
I suspect that David may have had German relatives or friends in Crawford County, Ohio where he migrated to. This is where David met his future wife, Sarah Morrison. Sarah had two brothers who were partners in a clothing store near where David had established a restaurant in the town of North Robinson. That may be how Sarah and David became acquainted. They married in 1872.
It's a special treat when a family historian finds words written by an ancestor. Below is an exerpt from David's application for a patent in 1883:
"Be it known that I, DAVID C. SPITZER, a citizen of the United States, residing at North Robinson, in the county of Crawford and State of Ohio, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Butter-Molds, of which the following is a specification, reference being had therein to the accompanying drawings.
My invention relates to certain new and useful improvements in butter-molds, and has for its object the construction and arrangement of a butter-mold in two sections that will admit the butter between said sections, properly mold and imprint the butter or other substance, and at the same time release the same without defacing or injuring it after the molding is completed."
(David must have thought it was important for his restaurant customers to have decorative butter.)
David and Sarah and their family of eight children moved to Galion, in Crawford County, about 1885. I assume that the restaurant business wasn't as satisfactory as David would have liked, so he was working as a carpenter at this time of his life. David died at age 50 of cancer and is buried at the Fairlawn Cemetery in Galion.
David C. Spitzer
Born: 03 Oct 1845 ,Rockingham, VA
Married: 05 Sep 1845 North Robinson, Crawford, OH
Died: 29 Jan 1896 Galion, Crawford, OH
Sources:www,fold3.com;U.S. Nat'l Archives military records; birth probate court record of daughter Spitzer, naming parents; 1880 census; Galion city directories, Crawford County marriage records and death records; Ohio County Marriage Records 1789-2013; Patent Application of 1883.
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