Mystery solved!!!!
Yvette Hoitink at Dutch Genealogy has done it again! She led me to the answer of whose house burned down and when. I first wrote about this in my post A Series of Disasters.
A newspaper clipping, saved by my family, reported the story of a house fire. A George Paake of Trimble Street in Kalamazoo, Michigan, lost his house. He was ill, his wife had recently died, and he had 5 children ages 14 and under at home. The unidentified paper called their recent lives a “series of disasters.”
I wasn’t sure if this was Teunis Peek, the father of my great-great-grandmother Alice Paak DeKorn (are you confused yet by Paake/Peek/Paak? I am!! Oh, and there is Pake, too. They are all the same name . . .) or someone else as I had no idea when the fire took place.
Through Yvette’s research, she was able to determine that George Paake who lost his house was actually Joost, the “missing” son of Teunis and brother of my great-great-grandmother.
His wife Lucy passed away in 1900, leaving 5 young children. George/Joost was 50 at the time he was left a widower.
With Yvette’s research results, I was able to get a better notion of George who had married a Dutch woman Lucy Kliphouse and had five children with her and was buying the house with a mortgage with the Building and Loan Association.
In Genealogy Bank I had not been able to locate a Kalamazoo Gazette article about the fire, but after Yvette narrowed the fire down to just past 1900, I used the search terms “fire” “Kalamazoo” and “Trimble,” rather than using George’s name. In that way I did find the Gazette article, which deems Mr. Paake “a worthy man.”
The fire happened on Wednesday, September 3, 1902, and the Gazette reported it the next day.
Within two years (1900-1902) George lost his wife and then his house.
Is it any wonder that in 1906 he married Ester Cook? Unfortunately, after living in Kalamazoo for one year with George, Ester too passed away. One more disaster in the series for George (and for Ester).
In 1908 he married Addie Amelia Giffos (probably Gifford) Wilder. When he married Addie his children were ages 10-20. I have no idea if this was a love marriage or a marriage of convenience, but it would be understandable that he would have liked some help raising these children. Also, it appears that Addie had at least a 5-year-old daughter at the time of her marriage to George.
One last comment: if you have family history trails that run back to the Netherlands, you will want to contact Yvette. She can break down those research barriers you think will never open to you.










































