The Shemwell Family

Mertie BarnerAge: 4 months18941895

Name
Mertie Barner
Given names
Mertie
Surname
Barner
Note: Bertie and Mertie Barner were twins
Birth September 17, 1894 34 33
Birth of a brotherBert “Bertie” Barner
September 17, 1894
Death January 21, 1895 (Age 4 months)
Burial
Cemetery - also add to Place of burial: Belle Plaine Cemetery
Family with parents - View this family
father
Abraham Lincoln Barner
Birth: August 8, 1860 31 26Springfield, Sangamon, Illinois, United States
Death: June 18, 1944Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
mother
Marriage: December 21, 1882
23 months
elder brother
5 years
elder sister
Florence Barner
Birth: April 1889 28 27Kansas, United States
Death: December 20, 1958Kansas, United States
3 years
elder sister
Ethel Barner
Birth: September 21, 1891 31 30Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
Death: November 8, 1956Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
3 years
herself
Mertie Barner
Birth: September 17, 1894 34 33Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
Death: January 21, 1895Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
twin brother
Bert “Bertie” Barner
Birth: September 17, 1894 34 33Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States
Death: November 26, 1970Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas, United States

Mertie Barner has 15 first cousins recorded

Name
Bertie and Mertie Barner were twins
Name
Bert Barner Obituary and Family Listing Bert Barner was the son of Abraham Lincoln Barner (1860-1944) and Laura Alice Barner. Bert was born September 17, 1894 in Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas and died November 26, 1970 in Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas. He married Frankie Nelson. Frankie was born on 14 July 1893 and died on June 12, 1952 in Belle Plaine, Kansas. Bert and Frankie lived in Palestine, Kansas in 1930. They had two children: Alberta Barner born in 1919 and Doris Marita Barner born on 15 January 1924 in Belle Plaine, Sumner, Kansas and died on March 6, 1989. Marita Barner married Floyd Griffith Carter. ***** Bert Barner Dies; Sunday Rites Held Bert Barner,76, a lifetime resident of Belle Plaine, died last Thursday. He farmed in this area until stricken with a long illness. Funeral services were conducted Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Hatfield Funeral Home, with interment in Belle Plaine Cemetery. The Rev. Keith Dudeck officiated. Vocal music was furnished by Mrs. Kenneth Utt and Mrs. Kenneth Howe, with Mrs. Roy Cheek as organist. Pallbearers included Richard Sullivan, Dean Nugen, Bob Pace, Jim Hatfield, Barton Evers and R. B. Moore. A. J. Lane, Weaver Poovey, George McAllister and Joe Wright served as honorary pallbearers. Bertie and his twin sister, Mertie, were born on Sept 19, 1894 to Abraham Lincoln and Laura Alice Barner at their rural Belle Plaine home. He joined the Methodist Church at an early age. In 1916 (differs from date on stone), he was married to Frankie Nelson, who died in 1952. He was also preceded in death by his parents, a brother, Ray, and three sisters, Florence Scott, Ethel Carrothers, and Mertie, who died in infancy. His survivors include two daughters, three granddaughters, and two great-grandsons. (Belle Plaine News, Dec. 3, 1970, submitted by Nancy Willis) https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26627932/bert-barner
Name
Ethel Carrothers (nee Barner) Obituary and Family Listing CARROTHERS, Ethet (BARNER) Ethel (Barner) Carrothers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Barner, was born July 21, 1891 near Belle Plaine, Kansas and died Thursday Nov. 8 1956 at her home. Ethel grew up in the Palestine community, joining the Palestine Methodist Church, later transferring her membership to the Belle Plaine Methodist Church. She lived near Belle Plaine until going to Winfield where she took up her profession. She moved back to Belle Plaine six years ago purchasing her own beauty shop, where she remained active until the time of her death. She was preceded in death by both of her parents, a sister Mertie Barner, a brother, Ray J. Barner; and one grandson, Dana Bruce Trent. She leaves to mourn her passing, her daughter, Dorothy Carrothers Trent; one granddaughter, Karen; one sister, Mrs. Florence Scott; one brother, Bert Barner; all of Belle Plaine, several nieces, nephews, cousins and hosts of friends. (The Belle Plaine News, Thursday, Nov. 15, 1956, submitted by Nancy Willis - Sumner County Genealogy Trails) https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/27006294/ethel_carrothers
Name
Abraham Lincoln Barner Biography and Family Listing Biography of Abraham Lincoln Barner Some of the most substantial people of Kansas today, well able to ride about over the improved highways in their automobiles, came into the state in the early days with the slow and tedious method of the prairie schooner or the mover’s wagon. Such an emigrant party arrived in Sumner County in 1873. They had come overland from Central Illinois, being twenty-six days on route. Three wagons comprised the train, and the driver of one of those wagons, then thirteen years of age, was Abrabam Lincoln Barner, who is now living retired at Belle Plaine in Sumner County, and for years had been prominently known as a farmer, stockman, land owner, banker and closely identified with many of the business and civic affairs of his home section. The head of the family at that time was his father, Michael Barner. Michael Barner had come out to Sumner County in the spring of 1873, with two other men, and they bought three-quarter seetions, two for $800 each and another for $850. One of these quarters had an unfinished house on it, but one of the familiar Kansas winds of that day soon blew it away. When Michael Barner brought his family out he bought 160 acres near one of the three quarter sections previously mentioned, paying $1,000 for it. Its chief improvement was a log cabin, and that old building is still standing there. Michael Barner during the following years became one of Sumner County’s most valued citizens. At the time of his death he owned 960 acres of land, and had devoted it to general farming and the raising of cattle and hogs. He was naturally a leader in the community, and was greatly admired for his straightforward, honest, God-fearing virtues and his devotion to his family. Michael Barner was born in Pennsylvania and married Martha Ann Mohn, a native of Ohio. Michael had been left an orphan at the age of nine years, and up to fifteen made his home with an older brother. Dospite early handicaps he was in no way deficient in energy and ambition to make the most of his opportunities, and on leaving home he went out to Illinois and after working hard for several years he bought eighty acres in the heavy woods not far from Springfield, Sangamon County. He paid $10 an acre for this land. The timber he removed by cutting into cord wood and selling it, and he also grubbed up the stumps and gradually got his land cleared for cultivation. He was an indefatigable worker, and by sheer determination won a substantial success. Though his school advantages had been very meager, he acquired a good edueation by teaching himself. When he married he had only $75 in capital, but he and his wife proved excellent team mates and by much self denial in the early days made a home and provided for their growing children. Michael Barner, realizing what he had been denied in his youth, was more than eager to give his children the best of educational equipment. In politics he was a republican, but later became allied with the populist party, and altogether was little of a politician, his only public serving being on the school board. While living in Illinois he had been able to increase his first farm by an addition of forty acros, and was prospering there, but it was his desire to expand and give his children a start which prompted him to trade his forty acres of Illinois land for 160 acres in Sumner County. The birthplace of Abraham Lincoln Barner was a log cabin on the little farm in Sangamon County, Illinois, where he first saw the light of day August 8, 1860. He was the third in a family of ten children, seven of whom are still living. He attended school in Illinois, and afterward had the advantages of a log-cabin temple of learning in Sumner County, Kansas, and for one year was in the high school at Oxford. He lived at home and did his part in the work of the farm until his marriage on December 21, 1882, to Miss Laura A. Cox. Her parents came to Sumner County in 1877. Mr. and Mrs. Barner are the parents of five children, one of whom died in infancy. Ray J. lives on his own farm; Florence is the wife of F. W. Scott, a farmer; Ethel is Mrs. Roy Carrouthers of Sumner County; and Bert lives on the home farm. When Mr. Barner was twenty-one years of age his father gave him a team of horses and allowed him his board free for one year. That was his start in life. He rented one of his father’s farms, and though he was thus fairly well capitalized he had by no means an easy time of it for the first fifteen years. He encountered successions of droughts, other plagucs incidental to Kansas farming in the early days, and it was only by the closest kind of co-operation between himself and his faithful wife and by going without the luxuries that he finally arrived at a comfortable degree of material prosperity. Eventually he bought 120 acres, but in 1893 sold it and raced into Oklahoma at the opening of the Cherokee strip in the fall of that year. He did not locate in Oklahoma, and returning to Kansas paid $5,000 for 160 acres of land. There he began his farming career in earnest, and gradually his prosperity enabled him to make other purchases until his ownership now extends over 800 acres of the fertile lands of Sumner County. This land is highly developed and improved, and he had done much as a stock raiser, keeping both horses and cattlc. His favorite brand of cattle is the Short-Horn. It was only recently, in 1916, that Mr. Barner retired from the farm and moved to his town home in Belle Plaine. He is president of the Citizens State Bank of Belle Plaine, having held that office since 1908. This is now the largest bank in the city. He was one of the organizers of the Mutual Farmers Elevator at Palestine being president of the company there, and had given his time and resourees liberally for the promotion of every landable undertaking in his community. He is a member and president of the Fraternal Aid Society, and had served as clerk of Palestine Township and four years as county commissioner. In politics he is a democrat. He also owned some real estate in the cities of Wichita and Belle Plaine. Mrs. Barner is an active member of the Methodist Church and Sunday School. https://accessgenealogy.com/illinois/biography-of-abraham-lincoln-barner.htm