OHIO STATEWIDE FILES OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List Issue 72 ************************************************************************ USGENWEB ARCHIVES(tm) NOTICE Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgenwebarchives.org ************************************************************************** OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest Volume 06 : Issue 72 Today's Topics: #1 Oh-Allen Co. History (The First Sc [Archives ] #2 Oh-Allen Co. Military (Hutchinson) [Archives ] #3 Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Re [Archives ] #4 Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Re [Archives ] #5 Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Re [Archives ] Administrivia: To unsubscribe from OH-FOOTSTEPS-D, send a message to OH-FOOTSTEPS-D-request@rootsweb.com that contains in the body of the message the command unsubscribe and no other text. No subject line is necessary, but if your software requires one, just use unsubscribe in the subject, too. ______________________________ --Boundary_(ID_Xlie9DFpSlbhaag9DdRuWQ) Date: 8 May 2006 16:56:29 -0000 From: Archives Subject: Oh-Allen Co. History (The First School) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-id: <20060508165629.3423.qmail@leaf3.bananic.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT X-Message: #1 Allen County OhArchives History - Schools .....The First School Of Lima August 3, 1896 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Woerner judyw0113@yahoo.com May 8, 2006, 4:56 pm Book Title: The Times Democrat, August 3, 1896 THE FIRST SCHOOLS OF LIMA (Excerpt from an article entitled “Opened—Is the Teachers’ Annual Institute of Allen County.”) The school was held in the north room of the old court house, which stood on the east side of Main street, between the square and Spring street, in the winter of 1832-33, it was of the subscription variety, term 66 days. W. H. C. MITCHELL, of Traverse City, Mich; T. T. MITCHELL, of Lima; JOHN J. COLE, of California; S. H. WARD, of Paulding county; Mrs. D. MUSSER and Mrs. D. BREESE, of Shawnee, tp., are all that remain of the thirty-nine scholars of the first school of Lima. Col. JAMES CUNNINGHAM, father of Mrs. J. N. HUTCHINSON, who is now, or was on the examining board, taught in 1833-’34. The scene of his labors being JACOB DOWN’S log cabin on Water street, where the Schultheis tannery now stands. Up to 1832 the law did recognize the school ma’am. In December 1831, an act was passed providing that “On the petition of the inhabitants of a district, and when the school examiners have granted such petition, the school directors shall appoint a female to teach spelling, reading and writing, only.” Miss MARGARET A. POAGUE saw her opportunity and grasped it. In 1834 she taught a small school in ORAIN VALENTINE’S cooper shop. As it was floorless, roofless and sideless Miss POAGUE necessarily taught in the summer time. JOHN CUNNINGHAM, whose daughter, Mrs. O. W. SMITH, has been one of our successful teachers, was the next teacher. In the summer of 1835, Miss MARIE HOVER taught in the Baptist church. Two schools were taught in the winter of 1835-’36 by Rev. CHAFEE in the Baptist church, and JOHN THOMAS in the court house. The first continuous nine months school was held in the Baptist church by LEMUEL H. IDE. In 1855 the union school system was adopted by a vote of the people. In 1856 the school was organized with Dr. W. W. LITTLEFIELD as superintendent, They occupied the old Methodist church until 1858, when the west school building was opened under the superintendency of WM. A. SHAW. The schools of Lima and of Allen county have always kept pace with or been in advance of the growth in other respects. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/allen/history/schools/firstsch18nms.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ohfiles/ File size: 2.8 Kb ______________________________ --Boundary_(ID_Xlie9DFpSlbhaag9DdRuWQ) Date: 8 May 2006 21:27:31 -0000 From: Archives Subject: Oh-Allen Co. Military (Hutchinson) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-id: <20060508212731.2714.qmail@mail.best1-host.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT X-Message: #2 Allen County OhArchives Military Records.....Hutchinson, Clarence Cunningham June 24, 1898 Spanishwar - Letters Co. C, 1 Tex. V. Cav. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Woerner judyw0113@yahoo.com May 8, 2006, 4:27 pm First Texas Cavalry From The Times Democrat, June 30, 1898 Bugler for First Texas Cavalry, CLARENCE HUTCHINSON tells of Fort Sam Houston. The Troop of Rough Riders to Which he belongs will soon be ordered to Fort Ringold. Fort Sam Houston, June 24, 1898 Dear Dad, It seems a long time since I last wrote you and will as far as I can give you a varied description of our new quarters. Fort Sam Houston is situated on a high bluff, being the highest point around the old town of San Antonio, and as this country is almost level clear down to the gulf, you can imagine how pleasantly we are situated. The reservation embraces nearly one hundred acres and the commissary stables, mess hall, ice plant, are scattered around and so far apart that it takes considerable walking to go any place. The mounted drill ground is nearly three miles from the fort and consequently mounted drills are held only once a day, to the dissatisfaction of the whole regiment, as everybody enjoys them, and then it is so much pleasanter than walking. As soon as some belated equipment arrives the First squadron is split and divided among the numerous frontier forts along the Mexican border. Our troop goes to Fort Ringold in about ten days. This delightful place is just eighty miles from any railroad and right on the Rio Grande river, so all the fighting we will do down there will be with horse thieves, greasers, all kinds of reptiles, and heat. As far as I can learn the fort is smaller than this one, so we will have one consolation—that is, not so much walking. San Antonio is a very historic old place herself, because here is located the Alamo, where colonel DAVY CROCKETT, colonel JIM BOWIE and many other noted characters so heroically gave up their lives fighting for their country. There are ten or a dozen old Spanish missions located around the town, and some of them bear dates for a hundred years and more back. Taken all around, San Antonio is the most cosmopolitan city in the south. People of all nationalities come here for lung trouble, and then the manners of the inhabitants themselves are very much northern. Streets here are all called plazas and are laid out very wide, while in the center there are parks with palms, fig trees, banana and other tropical trees and plants growing. We all like this place and will regret very much to leave it, but orders are orders, and then we may hit something better down at Ringold. The fact of being a bugler is no snap, as I must get up at 5:30 a.m., practice from 8:30 to 10 a.m. and then guard mount until 12 m. In the afternoon, practice from 1 till 4:30 and then about 30 minutes at retreat, which the whole corps blow at sun down. We have a morning and evening salute fired here and the whole regiment turns out for regimental formation and roll call. I have been able to see my horse only about one hour a day since I began to learn all the calls. Every nine (9) days I get a turn at headquarters and the rest of the time is spent in practice and drill with the corps. With love to all, I am your son, TATTS Additional Comments: NOTES: CLARENCE CUNNINGHAM HUTCHINSON / HUTCHISON served in the Spanish American War, Co. C, 1 Tex. V. Cav., until October 1898, when he was mustered out and came home to die. On March 23, 1899, at 20 years of age, he died of consumption and heart failure at the home of his parents, JOHN N. HUTCHINSON / HUTCHISON and EMILY CELESTIA (CUNNINGHAM) HUTCHINSON /HUTCHISON at Lima, Allen Co., Ohio. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/allen/military/spanishwar/letters/hutchins16mt.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/ohfiles/ File size: 4.2 Kb ______________________________ --Boundary_(ID_Xlie9DFpSlbhaag9DdRuWQ) Date: 9 May 2006 02:45:56 -0000 From: Archives Subject: Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Res) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-id: <20060509024556.4187.qmail@leaf3.bananic.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT X-Message: #3 Allen County OhArchives News.....Allen County Residents Who Passed Away During Year 1890. 1890 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Woerner judyw0113@yahoo.com May 9, 2006, 2:45 am The Lima Daily Times 1890 Excerpted from available issues of The Lima Daily Times. Miss MINNIE SETTLEMIRE, daughter of MILTON SETTLEMIRE residing west of this city, died January 29, 1890, of lung fever, after a long illness. Her funeral services will take place at the M. E. church. Burial Woodlawn cemetery. Mrs. LUCINDA RYAN died of pneumonia at her home on North Main street, January 29, 1890, after a short illness. La grippe was the primary cause of her death. Her funeral services will be held at the house with Rev. Ballinger of the U. B. Church conducting the service. Burial to be at Woodlawn cemetery. On February 8, 1890, LEWIS THOMAS, died at his home on south West st. after a lingering illness. He was afflicted with dropsy and has been very low for some time. Mr. Thomas has a brother, EVAN R. THOMAS at Gomer, and he too is very ill of the same disease. The funeral services of WILLIAM NAZOR were held February 11, 1890, at the Grace M. E. Church, Rev. Cook conducting the services. Templars attended the funeral in a body, Mr. Nazor being a member of that order. Burial at Woodlawn. Mrs. GEORGE LOWN, living on South Union street, died March 3, 1890 with heart disease. The remains of EDWARD SWARTOUT, formerly a Lima boy, whose death occurred April 1, 1890 at Hamilton of pneumonia, were brought to Lima. The funeral will take place from the parent’s residence. Interment is to be in Woodlawn cemetery. Mrs. JOHN WAGNER, of south Union street, died May 5, 1890 of consumption, aged 45 years. MARTHA CURTIS, wife of T. J. CRITES, and sister of Officer THOS. COMER, died June 20, 1890 of consumption, at the family home. She leaves a husband and five children. Funeral service to be at the Disciple church. Burial to be at Woodlawn cemetery. ROBERT B. LAWTHER died March 2, 1890 at his residence of general debility, aged 66 years. The six-months-old child of JOHN RICHARDS, died March 2, 1890 of cerebro spinal meningitis. Funeral will be at the home, burial at Dunkard cemetery. The four months old child of JOHN H. JOSEPH died March 3, 1890 of lung trouble. Burial will be at the Dunkard cemetery. Mrs. BENJAMIN MILLER, aged 45, died May 3, 1890. Interment will be in the Dunkard cemetery. CHRIS SHERRIT’s child, of five months, died July 6, 1890, at its father’s residence, of summer complaint. Burial to be at Woodlawn cemetery. Mrs. SUSANNAH HALLER, wife of JOHN F. HALLER, died July 6, 1890 of dropsy, aged 46 years. Her remains will be interred in Woodlawn cemetery. The three-months-old child of JACOB MANN, of Cairo, died July 24, 1890. A son, aged eleven, of GEORGE KLEIN, died July 24, 1890, of bowel trouble. A child of J. MOORE, of W. Kibby street, died July 24, 1890. The infant girl of O. A. DEWEESE died July 24, 1890. SADIE KOWSKY, nine months old, daughter of SAMUEL and DELIA KOWASKY died July 24, 1890. The remains were shipped to Piqua for burial. Mrs. S. F. DOAN died August 26, 1890. The remains will be buried at Woodlawn cemetery. CHARLES R. SMITH died September 13, 1890, in a tragic accident at the D & M Railroad yards. REBECCA SWISHER, widow of the late STEPHEN SWISHER, died at Elida September 14, 1890, at the house of her daughter, Mrs. A. J. MYERS, aged 88 years, 6 months and 26 days. She was married at the age of fifteen to a man named OGDEN, by whom she had six children. She next married a man named DOUGHERTY and some time after his death became the wife of STEPHEN SWISHER, who was a major in the war of 1812, having two children, LOUIS, now in Missouri, and VIRGINIA, the wife of A. J. MYERS. The deceased lady was the grand-mother of JOHN L. BRENNEMAN, who is now an old man, his mother being the eldest child of the first marriage with OGDEN. Miss ELLA DALZELL, an educated young lady with many beautiful traits of character, died September 15, 1890. CHARLES OSCAR SHAFER, aged 4 years, son of JOHN and SUSAN SHAFER, died September 15, 1890, from convulsions. BENJAMIN J. BROWN, aged 10 years and four months, son of Rev. B. J. BROWN, died September 16, 1890 of inflammation of the bowels, after a sickness of only four days. The remains of RICHARD THOMAS SHEA, one of the twin sons of WILLIAM SHEA, were buried at the Catholic cemetery on September 16, 1890. PERRY SEEDS died September 26, 1890, only a few hours after having his legs crushed in a tragic C., H & D Railroad accident. Mrs. BRIDGET O’BRIEN, wife of MIKE O’BRIEN, the contractor, died September 26, 1890, after an illness of two months duration. Her fatal illness was the result of child birth, the little babe having been buried three weeks ago. Mrs. O’BRIEN was born in Ireland in 1854. Ten children were born to her, five still living. The child of D. OVERHOLTZ died September 27, 1890, aged 9 months. The wife of THOMAS MORGAN died September 27, 1890, aged 25 years. She was an epileptic and in a fit she fell across a box and was found dead. HORACE P. CARNES died at his residence, October 13, 1890, from consumption, aged 61 years, 1 month and 20 days. The funeral services of Miss HATTIE DIXON were held October 16, 1890 at the family residence on West North street. Burial took place in Woodlawn cemetery. The little three-year old daughter of JOHN ZIMMERMAN, shot through the body on the morning of October 13, 1890, by a bullet from a Flobert rifle in the hands of FRANK BOLTON, died that evening. Mrs. JAMES A. MORRIS died October 13, 1890 of consumption, aged 37 years. The funeral of Mrs. JOHN A. SHEELY took place October 29, 1890 at the Water street residence; burial at Woodlawn cemetery. The remains of Mrs. DEATHRIDGE, the victim of the burning on Forest avenue, were buried from the Baptist Church October 29, 1890 and in the old cemetery. Mrs. MARY DUGGAN, aged 37, wife of MICHAEL DUGGAN, the grocer, died at home October 28, 1890, of Bright’s disease. The mother of twelve children, only three survive her. On October 29, 1890, BESSIE CULP, aged four years, daughter of C. C. CULP was fatally burned. She had been left in her grandmother’s room, in which there was a very little fire, but somehow her clothes caught fire. The eleven months old daughter of E. O. MOOK died November 2, 1890 of brain trouble. The child of HUGH WHEELER died November 6, 1890 after a severe attack of diphtheria, from which it appeared to be recovering, but which weakened its system. All that was mortal of J. CREW ROBB, who died in Chicago, was laid to rest in Woodlawn cemetery November 17, 1890. The funeral was held at the residence of R. W. MEILY. The infant child of FRANK BELL died November 22, 1890. The infant son of Wm. Vandeven was buried in the Catholic cemetery November 24, 1890. The nine months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. HENRY HOFF died November 24, 1890. The child was badly burned about two months ago by upsetting a pan of milk upon itself and has not been well since. The funeral of WILLIAM MCCREA FENTON took place December 9, 1890, at Bluffton, where he had been a resident for many years. He had lived to the age of 75, and died from general break-down of constitution. THOMAS LOWREY died December 10, 1890 at the house of his son-in-law, D. BARRET, on High street. He had been suffering a long time with asthma, which was lately complicated with heart disease. Mr. LOWREY was 69 years of age. After two weeks illness, RAY MULLEN, aged 12 years, son of J. T. MULLEN, died December 30, 1890 of follicular pharingitis. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/allen/newspapers/allencou35nnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ohfiles/ File size: 8.1 Kb ______________________________ --Boundary_(ID_Xlie9DFpSlbhaag9DdRuWQ) Date: 9 May 2006 02:57:36 -0000 From: Archives Subject: Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Res) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-id: <20060509025736.19168.qmail@leaf3.bananic.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT X-Message: #4 Allen County OhArchives News.....Allen County Residents Who Passed Away During Year 1891. 1891 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Woerner judyw0113@yahoo.com May 9, 2006, 2:57 am The Lima Daily Times 1891 Excerpted from available issues of The Lima Daily Times. The funeral of FRANK WILLOWER’s little boy took place January 2, 1891. N. W. REED died January 2, 1891 at the residence of his brother-in-law, S. REIGHARD. Mrs. ANNIE BUHR died January 10, 1891, after a long illness, at the residence of her son-in-law, RICHARD STONE. A little child, aged four months, of CHARLES HENTZE, son-in-law of PETER SHICK, died January 11, 1891, of brain trouble. WALTER FISHER, aged five years, died January 15, 1891 of paralysis, at the county infirmary. This boy was a son of GEORGE FISHER, one of the men killed by the terrible explosion at the Custer stone quarry, two months previous. JOHN SHANKLAND, aged 72 years, died January 15, 1891, at the residence of his son-in-law, S. W. WATSON. The funeral of Mrs. GEORGE DURNBAUGH took place February 6, 1891 from the Main street Presbyterian Church. Mrs. GODFREY HENNE, an old lady aged about 65, who had been living with a daughter on North West street, died June 9, 1891. CHARLES MCNEILLE, son of G. A. MCNEILLE, died September 10, 1891 of Cholera infantum. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/allen/newspapers/allencou36nnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ohfiles/ File size: 1.7 Kb ______________________________ --Boundary_(ID_Xlie9DFpSlbhaag9DdRuWQ) Date: 9 May 2006 03:20:50 -0000 From: Archives Subject: Oh-Allen Co. News (Allen County Res) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-id: <20060509032050.864.qmail@leaf3.bananic.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 8BIT X-Message: #5 Allen County OhArchives News.....Allen County Residents Who Passed Away During Year 1892. 1892 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Woerner judyw0113@yahoo.com May 9, 2006, 3:20 am The Lima Daily Times 1892 Excerpted from available issues of The Lima Daily Times. The funeral of Mrs. B. O. HITCHCOCK was held at her late home, corner of Spring and McDonald on January 5, 1892. PLESSAY RITENOUR, daughter of H. M. RITENOUR, died on her 20th birthday, January 2, 1892, at her home. She was sick first with diphtheria. This was followed by other complications, which caused her death. Mrs. FERRY, age 66, of Elida, died with la grip on January 7, 1892. FRANK WHEELER, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. WHEELER, died January 10, 1892. The week before his death he was taken with acute mania; passed into a comatose state, which resulted in his death. He leaves a wife and two babies. ENSON EDMONDS died at his home January 11, 1892. He had been sick only a short time having a severe cold which ran into La Grippe, and that developed into pneumonia. Mr. EDMONDS was 59 years old. Z. L. MEYERS died January 19, 1892. The funeral was held at Zion’s Church and the remains buried in the Ward cemetery. Mrs. FRANK GLEASON, of Van Wert, died at her home on January 27, 1892. The funeral of CHRISTIAN MULLENHOUR, the man killed by the premature explosion of dynamite on the grade east of LaFayette, was held January 30, 1892 at the Dutch Hollow church, near Elida. SARAH (HOWSER) HELSEL died January 24, 1892, aged 95 years and 9 days. Mrs. ELLIE LONG, aged sixty-one years and ten months, died at her home on St. Johns avenue, on February 9, 1892. CLARENCE ABRAMS, son of Mr. and Mrs. ABRAMS, died of indigestion on February 17, 1892, at the home of Mrs. ABRAM’S parents on East Pearl street. W. B. WOODEN, aged eighteen years, died from consumption on February 23, 1892, at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. DAVID WOODEN, on East Wayne street. Miss HATTIE BRIGGS, of West Sixth street, died March 11, 1892 of consumption. The infant child of ISAAC ROUSH, of Bath township, died March 21, 1892, of inflammation of the bowels. The remains of Mrs. S. E. LEWIS who died at Indianapolis were buried in Woodlawn cemetery March 22, 1892. A young boy, PATRICK HENRY, died March 20, 1892 from inflammatory rheumatism. WALLACE STANDISH died on April 5, 1892 from the effects of paralytic stroke. The funeral of JOHN NEEL will take place from the homestead on West Market street April 24, 1892 with Rev. J. F. DAVIES officiating. He died in Toledo at the home of his son Alfred. A little child of Mr. and Mrs. HABBITS died May 6, 1892. JEREMIAH QUINN, aged 92 years, died at his home on North Main street on May 9, 1892. FRED ROST, aged 66 years, who has been confined to his bed for several weeks, died June 5, 1892 from a complication of diseases. MAGGIE KLAUS, the ten year old daughter of PHILIP KLAUS, died June 23, 1892, from diphtheria. The funeral services of the late WILLIAM DEVOE were held from the Grace M. E. church in south Lima on June 29, 1892. The funeral for Mrs. DANIEL HOLMAN took place at the Fisher church near Lafayette on July 15, 1892. Funeral services for Mrs. SMELTZER took place at the THOMPSON residence on July 23, 1892, after which the remains were taken to Troy for burial. The funeral services of the late WILLIAM PANGLE were held from the home of his son CHARLES PRANGLE on July 23, 1892. The six month old child of W. H. TAYLOR, South Pine street, died July 29, 1892 of cholera infantum. The mother of the child died a few months ago. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. ANDY WESTBAY, died July 30, 1892, of cholera infantum. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. HENRY SHICK, of North Main street, died July 30, 1892. The infant of Mr. and Mrs. BROWN DOUGLASS died July 31, 1892. Mr. DANIEL HOLMAN died at the residence of his son, WILLIAM HOLMAN, on the 11th day of August, 1892, after suffering with an affliction caused by heart failure and swelling of the body, intimating dropsy. His age was 66 years, 2 months and 14 days. Mrs. DORCAS MURRAY died on August 14, 1892, aged 87 years, 4 months and 24 days. During her last days she was cared for by her daughter Mrs. JACOB HAWK. DAVID MARSH, aged about 88 years, died August 16, 1892. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. CRAYTON, of Greenlawn avenue, died August 15, 1892. Mrs. MICHAEL DOYLE, of North Main street, died August 17, 1892, of consumption and a cancer on her chin, at the age of 39 years. She leaves a husband and four children. Deceased is a daughter of SAMUEL H. LAWLOR and a sister of Councilman H. J. LAWLOR and the Mesdames P. H. FLAHIE and Mrs. THOMAS GORMAN. J. C. HAITHCOCK, colored, aged 23, died at his home in Clifton on September 28, 1892. The funeral of JOHN SULLIVAN, of East Findlay street, took place September 29, 1892 from St. Rose’s Catholic church. Mrs. MCHENRY, widow of the late Dr. MCHENRY, died November 2, 1892, at her home on East North street, after several weeks of suffering from heart failure and old age. FRANK DERRINGER, a little boy, died of diphtheria on November 3, 1892. He first became ill at school six days prior. Funeral services for C. & E. engineer, D. M. FREDERICKS, who died at Huntington, were held November 3, 1892 at Trinity church. ELI STROCK, 74 years and 8 months old, died at his home on November 7, 1892. He had been sick for several months with dropsy. HENRY CROSSLEY, aged 42 years, son of ROSE CROSSLEY, of West Market street, died on November 8, 1892, at his residence on South Pine street. Funeral services of the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ELIJAH ROBINSON were held November 8, 1892 at the residence in the Rowland’s addition. LIZZIE B. YOUNG the three year old daughter of CHARLES YOUNG, colored, of East North street, died November 8, 1892, with brain fever. JERRY SULLIVAN, who was suffering from a partial paralysis of the brain, died on November 8, 1892, at the age of 55 years. Funeral services for ex-Chief of Police, WILLIAM R. COLVIN, will be held on November 9, 1892 from his late residence on South Main street. ALBERT F. WOLF, aged 51 years, died December 3, 1892, at his home in Watt town of lung trouble. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. CHRISTIAN SMITH died December 15, 1892. MIKE RENN, C. E. & E. yardmaster, who was struck in the head with a coupling pin by some unknown person at Marion on Tuesday, died on Friday, December 16, 1892 without fully regaining consciousness. The funeral services of JACOB L. BAKER, a prominent resident of Harrod were held on December 17, 1892. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/allen/newspapers/allencou37nnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ohfiles/ File size: 7.1 Kb -------------------------------- End of OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V06 Issue #72 ******************************************