She and her husband always had a large garden from which she preserved fruits and vegetables to feed her family. She sometimes raised chickens for both the eggs and the meat.She was a good cook and made almost everything from scratch. She was also adept at sewing and often made clothes for her children and herself. When her mother, Mary Viola Siebert broke her hip, she spent 6 months with her oldest daughter Muriel Petges, and then came to the Taylor home where she stayed until she passed 6 months later. She was a member of the Baptist Church, and The Royal Neighbors Society.
She and her husband always had a large garden from which she preserved fruits and vegetables to feed her family. She sometimes raised chickens for both the eggs and the meat.She was a good cook and made almost everything from scratch. She was also adept at sewing and often made clothes for her children and herself. When her mother, Mary Viola Siebert broke her hip, she spent 6 months with her oldest daughter Muriel Petges, and then came to the Taylor home where she stayed until she passed 6 months later. She was a member of the Baptist Church, and The Royal Neighbors Society.
Family Members
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Harry Franklin Siebert
1893–1948
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Lela Elizabeth Siebert
1897–1900
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Marion Siebert
1899–1958
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Merle E Siebert Petges
1902–1977
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Lillie E Siebert
1904–1922
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Lula Edith Siebert Van Horn
1904–1972
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Carl W Siebert
1906–1996
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Eugene Arval Siebert
1912–1978
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Velma I. Weskalnies
1914–1994
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Ernest Earl Siebert
1917–1930