![]() Christopher
G.
Kircher, Meat Cutter Christopher G. Kircher
(1861–1896) was listed in
Denison's 1887 City Directory. Records state
that he was born in 1861 in
Missouri. Many Kirchers, including those who
lived in St. Louis around this
time, were German immigrants or children of
German immigrants. After moving to Denison, on August 18, 1885, Christopher G. Kircher married Lula A. I. Cutler (1866–1941). She was the youngest of eight children of Dr. Thomas Nicholson Cutler (1829–1896), physician and preacher, and Emeline Cartwright Cutler (1830–1879). Two of Lula's older siblings were Wyatt Thomas Cutler (1851–1903) Denison marshal, city councilman, judge, and barkeep and Laura Alenda Cutler (1861–1925). Laura and Wyatt married a brother and sister, Gustavus A. Henry "Gus" Howard (1847–1904) and Florence Miranda Howard (1854–1931). Thus Chris and Lula Kircher formed part of a close-knit clan active for decades in Denison.
Another of the Cutler brothers, Tom (1856–?), owned a saloon at 126 West Main. In 1887, Christopher Kircher was a bartender there. By 1891, Chris had two businesses of his own. With Adam O. Eckerle, he operated Eckerle & Kircher, plumbers, gas and steam fitters, dealers in gas and steam fixtures, at 428 West Main. In addition, with his
brother-in-law Gus
Howard, he operated the Buck Horn Saloon at
117 West Main. Wyatt and Tom Cutler
were now running Cutler Brothers Saloon at 230
West Main. Five years later, Chris took a
short break from
entrepreneurship, as the 1896 City Directory
showed him working as a carpenter
in the Katy Car Shops. He and Lula had
established their home at 808 West
Chestnut Street. They would live The
Denison City Directory indicated that by
1901,
Chris had
established the New Meat Market at 116 North
Rusk Avenue.
However,
according to the 1903 City Directory, by
that year Christopher
had
partnered up with William H. Hughes to
create the Kircher & Hughes Meat
Market at 503 West Main Street. Soon Chris bought
out Hughes's interest and
became sole proprietor of the business,
which operated at the same location for
nearly a decade. Chris and Lula had two
daughters, Minnie L.
(1887–1976) and Christina, called Crystal
(1889–1949). Maybe Chris's meat
business fell on hard times, for the
1913 City Directory listed Chris simply as
"butcher," with no
business address. And no occupation was given
for him in 1915. Apparently the Kirchers sought
opportunity in
Dallas, for the 1916 Dallas City Directory
showed him working as a meat cutter
at G. Watson in that city. Living with him at
704 West Jefferson Avenue was the
younger daughter, Crystal L., stenographer in
the Dallas auditing office of the
M.K.&T. Railway. Four years later, the
1920 Dallas City Directory
said that Chris
was a meat cutter at the North Haskell
Grocery. That same year,
the 1920 census located Chris and Lula at 4341
Cole Avenue in Dallas; here they
settled for some years. According Daughter Crystal
wasn't listed in Dallas directories
from 1920 forward; about this time she became
the second wife of a
By 1924, Chris, still in
Dallas, was a meat cutter
at Tinsley Brothers. The next year he had a
second-hand furniture store at 1315
Second Avenue; he and Lula had moved to 5735
Vanderbilt Avenue. At age 65, Chris was
retired. The census of 1930
found him and Lula
back in Denison, living at 1130 West Walker, a
corner
property they owned and valued at $6,000. This
had been the home of daughter
Crystal and her husband Charles; apparently
childless, they moved to 515 North
Perry Avenue, a pleasant location between
Morton and Bond streets. Christopher
passed away on June 15, 1932, and was
buried in Denison's Fairview Cemetery. Lula Cutler Kircher
was still living at 1130 West
Walker in 1940, when she was 75 years old.
She died on July 30, 1941, and was
buried in Fairview Cemetery. Crystal's
husband Charles passed away in 1943, and
Crystal joined him in Fairview Cemetery in
1949. Minnie Kircher
Durham Craven Cariker In 1908, Minnie Kircher
married Robert Gould Durham
(1913–1933). They lived in Sherman, where he
became a master mechanic for
Sherman Manufacturing Company. The Durhams,
who lived on Grand Avenue near
Austin College, had two children, both dying
in infancy. The first baby, Robert
Kircher Durham, born in 1911, survived only 17
days and was buried in Fairview
Cemetery in Denison. The second, George C.
Durham (1913–1916), was buried in
West Hill Cemetery in Sherman. Living next door to
the Durhams in 1930 were George
Frank Cariker (1876–1972) and his wife Lulu.
As a young man, just after his first
marriage in 1898, he had lived in Terrell,
Texas, and worked at the North Texas
Hospital for the Insane. Later After losing her
husband, Robert, in 1933, Minnie
remarried in 1936. The Dallas Morning
News of September 16 announced: Walter
Kyle Craven, proprietor of Camp Craven south
of Denison, and prominently identified with
the business circles of Denison,
was married to Mrs.
Minnie Kircher Durham, executive of
the Woman's Benefit
Association, in a quiet ceremony Tuesday at
the home of the bride's mother,
Mrs. C. G. Kircher
... Mrs. Craven is the daughter of the late C. G. Kircher,
pioneer businessman of Denison. Mr. Craven is
the son of the late Dr. and Mrs.
E. J. Craven of Whitesboro. Little information is available about Camp Craven. In 1939 it was located off the old Highway 75 (now Texoma Parkway) between Denison and Sherman. In 1941 the camp was a member of the Denison Chamber of Commerce. According
to Wikipedia, the Woman's Benefit Association
originated as a female
auxiliary of a fraternal organization, the
Knights of the Maccabees.
A split led to formation of the Women's
Benefit Association in
1915. Illustrative of its work, a
Michigan newspapered reported in
1919 that "2,700 revises of the Woman's
Benefit Association were
organized as active unites of the Red Cross
and over 200,000 members
enthusiastically gave their every effort to
this work during the war."
Minnie and Walter Craven,
though up in years, seem
to have taken care of two girls born in 1940.
They were Carol Eugenia Ann Maxwell
and Sandra Lee Shiflett. Then Walter died in
1948. Minnie's sister Crystal
passed away in 1949. Both Walter
Frank
passed away in 1972. Minnie achieved the age of
89, living until
January 2, 1976. Both Minnie and Frank
were
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