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Running Through the Sands of Time

Red Barn and Pasture

Our Ancestors Had Dreams...

A generation that ignores history has no past—and no future.—Robert A. Heinlein

Our ancestors had dreams too—for themselves and the people they loved. When those dreams disappear from memory, so does everything they fought for. That is what these stories are for: not just to remember, but to make sure the remembering means something.

Joel Stratton dreamed of Harvard and the law. When his father died and that door closed, he walked through every other one—canal driver, constable, doctor, spy—until the war and his wounds finally stopped him. Isaac King wanted nothing more than to pull his weight on a farm in the Haw Patch. In 1862 he lied about his age, carried that dream into battle after battle, hauled ammunition up Missionary Ridge on a foot that never stopped bleeding, and came home with one answer: “We did what had to be done. And we came home.” My father dreamed in radio waves and went to France at twenty-one to keep the signals humming, coming home with poison in his body that would steal him from us two decades later. My mother dreamed of escape and got it at sixteen on a train to Michigan with a marriage license full of lies—picking herself up from bad choices, violence, and loss, running a diner, raising a child in her mid-life. At seventy-four, after burying her fourth husband, she told the Social Security lady, “After four husbands, number five is going to be damn hard to find.”

That is why this site exists. Not a museum or a monument, but a living room where the family can sit down together across the centuries. Karen and I have spent more than fifty years gathering the pieces—the letters, the records, the photographs, the stories nobody else thought to save. Once you start listening to the dead, you find you can’t stop. They have too much to say.

WmFS — Wm. F. Stratton, April 2026

The Chosen

Bill and Karen on Mt. Ellinor
Bill & Karen Stratton

We are the chosen. In each family there is one who seems called to find the ancestors—to put flesh on their bones and make them live again, to tell the family story and feel that somehow they know and approve. Doing genealogy is not a cold gathering of facts but breathing life into all who have gone before. We are the storytellers of the tribe.

All the facts and dates we gather are just frames. We take those bits and pieces and give them voices, and those voices reach from the grave and beg us to tell their stories so they will not be forgotten. So we do. With love and care and faith, we do.

Where to Begin

Bertha King

Bertha Lena McConnell King

My Grandma King. I lived with my mother’s parents for the first ten years of my life, the longest stretch I spent with anyone growing up. She could feed a threshing crew and still have energy to darn socks by lamplight.

Read her story »
CPL Volney King

CPL Volney Wm King

My Grandpa King, about 1899 in Florida, awaiting a ride to Cuba that never came. He contracted malaria there, and it plagued him for the rest of his life. He taught me to fish, to read a baseball game, and to keep going.

Read his story »
Peg, Marilu, Mom and Me

Peg, Marilu, Mom & Me — 1938

My father, “Doc” Stratton, was dying from Banti’s Syndrome. Mom held us all together while making the long trips to Indianapolis. This is who we were before everything changed.

Read her story »
Gordon and Verna Schneider wedding

Gordon & Verna Schneider

Karen’s parents on their wedding day, Detroit, 1936. Gordon became a Detroit police officer and was killed in the line of duty in 1962. Verna raised two daughters on her own after that.

Meet the family »
Frederick N. and Ferdinand P. Stratton

Frederick & Ferdinand Stratton

Two brothers, both WW1 radio operators. Fred became a dentist; Ferdinand ran a radio-TV repair shop. Fred was my father—he died when I was three, and I spent the rest of my childhood trying to understand who he was.

Read Fred’s story »
McConnell Farm, April 8, 1898

McConnell Farm, 1898

Bertha, Mary, George, Isaac, Ross, Louisa, and Wm J. McConnell. The homestead where Grandma King grew up and where I spent my first years—the place that made me who I am.

Read their story »

The Front Porch

Two new stories this week, both from the Pacific war. Cousin Jack: Easter Morning at Okinawa — Jack D. McConnell of Green Township enlisted the day before he turned eighteen, served as a plank owner aboard USS Knudson, was present when 180,000 men went ashore on Easter Sunday 1945, and entered Tokyo Bay two days after the surrender. The other is GM3C Bill Rhinehart: Last Muster Call — Bill Rhinehart of Whitley County enlisted two days before Christmas 1941 at seventeen, made plank owner on USS Cleveland, earned his rating through North Africa and the Solomons and Empress Augusta Bay, missed his ship at San Pedro, and finished the war on USS Conner at the last amphibious landing of the Pacific. He was my mother Lucille's fourth husband, and he had a beautiful Irish tenor voice. Thirty-five pieces in the library now. Read the Histories.

WmFS — Wm. F. Stratton, May 2026

Explore the Site

By the Numbers

834 individuals · 26 veterans · 7 wars · 106 occupations

Veterans by Conflict (26)
    Revolutionary War (4)
  • Francis STRATTON
  • John STRATTON
  • Jonathan STRATTON
  • Ephraim WARREN
  • Civil War (9)
  • Nelson DONNELLAN
  • Thomas Loney DONNELLAN
  • Joseph W FABER
  • Jacob J GERBER
  • George Washington HOLLABAUGH
  • Isaac William KING
  • Alonzo Thomas PRENTISS
  • Norman Melvin PUTNAM
  • Ferdinand SCHELLSCHMIDT
  • Spanish-American War (2)
  • Volney William KING
  • Harry Percy STRATTON
  • World War I (4)
  • Fred M BELL
  • Ferdinand Paul STRATTON
  • Frank Arthur STRATTON
  • Frederick Nelson STRATTON
  • World War II (4)
  • Jack D MCCONNELL
  • William Eugene RHINEHART
  • William Lewis RHINEHART
  • Eleanor Marie SCHNEIDER
  • Vietnam War (2)
  • Karen Sue SCHNEIDER
  • William Frederick STRATTON
  • Gulf War (1)
  • William Ronald PATTON
Occupations (106)
    Healthcare
  • Harold Adair LUCKEY — Physician
  • James Edward LUCKEY — Physician
  • Dr James Robert ROTH — Physician
  • Arthur F SCHELLSCHMIDT — Physician
  • Karen Sue SCHNEIDER — RN, 1966-1975
  • Karen Sue SCHNEIDER — Family Nurse Practitioner, 1975-2010
  • Francis Joel STRATTON — physician
  • William Frederick STRATTON — Clinical Laboratory Tech 1959 to 1965
  • William Frederick STRATTON — Health Care Administration 1965 forward
  • Education
  • Nellie Grace BARKLEY — Teacher
  • Elias Baron GERBER — Teacher
  • Fred George HENDRICKSON — Teacher/School Administrator
  • Lucille Dee KING — School Lunch Cook (Lignier Consolidated Schools)
  • Zahazy Jarquin PALACIOS — Teacher
  • Otilie Katherine SCHELLSCHMIDT — Teacher
  • Law & Law Enforcement
  • Gordon George SCHNEIDER — Police Officer
  • Francis Joel STRATTON — lawman (constable&ldeputyusmarshall
  • Frank Nelson STRATTON — Attorney
  • Business & Office
  • James Arthur BIDDLE — Wholesale Grocery Executive
  • Donald D CURTIS — Furniture Repair
  • Clayton Volney KING — furniture manufacturing executive
  • Lucille Dee KING — Accounting clerk, J.L. Hudson Department Store
  • Donald SCHWAB — Department Store Executive
  • Francis Joel STRATTON — patent clerk/spy
  • Justine Maxwell STRATTON — Sales Executive
  • William Frederick STRATTON — Administrative Assistant, Puget Sound Blood Center, Seattle
  • Trades & Service
  • Jesus Alarcon CORRAL — Landscape Artist. Stone Mason
  • Joseph W FABER — Wagon Maker
  • Roman Lamont HUNTER — Carpenter/Builder
  • William Eldren HUNTER — Builder
  • Clifton A SORENSEN — Masonary
  • Jarred Elika STRATTON — Builder
  • William Eric STRATTON — Masonary Wizard
  • Agriculture
  • Glenn R AREHART — Farmer
  • Phillip Lee AREHART — Farmer
  • John A BARKLEY — Farmer
  • Lester W BARKLEY — Farmer
  • Lloyd W BENDER — Farmer
  • James W CASE — Farmer
  • George HOLLABAUGH — Farmer
  • George Washington HOLLABAUGH — Farmer
  • Isaac KING — Farmer
  • Isaac William KING — Farmer
  • Volney William KING — Farmer
  • William T KING — Farmer
  • Isaac Nicholas MCCONNELL — Farmer
  • Isaac William MCCONNELL — Farmer
  • Jack D MCCONNELL — Farmer
  • William Johnson MCCONNELL — Farmer
  • Carl Richard SCHLEMMER — Farmer
  • John STRATTON — Farmer
  • Richard STRATTON — Farmer
  • Richard STRATTON — Farmer
  • Richard STRATTON — Farmer
  • Samuel STRATTON — Farmer
  • Samuel STRATTON — Farmer
  • Samuel STRATTON — Farmer
  • Terry Robert VANETTE — Insurance, Farm
  • Creative
  • Kalama Jedediah Stratton JARQUIN — surfer
  • Eleanor Marie SCHNEIDER — writer
  • Frank Nelson STRATTON — Short Stroy Writer, Publioshed
  • Other
  • Adrian Lamont BIDDLE — Art Supplies Sales
  • Francis Asberry CLAYTON — Fireman
  • Plenty Francis CLAYTON — Fireman
  • Plenty Francis CLAYTON — Fireman
  • Donald Henry COCKERLINE — Fireman, Chief
  • Ernest CORRAL — Painter
  • Jay Joseph CORRAL — Painter
  • Benjamin F GERBER — Tinsmith
  • Elias Baron GERBER — Hardware
  • Elias Baron GERBER — Surveyor
  • Lucille Dee KING — Co-owner and cook, train car diner (World War II era)
  • Lucille Dee KING — Lunch counter waitress, dime store (Matthew‚Äùs in Ligonier)
  • Lucille Dee KING — Commercial laundromat Attendant
  • William LEBENZON — Lumber Buyer
  • Sidney E ORT — Clothiing Store Proprietor
  • Ronald Allen PATTON — Railroad Enfineer
  • Ronald Allen PATTON — Chemical Engineer
  • Samuel William PATTON — Indiana State Patrolman
  • Samuel William PATTON — Antique Repair
  • Samuel William PATTON — Accountant
  • William Ronald PATTON — Fighter Pilot
  • William Ronald PATTON — Airline Pilot
  • William Ronald PATTON — Test Pilot
  • Aaron J RIMMEL — Banker
  • Ferdinand SCHELLSCHMIDT — Musician
  • Alvin Jack SCHLEMMER — Woodworker
  • Frederick J SCHWAB — Banker
  • Charles C SMITH — Auto Dealer
  • Dustin Porter STRATTON — Master Baker,Chef, Food Wizard
  • Ferdinand Paul STRATTON — Wireless Radio Operator
  • Frank Nelson STRATTON — Flour Mill Worker
  • Frank Nelson STRATTON — State and County Prosecuter
  • Frederick Nelson STRATTON — Wireless Radio Operator
  • Jeffrey Porter STRATTON — Construction Manager
  • John Stalham STRATTON — Yeoman
  • Matthew Barkley STRATTON — Construction Manager
  • Paul David STRATTON — Electronic Engineer
  • Samuel Edgerton STRATTON — Millwright
  • Samuel Edgerton STRATTON — County Supervisor
  • Thomas STRATTON — Yeoman
  • William STRATTON — Yeoman
  • George Roland STUMPF — Aircraft Engineer
  • Jason Jay VANETTE — Airline Pilot
  • Jeffery Robert VANNETTE — Sheriff, Canine Handler
  • John Marshall WALLACE — Auto Mechanic

About This Site

Over 50 years of research into the Stratton, Schneider, King, and allied families—from colonial Massachusetts to Indiana and beyond. Built by Bill & Karen Stratton.

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