Individual Details
Harry Yoder Goheen
(8 Sep 1916 - 27 Nov 2004)
Events
Families
| Spouse | Laura Jeanice Gault (1918 - 1989) |
| Child | Living |
| Child | Living |
| Spouse | Lillian Jane Hess (1910 - 2009) |
| Father | Robert Roy Goheen (1879 - 1953) |
| Mother | Nannie May Yoder (1880 - 1950) |
| Sibling | Emma Oleta Goheen (1900 - 1984) |
| Sibling | Joseph Ray Goheen (1904 - 1973) |
| Sibling | Roy Robert Goheen (1906 - 1983) |
| Sibling | John Harold Goheen (1920 - 1978) |
Notes
Birth
Harry was born Sept. 8th, 1914 at 3408 South Moffet in Joplin, Mo. He was the fourth child born to Nannie [1880/1950] and Robert Ray Goheen [1879 /1953]. Oleta was the first at 15 pounds, then Ray at 14 1/2 pounds, then Roy at 14 pounds, then Harry at 13 1/2 pounds and John Harold was last at 13 pounds. Harry was one of the first babies delivered by Dr. Moody who became a very well known and liked "baby doctor". They weren't called pediatricians in those days. Oleta was probably born in 1900 and the others at 4 fn 5 years apart. When Nannie and Robert were first married, they lived in Murphysburg which we now call East town and Robert worked as a stage hand at the Joplin Theater located on the Southwest comer of 7th and Joplin Streets. He told of walking to work across the railroad tracks and carrying a gun for protection. That was in the days when Joplin had a reputation for being a very rough town and it lived up to it's reputation. That was also when the business district was centered around First and Main. The theater where he worked showed stage productions only. Thiswas long before there were movies. Robert was also skilled in masonry and worked on the Newman building at Sixth and Main and many other construction jobs. Later they moved to 3408 South Moffet street where Harry was born. He started school at Stapleton but during his first year some boys burned the building so he finished the first grade in a church building. He was very sick that year with pneumonia and Dr. Moody. said "take him to the country and turn him loose" which was goad advice for he grew up to be a big string man. His folks bought a ten acre tract of land in the Oak Grove community and they cleared the land and built two houses.
Oleta was married by this time to Bart Wellington and one house with five
acres was for them. The well was drilled on the boundary line to service both
houses. Harry learned to hunt, trap and fish. He had two dogs and one would chase a squirrel while the other one circled around in front and Harry would kill the animal with a sling shot. This was before he was old enough to have a gun. Any game that he brought home was eaten for this was in the early twenties sad people made do with what they had. They had big gardens, raised their own chickens, hogs and of course had a cow for milk. Robert would never let them eat the tenderloin when they butchered. He wanted lots of sausage! Since they had no way of preserving meat except with salt, they ate the meat in this order to keep from losing any from spoilage. First they ate the liver and heart then the side meat (which is bacon when cured) then the sausage and the shoulders and finally the ham (which had been salted]. This may sound like a hard life, but the food was better tasting than any we have now with all the "additives". But for Harry it was what the doctor ordered. The family attended church in Oak Grove at a small church where his father vas superintendent of Sunday School. He
was also on the School Board. Sunday was a big day for the Goheens.
Robert always put a roast with potatoes, carrots and onions in the oven
before they left for Sunday School.
Nannie baked at least two pies and a take. She also made a Idle dessert. In
the summertime there was fried chicken instead of roast. Sometimes a preacher from Joplin accompanied by his family would tome out and give the sermon. They stayed for dinner with Hotel's family and spent the afternoon playing croquet Harry went to school al Oak Grove until Ins eighth grade, Then, because he had to come to Joplin to South High at Twenty Second and Wall, he moved in
with Oleta and Bart, He had to ride to town with Bart and since Bart got up early to go to work at the Interstate Grocery at Tenth and Main, it was easier for Harry to live with them. Bert was very good to Harry. He allowed him to take the car to school after dropping Bart off at work and after school Harry would drive up and down Main Street with a carload of friends, which must have made him very popular. When he was in the Ninth grade Harry was introduced to football. He was big for his age end the coach put him in the game before he even knew what it was all about. But he soon learned and played tackle at first and later played fullback The next year he went to Neosho to school because he had no ride to Joplin. A Neosho teacher gave him a ride and since he could not stay after school, he did not get to play. But he did help coach the younger boys during school hours. He went to Galena, Kansas high school for the eleventh grade and his last year school. Bart and Oleta had moved to Galena and he lived with them. He did gel to play football that last year.
Harry doesn't nave much to say about his mother, SO we can assume that she was a home maker and probably worked very hard. We know that she was a good cook and she was exceptionally fond of "sweets". She was diabetic and the disease finally caused her death. During the thirties, every Saturday night the family would come to Joplin and while Robert did the weekly grocery shopping, Nannie ate a pint of ice cream at Weideman's Ice Cream Parlor. It was always a special treat when one had ice cream at Weideman's. Harry does tell one little story about his mother which shows that she had a of humor. It was while they still lived in Joplin. the church was to have a Halloween party and Robert wanted to go but Nannie said she didn't, but for him to go anyway He went on and a woman in a costume and mask came and nobody knew who she was. Robert tried very hard to see who she was, but not until everyone removed their masks did he learn that it was Nannie! She Week first place far the best costume.
Marriage
Jeanice and Harry met at a Weiner roast. They both had dates with other people but Harry decided that night that there was something special about Jeanice that he just had to persue. He went to see her the very next day. They dated about three years before they were married. Harry worked at Campbell 66 when they married.Miscellaneous
Medical - Artheiosclerosis, Hypertension,Heart Disease, Pacemaker- July 2000, Stroke.Marriage
Lillian and Harry had both lost their first spouses. They knew each other through their spouses and started to travel together. They played Duplicate Bridge and when to tournaments all through the Midwest.Death
Harry Yoader Goheenfather Robert Goheen
mother Nannie Yoader
born 8 Sep 1916 Joplin, Missouri
died 27 Nov 2004
Birth: Sep. 8, 1916, Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri, USA
Death: Nov. 27, 2004, Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri, USA
Husband of Jeanice (Gault) Goheen (Marr. Dec. 4, 1937. She died Nov. 26, 1989.) & Lillian (Hess) Goheen (Marr. Feb. 16, 1992 in Arkansas Pass, Texas.)
Father of Jan Nickeson and her husband, Jerry & Bill Goheen and his wife, Jacqueline.
Adopted Father of Nita Aquino and her husband, Jerry.
Son of Joseph R. & Nannie (Yoder) Goheen.
Brother of Oleta Williams (Deceased), Roy Goheen (Deceased), Ray Goheen (Deceased), & John Goheen (Deceased).
Spouses: Jeanice Gault Goheen (1918 - 1989); Lillian Jane Hess Goheen (1910 - 2009)
Burial: Ozark Memorial Park Cemetery, Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri, USA
Endnotes
1. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Letter from Edna Diane Childs Goheen Pla, 505 Bethany Way, Knoxville, TN 37918, to Author on June 1, 2001. Diane Pla is Joseph Rittenhouse Goheen > Robert Roy Goheen > Harry Yoder Goheen > Billy Ray Goheen > Edna Diane Childs Goheen.
2. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, e-mail attachment from Lillian Goheen, article she wrote about Harry Yoder Goheen. see memo.
3. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Letter from Connie (Goheen) Isley; 19855 J Highway, Diamond, MO 64840. to Elizabeth L Albright, 14 March 2001; held in 2001 by receiver, 4927 Palo Alto SE, Albuquerque, NM 87108, Connie Isley is; Joseph Rittenhouse Goheen > Robert Roy Goheen > John Harold.
4. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Letter from Edna Diane Childs Goheen Pla, 505 Bethany Way, Knoxville, TN 37918, to Author on June 1, 2001. Diane Pla is Joseph Rittenhouse Goheen > Robert Roy Goheen > Harry Yoder Goheen > Billy Ray Goheen > Edna Diane Childs Goheen.
5. Salt Lake City, Utah, Marriage License, page 439, Harry Goheen and Jeanice Gault, 4 December 1937; FamilySearch.org, Family History Library.
6. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Letter from Edna Diane Childs Goheen Pla, 505 Bethany Way, Knoxville, TN 37918, to Author on June 1, 2001. Diane Pla is Joseph Rittenhouse Goheen > Robert Roy Goheen > Harry Yoder Goheen > Billy Ray Goheen > Edna Diane Childs Goheen.
7. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Letter from Edna Diane Childs Goheen Pla, 505 Bethany Way, Knoxville, TN 37918, to Author on June 1, 2001. Diane Pla is Joseph Rittenhouse Goheen > Robert Roy Goheen > Harry Yoder Goheen > Billy Ray Goheen > Edna Diane Childs Goheen.
8. Letter from () to Elizabeth L Albright;, Lillian Goheen
9. Harry Yoader Goheen, , , Ancestry Index, Social Security Administration, . death claim.
10. Find A Grave, Findagrave.com, database and digital images (http//:www.findagrave.com : viewed 6 December 2015), Memorial# 9978322.

