USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Andover > Necrology, 1890-1900 (Andover Theological Seminary) > Part 8
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61
65
Ill., and resided there until his death. For three years he was pastor of the Congregational church and teacher in the Geneseo Seminary. He afterwards opened a private classical school, meantime serving one year as Presbyterial missionary, and preaching in various churches, especially at Vienna, Ill., 1859- 60, and at Gardner, Ill., 1860-61.
During nearly all of Mr. Waldo's ministerial life, both in the Western Re- serve and in Illinois, he served simultaneously as preacher and teacher. While teaching at Oberlin, great revivals followed his preaching there, "and in a town some twelve miles distant." While lecturing on Moral and Intellectual Philos- ophy at Farmington Academy, in the winter of 1836-37, his hearers were so much aroused by his teaching on Conscience that " lecturing was waived to give place to preaching." In his last years he continued to teach "a small school every winter, and even in the summer vacation preceding his death he had one pupil come every day to read Latin." When seventy-nine years old he pub- lished a New Grammatical Method for the Use of Schools. A Geneseo paper said : " His kindly spirit, scholarly taste, and devoted life will be one of the chief treasures of our city. He desired to be known as the Preceptor and Friend of Youth. This motto ought to be put on his tomb."
Mr. Waldo was married, April 11, 1834, to Abiah Spofford, of Andover (North Parish), Mass., daughter of Moody Spofford and Dolly Farnum. She died November 15, 1881, and he married, second, March 28, 1882, Mrs. Amelia S. Green, of Albion, N.Y., daughter of Orra Clark, and widow of Eri A. Green, who survives him. He had no children.
He died of hemorrhage of the bladder, at Geneseo, Ill., October 30, 1890, aged eighty-eight years.
CLASS OF 1840.
Henry Callahan.
Son of Robert Callahan and Dorcas Pettengill; born in Andover (North Parish), Mass., January 5, 1811; graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, 1832, and at Union College, 1836; taught in Tamworth, N.H., 1836-37; took the full course in this Seminary, 1837-40; was licensed by the Andover Asso- ciation, meeting with Rev. John C. Phillips, Methuen, October 6, 1840; taught in Cazenovia, N.Y., and preached in the vicinity of Schenectady, and at Evans, N.Y., 1840-43. He was pastor of the Presbyterian church in Niagara Falls, N.Y., 1843-49, and of the Congregational church in Oxford, N.Y., 1850-62. He was chaplain of the 114th New York Regiment in the War of the Rebellion. Returning from this service, he was acting pastor of the Presbyterian church in Franklin, N.Y., for two years, and also instructor of Latin and History in Dela- ware Literary Institute at the same place. He then opened in Franklin a home school for boys, called the Callahan Institute, which he maintained for fourteen years.
His service in war time in the charge of a large hospital in New Orleans was one of special usefulness, although it seriously undermined his health. " A warm-hearted, loyal Christian gentleman - such is the summing up of his character."
Mr. Callahan was married, May 9, 1843, to Mary Ann Allis, of Cazenovia, N.Y., who survives him, with four sons, a daughter having died in childhood.
He died of Bright's disease, at Franklin, N.Y., February 7, 1888, aged seventy-seven years.
66
Gideon Southward Johnson.
Son of Daniel Johnson and Sarah Alden; born in Haverhill, Mass., April 25, 1810; graduated at Dartmouth College, 1835; in the Seminary, 1835-36 and 1838-40, being, in the mean time, principal of Fairhaven (Mass.) Academy, 1836- 38; was licensed by the Andover Association, meeting with Rev. Samuel C. Jackson, Andover, April 7, 1840. He was ordained at Haverhill, September 13, 1841, and labored as home missionary in Lucas and Fulton counties, Ohio, 1848- 51, and was pastor of churches at Seward and Pecatonica, Ill., 1851-55. He was then compelled by the failure of his voice to discontinue preaching, and resided without charge at Pecatonica until 1858, at Rockford, Ill., until 1867, and afterwards in the town of Marion, Ill., being postmaster successively at Hale and at Stillman Valley from 1867 until his death.
He was married, May 25, 1841, to Mary White Jones, of Spencer, Mass., daughter of Dr. Asa Jones and Lucy Dunbar. She died November 8, 1857, and he married, second, October 22, 1860, Julia A. Woodward, of Warrens- burgh, N.Y., daughter of David Woodward and Annie McDonald, who sur- vived him. Of eight children, three are living.
Mr. Johnson died of malignant corn, at Stillman Valley, Ill., December 25, 1888, in the seventy-ninth year of his age.
CLASS OF 1857.
Abner Leavenworth Train. (Non-graduate.)
Son of Rev. Asa Milton Train (Class of 1829) and Lucia Leavenworth; born in Milford, Conn., September 16, 1830; prepared for college at Williston Seminary; graduated at Yale College, 1853; studied law with Hon. John Hooker, Hartford, Conn., 1853-54, and after a year in this Seminary, 1854-55, resumed that study, 1855-56; was admitted to the Bar in 1857; practiced for a short time in Hartford, and then in Milford; was private secretary of Hon. Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy, 1862-63; and Deputy Collector of the Port of New Haven, 1864-65. He was associate editor of the New Haven Fournal and Courier for one year, and an editor and proprietor of the New Haven Daily Palladium from 1865 to 1873. He resided in New York City afterward, but spent two years of study and observation in Europe. In 1886 he was appointed secretary of the Forestry Commission of the State of New York, in which position he continued until his death.
Mr. Train was Clerk of the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1858, and a member of the same body from Milford in 1861 and 1862. He compiled and edited the history of his college class. He took great interest in music, prepared a lecture on " Wagner and his Music," and at one time was secretary of a prominent musical society in New York City, which was under the leadership of Dr. Damrosch. "He was a man of rare qualities of head and heart. He was of a modest nature, rather distrustful of his own abilities, and this, together with a somewhat delicate physique, prevented his taking so prominent a position before the public as was commensurate with his ability and varied knowledge."
He was married, March 17, 1863, to Susan Atwater Bull, of Milford, daughter of Allen C. Bull and Julia Smith. She died July 22, 1870; two chil- dren died in infancy, and a married daughter resides in New Haven.
Mr. Train died of heart failure, induced by rheumatism, at Albany, N.Y., February 10, 1891, aged sixty years.
67
FORTY-SIX names are recorded in the preceding lists, the same number as last year. Six of them belong to the record of previous years, but have not pre- viously been reported. The average age of the forty-six men is sixty nine years, seven months, and twenty-one days. Thirteen of the number had passed the age of fourscore years; thirteen were between seventy and eighty; and all, save four, were over fifty. In at least nine cases death resulted from la grippe. As regards Seminary classes, the list extends from Dr. Addison Kingsbury, who left Andover in 1828, to Mr. Frederick, who, as member of the Advanced Class, attended these anniversaries one year ago.
Twenty-nine were full graduates, fifteen were non-graduates, and two, resi- dent licentiates. All of the forty-six men had previously pursued a course of study in collegiate institutions, although in a very few cases the course had not been completed. Twelve came from Amherst; six from Yale; six from Mid- dlebury; five from Dartmouth; three from Harvard; two each from Williams, Oberlin, and Beloit; and one each from Bowdoin, Brown, Columbia, Johns Hopkins, Union, and the Universities of New York, Pennsylvania, and Vermont.
The names of many will be readily recognized, as those of Drs. Backus, Skinner, and Wood, of the Presbyterian Church; Professor Shackford, of the Unitarian Church; Professor Aiken, the eminent scholar; Professor Loomis, the distinguished scientist; and President Blanchard, the vigorous reformer. Others, like Dr. Spalding, Mr. Hathaway, and Mr. Tuck, have been well known in New England pastorates. Four, including the lamented Constantine, were foreign missionaries; and a still larger number, like Mr. Peet and Mr. Waldo, endured hardness in the no less important work of laying foundations in the then obscure home missionary fields of the West. A few have been stricken down - like Professor Smith, of Worcester, Alfred H. Hall and Austin H. Burr-in the prime of life's work. All were earnest men, and their works do follow them.
Mr. Isaac Watts Wheelwright, of South Byfield, Mass., of the class of 1825, is still our senior alumnus, although Rev. William Withington, a non- graduate of the preceding class, and Rev. Peter Kimball, a graduate of the succeeding class, are both living, the latter being now in his one hundredth year.
Mer ra
I Hall Librar From b. b. Carpenter June 16, 1893
ANDOVER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.
NECROLOGY,
1892-93.
PREPARED FOR THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, AND PRESENTED AT ITS ANNUAL MEETING, JUNE 14th, 1893, BY C. C. CARPENTER, SECRETARY.
Second Printed Series, No. 3.
BOSTON: BEACON PRESS : THOMAS TODD, PRINTER, I SOMERSET ST. 1893.
OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION.
REV. JAMES G. MERRILL, D.D., Moderator, 1892.
REV. PROF. EDWARD Y. HINCKS, D.D.,
REV. EDWARD S. TEAD, Committee,
REV. HENRY J. PATRICK, D.D., 1892-93.
REV. B. M. FULLERTON, D.D.,
REV. C. C. CARPENTER, Secretary, 1892-95.
NOTICE.
THIS Obituary Record is published annually in connection with the meeting of the Alumni Association at the June anni- versaries. Alumni are earnestly requested to aid in its prepara- tion by communicating the fact of the death of any past member of the Seminary, together with any newspaper notices or memorial sketches. These, with change of address, or other information relating to the record of living alumni, should be sent to the Secretary at Andover.
INDEX.
Class.
Page.
1871. CHARLES D. BARROWS, D.D.
Age. 48
93
1842.
HIRAM BINGHAM
77
84
1842.
EDWIN E. BLISS, D.D.
75
81
1856. HORATIO N. BURTON, D.D. .
66
88
1838. 1861. S. RUSSELL BUTLER
55
91
1838. CHARLES DAME .
81
79
1852. OBED DICKINSON
74
87
1842. JUSTIN FIELD .
76 84
1832. ALBERT W. FISKE 90
76
1846. JAMES FLETCHER
69
85
1836. KENDALL FLINT, M.D.
85
77 87
1838. STEPHEN S. N. GREELEY
79
79
1841. HENRY L. HAMMOND .
78
80
1860. HENRY C. HITCHCOCK
57
89
1870. FRANCIS T. INGALLS, D.D.
48
92
1826. PETER KIMBALL
99
75
1848. JOSEPH T. NOYES
74
85 86
1879. SILAS A. POTTER, M.D.
38
94
1860. A. HASTINGS ROSS, D.D. .
62
90 82
1842. ELIPHALET Y. SWIFT .
77
83
1856. JOSEPH H. TYLER
67
89
1862. LORENZO J. WHITE 64
92
1824. WILLIAM WITHINGTON
93
74
1835. ISAAC R. WORCESTER, M.D. 83
76
Trustee.
EDWARD TAYLOR
76 73
Not Previously Reported.
1832. WILLIAM P. APTHORP . 77 94
1840. MOSES M. SMART, M.D. 73 95
81
80
1848. HEZEKIAH D. PERRY
74
1842. ALFRED STEVENS, D.D. . 82
1838. ELIEZER J. MARSH
1849. HENRY M. GOODWIN, D.D. . 72
78
DANIEL BUTLER 84
NECROLOGY.
TRUSTEE.
Edward Taylor.
Son of Jonathan Taylor and Harmony Brewster; born in Chester Village (now a part of Huntington ), Mass., March 29, 1817, the family, however, re- moving in his infancy to Westfield ; studied in Lenox and Westfield Academies with the purpose of entering college and fitting for the ministry, but was pre- vented by his health from doing so. When eighteen years old he entered busi- ness in Boston as a bookkeeper, and in 1839 came to Andover to fill the same position in the Marland Manufacturing Company. There he continued, with the exception of two years' service as the cashier of the Andover Bank, 1843-45, until his election to the office of treasurer of Phillips Academy and the Theo- logical Seminary in 1868, as successor to Dr. John L. Taylor, who then became Smith professor in the Special Course in the Seminary. The responsible duties of this position he performed for twenty-one years, retiring in feeble health in 1889, although remaining on the board of trustees, to which he had been elected in 1867, until his death.
During his fifty-four years of residence in Andover he was called to many offices of trust. For ten years, including the trying period of the War of the Rebellion, he was town treasurer, and for nine of the ten years town clerk. In 1866 and 1869 he represented Andover and North Andover in the Legislature. For thirty years, 1859-89, he was by election of the town a trustee of the Pun- chard Free School, and for eleven years, 1859-70, a trustee of Abbot Academy. He was for many years director of the Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance Com- pany and of the Andover National Bank, and for ten years president of the latter institution. In 1842 he united with the South Church by letter from the Bow- doin Street Church, Boston, and for the half century since has been most heartily and helpfully identified with its material and spiritual interests. He was one of its deacons for twenty-five years, superintendent of the Sabbath school fifteen years, for many years one of the church committee, and for over forty years treasurer of the historic Ministerial Fund of the parish.
Descended on one side from Rev. Edward Taylor, an early nonconformist English emigrant and the first minister of Westfield, and on the other from Elder Brewster of the Plymouth Pilgrims, Deacon Taylor exemplified the sturdy Puritan and Pilgrim traits of character, moral and spiritual. He believed in God and desired to serve him. He carried his religious conscientiousness and faithfulness into his business and his benevolence. No one ever doubted for a moment his strict honesty and truthfulness. What he thought it right to do, what he had said he would do, that he was sure to do. When he was in the Legislature the members of the House voted themselves an extra compensation of two hundred dollars. He believed this to be wrong, and sent one hundred dollars to each of the towns he represented, with a modest note saying that he was "in receipt of a larger compensation than met his approval," and asking
74
them to expend the annual income of the amount " towards furnishing fuel for some worthy ones " needing such provision. He gave very unostentatiously but liberally during his life, it being his plan to devote one quarter of his income to benevolence. Scholarships in Phillips and Abbot Academies bear respec- tively the names of Jonathan Taylor and Harmony Brewster. He left by be- quest about ten thousand dollars to benevolent societies and educational insti- tutions, with Phillips Academy and the Congregational Church Building Society as residuary legatees.
In a memorial sketch of Mr. Taylor, Principal C. F. P. Bancroft (Class of 1867) wrote : " With strong convictions and great strictness in his own life, he had a real sympathy for others and a liberal temper towards the opinions and the conduct of his fellow men. Reserved of speech and undemonstrative in manner, he could on occasion speak with convincing directness and honesty, and he often showed a depth of interest and feeling which was stronger than words. He commanded the confidence of all; he had many and true friend- ships; intimacies he had none. . .. Above all, his Christian principles and consistent conduct and character made him a power in the community and a blessing to the world."
Mr. Taylor died at Andover, of general debility, May 21, 1893, aged seventy- six years. He was never married.
ALUMNI.
CLASS OF 1824.
William Withington. (Non-graduate.)
Son of Joseph Weeks Withington and Elizabeth White; born in Dor- chester, Mass., October 28, 1798; prepared for college at Phillips Academy, Andover; graduated at Harvard College, 1821; in this Seminary, 1821-24. He was ordained as deacon by Bishop Griswold, September 26, 1824, and as priest by the same, September 10, 1840. Although a man of fine talent and scholarship, Mr. Withington's health was not strong, and his parochial charges were few and of brief duration. He officiated in St. John's Church, Ashfield, Mass., 1824-25, returning there for two years' service, 1850-52; he was rector of Christ Church at Clappville (now Rochdale) in Leicester, Mass., 1839-41; of St. Paul's Church, Hopkinton, Mass., 1848-49; and of Christ Church, Swansea, Mass., 1853-56. He was for a short time diocesan mission- ary in Michigan, and chaplain of the Legislature of that State in 1859. At other times he usually resided in Dorchester, quietly devoting his time to literary pursuits. He published Christian Radicalism in 1836, and The Growth of Thought as Affecting the Progress of Society in 1851. From 1858 he resided in Washington, D.C., and as late as 1881, when in his eighty-third year, took charge for several weeks of one of the smaller Episcopal churches in that city.
He was married, June 9, 1825, to Mary Stacy Frothingham, of Newburyport, Mass., daughter of Benjamin Frothingham and Mary Stacy. She died October 26, 1829, and he married, second, April 5, 1832, Elizabeth Williams Ford, of Dorchester, daughter of Joseph Ford and Sarah Foster, who died Decem-
75
ber 25, 1891. He had three sons and five daughters; two of the sons and one of the daughters are deceased.
Mr. Withington died of old age, at the home of his son, Gen. William H. Withington, in Jackson, Mich., August 31, 1892, in the ninety-fourth year of his age.
CLASS OF 1826.
Peter Kimball.
Son of Joseph Kimball and Eunice Atkinson; born in Boscawen, N.H., March 5, 1793; while teaching the village school at New Hartford, N.Y., he prepared for college under the instruction of Rev. Noah Coe (Class of 1811) ; graduated at Hamilton College, 1822 ; after spending a year in Boston, took the full course in this Seminary, 1823-26. He was engaged in home missionary serv- ice in Goshen and Marlow, N. H., 1826-27 ; in Manchester, N.Y., 1827-28; Swe- den, N.Y., 1828. He went to Ohio in 1830, and, while supplying the Presbyterian Church at Watertown, assisted Rev. L. G. Bingham in the pioneer work which resulted in the founding of Marietta College. He was ordained at Watertown, August 30, 1831, and remained there until 1833. He preached at Hamburg, N. Y., 1833-34, and at West Aurora, N.Y., 1834-35. After the death of his wife in 1836 he removed to Boston, where he resided most of the time from 1838 to 1855. He kept for several years a " Writing Academy " on Washington Street, having as pupils many who have since become distinguished. For a considerable period he did clerical work for the secretaries of the American Board, as also at one time for Hon. Charles Sumner. From 1855 he resided with his brother, Rev. Milton Kimball (Class of 1829), at Augusta, Ill. ; from 1866, in Rochester, N.Y .; from 1878, in Cleveland, Ohio; and in 1883 went to the Presbyterian Ministers' House at Perth Amboy, N.J., where he spent his remaining years.
Only about seven years of his long life were engaged in pastoral service, " but he seems," writes his nephew, Rev. C. Cotton Kimball, D.D., " never to have intermitted the quiet labors of a gracious and useful life. He took great interest in youth, and was always writing to his 'boys,' many of whom were men of seventy five or eighty years." As late as 1883 he was granted a patent for a process which he had invented for changing the bearing years of fruit trees. Although "terribly affected in 1859 by a lesion of the heart, so as to be often unable to speak or do anything," he outlived all his contemporaries and died in his one hundredth year. He attributed his longevity in large part to his entire disuse after his youth of ardent spirits, tobacco, and through most of his life of tea and coffee. In his youth he was a musician in the New Hampshire militia, and the use of the drum and fife which he had practiced in the time of the War of 1812 he kept up to the end of life, deeming it beneficial to his lungs and heart.
Not long before his death he wrote : " I do not expect to live so long as I might by fifteen or twenty-five years if I had never violated the laws of life. I enjoy early rising, read and write by native sight, and taste good food as a boy. I rejoice in the assurance of life eternal through our Lord Jesus Christ - man restored to the image of God and fitted to drink of the river of his pleas- ures." The superintendent of the Home where he died reports that "his last words were, ' I am going to be with my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,?"
He was married, October 6, 1831, to Maria Mabel Wilcox, of Le Roy, N.Y.,
76
daughter of Nathan Wilcox and Elizabeth Elliot. She died at Rochester, N.Y., March 25, 1836.
Mr. Kimball died of old age, at Perth Amboy, N.J., June 15, 1892, aged ninety-nine years, three months, and ten days.
CLASS OF 1832.
Albert William Fiske.
Son of Dea. William Fisk and Lucy Bradish; born in Upton, Mass., January 16, 1802 ; prepared for college at Day's Academy, Wrentham; grad- uated at Brown University, 1829, and took the full course in this Seminary. He began to preach in Alfred, Me., immediately after his graduation in Sep- tember, 1832 ; was ordained there as an evangelist, May 8, 1833, and continued as acting pastor of the church until 1844. From 1844 to 1848 he was in charge of the church at Scarboro, Me., and after brief periods of supply in Houlton, Me., 1848, and Upton, Mass., 1849, he was installed at Kittery, Me., July 18, 1850, and remained there seven years. May 20, 1857, he was installed over the church at Fisherville (now Penacook) in Boscawen, N.H., and dismissed, September 16, 1863. Although retiring then from active pastoral service and retaining his residence at Fisherville, he afterwards supplied for a few months each the churches in Centre Harbor, Boscawen, Warner, Barnstead, and Groton, clos- ing his last engagement in 1870.
Prof. W. J. Tucker, D.D. (Class of 1866), writes of him : "Mr. Fiske was a pastor of unusual faithfulness and efficiency. He was direct, simple, and interesting in his thought in the pulpit and in his intercourse with his people. After his resignation he lived for a considerable term of years in the town - an admirable parishioner and a respected citizen."
He was married, January 1, 1833, to Mary Davis, of Holden, Mass., daugh- ter of Elnathan Davis and Lucy Partridge. She died, January 2, 1850, and he married, second, June 18, 1851, Mary Ann Whipple, of Charlton, Mass., daughter of John Whipple and Anna Hall. She survives him, with two sons and two daughters, another son having died in 1876 and three children in infancy.
Mr. Fiske died of old age, at Penacook, N.H., December 7, 1892, aged nearly ninety-one years.
CLASS OF 1835.
Isaac Redington Worcester, M.D. (Resident Licentiate.)
Son of Rev. Leonard Worcester and Elizabeth Hopkins; born in Peacham, Vt., October 30, 1808; prepared for college at Peacham Academy, but was pre- vented by ill health from pursuing a classical education; graduated at Dart- mouth Medical College, 1832, having also studied under Dr. Josiah Shedd, of Peacham. He practiced medicine in Leicester, Mass., for three years, and then turned his attention to the study of theology, and was licensed to preach by the Caledonia (Vt.) Association, August 8, 1835. His brother, Rev. Evarts Worcester, having died in the first year of his pastorate at Littleton, N.H., he succeeded him there, being ordained September 27, 1837, and remaining five years. From 1842 to 1846 he was secretary of the Vermont Domestic Mission- ary Society, having his residence at Montpelier. He then began his long period
77
of service for the American Board, being district secretary for Massachusetts until 1859, and editor of the Missionary Herald, and for much of the time of the Journal of Missions, from 1856 to 1878. He was also a corporate member of the Board from 1870 to 1889, and a member of the Prudential Committee from 1878 to 1882. In 1849 he removed from Leicester to Auburndale, being one of the first residents of that suburban village and one of the founders of its church.
Mr. Worcester was of a marked ministerial stock, his father being of the famous Worcester family of Hollis, and his mother a daughter of Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins, of Hadley; his maternal aunts were the wives of Dr. Emmons, Dr. Austin, and Dr. Spring ; three of his brothers were ministers - one of them, Dr. Samuel A. Worcester (Class of 1823), the early missionary to the Cherokees whose unjust imprisonment in the Georgia Penitentiary occasioned great indigna- tion in New England. Naturally, therefore, although trained for another pro- fession, he became a minister, and spent nearly all of his long life in quiet but most valuable service in the home department of foreign missions. "He was a man of sincere piety, humble yet cheerful, gladly spending his time and strength in labors for the coming of that kingdom which he joyfully believed would yet be established throughout the earth."
He was married, November 16, 1835, to Mary Sophia Sargent, of Leicester, Mass., daughter of Col. Henry Sargent and Elizabeth Denny. She survives him, with two daughters, one the wife of Dr. N. G. Clark, foreign secretary of the American Board, the other of Prof. M. L. D'Ooge, of Michigan University. Two sons and one daughter died in childhood.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.