Tuesday, May 20, 2025

The Church That Bramel Built

The year was 1814, and the United States was at war with Great Britain and her allies in North America. In August, British General Robert Ross led a march across southern Maryland and defeated American troops at Bladensburg before torching the capital city of Washington. Ross's fleet had sailed up the Patuxent River and anchored near the boundary of St. Mary's and Charles Counties along the banks of the recently evacuated town of Benedict. The British rowed ashore, over 4,000 troops with cannons and provisions, to a rallying point on or very near the property that Jonathan Bramhall had sold just a couple years prior. The Bramhalls had relocated their tobacco operation to Kentucky and managed to avoid the drama of this war.

Jonathan Bramhall and his brothers James and William had fought against the British during America's Revolutionary War just a few decades earlier. They were the sons of William and Margaret Bramhall, a surname that evolved to Bramel and many similar spellings. Jonathan, his wife Thompsa, and most of their offspring arrived at the Ohio River town of Maysville, Kentucky around 1812. Jonathan died in 1823 and his wife in 1832. They were my fifth great grandparents.

In the decades to follow, the descendants of Jonathan and Thompsa Bramhall/Bramel acquired huge parcels of land between Maysville and Flemingsburg in southern Mason County into Fleming County. Woodlands were cleared for crops and stock, and timber was milled for the construction of grand farmhouses and giant tobacco barns. Large families occupied these farms, and the property was divvied between heirs for the next one hundred years.

In the late 1830s, a band of Disciples of Christ reformers settled next to Mill Creek eleven miles south of Maysville on the Fleming Turnpike, modern day Kentucky Route 11. For the next decade, the small congregation met at a log cabin next to the creek. Then in 1847, construction began on a proper sanctuary after the lot on which the original cabin stood was purchased for $100. Brick was fired on site, and the lumber was milled from trees on the plot.

Mill Creek Church, circa 1900. How many Bramel kin in this photo?

According to family lore, the total expense of the church plot and the building materials was funded by a $200 donation from James Alexander Bramel, known as Alex. Born in Maryland in 1791, Alex was the youngest son of Jonathan and Thompsa and had married Mary Wood in 1811, a year prior to the family's relocation to Kentucky.

The Bramel party traveled overland to western Pennsylvania, perhaps utilizing the Potomac River as far west as Cumberland, Maryland (Fort Cumberland at that time). The next phase of their journey required a traverse of the Allegheny Mountains for eighty miles to the confluence of Redstone Creek with the Monongahela River at Brownsville. There, they could purchase flatboats, or "Kentucky boats," and perhaps hire an experienced river guide for the ten-day or so voyage down the Ohio River to the landing next to Limestone Creek at Maysville. The Navigator, written by Zadok Cramer in 1801 and updated a dozen times over a quarter century, guided pioneers who chose the river route to western destinations.

The Navigator, Eighth Edition, title page with description

Pioneers on Ohio River, illustrated by F.O.C. Darley (colorized)

Excerpt from The Navigator, Eighth Edition page 110

At least ten children who lived to adulthood were born to Alex and Mary Bramel, my fourth great grandparents, by 1834. The Mill Creek Christian Church, in addition to it's role as a house of worship, became a center for social activities for the Bramels and other area farm families, as well as for the residents of the Lewisburg, Mt. Gilead, Wedonia, and Helena communities. The "church by the side of the road," as it came to be known by the locals, remained  essentially unchanged for over half a century before upgrades were made in 1905. The changes were subtle; new pews, double windows, and a coal furnace. A partition was added to create private space for Sunday school classes.

Southeastern Mason County in 1876, with Bramel residences highlighted.

Another half century passed and a couple more generations of Bramels passed through the church. It was time for some upgrades. A fundraising letter was sent out to the church membership late in 1949 to gauge the congregation's ability to cover the projected cost of $14,000. The project moved forward and was completed by the following summer, in spite of unforeseen setbacks including the collapse of the south wall during the excavation of a basement beneath the sanctuary. The basement added space for three Sunday school classrooms and a fellowship hall with a kitchen and restrooms. Hardwood floors were installed, and to the delight of many congregants, the pulpit was relocated from the front to the rear, thereby allowing the latecomers to sneak in without detection or judgment. A baptistry was added to eliminate the practice of conducting baptisms on the muddy banks of the creek out back. The interior received a complete paint job over smooth plaster, new light fixtures and carpet runners. Perhaps most notable to the casual passerby, the brick exterior was brightened with a coat of white paint.

Original church sanctuary facing the front doors.

In 1952, a modern parsonage was built adjacent to the church, housing for a minister and his or her family. The church received a loan from Abner Pierce Bramel for the parsonage project. Abner served as a deacon for the church for 35 years and had been elected elder and chairman of the board. Additionally, he held the office of county commissioner for twelve years. The historic church was featured in an article in the Lexington Herald Leader in 1962.


Abner Bramel, born in 1871, and his nine or so siblings descended from Jonathan and Thompsa Bramhall on both their maternal side (Emmerine Wilson Bramel < Samuel Bramel < Samuel Allison Bramel < Jonathan Bramhall) and their paternal side (Samuel Allison "Al" Bramel < James Alexander Bramel < Jonathan Bramhall). In 1898, Abner married his own distant cousin Carrie Jane Bramel (William Washington Bramel < James Alexander Bramel < Jonathan Bramhall), although the couple remained childless. Carrie Jane, daughter of William Washington Bramel and Nancy Jane (Thomas) Bramel who were my third great grandparents, was one of six children named in the will of their parents. She and Abner farmed a plot of land that was deeded to her after her father William died in 1899. His widow, Nancy Jane died in 1904. Nancy Jane was a daughter of Staley Thomas and a granddaughter of Nathaniel Thomas, another former Marylander and patriot of the Revolutionary War who was injured at the Battle of Trenton.

Maysville Ledger July 1, 1899

... Third: I will and bequeath unto my daughter Carrie J. Bramel, wife of Abner Bramel, 88 acres of land on which she now resides, and at the death of my wife, the said Mrs. Carrie J. Bramel is to be charged for same at the rate of twenty dollars per acre, and the proceeds divided equally between my six children. -from the will of William Washington Bramel

Maysville Ledger August 15, 1899


Maysville Ledger October 3, 1904

Carrie Jane was 11 years older than Abner, and she died in 1950 at the age of 90. Abner remained active with the church until his death in 1963.

1958 article featuring Abner Bramel's 89th birthday.

Abner and Carrie Jane Bramel, when they prepared their wills in 1939, had made arrangements to leave their entire estate to the Mill Creek Christian Church, a gift valued at approximately $150,000 at the time the will was probated. This would be the equivalent of about $1.5 million today, adjusted for inflation, as of 2025. $25,000 was put in a trust to assist with salaries for ministers. The remainder was designated for a new church at or near the site of the existing structure, with Abner's trustees to approve any such plans.


After months of review, it was agreed that the existing structure would be restored and converted to classrooms, an office, a nursery and other facilities. The exterior would be updated with a brick veneer to match the new addition. A new sanctuary addition, 72 feet long by 40 feet wide, would be constructed to the south of the existing structure, along with a new fellowship hall in the basement level. Ground was broken in August, 1964. During construction, services were held at the Lewisburg School three miles up the road. Around this same time, the church was able to acquire a half acre lot next door at the intersection of Ky. 11 and Mill Creek Road when it was offered for public auction, a portion of which would be used for parking. 



Construction was completed in June, 1965, and a dedication ceremony was planned to commemorate the grand opening of the beautiful new church.


Dedication service June 20, 1965

Carrie Jane's brother Alonzo Wellwood "Wood" Bramel married Mary Amelia McIntyre of Mason County's Fernleaf community in 1885, my great-great grandparents. The local newspaper reported on their big day:

An occasion of more than ordinary interest was the marriage of Miss Mary McIntyre to Mr. A.W. Bramel, of Lewisburg, which was solemnized at the home of Mr. B.F. McIntyre, brother to the bride, on Thursday last, at three o'clock p.m., by Rev. Willie Hall, who, in a beautiful and impressive manner, administered the marriage rites and pronounced them man and wife. The bridal party came in from the rear parlor, preceded by two attending couples and lastly the bride and groom. The bride's costume was exceeding handsome of garnet silk. She is a lovely and accomplished lady, a brunette with brown eyes. Many were the friends who gathered there to witness the ceremony and many were the words spoken of her who was soon to be united in fate and fortune with the man of her choice and, then to depart for their new home. The presents bestowed so generously up the twain were numerous and handsome. After the ceremony the bridal party and a few invited guests repaired to the home of the groom's parents, where a bountiful repast was in waiting for them which all enjoyed. We join with their many friends in wishing them a smooth voyage over life's seas. -Maysville Daily Bulletin, April 8, 1885

Wood and Amelia owned and operated a large farm in the vicinity of the Mill Creek Church, 208 acres with a large 10-room farmhouse, a tobacco barn, a stock barn and a double corn crib. Much of this parcel was passed down from Wood's grandfather Alex and his father William. They raised four children on the farm before moving into Maysville, where Wood Bramel engaged in various business ventures, including a tobacco warehouse and a farm implements shop.

1908 advertisement, Maysville Daily Ledger

Their first born, George Pierce Bramel, was my great grandfather. His siblings were a brother, Leslie, and two sisters, Nancy Mae and Miriam Hassel. George, who seems to have been known as Pearce Bramel as a youngster, was greatly influenced by his upbringing in the Mill Creek Church community. At the age of fifteen, Pearce ran away from home, taking the train to Lexington. His unauthorized journey might have been a reconnaissance mission to explore the College of the Bible, where he would later enroll.

Maysville Daily Ledger, May 20, 1901

The list of notable lay ministers at Mill Creek includes John William McGarvey. McGarvey was an author and a long-time professor at College of the Bible, teaching Sacred History for 46 years. In addition, he served as President of the institution from 1896 to 1911. His visits to the Mill Creek Church might have inspired Pearce to pursue a career at the pulpit. Pearce lived in Lexington from about 1903 to 1907 while attending the school now known as Lexington Theological Seminary. He was invited to deliver the sermon at the Christian Church in Maysville while home on breaks.

Maysville Daily Ledger, May 3, 1906

While in Lexington, Pearce met and courted Sallie Mae Nolan. They were married at the home of her parents in November of 1905. A daughter, Esther Mae Bramel, was born December 6, 1906. After school, the young family moved frequently with Pearce's preaching assignments at small town Christian churches throughout the midwestern states. Three sons, Vernon, Malcolm, and Henry, were born along the way.

Wood Bramel died in 1916, and Pearce returned home to Maysville to assist with family matters. His mother Amelia Bramel assigned him as executer of Wood's estate. With none of the heirs interested in operating the old farm, it was auctioned off in 1919.

Maysville Daily Ledger, November 6, 1916


Bourbon News, December 2, 1919


Bourbon News, December 23, 1919

The Mill Creek Christian Church continues to serve a small congregation in the modern day. It is one of the oldest houses of worship in Northern Kentucky. While most of the Bramel families of historic Mason County have spread out around the country, the "church by the side of the road" will always be an important part of our proud heritage.

The church's original communion set is still on display.

The church's exterior, modern day.

A look at the sanctuary, modern day.

Links:

Follow the next chapter, the stories of George Pierce Bramel's offspring: The Search For Malcolm Bramel's Heirs

Explore the Bramel DNA project: Bramel DNA: Our Link to Medieval Times

Sources:

Mill Creek Christian Church; Facebook Group Page

The Navigator, Eighth Edition; Zadok Cramer, 1814; Cramer, Spear, and Eighbaum

 



Saturday, April 5, 2025

Vernon W. Bramel


Vernon Bramel (October 9, 1935 - April 5, 2025)

Vernon William Bramel, Jr., 89, of Danville, Kentucky died peacefully in the early hours of April 5, 2025 at the Morning Pointe Alzheimer's Center in Danville.

Vernon was born in Bettsville, Ohio on October 9, 1935 to Vernon and Marietta (Semer) Bramel, the youngest of five brothers. He is survived by one brother, Malcolm Earl Bramel (Katherine) of Charlottesville, Virginia, and a sister, Sally Darlene (Michael) Kear of Sebring, Florida. Vernon was preceded in death by his parents and three brothers, Richard Eugene Bramel, Charles Everett Bramel, and George Raymond Bramel.

Vernon graduated from Bettsville High School and was active in the athletics programs there. He proudly played point guard for the undefeated Seneca County champion basketball team in 1954. He worked before school making donuts at the Pie House Restaurant, and in the summertime, he was one of the first lifeguards at the H.P. Eells Park near the village. Vernon enlisted in the Army after high school and left for basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky. He returned home and married his high school sweetheart, Sharon Lee Jeanette, on December 9, 1954 in Auburn, Indiana. The couple recently celebrated their 70th anniversary, and she was there by his side when he passed.


Vernon returned to Fort Knox for additional training before deploying to Heidelberg, Germany for a three-year assignment at 5th Surgical Hospital (Mobile Unit) Headquarters section, where he was honored as Soldier of the Month. "Private First Class Bramel's performance of duty, his off-duty habits, immaculate manner of dress, gentlemanly conduct, and soldierly manner are beyond reproach, and have served both as an inspiration to his section, and the unit as well."

Upon completion of his service, Vernon returned to Bettsville, where he and Sharon raised five sons and one daughter. He attended college at nearby Tiffin University, where he also played for the school's basketball team while working as a bookkeeper at local businesses. His newfound love of golf led to new affiliations that opened the door for career opportunities. For the sake of his family, he passed up an opportunity to become one of the founding fathers of the Nature Trails Golf Course where he won multiple club championships through the 1970s.

Vernon worked for the Whirlpool Corporation in Clyde, Ohio for much of his career. In 1979, a transfer opportunity resulted in the family's relocation to Danville, where the three younger children graduated from Boyle County High School. He attended many sports functions there, following the exploits of his children and grandchildren. His golf prowess earned him several honors at the Danville County Club. After retirement, Vern and Sharon vacationed frequently in Central Florida. They were among the very first residents of the Ridgefield Farms community in Danville.

60thAnniversary 2014

Along with their many grandchildren and great-grandchildren, all six children of Vern and Sharon survive: Mike (Kathy) of Upper Sandusky, Ohio; Randy (Joan) of Bardstown, Kentucky; Rodney (Peggy) of Kirkland, Washington; Kurt of Baltimore, Maryland; Kerry (Eric) of Danville; and Steve (Katy) of Danville. 

Military funeral honors and interment will be scheduled at Camp Nelson National Cemetery for a later date.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Text of Eulogy, 25 Apr 2025, Camp Nelson National Cemetery, Jessamine County, Kentucky

SOLDIER OF THE MONTH
OCTOBER 1956
Private First Class VERNON WILLIAM BRAMEL

"Excellent and beyond criticism" are the words that have been used to describe PFC Vernon Bramel's work since he has been a member of the 5th Surgical Hospital (Mobile Army) Headquarters section.

Private First Class Bramel was born at Bettsville, Ohio on the 9th of October, 1935. He graduated from the Bettsville High School in June, 1954. PFC Bramel is married and is the proud father of a fine son.

PFC Bramel entered the service on the 22nd of September, 1954, and underwent his basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky.

Following basic training, PFC Bramel spent the next eight weeks at the Division Training Center, Fort Knox, Kentucky. He arrived in Germany on the lst of March, 1955, and was assigned to our unit; the 5th Surgical Hospital (Mobile Army). Once assigned to our unit, he was attached to Headquarters Section, where he is assigned as personnel clerk. He was promoted to his present rank in July, 1955.

PFC Bramel's performance of duty, his off-duty habits, immaculate manner of dress, gentlemanly conduct, and soldierly manner are beyond reproach, and have served both as an inspiration to his section, and the unit as well. Congratulations on being selected soldier of the month by the non-commissioned officers of the 5th Surgical Hospital (MA). Keep up the fine work .....

___________________________________________________

Ladies and gentlemen, friends, family, and neighbors, we’re gathered here today to bid a fond farewell to Vernon Bramel — our dad, our papa, uncle, friend, colleague, and the steadfast husband who walked hand-in-hand with his bride of seven decades. Now, when my parents prepared their final wishes a few years back, they didn't want a fancy send off. Even this brief statement might have been perceived as "over-the-top." But something needed to be said, and I've been bestowed with the honor of delivering a few quick stories to paint you a picture of the man we loved.

Let me start with a memory, one I’d completely forgotten until I sat down to write these words. It’s a true tale, and I’d wager it’s news to all of you. When I was a lad of sixteen, Dad was offered a fine promotion—a chance to climb the corporate ladder, but it came with a catch. It meant uprooting the whole Bramel clan from our little village in northwest Ohio and transplanting in the rolling hills of the Bluegrass. Now, that was the only home we’d ever known—where Mom and Dad were raised, where their folks still lived, and where my three older brothers had already crossed the high school stage, diplomas in hand. Before he broke the news to the rest of the family, Dad pulled me aside, “Son,” he said, “you’ve got two years left until you graduate, and a move like this would hit you harder than the others. If you want to stay put, if you don’t want to change schools, I’ll turn down the offer, and we’ll keep our feet planted right here.” Well, you know how it turned out—I gave him my blessing, and before long, I was a Junior at Boyle County, Kerry was a Freshman, Steve was in seventh grade, and here we all are, right?

It doesn't take a philosopher to see how one choice can send ripples through a lifetime, changing the course of a whole lot of folks. Dad made plenty such decisions, always with his family first in his heart. He didn’t have to do any of it, but he did, and I'd say things turned out for the best.

Now, Vernon Bramel came from humble stock; his folks had enough for the bare necessities, but little more. As a teen, he’d rise before the roosters to make donuts at the local eatery, just to afford a sharp pair of trousers. The Bramel house lacked many niceties, such as an indoor privy and a shower, so he’d scrub up in the school locker room. That little school of ours had its moment in the sun, too, and Dad never tired of bragging about that undefeated Bobcats basketball team that clinched the county championship—though he’d swear on a stack of Bibles that the refs robbed them in the district playoffs.

"Pebbles" Bramel #4 far left



After high school, he followed his four brothers into the armed services, marching off to Germany and back. When he returned, he enrolled at Tiffin University, compliments of Uncle Sam and the GI Bill. Mom always said the Army's ways turned him fussy and particular—he was the only one who could fold a bedsheet corner sharp enough to suit himself and Mom's side was never quite up to snuff. But I believe he was born with that streak, and it only grew with age. In his later years, he’d sometimes shave multiple times per day, read the instructions on a new gadget until the ink wore thin, and underline them for good measure. Thrifty? Oh yeah. He’d buy restaurant gift cards on 4X fuel point days and orchestrate the Bramel caravan at the gas pump before the points could expire, squeezing every drop of savings out of the maximum 35 gallons. I'm confident there's still a stack of gift cards stashed away for safekeeping in a place he long ago forgot about.



My folks raised us to stand on our own two feet, handing us just enough tools to wander out into the universe while leaving plenty of mysteries for us to chase. But there was always a comfort, like a warm quilt on a winter night, knowing Mom and Dad would move heaven and earth if we stumbled. My brother Randy recalls golfing with Dad as a young fellow, pleading for strokes to level the playing field—Dad was a regular wizard with a nine-iron, you see, although maybe not so great with the putter. “No strokes,” Dad would say. “Just play better.” It wasn’t just about golf; it was about being a better man.

Come Sunday, you’d find Dad on the golf course, his holy ground, where the fairways whispered peace to his soul. But he was a man of faith in his quiet way, praying each night for his family, his great grandson Wes or anyone else wrestling with affliction. Folks often asked the secret to his long marriage with Mom. “Never hold a grudge,” he’d say, simple as that. Mom told me when times got lean, he’d comfort her and promise, “Hang in there, my love, because we’re gonna have a grand retirement.” And by God, they did.

As the years piled up, Dad started talking more about going home. He’d dream of seeing his own mom and dad, and sometimes he’d wake from a nap, holler “EARL BRAMEL!”—his brother’s name—for no reason at all, then drift back to sleep. I recall the first time I noticed his mind slipping a few years ago, when he swore the NBA had up and changed the playoff rules, though nothing was different. Even when the games on TV turned to a complete jumble in his head, it was still a comfort to sit beside him, sharing the quiet of the moment.

I picture him now, strolling off the 18th green, his swing as smooth as ever, with the whole heavenly clubhouse waiting to pat him on the back. It pains us to let him go, but our hearts are full with gratitude for the years we had, how fortunate we have been that he was our dad. Vernon Bramel was a man who lived plain, loved deep, and left us all a little better for knowing him. And if that's not a life well-lived, I don’t know what is.         -Kurt Bramel 4/25/2025


Links:
How the Bramels got to Bettsville: The Search For Malcolm Bramel's Heirs
Grandpa Bramel wasn't expecting this: Vernon Bramel's Big Inheritance

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

The Search for Malcom Bramel's Heirs

"Hello! I'm from the federal government. I'm contacting you about unclaimed benefits for which you might be eligible." Most everyone has received a communication like this and dismissed it as a scam. But once in a rare while, it turns out to be real.

Such was the case for our family in May of 2019. My father phoned to notify me of a letter he had received from Veterans Affairs. He had been identified as possible "next of kin" to Malcolm Bramel, who died in 1965 and left no beneficiary for a death benefit. My follow-up telephone conversation with Mr. Gallagher, the case investigator in the Philadelphia office of Veterans Affairs, confirmed the legitimacy of the claim. Apparently, the file had been opened and closed several times over the course of more than half a century since Malcom's death in California. But with the growing popularity of ancestry research and the availability of online records, new clues had led the investigator to my father. I engaged in a quest to assist Mr. Gallagher in identifying and locating any and all eligible beneficiaries.

Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery, San Diego, California

Little was known about my father's paternal side of the family. To complicate things, my dad was probably in the very early stages of dementia by that time. So it stands to reason that he did not realize or remember that Malcolm was his uncle, his father Vernon's younger brother. There was also another brother, Henry, and an older sister, Esther. But Vernon almost never talked about his childhood, his siblings, or his family in general. For decades, we were only told that his family came from Kentucky and that he ran away from home at a young age.

My research of Bramel ancestry ramped up in 2012 after having been derailed by a lack of first hand testimony. I composed a letter to a man named Jerry Bramel of Toledo, Ohio. My research had identified Jerry as a son of Vernon's youngest brother, Henry. My dad and some of his siblings recalled Vernon attending the funeral of Jerry's brother Robert Bramel in 1958 after he drowned in a quarry west of Toledo at age 20, the only mention he ever made of his family. Jerry responded via e-mail to my inquiry with a trove of photographs, newspaper clippings, and documents, including the 1965 death certificate for Malcolm Bramel. Jerry mentioned his half-sister Patricia who was living in their father's old house in Toledo, where the documents were found. After Jerry passed away in 2015, Patricia and I began to correspond via mail and telephone.

Malcolm Bramel died in Los Angeles in 1965

Second-hand testimony from Jerry and Patricia provided a new perspective about the upbringing of my grandfather and his siblings based on stories told by their father Henry. Patricia wrote that the parents of the four Bramel siblings, George Pearce Bramel and Sally Mae (Nolan) Bramel had apparently divorced around the time of Henry's birth in 1917. The couple had met in Lexington while George, a native of Mason County, Kentucky, was attending College of the Bible there. They were married in 1905 at the home of Sally's parents, William and Susan (Johnson) Nolan, in Lexington. After the divorce, Sally and the boys were living in Covington, Kentucky, and she remarried to a man named Taylor sometime after 1920. When Sally died in 1925, the court determined that the boys should go live with their biological father, George, even though the stepfather had offered to adopt them. Their sister Esther had been living with their paternal grandmother, Amelia (McIntire) Bramel, in Maysville, Kentucky and attending high school there.

January 13, 1904

Married November 9, 1905

Meanwhile, George Bramel had married for a second time in November of 1918 to a Tennessee woman, Elizabeth "Bessie" (Lewis) Hatcher, the widow of Henry Hatcher, and they had relocated to Toledo. Since college, George had been a minister, serving small town congregations in several midwestern states. But in his new career, he was driving a dairy delivery truck in Toledo. Bessie had two sons from her first marriage in Tennessee, Raymond and Hurstell. Ten year-old Hurstell was killed in an accident involving an automobile in 1921. George and Bessie had a daughter, Mary Kathleen Bramel, born two weeks before Hurstell's death. Patricia shared that neither she nor anyone in her family had ever heard about the existence of her father's half-sister Kathleen until I shared my research with her.


Hurstell Hatcher Death Certificate (Informant: George Bramel)

As Patricia tells the story, George traveled to Kentucky to pick up the three boys after the death of their mother. Rather than taking them into his home and raising them, he dropped them off at the orphanage in Maumee, the Lucas County Children's Home. The boys never had any contact with their father after that. 

Lucas County Children's Home, Maumee, Ohio - closed 1986



In my effort to find any unknown relatives who might be beneficiaries of the Malcolm Bramel death benefit settlement, I focused on the half-sister, Mary Kathleen Bramel. My previous research efforts had turned up nothing beyond her school days at Toledo Libbey High School. But a renewed search resulted in a 2014 obituary from Cleveland, Tennessee. 

This discovery revealed a previously unknown living cousin who would rightly hold an equal stake in the insurance settlement, Jerry Harris, Jr. of Cleveland, Tennessee. With some internet sleuthing, I came up with a mailing address and sent off a letter to Mr. Harris:

May 10, 2019

Mr. David Jerry Harris, Jr.
Cleveland, Tennessee

Dear Jerry,

I apologize for this intrusion. I’ve been researching Bramel ancestry for several years, and I believe you are a first cousin to my father, so please correct me if I have the wrong person.

My dad, Vernon Bramel of Danville, Kentucky, received a letter from Veterans Affairs this week. It seems that his father, also Vernon Bramel, had a brother named Malcolm who served in the military for a couple of decades from the 1930’s to the 1950’s. Malcolm died in 1965 with a small insurance policy through Veterans Affairs which was never claimed, and they are attempting to find next of kin before closing out the file.

I’m helping my dad with this matter to identify any heirs of Malcolm who would be entitled to a share of the settlement. Malcolm was married briefly and divorced with no direct heirs. His siblings are all deceased. In the next generation, my dad and his three living siblings in Virginia, Oklahoma, and Florida would seem to be entitled to a share, as well as a surviving daughter of Malcolm’s brother Henry in Ohio.

I believe from my research that your mother was Mary Kathleen Bramel, born in Toledo, Ohio in 1921. If this is true, then you too would be entitled to one-sixth of the insurance settlement. Don’t get too excited because it’s only $5,000 divided six ways. I’m just trying my best to make sure no one is left out.

You can contact me via email or via my cell phone xxx-xxx-xxxx to confirm your identity. If you are eligible, then Veterans Affairs will mail you information including a claim form. In the meantime, I think you’ll be interested in the research materials I’ve attached.

I will look forward to hearing from you!

Best Regards,

Kurt Bramel

The following week, I received a telephone call from Mr. Harris, a widower with two children and four grandchildren. He told me all about his mother and his grandmother, from the time they left Toledo and relocated to Chattanooga. George apparently abandoned them sometime around 1930, and then Bessie and Kathleen left Toledo about 1938. Raymond Hatcher stayed in Toledo for a few years, working in the hotel and hospitality industry, before he too returned to Tennessee. He and his mother were temporarily living in Miami at the time of the 1950 Census, on which Bessie's marital status was listed as "separated" rather than divorced. Kathleen Bramel took a job as a salesperson at Miller Brothers, a department store chain based in east Tennessee. She worked at their flagship store in downtown Chattanooga, a four story building that featured two snack bars and a tea room. It's there where she met David Jerome Harris.


1939 employee photo

Kathleen Bramel identified in company photo

Kathleen at age 19, married Mr. Harris, age 29, and moved with him to the Harris family farm near Apison, east of Chattanooga, with his mother, two older sisters, and a brother-in-law. Two sons were born, David "Jerry" Harris, Jr. in 1941 and Brian Wood Harris in 1943. The family ran a dairy operation for several decades before the farm was sold. Jerry lost his mother and brother in 2014. At the time we connected, he was living in the old family home near Cleveland.

Plowman Cemetery, Apison, Tennessee

Among the documents contributed by Jerry Bramel, from the old Henry Bramel home in Toledo, there was a newspaper clipping announcing the marriage of his aunt Esther Bramel to Charles Hopper. The announcement came from George's sister Nancy Mae, who had married a steel truss bridge magnate named Benjamin Jones. According to Jerry, it was one of Esther's numerous marriages. Did any of these unions result in a cousin who would be eligible for a share of the Malcolm Bramel settlement?

Esther Bramel's third (est.) marriage, circa 1940, announced by Nancy Mae (Bramel) Jones

Esther Mae, the eldest of the four Bramel siblings, was born to George and Sally Mae in 1906 in Kentucky. George's ministry career landed the young family in Ohio and then Indiana for a time, and they appear on the 1910 Census for West Lebanon, Warren County, Indiana. After her parents divorced, she alternated between her paternal grandmother in Maysville and her mother in Covington. She appears in the 1920 Census for both households, Covington enumerated in mid-January and Maysville enumerated in late-January. An apartment in Covington housed Sally Mae and all four Bramel children, Sally's widowed mother Susan Nolan, and a co-worker of Sally who was lodging with the family. The Maysville home of Amelia Bramel, widow of Alonzo Wellwood "Wood" Bramel, was occupied by Esther, Amelia's daughter Hassel, and Hassel's second husband, Charles Hopper. This is the same Mr. Hopper who Esther would marry two decades later. Esther had previously married Robert Allars in Toledo and also a Mr. Sacks apparently in Philadelphia. She married for the final time in 1951 to Lloyd Galbreath in Cleveland, Ohio. They moved to Jacksonville Beach, Florida, where they resided for the remainder of their lives. Esther died in 1981, and for the purpose of locating next of kin for the insurance payment, my research did not uncover any evidence that Esther ever had any children.

George, Sally, and Esther Bramel, circa 1908

My grandfather Vernon Bramel was born on June 18, 1910 in West Lebanon, Indiana, where his father was pastor of the Christian Church. His two younger brothers were born in Kentucky. Henry was born on March 24, 1917 (confirmed), but the date of Malcolm's birth remains unclear. I had long suspected that both Vernon and Malcolm misrepresented their age during their time at the orphanage in order to qualify for better options. Vernon was placed with a foster family at a farm in Sandusky County, and then Malcolm enlisted in the U.S. Army. Vernon had always told his family that he was born in 1908, the date listed on his drivers license and cemetery headstone. But I located his actual birth record in the vital records department in Attica, Indiana confirming the 1910 date. That birth record revealed another previously unknown fact about my grandfather, that his first name was Clyde. Vernon was actually his middle name.

Christian revival in West Lebanon, Indiana - 1909

Malcolm enlisted in late 1927 during an era in which the age requirement for enlistment was seventeen with parental consent or eighteen without. Malcolm's birth date is listed on his death certificate and all military records as January 18, 1910, but I suspect it was actually 1911 or 1912, given that his older brother's confirmed date of birth was March of 1910. It is possible and even likely that Malcolm's enlistment occurred prior to his true sixteenth birthday. With a lack of official records in the orphanage setting, unverifiable vital statistics were discerned by the child and accepted by the recruitment officer tasked with meeting recruitment goals.

Malcolm Bramel was assigned to First Battalion, 7th (and later 12th) Field Artillery at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas. He traveled by train from Toledo to New York City. Then on December 1, 1927, he boarded the Chateau Thierry at Fort Slocum on Davids Island in the western end of the Long Island Sound for transit to Texas. Military records confirm his active duty at Fort Sam Houston through his discharge on April 25, 1934. An absence of records suggests a gap in active duty for the next three years, although it seems Malcolm remained in San Antonio and probably worked for the military in some capacity.

Then in 1937, Malcolm accepted an assignment with 11th Field Artillery at Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Territory of Hawaii. He traveled to Fort McDowell in the San Francisco Bay for his March 12th embarkation. He traveled aboard the St. Mihiel to Honolulu, arriving for duty on March 18, 1937. He remained at Schofield Barracks with ranks of Private First Class and Corporal until December 28, 1939, at which time he returned to Fort McDowell. Notably, Malcolm's assignment ended two years before U.S. military installations at Oahu were damaged or destroyed during a surprise arial attack by Japanese forces, killing more than 2,400 Americans and plunging the United States into war.

Malcolm Bramel's next assignment appears to be at Fort Lewis near Tacoma, Washington, as enumerated on the 1940 Census. Malcolm married Miss Elsie Perry on September 21, 1940 before the Justice of the Peace for Pierce County in Tacoma. The marriage was short lived and Elsie had moved on to her second marriage by 1946. 

As the war ramped up in the Pacific and in Europe, a defense distribution depot was established in San Joaquin County in central California. A review of city directory records suggests that Malcolm was living in Stockton during the wartime years and working at this depot, whose mission was to purchase, store, and ship necessary supplies to armed forces in the Pacific war as well as the Western Front in Europe.

Back in Ohio, the youngest of the three brothers, Henry Carl Bramel, was just eight years old when their mother died. With Vernon having been farmed out and Malcolm having joined the Army, Henry was left with fewer options. It seems that he alternated between the orphanage, distant family, and foster care during his childhood and teen years.

Henry Bramel with his mother Sally Mae

In addition to their father, the Bramel brothers had several other relatives living in or near Toledo during those years after their mother's death in 1925. In part, this can be attributed to the so-called "Hillbilly Highway," referring to the migration of Kentuckians and others native to Appalachia to the industrialized regions of the North, beginning after 1910 and continuing for half a century. Prior generations of Bramels had primarily farmed their lands in southern Mason County since the 1812 arrival of George's great-great grandfather Jonathan Bramhall, a veteran of the American Revolution, from Charles County, Maryland. The Nolans of Kentucky originally settled along the Kentucky River south of Lexington near Old Cane Springs Church, which the family helped to establish. Henry Noland, also a patriot of the American Revolution and a great-great grandfather of Sally Mae, operated Noland's Ferry beginning before 1800, connecting College Hill Road in Madison County to southern Clark County at the confluence of the Red River.

William John Noland (1775-1858), Sally Mae's great grandfather

Patricia Bramel shared with me that she knew of a first cousin, John Nolan, born in 1938 and still living in Toledo. He is actually the son of Sally Mae's youngest brother John Nolan Sr. who had left Kentucky for Toledo and was working as a machinist for a spark plug manufacturer as of 1920. His mother Susan Nolan, maternal grandmother to the Bramel brothers, appears to have left Covington and was living in Toledo, perhaps with John, until her death in 1929. Esther Bramel, after her 1925 graduation from Maysville High School and the death of her mother, found her way to Toledo, where she was married for the first time to Robert Allars on December 5, 1925. Additionally, the boys' paternal grandmother Amelia Bramel, accompanied by her daughter Hassel, had visited with her other daughter Nancy May who resided in nearby Detroit, according to a 1927 newspaper clipping announcing Amelia's passing.

Mary Amelia (McIntire) Bramel (1849-1927)

Amelia Bramel death notice - 1927

Seated: Susan (Johnson) Nolan (1850-1929)
Standing: Sally Mae (left), Unknown sister? (Right)

The question of whether or not any of these relatives intervened at all with the boys in the orphanage is left to speculation at this point. But Patricia Bramel did share this with me regarding her father, Henry:

My dad ran away from that hell hole orphanage at age 14 years and went back down to Kentucky to be with Sadie Caldwell, his 1st cousin (Sadie's mother and Sallie Mae were sisters). She basically took care of him for awhile. Eventually, my dad came back up here to work. Plus Vernon was here.

Patricia's timeline places Henry at the orphanage from 1925 to 1931, and she makes no mention of intervention from family members in the Toledo area. Sadie Caldwell, the cousin who took in Henry, was one of four children born to Eva Nolan, who married Joshua Caldwell in 1892. They had a son and three daughters before Eva's untimely death about 1901. The son, Smith Henry Caldwell, went to live with his father in Winchester, Kentucky. The three young daughters, Fannie, Elizabeth, and Sadie Mae, were raised by nuns at the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, a convent in Fort Thomas. Perhaps this made them more sympathetic than other family members to Henry's plight.

Henry stayed with Sadie in the Covington area for a couple years or so before returning to Ohio. He went to work on Amiel Helle's farm east of Toledo in Jerusalem Township, in the vicinity of what is now Maumee Bay State Park. Henry and the farmer's daughter Sophia began a relationship and were married on June 18, 1935.

He worked for Helle's and that's where he met Sophie, got her pregnant, and a "shotgun" wedding occurred. My dad was only 18 years old when Jerry was born January 18, 1936, and Bob was born a year or so later. My dad was a dumb kid who had no male role models in his life since he was 8 or 9 years old. So consequently he cheated and left Sophie and the boys. Vernon never forgave him and never had anything to do with my dad again.

Patricia's account squares with the testimony from my dad and his siblings. Vernon disassociated with Henry because he felt a man should never abandon his family in the way that his own father George had done to him, his mother, and his siblings. It seems that George, after leaving his second family behind in Toledo, spent some time in Columbus, where married for a third time to Leone Morris. They relocated briefly to Houston, Texas before settling permanently in Shreveport, Louisiana. George died there in 1963, Leone in 1984.

Forest Park Cemetery, Shreveport, Louisiana

Henry worked on a crew building county roads through the Work Progress Administration, a federal agency created during the Great Depression of the 1930's to provide jobs for millions of Americans while shoring up infrastructure. After his divorce, he moved into Toledo and worked in the burgeoning automobile parts industry for the remainder of his career, retiring in 1977 from City Auto Stamping Company. Henry developed a shaping machine for which he received a patent in 1950. He was married briefly to Juanita Fern Schooner in 1947. Then he married for a third time in 1951 to Edna Marie Eckhardt. Patricia was born the following year. Meanwhile, Sophie and their two sons settled in the nearby village of Millbury, where the boys attended Lake High School. She remarried to Andrew Cook.

1958 death notice for Robert, son of Henry and Sophia

Vernon, at age fifteen, probably resided in the orphanage only for a brief period before being farmed out. He went to live with the Harold and Jennie Hufford family on their farm west of Fremont. By all accounts, the Huffords were kind-hearted people who treated Vernon very well. As a testament to this, Vernon maintained contact with them and even took his children to visit with them years later.

The Hufford farm was situated where U.S. Rt. 6 meets State Rt. 590 six miles north of the village of Bettsville. Just to the southeast of Bettsville at Maple Grove, a large stone quarry operated by Dolomite Products Company had been ramping up production since the onset of the war in Europe a decade earlier, World War I. The main product was dolomite flux widely used in the steel industry. Vernon was hired there in 1927 and would work there for the next 49 years. The name of the company later changed to Basic Refractories and then Basic, Inc., and Howard P. Eells Jr. was its Chairman and Chief Executive.

Cleveland businessman H.P. Eells Sr. acquired the quarry from Holran Stone Co. in 1908


New signage for Basic's Maple Grove operation, 1949

Vernon met Marietta Semer soon after his arrival in Bettsville, and no one is quite sure how or why they met. My best guess is that some of her Semer brothers were working at Dolomite Production, as most working age males in the area did at some point, and perhaps that's how they were introduced. Vernon and Marietta were both age seventeen when they were married.

Vernon and Marietta, married November 26, 1927

Vernon and Marietta rented a very rudimentary house situated on farmland next to the railroad tracks just south of Bettsville. All five sons were born there between 1928 and 1935, Richard Eugene, Malcolm Earl, Charles Everett, George Raymond, and my father Vernon William. By about 1940, they had saved enough to purchase that same house along with three lots at the southeast corner of Bettsville in what was known as the Andrews Addition, or "The Ridge." The cost of the land, the house, and the relocation of the structure a quarter of a mile down Seneca Street totaled $900. A daughter was born in 1942, Sally Darlene.

Vernon had no more than an eighth grade education, but he was very well-read and self-taught from publications like Popular Science and Popular Mechanics. He built a galley-style kitchen along the north end of the house. There was no indoor bathroom until Sally was about junior high age, at which time Vernon built a back addition with a shower and toilet, along with a septic system. He made cinderblocks by pouring cement into molds and used them to build a barn where they kept a pair of dairy cows. They cultivated a large vegetable garden next to a root cellar. Vernon built a tractor from scrap parts and rented a field out in Liberty Township where he and the older sons planted, harvested, and sold popcorn for supplemental income. He used lumber from the stone quarry's discarded dynamite crates to build tables, benches, and even toys.

Sons of Vernon and Marietta Bramel, circa 1939

In the years following World War II, all five sons served in the military in some capacity. Meanwhile, their uncle Malcolm Bramel returned to Texas and served out the remainder of his military career in the newly created United States Air Force. He achieved the rank of First Lieutenant at the Goodfellow Air Force Base near the west Texas city of San Angelo. He married a junior high music teacher from Iowa, Hazel Gertrude Palmer, but they remained married only until the mid-1950's. Malcolm retired from the Air Force in July of 1952. He relocated to Los Angeles for the last decade of his life.

Article from a military publication in Germany

Vernon, Marietta & Family, circa 1957 (first reunion in 11 years)
Vernon Jr., Charles Everett, Sally, Earl, Vernon, Richard Eugene, Marietta, George

Spouses: Joanne Fuller (Charles), Sally, Madonna Henderson (Richard),
Marietta, Sharon Jeanette (Vernon Jr.), Virginia Maggard (Earl)

Four of about 20 grandchildren next to Vernon's cinderblock barn, circa 1958
David, Richard, Sandra, and Jennifer

 

Vernon with Basic Inc. CEO Howard P. Eells, Jr. at a company event, ca. 1956

Basic, Inc. - Maple Grove facilities, 1975

Vernon continued his employment at Basic, Inc. until his retirement in 1976. That same year, he received an inheritance from the estate of his aunt Nancy Mae, widow of Benjamin Jones. He and Marietta purchased a mobile home recreational vehicle and embarked on numerous vacation trips.

1976 death notice for Nancy Mae Bramel, Akron Beacon

Marietta and Vernon with their mobile home, 1987

Satisfied that all the living heirs of the Malcolm Bramel life insurance benefit had been identified and located, Mr. Gallagher of Veterans Affairs mailed out claim forms for the eligible beneficiaries. Ultimately, the $5,000 benefit, a ceremonial gesture for the most part, was shared between Vernon's three living children and their cousin in Toledo. The other living cousin in Tennessee, unknown before this project, opted out of his share.

One of the beneficiaries was Malcolm Earl Bramel, the namesake of this article's central character. Uncle Earl was instrumental in providing some of the anecdotes and photographs compiled for this project. As his physical being succumbs to the inevitable and natural decline of his 94 years, his mind, memory, and wit remain as sharp as ever. I'm proud to call him my friend, and to him I dedicate this article.

Malcolm "Earl" Bramel

Update: Uncle Earl passed away on May 9, 2025 at the age of 95. He was the last of the five brothers.

LINKS:

The story behind Vernon Bramel's Big Inheritance

Amelia Bramel's grandfather, Alexander McIntire, was an early Kentucky frontiersman who was Killed by the Shawnee.

Marietta's father, William Semer, moved the family to Bettsville after a lengthy military career that began at Fort Zachery Taylor, Key West, Florida

The Bramel DNA project traces our ties back to Medieval England.

A tribute to my father: Vernon William Bramel



Descendants of Alonzo Wellwood Bramel and Mary Amelia McIntire


Generation 1

1. ALONZO WELLWOOD "WOOD" BRAMEL (William Washington Bramel, James Alexander Bramel, Jonathan Bramhall) was born on 26 May 1856 in Lewisburg, Mason County, Kentucky. He died on 05 Nov 1916 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He married MARY AMELIA MCINTIRE (daughter of Alexander McIntire Jr. and Miriam Lyons) on 02 Apr 1885 in Fernleaf, Mason County, Kentucky. She was born on 04 Sep 1849 in Mason County, Kentucky. She died in 1927 in Detroit, Michigan. 

Maysville Cemetery, Mason County, Kentucky

Alonzo Wellwood Bramel and Mary Amelia McIntire had the following children: 

2. i. GEORGE PIERCE BRAMEL was born on 26 Feb 1886 in Mason County, Kentucky. He died on 4 Aug 1963 in Shreveport, Louisiana. He married (1) SALLY MAE NOLAN (daughter of William Henry Nolan and Susan Johnson) on 09 Nov 1905 in Lexington, Kentucky. She was born in Sep 1880 in Lexington, Kentucky. She died on 23 Aug 1925 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He married (2) ELIZABETH LEWIS on 15 Nov 1918 in Anderson County, Tennessee. She was born on 23 Jul 1890 in Roane County, Tennessee. She died in Jul 1979 in Hamilton County, Tennessee. He married (3) LEONE MORRIS about 1938 in Columbus, Franklin, Ohio, United States. She was born on 24 Mar 1903 in West Virginia. She died on 21 Oct 1984 in Shreveport, Louisiana. 

George P. Bramel (1886-1963)

ii. LESLIE BRAMEL was born on 03 Nov 1887 in Mason County, Kentucky. He died in Jun 1967 in Soap Lake, Grant County, Washington. 

iii. NANCY MAE BRAMEL was born in Dec 1889 in Kentucky, United States. She died on 24 Feb 1976 in Ravenna, Portage County, Ohio. She married (1) WARREN HAGER WILKINSON on 7 Nov 1914 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was born on 05 Jan 1887 in Columbus, Ohio. He died on 17 Oct 1975 in Duval County, Florida. She married (2) BENJAMIN FRANKLIN JONES (son of Benjamin Enoch Jones and Harriet Bellars) on 10 July 1931 at Mackinac Island, Michigan. He was born on 28 Sep 1884 in North Lawrence, Stark County, Ohio. He died on 26 Jul 1967 in Ravenna, Portage County, Ohio. 

Benjamin and Nancy Mae (Bramel) Jones, Lavern Lloyd Jones and Harlene, circa 1932

3. iv. MIRIAM HASSEL BRAMEL was born in Mar 1892 in Mason County, Kentucky. She married (1) ARTHUR BARKER CRASK (son of John R Crask and Mary Crask) on 31 May 1910 in Tuscola, Douglas County, Illinois (Rev. George P. Bramel, brother of the bride, officiated the ceremony at the court house). He was born on 30 Aug 1890 in Warren County, Indiana. He died on 21 Dec 1949 in Los Angeles, California. She married (2) CHARLES CLARK HOPPER (son of Charles C. Hopper and Anna Clarke) on 16 May 1917 in Greensburg, Decatur County, Indiana (they lived with her mother per 1920 census). He was born on 12 Jul 1895 in Mason County, Kentucky. He died on 11 Mar 1959 in Mason County, Kentucky. She married (?) LAUDER. He died in Michigan. 

Generation 2

George Pierce Bramel and Sally Mae Nolan had the following children: 

i. ESTHER MAE BRAMEL was born on 6 Dec 1906 in Kentucky. She died on 5 Feb 1981 in Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida. She married (1) ROBERT L. ALLARS on 5 Dec 1925 in Toledo, Ohio. He was born 15 Dec 1899 in Illinois. She married (2) Mr. SACKS about 1927. She married (3) CHARLES CLARK HOPPER (son of Charles C Hopper and Anna Clarke) about 1945 in Augusta, Bracken, Kentucky, USA. He was born on 12 Jul 1895 in Mason County, Kentucky. He died on 11 Mar 1959 in Mason County, Kentucky. She married (4) LLOYD MERRILL GALBRETH on 1 Oct 1951 in Cleveland, Ohio. He was born on 14 Aug 1905 in Chicopee, Hampden County, Massachusetts. He died on 16 Apr 1978 in Jacksonville Beach, Duval County, Florida.

4. ii. CLYDE VERNON BRAMEL was born on 18 Jun 1910 in West Lebanon, Warren County, Indiana. He died on 23 May 1992 in Toledo, Ohio. He married MARIETTA SEMER (daughter of William Lampson Semer and Nettie Blanche Russell) on 28 Nov 1927 in Belmor, Putnam County, Ohio. She was born on 01 Mar 1910 in Fort Schuyler, Bronx, New York. She died on 04 Aug 1993 in Danville, Boyle County, Kentucky. 

iii. MALCOLM BRAMEL was born on 18 Jan 1912 in Kentucky. He died on 04 Apr 1965 in Hawthorne, Los Angeles County, California. He married (1) ELSIE PERRY (daughter of Earl H. Perry and Addie Bacey) about 1940 in Tacoma, Pierce County, Washington. She was born about 1923 in Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin. He married (2) HAZEL GERTRUDE PALMER (daughter of Lowie C. Palmer and Jessie M. McMasters) about 1948 in San Angelo, Texas. She was born on 14 Jul 1918 in Soldier, Monona County, Iowa. She died in Mar 1994 in Denver, Denver, Colorado. 

iv. GEORGE BRAMEL was born on 26 Jan 1913 in Knox County, Indiana. He died in 1913 (speculative). 

5. v. HENRY CARL BRAMEL was born on 24 Mar 1917 in Mason County, Kentucky. He died on 16 Sep 1984 in Toledo, Ohio. He married (1) SOPHIA A. HELLE on 18 Jun 1935 in Lucas County, Ohio. She was born on 25 Oct 1914 in Lucas County, Ohio. She died on 22 Jun 1999 in Oregon, Lucas County, Ohio. He married (2) JUANITA FERN SCHOONER on 27 Aug 1947 in Toledo, Ohio. He married (3) EDNA MARIE ECKHARDT (daughter of Arthur Robert Eckhardt and Marie Eleanor Mominee) on 12 May 1951 in Toledo, Ohio. She died on 15 Sep 1980 in Toledo, Ohio.

Henry C. Bramel (1917-1984)

George Pierce Bramel and Elizabeth Lewis had the following child:

vi. MARY KATHLEEN BRAMEL (daughter of George Pierce Bramel and Elizabeth Lewis) was born on 12 Apr 1921 in Toledo, Ohio. She died on 28 Jul 2014 in Cleveland, Bradley County, Tennessee. She married DAVID JEROME HARRIS, SR. about 1940 in Hamilton County, Tennessee. He was born 3 Aug 1907 in Jefferson County, Tennessee and died in Aug 1971 in Hamilton County, Tennessee.

Arthur Barker Crask and Miriam Hassel Bramel had the following child: 

i. RUBY LOUISE CRASP (daughter of Arthur Barker Crask and Miriam Hassel Bramel) was born on 26 Jun 1911 in West Lebanon, Warren County, Indiana. She died on 15 Oct 1984 in West Covina, Los Angeles, California, United States of America. She married (1) ORVAL M. TYLER (son of James Crettington Tyler and Nora Jane Young) in 1929 in St. Joseph, Indiana, United States. He was born about 1908 in Indiana. He died on 20 Sep 1977 in Los Angeles, California. 

Generation 3

Clyde Vernon Bramel and Marietta Semer had the following children: 

i. RICHARD EUGENE "TUFFY" BRAMEL was born on 27 May 1928 in Bettsville, Seneca, Ohio. He died 11 Apr 2018 in Punta Gorda, Charlotte County, Florida. He married MADONNA HENDERSON (daughter of Shirley J. Henderson and Helena Depinet) on 09 Dec 1949. She was born on 17 Mar 1931 in Ohio. She died on 6 Jun 2020 in Punta Gorda, Charlotte County, Florida.

Richard "Tuffy" and Madonna Bramel, 2011

ii. MALCOLM EARL BRAMEL was born on 19 Feb 1930 in Bettsville, Seneca County, Ohio. He died on 9 May 2025 in Emporia, Greensville County, Virginia. He married (1) VIRGINIA ROSE MAGGARD. She was born on 04 Sep 1925 in Whitesburg, Letcher County, Kentucky. She died in 2010 in Lexington, Kentucky. He married (2) KATHERINE KNIGHT (daughter of Wilbur Haywood Knight and Allie Morris). She was born 20 Jun 1938 in Greene County, Virginia.

Katherine, Marietta, and Earl, 1992

iii. GEORGE RAYMOND BRAMEL was born on 06 Jan 1932 in Bettsville, Seneca County, Ohio. He died on 22 Jan 2001 in Milford, Geary County, Kansas. He married (1) FREDA MELISSA COLLINS (daughter of Paul and Lillian Collins) on 10 May 1950 in Seneca County, Ohio. She was born on 18 Nov 1930 in Seneca County, Ohio. She died on 6 Jun 2020. He married BARBARA NELL "BOBBIE" BRITT on 1 Jul 1965 in Fairfax, Virginia. He married (2) ELSIE SHILEY about 1956. She was born on 21 Jun 1935 in Ohio. She died on 21 Jul 2005 in Ohio, United States. He married MARGUARITE SHILEY. He married CAROL J DEWEY. 

Freda and George, circa 1950

iv. CHARLES EVERETT BRAMEL was born on 14 Dec 1933 in Bettsville, Seneca County, Ohio. He died 15 Oct 2019 in Okemah, Okfuskee County, Oklahoma. He married (1) JOANN FULLER in 1957 in Missouri, United States. She was born on 19 Feb 1940 in Fort Leonard Wood, Pulaski County, Missouri. She died 22 May 2013 in Edmond, Oklahoma. He married (2) SHARON CHILDERS on 12 Jul 1996 in Eureka Springs, Carroll County, Arkansas. 

Charles Everett Bramel

v. VERNON WILLIAM BRAMEL JR. was born on 09 Oct 1935 in Bettsville, Seneca County, Ohio. He died 5 April 2025 in Danville, Boyle County, Kentucky. He married Sharon Lee Jeanette (daughter of Joseph Benjamin Jeanette and Winifred Chapman) on 09 Dec 1954 in Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana. She was born on 16 Apr 1938 in Fremont, Sandusky County, Ohio. 

Vernon Jr. and Sharon, 2014

vi. SALLY DARLENE BRAMEL was born on 14 Apr 1942 in Fremont, Sandusky County, Ohio. She married MICHAEL KEAR (son of Russell Wayne Kear and Dorothy Marie Wahrer) in Oct 1966 in Lake County, Florida. He was born on 09 May 1944 in Tiffin, Seneca, Ohio, USA. 

Sally and Mike, 2013

Henry Carl Bramel and Sophia A Helle had the following children:

i. JERRY CARL BRAMEL was born on 10 Jan 1936 in Curtice, Lucas County, Ohio. He died on 29 Aug 2015 in Toledo, Ohio.

ii. ROBERT CHARLES BRAMEL was born on 08 Oct 1937 in Curtice, Lucas County, Ohio. He died on 17 May 1958 in Whitehouse, Lucas County, Ohio. 

Henry Carl Bramel and Edna Marie Eckhardt had the following child: 

iii.  PATRICIA ANN BRAMEL was born on 27 Nov 1952 in Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio. She married LLOYD GEORGE WHITAKER in Jun 1971 in Toledo, Ohio. 

Mary Kathleen Bramel and David Jerome Harris had the following children:

i.    DAVID JEROME HARRIS, JR. was born in 1941 in Hamilton County, Tennessee. He married WILLIE "RUTH" GOFORTH on 28 Jun 1969 in Hamilton County, Tennessee. She was born on 11 Oct 1944 in Athens, McMinn County, Tennessee and died on 22 Nov 2016 in Cleveland, Bradley County, Tennessee.

ii.    BRIAN WOOD HARRIS was born 28 Jun 1943 in Hamilton County, Tennessee. He died on 8 Jul 2014 in Hamilton County, Tennessee.