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GAMACHE FAMILY & MOON CAR CO |
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Latest News
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Written by AHS
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Monday, 16 June 2008 |
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GAMACHE RELATIVES GATHERED JUNE 13 AT THE ARNOLD PONDEROSA TO MEET AUTHOR DR. JERRY GAMACHE, seated second from left, next to twin sister SHARON SHAVER. Mel Shaver is at the far right and Mili Koger Gamache is at the far left. Dr. Jerry Gamache's new book is "Journeys: The Gamaches in the New World" published by Author House, Bloomington, IN. Standing behind is Bill Pilger, granddaughter Amber McCoombe, Doug Gamache , brother Emmett P. and father Emmett C., Ronald F. Gamache, Sharon Kamprad, Karen Lyons, Julius Riedy ,Shirley and Charles Block, Allen Flamm, and Mary Moore. MIDDLE ROW: Delores Pleimann, Coralie and Lawrence Ktazenberger, Pat Lambert, Pat Pleimann, Linda Taylor, and Ricky Thomas. OHER RELATIVES WHO BOUGHT GAMACHE BOOK BUT NOT PRESENT FOR PICTURE: Matt Gamache, Edward Gamache,Debra Gamache, Dana , Lauren and Bobby A. Gamache, Marge Gamache Webb, Jenne (Moersch) Kostial, Payton and Neil Moersch, Terra Raleigh, and Dennis Christ. IN THE 1920s THE GAMACHE MOTOR CO. (MAKER OF THE MOON CAR)WAS OWNED BY JOSEPH LEE GAMACHE, HIS WIFE DAISY, AND SON JOSEPH ELMER. THESE ARE DR. JERRY GAMACHE'S FATHER, GRANDMOTHER, AND GRANDFATHER. 
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Last Updated ( Monday, 16 June 2008 )
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Dr. Jerry Gamache Book Signing |
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Latest News
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Written by AHS
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Saturday, 31 May 2008 |
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Dr. Jerry Gamache has authored "Journeys: The Gamache Family in the New World" and will sign books at two locations. On Friday, June 13 from 1-4 p.m.in the Entryway of the Arnold Library at 1701 Missouri State Rd. and again on Sat. June 14 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Arnold Historical Society Museum in Ferd Park, 1838 Old Lemay Ferry Road. Dr. Gamache chronicles the Gamache family from 1565 in France until the present generation. In 1650 , a portion of the Gamache family immigranted to Quebec, New France (Canada). There they established the town of Cap St. Ignace on the south bank of the St. Lawrence. Members of the family are buried in a crypt beneath the church and more in graveyards around the small town. In the 1760s Jean-Baptiste took up roots and moved to Detroit and on to Fort Chartres, IL. There he met Pierre Laclede and together with 34 other men canoed across the Mississippi on Feb. 15, 1764 to a new village they named St. Louis. Jean-Baptiste's marriage in 1767 in St. Louis and the marriage contract, located in the Missouri State Archives, is one of the earliest manuscripts in St. Louis history. Their sons lost the rights to Jefferson Barracks, originally Gamache land, and that is an integral part of Gamache history. The book sells for $25. A great gift for Father's Day, especially with the author signing it. The book is dedicated to the founding president of the Arnold Historical Society, Jack Underwood, who wrote a poem for Journeys. |
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 31 May 2008 )
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Latest News
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Written by AHS
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Sunday, 25 May 2008 |
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Wayne and Dotty Marty accept the Best of Show Trophy from Bernie Wilde and Charlie Heisler. Their 1930 Chevrolet. also won in 2006. |
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 25 May 2008 )
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The Starling Airport Story |
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General History
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Written by AHS
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Tuesday, 13 February 2007 |
Three Area Men Relate Stories About Starling AirportStarling Airport gliders were used to train pilots before they flew troop carrier gliders in WWII in France. Troop carrier gliders were used on D Day, Normandy Invasion, June 1944. 
Oscar Masters holds a picture of a glider which is ready to be towed to Starling Airport for testing. Age 83, Oscar Masters recalled how he flew planes out of Starling Airport. Back in his childhood years in the 30s Oscar grew up on Montebello Road and watched his neighbor Murray Whitehead play softball. Later Murray would buy the land to begin Starling Airport. Future owners were Carl Stockstrom and, in the 50s, David Randolph, a developer. When Oscar was a senior in Herky High School he would spend weekends with Murray at Starling Airport, a one lane gravel road near Hwy 61. Nearby was a gravel plant owned by Holzer. A drag system was used to get the gravel out of the river and it was taken to a storage yard at the northeast corner of Hwy 61. Residents would buy the gravel. The Rhombergs had a farm on that gravel road that eventually saw Startling Airport in operation. Oscar wold help build gliders designed after the Yankee Doodle built in 1936 and flown in 1937. He would put wings on so he could catch a ride when the glide was being air tested in Arnold. The gliders were built on Ivory Avenue in 1942-43. Ten experimental planes were built and each one was tested at Starling. Murray would tow the plane via large trucks to Starling where the wings were reattached and the plane taken up 4,000-5,000 feet to see if the plane was air worthy. Aftter the 10th glider was built, the gliders were moved out to "A" building at the Arena. Then every 10th airplane was inspected. Once planes went into production, every nut and bolt was accounted for in a cost effective method. These gliders were used during World War II because they could fly in quietly--just glide in. They were used during the Normandy Invasion on D Day in France--June 1944. Oscar remembers the day Randy Chapman flew a glider for a large crowd. The plane had been hanging overhead in the building and the gas heaters blew on it continually and dried out the parts. When the plane looked like it was going to crash, Randy looked like he was getting out of the plane when he realized that the plane was aiming for people who were watching him--including his wife. He repositioned himself in the seat and steered the glider away from the people toward the lake in Arnold City Park. He died in the glider. Oscar served his country in 1943 in World War II in the Army Air Force. When he returned to this area, he flew the Piper Cub and other small planes out of Starling. Later he flew out of Weiss Airport in Fenton. Oscar and his brother owned Masters Brothers Sand Plant on Hwy Z till 1972, then managed it for Bussen Quarries until it was sold to Unimin in 1990. In retirement Oscar started skiing when he was 68 and quit this year. He plays golf almost every day and bowls three nights a week. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 February 2008 )
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Louise Frederici & Buffalo Bill Cody |
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Famous Arnoldians
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Written by Bernie Wilde
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Wednesday, 10 January 2007 |
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This is a story about the courtship of Louise Frederici and William (Buffalo Bill) Cody. Margaret Louise Frederici was born in Arnold, Missouri, May 27, 1844 on a farm near present day Jeffco Blvd. and Frederitzi Lane, just south of Church Road. Members of the Frederici family were some of the founding members of Immaculate Conception Church which was only a log church building when Louise was born. |
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 16 February 2008 )
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