My Family Tree - Person Page 5400

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Person Page 5400

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Dolly Spangler (F)
Pop-up Pedigree

     Dolly Spangler was the daughter of Henry Spangler and Elizabeth Ilgenfritz.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C

Donald Hays Spangler (M)
b. 29 May 1918, d. 13 November 1942
Pop-up Pedigree

     Donald Hays Spangler was born on 29 May 1918 at Albion, Indiana. He was the son of Martin Henry Spangler and Myrtle Elizabeth Blue. Donald Hays Spangler died on 13 November 1942 at Savo Island, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, at age 24.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C
Veteran=Y

Dora Spangler (F)
Pop-up Pedigree

     Dora Spangler was the daughter of Jacob Spangler and Mary Krone.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C

Dora A. Spangler1 (F)
b. 26 February 1889, d. 11 March 1982
Pop-up Pedigree

     Dora was born at Mount Zion, York Co., Pennsylvania, on 26 February 1889. She was the daughter of Benjamin Spangler and Amanda (?). She married Charles F. Billet at York, York Co., Pennsylvania, on 20 June 1908. Dora died on 11 March 1982 at York Co., Pennsylvania, at age 93. Her body was interred in March 1982 at Springettsbury Twp., York Co., Pennsylvania, at Mt. Zion Cemetery.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=M

Children of Dora A. Spangler and Charles F. Billet
Lawrence Leroy Billet b. 28 Jul 1908, d. 22 May 1910
Scott C. Billet+ b. 24 Jun 1911, d. 23 Jul 1979
Charles S. Billet+ b. 16 Jul 1913, d. 1 May 1967
Claude Billet+ b. 20 Sep 1915, d. 4 Mar 1955
Kenneth S. Billet+ b. 13 Oct 1918, d. 19 Apr 1975
Merle Lucinda Billet+ b. 11 Oct 1921, d. 18 May 1989
Lloyd P. Billet+ b. 27 Jun 1925, d. 7 Jan 1962
Robert Eugene Billet+ b. 28 Jul 1927, d. 31 Jul 1986

Citations

  1. [S53] Dellinger - Kattermann, Donald F. Billet.

Dora Florence Spangler (F)
b. 23 December 1893, d. 24 May 1982
Pop-up Pedigree

     Dora Florence Spangler was born on 23 December 1893 at Springgarden Twp., York Co., Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of William Henry Spangler and Amanda Jane Gleason. Dora Florence Spangler married Paul Herman Metzel. Dora Florence Spangler died on 24 May 1982 at Oreland, Pennsylvania, at age 88.

Immigrant=N

Children of Dora Florence Spangler and Paul Herman Metzel
Paul Herman Metzel Jr. d. 2 Oct 1918
Vincent Bernard Metzel+ b. 28 Feb 1914, d. 21 Oct 1986
Roslyn Gleason Metzel+ b. 3 Jan 1920, d. 4 Apr 1996
Ruth Lorraine Metzel b. 1 Feb 1924, d. 6 Aug 1985

Dorothea M. Spangler (F)
b. 17 December 1827
Pop-up Pedigree

     Dorothea was born on 17 December 1827. She was the daughter of John Daniel Spangler and Elizabeth King.

Children of Dorothea M. Spangler
Joie McKnight
Katie McKnight

Edgar M. Spangler (M)
Pop-up Pedigree

     Edgar M. Spangler was the son of Jacob Spangler.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C

Edith Spangler (F)
Pop-up Pedigree

     Edith Spangler was the daughter of Charles Bingley Spangler.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C

Edith Spangler (F)
d. 1967
Pop-up Pedigree

     Edith Spangler was the daughter of William Henry Spangler and Amanda Jane Gleason. Edith Spangler married Will Steininger. Edith Spangler died in 1967.

Immigrant=N

Edman "Ned" Spangler (M)
b. 10 August 1825, d. 7 December 1875
Pop-up Pedigree

     Edman "Ned" Spangler was born on 10 August 1825 at York Co., Pennsylvania. He was the son of William Spangler and Anna Maria (?). Biographical Sketch of Edman "Ned" Spangler

Edman "Ned" Spangler was born in York, Pennsylvania on August 10, 1825. During the Civil War, Spangler worked at Ford's Theatre in Washington as a carpenter and scene shifter. Through his work at Ford's, Spangler met actor John Wilkes Booth. Spangler often tended to Booth's horse when he was at the theatre.

Ned Spangler's Role in the Conspiracy

On April 14, the day of Lincoln's assassination, Spangler helped prepare the State Box for the president. He removed a partition separating two boxes, creating a larger one for Lincoln and the other members of his party. While working on the box, Spangler allegedly made derogatory remarks--such as "Damn the President!"--about Lincoln.

Sometime between nine and ten o'clock, Booth appeared at the rear of the theatre and called for Spangler. Booth asked Spangler to hold his horse. Spangler in turn asked Joseph Burroughs (better known as "Peanuts") to watch Booth's horse. When Peanuts told Spangler that he "had to go in to attend my door," Spangler said he should hold the horse anyway and "if there was any thing wrong to lay the blame on him."

Immediately after the shooting of Lincoln, Spangler hit Jacob Ritterspaugh, another Ford's employee who had begun to chase Booth, in the face and told him, "Don't say which way he went."

Spangler was questioned the day after the authorities, then arrested on April 17 and charged with being an accomplice to Booth.

Ned Spangler's Trial

At the 1865 Conspiracy Trial, prosecution witnesses reported seeing Booth on the evening of the assassination, standing at the back door of the theatre and holding his horse and calling for Ned Spangler. James Gifford described Spangler as "a sort of drudge for Booth." John Sleichmann, a property man for the theatre, testified that he saw Booth enter the back door of the theatre and ask Spangler, "Ned, you'll help me all you can, won't you?" According to Sleichmann, Spangler replied, "Oh, yes." Joseph Stewart, a theatergoer with a front orchestra street who ran after Booth across the stage yelling, "Stop that man!," testified that he was "satisfied" that Spangler was the person he saw near the rear door who was in a position to block Booth's exit if he had been so inclined. Finally, John Miles, a Ford's employee, testified when he asked Spangler who it was he saw holding Booth's horse before his escape, Spangler replied, "Hush, don't say anything about it."

Spangler's defense attorney, Thomas Ewing, argued that while the prosecution evidence might suggest Spangler agreed to assist
Booth on April 14, it failed to prove that Spangler was aware of Booth's guilty purposes in requesting his assistance.

The Military Commission found Spangler guilty and sentenced him to six years in prison.

Spangler served a year-and-a-half of his sentence at Fort Jefferson in the Dry Tortugas before being pardoned by President Johnson in March, 1869. After his release from prison, Spangler accepted Dr. Samuel Mudd's offer of five acres of farmland near Mudd's home in Maryland. He lived there from 1869 to 1875, when he died.
Edman "Ned" Spangler died on 7 December 1875 at Charles Co., Maryland, at age 50; Ned died at Dr. Mudd's farm.

Immigrant=N
Related_By=C

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