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Valerie Lillian SALATHÉ

Female 1889 - 1982  (92 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Valerie Lillian SALATHÉ was born on 24 Aug 1889 in Jersey City, Hudson, New Jersey (daughter of Dr. Frederick SALATHÉ and Antoinette MICHAELIS); died on 11 Feb 1982 in Santa Barbara, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1910, Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California
    • Census: 1920, Santa Barbara, California

    Valerie married George Karl FREEMAN on 15 Jun 1911 in Los Angeles, California. George (son of George W. FREEMAN and Cornelia Alice REED) was born on 10 Aug 1886 in Ohio; died on 20 Sep 1970 in Santa Barbara, California; was buried in Santa Barbara, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Valerie Persis FREEMAN was born on 17 Feb 1915 in Santa Barbara, California; died on 17 Aug 2014 in Irvine, Orange, California; was buried in Riverside Natl. Cemetery, Riverside, California.
    2. Alice Salathé FREEMAN was born on 17 May 1918 in Santa Barbara, California; died on 3 May 2010 in Claremont, Los Angeles, California.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Dr. Frederick SALATHÉ was born on 8 May 1857 in Basel, Switzerland (son of H. SALATHÉ and Dorthoy BAERWART); died on 1 May 1923 in Santa Barbara, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1910, Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California

    Notes:

    FREDERICK SALATHÉ, PhD

    The youthful but progressive young state of Wyoming is fortunate in many ways, not the least one of these being the great number of men of acknowledged and conspicuous ability who have cast in their lots with her fortunes. Each calling, profession, vocation, that has its place in the wide range of the capabilities of the state has its representative men of the most distinguished order, men of not only preeminent ability in their respective spheres of action but also possessed of sterling character, animated by high principles, considering the public good through able, well-directed personal endeavor. Among the most distinguished of the sons of the state, standing in the foremost rank of the world’s great chemists, is Frederick Salathé, Ph.D., now of Casper. Wyo., whose distinctive talents and fame are bounded by no narrow horizon, but are known and honored by the most distinguished scientists of America and Europe.
     Doctor Salathé was born at Basle, Switzerland, on May 8, 1857, the son of H. and Dorthoy (Baerwart) Salathe, also natives of Basle. They trace their Huguenot ancestry to a residence in France in the time of the Moorish wars in the years immediately antecedent to the middle of the sixteenth century, where they stood in the full splendor of the grace, courtesy and other brilliant qualities then attaching to the people of their faith, renowned alike as scholars, soldiers and lovers of country. The name was then spelled Saladdin, and the family enjoyed life in the sunny land of France until after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, when they were among the half-million of Protestants who fled to foreign countries, and locating in Basle, they soon became prominent as merchants and in civic life. The paternal grandfather was for long years the treasurer of the federal government of Switzerland, holding this office by repeated and consecutive elections until he resigned on his retirement from business. The father, also, was a successful merchant, and the originator of and the pioneer operator in the silk industry of Basle, which has attained such huge proportions and is now largely devoted to the manufacture of silk ribbons. Owing to the high reputation he had acquired as the leader in this industry and on account of his high moral character, business capacity and integrity, he was commissioned by President Grant as U. S. consul at Basle, retaining the appointment during Grant’s successive administrations. The Doctor’s maternal uncle, Edward Baerwart, was one of the leading merchants of Rio Janeiro, Brazil, during the past generation, and his extended mercantile operations (the wholesaling and importation of woolen goods) are now continued by the Doctor’s younger brother, Edward.
     Receiving his preliminary educational training in the schools of Basle, Frederick Salathé supplemented this by an attendance at and a graduation from the Basle Industrial School, thereafter pursuing a full course of three years at the Federal Polytechnic School at Zurich, being graduated there from with the highest honors and acquiring thereby the appointment of assistant director of the Chemical Technical Laboratory under, first, Prof. E. Kopp and second. Prof. George Lunge, here remaining two years, within which time he had prepared his thesis for submission to the faculty of the University of Zurich upon the derivatives of aniline, for which he received the degree of Ph. D., after this the doctor invented the process by which aniline colors and dyes are manufactured from the refuse of petroleum oils. Applying for a patent in Switzerland, he came to this country to introduce his invention, and in 1879 he had suitable chemical works for his process erected in Titusville, Pa. These proved very successful under the doctor’s supervision until the tariff on aniline products was largely reduced, the price of certain necessary imported chemicals at the same time being increased, and these changed financial conditions caused the business to become unprofitable. Doctor Salathe was then employed as chief chemist of the Tidewater Oil, with headquarters at New York City, and introduced new processes of refining mineral oils, and from there was called to California by the Union Oil, with a salary of $10,000 and an interest in the plant to erect and conduct the first oil refinery operated in that state. Three years from this time his services were obtained by an English syndicate operating in Uvalde, Tex., to erect and put in operation a large plant for the refining of a natural asphaltic product, which the doctor named litho-carbon, and from which he produced various valuable commercial substances, useful in the manufacturing of artificial rubber and insulators for electricity. Accomplishing this labor the doctor established himself in Los Angeles, Calif., devoting his especial attention to lubricating oils, paving asphalts and the installations for the use of fuel-oils in all branches of railroad work and other industries, in this connection putting in the first oil burner used in a locomotive on the Santa Fe system, this being done on the California Southern Railroad, a branch of the Santa Fe. In 1897 Doctor Salathe was called to Wyoming to conduct the refining business of the Pennsylvania Oil & Gas, and in this he is largely interested and has here introduced the latest processes for the refining of the Salt Creek oil, which he claims to be the finest natural oil of the world, his claim being supported by such eminent scientists as Redwood of London and others of equal reputation. The Doctor has also constructed the electric lighting plant of Casper and to his scientific skill the people are indebted for the excellent light they are privileged to enjoy, Mr. C. H. King being associated with him in this enterprise.
     Doctor Salathé has attained the Thirty-second degree of the Scottish Rite of Masonry, also is a Knight Templar and a member of the Royal Arcanum. In scientific circles his abilities have been acknowledged by his admission to numerous European scientific societies, general and special, being the German member of the National Chemical Society of Berlin, and he also affiliates with the American Society for the Advancement of Science.
     The marriage ceremonies uniting Doctor Salathé and Miss Antionette Michaelis were solemnized on September 16, 1886. She is a native of New York, where her father, Edward Michaelis, who was born in Hamburg, Germany, has long conducted a prominent real-estate agency. Their children are Frederick, now attending a preparatory school preliminary to entering a university; Valerie, a student of the Casper high school; Antoinette and Edward. The family is one of the most popular in the community and its home is a center of attractive hospitality. [source: “Progressive Men of Wyoming” written by A. W. Bowen in 1901 transcribed by a Friend of Free Genealogy]

    Frederick married Antoinette MICHAELIS on 16 Sep 1886. Antoinette (daughter of Edward MICHAELIS and Augusta SCHUETZ) was born on 20 Aug 1867 in New York; died on 17 Dec 1961 in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Antoinette MICHAELIS was born on 20 Aug 1867 in New York (daughter of Edward MICHAELIS and Augusta SCHUETZ); died on 17 Dec 1961 in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1910, Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California
    • Census: 1940, Los Angeles, California

    Children:
    1. Frederick SALATHÉ, Jr. was born on 8 Sep 1887 in Jersey City, Hudson, New Jersey; died on 9 Jan 1976 in Montecito, Santa Barbara, California.
    2. 1. Valerie Lillian SALATHÉ was born on 24 Aug 1889 in Jersey City, Hudson, New Jersey; died on 11 Feb 1982 in Santa Barbara, California.
    3. Antoinette SALATHÉ was born on 1 Sep 1899 in Wyoming; died on 27 Jun 1994 in Los Angeles, California.
    4. Edward Emile SALATHÉ was born on 18 Jan 1902 in Wyoming; died on 14 May 1990 in Los Angeles, California.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  H. SALATHÉ

    H. married Dorthoy BAERWART. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Dorthoy BAERWART
    Children:
    1. 2. Dr. Frederick SALATHÉ was born on 8 May 1857 in Basel, Switzerland; died on 1 May 1923 in Santa Barbara, California.

  3. 6.  Edward MICHAELIS was born in Hamburg, Germany.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1880, New York, New York

    Edward married Augusta SCHUETZ. Augusta was born in Germany. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Augusta SCHUETZ was born in Germany.
    Children:
    1. Emily Augusta MICHAELIS and died.
    2. Emil Martin MICHAELIS was born in Nov 1859 in New York, New York; died on 7 Dec 1908.
    3. 3. Antoinette MICHAELIS was born on 20 Aug 1867 in New York; died on 17 Dec 1961 in Pasadena, Los Angeles, California.