USA > Wisconsin > Outagamie County > The pioneers of Outagamie County, Wisconsin : containing the records of the Outagamie County Pioneer Association; also a biographical and historical sketch of some of the earliest settlers of the county, and their families, their children, and grand-children > Part 15
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Sam, their eldest son, was born at Sackett's Harbor, Jef- ferson county, N. Y., in 1824. He learned his trade in the office of the Green Bay Republican ; worked in Milwaukee in 1844 ; succeeded to the Green Bay paper that fall; re- moved it to Fond du Lac at the close of 1847, and there published The Fountain City three years; failed in the business and went back to Green Bay, where he published the Green Bay Spectator two years. In January, 1853, he came to Appleton, and on Feb. 24, 1853, issued the first number of the Appleton Crescent. He was school com-
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missioner of Green Bay for three years. In this locality he has held a few offices. Was a member of the first board of trustees of the Village of Appleton; clerk of the Cir- cuit Court two terms; a trustee of the Cemetery Associa- tion for forty years; member of assembly, one term; county judge, two terms; school clerk, about twenty years ; and justice of the peace for nearly the same term. In the Odd Fellows he was grand master two terms, and grand representative for five years, besides being the director in the Wisconsin Odd Fellows' Insurance Co., for twenty-five years. His wife is a daughter of John J. Driggs, a Green Bay pioneer, from Rome, N. Y., and a niece of the Rev. Albert Barnes.
Francis A. Ryan was born in 1828, became a printer and lived long at Kenosha. He came to Appleton in 1858, and established the Appleton Motor, the predecessor of the Post. He belonged to the "Clay Guards," mustered by Gen. Cassius M. Clay, in the defense of Washington, in 1861, and was subsequently receiver of the United States Land Office at Menasha. He died in 1882, leaving a widow, Delia A. Ryan, now living at Athol, Mass.
James Ryan was born in 1830. He came to Appleton in the fall of 1853, and the next year entered the Crescent force, where he still is. He has been mayor, alderman, city treasurer and postmaster of Appleton, and State Sena- tor of the Twenty-second District. His son Sam J., a native of Appleton, is now business manager of the Cres- cent, and his second son, Dudley, long a postal clerk, is about to enter a Green Bay manufacturing concern in a re- sponsible position. His wife, Carrie, is from New York City.
John C. Ryan was born in 1833, and came here with the Crescent in 1853, with which he remained until 1859, when he went to the Rocky Mountain Region. He has traversed all the States and Territories from British Columbia to Lower California, being a Colorado printer, an Idaho gold miner, and an officer of the Montana legislature. When last heard from he was in Nevada.
Henry Dodge Ryan was born in 1837 ; came to Appleton to attend school in the Lawrence Institute in 1851, and
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joined the Crescent force soon after the establishment of the paper, which he edited during the civil war. He has been under sheriff of this county, and assessor and city attorney of Appleton. He is an able lawyer, and although averse to office holding, would make a good mayor and a safe legislator. His wife is a native of Wisconsin; his son, William A., is bookkeeper in the Kimberly Mills.
David J. Ryan was born in 1840. He led a cow to Apple- ton from Fort Howard in the fall of 1853 ; remained here and went to school to Daniel Huntley until the end of the school year. In the fall of 1854 he went to Menasha, where he resided until 1880, when he took up his residence in Appleton. He was town clerk of Menasha, and clerk to the register of the United States Land Office. He has a military history, being badly wounded at the battle of Perryville, in which his regiment, the twenty-first, was hotly engaged. He is immersed in business, is a bachelor and would be a splendid prize for a rich widow.
Mrs. Martha J. Allen, twice a widow, the youngest of all the Ryans, was born in 1843, and came to Appleton to reside in 1880. Her son, Louis J. Robinson, is an efficient and popular clerk in the Appleton post office. All the Ryans, except "the judge" were born at Fort Howard.
JOHN W. WOODWARD.
The subject of this sketch was born in Otsego county, New York, August 19, 1793. His father's family con- sisted of six children; two daughters, Nancy and Lucy ; four sons, John Wesley, Fletcher, Arnold and Richard. At the age of twenty-four he experienced religion and united with the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which he was an active member till his death. February 18, 1818, he married Sophia Z. Warner, daughter of Charles and Sophia Warner, of Unadilla, N. Y.
When quite young Mr. Warner joined the American army and was an officer under Gen. Washington, and was at the surrender of Lord Cornwallis to the American forces. He died in 1836, aged seventy-eight years. Mrs. Warner
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survived her husband eleven years; she died in 1847, aged seventy-nine years. Their family consisted of eight chil- dren : Esther, Lucy, Sophia, Charity, Elizabeth, Mary, Sarah and Charles.
Mr. Woodward moved to Geddes, Onondaga county, when it was new and kept public house for several years, when he turned his attention to farming ; he also kept a store of general merchandise till the fall of 1851, when, on account of his wife's health and the advice of the attending physi- cian, he closed his business and on Oct. 9, 1851, started for the west, spending the winter at Menominee Falls, Wis. In the spring of 1852 he moved to Appleton where he opened a store in a building where Kamps' drug store now stands. During the summer he built a home on Lawrence street and occupied it Nov. 5, 1852. He also built the stone block on College avenue in 1856, now known as the "Doug- las Block," where he remained in business until his death, on Sept. 6, 1868, aged seventy-five years, three months and twenty-nine days. His family consisted of eight children, four sons and four daughters, their names in order being, Deloso Elihu, Elury Louisa (Mrs. C. G. Adkins), Wesley Grondison, Eldridge Warner, Sarah L. (Mrs. B. Douglas), Francis I. (Mrs. L. B. Noyes), Henrietta Esther (Mrs. T. W. Brown), and Charles Richard. Wesley died in Cali- fornia Jan. 3, 1857, Charles Richard in Stephensville, Wis., Feb. 1, 1867, aged twenty-eight years; Eldridge, in Onon- daga county, N. Y., Henrietta, Appleton, Sept. 6, 1876 ; Delos, California.
Of this family there remain but two, Mrs. C. G. Adkins and Mrs. B. Douglas of this city.
NATHAN NYE.
Born April 24, 1798, on the island of Martha's Vinyard. Removed while young to Washington county, Vermont ; was married in 1820 to Betsy, eldest daughter of Moses Shelden. Removed with his family to Racine county, Wis- consin Territory, in 1845. From there he went to Appleton in 1849, and to Freedom in 1856. One son survives him, Edwin Nye, who is still a resident of Freedom.
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THE DEY FAMILY.
Mr. John Dey was born May 17, 1825, in Root, Mont- gomery county, New York. His father and mother, James and Hannah Russel Dey, were born in Jersey City, and the father and two brothers were soldiers in the war of the revolution. Mr. Dey's father was seventeen years old when he saw Washington at the battle of Princeton. Mr. Dey is of Holland lineage in the material line; he was reared on his father's farm and fulfilled his legal obligations to his parents. In the fall of 1845, Oct. 9, he was married ,to Miss Eveline Kling; in 1846 with wife and one child went west and located JOHN DEY. twenty miles north of Chicago, in Cook county, where he learned the cooper's trade ; in 1849 he leftfor Ap- pleton with his wife and two children. Their conveyance was a lumber wagon and oxen. Arrived Oct. 3, 1849, and located on the northeast corner of what is now John Finkle's farm, on Sec. 29, T. 21, R. 17, and worked at the cooper's trade and clearing land until the year 1854. In February he moved his family to the town of Greenville, on Sec. 7, T. 21, R. 16, where he now resides, and reared and edu- cated the following children : Martha J. Dey, born Aug. 7, 1846, married to Mr. Leonard Jewell, Nov. 15, 1860; they have had ten children, six of them now living, all of whom reside in Rendville county, Minnesota.
Sarah Melvina Dey, born Jan. 11, 1848, in Cook county, Illinois. She married Mr. Henry Calkins, July 26, 1873 ;
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they now reside in the town of Deer Creek and have had seven children, six of them now living. David J. Dey with a twin sister Nannie, born Nov. 20, 1851 ; Nannie died Jan. 20, 1853 ; David was mar- ried to Miss Mary O'Brien, Oct. 14, 1872, they have had eight children, all living and well educated ; they reside in Antigo ; he is now employed in the United States Mail Ser- vice on the M. L. S. & W. Railroad. Second son, John W. Dey, born Feb. 8, 1854, married to Flora R. Salter, Sept. 7, 1875; they now reside on a farm in Cicero ; have had three children, all boys. Third daughter, Elizabeth Eve- line Dey, born Dec. 12, 1857, and married to Jacob Rupple, March 27, 1878 ; MRS. JOHN DEY. Mr. Rupple died Sept. 25, 1892; his widow now resides on a farm adjoining her father's farm on the south, having five children, four boys and one girl. Fourth daughter, Ella Louisa Dey, born Sept. 1, 1861, now living with her father, unmarried and out of health for fifteen years. Fifth daughter, Nettie May Dey, born Feb. 16, 1867, married to George Berry, April 20, 1891 ; they reside on a farm in the town of Maine and have no children. Anna S. Dey, born April 13, 1865, married to Emil C. Frank, March 17, 1891, now residing with her father and mother on their homestead.
Mr. Dey has thirty-one grandchildren now living and three great-grandchildren, and if they both live until Oct. 9, 1895, they intend to celebrate their golden wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Dey united with the Methodist Episcopal Church in the fall of 1847, and still remain in full member-
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ship of said church. Mr. Dey is now superintendent of the Sunday School, and has been for the last forty years. He is now president of the Outagamie County Agricultural Society and has held that office for the past fifteen years, and has lately been elected a trustee of the Outagamie County Insane Asylum for three years, and also been president of the Outagamie County Pioneer Association for seventeen years. Mr. Dey by his experience is good authority on fruit culture, and has a fine orchard on his homestead. He was a soldier in the War of the Rebellion and enlisted in August, 1862, in Appleton, in Company D, Twenty-first Regiment for three years and left a wife and six children on the farm; was wounded Aug. 7, 1864, in a battle before Atlanta and was discharged May 19, 1865; he has been justice of the peace thirty years and assessor thirteen years.
MATHEW M'COMB.
Mathew McComb was born the first day of January, 1821, at the Spa-Wells, in the county of Down, Ireland ; was married to Mary J. Stewart, of Saintfield, in said county, the thirty-first day of March, 1849, who died the sixth day of February, 1891, at Hortonville in the county of Outa- gamie, and State of Wisconsin, with whom he had six sons and three daughters, all of whom are living (excepting one son, Edwin B., who died January 14, 1864), viz .: Isaac N. McComb, now residing at Brillion, Calumet county, Wis .; Jennie S., wife of C. H. Baake; Henry R. McComb of Shaw- ano, Shawano county, Wis .; A. C. McComb of Oshkosh, Wis .; Emma A., wife of Delos Lewis of Dale, Outagamie county, Wis .; Virgil B. and C. H. McComb of Bozeman, Montana; and Ina V., wife of John Reincking of Horton- ville, Outagamie county, Wis. On the 30th day of January, 1893, he married Cynthia C. Griffin, formerly wife of George N. Pembleton. He has resided in the town of Hortonia, Outagamie county, Wis., from the second day of July, 1849, to the present time.
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WILLIAM W. BRIGGS.
William W. Briggs was born at Buckfield, Me., Aug. 12, 1823. His father, Daniel Briggs, was a soldier in the war of 1812, after which he, with his wife, Pheba Thomas Briggs and seven children settled at Monson, Me. The subject of this sketch spent his boyhood as a pioneer in northern Maine; his mother dying when he was but fourteen years of age. He was engaged in lum- bering on the rivers St. Johns, Penobscot and Kennebec, whichmeans the hardest kind of work, for lumbering then had no conveni- ences as now. In 1851 WILLIAM W. BRIGGS. William W. Briggs was married to Mary E. Page, and the year following they came to Wisconsin, first stopping in northern Illinois. They traveled by team from Beloit, Wis., to Hortonville. The men walking when it was rough and poor roads, which was most of the way. They had two children, Eben P. and Eliza M. Briggs.
Mr. Briggs was engaged in the milling business there for about eighteen years, when he moved with his family to Appleton, where he has lived ever since. In 1874 he built the "Briggs House" and engaged in active hotel life for four years.
Mr. Briggs with Ira Hersey and H. B. Sanborn built the first grist mill at Hortonville, which is now considered the oldest one in this c unty.
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THE BLOOD FAMILY.
Henry L. Blood was born Dec. 27, 1813, in Oxford county, New Hampshire; was married to Miss Catharine South- mayd, of Jay, N. Y., April 25, 1838; they had three chil- dren, E. J. Blood, born April 10, 1846, married to Miss Laura Washburn ; had two children, both dead ; E. J. Blood died in 1885. Second son, Fred. Blood, born Aug. 6, 1848, married to Miss Lillian Curtis, Oct. 18, 1875 ; they have four children, three boys and one girl; they now live in Appleton. F. H. Blood is engaged in the wood and coal business. Kitty Blood was born May 4, 1851, married to George M. Miller in 1872; they have had two children, one boy having died and the girl now living ; Mrs. HENRY L. BLOOD. Miller died in Lawrence,
Kan., Dec. 28, 1874. Mrs. H. L. Blood died Jan. 11, 1855. Mr. Blood married three times ; Miss Mary Brown, Jan. 5, 1859 ; they have two children now living, Frank L. Blood, born June 15, 1862; married to Miss Benito Fuller ; they have two children, a boy and a girl. May Blood, born July 31, 1865, married to C. W. Jarvis Sept. 16, 1891; they now live in Ishpeming, Mich.
Mr. H. L. Blood moved to Mackinaw Island in 1844; in 1846 he moved to Oshkosh and kept the first hotel; in 1847 moved into the Astor House, Green Bay ; in 1849 moved to Appleton ; he was agent for Lawrence University and built the first College Building ; he built the first shanty in Appleton in 1848, and hired John F. Johnston and wife
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to move into it to board the men who worked on the first college building. Mr. Blood kept a hotel several years in Appleton and was a prominent citizen. He died Feb. 21, 1888.
HENRY J. DIENER.
Mr. Henry J. Diener was born in Germany, June 20, 1830; came to America with his parents in 1832; they located in New York and lived in Monroe county until 1848, then came to Wisconsin and lived in Oshkosh and Rosendale two years, then moved to Ellington in this county in 1850 and located on Sec. 9, T. 22, R. 16, where he now lives ; in 1855 he married Miss Anna B. Jenny, she was born in Canton Glaurus, Switzerland, in 1837; in 1844 she came with her parents to Rochester, N. Y., where she lived until 1855, when they removed to the town of Elling- ton, in this county ; they have ten children, nine of them now living, seven daughters and two sons. Louisa, the oldest daughter, married Mr. Orris Axtel in 1867; they have five children, two sons and three daughters. Second daughter, Charlena, married to Otto P. Schlafer May 18, 1881 ; they have three children, one son and two daughters ; they now live in Appleton. Third daughter, Florence A., married Hiram C. Greely in 1881; they have two daught- ers. Fourth daughter, Wilna E., married to John A. Boon 1880; they have two sons and one daughter. Fifth daughter, Amelia M., married G. L. Finkle Nov. 29, 1883 ; they have one son. Sixth daughter, Jessie E., married to Byron Smolk in 1886; they have one pair of twin daughters. Seventh daughter, Carrie E., married to Charles Tackman in 1884. Eighth child, a son, Charles H. Diener, born in Ninth child, Maggie E., died May 1, 1889. Tenth child, Walter H. Diener, both sons now live with their parents on the homestead. Mrs. Diener's mother, Mrs. Magdalene Jenne, now in her eighty-sixth year, lives with her in her family. Mr. Diener was a soldier in the War of the Rebellion and is now a prominent and respected citizen of the town of Ellington and a successful farmer.
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THE CULBERTSON FAMILY.
About the beginning of the eighteenth century, there lived near Campbeltown, Scotland, one James Culbertson, who took for a wife, Jean Campbell; whose son Robert married Nannie Harvey; whose son James and his wife Jenet White Culbert- son had six sons and three daughters, Jean, Agnes, Robert, Janet, William, John, James, Samuel and David. For many years the family rented and lived on Skerbolin Farm, five miles north of Camp- beltown ; but when all the children had reached ma- turity they emigrated to America betwen the years 1818 and 1822, locating in southern Indiana where the first settlers were making their pioneer start. John, who was MATTHEW CULBERTSON. born May, 1796, was the last to emigrate. Soon after reaching America, but be- fore his journey was completed, he was married Sept. 11, 1822, to Margaret Reid, a member of the same emigrant party and a resident of his native land ..
They located in Shelby township, Jefferson county, In- diana, where John's people had preceeded him. Here he took a quarter section of unimproved very heavily timbered land and subdued it into a modern farm of that date and here their family was born : James, Matthew, John, Janet, Margaret, Alexander and Nancy.
At the time the boys had reached manhood and wished to establish homes for themselves, Wisconsin Territory was in the boom, and March 22, 1848, John accompanied by his
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son Matthew, started on a land-seeking expedition. They went by an Ohio river boat to Cincinnati, from there by canal boat to Toledo, then by railroad sixty-five miles to the terminus, then by stage to St. Joseph, Mich., and from there by boat to Sheboygan, Wisconsin Territory, where they arrived at the earliest possible moment, which was April 4, and from here they proceeded on foot, finally hold- ing up at Green Bay where, April 14, they bought in the Government land office three hundred and eighty acres of land, being that upon which members of the family now reside in the town of Greenville.
Matthew at once built a cabin and was the first settler in Greenville. His father, after remaining with him several weeks, returned to his home in Indiana, where Matthew joined the family in November. The next spring, accom- panied by his brother James, moved with team and wagon to the pioneer home, where they were joined by John Jr. in 1850 and Alexander in 1855.
In 1854 their mother, Margaret, died, and their father, selling his farm, moved to Wisconsin in 1858, accompanied by Margaret and Nancy. March 6, 1851, Matthew took for a partner in life Hannah, daughter of Enos Otis. John was married Dec. 8, 1853, to Miss Esther Prentice ; James March 18, 1860, to Abbey Wickwire, and Alexander to Sylvina Perry April 15, 1869. Their father, John, died Dec. 7, 1877, and was buried in the Greenville town ceme- tery.
N. B. DRAPER.
Mr. Nelson B. Draper was born in Otsego county, N. Y., Dec. 13, 1823 ; he was married to Miss Sarah A. Spencer Nov. 21, 1855 ; they have one daughter, born Jan. 1, 1860, married to Adelbert Grant June 13, 1882; they have two sons and three daughters ; they now reside on section 27 in Ellington. Mr. Draper came to Ellington Sept. 21, 1857, and settled on section 27, where he established a home and resided there until his death, Oct. 25, 1880. His widow now resides in Appleton.
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THE ROUDEBUSH FAMILY.
Silas J. Roudebush was born in Ohio, May 11, 1818; came to Appleton in 1854 ; he had been in California four years digging gold. He settled on the s. e. 14 sec. 28, T. 21, R. 17, where he established his home and resided there until his death, April 30, 1875. He was married to Miss Sylvia Warner March 2, 1847; they have had six children, three sons and three daughters. First child, Josephine, born Dec. 16, 1847, died March 6, 1869. Second child, Fran- ces Eleanor, born Aug. 4, 1850, was married to Chas. Bowen Feb. 22, 1866 ; they removed to Iowa in 1872 ; they have seven children, two sons and five daught- ers. Third child, Perry G., born Dec. 4, 1854; married to Dela Page ; SILAS J. ROUDEBUSH. they live in Appleton and nave six children, two boys and four girls. Fourth child, Martha A., born Nov. 10, 1856, married to G. H. Murphy Jan. 3, 1878 ; they have no children; they now live on the family homestead, and Mrs. Murphy's mother lives with them; she is now in the sixty-eighth year of her age; Mr. Murphy is engaged in lumbering. Fifth child, David W., born Jan. 22, 1858, married to Miss Fannie Armstrong May 27, 1880 ; they live in Appleton and have four children, all boys. Sixth child, William C., born Sept. 17, 1865, married to Miss Minnie R. Stern ; they now live on part of the homestead and have three children, all boys.
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THE SCOTT FAMILY.
Jared G. Scott was born of Scotch parents on a farm in Saratoga county, New York, Feb. 8, 1808. When seven- teen years old he was bound out to learn the tan and currier and shoe makers' trade. There he stayed till he thought he knew enough about that business, then ran away and brought up in the town of Castile, Wyoming county, N. Y., where he, in 1828, married Sally Hurd. There they lived and raised a family of four boys and four girls till they came to Wiscon- sin, in May, 1854. In September of that year he bought land in the town of Ellington, this county, where with the help of his family he cleared his land and erected buildings that made it a good home.' JARED G. SCOTT. Sally Scott died Sept. 4, 1869. J. G. Scott died April 8, 1877. The children are all living ; the girls are Mrs. A. H. Burch, Mrs. John Van Heuklon and Mary Scott, all residents of Grand Chute, and Mrs. G. M. Davis of Nebraska. The youngest son, Z. D. Scott, resides in Milbank, S. D. Norman and J. G. Scott in Stephenville and your humble servant in Appleton.
JOHN KOBUSSEN,
Came from Holland in 1848; came to this county in 1851 and settled on Sec. 32, T. 21, R. 19, now town of Buchanan, where he cleared a farm and established a home; March 17, 1869, removed to Little Chute where he now resides ; he has no children,
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THE WHITMAN FAMILY.
Sylvester S. Whitman was born May 5, 1811; in Turner, Oxford county, State of Maine, married in 1833 to Miss Nancy M. Waite, who was born in Livermore, Me., in 1814 ; they have had six chil- dren, three sons and three daughters. First son, Oscar V., born in 1835, married to Miss Rispah Leavitt in 1860 ; they have one son and one daughter ; they live in South Paris, Me. Second son, Orson, died at the age of four years. Third son, A. B., was born in 1854, in the State of Maine, was mar- ried to Miss Eliza M. Briggs in Appleton, Jan. 1876; they have three daughters. Mr. Whitman was a graduate of Law- rence University in 1875; has been superintendent of schools in Appleton for SYLVESTER S. WHITMAN. nine years and district at- torney two years, and is now city attorney and does a general law business. First daughter, Osta M., married to Ashley Briggs, she died in 1870 and leaves two children. Second daughter, married to John McMurdo, who died in Hortonville in 1890; the widow now lives in Hortonville. Third daughter, Mary Ellen, married to W. J. Stewart of Mason City, Ia., where they now live; they have two daughters. S. S. Whitman had a farm and store in the State of Maine; he came to Wisconsin in 1857, settled at Oshkosh; staid two years, then moved to Hortonville in 1859 and engaged in the lumbering and saw mill business ; he died June 2, 1894 ; his first wife died in Appleton in
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1873, where Mr. Whitman lived a short time; he married for his second wife, Mrs. Harriet M. Hewitt in 1878, who now survives.
HENRY KETHROE.
I was born in Winterbourne, Gloucestershire, England, May 10, 1812. I worked at the hatter's trade until we came to America in 1848. We remained in the State of New York one year, then came to Wisconsin, and settled in Ellington, Outagamie county, where we lived until 1866, when we moved to Hortonia, where we now reside.
In 1841 I married Esther Webb. Of our six chil- dren now living three are married. These are Mrs. B. M. Gurnee, Stephens- ville, Wis. ; Mrs. S. C. Heard, Reardon, Wash .; and Mrs. T. R. Curtis, San HENRY KETHROE. Bernardino, Cal. A son, Joseph Kethroe, lives in Washington, and two daughters at home. One son died in Arizona in 1879 and one died in infancy. Mrs. Kethroe was born March 2, 1817 and died June 21, 1889.
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