(1) He has/had a relationship with Elizabeth Ann Ripley.
Child(ren):
(2) He is married to Jane Heslep.
They got married on December 1, 1853 at Sistersville, Tyler, West Virginia, United States, he was 21 years old.Sources 9, 22, 32
Child(ren):
William Henry Buck | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth Ann Ripley | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) 1853 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jane Heslep |
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=110860350&pid=39
William Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Aug 20 1832 - Virginia, United States<br>Death: Dec 10 1910 - Lincoln, Tyler, West Virginia, United States<br>Father: John H Buck<br>Mother: Sarah Mary Buck (born Knight)<br>Siblings: Lavinia Buck, John "Jack" Buck, Jr, William T Buck, Archibald Buck, James Calvin Buck, Elizabeth Buck, David Buck<;/a>, Ruthie Buck, David Buck, Susan Buck, Millie Jane Buck, Alexander Buck
Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Circa 1832 - Virginia, United States<br>Residence: June 1 1870 - West Virginia, USA<br>Age: 38<br>Race: White<br>Wife (implied): Jane Buck<br>Children (implied): George Buck, Florida Buck, John Buck, Christena Buck, Lincoln Buck, Sarah Buck, Unis Buck<br&;gt;Census: usehold<br>Relation to head; Name; Age; Suggested alternatives<br>Head (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659831/henry-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Henry Buck</a>; 38; <br>Wife (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659832/jane-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Jane Buck</a>; 33; <br>Son (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659833/george-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">George Buck</a>; 13; <br>Daughter (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659834/florida-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Florida Buck</a>; 11; <br>Son (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659835/john-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">John Buck</a>; 9; <br>Daughter (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659836/christena-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Christena Buck</a>; 6; <br>Son (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659837/lincoln-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Lincoln Buck</a>; 5; <br>Daughter (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659838/sarah-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Sarah Buck</a>; 4; <br>Daughter (implied); <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10128-74659839/unis-buck-in-1870-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Unis Buck</a>; 1 month;
<p>Reading Eagle<br />Publication: Reading, Berks County, PA, USA<br />Date: Dec 18 1910<br />Periodicity: Daily<br />Text: "...father being the late Jonathan Millard. She is survived by one son. Paul, and the following sisters and brothers: Mrs William Herflicker and Mrs. Henry Buck, Mrs. Joseph Herflicker. and William •Millard ... destination late. Loi Death of Widow of Howard Leinbach. Dec. Sarah L., widow of Howard Leinbach, died at the residence of her son, Paul West Birds- boro, of heart disease. Her maiden name was Millard, her ... 'clock Services at the house only; interment private in St. Michael's Cemetery. The arrangements will be ln charge of Funeral Director Edwin F. Mohr. Good Skating on the canal was especially fine on Sunday ... , Dec 2 4, at this place. THE LATE MOSES..."</p>
Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Aug 1832 - West Virginia, United States<br>Residence: 1900 - Lincoln district (north side, excl. Sistersville city), Tyler, West Virginia, USA<br>Age: 68<br>Marital status: Married<br>Marriage: Circa 1853<br>Race: White<br>Ethnicity: American<br>Wife: Jane Buck<br>Children: William H Buck, James E Buck, Jennie E Wade<br>Census: Township:excl. Sistersville city)Enum. District:84Family:10 County:TylerSeries:T623Line:51 State:West VirginiaRoll:1241774Image:126 Date:1900Sheet:1 See household members<br><a id='household'></a>Household<br>Relation to head; Name; Age; Suggested alternatives<br>Head; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296931/henry-buck-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Henry Buck</a>; 68; <br>Wife; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296932/jane-buck-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Jane Buck</a>; 63; <br>Son-in-Law; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296935/friend-wade-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Friend Wade</a>; 27; <br>Daughter; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296936/jennie-e-wade-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">Jennie E Wade</a>; 25; <br>Son; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296933/william-h-buck-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">William H Buck</a>; 22; <br>Son; <a href="https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10131-126296934/james-e-buck-in-1900-united-states-federal-census?s=570626171">James E Buck</a>; 20;
<p>Reading Eagle<br />Publication: Reading, Berks County, PA, USA<br />Date: Dec 18 1910<br />Periodicity: Daily<br />Text: "...father being the late Jonathan Millard. She is survived by one son. Paul, and the following sisters and brothers: Mrs William Herflicker and Mrs. Henry Buck, Mrs. Joseph Herflicker. and William •Millard ... destination late. Loi Death of Widow of Howard Leinbach. Dec. Sarah L., widow of Howard Leinbach, died at the residence of her son, Paul West Birds- boro, of heart disease. Her maiden name was Millard, her ... 'clock Services at the house only; interment private in St. Michael's Cemetery. The arrangements will be ln charge of Funeral Director Edwin F. Mohr. Good Skating on the canal was especially fine on Sunday ... , Dec 2 4, at this place. THE LATE MOSES..."</p>
William T Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Sep 19 1823<br>Father: John H Buck<br>Mother: Sarah Mary Buck (born Knight)<br>Siblings: Lavinia Buck, John "Jack" Buck, Jr, Archibald Buck, James Calvin Buck, Elizabeth Buck, David Buck, Ruthie Buck, David Buck, Susan Buck, William Henry Buck, , Alexander Buck
<p>Cameron County Press<br />Publication: Emporium, Cameron, Pennsylvania, USA<br />Date: Dec 22 1910<br />Text: ".... Prothonotary W. J. Leavitt attended the funeral of his late friend, William Buck, at Ridgway. They used to enjoy outings together—Mr. Buck serving as cook for the camp. Mr. and Mrs. TferrvShade, ofSinnamahoning ..."&;lt;br />About this sourceCornelius B. Gould (1826-1897) arrived in Emporium, Pennsylvania, on the last day of February 1866, recruited from Binghamton, New York, by a group of Cameron County Republicans who wanted a local newspaper reflecting that party’s politics. Gould, a native of Cherry Valley, New York, had worked with three newspapers in that state.In an 1888 memoir published in J.H. Beers’s The History of Cameron County (1890), Gould said that his first impulse upon arriving in Emporium was to get on the next train back to New York, as “a more desolate looking place, or one more uninviting to embark in the enterprise of establishing a newspaper, could rarely be found. The only view that met our eye, on stepping from the cars, was the towering mountains, woods, and stumps.” Gould stayed, despite the discovery that the equipment provided from the defunct Smethport Citizen consisted of a hand press and some type. The Cameron County Press was launched in March 1866 and was an immediate success, allowing Gould to buy a new Gordon press.Cameron County, located in the Allegheny Mountains wilderness of Pennsylvania, was formed in March 1860 from parts of Clinton, Elk, McKean, and Potter Counties, and named for United States Senator Simon Cameron, of Lancaster. Edward Shippen settled in the area along Sinnemahoning Creek (emptying into the West Branch of the Susquehanna River) around 1810, and the community was known as Shippen in 1861 when chosen as the Cameron County seat. The name was changed to Emporium when the town was incorporated in 1864. Emporium, a Latinized form of the Greek word for market or center of trade, reflected the citizens’ (all 800 or so) hopes for prosperity. Lumbering and its adjuncts of sawmills and tanneries were the largest industries in town in the late 1800s. Emporium’s population increased by almost 86 percent (to 2,147) between 1880 and 1890, and the Press thrived, claiming 800 readers, despite a major setback when the plant burned down in November 1877. In 1890, a new industry --explosives manufacturing--arrived, and the Climax Powder Plant later supplied explosives for constructing the Panama Canal. At least three other explosives factories opened later, supplying the needs of the country during World War I and underscoring Emporium’s nickname, “Powder City.”Gould died in May 1897, and there was a seamless takeover of the Cameron County Pressby his son-in-law, Henry H. Mullin (1851-1916), a Carlisle native who had arrived in Emporium in 1867 and immediately joined the Press. Mullin made few changes to the newspaper, which remained six columns wide and eight pages long, and continued to cover local news in depth through columns titled “Personal Gossip” and “Death’s Doings,” while serialized fiction by famous authors of day including H. Rider Haggard and Arthur Conan Doyle was featured on page one. Of special interest were letters (March 11, 1897) from local residents who had gone to Alaska as gold prospectors in 1896; reports (August 1896) on the local reunion of the famed Bucktail Regiment, the 42nd Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War, whose men had come from Cameron and nearby counties; and news reports (September 4, 1902) of the explosion of the nitroglycerine building at the Keystone Powder Works, “the third shock of the kind in eleven years.”</p>
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=158758566&pid=38/ Ancestry.com
<p>Cameron County Press<br />Publication: Emporium, Cameron, Pennsylvania, USA<br />Date: Dec 22 1910<br />Text: ".... Prothonotary W. J. Leavitt attended the funeral of his late friend, William Buck, at Ridgway. They used to enjoy outings together—Mr. Buck serving as cook for the camp. Mr. and Mrs. TferrvShade, ofSinnamahoning ..."&;lt;br />About this sourceCornelius B. Gould (1826-1897) arrived in Emporium, Pennsylvania, on the last day of February 1866, recruited from Binghamton, New York, by a group of Cameron County Republicans who wanted a local newspaper reflecting that party’s politics. Gould, a native of Cherry Valley, New York, had worked with three newspapers in that state.In an 1888 memoir published in J.H. Beers’s The History of Cameron County (1890), Gould said that his first impulse upon arriving in Emporium was to get on the next train back to New York, as “a more desolate looking place, or one more uninviting to embark in the enterprise of establishing a newspaper, could rarely be found. The only view that met our eye, on stepping from the cars, was the towering mountains, woods, and stumps.” Gould stayed, despite the discovery that the equipment provided from the defunct Smethport Citizen consisted of a hand press and some type. The Cameron County Press was launched in March 1866 and was an immediate success, allowing Gould to buy a new Gordon press.Cameron County, located in the Allegheny Mountains wilderness of Pennsylvania, was formed in March 1860 from parts of Clinton, Elk, McKean, and Potter Counties, and named for United States Senator Simon Cameron, of Lancaster. Edward Shippen settled in the area along Sinnemahoning Creek (emptying into the West Branch of the Susquehanna River) around 1810, and the community was known as Shippen in 1861 when chosen as the Cameron County seat. The name was changed to Emporium when the town was incorporated in 1864. Emporium, a Latinized form of the Greek word for market or center of trade, reflected the citizens’ (all 800 or so) hopes for prosperity. Lumbering and its adjuncts of sawmills and tanneries were the largest industries in town in the late 1800s. Emporium’s population increased by almost 86 percent (to 2,147) between 1880 and 1890, and the Press thrived, claiming 800 readers, despite a major setback when the plant burned down in November 1877. In 1890, a new industry --explosives manufacturing--arrived, and the Climax Powder Plant later supplied explosives for constructing the Panama Canal. At least three other explosives factories opened later, supplying the needs of the country during World War I and underscoring Emporium’s nickname, “Powder City.”Gould died in May 1897, and there was a seamless takeover of the Cameron County Pressby his son-in-law, Henry H. Mullin (1851-1916), a Carlisle native who had arrived in Emporium in 1867 and immediately joined the Press. Mullin made few changes to the newspaper, which remained six columns wide and eight pages long, and continued to cover local news in depth through columns titled “Personal Gossip” and “Death’s Doings,” while serialized fiction by famous authors of day including H. Rider Haggard and Arthur Conan Doyle was featured on page one. Of special interest were letters (March 11, 1897) from local residents who had gone to Alaska as gold prospectors in 1896; reports (August 1896) on the local reunion of the famed Bucktail Regiment, the 42nd Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War, whose men had come from Cameron and nearby counties; and news reports (September 4, 1902) of the explosion of the nitroglycerine building at the Keystone Powder Works, “the third shock of the kind in eleven years.”</p>
William Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Aug 20 1832 - Virginia, United States<br>Death: Dec 10 1910 - Lincoln, Tyler, West Virginia, United States<br>Father: John H Buck<br>Mother: Sarah Mary Buck (born Knight)<br>Siblings: Lavinia Buck, John "Jack" Buck, Jr, William T Buck, Archibald Buck, James Calvin Buck, Elizabeth Buck, David Buck<;/a>, Ruthie Buck, David Buck, Susan Buck, Millie Jane Buck, Alexander Buck
William Henry Buck Sr.Birth name: William Henry Buck Sr.Gender: MaleBirth: Aug 20 1832 - Washington, Washington, Pennsylvania, United StatesMarriage: Spouse: Jane Heslep - Dec 1 1853 - Sistersville, Tyler, VirginiaResidence: 1900 - Lincoln district (north side, excl. Sistersville city), Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesDeath: Dec 10 1910 - Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesBurial: Kimble Cemetery, Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesParents: John Henry Buck Sr., Sarah Mary Buck (born Knight)Wife: Jane Buck (born Heslep)Children: , John Stephen Buck, James E Buck, Christena Kimble (born Buck), Abraham Lincoln Buck, <a>Florida Kimble (born Buck), Eliza Jane Wade (born Buck), George Tillman Buck, Cordelia Verna Buck, Eunice Lois Slider (born Buck), Sarah Tabitha Roberts (born Buck), Anna Elizabeth Kimble (born Buck)Siblings: Alexander Buck, Susanna Kimble (born Buck), Archibald Buck, Elizabeth Buck, Bertha Wright (born Buck), John Parriot Buck Jr., David Buck, Milyjune Dennis (born Buck), James Calvin Buck Sr, Lavina Kimble (born Buck)
William Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Aug 20 1832<br>Death: Dec 10 1910<br>Wife: Elizabeth Ann Buck (born Riffle)<br>Son: Thornton James Buck
Henry Buck<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Circa 1831<br>Death: Dec 10 1910 - Buck Run West Virginia<br>Age: 79<br>Occupation: Farmer<br>Marital status: Widowed<br>County of death registration: Tyler
William Henry Buck Sr.Birth name: William Henry Buck Sr.Gender: MaleBirth: Aug 20 1832 - Washington, Washington, Pennsylvania, United StatesMarriage: Spouse: Jane Heslep - Dec 1 1853 - Sistersville, Tyler, VirginiaResidence: 1900 - Lincoln district (north side, excl. Sistersville city), Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesDeath: Dec 10 1910 - Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesBurial: Kimble Cemetery, Tyler, West Virginia, United StatesParents: John Henry Buck Sr., Sarah Mary Buck (born Knight)Wife: Jane Buck (born Heslep)Children: , John Stephen Buck, James E Buck, Christena Kimble (born Buck), Abraham Lincoln Buck, <a>Florida Kimble (born Buck), Eliza Jane Wade (born Buck), George Tillman Buck, Cordelia Verna Buck, Eunice Lois Slider (born Buck), Sarah Tabitha Roberts (born Buck), Anna Elizabeth Kimble (born Buck)Siblings: Alexander Buck, Susanna Kimble (born Buck), Archibald Buck, Elizabeth Buck, Bertha Wright (born Buck), John Parriot Buck Jr., David Buck, Milyjune Dennis (born Buck), James Calvin Buck Sr, Lavina Kimble (born Buck)
H. Buck<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Circa 1867<br>Death: Dec 12 1887 - Tyler West Virginia<br>Age: 20<br>County of death registration: Tyler