hackettstown, two miles away and summoned physicians and ambulances from there and other towns.

    With little rest from fighting the earlier fires at the Williams and Hibler Lumber Yard, the citizens and doctors of Hackettstown rushed to aid the victims of this horrific accident. Arriving to the hissing and whistling sounds of the pressurized steam escaping its boiler, No. 1104 appeared in the dark as a moaning, writhing, dying behemoth. They were aghast at what they found. The suffering was intense.

    Using sheets and pillows appropriated from the Pullman cars, the citizen rescuers struggled to bring the slightest bit of the comfort to those scalded by the steam. One man jerked a roll of bills from his pocket and begged Joseph Snyder to kill him ending his misery. Only a few trainmen and passengers were killed instantly. One woman was decapitated. The others went through hours of agony before they succumbed to their injuries.

    Those that could be transported were taken to the hospital in Easton, Pennsylvania twenty-five miles to the southwest of Hackettstown. Others were transported to hospitals in, Dover and Morristown as there was no hospital in Hackettstown. On June 17, police were forced to draw up lines around the Easton hospital as hundreds of grief stricken relatives caused a near riot in an effort to ascertain any information about their loved ones.

    Grand-daughter Dorotha Sisco Thomas remembers hearing the story that James Banker was seen walking down the tracks with his conductors lantern aglow, perhaps in a state of shock from severe scalding shouting, My God, would someone please help me. James Nathaniel Banker died nine days later on June 25, 1925 at the age of fifty-two.

    Mr. and Mrs. John Pfeiffer, an elderly couple from Hold Corss, Iowa, riding in the front of the first coach miraculously survived with only a few bruises. Other survivors told of a slightly scalded Chicago woman who limped moaning through the wreckage until she found her missing purse.

    A total of fifty passengers died, some from the impact of the crash, most from being scalded by the inescapable steam. Of the five crew members, only Flagman Judge survived as he was positioned at the rear of the train.

    An investigation into the accident by the W. P. Borland, Director of the Bureau of Safety for the Interstate Commerce Commissions found that it was just that...an accident. There was no blame to be placed, no fingers to be pointed as all had done their jobs appropriately. It was deemed an act of God.

    Today, the Rockport Crossing near Hackettstown, New Jersey is peaceful and quiet. In the area of the pheasant farm on Hazen Road near the crossing there is a simple garden to mark the site of the crash that happened generations in the past. In the garden is a brass plaque memorializing the final stop of engine No. 1104 and honouring the souls that were lost that early Tuesday morning of June 16, 1925


    Buried:
    Rose Hill Cemetary

    Died:
    Train Wreck

    Nathaniel married Lila Ann Hinds 1897. Lila (daughter of Albert Post Hinds and Lilly P Sweet) was born 20 Jul 1872, Montrose, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 30 Oct 1950, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried , Hallstead, PA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 16. Lorena Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 17 May 1907, Hallstead, Pennsylvania, USA; died 5 Mar 1964, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 17. Mildred Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 8 Apr 1899, Pennsylvania; died Apr 1979, Florence, Fremont, Colorado, USA; was buried , Fremont County, Colorado, United States of America.
    3. 18. Ethel Mae Banker  Descendancy chart to this point 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.
    4. 19. Alvin Elsworth Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 8 Jan 1898, Pennsylvania; died 2 May 1975, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Binghamton, Broome County, New York, United States of America.
    5. 20. Lillian M Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 13 Oct 1903, Pennsylvania; died 11 Jun 1982, Woodbridge, Prince William County, Virginia, USA.
    6. 21. Howard James Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 15 Dec 1908, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 12 Dec 1969; was buried , Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    7. 22. Erma Banker  Descendancy chart to this point was born 22 Nov 1910, Hallstead Susqa County, Pennsylvania; died 31 Aug 1911, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

  7. 8.  Alson A Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 1869, New York; died 1879; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

  8. 9.  Wesley Banker Descendancy chart to this point (1.James1) was born 1871; died 1873; was buried , Hallstead, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 10.  Aringten Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1) was born Jun 1892, Illinois.

  2. 11.  Ollie Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1) was born Dec 1895, New York.

  3. 12.  Fred Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1) was born Aug 1897, New York.

  4. 13.  Elsie M Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1) was born 1906, United States.

  5. 14.  Frank S Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1) was born 1904, United States.

  6. 15.  Annie A Kinney Descendancy chart to this point (6.Minnie2, 1.James1)

  7. 16.  Lorena Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 17 May 1907, Hallstead, Pennsylvania, USA; died 5 Mar 1964, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Lorena married Raymond Smith. Raymond (son of William H. Smtih and Eva Cooper) was born 17 Jul 1907, Newton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died Mar 1970, Newton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 23. Howard Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 24. William H Smith  Descendancy chart to this point was born 19 Jun 1944; died 8 Aug 1974, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania; was buried , Newton.
    3. 25. Raymond Smith, Jr  Descendancy chart to this point was born 6 Jun 1941, Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA; died 11 Aug 2015, Georgetown, VA; was buried , Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, United States of America.
    4. 26. Ronald Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 27. Gerald Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    6. 28. Roger Smith  Descendancy chart to this point

    Lorena married Carl Kelley [Group Sheet]


  8. 17.  Mildred Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 8 Apr 1899, Pennsylvania; died Apr 1979, Florence, Fremont, Colorado, USA; was buried , Fremont County, Colorado, United States of America.

    Notes:

    Banker Siblings http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=88a86042-5312-440a-97dc-c8052bd581aa&tid=11714637&pid=-412810014

    Mildred married John VanAucken 25 Aug 1917, Broome, New York, USA. John was born Abt 1892, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 29. James VanAucken  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 30. Jack Vanauker  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 31. Lila VanAuken  Descendancy chart to this point

  9. 18.  Ethel Mae BankerEthel Mae Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) 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.

    Notes:

    Ethel Mae Banker Sisco was born the third of six children of James Nathaniel and Lila Ann (Hinds) Banker on May 23, 1900 in Hallstead, PA. Both twenty-seven years old at the time. The family rented a home at 213 Fourth Street in Hallstead, PA., within walking distance of the Hallstead train depot where Ethel's father worked as a brakeman for the D, L, & W Railroad.

    The 1910 US Federal census shows ten year old Ethel still living at the Fourth Street address. The Banker family were some of the first settlers in the Hallstead area. The family farmstead and cemetery are located at the intersection of SR1022 and Hunzinger Road up DuBois Street, just up the hill from the Fourth Street home of James and Lila.

    Like most of her generation, Ethel's education perhaps ended around the sixth grade. Not much is known about her teenage years.

    While it is not known when or where she met Olin Sisco, it can be surmised that they either met each other after Olin's family relocated from Nicholson, PA to Hallstead sometime between 1910 and 1917 or, perhaps she began working at the Endicott Shoe Company where her brother was employed before she was seventeen and met Olin there. Seventeen year old Ethel and twenty year old Olin were married on September 1, 1917 at the parsonage of the Grace Baptist church by Rev. H. M. Shepson, a well known evangelist throughout the area. Ethel continued to work at EJ until she and Olin Sisco began their family in 1920.

    One year after their wedding, Olin would be called to enlist in the US Army and sent to basic training in Georgia. While Ethel must have missed Olin during this period, his time in the army was shortened and he would never deploy as WWI came to an end five months into his enlistment.

    On February 25, 1920, three years after their wedding and at 20 years old Ethel would experience joy as first child Dorotha was born. Life continued to get better and better and by 1923 they purchased a home at 6 Theron Street and in 1923 the twins, Leo and Leon were born.

    Unfortunately that joy would begin to turn to sorrow, grief and misery as Leo, born with a spinal defect died nine months after his birth. As was customary in those days, the deceased would be mourned in the home and then taken by the funeral home to the grave site. Dorotha Sisco Thomas remembers sitting in the back seat of the funeral home's large car between her mother and father with Leo's casket sitting across their laps as they were driven the few short blocks to the Floral Park Cemetery in Johnson City, NY.

    In 1925, the federal census shows that Olin, Ethel, Dorotha, and Leon lived at 6 Theron Street along with Lorena Banker and Ellsworth Banker, Ethel's sister and brother who were also working at the EJ sho factory at the time. The 1930 census shows that Olin, Ethel, Dorotha and Lillian continued to live at the 6 Theron Street address and that Lorena and Ellsworth had moved out.

    By 1940, the family had moved to Hallstead where Ethel's tribulations continued in marriage. It is often said that when you marry, you marry the entire family. This unfortunately was the case for Ethel as her mother-in-law for some reason despised her. Grandson Terry Sisco remembers Ethel as a warm, caring and giving woman who was very devout in her faith in Christ. It is not known when her relationship with Mary Sisco deteriorated but she endured a difficult relationship with her mother-in-law who overtly expressed that she would do all in her power to break up Ethel's marriage to Olin if "it were the last thing I do before I die."

    While Dorotha and Leon grew up as model children, Lillian, the Sisco's third child was more of a free spirit. She died at the young age of twenty-three of kidney failure adding to the emotional toll that Ethel had endured her entire married life. It was Ethel's faith in God that sustained her through these tribulations.

    Ethel typically wore a "house dress" with an apron over it and black orthopedic high heel shoes. She loved baking. Her baked goods along with canning fruits and vegetables added to the finances of the family. She would take her goods to market in Johnson City, NY along with produce raised on the family farm.

    She was a faithful member of the Hallstead Baptist church and was a very devout Christian who intensely loved her family. Her lifelong friend was Bessie Gathany, with whom she spent many hours sewing and conversing. Bessie, her husband Dan along with Olin and Ethel took trips from Hallstead to Indian Rocks Beach, Florida in the days before Interstate highways.

    She was a very talented seamstress. Esther Sisco, Ethel's daughter-in-law worked for the Harvey's Chicken farm in the 1950's and would bring collect the empty chicken feed bags that were typically made of flannel. She would give these to Ethel who would make grandson Terry Sisco pajamas from the material. Ethel loved her grandchildren and enjoyed them spending weekends at her house and attending church with her. As a treat she would make "bread, butter and sugar sandwiches.

    As a hobby she raised African violets.


    Buried:
    Floral Park Cemetary

    Died:
    Stroke and Diabetic complications

    Ethel married Olin Reece Sisco 1 Sep 1917, Binghamton, Broome, New York, USA. Olin (son of Frances Luther Sisco and Mary Mercy Phillips) 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. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 32. 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. 33. 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. 34. 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. 35. 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.

  10. 19.  Alvin Elsworth Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 8 Jan 1898, Pennsylvania; died 2 May 1975, Johnson City, Broome, New York, USA; was buried , Binghamton, Broome County, New York, United States of America.

    Notes:

    ),(

    Alvin married Blacka Vera [Group Sheet]


  11. 20.  Lillian M Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 13 Oct 1903, Pennsylvania; died 11 Jun 1982, Woodbridge, Prince William County, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:


  12. 21.  Howard James Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 15 Dec 1908, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 12 Dec 1969; was buried , Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    ),(

    Howard married Melvina Fletcher 26 Oct 1937, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA. Melvina (daughter of Thomas Fletcher and Alice Durden) was born 2 Sep 1907, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, USA; died 4 Mar 2000, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania; was buried , Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet]


  13. 22.  Erma Banker Descendancy chart to this point (7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 22 Nov 1910, Hallstead Susqa County, Pennsylvania; died 31 Aug 1911, Hallstead, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 23.  Howard Smith Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

    Howard married Olga. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 36. Butch Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 37. Terry Smith  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 24.  William H Smith Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 19 Jun 1944; died 8 Aug 1974, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania; was buried , Newton.

    William married Ann Wilkers. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 38. Robin Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 39. Marla Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 40. Randy Smith  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 25.  Raymond Smith, Jr Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) was born 6 Jun 1941, Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA; died 11 Aug 2015, Georgetown, VA; was buried , Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, United States of America.

  4. 26.  Ronald Smith Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

    Ronald married Nacny Mancini. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 41. Alex Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 42. Lori Smith  Descendancy chart to this point

  5. 27.  Gerald Smith Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

    Gerald married Joyce Schuler. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 43. Gerald Smith, Jr  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 44. Stephen Smith  Descendancy chart to this point

  6. 28.  Roger Smith Descendancy chart to this point (16.Lorena3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

    Roger married Delores. [Group Sheet]


  7. 29.  James VanAucken Descendancy chart to this point (17.Mildred3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

    James married Mildred Aleene Beck (daughter of George R Beck and Francis A Beck) [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 45. Truman Ray Van Auken  Descendancy chart to this point

  8. 30.  Jack Vanauker Descendancy chart to this point (17.Mildred3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

  9. 31.  Lila VanAuken Descendancy chart to this point (17.Mildred3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1)

  10. 32.  Dorotha Mae Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (18.Ethel3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) 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. 46. John Reece Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 47. Michele Anne Thomas  Descendancy chart to this point

  11. 33.  Lillian Maxine Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (18.Ethel3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) 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]


  12. 34.  Leo Howard Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (18.Ethel3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) 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.


  13. 35.  Leon Arthur Sisco Descendancy chart to this point (18.Ethel3, 7.Nathaniel2, 1.James1) 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. 48. Terry Leon Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 49. Yvonne Esther Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 50. Sandra Marlene Sisco  Descendancy chart to this point