Cousin Dawn Jager asked about Aunt Ruth’s fudge recipe. Perhaps this is it. I found this in her recipe book (more a clipping file of recipes). It looks like the Jagers dominated the Wayland Globe in November, 1967. (I wonder if they were worried about being overexposed.) I’m not familiar with fudge that is kneaded. And here is another fudge recipe from her book:
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
I found this clipping in Aunt Ruth’s recipe book (was someone looking for that?) This ran in the Wayland Globe in November, 1967. It’s nice to see her with a smile on her face. In our 8mm movies and photographs, it seems like she is often not smiling. Anybody remember eating this dish?
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
Lambert (Bert) Jager was born on June 27, 1891, a Saturday. His parents were Frank and Hendricka Jager, who lived in Clam Union Township, Michigan, just east of McBain, and just farther east of Cadillac. Lambert’s grandfather was Lambertus Jager (click to read the previous post about him) who came to America to join Frank and his other sons after his wife (Anna Strijker Jager) died back in the Netherlands.
At age 20, in 1911, Bert Jager was living in Pontiac, Michigan. Aunt Ruth’s family history collection includes a series of postcards Bert sent home to Missaukee County between 1911 and 1914.
A postcard from August 1912 showed Bert and his brother Abel. “Abel is working by me now”
Sometime between 1914 and 1916, Grandpa Jager headed out west to California. A 1916 letter to his brother showed that he was living in Afton, California, north of Sacramento. He was working on a ranch, but he had bought 10 acres of land for $250. The land had a small almond orchard on it. “…I am in debt now up to my neck.” A personal item in the local paper noted, “Bert Jager, a sturdy young farmer from Afton, visited Colusa on business yesterday.”
Although World War I started in Europe in 1914, the U.S. did not declare war on Germany until April of 1917. Grandpa Jager, living in California, got this draft notice in March 1918:
Ordered to report on April Fool’s Day, 1918, Grandpa Jager was sent to basic training at Camp Lewis, just south of Seattle, Washington. Bert Jager was a private in the Headquarters Company of the 364th Infantry, which was part of the 182nd Brigade, part of the 91st Division, part of the V Corps of the American Expeditionary Force.
After almost three months of basic training, Bert and the rest of the 364th Infantry left Camp Lewis by train in June 26, 1918. They arrived at Camp Merritt outside New York City. On July 12, the 364th left for Europe on the Olympic, the sister ship to the ill-fated Titanic.
After a week on the Atlantic Ocean, Bert and his fellow American soldiers arrived in Southampton, England, and then on to Le Havre, France. They spent the rest of July and August in France, drilling and training.
In September, Grandpa and the 364th headed to the front lines. The 91st Division was placed smack in the middle of what would become the largest battle in World War I–The Meuse-Argonne Offensive. Grandpa Jager sets the stage in his WWI diary: “September 21st–Left orchard and had a 5 kilometer hike to near battle line through Auberville. Also, Germans sending over gas shells and shrapnel continuously, arriving same day. Left on September 2th to go and take our positions to go over the top next morning on September 26th.”
“Going over the top” was soldiers charging out of their trenches to attack the enemy across no-man’s land. What was Lambert Jager’s experience in the middle of this great battle? We don’t know. This is all he put in his diary: “September 26th into battle till October 4.”
The 364th was later sent to Belgium, where they were also near the front lines. After the war ended on November 11, 1918 (“News came. Armistice was signed, all felt happy. They say we are going home very soon”), Grandpa’s unit stayed in France until March, 1919. They took the U.S.S. Siboney back to America, and Lambert Jager was back in California in April. He was discharged from the army on April 26, 1919. His discharge papers note “Service honest and faithful.”
In 1921, Sarah VerStrate boarded the train in Grand Rapids and headed out to California to marry Bert Jager. According to Aunt Ruth’s “Family Memories” that she wrote in 2008, “There was some resistance to the marriage to Bert because he was so much older than she (she was 21, he was 30) and the fact that she went to California to marry him. According to what I remember Mom saying, her father didn’t like it one bit.”
Sarah and Bert were married in Willows, California on April 28, 1921. Retha was born in 1922 and Freda in 1923. Apparently that almond orchard he bought back in 1916 didn’t result in prosperity. Here is an ad from the local paper in 1923:
Bert and Sarah returned to Michigan and settled on Dalton Avenue in the Beverly neighborhood of Grand Rapids. They had eight more children, plus a baby named Freddie born in 1934 that did not live. Bert worked for Leonard Refrigeration and later hauled coal for Breen and Haliday Fuel Company. They later moved to 140th street to a house that burned down in 1943, and then down the road to the house that later Rich and Barb’s family lived in, and is now owned by Dawn and Mark Doxey. The family transferred their membership from the Wyoming Park Christian Reformed Church to the Moline CRC in 1937.
Lambert Jager died of pancreatic cancer on May 10, 1952. He was buried in Hooker Cemetery.
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
Since this blog is “Aunt Ruth’s People,” I thought I would share a selection of photographs from the life of Ruth.
Ruth in 1942
Ruth at Uncle Abe and Aunt Anna VerStrate’s Farm
Ruth’s senior picture. It was taken in November, 1944, and she graduated in 1945.
Summer, 1946
Ruth and Freda Jager
Ruth and Ken VanderHeide, probably at a Verstrate Family reunion
Ruth with “Richard’s car.” Anyone know the year and model?
Ruth driving–“The day we moved” April, 1953
Ruth is 4th from the left, and my Mom, Bev Schrotenboer, is 3rd from the left. Far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine VanderWoude. Can you identify anyone else?
Ruth Jager and her cousin Bernice VanderHeide when Ruth lived in Denver. Did Bernice also live there?
January, 1957–Ruth in front of the house on 146th?
Fashion!
More fashion!
July, 1964
Ruth was a long-time employee at Pitney-Bowes
Ruth at Pitney Bowes in January, 1974
A picture taken for the Wayland Globe newspaper in 1967
A drawing of Ruth in 2015, by Rebecca Moelker
Aunt Ruth never married, but she did apparently have a secret boyfriend!
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
Missaukee County, just east of Cadillac, is the homeland of the Jagers. And if you wander through the farmland east of McBain, you come across the small settlement of Falmouth. Just south of there is Clam Union Cemetery. And here you can find the remarkable tombstone of Lambertus Jager.
Lambertus was the father of Frank.
Frank was the father of Lambert (Bert).
Lambert and Sarah were the parents of Retha, Freda, Richard, Ruth, Robert, Leonard, Lambert, Jane, Donald, and Katharine Susan.
So Lambertus is my great-great-grandfather. He came to America in 1886, just after his son Geert (1882), Tammo (1883), and Frank (1885). His daughter Anna followed in 1887.
As you can see on the tombstone, he was born (geboren, geb.) June 18, 1823, so he was 63 when he came to America. His wife, Anna Strijker Jager, had died in 1876, so it seems likely that his children convinced him to join them in Michigan.
This is a picture of Lambertus Jager. I did not see any pictures of him in the Google Drive of pictures from Aunt Ruth, but this is from findagrave.com. He died on April 18, 1899, at the age of 75. (Ovl. is the abbreviation for the Dutch word “overleden,” meaning passed away.) Vader is of course the Dutch word for father, and the inscription on the bottom is “Openbaring 14:13 “Zalig zijn de doden, die in den Heere sterven.” This is from the Bible (Revelations 14:13) which roughly translated means “Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord.”
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
One of my fond memories as a kid was attending the annual VerStrate family reunions, held at Long Lake Park.
On our way to Mackinac Island, Mary Jo and I stopped at Long Lake County Park, which is just a few miles west of 131 at the Cedar Springs exit. The visit allowed me to wander down memory lane. My guess is that I attended with my family the reunions from the early 1960s up until the mid-1970s, when I was in high school.
My strongest memories are the food and the games. There must have been prizes for the games, as I recall winning a socket set that Uncle Don Jager really wanted and didn’t think a 13-year-old needed. We must have swum in the lake, although I don’t remember that very much. I was also the kind of kid to wander off and just explore on my own. I remember the large electrical towers that run through the park. These reunions were really my only contact with the VerStrate side of the family, except for Bernice Vanderheide, who took lots of trips with Aunt Ruth and seemed to hang out with her.
When Aunt Ruth Jager died this past summer, I became the keeper of the family photographs and history. Part of those family archives was the spiral notebook that recorded the history of the VerStrate reunions down through the years. Here’s the list of VerStrate reunions, by year and location:
1943–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1944–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1945–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1946–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1947–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1948–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1949–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1950–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1951–Silver Lake Grange Hall
1952–Silver Lake Grange Hall
1953–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park?
1954–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1955–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1956–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1957–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1958–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1959–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1960–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1961–School Section Lake, Mecosta County Park
1962–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1963–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1964–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1965–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1966–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1967–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1968–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1969–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1970–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1971–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1972–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1973–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1974–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1975–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1976–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1977–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1978–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1979–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1980–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1981–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1982–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1983–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1984–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1985–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1986–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1987–Long Lake, Kent County Park
1988–Long Lake, Kent County Park
Was 1988 the last Verstrate reunion? Perhaps someone who knows can share in the comments.
Hidden among Aunt Ruth’s family history materials was an old composition book (10 cents!)
Inside is the history of each reunion from 1943 to 1988. The clan always conducted a business meeting, and these are the minutes. They elected officers and had a fund of money that carried over from year to year. Here are minutes from 1943:
“The Ver Strate Reunion was held at Long Lake, Kent County Park, on August 21, 1943. There were about forty persons present.
“In the absence of the president, Addie Dalstra conducted the short business meeting. It was decided that we have a reunion in 1944 at Schoolcraft Park the first Saturday in August provided the war does not make it necessary to postpone it. The people from Hudsonville were appointed as the food committee and they can also get up games if they want them.
“No collection was taken because there was sufficient money in the treasury to cover all bills.”
In 1944 Bert Jager (Ruth’s father) was elected vice-president and Freda Jager the secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Lambert Jager (Sarah) was appointed chairman of the food and game committee in 1945. This is also the year the leftover hamburgs and buns were auctioned off, with $4.75 going into the treasury. Richard Jager was the vice president in 1949. In this same year, “There wasn’t anything in the treasury, so a collection was made to meet expenses.” Richard Jager moved up to president in 1950 and 1951. 57 people attended in 1955. That year the question of a group picture was raised and voted down. In 1961, Aunt Ruth made a motion to have the next year’s reunion held at Gun Lake. The motion was defeated. The motion to have the reunion at Long Lake passed with the amendment that the committee would find out if the lake was good for swimming. 1963 saw the highest attendance ever with 106 people present.
In 1975, new business included “a motion made and approved to put a marker on the grave of Grandfather and Grandmother Ver Strate in Riverside Cemetery. Shirley will check family Bible for birth and death dates. Interest was shown in starting a family tree.” Noted guests included Uncle Chris Ver Strate from Florida, Ken and Sena VanderHeide from South Dakota, Robbie Jager from Arizona, and Ruth VanderHeide from Washington State. In 1980, the minutes noted two deaths–Richard Jager, August 29, 1979, and Walter Mullen, October 2, 1979. It was noted, “We are grateful and comforted by their faith in Christ and the knowledge that they live on in Him.”
By 1988, only 32 family members attended the reunion at Long Lake. A motion was made to hold the reunion again in two years, in 1990, in order to try for a larger crowd.
Was that reunion ever held? Did they continue? This is the last entry in the Ver Strate family notebook.
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…
Thanks for the info, Rol. I will add that to the picture. Any idea what the occasion was? Were these…
Wow Chuck, precious treasures. The group shot with Aunt Ruth and Aunt Bev, far right Edie DeYoung, back tall, Elaine…
I agree. And sorting through these, I got a much better sense of what she was like as a young…
These pictures are such a treasure. Aunt Ruth was always such a sharp, classy lady with a beautiful smile!❤️
I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you putting these together. It’s nice to know and to…