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George D. Abbott

Spouse: Mary E. Carroll
Marriage: DATE UNKNOWN

  1. Edward Miller Abbott

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Mary Elizabeth Antler

Birth: 6 Oct 1888

Father: Charles C. Antler
Mother: Agnes Elvira Wheelock

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Eli Chase

Spouse: Betsey Wheelock
Marriage:

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Peter William Rattazzi

Spouse: Marion Emily Kiser
Marriage: 3 Jul 1933, Piermont, NH

  1. Peter William Rattazzi, born 15 Jul 1953, Barre, VT

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Caroline Wheelock

Birth: 4 Sep 1804, Charlton, Worcester Co, MA

Death: 4 Jul 1842, Oxford, Worcester Co, MA

Burial: Oxford South Congregational Church Cemetery, Oxford, Worcester Co, MA

Father: Aaron Wheelock
Mother: Ruth Towne

Notes:

According to the History of Oxford, Caroline was unmarried at the time of her death.

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Frank Emerson Wheelock

Birth: 11 Apr 1863, Holland, Erie Co, NY

Death: 28 Jun 1932, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas

Burial: Lubbock Cemetery, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, TX

Father: William Efner Wheelock
Mother: Louisa Diane Farrington

Spouse: Sylvia Belle Hunt
Marriage: 9 Dec 1891, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas

  1. Cyril Efner Wheelock, born 22 May 1893, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas
  2. Eva Minnette Wheelock, born 28 Jan 1895, TX
  3. Elwin Bryan Wheelock, born 20 Sep 1896, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas
  4. Howard Emerson Wheelock, born 25 Aug 1898
  5. Fern Marie Wheelock, born 19 Dec 1900, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas
  6. William Irvin Wheelock, born 26 Feb 1903, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas
  7. Edith Annette Wheelock, born 19 Jan 1905, Lubbock, Lubbock Co, Texas

Notes:

Frank Emerson Wheelock, founder of the City of Lubbock, and one of the most influential early-day citizens of the South Plains of Texas, was born in Holland (Erie County), New York, on April 11, 1863. The Wheelock family had come to America from England during the historic "Great Migration" of the early seventeenth century to escape persecution by the Stuart Kings. The family immediately assumed a leading role in the affairs of colonial New England. Frank Wheelock's parents, Dr. William Efner (1842-1902) and Louisa Diane (Farrington, 18??-1869) Wheelock made their home in New York, where Dr. Wheelock was a practicing physician.

After the death of his wife, while Frank Wheelock was yet a child, Dr. Wheelock moved to Madison, Wisconsin, taking young Frank and his brother, William Ava Wheelock, with him. According to family records, the father went on west to buy a farm in North Dakota, where the boys spent summers with him. During the school terms, Frank stayed in Madison with his Uncle, Jerome Wheelock, while William went to Moline, Ilinois, to stay with another Uncle.

In 1876, the Jerome Wheelocks moved to Moline taking Frank with them, and in 1878 the family moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where Frank finished school. His first employment was with S.J. Palmer, a fruit commission merchant of Minneapolis, but in 1887 he accepted a new position as a farm manager on the IOA ranch, an extensive livestock operation in West Texas. The Western Land and Live Stock Company, which owned the IOA ranch, was controlled by Stillman W. Wheelock, a great uncle of Frank Wheelock, who was a prominent businessman and civic leader of Moline. Stillman Wheelock was president of the well-known Moline Plow Company, the Moline Paper Company, and a number of other Illinois firms.

Frank Wheelock moved to Texas at the age of twenty-four, and from that time forward began to play an important role in the development of the South Plains region. Although the ranch was dissolved in 1892 following the death of his uncle, Frank Wheelock remained in Texas. He had become interested in ventures of his own. His interest in building a town on the plains was discussed by Rollie Burns, an IOA foreman:

"In the spring of 1890, a real estate man by the name of W.E. Rayner came to Lubbock County and began to talk about laying off a townsite and establishing a county seat...He wanted the good will of some of the local citizens, and offered Frank (F.E.) Wheelock and myself ten lots each if we would support him in his effort to get the county seat at Monterey. Wheelock and I had been watching his activity, and decided that the matter of starting a town was not so involved. We told him our support would cost a great deal more than ten lots apiece. He got mulish and said that was all he would give. Wheelock and I decided to start a town of our own."

This they did, with financial support from John T. Lofton and James Harrison of Fort Worth, and with Frank Wheelock as manager for the venture. Wheelock built the Nicolett Hotel which was to become a Lubbock landmark, a store building, and put in a well and windmill. This activity prompted Rayner, the rival town promoter, to suggest a compromise, which was effected December 19, 1890, by an agreement between F.E. Wheelock, J.T. Lofton, James Harrison, W.E. Rayner, and H. Rayner. A new section of land, where the town of Lubbock now stands, was selected as the site for a joint town venture, and Wheelock was appointed to manage the affairs. The success of his untiring efforts are witnessed today in the "Hub City" of the South Plains.

From that time on, Frank Wheelock's chief interest and occupation was the zealous promotion of the civic affairs of his beloved city. He served as Lubbock's first mayor and was on the first Lubbock County Commission, introduced the first cotton gin in Lubbock County, introduced the first self-binding harvest machine in the county, brought the first Sudan seed to Lubbock, and was one of the earliest breeders of registered Hereford cattle in the area. He also was Lubbock's first postmaster, and promoted the first motor bus line operating out of Lubbock. He was further interested in the development of the Lubbock Cemetery and the promotion of railroads and good highways. His name is perpetuated in Lubbock in the Wheelock Addition of the City and in the F.E. Wheelock School.

He continued private business ventures as a rancher and cattle-man, as a partner with Irving L. Hunt in the mercantile firm of Hunt and Wheelock, and as a financier.

Wheelock was married on December 9, 1891, to Sylvia Belle Hunt (1874-1944), a sister of Irving L. Hunt. This union was blessed with a thriving family of seven children: Cyril Efner Wheelock (1893-1946), Eva Minnette (Wheelock) Jarrott, Elwin Bryan Wheelock, Howard Emerson Wheelock, Fern Marie (Wheelock) Conley, William Irvin Wheelock, and Edith Annette (Wheelock) Tipps.

Frank Emerson Wheelock passed away in Lubbock on June 28, 1932. His death was mourned by the entire city. An editorial in the Lubbock newspaper said of him: "We should now lose sight of those makers of civilization-- those who braved dangers and hardships to make frontier history and pioneer achievement."

Sources:

  1. This biography was written and published by the Wheelock Elementary School, of Lubbock, Texas. It also appears here: Seymour V. Connor, Builders of the Southwest (Lubbock, Texas: Southwest Collection Texas Technological College, 1959), p. 266; online at Archive.org (https://archive.org/details/buildersofsouthw0000unse/page/266/mode/2up : accessed 26 June 2024).
  2. Sources cited in the original online posting include: Interview with Mrs. John Jarrott, Mrs. E.M. Conley, and Mrs. T.T. Tipps. 11 June 1956. Records of the Lubbock County Clerk, especially Vol. 5, page 387, Deed Records, and Vol. 5, p. 412, Deed Records. "Wheelock Scrapbook" in possession of Mrs. E.M. Conley Paddock, Buckley B. "A History of Northern and Western Texas." The Lewis Publishing Company: Chicago/New York. Vol. 1. 1906. "The Past and Present of Rock Island County." H.E. Kett & Co.: Chicago, Ilinois. 1877. Biographical sketch of Frank E. Wheelock, compiled by Alice H. Wheelock of Moline, Illinois. "Wheelock Geneology" compiled by Henry T. Wheelock, Altadena, California, in 1942. Holden, W.C. "Rollie Burns." Southwest Press: Dallas, Texas. 1932.
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Gertrude Winspear

Birth: 31 Jan 1862, Lancaster, Erie Co, NY

Death: 1864

Father: John Winspear
Mother: Catherine Elmira Wheelock

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