The Sarell Family
By Lawrence Peahl
October 2004
The
Sarell family has been traced back to Edward Sarell in England in the
first half of the eighteenth century. He was married to Elizabeth Ellis
on 10 Feb 1785 in Frithelstock, Devonshire, England. Devonshire was the
home of the Sarells during this period. Although I have no specifics on
Edward's birth date or place, he probably was also from Devonshire. They
had three children Raymond Seldon Sarell (1786 - ??), William Sarell
(1788 - ??) and our ancestor Robert Dullam Sarell, born in Bideford,
Devonshire1 on 2 May 1792.
There is a reference to Robert in a
website listing Exeter Working Papers in British Trade History. The site
lists him in Bideford in Devonshire as the Globe Inn Innkeeper with a
mention of a bankruptcy on 23 Aug 1827. Whether it was his or someone
else isn't stated.
Robert married Betsy (also spelled Betsey) Benison
(b. 1 Jun 1788 in Exeter, Devonshire). They were married in Bideford on
19 Aug 1813. Betsey's mother was Jane Marks, and the name Marks shows up
in several descendants. Church records in Bideford list a number of
Sarells as well as families with surnames of Searle, Searell, Searl,
Saroll, Sarels, Sarles, and Searls. It appears that at least some of
these were from the same family.
Robert and Betsy had eight
children: Robert Henry (1814 - ??), Jane Marks, Raymond Seldon (1817 -
??), Hannah Marks (1818 - 1819) who died in infancy, and Edward Sarell
(1819 - 1820) who also died in infancy. Our ancestor William Marks
Benison Sarell (note the names surfacing again) was born on 17 Oct 1821
in Bideford. The remaining two were another Hannah (1822 - ??) and John
(1823 - 1890). Hannah and Jane were apparently unmarried and were living
together in 1890 in Sidwell, Exeter, Devonshire. John eventually
followed his brother William M. B. to Golden, CO.
William Marks
Benison (W.M.B.) Sarell, after a limited education, began working in his
father's tin shop at the age of twelve. Five years later he went to
London and clerked in Louis & Company's hardware store for five
years and then returned to London where he met and married Amelia Fuller
(b 31 Jan 1807 in England) on 19 Nov 1849. He was 28 and she was 41 at
the time. They had one child, William Marks Sarell, who was born on 21
Jan 1851 in Holsworthy which is near Bideford in Devonshire. The fact
that Amelia was almost 44 at the time may explain why she had the one
child only.
After engaging in the hardware business in Devonshire, in
1856, W.M.B. decided to bring his family to America. They sailed out of
Plymouth, Devonshire on a ship called the Lady Peel.2 Young William was
only five at the time. He recalled later how they were driven back from
Newfoundland to the Bay of Biscay on the coast of France. After setting
out again, another storm took the mast and cookhouse from the ship. With
their water supply down to one pint a day, they finally landed in Quebec
City in October 1856. After receiving a supply of water and vegetables,
they boarded a steamer sailed up the St. Lawrence River to Port Hope on
Lake Ontario.
One year later they moved up stream about 20 miles to
Bowmanville, which is about 30 miles east of Toronto where W. M. B.
engaged in the stove and tin business. After four years, in 1860, the
elder Sarell left Amelia and young William in Bowmanville and headed to
the United States. He went to Central City in what was then still the
Kansas Territory.3 Gold had just been discovered there in May 1859.
There he became a miner for three years and then opened a hardware and
tin store in 1863. His wife and son remained in Bowmanville where young
William went to school, his only education.
Then in May 1864, Amelia
(age 58) and son William (age 13) set out to join W.M.B. in Central
City. William describes in an autobiography written in 1939 how they
made the trip. They went by rail on the Trunk Railroad to Detroit and
then Chicago where they spent three days. They continued by rail to
Grinell, Iowa. From there they went by stage coach to a place called Big
Grove Stage Station4 where they were loaded onto a two-horse wagon.
Picking up supplies in Plattsmouth, Nebraska they crossed the Missouri
River by ferry. Now in a wagon train with three wagons, three men, the
driver and his wife, Amelia and William made slow progress going about
20 miles a day. Indians were on the warpath and they spent one night
between two burning ranch houses raided by the Indians. They finally
reached Denver after 30 days on 23 June 1864. This was a journey of
about 1,600 miles.
After having to cross the Platte River on a ferry,
they arrived in Golden, Colorado on June 25th. W.M.B. had come to Denver
to meet them, but couldn't locate them so he walked back to Golden5 and
was still unable to locate is wife and son, who were trying to ford a
creek and lost a horse. After walking another ten miles or so to Guy
Hill, he eventually met up with Amelia and son at Golden Gate. From
there they went to the top of Smith Hill where W.M.B. went on to Central
City and his wife and son walked the eight miles where they finally met
up for good.
They remained in Central City until 1866 when the moved
to Golden. There W.M.B. set up a hardware store and a drug store on
Twelfth Street. William tells about joining up to fight Indians in the
Jefferson County Guard in 1868 (age 17), but he was never in combat. He
did learn what the life of a soldier was like. He wrote that in 1942
there were only two of his original company left. In 1867-68 he served
as a page boy in the Colorado Territorial Assembly which met in Golden,
the territorial capitol at the time6. He recalled later that the only
significant thing they accomplished was a vote in 1868 to move the
capitol to Denver.7 He was also a personal friend of George West, the
founder of the Colorado Transcript newspaper8, and he used to help with
running the presses.
William began an apprenticeship as a tinsmith
with his father in about 1867. In 1875 W.M.B. turned over the hardware
business to William.
W.M.B. had a long career of service in the
temperance movement. As early as 1849 he was a delegate to the first
World's Temperance Convention in London. In 1873 he was a delegate from
Colorado to the Right Worthy Grand Lodge in London. In 1879, he was
elected Grand Worthy Chief Templar for the states of Colorado, Wyoming,
and New Mexico. W.M.B. lived until 22 May 1908 when he died in Golden at
the age of 86. Amelia preceded him in death on 4 Jan 1894 just short of
her 87th birthday.
William in the meantime married Laura Macon
Simons (born 8 Nov 1858 in Missouri) on 15 Nov 1876 in Denver shortly
after he assumed the operation of the hardware store. He dabbled in
politics in 1877 when he served as the Clerk and Treasurer for Golden.
He and Laura lived at 1512 Ford Street from 1881 to 1944. He had a long
career in the hardware business retiring in 1940. "Billy" as he was
known was an esteemed member of the community.
William and Laura had
six children, all born in Golden. Raymond H. Sarell was born in 1876 and
died in 1944, the same year as his father. He worked with his father in
the hardware business. Their second child was Della M Sarell who was
born about 1884 and married Phil D Gleason. I haven't been able to find
either of their death dates.
Their third child was my ancestor Edward
Dullam Sarell born on 10 Oct 1885. After graduating from Golden High
School he went to work for the Coors Porcelain Company as a toolmaker
where remained until his retirement. Sometime before 1912 he married
Loretta May Wells who was born 15 Jan 1894 in nearby Georgetown. He
served on the Golden city council at one time, and lived at 1501 East
Street. He and Loretta had five children, all born in Golden: Laurene
Rosalie Sarell, my mother, was born 29 Dec 1912 and died on 6 Sep 1995
in Bakersfield, CA; Edward Dullam Sarell Jr, born 3 Jan 1916, married
Lila Belle Dulaney, and died 26 August 1973 in Golden; Ethan Allen
Sarell born 27 Feb 1918 currently lives in Downey, CA; Elizabeth May
Sarell born 1 Apr 1920 married Fred Olmstead (1919 - 2003) and currently
lives in Folsom, CA; William Benison Sarell born 19 Aug 1921, married
Loraine Haken, and currently lives in Downey, CA. Edward and Loretta
were divorced in the early 1930's and he later married Goldie Northcutt.
Edward died on 23 Aug 1964 in Arvada.
Loretta's family traces back to
Francis Cooke who came over to America on the Mayflower in 1620. Her
grandfather Sidney Allen was related to Ethan Allen (1738-1789) who led
the Green Mountain Boys in Vermont.
William and Laura's fourth child
was William Marks Sarell Jr, born 8 Jul 1887. He married Eva in about
1916 and they had one son Donald (1921 - 1971). William Jr was an
electrician in Denver in 1930 and died in June 1972 in Golden.
The
fifth child was Jessie Sarell who was born 9 Oct 1888. She married
Arthur H Rudd (1875-1928) who was a surveyor. She died in Aug 1979 in
Cleveland, OH.
The sixth child was Benison Sarell who was born in Aug
1891 and died less than a year later in Golden.
My mother,
Laurene Rosalie Sarell graduated from Golden High School in 1931 and
shortly after came to California with her mother Loretta. She worked as
an elevator operator in the C.C. Chapman Building. Mr. Chapman was a
benefactor for California Christian College in Orange which was named
Chapman College in 1934 in his honor. At that time he met Lawrence
Harman Peahl from Taft, CA who graduated from the University of
California in 1932 in with a degree in Mechanical Engineering. He was
working for the Southern California Gas Company in Los Angeles at the
time. They were married on 19 October 1934 at Wee Kirk O' the Heather in
Forrest Lawn, Glendale, CA. In July 1935 he was transferred to
Lancaster, CA where I was born on 30 April 1936.
In October 1939 he
was transferred back to Los Angeles and lived in Eagle Rock near
Pasadena. My sister Barbara Jeanette Peahl was born on 15 June 1941
while there. In July 1943 Harman was located back to his home in Taft
where we lived on the Gas Company lease located east of town. His final
transfer occurred in Jan 1948 to Avenal located about 75 miles north of
Taft. While there Harman contracted a fatal case of pneumonia and died
20 November 1950. Laurene, Barbara and I moved back to Taft in January
1951. In 1959 Laurene married Norman Jensen "Bill" Milford. He died in
1987 and she remained in Taft until her death on 6 September 1995.
1 Bideford is a port on the north coast of Devon and
dates back to 1272. It thrived as a trading port with the Americas in
the 16th through 18th centuries. Today it is primarily a resort.
2
The Lady Peel was built in Quebec in 1843 and was eventually abandoned
in the north Atlantic in 1872. It sailed to Quebec from 1850 to 1856.
3 The Colorado Territory was formed out of the Kansas Territory on 28
Feb 1861.
4 There is no place by that name today.
5 Golden, first
settled in 1858, was known as Golden City until 1872.
6 Golden became
the territorial capitol in 1862.
7 Colorado would not become a state
until 1876.
8 Founded in 1866.
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