His father, Nicholas Michael, was called Michael so to avoid confusion son Michael was called Mitchell and this is how he was known to all of the Rebarchik relatives. To the Klucheski side of the family he was called Michael.
He married Mabel Doyle in St. Augustine's Church in Chilton, Wisconsin. For the first several years they lived at the home of Mabel's father, Mark Doyle. They then moved to Goodman, Marinette County, Wisconsin where they lived for many years.
Their home in Goodman was located on Fifth street across the alley from the Chemical Plant where Michael worked.
In the spring of 1929 Michael, at the urging of relatives, moved the family to Kenosha but the job was short lived and in the fall the family returned to Goodman.
The family always had a garden of vegetables and flowers along with a dog and several cats. The home also had a player piano in the front room and a cabinet of player rolls with the words. Daughter Bernice took piano lessons and could play quite well. Michael enjoyed baseball games, playing cards, and fishing. The family would go on fishing trips with picnic lunches, fishing with cane poles, riding in their rowboat, playing in the water and then enjoying delicious fish dinners the next day. They also went picking blueberries, blackberries and raspberries during picking season.
In late Oct 1958 Michael and Mabel left Goodman to stay with their daughter Eleanor in Chicago.
His father, Nicholas Michael, was called Michael so to avoid confusion son Michael was called Mitchell and this is how he was known to all of the Rebarchik relatives. To the Klucheski side of the family he was called Michael.
He married Mabel Doyle in St. Augustine's Church in Chilton, Wisconsin. For the first several years they lived at the home of Mabel's father, Mark Doyle. They then moved to Goodman, Marinette County, Wisconsin where they lived for many years.
Their home in Goodman was located on Fifth street across the alley from the Chemical Plant where Michael worked.
In the spring of 1929 Michael, at the urging of relatives, moved the family to Kenosha but the job was short lived and in the fall the family returned to Goodman.
The family always had a garden of vegetables and flowers along with a dog and several cats. The home also had a player piano in the front room and a cabinet of player rolls with the words. Daughter Bernice took piano lessons and could play quite well. Michael enjoyed baseball games, playing cards, and fishing. The family would go on fishing trips with picnic lunches, fishing with cane poles, riding in their rowboat, playing in the water and then enjoying delicious fish dinners the next day. They also went picking blueberries, blackberries and raspberries during picking season.
In late Oct 1958 Michael and Mabel left Goodman to stay with their daughter Eleanor in Chicago.
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