Difference between revisions of "Anna Veronica Berish"
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== Family Years == | == Family Years == | ||
− | + | How Anna came to meet her future husband '''[[Joseph John Timko Sr.]]''' can only be a matter for speculation. It is known that the Slovak miners lived in very close-knit communities where everyone knew everyone else. Perhaps they met during a church social or through mutual friends or simply as neighbors. No matter, the county records show they were married on September 14, 1914 in Dixonville, Indiana County, PA.<ref>''Orphans Court, Indiana County, PA, Joseph & Anna Timko’s Marriage License, No. 3747, Volume 22 Page 248.''</ref>Anna was just seventeen at the time of her marriage. In fact, her father had to file papers with the court to allow his daughter’s marriage. The young couple were married by Reverend Gro. D. Bonsk. | |
− | + | Never the next seventeen years, the young couple would have eleven children: five boys - Joseph John Jr., Stephen Michael, Edward John, Albert James and one unnamed who died at birth, and six girls - Mary Martha, Anna Joan, Susanna, Elizabeth Margaret, Emma Marie and Dorothy Alice. Susanna would only live a few days before passing away. | |
+ | The ten children of Joseph and Anna are as follows; | ||
* '''[[Mary Martha Timko]]''' | * '''[[Mary Martha Timko]]''' | ||
* '''[[Anna Joan Timko]]''' | * '''[[Anna Joan Timko]]''' |
Revision as of 21:55, 30 April 2021
Anna Veronica (Berish) Timko - Born on Anna Biros on March 1, 1897 in Riddlesburg, Broadtop Township, Bedford County, PA. She was the oldest child of Michael Berish, a coal miner, and Anna P. Mudry, a housewife.
Description
Anna was a thin individual who stood about 5 foot 8 inches in height. She had light brown hair, brown eyes and wore eye glasses in her later years..
Early Years
Having 12 younger brothers and sisters, Anna spent much of her youth helping her mother raise the other Berish children.
Education
Anna's formal education was completed by the eighth grade.
Religion
Anna was baptized into the Catholic faith and was devout member of the Church in later years. She was a member of Sts. Cyril and Methodius Catholic Church in Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio during the early years of living in Warren. However, in her final years, she attended Christ Our King Church in Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio.
Family Years
How Anna came to meet her future husband Joseph John Timko Sr. can only be a matter for speculation. It is known that the Slovak miners lived in very close-knit communities where everyone knew everyone else. Perhaps they met during a church social or through mutual friends or simply as neighbors. No matter, the county records show they were married on September 14, 1914 in Dixonville, Indiana County, PA.[1]Anna was just seventeen at the time of her marriage. In fact, her father had to file papers with the court to allow his daughter’s marriage. The young couple were married by Reverend Gro. D. Bonsk.
Never the next seventeen years, the young couple would have eleven children: five boys - Joseph John Jr., Stephen Michael, Edward John, Albert James and one unnamed who died at birth, and six girls - Mary Martha, Anna Joan, Susanna, Elizabeth Margaret, Emma Marie and Dorothy Alice. Susanna would only live a few days before passing away.
The ten children of Joseph and Anna are as follows;
- Mary Martha Timko
- Anna Joan Timko
- Susanna Timko
- Joseph John Timko Jr.
- Stephen Michael Timko
- Elizabeth Margaret Timko
- Edward John Timko
- Albert James Timko
- Emma Marie Timko
- Dorothy Alice Timko
Residences
During the family's years in Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio, Joseph and Anna rented or owned a total of seven houses on the southwest side of the city.
- 1xx Parkman Road [Note: The exact address of the family's first rental house is not known. My paternal Aunt Emma (Timko) Burin said that while driving with her mother Anna, Anna pointed to a small collection of houses next to the railroad tracks on Parkman and said that was the house the family lived in when they first arrived in the city. At the time, it never occurred to Emma to ask exactly which of the house had been the family's first home. However, from city records, the address would have to have been either 160, 170 or 178 Parkman Road, hence the 1xx designation.]
- 985 Hunter Street NW
- 1437 Tod Avenue SW
- 487 Fourth Street
- 481 Oriole Place SW
- 770 Fourth Street
- 1640 Oak Street SW
Working Years
Anna was a homemaker for 40 years. She never worked outside the home.
Personal Life
Anna, or Baba as she was known to her grandchildren, was a no-nonsense type of grandmother who was used to running a large household full of kids. And despite the fact that we were her grand children, it made no difference. Grandson, granddaughter, son, daughter, niece or nephew, she treated us all the same – with firmness, with fairness and, despite the lack of a smile, with love. Smiles, it seems, were only given on special occasions and that made them all the more sought after. I suspect that the only one who could see beneath her façade was Joseph and that he was one of the few that could draw out a smile whenever he wanted one.
Death
Anna died from breast cancer which spread to her spine on April 27, 1972 at St. Joseph’s Riverside Hospital in Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio. She was buried along side her husband Joseph on April 29, 1972 at Sts. Peter and Paul Cemetery in Lordstown, Trumbull County, Ohio.
- ↑ Orphans Court, Indiana County, PA, Joseph & Anna Timko’s Marriage License, No. 3747, Volume 22 Page 248.