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    1. [CAMARIPO] SHIMER info
    2. Don Fitchett
    3. Hi List, I've been corresponding with John Egnew, JOHNEGNEW@aol.com, who is descended from the SHIMER line, part of which, came to CA in 1849 and were pioneers in the Coulterville area. He emailed me jpgs of two newspaper clipping that he had on the James Shimer who settled in Coulterville. I've transcribed the two clippings below. If anyone would like the jpg of the clippings, pls contact me and I will email them to you. Is anyone researching the SHIMER line? Have a happy 4th! Don The following article is a newspaper clipping from an unknown newspaper or a NSDAR publication. The article is in the possesion of John Egnew, JOHNEGNEW@aol.com James Shimer returned to Cadiz, Ohio from his first trip to California where he married Mary Keesey in 1852. Several years later he returned to California bringing his wife and son by wagon train. They settled in Coulterville where he ran a blacksmith shop and mined. They had five children, three boys and two girls. Their son Austin was born in Cadiz. The other children, Amanda, Frances, Arthur and George were born in Coulterville. Austin and his wife Clara had seven children, James who is unmarried, Armanda who married George Dexter, Myrtle K. Clark, Norma “Nell” who married Will Canova, Florence Metz, Edith and Alice (Alicia). These children are all buried in the Coulterville Cemetery. Armanda Shimer married James Halstead of Coulterville and Hazel Green, a stopover on the Coulterville Road, the first wagon road to Yosemite Valley. They had seven children: Mary Elizabeth, Robert Franklin, Lulu, James Shimer, Jeanette, Gertrude and August. Mary Elizabeth married Frank Albert Bondshu. Two of their sons Harold and Lowell Bondshu (third generation Californians), Harold’s son, Robert (fourth generation) and Bill, Coby and Frank and Krista, the children of Robert and Rachel Bondshu, (fifth generation Mariposa County) all live in Mariposa and are descendants of this branch of the family. Robert Franklin Halstead who operated the power plant in Yosemite for many years married Nellie Hope of Coulterville. Their descendants live in Hanford, Merced and Atwater. U. S. Shaver and Lulu moved to Oregon. James Shimer Halstead married Della Rouse Shimer. He was a railroad employee at El Portal. Their children settled in Tuttle, Merced and Fresno. Jeanette Halstead married Jesse E. (unreadable). Frances Shimer married Frank Halstead. They lived on a ranch near Coulterville. They had five children: Elmira A. Stipes, Albert, Lloyd, Cloyd and Elsie. They settled in Merced and LeGrande. Arthur Shimer married Mary Daneri of Coulterville. Their children were (unreadable) and William J. Shimer recently retired from the Division of Forestry. He and his wife Grace live in Coulterville. They have two sons John William and Michael Arthur. John William Shimer and his wife, Judy and their children John Garrett and Shae Gregory live in Greely Hill. Michael Arthur Shimer and his wife Kathy and their children, Richard John and Tina Marie live in Coulterville. George Shimer was married to Della Rouse. They had three children Hazel Ellis and Nettie Hawk of Yosemite and George Shimer, Jr., of Coulterville. James Shimer died April 22, 1903 and his wife Mary died February 14, 1908. Both are buried in the Coulterville Cemetery. James Shimer’s great grandfather, Daniel Shimer with his brothers, Frederick, Michael and Adam came from Germany. They sailed on the ship “Edinburg” from Rotterdam September 15 1749. They settled in Northern Maryland just across the line from Bedford, Pennsylvania. He was a blacksmith by trade. His son James Shimer served as a Ranger on the Frontier (1778-1783). He was a Revolutionary Soldier from Northhampton County, Pennsylvania, First Company, Jacob Dewit, Captain, Fifth Battalion. The Shimer Family were early settlers and pioneers in Harrison County, Ohio having moved there in the early 1880’s. Helen Houston Bondshu Mariposa Chapter, NSDAR, Bicentennial Project JAMES SHIMER’S TRIP TO CALIFORNIA IN ‘49 The following account of James Shimer’s trip to California was published in the Evening Gazette in Reno, Nevada on July 7, 1915 and Colonel John Conwell and printed in the Cadiz, Harrison County newspaper on July 22, 1915. These two men at this time were the only survivors of the Cadiz party. James Shimer, a pioneer and early settler in Coulterville was born in Cadiz Township, Harrison County, Ohio in 1827. The party bound for the gold fields of California consisted of the following persons: James Shimer, Asbury Johnson, his brother Henry, Frank Brainard, Thomas Holmes, Lewis Lewton, Ralph Bancroft, John Conwell, Josephus Bradbury, William Cady, Jacob Allender and a Dr. Y. H. Jones who started but dropped out. A man named Spotswood joined the party at Louisville. The group left Cadiz, Ohio on March 20, 1849, going by boat from Martin’s Ferry to St. Louis from there to St. Joseph, Missouri, also made by boat and then the trip across the plains began. They had three wagons and twenty-one mules, six mules to each wagon, the other three alternating while the tired ones were given a rest. One of the many adventures across the plains and over the mountains: when they were camped in North Platte Valley, one night there was a terrific storm. The tents were blown down and could not be made fast. Rain fell in torrents and hail covered the ground to a depth of three inches. In the morning they found themselves on a bed of quicksand. The wagons sank in the sand up to the hubs. The mule teams could not get close enough to the wagons. A long rope was attached to the wagons and boards were laid on the ground and placed near the wagon wheels. The men stood on the boards to prevent them from sinking in the sand. The mules were hitched to the rope, by pulling and the men by lifting, the wagons were finally brought out on safe ground. On the average they made twenty mile a day, one day fifty miles were covered. This was necessary in order to reach a place where they could obtain water. This wagon train had an easier trip than most of the pioneers. They attributed this to their mules. A majority of the pioneers crossed the plains with oxen, all the way from the Missouri River, they passed carcasses and skeletons of these animals. They had died of thirst and exhaustion. These pioneers knew nothing of how or where to locate water. The Shimer party did not have the know how either, but their mules did. When they were within four miles of the Humbolt River, the mules were on the point of dropping. Suddenly one of them whinnied, and the team stopped automatically, the mules sniffed and as if a starter had said “go” they took off at a terrific pace. There was no stopping them, they had smelled water. They ran right into the Humbolt River and did not stop until they had found the deepest place. In the river they again demonstrated their keenness. Instead of committing suicide as a horse or man would do when so nearly dead of thirst, they drank sparingly and remained in the middle of the river for more than an hour. In this group there were several experienced hunters and they had no trouble killing two or three deer a day so they had plenty of food. They also did not have any trouble with the Indians. In August they passed through Reno. There was only one house there at the time. This little house was used as a hotel for those on their way to Sacramento. The group arrived in Weaverville on August 24. They did not stay there long, from there they moved to Hangtown (Placerville) and then to the Southern Mines near Coulterville and Sonora. In the course of several years most of the members of this wagon train returned to Cadiz. James Shimer returned to Cadiz and later returned with his family and made his home in Coulterville.

    06/26/2001 01:08:51