reed family tree - squarespace family tree 2014 charles lawson reed (1920-1993) dorothy whittaker...

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1800 1810 1820 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2020 2010 1830 Foster Reed (1923-1927) Priscilla Reed Gamble (1917-1993) David Gibbs Gamble ( - ) Pauline Reed (1916-1972) Charles Alfred Reed (1856-1928) Nancy Clark Reed (1832-1856) Richard Cummins Stockton Reed (1825-1909) Charles Lawson Reed (1988-1923) Pauline Carson Foster Reed (1891-1967) Samuel Foster (1800-1866) Susan Cutter Foster (1797-1869) Seth Cutter Foster (1823-1914) Julia Resor Foster (1832-1915) Enoch Terry Carson (1822 - 1899) Julia Ann Williams (1826 - 1850) Julia Carson (1850 - 1925) Margaret ( - ) Lucille Carson (1848 - 1864) Drausin Wulsin (1842 - 1910) Mary King (1837 - 1921) William Resor Foster (1864-1925) Julia Resor Foster (1862-1916) Joseph Foster (1864-1905) Julia Resor Foster (1890-1967) Pauline Carson Foster (1864-1891) Lawson Reed Wulsin (1951 - ) John Cameron Wulsin (1986 - ) Aynara Chavez Wulsin (1986 - ) Lawson Reed Wulsin, Jr. (1982 - ) Courtney Alma Hill Wulsin (1981 - ) Howard Wells Wulsin (1979 - ) Alejandra Casillas Wulsin Stuart Crowell Smither Wulsin (1983 - ) Claire Elizabeth Smither Wulsin ( - ) Victoria Elizabeth Wells Wulsin (1953- ) Isabel Victoria Casillas Wulsin (2013 - ) Drausin Foster Wulsin (1953 - ) Mary MacNeur ( - ) Susan Mineer ( - ) Mary MacNeur Wulsin (1986 - ) Drausin Foster Wulsin, Jr. (1984 - ) Ali Frick ( - ) Rosamond Reed “Robin” Wulsin (1955 - ) Dennis Szuhay ( - ) Terra Rose Szuhay (1997 - ) Sylva Reed Szuhay (1999 - ) Stockton “Stocky” Wulsin (1957 - ) Barbara Wulsin ( - ) Anna Wulsin (1988 - ) Douglas Wulsin (1990- ) Luke Wulsin (1991 - ) John Hagar Wulsin, Jr. (1949 - ) Alice Barton ( - ) Jane Wulsin ( - ) Jackson Chance Adams Fiona Rose Adams Seth Tobias Wulsin (1981 - ) Paula Winograd ( - ) Lara Hagar Wulsin Adams (1979 - ) Will Adams ( - ) Reed Family Tree 2014 Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993) Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998) Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994) C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III ( - ) Jane Levy Reed (1947 - ) Rosemary Anne Reed (1980 - ) Nicole Akemi Tamaribuchi (1977 - ) James Lawson Reed (1977 - ) Nicholas Woods William Reed (1980 - ) Alexander Lawson Reed (2011 - ) Anthony Julian Tamaribuchi (1996 - ) Chiara Manzzini Reed (2012 - ) Dorothy “Dede” Foster Reed (Hagist) (1949 - ) Peter Raleigh Hagist (1950 - ) Colin Campbell Ferenbach (1934 - ) Sophie Anderson Hagist (1977 - ) Carter Alan Schlumberger (1974 - ) Peter Woods Hagist (1978 - ) Elizabeth Fleming Yarborough (1980 - ) Timothy Carter Schlumberger (2003 - ) Max Peter Schlumberger (2005 -) Timothy Raleigh Hagist (1984 - ) Carolyn Elizabeth Wioshek (1984 - ) May Elizabeth Hagist (2012 - ) William Raleigh Hagist (2014 - ) Fiona Reed Hagis (1981 - ) Federico Sada (1979 - ) Fiona Sada (2010 - ) Isabela Sada (2011 - ) Sophia Sada (2014 - ) Janny “Janny” Reed Goss (1946 - ) Wayne Walter Goss (1945 - ) Cristian Woods Goss (1977 - ) Ashley Davison Scofield Goss (1976 - ) Carter Reed Goss (2008 - ) Kelly Marie Darsie Goss (1978 - ) Samuel Darsie Goss (2000 - ) Finnley Woods Goss (2004 - ) Charlotte Carolyn Goss (2011 - ) Foster Reed Goss (1975 - ) Anya Margaret Goss (2004 - ) Foster Anderson Reed (1951 - ) ( - ) Trish ( - ) Anderson Foster Reed ( - ) Hugh Reed ( - ) Willie Reed ( - ) Emma ( - ) Anna ( - ) David Gibbs Gamble, Jr. ( - ) ( - ) Foster Reed Gamble (1947 - ) Diana Moss ( - ) Kimberly Carter (1952 - ) Andy Hardy (1972 - ) Teyara Gamble Hardy (1976 - ) Trevor (1980 - ) Kaenon Hardy (2005 - ) Hathaway (2009 - ) Minka Hardy (2014 - ) Hathaway Gamble Barry (1949-) Lisa ( - ) Co Gamble ( - ) Kai Gamble ( - ) Polly Reed Gamble Cherner (1951 - ) Randy Cherner ( - ) Josh Kitt Cherner (1983 - ) Eli Mark Cherner (1988 - ) Jarrett Reed Cherner (1981 - ) Peaches ‘Kendra” Gamble (1946 - 2010) From Masonic Journal of Lousiville, KY. Seventy-Fifth Volume, 1891 Quite the most brilliant affair of the week was 'the afternoon reception oo Friday, at which Mr. and Mrs. Beth C. Foster presented to society their, charming granddaughters. Miss Pauline Carson Foster and Miss Julia Resor Foster in., two aeou- tantes with all the youthful fragrance and sweet naturalness ot twin roses on a single bush. The fine old Foster homestead, which has been the seat of the bead of the house since the daya when Clifton comprised the baronial acres OI a lew great esiaioa, wss like a flower show. The receiving line was formed in the square bay of the drawing room, and was- surrounded on all sides with a perfect forest of tall American Beauties.- r Mlas FosterT who has been like a mother to her niece. Miss Pauline Foster, made the nresentatlons. Bb wore a stmpl toilet of pale grey satin, renevea witn wium iscti and a line of silver. Mrs. Foster waa a delicate figure In a handsome black tollst. J with a toucn or wnite aoout ine mroni. The debutantes are the children ot twin brothers and have been brought np almost as sisters. - . ' . Miss Julia wore a lovely gown of pale blue chiffon oyer blua, satin, with a bint of pink and crystal about .the bodice. She carried an armful of Ulles'of th valley and Spanish orchids. - She has lovely fair hair. a dainty -figure and a gracious 'manner. Miss Pauline, who -has an artistic prettl-ness, wot a rosy gown of deep pink chiffon, relieved with blvie. Her fair hair was brought low ore ber ears In a fashion that suited bar to perfection, and with ber arms overflowing with Klllarney. roses, - valley I llUes and orchids she mader a charming picture, uenina xne line ws a unnum of bouquets sent the debutantes, and in every room, upstairs and uown. were great vases ot chrysanthemums and' 'American Beauties..' . Tb tea table waa don in American Beauties and presided over by a few yonnaj friends ot the debutant, - Misses Mary Groesbeck, Judith Colston, Helen Greene. Jan - Bowler. Angela Mitchell. Dorothy Lawson, - Dorothy - 8attler and , Frances Smith An. srehestra played during tb hours of the reeeptton, and all th fashion of th town, was there to pay tta respects and welcome th debutantes to tb rsnks of society. Miss Foster announces the engagement of her niece. Miss Pauline Carson Foster, and Mr. Charles Lawson Reed, son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. L. Reed. ' The announcement of the engagement of Miss Pauline Fonter and Mr. Law-son Reed is a matter of moment to society, foi. both are indispensable to the gaieties' of ,the fashionable world. Miss Foster.' who is the daughter or Mr. William Resor Foster and granddaughter of the, late Setli Foster, was educated at Farmington, and has been beautifully brought up by her devoted aunt. Miss Foster, amohg the rolling hills and sloping lawns of the family estate on Glen-mary avenue. There 1 something very exquisite and fastidious about Miss Foster that gives to her slender grace and lovely coloring, her wohderful frocks that always seem to have a chic like no one else's, a rare distinction even. among the many charming girls of her set. Whether in the ballroom, where she dances with perfect poise; In the saddle, where she Is like a silhouette by Edouart, or at the-dansant and afternoon reception, she is noticeable for a certain high-bred air that Is like a patent royal. She came out a few years ago, and has always been much admired, her mourning for her grandfather having this winter made her life rather a secluded one. the visit of the Princess Bospigllosl, who in a very intimate friend, alone persuading her to lay aside for ,a brief moment the quiet that haji engulfed her. She Is a cousin of Mr. John Longwoi th Stettinlua. whose sister recently married In Geneva, Monsieur Gulseppe Flamingo, the owner of Cavour's historic Journal, L'ltalle, and who Is -at present delightfully established at the Grand Hotel In Rome. Her grandfather, the late Setlt Foster, was' one of the ablest men of his day. A man of sterling dignity, whose splendid ability helped found the commercial prosperity of Cincinnati. He was far several years the oldest member' of the Chamber of Commerce, ar.d as such was always singled out "among his fellows for special honors. Mr. Reed is a son of Dr. Charles A. L. Reed, one of the great surgeons of the jcountry,' whose reputation is not confined to the limits of America. He has had tne honor of being selected as President of the American Medical Association, and for his service as head of the Alliance Francalse of Cincinnati he wears the scarlet ribbon of the Legion d'Honneur, presented by the Government of France. The groom-elect, with suCh traditions, comes easily by the many qualities that make him one of the most interesting bachelors In town. He is a Yale man, claj?s of 1911, and "made" the Junior fraternity Psl Upsllon and the hlstorlo senior society "Scroll and Key." He was really Intended for the diplomatic service, his gift for the languages enabling him to speak French and Italian fluently, his long residence abroad, both In France and Italy, fitting him especially for such a career. But the call of business laid Its energetic spirit upon him, and after grad kiatino- from his Alma Mater he estab lished himself In the world of commerce1 in- Cincinnati. He Is Secretary or tne Cincinnati Yale Club, and an ardent member or the Unlverdslty and Bachelor Co tillion Clubs and quite one or the mosi popular men in town. No date has been set for the wedding, but It is understood that It will ot be long delayed. CLUBMAN Succumbs To Illness. kajor C. Lawson Reed Served Overseas With Artillery. High Post in Reserve Corps Also Held By Business Man-jlnfec-. tion Hastens End. An the result of aa Infection known technically to the medical profession aa . encethadltle. Major - C. Lawson Reed, prominent club and business man of the city, died at his home, ISU Interwood place, Clifton, yesterday. He was IS years old. Major Reed was in an automobile accident recently and received minor injuries. His father," Dr. C. A. U Reed, said the accident was in no Way . responsible for his death, for the infection did not show up until two weeks later. For the first three weeks it did not hamper him in his duties as Assistant Secretary of the tStearns at Foster Company, Lockland, but' about two weeks ago his condition became more serious and he was forced to give np his work. . ' . Funeral services are to be held at I o'clock to-morrow afternoon 'at the Reed residence in Clifton. The services will be conducted by Bishop Boyd Vincent, and the services at the grave In Spring drove by Rev. F. U Flinch-baugh, of the Calvary Church, Clifton. Graaeated Fresa Yale. Major Reed was born December 4, 18(8, and educated in the Cincinnati schools and in the schools of Switzerland and Italyj He inter prepared for college at Culver Military Institute, and entered Tale In 1907, being graduated in 111.- In Tale he was a member of the Saroll and Keys Society.' After graduation he went Into private .business and later became Ai-flstan tSeeretary of the Stearns and Foster Company. During the World War he gained for himself an enviable record. He was commissioned First Lieutenant upon the completion of the second officers' training camp at Camp Sherman, and sailed from New York June S. ISIS, with hthe Thirty-second Field Artillery. In September, 1911, he went to the front, his brigade being an independent one that acted aa divisional artillery for several divisions at Various times. Among these divisions were the Ninety-first, Thirty-second, Thirty-third. Seventeenth French Division, and Twenty-ninth. Just before the signing of the Armistice, he took a course in sound ranging with the Seventh French Army on tin Alsace front ' Later he spent Sve months on the Rhine, being stationed It kilometers from Coblent as a member of the American Army of Occupation. Returns te Aaaerleew - He returned to America with his outfit via Brest and Camp Merritt and was mustered out May ti. 1911, at Camp Sherman. As a member of the Officers' Reserve Corps, he was one of a committee of three reserves and three regular eoera to work out regulations for that corps. He served as a Major with the General Stall Corps until November 1, 1910. in the War Plana and Operations Division of the War. Depart- ment's Oenertal Staff. Major Reed was a member and Governor of the University Club and a member of the Queen City Club. He was one of the earlier members of the Cinclnnatus Association and Its second President . In June. 19U,' he married Miss Pauline Carson. Foster. His widow and Ave children survive him. The children are: Pauline Foster Reed, T years old; Prlscllla Reed, ( years eld; Charles Lawson Reed. Jr., t years old; Rosamond Reed, S years old, and Foster Reed, 10 months old. R. C. Stockton REED, A. M., M. D., of Fairfield Township, was born in Franklin, Warren County, Ohio, February 2, 1825, and was the third child of Gilbert and Catherine C. REED. His father, Gilbert REED, was born in Delaware, in 1800, and was a member of the REED family of that State that was identified with the Revolutionary movement twenty-four years before his birth. He was but little more than an infant when his parents died, and he was adopted into a Quaker family, living not far from Trenton, New Jersey, where he remained until near his eighteenth year. It was a condition of young Gilbert's adoption that he was to be received into the family as a member, and granted a liberal amount of schooling; but each of these conditions was grossly violated by his guardians, from whom he took his departure, without the formality of an adieu, a short time before the expiration of what was really his servitude. He went to Philadelphia, and was soon caught up in the general western movement, joined an emigrant party, and made his way over the mountains to Pittsburg, and thence by keel-boat down the Ohio to the city of Cincinnati, arriving at the latter place in 1818. He remained but a short time in Cincinnati, going thence to Trenton, Butler County, and subsequently to near Franklin, Warren County, where, in 1820, he met and married Cather- ine Cummings STOCKTON, who was born in New Jersey in 1798. She was the eldest daughter of John Robert STOCKTON by his wife, whose maiden name was Jane VANSCHAICK, of New York State. John Robert STOCKTON was the eldest son of Philip and Catherine (nee CUMMINGS) STOCKTON. Philip STOCKTON was a member of the New Jersey family of that name. His brother, Richard STOCKTON, was one of the signers of the Declaration of Indepen- dence from New Jersey. One of his sisters married Dr. Benjamin RUSH, and another became the wife of Elias BOUDINOT, a prominent New Jersey divine. But Philip STOCKTON, being a clergyman of the Established Church of England, was not as loyal to the American interest as were the rest of his family; he identified himself with the Tory party, and was a zealous supporter of the crown. It is believed that at the conclusion of the war he went to England, where he died, but his family remained in America. This family consisted of John Robert STOCKTON, Lucius Witham STOCKTON, William Tennant STOCK- TON, Richard Cummings STOCKTON, and Elias Boudinot STOCKTON. The first named, after his marriage with Miss VANSCHAICK, near Schenectady, moved to Western New York, and lived for a while near Auburn. He thence started West, and arrived in Ohio in 1816, and located temporarily near Franklin, Warren County, but soon removed to and occupied a tract of land still known as the "Stockton section," near Pisgah. It was, however, during his stay at Franklin that his eldest daughter, Catherine C., married Gilbert REED. A few months after the birth of R. C. S. REED, who was the third son, his father removed to Union Township, Butler County, where he remained until 1832, when, after a few months' sojourn with his father-in-law, he took his family to Montgomery County, Ohio, where he purchased land lying on the National Road and the Dayton and Union Railroad, where he remained until his death, which occurred in 1860. At eleven years of age, R. C. S. REED left his parents' home in Montgomery County to live with his grandfather near Pisgah. John R. STOCKTON was a gentleman of the old school, but was a haughty and austere man, who would tolerate no opposition to his authority and allow no dissent to his dictum. It can readily be understood how an example of this kind should, during a period of three years, exert a permanent influence upon a susceptible lad. During his stay at Pisgah, which lasted until the death of his grandfather, in 1839, young REED enjoyed the advantage of the neighboring schools. He stoutly demurred upon his return home to his father's proposition to put him at a trade. He carried his point, and was given three more years of coveted opportunities at private schools. At the expiration of this time he secured a certificate as teacher, and began that occupation in Preble County, Ohio. During the few succeeding years, he followed the calling of a teacher in the counties of Preble, Butler, Warren, and Hamilton. The next year he married Miss Nancy CLARK, daughter of John CLARK, of Milford Township, Butler County, Ohio, and began housekeeping at Wolf Lake, Indiana, where in 1854 his first son, now Dr. John G. REED, of Westchester, Ohio, and two years later his second son, now Dr. C. A. Lee REED, of Hamilton, Ohio, were born. On July 14, 1856, his wife died--a loss that for a time threatened to completely crush him. With his dearest ties now severed, he abandoned his prosperous practice in Indiana and spent a period in travel. On his return in 1859, he married Mrs. Susan W. MCCLELLAND at Hamilton, and returned for a time to Wolf Lake, where his third son, Horace Greeley REED, was born. In 1860, he removed to Union Township, and has since been a resident of Butler County. In 1860, he accepted the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, with which institu- tion he soon became closely identified. In 1862 Dr. REED was elected professor of materia medics and therapeutics in the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, and held that position continuously for seventeen years, resigning in 1878, but was immediately elected to an Emeritus professor- ship. In 1882 he was appointed by the board of trustees, of which he was and is a member, to reorganize the faculty, the former one having resigned in consequence of some internal dissentions. In this task, as in two former instances of a similar kind, he was successful, and the institution, through his instrumentali- ty, was again placed upon a career of prosperi- ty. With the reorganization, however, Dr. REED again resumed an active connection with the institution, assuming the duties of his old professorship. As a reward for his services, and in recognition, not only of his long connection with the institution, but of his executive ability, Dr. REED was by his colleagues elected dean of the faculty. Dr. REED resides at Jones's Station, Butler County, in the easy enjoyment of a comfort- able home. He has for several years been out of active practice, and now attends only such of his friends and neighbors as it may suit his convenience to look after. Of his children but two, Kate and William, aged respectively sixteen and thirteen, remain at home. In politics Dr. REED is a staunch Republican, and while very liberal in religion, his tendency is toward Presbyterianism. In 1882 he received the honorary degree of Master of Arts from Summit College, Kentucky. ` Seth Cutter Foster | Cincinnati, The Queen City, Vol. 3; published in 1912. | Transcribed by: Michelle Leslie Seth Cutter Foster, president of the Stearns & Foster Company, with offices at Nos. 118-120 East Canal street, Cincinnati, may justly be regarded as one of the remarkable business men of the city. Although he has passed the eighty-eighth anniversary of his birth he is to be found at his office almost every working day and directs the affairs of the great establish- ment with the ease and facility of a man many years his junior. He was born on a farm in Boone county, Kentucky, October 6, 1823, a son of Samuel Foster, who was born in England and emigrated to America in his young manhood. After living for a short time in Boston he came to Cincinnati and was here married to Miss Susanna Cutter, a daughter of Seth Cutter. Mr. Cutter came from Charlestown, Massachusetts, to Cincinnati with his family about 1780 and here established his permanent home. In 1810 Mr. Foster, Sr., moved to Boone county, Kentucky, where he acquired a homestead, devoting his attention to agriculture. At the age of sixteen years, in 1830 Seth C. Foster bade farewell to his parents and came to Cincinnati where he secured a position in the store of Albert and Henry Lewis. He began in a humble capacity, his duties consisting in sweeping out the store, dusting off the goods and running errands. He applied himself with such diligence, however, that in a short time he was advanced to a more responsible position and made his acquaintance of Dr. Ray, the famous educator and the compiler of Ray’s arithmetics which were familiar to American boys in generations past. Having been reared in the backwoods of Kentucky the aspiring dry-goods clerk had possessed very limited opportunities of education. Dr. Ray was a man of large heart and great sympathy for struggling youths and he suggested a night school, saying that he knew of a few boys who might take advantage of instruction under such circumstances and perhaps his young friend knew of others. The result was the establishment of a night school at the Woodward school building where Dr. Ray gave lessons in writing, arithmetic and bookkeeping. This was the first night school west of the Allegheny mountains and it was in successful operation for two years, many of the young men there being awakened to a realization of larger possibilities which changed the whole tenor of their lives. One of the most studious of the pupils was Seth C. Foster. He made rapid advance- ment and during the second year of the school learned bookkeeping and also was promoted to a more lucrative position in the store. Later he was employed in an establishment on Main street and made the acquaintance of George S. Stearns who had been engaged in the manufacture of printers’ ink on Liberty street and being naturally mechanical, was experimenting at this time in the manufacture of cotton wadding and other cotton goods. As Mr. Foster was selling cotton goods over the counter, he suggested to Mr. Stearns that he could find a market for the goods the latter was manufacturing and, accordingly, they associated in the manufacture of cotton goods with a capital of three thousand dollars, giving employment to six persons. Their factory was located at the corner of Clay and Liberty streets and they continued at that place about fifteen years, when they moved to Lockland, still retaining offices in Cincinnati. The Stearns and Foster Company is now a large corporation with capital stock of one million, five hundred thousand dollars and one of the most completely appointed manufacturing plants in America, all of which has grown out of the modest beginning at Clay and Liberty streets. The company manufactures black and white wadding, cotton felt mattresses and batting and its products are sold in all the principal commercial centers of America. Two of Mr. Foster’s sons have been prominently connected with the company. These sonswere twins. Joseph was secretary of the company at the time of his death, which occurred in 1906, and William R. has been actively connected with it ever since he began his business career. The officers are:Seth C. Foster, president; William S. Stearns, vice president; Edwin R. Stearns, treasurer; and William R. Foster, secretary. Mr. Foster of this review has resided at Clifton for many years and is a member of the Calvary Episcopal church of that suburb. He is a true adherent to the republican party and cast his first vote for James C. Birney, abolition candidate for president; he holds membership in the Queen City Club, of which he is one of the charter members. From his boyhood active, alert and clear-headed in business affairs, he possessed the very desirable ability of recognizing opportunities and utilizing them to his own advantage and that of his associates. He was endowed by worthy parents with courage and perseverance and his success may largely be ascribed to these important elements. As a manufacturer his name is widely known and his methods have been such as to inspire the confidence and respect even of his competitors. It is with pleasure that his record is here with presented of one who is eminently worthy of a place among the leading men of Hamilton county.

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Page 1: Reed Family Tree - Squarespace Family Tree 2014 Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993) Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998) Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994) C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III

1800 1810 1820 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 202020101830

Foster Reed (1923-1927)

Priscilla Reed Gamble (1917-1993)

David Gibbs Gamble ( - )

Pauline Reed (1916-1972)

Charles Alfred Reed (1856-1928)

Nancy Clark Reed (1832-1856)

Richard Cummins Stockton Reed (1825-1909)

Charles Lawson Reed (1988-1923)

Pauline Carson Foster Reed (1891-1967)

Samuel Foster (1800-1866)

Susan Cutter Foster (1797-1869)

Seth Cutter Foster (1823-1914)

Julia Resor Foster (1832-1915)

Enoch Terry Carson (1822 - 1899)

Julia Ann Williams (1826 - 1850)Julia Carson (1850 - 1925) Margaret ( - )

Lucille Carson (1848 - 1864)Drausin Wulsin (1842 - 1910)

Mary King (1837 - 1921)

William Resor Foster (1864-1925)

Julia Resor Foster (1862-1916)

Joseph Foster (1864-1905)Julia Resor Foster (1890-1967)

Pauline Carson Foster (1864-1891)

Rosamond Reed Wulsin (1921-2003)

John Hagar Wulsin (1920- )

Lawson Reed Wulsin (1951 - )

John Cameron Wulsin (1986 - )Aynara Chavez Wulsin (1986 - )

Lawson Reed Wulsin, Jr. (1982 - )Courtney Alma Hill Wulsin (1981 - )

Howard Wells Wulsin (1979 - )Alejandra Casillas Wulsin

Stuart Crowell Smither Wulsin (1983 - )Claire Elizabeth Smither Wulsin ( - )Victoria Elizabeth Wells Wulsin (1953- )

Isabel Victoria Casillas Wulsin (2013 - )

Drausin Foster Wulsin (1953 - )

Mary MacNeur ( - )

Susan Mineer ( - )

Mary MacNeur Wulsin (1986 - )

Drausin Foster Wulsin, Jr. (1984 - )Ali Frick ( - )

Rosamond Reed “Robin” Wulsin (1955 - )

Dennis Szuhay ( - )

Terra Rose Szuhay (1997 - )

Sylva Reed Szuhay (1999 - )

Stockton “Stocky” Wulsin (1957 - )

Barbara Wulsin ( - )

Anna Wulsin (1988 - )

Douglas Wulsin (1990- )

Luke Wulsin (1991 - )

John Hagar Wulsin, Jr. (1949 - )

Alice Barton ( - )

Jane Wulsin ( - )

Jackson Chance AdamsFiona Rose Adams

Seth Tobias Wulsin (1981 - )Paula Winograd ( - )

Lara Hagar Wulsin Adams (1979 - )Will Adams ( - )

Reed Family Tree 2014

Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993)

Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998)

Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994)

C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III ( - )

Jane Levy Reed (1947 - )

Rosemary Anne Reed (1980 - )

Nicole Akemi Tamaribuchi (1977 - )

James Lawson Reed (1977 - )

Nicholas Woods William Reed (1980 - )

Alexander Lawson Reed (2011 - )

Anthony Julian Tamaribuchi (1996 - )

Chiara Manzzini Reed (2012 - )

Dorothy “Dede” Foster Reed (Hagist) (1949 - )

Peter Raleigh Hagist (1950 - )

Colin Campbell Ferenbach (1934 - )

Sophie Anderson Hagist (1977 - )Carter Alan Schlumberger (1974 - )Peter Woods Hagist (1978 - )

Elizabeth Fleming Yarborough (1980 - )

Timothy Carter Schlumberger (2003 - )Max Peter Schlumberger (2005 -)

Timothy Raleigh Hagist (1984 - )Carolyn Elizabeth Wioshek (1984 - )

May Elizabeth Hagist (2012 - )William Raleigh Hagist (2014 - )

Fiona Reed Hagis (1981 - )Federico Sada (1979 - )

Fiona Sada (2010 - )Isabela Sada (2011 - )

Sophia Sada (2014 - )

Janny “Janny” Reed Goss (1946 - )

Wayne Walter Goss (1945 - )

Cristian Woods Goss (1977 - )Ashley Davison Sco�eld Goss (1976 - ) Carter Reed Goss (2008 - )

Kelly Marie Darsie Goss (1978 - )Samuel Darsie Goss (2000 - )

Finnley Woods Goss (2004 - )Charlotte Carolyn Goss (2011 - )

Foster Reed Goss (1975 - ) Anya Margaret Goss (2004 - )

Foster Anderson Reed (1951 - )

( - )

Trish ( - )

Anderson Foster Reed ( - )

Hugh Reed ( - )

Willie Reed ( - )

Emma ( - )

Anna ( - )

David Gibbs Gamble, Jr. ( - )

( - )

Foster Reed Gamble (1947 - )

Diana Moss ( - )

Kimberly Carter (1952 - )

Andy Hardy (1972 - )Teyara Gamble Hardy (1976 - )

Trevor (1980 - )

Kaenon Hardy (2005 - )Hathaway (2009 - )

Minka Hardy (2014 - )

Hathaway Gamble Barry (1949-) Lisa ( - )Co Gamble ( - )

Kai Gamble ( - )

Polly Reed Gamble Cherner (1951 - )

Randy Cherner ( - )

Josh Kitt Cherner (1983 - )

Eli Mark Cherner (1988 - )

Jarrett Reed Cherner (1981 - )

Peaches ‘Kendra” Gamble (1946 - 2010)

From Masonic Journal of Lousiville, KY. Seventy-Fifth Volume, 1891

Quite the most brilliant a�air of the week was 'the afternoon reception oo Friday, at which Mr. and Mrs. Beth C. Foster presented to society their, charming granddaughters. Miss Pauline Carson Foster and Miss Julia Resor Foster in., two aeou- tantes with all the youthful fragrance and sweet naturalness ot twin roses on a single bush. The �ne old Foster homestead, which has been the seat of the bead of the house since the daya when Clifton comprised the baronial acres OI a lew great esiaioa, wss like a �ower show. The receiving line was formed in the square bay of the drawing room, and was- surrounded on all sides with a perfect forest of tall American Beauties.- r Mlas FosterT who has been like a mother to her niece. Miss Pauline Foster, made the nresentatlons. Bb wore a stmpl toilet of pale grey satin, renevea witn wium iscti and a line of silver. Mrs. Foster waa a delicate �gure In a handsome black tollst. J with a toucn or wnite aoout ine mroni. The debutantes are the children ot twin brothers and have been brought np almost as sisters. - . ' . Miss Julia wore a lovely gown of pale blue chi�on oyer blua, satin, with a bint of pink and crystal about .the bodice. She carried an armful of Ulles'of th valley and Spanish orchids. - She has lovely fair hair. a dainty -�gure and a gracious 'manner. Miss Pauline, who -has an artistic prettl-ness, wot a rosy gown of deep pink chi�on, relieved with blvie. Her fair hair was brought low ore ber ears In a fashion that suited bar to perfection, and with ber arms over�owing with Klllarney. roses, - valley I llUes and orchids she mader a charming picture, uenina xne line ws a unnum of bouquets sent the debutantes, and in every room, upstairs and uown. were great vases ot chrysanthemums and' 'American Beauties..' . Tb tea table waa don in American Beauties and presided over by a few yonnaj friends ot the debutant, - Misses Mary Groesbeck, Judith Colston, Helen Greene. Jan - Bowler. Angela Mitchell. Dorothy Lawson, - Dorothy - 8attler and , Frances Smith An. srehestra played during tb hours of the reeeptton, and all th fashion of th town, was there to pay tta respects and welcome th debutantes to tb rsnks of society.

Miss Foster announces the engagement of her niece. Miss Pauline Carson Foster, and Mr. Charles Lawson Reed, son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. L. Reed. ' The announcement of the engagement of Miss Pauline Fonter and Mr. Law-son Reed is a matter of moment to society, foi. both are indispensable to the gaieties' of ,the fashionable world. Miss Foster.' who is the daughter or Mr. William Resor Foster and granddaughter of the, late Setli Foster, was educated at Farmington, and has been beautifully brought up by her devoted aunt. Miss Foster, amohg the rolling hills and sloping lawns of the family estate on Glen-mary avenue. There 1 something very exquisite and fastidious about Miss Foster that gives to her slender grace and lovely coloring, her wohderful frocks that always seem to have a chic like no one else's, a rare distinction even. among the many charming girls of her set. Whether in the ballroom, where she dances with perfect poise; In the saddle, where she Is like a silhouette by Edouart, or at the-dansant and afternoon reception, she is noticeable for a certain high-bred air that Is like a patent royal. She came out a few years ago, and has always been much admired, her mourning for her grandfather having this winter made her life rather a secluded one. the visit of the Princess Bospigllosl, who in a very intimate friend, alone persuading her to lay aside for ,a brief moment the quiet that haji engulfed her. She Is a cousin of Mr. John Longwoi th Stettinlua. whose sister recently married In Geneva, Monsieur Gulseppe Flamingo, the owner of Cavour's historic Journal, L'ltalle, and who Is -at present delightfully established at the Grand Hotel In Rome. Her grandfather, the late Setlt Foster, was' one of the ablest men of his day. A man of sterling dignity, whose splendid ability helped found the commercial prosperity of Cincinnati. He was far several years the oldest member' of the Chamber of Commerce, ar.d as such was always singled out "among his fellows for special honors. Mr. Reed is a son of Dr. Charles A. L. Reed, one of the great surgeons of the jcountry,' whose reputation is not con�ned to the limits of America. He has had tne honor of being selected as President of the American Medical Association, and for his service as head of the Alliance Francalse of Cincinnati he wears the scarlet ribbon of the Legion d'Honneur, presented by the Government of France. The groom-elect, with suCh traditions, comes easily by the many qualities that make him one of the most interesting bachelors In town. He is a Yale man, claj?s of 1911, and "made" the Junior fraternity Psl Upsllon and the hlstorlo senior society "Scroll and Key." He was really Intended for the diplomatic service, his gift for the languages enabling him to speak French and Italian �uently, his long residence abroad, both In France and Italy, �tting him especially for such a career. But the call of business laid Its energetic spirit upon him, and after grad kiatino- from his Alma Mater he estab lished himself In the world of commerce1 in- Cincinnati. He Is Secretary or tne Cincinnati Yale Club, and an ardent member or the Unlverdslty and Bachelor Co tillion Clubs and quite one or the mosi popular men in town. No date has been set for the wedding, but It is understood that It will ot be long delayed.

CLUBMAN Succumbs To Illness. kajor C. Lawson Reed Served Overseas With Artillery. High Post in Reserve Corps Also Held By Business Man-jlnfec-. tion Hastens End. An the result of aa Infection known technically to the medical profession aa . encethadltle. Major - C. Lawson Reed, prominent club and business man of the city, died at his home, ISU Interwood place, Clifton, yesterday. He was IS years old. Major Reed was in an automobile accident recently and received minor injuries. His father," Dr. C. A. U Reed, said the accident was in no Way . responsible for his death, for the infection did not show up until two weeks later. For the �rst three weeks it did not hamper him in his duties as Assistant Secretary of the tStearns at Foster Company, Lockland, but' about two weeks ago his condition became more serious and he was forced to give np his work. . ' . Funeral services are to be held at I o'clock to-morrow afternoon 'at the Reed residence in Clifton. The services will be conducted by Bishop Boyd Vincent, and the services at the grave In Spring drove by Rev. F. U Flinch-baugh, of the Calvary Church, Clifton. Graaeated Fresa Yale. Major Reed was born December 4, 18(8, and educated in the Cincinnati schools and in the schools of Switzerland and Italyj He inter prepared for college at Culver Military Institute, and entered Tale In 1907, being graduated in 111.- In Tale he was a member of the Saroll and Keys Society.' After graduation he went Into private .business and later became Ai-�stan tSeeretary of the Stearns and Foster Company. During the World War he gained for himself an enviable record. He was commissioned First Lieutenant upon the completion of the second o�cers' training camp at Camp Sherman, and sailed from New York June S. ISIS, with hthe Thirty-second Field Artillery. In September, 1911, he went to the front, his brigade being an independent one that acted aa divisional artillery for several divisions at Various times. Among these divisions were the Ninety-�rst, Thirty-second, Thirty-third. Seventeenth French Division, and Twenty-ninth. Just before the signing of the Armistice, he took a course in sound ranging with the Seventh French Army on tin Alsace front ' Later he spent Sve months on the Rhine, being stationed It kilometers from Coblent as a member of the American Army of Occupation. Returns te Aaaerleew - He returned to America with his out�t via Brest and Camp Merritt and was mustered out May ti. 1911, at Camp Sherman. As a member of the O�cers' Reserve Corps, he was one of a committee of three reserves and three regular e�oera to work out regulations for that corps. He served as a Major with the General Stall Corps until November 1, 1910. in the War Plana and Operations Division of the War. Depart-ment's Oenertal Sta�. Major Reed was a member and Governor of the University Club and a member of the Queen City Club. He was one of the earlier members of the Cinclnnatus Association and Its second President . In June. 19U,' he married Miss Pauline Carson. Foster. His widow and Ave children survive him. The children are: Pauline Foster Reed, T years old; Prlscllla Reed, ( years eld; Charles Lawson Reed. Jr., t years old; Rosamond Reed, S years old, and Foster Reed, 10 months old.

R. C. Stockton REED, A. M., M. D., of Fair�eld Township, was born in Franklin, Warren County, Ohio, February 2, 1825, and was the third child of Gilbert and Catherine C. REED. His father, Gilbert REED, was born in Delaware, in 1800, and was a member of the REED family of that State that was identi�ed with the Revolutionary movement twenty-four years before his birth. He was but little more than an infant when his parents died, and he was adopted into a Quaker family, living not far from Trenton, New Jersey, where he remained until near his eighteenth year. It was a condition of young Gilbert's adoption that he was to be received into the family as a member, and granted a liberal amount of schooling; but each of these conditions was grossly violated by his guardians, from whom he took his departure, without the formality of an adieu, a short time before the expiration of what was really his servitude.

He went to Philadelphia, and was soon caught up in the general western movement, joined an emigrant party, and made his way over the mountains to Pittsburg, and thence by keel-boat down the Ohio to the city of Cincinnati, arriving at the latter place in 1818. He remained but a short time in Cincinnati, going thence to Trenton, Butler County, and subsequently to near Franklin, Warren County, where, in 1820, he met and married Cather-ine Cummings STOCKTON, who was born in New Jersey in 1798. She was the eldest daughter of John Robert STOCKTON by his wife, whose maiden name was Jane VANSCHAICK, of New York State. John Robert STOCKTON was the eldest son of Philip and Catherine (nee CUMMINGS) STOCKTON. Philip STOCKTON was a member of the New Jersey family of that name. His brother, Richard STOCKTON, was one of the signers of the Declaration of Indepen-dence from New Jersey. One of his sisters married Dr. Benjamin RUSH, and another became the wife of Elias BOUDINOT, a prominent New Jersey divine. But Philip STOCKTON, being a clergyman of the Established Church of England, was not as loyal to the American interest as were the rest of his family; he identi�ed himself with the Tory party, and was a zealous supporter of the crown. It is believed that at the conclusion of the war he went to England, where he died, but his family remained in America.

This family consisted of John Robert STOCKTON, Lucius Witham STOCKTON, William Tennant STOCK-TON, Richard Cummings STOCKTON, and Elias Boudinot STOCKTON. The �rst named, after his marriage with Miss VANSCHAICK, near Schenectady, moved to Western New York, and lived for a while near Auburn. He thence started West, and arrived in Ohio in 1816, and located temporarily near Franklin, Warren County, but soon removed to and occupied a tract of land still known as the "Stockton section," near Pisgah. It was, however, during his stay at Franklin that his eldest daughter, Catherine C., married Gilbert REED.

A few months after the birth of R. C. S. REED, who was the third son, his father removed to Union Township, Butler County, where he remained until 1832, when, after a few months' sojourn with his father-in-law, he took his family to Montgomery County, Ohio, where he purchased land lying on the National Road and the Dayton and Union Railroad, where he remained until his death, which occurred in 1860. At eleven years of age, R. C. S. REED left his parents' home in Montgomery County to live with his grandfather near Pisgah. John R. STOCKTON was a gentleman of the old school, but was a haughty and austere man, who would tolerate no opposition to his authority and allow no dissent to his dictum. It can readily be understood how an example of this kind should, during a period of three years, exert a permanent in�uence upon a susceptible lad.

During his stay at Pisgah, which lasted until the death of his grandfather, in 1839, young REED enjoyed the advantage of the neighboring schools. He stoutly demurred upon his return home to his father's proposition to put him at a trade. He carried his point, and was given three more years of coveted opportunities at private schools. At the expiration of this time he secured a certi�cate as teacher, and began that occupation in Preble County, Ohio. During the few succeeding years, he followed the calling of a teacher in the counties of Preble, Butler, Warren, and Hamilton.

The next year he married Miss Nancy CLARK, daughter of John CLARK, of Milford Township, Butler County, Ohio, and began housekeeping at Wolf Lake, Indiana, where in 1854 his �rst son, now Dr. John G. REED, of Westchester, Ohio, and two years later his second son, now Dr. C. A. Lee REED, of Hamilton, Ohio, were born. On July 14, 1856, his wife died--a loss that for a time threatened to completely crush him. With his dearest ties now severed, he abandoned his prosperous practice in Indiana and spent a period in travel. On his return in 1859, he married Mrs. Susan W. MCCLELLAND at Hamilton, and returned for a time to Wolf Lake, where his third son, Horace Greeley REED, was born. In 1860, he removed to Union Township, and has since been a resident of Butler County. In 1860, he accepted the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, with which institu-tion he soon became closely identi�ed.

In 1862 Dr. REED was elected professor of materia medics and therapeutics in the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, and held that position continuously for seventeen years, resigning in 1878, but was immediately elected to an Emeritus professor-ship. In 1882 he was appointed by the board of trustees, of which he was and is a member, to reorganize the faculty, the former one having resigned in consequence of some internal dissentions. In this task, as in two former instances of a similar kind, he was successful, and the institution, through his instrumentali-ty, was again placed upon a career of prosperi-ty. With the reorganization, however, Dr. REED again resumed an active connection with the institution, assuming the duties of his old professorship. As a reward for his services, and in recognition, not only of his long connection with the institution, but of his executive

ability, Dr. REED was by his colleagues elected dean of the faculty.

Dr. REED resides at Jones's Station, Butler County, in the easy enjoyment of a comfort-able home. He has for several years been out of active practice, and now attends only such of his friends and neighbors as it may suit his convenience to look after. Of his children but two, Kate and William, aged respectively sixteen and thirteen, remain at home. In politics Dr. REED is a staunch Republican, and while very liberal in religion, his tendency is toward Presbyterianism. In 1882 he received the honorary degree of Master of Arts from Summit College, Kentucky. `

Seth Cutter Foster | Cincinnati, The Queen City, Vol. 3; published in 1912. | Transcribed by: Michelle Leslie Seth Cutter Foster, president of the Stearns & Foster Company, with o�ces at Nos. 118-120 East Canal street, Cincinnati, may justly be regarded as one of the remarkable business men of the city. Although he has passed the eighty-eighth anniversary of his birth he is to be found at his o�ce almost every working day and directs the a�airs of the great establish-ment with the ease and facility of a man many years his junior. He was born on a farm in Boone county, Kentucky, October 6, 1823, a son of Samuel Foster, who was born in England and emigrated to America in his young manhood. After living for a short time in Boston he came to Cincinnati and was here married to Miss Susanna Cutter, a daughter of Seth Cutter. Mr. Cutter came from Charlestown, Massachusetts, to Cincinnati with his family about 1780 and here established his permanent home. In 1810 Mr. Foster, Sr., moved to Boone county, Kentucky, where he acquired a homestead, devoting his attention to agriculture. At the age of sixteen years, in 1830 Seth C. Foster bade farewell to his parents and came to Cincinnati where he secured a position in the store of Albert and Henry Lewis. He began in a humble capacity, his duties consisting in sweeping out the store, dusting o� the goods and running errands. He applied himself with such diligence, however, that in a short time he was advanced to a more responsible position and made his acquaintance of Dr. Ray, the famous educator and the compiler of Ray’s arithmetics which were familiar to American boys in generations past. Having been reared in the backwoods of Kentucky the aspiring dry-goods clerk had possessed very limited opportunities of education. Dr. Ray was a man of large heart and great sympathy for struggling youths and he suggested a night school, saying that he knew of a few boys who might take advantage of instruction under such circumstances and perhaps his young friend knew of others. The result was the establishment of a night school at the Woodward school building where Dr. Ray gave lessons in writing, arithmetic and bookkeeping. This was the �rst night school west of the Allegheny mountains and it was in successful operation for two years, many of the young men there being awakened to a realization of larger possibilities which changed the whole tenor of their lives. One of the most studious of the pupils was Seth C. Foster. He made rapid advance-ment and during the second year of the school learned bookkeeping and also was promoted to a more lucrative position in the store. Later he was employed in an establishment on Main street and made the acquaintance of George S. Stearns who had been engaged in the manufacture of printers’ ink on Liberty street and being naturally mechanical, was experimenting at this time in the manufacture of cotton wadding and other cotton goods. As Mr. Foster was selling cotton goods over the counter, he suggested to Mr. Stearns that he could �nd a market for the goods the latter was manufacturing and, accordingly, they associated in the manufacture of cotton goods with a capital of three thousand dollars, giving employment to six persons. Their factory was located at the corner of Clay and Liberty streets and they continued at that place about �fteen years, when they moved to Lockland, still retaining o�ces in Cincinnati. The Stearns and Foster Company is now a large corporation with capital stock of one million, �ve hundred thousand dollars and one of the most completely appointed manufacturing plants in America, all of which has grown out of the modest beginning at Clay and Liberty streets. The company manufactures black and white wadding, cotton felt mattresses and batting and its products are sold in all the principal commercial centers of America. Two of Mr. Foster’s sons have been prominently connected with the company. These sonswere twins. Joseph was secretary of the company at the time of his death, which occurred in 1906, and William R. has been actively connected with it ever since he began his business career. The o�cers are:Seth C. Foster, president; William S. Stearns, vice president; Edwin R. Stearns, treasurer; and William R. Foster, secretary. Mr. Foster of this review has resided at Clifton for many years and is a member of the Calvary Episcopal church of that suburb. He is a true adherent to the republican party and cast his �rst vote for James C. Birney, abolition candidate for president; he holds membership in the Queen City Club, of which he is one of the charter members. From his boyhood active, alert and clear-headed in business a�airs, he possessed the very desirable ability of recognizing opportunities and utilizing them to his own advantage and that of his associates. He was endowed by worthy parents with courage and perseverance and his success may largely be ascribed to these important elements. As a manufacturer his name is widely known and his methods have been such as to inspire the con�dence and respect even of his competitors. It is with pleasure that his record is here with presented of one who is eminently worthy of a place among the leading men of Hamilton county.

Page 2: Reed Family Tree - Squarespace Family Tree 2014 Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993) Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998) Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994) C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III

Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993)

Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998)

Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994)

C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III ( - )

Jane Levy Reed (1947 - )

Rosemary Anne Reed (1980 - )

Nicole Akemi Tamaribuchi (1977 - )

James Lawson Reed (1977 - )

Nicholas Woods William Reed (1980 - )

Alexander Lawson Reed (2011 - )

Anthony Julian Tamaribuchi (1996 - )

Chiara Manzzini Reed (2012 - )

Peter Raleigh Hagist (1950 - )

Colin Campbell Ferenbach (1934 - )

Sophie Anderson Hagist (1977 - )Carter Alan Schlumberger (1974 - )Peter Woods Hagist (1978 - )

Elizabeth Fleming Yarborough (1980 - )

Timothy Carter Schlumberger (2003 - )Max Peter Schlumberger (2005 -)

Timothy Raleigh Hagist (1984 - )Carolyn Elizabeth Wioshek (1984 - )

May Elizabeth Hagist (2012 - )William Raleigh Hagist (2014 - )

Fiona Reed Hagis (1981 - )Federico Sada (1979 - )

Fiona Sada (2010 - )Isabela Sada (2011 - )

Sophia Sada (2014 - )

Janny “Janny” Reed Goss (1946 - )

Wayne Walter Goss (1945 - )

Cristian Woods Goss (1977 - )Ashley Davison Sco�eld Goss (1976 - ) Carter Reed Goss (2008 - )

Kelly Marie Darsie Goss (1978 - )Samuel Darsie Goss (2000 - )

Finnley Woods Goss (2004 - )Charlotte Carolyn Goss (2011 - )

Foster Reed Goss (1975 - ) Anya Margaret Goss (2004 - )

Foster Anderson Reed (1951 - )

( - )

Trish ( - )

Anderson Foster Reed ( - )

Hugh Reed ( - )

Willie Reed ( - )

Emma ( - )

Anna ( - )

Page 3: Reed Family Tree - Squarespace Family Tree 2014 Charles Lawson Reed (1920-1993) Dorothy Whittaker Reed (1923 - 1998) Peter Stockton Reed (1953 - 1994) C. Lawson “Larry” Reed, III

Rosamond Reed Wulsin (1921-2003)

John Hagar Wulsin (1920- )

Lawson Reed Wulsin (1951 - )

John Cameron Wulsin (1986 - )Aynara Chavez Wulsin (1986 - )

Lawson Reed Wulsin, Jr. (1982 - )Courtney Alma Hill Wulsin (1981 - )

Howard Wells Wulsin (1979 - )Alejandra Casillas Wulsin

Stuart Crowell Smither Wulsin (1983 - )Claire Elizabeth Smither Wulsin ( - )Victoria Elizabeth Wells Wulsin (1953- )

Isabel Victoria Casillas Wulsin (2013 - )

Drausin Foster Wulsin (1953 - )

Mary MacNeur ( - )

Susan Mineer ( - )

Mary MacNeur Wulsin (1986 - )

Drausin Foster Wulsin, Jr. (1984 - )Ali Frick ( - )

Rosamond Reed “Robin” Wulsin (1955 - )

Dennis Szuhay ( - )

Terra Rose Szuhay (1997 - )

Sylva Reed Szuhay (1999 - )

Stockton “Stocky” Wulsin (1957 - )

Barbara Wulsin ( - )

Anna Wulsin (1988 - )

Douglas Wulsin (1990- )

Luke Wulsin (1991 - )

John Hagar Wulsin, Jr. (1949 - )

Alice Barton ( - )

Jane Wulsin ( - )

Jackson Chance AdamsFiona Rose Adams

Seth Tobias Wulsin (1981 - )Paula Winograd ( - )

Lara Hagar Wulsin Adams (1979 - )Will Adams ( - )