NameEugene FINK
Birth4 Sep 1886, (near) Versailles, Brown, Illinois
Death17 Dec 1930, Versailles, Brown, Illinois Age: 44
Death MemoAt home
Burial19 Dec 1930, Versailles, Brown, Illinois
Burial MemoWest Cemetery
Cause of deathTuberculosis
OccupationLock Hand At The La Grange Locks East Of Versailles, Illinois
Spouses
Birth16 Jul 1892, Ripley, Brown, Illinois
Death24 Apr 1955, Springfield, Sangamon, Illinois Age: 62
Death MemoSt. John’s Hospital
Burial27 Apr 1955, Versailles, Brown, Illinois
Burial MemoWest Cemetery
Misc. Notes
1. As told to me by my aunt, Hilma Jean Ivey Mortell: “My grandmother was great at taking pictures and writing on backs of them. She only went to school through 8th grade, but she was self educated in many ways. An intelligent woman. I have an old album of hers from the locks where Mother's family lived for a few years. My grandfather (Eugene) was a locks tender at the LaGrange Locks on the Illinois River near Versailles. Mother always said that those were the happiest times of her childhood and that they had a good life there. Mother's family and Alva's brother and his family, in addition to one other family, the Coles, were the only ones who lived there. Mother had great stories about when the river flooded, and she was quite a good ice skater when it froze.”
2. On the last page of a book entitled A Memorial History and Genealogical Record of the John Howell and Jacob Stutzman Families is the following, written in hand by Alva Fink: “‘ But though the large, black eyes opened when she raised her head, there was no recognition in their gaze; for the soul was preparing for it’s final flight, and was too busy to look out of it’s own windows.’ [from ‘St. Elmo’] Alva Fink” (it is thought that she wrote this after her son, Howell’s death in 1922).
Marriage17 Feb 1910, Quincy, Adams, Illinois
Misc. Notes
1. As told to me by my mother: “I do remember one thing about the locks. When the showboats would go through the locks, the kids were each given 5 cents to go aboard and buy a big stick of peppermint candy. Those were the best days of mom’s life, because they were all still alive. Her brother, Howell, died when he was 11, her dad when she was in high school, and Charlyne died when she was 21.”
[10]2. 1910 US Census, Illinois, Brown County, Versailles Township, District 9, Sheet 15B, Enumerated 6 May 1910:Eugene Fink; Head; Age 23; Married - 0 years; POB Illinois; Father POB Ohio; Mother POB Kentucky; Occupation - Farm Laborer; Weeks out of work in 1909 - 0; Able to Read and Write - Yes; Rents Home
Alvah Fink; Wife; Age 17; Married - 0 years; Mother of 0 children; POB Illinois; Father POB Illinois; Mother POB Illinois; Occupation - None; Able to Read and Write - Yes