Clifford B. Pease (1879-1944) was the son of James Augustus Pease (1840-1922) of Rockport Township, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, and Asenith Abell (1845-1914), also of Rockport Township. Clifford was born in Dover Township, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, on September 17, 1879. He was one of six children. His siblings were Herbert E. (1866-1927, married to Lydia Stoll), Marcia (1867-1878), Chester C. (1868-1964, married to Ruby Hall, a descendent of the Hale family of Ohio), Clarence J. (1873-1879), and Clinton T. (1882-1940, married to Hattie Bates). Pease family members were direct descendants of Major Lorenzo Carter, Cleveland's first permanent settler.
As a child, Clifford B. Pease attended the public grammar school in Dover Township that, in 1929, would become the new site for the funeral home business started by his father, James Augustus Pease, in the early 1870s. He attended and graduated from the Champion College of Embalming in 1899, the Massachusetts College of Embalming in 1902, the Esco School of Applied Science of Embalming in 1919, and the Cincinnati College of Embalming in 1920.
Prominent in the business and civic affairs of his community, Clifford B. Pease was the first Town Clerk of Dover Village when it was incorporated in 1911. He was a member of the Dover Masonic Lodge, Dover Odd Fellows, the North Olmsted Kiwanis, and numerous state and national funeral director organizations. He was an avid outdoorsman and was a member of the Dover Bay Gun Club. His love of hunting took him to Ontario, Canada, and to Wardsboro, Vermont, where he owned a small hunting lodge.
He married Alice Minerva Osborn (1888-1959) of Dover Township on September 29, 1909. She was born in Dover Township on July 8, 1888. She was the daughter of Samuel Osborn (1842-1897) and Mary Crocker (b. 1851), both of Dover Township. Alice Minerva Osborn was a granddaughter of Reuben Osborn and of Jedediah Crocker (1761-1841) of Lee, Massachusetts, early settlers of the Western Reserve. Reuben Osborn accompanied Joseph Cahoon, an original founder of Dover Township, Ohio, from New England to the Western Reserve. Jedediah Crocker was at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, with General George Washington during the American Revolution, and was one of eight founders of Dover Congregational Church in Dover Village, Ohio. The charter for the church was brought to Ohio by covered wagon and oxcart from Lee, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, about 1815.
Alice Minerva Osborn was one of several children, including Leverrett Osborn (d. ca. 1948, married to Emily Newsham McLain of Portland, Oregon, and California). She graduated from Dover Village public schools and was an active member of Dover Congregational Church. Along with her husband, Clifford B. Pease, she was a member of the Cora Griswold Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star. She was a licensed funeral director and assisted her husband for thirty-five years until his death in Westlake, Ohio, on October 3, 1944. She continued to operate the Pease Funeral Home with her daughter, Marion Elizabeth, until it was sold to Glen A. Jenkins of Westlake, Ohio, in 1955. She then traveled extensively until her death in the Pease home in March 1959.
Clifford B. Pease and Alice Minerva Osborn Pease had two children, Marion Elizabeth (1910-1991) and Kenneth Osborn (1913-1916). Marion Elizabeth Pease was born in Dover Village, Ohio, on August 1, 1910. Kenneth Osborn Pease was baptized in Dover Congregational Church on April 6, 1913. The Pease family was involved in a serious auto accident in Dover Township in 1916. It is unclear if this was a contributing factor in the death of Kenneth Osborn Pease later that same year.
Marion Elizabeth Pease began her studies as a primary school teacher at the College of Wooster in Wooster, Ohio, in 1928. She received a teaching certificate, but transferred to Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, and graduated in 1931. She attended and graduated from the Cleveland College of Embalming and became a licensed funeral director in 1933. She was member of numerous state and national funeral director associations. She was briefly married for five months from June 1940 to November 1940 to Rudolph Sobel of Cleveland. She filed for divorce in November 1940 and never remarried. She was a lifelong advocate for animal rights in her community. She owned many purebred terriers during the course of her life and was a member of the Cleveland Animal Protection League. She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star and belonged to the same chapter as her parents. She was the first vice-regent of the Nathan Perry Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Lorain, Ohio.
She continued to operate the Pease-Jenkins Funeral Home after the death of her mother in 1959 under the new ownership of the Jenkins family. She was a licensed funeral director well into the 1980s. She died in Cleveland on November 28, 1991.
The Clifford B. Pease Family Papers, 1811-1991, consist of address and birthday books; correspondence; daybooks; genealogies and canine pedigrees; financial and tax records; legal records, including deeds, wills, estate inventories, land partitions and purchases, divorce papers, and lawsuits; birth and death certificates; diplomas and certificates; newspaper clippings and notes, including birth, death and wedding announcements; poetry and recipe books; academic catalogs and directories; pamphlets; and bulletins.
This collection is of value to genealogical researchers and family historians of the Abell, Carter, Crocker, Osborn, and Pease families of Dover Township, Ohio, now the communities of Bay Village, North Olmsted, and Westlake, Ohio. There is also correspondence with persons in the states of California and Colorado as well as in Ontario, Canada, which may interest historians or sociologists studying mid to late twentieth century North American culture. Historians studying the migration and settlement of these communities from Massachusetts and Connecticut to the Western Reserve will find an original deed and sale of land dated May 23, 1812, belonging to Nehemiah Hubbard, Jr. (1752-1837) and Joshua Stowe (1762-1842) of the Connecticut Land Company to Jedediah Crocker of Euclid, Ohio, to be of interest. Also of interest to historians of Dover Village, Ohio, is a bill of sale of land dated September 1, 1818, and signed by Joseph Cahoon, David Ingersol, Waterman Sweet and his wife, Amy Sweet. The sale was made to Jedediah Crocker.
Sociologists and family historians will also have interest in the Pease correspondence dated from the turn of the century to the early 1990s. Historians of the nineteenth century will find the deeds, land partitions and purchases, and Civil War era report cards of Sarah Crocker to be of interest. Genealogists and historians will also find numerous copies of newspaper clippings detailing the early histories of the townships of Rockport and Dover Village, which now comprise many western suburban Cleveland cities. In the educational records, there are some biographies of graduates of the College of Wooster. There is also a record directory of all graduates and non-graduates of the College of Wooster from 1870-1940. This may provide a good alternative source for genealogists searching for family records at the College of Wooster.
The collection is arranged in six series.
All photographs have been removed to PG 505 Clifford B. Pease Family Photographs
The researcher should also consult MS 4809 Pease Funeral Home Records.
Processed by Richard B. Robertson in 1999.
None.
[Container ___, Folder ___ ] Clifford B. Pease Family Papers, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio
Gift of Christine Kitchens in 1993.
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.