USA > Maine > Cumberland County > Harrison > Centennial history of Harrison, Maine > Part 50
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MRS. H. ELIZABETH (MEAD) WESTON
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concerned the welfare of Bolster's Mills during their resi- dence there, and they had the universal respect of all who had the good fortune to know them well.
They continued to reside at Bolster's Mills, the doctor attending to his large practice as a physician, and also en- gaging in lumbering operations to some extent. In 1893, he was induced to go to Chicago, Illinois, where he opened an office, and secured a lucrative practice. He was offered a government position in connection with the World's Fair, which was going on at that time, but was not able to accept it. At the end of seven months' residence in Chicago, ill health obliged him to give up his practice, and return to Bolster's Mills, his family having continued to reside there during his absence. He suffered from a general breakdown of the whole system, which he strove to his utmost to overcome after his return, but he failed to obtain relief, and passed away at his home on June 19, 1896, greatly mourned by a large circle of relatives and friends.
The family continued to reside at the Weston homestead after the death of the doctor until after the death of Mrs. Weston which occurred on June 22, 1900. She was born at North Bridgton, September 15, 1838. As the frequent references made to her in this sketch plainly show, she was one of the most capable and talented women that ever lived in Harrison. Her natural ability always made her a leader in any organization that she was a member of. She usually occupied an official position, and she always filled it in such a capable manner as to show that she was eminently qualified to fill a much higher place. In about a year after the death of the mother, both daughters mar- ried, and the well known homestead was sold to Mr. John C. Frost, who still occupies it. He had formerly lived where the youngest daughter is now living.
The children of Samuel Loton and H. Elizabeth (Mead) Weston were as follows:
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VIRGINIA FRANCES, b. Oct. 7, 1868; married Isaac Hagar of West Milan, N. H., May 22, 1901. They have one son, Howard Loton, born April 19, 1902. Mrs. Hagar was a successful teacher before her marriage, having taught numerous schools in Harrison and other towns. She now holds the position of Superintendent of Schools in Milan, N. H., and fills the office in such a satisfactory manner that she has been twice re-elected.
ALICE MEAD, b. Feb. 2, 1881; married Melville R. Wilbur of Bolster's Mills, July 17, 1901. One child, Harriet Elizabeth, was born Dec. 4, 1905, and died when less than one year of age. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur have lived on the Newell Trafton farm in Harrison, the greater part of the time since their marriage, and have now made it their permanent home. Mrs. Wilbur has taught many schools, both before and after her marriage, and has always been very successful. She inherited many of the qualities of both father and mother, and is a woman of much ability, always taking a leading part in the different organizations of which she is a member.
WHITMAN FAMILY.
JOHN WHITMAN, one of the earliest settlers of the town of Weymouth, Massachusetts, was the ancestor of nearly all of the name of Whitman in this country. He came from England, and must have arrived in this country about 1638. He owned and lived upon a farm in Wey- mouth, which has descended from father to son, and still remains wholly in the possession of his descendants.
THOMAS WHITMAN, the oldest son of John, was about twelve years old when he arrived in this country with his father's family. He continued to reside in Weymouth until 1662, when he removed to Bridgewater, Massachu- setts, and settled upon a tract of land which has since been called Whitman's Neck.
FRANCIS H. WHITMAN
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NICHOLAS WHITMAN, the third son of Thomas, had his father's homestead, and lived with him. He was born about the time of King Philip's War, in which his father's house was destroyed by the Indians.
JOSIAH WHITMAN, the tenth son of Nicholas, who had his father's dwelling house and part of the homestead, was extensively engaged in the manufacture of shoes. He died of consumption when only twenty-nine years of age.
REV. LEVI WHITMAN, oldest son of Josiah, was born in Bridgewater, in 1748. He graduated from Har- vard College, and studied for the ministry. In 1785, he was ordained as pastor of the Congregational Church in Wellfleet, Massachusetts.
LEVI WHITMAN, oldest son of Rev. Levi, was born in Wellfleet in 1789. He graduated at Harvard College in 1808, and studied law with Hon. Ezekiel Whitman of Portland. He settled at Norway, Maine, in 1811, and rep- resented that town in the Massachusetts Legislature in the years 1813-16. He died in Harrison, Maine, in 1872. His wife was Mrs. Mercy Adams Farrar. They had one son, the subject of the following sketch.
FRANCIS H. WHITMAN, the only son of Levi and Mercy A. Whitman was born on Christmas Day, 1823, in Norway Village, where for over fifty years his father practiced law. He was educated in the town schools and at Hebron Academy, with the expectation of attending col- lege, but when nearly fitted his health failed, and he was obliged to give up his long cherished wish. He then turned his attention to farming, and was also for many years ex- tensively engaged in lumbering enterprises.
He moved from Norway to Harrison in 1861, settling on what was then known as the "Sumner Burnham Farm,"
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but which later became somewhat famous as the "Summit Hill Farm." Here he resided for many years. Of quick observation, and possessing a wonderful memory, he had always at command a fund of information and humor which made him the entertaining companion of young and old. He was a man of much natural ability, and very few men were better posted in regard to the affairs of both State and nation. During his long residence in Harrison, he was one of its leading men, but firmly refused to accept town office, though he was frequently besought to do so. In politics he was a firm and consistent Democrat, and in the fall of 1879, he consented, much against his wishes, to accept the nomination of his party for Representative to the Legislature from the classed towns of Harrison, Otis- field, and Casco, and was elected by a good majority. This was the only office that he would ever consent to accept.
A very large spring was situated on Mr. Whitman's farm, and certain things that came under his observation caused him to think that the waters of that spring possessed valuable medicinal qualities. He proceeded to make ex- tended experiments with it, and had it analyzed by practi- cal chemists, with the result that it was finally determined beyond a doubt that the water was possessed of medical properties which made it equal in value to any of the va- rious mineral waters that were then on the market. The proprietor placed the water upon the market, and advertised it extensively, with the result that a large sale was worked up, and the Summit Spring became famous at home and abroad, thus enhancing the value of his property to quite an extent.
Finally, in 1888, the whole property, including the spring and farm, was sold to a syndicate of persons living out- side of the State, and Mr. Whitman left the farm where he had lived for so many years. During the remainder of his life, Mr. Whitman was something of a cosmopolitan, attending to his various business affairs in Oxford and
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Cumberland Counties. He died at Norway, June 7, 1894.
In 1844, he was married to Martha B. Mayberry of Otis- field, who died in January 12, 1898. Their children were as follows :
MERCY ADAMS, b. Aug. 16, 1845; married, June 13, 1870, Napoleon Gray, son of Hon. Albert Gray of Harrison. Is now living, a widow, at Harrison Village.
MARY ELIZA, b. April 23, 1851; married, Dec. 25, 1873, Albert Gray, son of Hon. Albert Gray of Harrison. Is now living, a widow, with her sister at Harrison Vil- lage. A. M.
WHITNEY FAMILY.
The Whitney family has been most numerously repre- sented among the inhabitants of Harrison, and it seems eminently proper that something in regard to the ancestry of our many fellow citizens of this name shall be given at the beginning of this sketch.
The Whitney family trace their descent from Turstin de Wigemore, a Fleming, who came to England in 1066 with William the Conqueror, and participated in the battle of Hastings in October of that year. The family took their name from their residence, called Whitney Court, at Whit- ney-on-the-Wye. Each succeeding generation of the fam- ily married into the best families of England, and held prominent positions at the court of the king. The estate not being entailed, and the last Whitney of Whitney Court having only daughters, it was sold, but is still called Whit- ney Court.
Thomas Whitney and wife Mary, belonging to a younger branch of the family, moved to Westminster, England, where their son, John, was born in 1589. He emigrated to America in 1635, and lived in Watertown, Massachusetts. He had nine children, from the youngest of whom, Ben- jamin, the Harrison Whitneys are descended.
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Nathaniel Whitney, son of Benjamin, and grandson of John, was born in York, Maine, April 14, 1680, and it ap- pears that he was a resident of that town during his whole lifetime. He must have lived to a good old age, as it is known that he was living in York as late as 1760, and his estate was not settled till 1768. He married Sarah, daugh- ter of John Ford of Kittery, by whom he had ten children.
Nathaniel Whitney, second son of Nathaniel and Sarah (Ford) Whitney, was born in York, December 12, 1709, and moved to Gorham from Falmouth, about 1769, having previously lived in Biddeford, where the most of his chil- dren were born. The hill in Gorham where he and some of his brothers made their settlement is still known as Whit- ney's Hill. He married Hannah Day of Wells, and they had nine children.
Moses Whitney, son of Nathaniel and Hannah (Day) Whitney, was born in Biddeford, March 17, 1739, and was said to have been remarkable for his strength and courage. He served in the French and Indian wars, and also in the Revolution, and finally settled in Gorham, where he married Susanna Crockett, by whom he had one daughter. Mrs. Whitney died when her daughter was but two days old. On September 6, 1763, Mr. Whitney married Molly Page of England, an old diary of the time, chronicling it as "a tall wedding," and by her he had eight children. On Jan- uary 22, 1792, Mr. Whitney married, for a third wife, Mrs. Abigail (Skillings) Kimball, by whom he had one daugh- ter, Sally, who married Rev. Joseph H. Phinney of Harri- son on September 26, 1812. Mr. Whitney moved to Harri- son about 1813, and resided with his son-in-law, Mr. Phin- ney.
ENOCH WHITNEY, son of Moses and Molly (Page) Whitney, was born in Gorham, April 8, 1773, and married, first, Hannah Newcomb; second, Mrs. Kendall, mother of the celebrated bugle player, Ned Kendall; and, third, a
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Mrs. Dennett of Brownfield. He lived in Limington, Stand- ish, and Buxton, and subsequently, in 1810, moved to Har- rison, settling on the Joseph Phinney farm. He had ten children, all by the first wife:
DANIEL, b. in Limington, Jan. 22, 1793; married Jan. 19, 1815, Susan, daughter of Naphtali Harmon, 2d, of Har- rison, b. Aug. 31, 1792. He settled in this town and lived many years on a small farm at the turn of the road lead- ing to the residence of Fred Whitney. "Uncle" Daniel had some of the best traits of his ancestral family. He was honest, kind and true as neighbor or friend and "Aunt" Susie was his perfect counterpart. Daniel Whit- ney died Mar. 24, 1873. Mrs. Susan Whitney died Oct. 31, 1875. They had one daughter :
I. Sarah P., b. Feb. 29, 1816; married Ebenezer Whit- ney of Bridgton, b. - -; died Dec. 20, 1877. Sarah P., his widow, died Sept. 10, 1883. Ebenezer and Sarah P. Whitney had: Susan Augusta. Calvin Crocker, b. Feb. 22, 1839; married Sarah Blake of Gorham, Sept. 3, 1841. He died in Bridgton, Sept. 30, 1896. She died Feb. 7, 1907. Calvin C. Whit- ney was a carriage painter of high professional abil- ity. He worked many years in the great carriage factories of Charles P. Kimball in Portland, Me., and in Chicago, Il1. He also worked in the great Pullman Car Shops in Pullman, Ill. Their children : Eveline Augusta, b. Sept. 1, 1862; died Feb. II, 1907; unmarried. Margie Isadore, b. Apr. 3, 1864; married Willis E. Marriner of Bridgton, June 29, 1889; children, Ernest Cummings, b. Oct. 16, 1891 ; student in Bridgton High School, college preparatory year. Frederick Whitney, b. Feb. 5, 1896. Evelyn Louise, b. Feb. 2, 1905. Fred Ernest, 3d child of Calvin, b. in Gorham, Aug. II, 1867; married Emily Brackett of Watertown, Mass .; and resides there. He is a provision dealer in Cambridge, Mass. James Cummings Sloan, 4th child of Calvin, b. in Portland, Sept. 19, 1869; was grocer in Bridgton for years; now of the firm of Whitney & Hobson, in trucking business in Portland; married Georgia McGee of Bridgton; they had one son: Clarence Eastman Whitney, b. Mar. 5, 1897; died May 6, 1906. Mar-
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garet Edith, b. Nov. 10, 1906. Lillian, b. Aug. 19, 1871; married Willis E. Crosby of Bridgton, Nov. -, 1901; children : Mary Lela, b. Aug. 20, 1903. Calvin, b. July 19, 1905. Maude Esther, b. Nov. 19, 1873; married Edwin Rae Hill of Cumberland, Me. Clifford Calvin, b. Apr. 13, 1882; grocer ; re- sides in Portland.
MARY; married William Decker of Casco.
FREEMAN, b. in Standish, Mar. 9, 1800, coming to Harrison with his father when he was ten years of age. He mar- ried Mary S., daughter of James and Mary (Stickney) Gray; and, second, Mrs. Melinda (Packard) Trafton. He was a farmer and resided in Harrison till his death Mar. 24, 1873. Their children :
I. Stephen T., b. May 15, 1821; married May 4, 1845, Catherine Brown of Waterford, and settled in town as a farmer and veterinary surgeon. He died Dec. 15, 1897. They had nine children: Mary, b. Apr. 10, 1846; died in infancy. Irene L., b. June 10, 1847; died June 23, 1865. Ann Eliza, b. July II, 1849; married George E. Tarbox of Harrison; they have one child, Chester D. Tarbox, who is propri- etor of a flourishing livery business in Harrison Vil- lage. George E. Tarbox was engaged a number of years in the business of manufacturing clothing for Boston contracts. He has been an active farmer, and has served the town on board of selectmen and as a member of school committee. He represented his district (Harrison and Otisfield) in the Legisla- ture of 1907. He has been station agent for the Bridgton & Saco Valley R. R. at Harrison Village and is now employed in an extensive lumber business in Cornish, for the Maine Central R. R. Co. Frances D., b. Feb. 19, 1851; married Daniel Woodsum of Harrison. (See Woodsum family.) Charles Sum- ner, b. May 6, 1853; married Anna Decker, daughter of Rev. Gideon T. Ridlon; their children: Harvey Sumner, b. Apr. 17, 1878; married Flossie Belle Winslow of Bridgton, b. Aug. 5, 1884; their son, Donald Harvey, b. Feb. 5, 1908. Flora Ethel, b. Sept. 27, 1883. She graduated from Bridgton Acad- emy in class of 1902, and was two years in Bridge-
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water Normal School. She has taught one year in Harrison and two years in the public school at West Bridgewater, Mass. Her present engagement as teacher, is in a school at Melrose, Mass. William Henry, b. May 12, 1855; married Laura Ella, daugh- ter of Enoch and Susan (Lord) Whitney of Har- rison, May 18, 1880. Their children: Maud Agnes, b. July 31, 1882; married Stephen Winslow of Otisfield; have one daughter, Ethel. Adaline, b. July 3, 1885 ; married Clayton Wentworth of Brown- field. Guy, b. May 3, 1887. Herbert, b. Feb. 23, 1893. Laura E., b. Sept. 10, 1899. Stephen Horace, b. Aug. 24, 1857; married Harriet Wald- ron Rodick of Freeport, b. June 14, 1860; died Mar. 5, 1893; children: Raymond Rodick, b. May 16, 1887. Herbert Clifford, b. Aug. 17, 1888; died May 9, 1889. Edith Miriam, b. Feb. - , 1891; died Feb. - , 1893. Fred A., b. Nov. 20, 1859; married Mabel Wheeler of Berlin, N. H., Apr. 7, 1862; chil- dren : Harry F., b. Apr. 26, 1888. Elizabeth, b. Nov. 25, 1889. George Arthur, b. Apr. 22, 1894. Percy Thomes, b. Apr. 17, 1895. Howard Sharp, b. Aug. 18, 1898. Infant, b. July 25, 1899; deceased.
2. James G., b. Dec. 20, 1822; married Jan. 3, 1846, Betsy H., daughter of Seth Carsley, 2d (See Cars- ley family), and settled in town as a farmer. Mr. Whitney was a very intelligent and prosperous farm- er, and prominent in church and civil affairs. He was one of the successors of the famous first board of deacons in the Free Baptist Church, which office he filled with strict fidelity to the honor and advance- ment of the church and its sacred interests. They had three children : Charles F., b. Oct. 13, 1846; re- sides in Paris, Me .; married -; has a son : Karl; unmarried; resides in Harrison. Horace R. b. Oct. 3, 1847; moved to State of Washington ; married; removed to San Jacinto, Cal., and resides there. Eleazer P., b. Feb. 15, 1852 ; moved to Wash- ington about thirty years ago; resides in Penton, King Co., Washington. They were all born in Har- rison, and are excellent representatives of an old and respectable family.
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3. Edward Kendall, b. Sept. 9, 1824; married Oct. 29, 1848, Arvilla, daughter of Marquis D. and Sally (Nutting) Caswell of Harrison. (See Caswell fam- ily.) Children: Edward, b. Aug. 19, 1851; fitted for college at Bridgton Academy and Norway Lib- eral Institute, and graduated from Bates College in class of 1876. He was afterward employed at teach- ing in academies and high schools, during which time he learned the art of stenography. About 1878, he engaged as stenographer and typewriter for the New Home Sewing Machine Company of Orange, Mass., where he continued in service thirteen years. In 1898, he was appointed to a clerkship in the Bureau of Statistics of the U. S. Treasury ; since then made one of the bureaus of the Department of Commerce and Labor. His efficiency in clerical service has been recognized by a number of honorable promo- tions to higher grades of duty. He married Mar. 7, 1888, Mary Eliza Stone of Windsor, Conn .; their children are: Robert Buckingham, b. Nov. 29, 1890; a student in the East Washington high school. Clif- ford Caswell, b. May 29, 1892; is a student in high school. Harrison, b. Oct. 21, 1858; fitted for col- lege at Bridgton Academy in 1880, and graduated from Bates College, in class of 1884; also from Harvard Veterinary College in 1887, with the degree of V. D. S. He has since resided in New Haven, Conn., where he has gained distinction in his pro- fession, and has been president of the State Veter- inary Association. Fairfield, b. Feb. 20, 1862; pre- pared for college at Bridgton Academy in 1882, and graduated from Bates College in 1887. He imme- diately entered the teaching profession and was prin- cipal of Greely Institute, Cumberland, Me., for six years. Since then, he has engaged in the superin- tendence of the public schools in a number of Massa- chusetts towns. He is now superintendent of the schools in the town of Saugus. He married Aug. 5, 1891, Alma Maria Brackett of Cumberland; they had a daughter who died in infancy. Mrs. Alma M. Whitney died - -. Mr. Whitney married 2d, Caroline Sprague of North Easton, Mass., July 22, 1908. Mary Florence, b. Apr. 28, 1866; grad-
EDWARD KENDALL WHITNEY
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uated from Bridgton Academy in class of 1885; taught in the public school one year; afterward for five years working as stenographer in Bridgeport and New Haven, Conn. She was a constant nurse and attendant to her father during the years of his last illness. She was married, Aug. 18, 1896, to Dr. Charles B. Sylvester of Harrison; their children are : Allan Whitney, b. July 27, 1898. Miriam Caswell, b. Dec. 31, 1900.
Edward Kendall Whitney was engaged in brick making, near Cape Monday, three years, about 1850. In 1853, he moved to the homestead of his father-in-law, Mr. Caswell, and settled permanently as proprietor and manager, assum- ing the care and support of his wife's parents. He insti- tuted a number of progressive schemes for improvement and profit in farm culture, and some of his ideas and in- novations upon old, standard habits of farming, produced a startling effect upon the public mind. Yet, in a few years his favorite ideas relative to higher modes of farming "caught on" with many of the most progressive and thrifty farmers in his own and adjoining towns; in fact, his suc- cess as a breeder of fine Chester swine and Jersey cows, and his large and productive orchards became objects for imitation and emulation on many other farms. Mr. Whit- ney was an expert in the art of tree production, and had apple and pear tree nurseries, from which he planted large orchards on his own farm and sold to neighboring farmers, many hundreds of choice trees for new orchards; among them the valuable apple orchard of S. H. Dawes, one of the handsomest and most productive orchards of its size in the State.
Mr. Whitney's herd of Jersey cows, raised on his own farm, generally numbered fifteen, but at one time he had eighteen. His wife was the butter maker for a number of years, until the labor became too arduous for her, when Mr. Whitney assumed the charge and personal manipula- tion of that department of the farm dairy. It is believed
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no similar farm dairy-so large in extent and so produc- tive of finest butter has ever existed in town. It must not be forgotten, but ever remembered, that, to the co-operation and intelligent assistance and encouragement of his wife was due successful results of his practical application of his advanced theories. There is abundant evidence of wise foresight in the present aspect of world-wide demand for the precise articles which he produced and which his farm has produced in late years, since his ownership and manage- ment ceased. It is sufficient to say, that though he may have erred in judgment as to the prospective profitableness of one or more schemes for money making in a pursuit quite proper for some farmers, the general methods pur- sued by him were judiciously carried out, and, as the world judges, his career was crowned with triumphant success.
Near the end of the century, Mr. Whitney's increasing cares and infirmities of body and impairment of mental faculties compelled him to relinquish his oversight of his extensive operations, and he was led to retire to the quietude of his home, where, with the beloved companion of his youth and prime, he passed the remaining two years of his life; the object of the kind ministrations of many sympa- thizing friends.
Mr. Whitney made a profession of religion at the age of eighteen years, and joined the Free Baptist Church in Har- rison; being baptized with three of his brothers on the same occasion. He was zealous and faithful in his efforts to promote the welfare and prosperity of the church of his choice through all the vicissitudes of its history to the end of his active life. He gave liberally to the cause of the church at home and the Sunday-school, of which he was a teacher and superintendent, and to missions and other institutions for church extension.
Although not possessed of a liberal education in the schools of his early days, Mr. Whitney was, yet, a man of wide information on many subjects pertaining to agricul-
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ture and farm management. That was not, however, the limitation of his knowledge or sphere of active interest. He read much and thought deeply on the political questions of the times and on the subject of the future prevalence of the power and influence of Protestant Christianity through the missions among the nations of the world. He was a true friend of public education and gave all his children a course of training in Bridgton Academy, fitting them to become competent teachers in schools of high grade. From that stage of advancement in learning, they each took up the work of self-help, and pushed their way through, without assistance, to the end of a college course, each graduating with the degree of A. B. Thus they at- tained the object of their ambition as they entered upon a higher sphere of achievement in professional life. Mr. Whitney's death occurred on February 14, 1897.
4. George F., b. June 12, 1826; married Nov. 16, 1848, Mary Ann Bailey of Harrison. He has been a farm- er in Harrison for many years. In his earlier life, he worked at wire making business in Maine, Massa- chusetts and Connecticut, about 25 years. Their children are: George F., Jr., b. Sept. 24, 1850; mar- ried Ist, Frederica Boody of Westbrook; they had one child; Fred; married; lives in Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Frederica M. Whitney, first wife, died in Har- rison, June 28, 1878. He married 2d, Susan Edith, daughter of Alpheus and Sophia A. Converse of North Brookfield, Mass. No children. Frank H., b. May 30, 1852; married July 30, 1873, Almeda F. Cutter of Westbrook; they had one daughter, Anna Louise, b. Oct. 17, 1874; married Oct. 17, 1894, Lewis F. Briggs of Harrison; their children are, Hazel Erdine, b. Oct. 10, 1895. Frank Laurence, b. Oct. 29, 1898. Myron Whitney, b. July II, 1905. Second daughter of Frank H., May Evelyn, b. May 9, 1881; resides in Harrison; unmarried. Frank H. Whitney died in Harrison, Mar. II, 1887. Mary E., b. Aug. 15, 1855; married Sept. 27, 1873, Charles Roberts of Westbrook; their children, Edna War- ren, b. Feb. 23, 1878; married Apr. 16, 1903, George
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