NEWS: Jacob A. and Clarissa (WILSON) HOFFMAN Celebrate 30th Anniversary, 1900, Blair County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/blair/ _______________________________________________ THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob A. Hoffman Celebrate Their Cotton Wedding. Burgess J. A. Hoffman and wife celebrated the thirtieth anniversary of their wedding yesterday afternoon at their home on West Washington avenue. They were married at Alexandria, Huntingdon county, on the 9th of February, 1870, and on the anniversary occasion yesterday a number of persons were present who witnessed the ceremony thirty years ago. Miss Clarissa Wilson was the maiden name of Mrs. Hoffman. It was a cold, blustery, winter day when she became the wife of Mr. Hoffman, and the trip to Huntingdon overland, to take a railroad train for the honeymoon tour, is well remembered by Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman as a chilly beginning to their voyage in life together, so far as environment was concerned, but the blasts of winter seemed only to heighten the warmth of affection which has reigned supreme in their household as the winters have since come and gone for nearly a third of a century. Besides Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman and their family there were present yesterday Rev. Dr. W. M. Frysinger, present pastor of the First M. E. church; Mrs. Annie Raugh, of Altoona; Austin Altman and wife, P. H. Piper and wife, Misses Ella and Carrie Piper and Miss Sarah Long, of Alexandria; James Wilson (brother of Mrs. Hoffman) and wife, of Petersburg; David Long and wife and H. A. Hoffman (brother of Mr. Hoffman) and wife, of Tyrone, together with Mrs. Charles L. Hoffman (daughter-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman) and two children, Richard Jacobs and Clair Festler, of Punxsutawney. During the afternoon the two children were baptized by the ministers present. A sumptuous dinner was served at 4 o'clock, and the anniversary occasion was most enjoyably spent by all present. The congratulations were warm and earnest, and the substantial remembrances were appropriate and tasteful. A letter expressing regret for unavoidable absence was received from J. L. Isenberg, a friend who was at the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman. He is now the editor of The Wave, published at Enid, Oklahoma. Tyrone Daily Herald, February 10, 1900