I438: Lori BAILEY (____ - ____)

Lori BAILEY

____ - ____

Family 1 : Dennis Gene JOHNSON
  1.  Dane Gregory BAILEY

       __
    __|
   |  |__
 __|
|  |   __
|  |__|
|     |__
|
|--Lori BAILEY 
|
|      __
|   __|
|  |  |__
|__|
   |   __
   |__|
      |__

INDEX


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Charles Davis "Chuck" COLLINS

22 Feb 1935 - 06 May 1983

Family 1 : Jean Ann RIERSON
  1. +Kim Charles COLLINS

       __
    __|
   |  |__
 __|
|  |   __
|  |__|
|     |__
|
|--Charles Davis "Chuck" COLLINS 
|
|      __
|   __|
|  |  |__
|__|
   |   __
   |__|
      |__

INDEX


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Arthur DELAUGHDER

____ - ____

Father: Stanley Lewis DELAUGHDER
Mother: Helen A. _______


                                __
                             __|
                            |  |__
 _Stanley Lewis DELAUGHDER _|
|                           |   __
|                           |__|
|                              |__
|
|--Arthur DELAUGHDER 
|
|                               __
|                            __|
|                           |  |__
|_Helen A. _______ _________|
                            |   __
                            |__|
                               |__

INDEX


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Linda Jo GAETHLE

[1370]

____ - ____

Father: Walter A. GAETHLE
Mother: Roberta M. "Bobbie" LEMMON

Family 1 : _______ DANIELS

                                                          _________________________
                               __________________________|
                              |                          |_________________________
 _Walter A. GAETHLE __________|
|                             |                           _________________________
|                             |__________________________|
|                                                        |_________________________
|
|--Linda Jo GAETHLE 
|
|                                                         _George Arthur LEMMON ___+
|                              _Claud Elliott LEMMON ____|
|                             |                          |_Mary Magdaline ELLIOTT _+
|_Roberta M. "Bobbie" LEMMON _|
                              |                           _________________________
                              |_Veronica "Billie" EAVES _|
                                                         |_________________________

INDEX

[1370] still living - details excluded


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Everett Lee HIGHLUND

09 Jun 1932 - 22 Nov 1975

Family 1 : Patricia Lou ANDERSON
  1.  Clifford Charles HIGHLAND
  2.  Debra Ann HIGHLUND
  3.  Lisa Lynne HIGHLUND

       __
    __|
   |  |__
 __|
|  |   __
|  |__|
|     |__
|
|--Everett Lee HIGHLUND 
|
|      __
|   __|
|  |  |__
|__|
   |   __
   |__|
      |__

INDEX


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Betty LARSEN

[1560]

____ - ____

Family 1 : Carl D. ORTNER

       __
    __|
   |  |__
 __|
|  |   __
|  |__|
|     |__
|
|--Betty LARSEN 
|
|      __
|   __|
|  |  |__
|__|
   |   __
   |__|
      |__

INDEX

[1560] still living - details excluded


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Cora Belle LEMMON

18 Dec 1876 - 06 Apr 1959

Father: Jason Eli LEMMON
Mother: Angelleta Miserva "Angie" MAY

Family 1 : Elmer BALL
  1. +Zelma Rosetta BALL
  2. +Helen Pearl BALL
Family 2 : Roy DUKES

                                                  _James Sr LEMMON _+
                                  _Eli LEMMON ___|
                                 |               |_Rebecca BLAKE ___
 _Jason Eli LEMMON ______________|
|                                |                _James MORRILL ___
|                                |_Jane MORRILL _|
|                                                |_Electa FULLER ___
|
|--Cora Belle LEMMON 
|
|                                                 __________________
|                                 _______________|
|                                |               |__________________
|_Angelleta Miserva "Angie" MAY _|
                                 |                __________________
                                 |_______________|
                                                 |__________________

INDEX

[186] [SOURCE] CADI


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Mary LEMMON

____ - ____

Father: DeWitt LEMMON

Family 1 : _____ TRUMBLE

                                    _Hugh LEMMON ____+
                  _Hugh Jr LEMMON _|
                 |                 |_Martha MCHENRY _+
 _DeWitt LEMMON _|
|                |                  _________________
|                |_Ann LEWIS ______|
|                                  |_________________
|
|--Mary LEMMON 
|
|                                   _________________
|                 _________________|
|                |                 |_________________
|________________|
                 |                  _________________
                 |_________________|
                                   |_________________

INDEX


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Uriah Blake LEMMON

[12]

16 Mar 1808 - 15 Feb 1887

Father: James Sr LEMMON
Mother: Rebecca BLAKE

Family 1 : Emily Amanda MCINTYRE
  1. +William Henry LEMMON
  2. +John McIntyre LEMMON
  3. +Sara Annett LEMMON
  4. +Cyrus Adhill LEMMON
  5.  Burton LEMMON
  6. +Maurice B. LEMMON
  7. +Rebecca LEMMON
  8.  James LEMMON
  9. +Elizabeth E. "Lizzie" LEMMON
Family 2 : Susan SHUTTS
Family 3 : Cornelia SPRIER
Family 4 : Dorcus M. FURGUSON
Family 5 : Sarah HOYT

                                      ______ LEMON _____
                    _Hugh LEMMON ____|
                   |                 |__________________
 _James Sr LEMMON _|
|                  |                  _John MCHENRY ____+
|                  |_Martha MCHENRY _|
|                                    |_Susannah MCNEIL _
|
|--Uriah Blake LEMMON 
|
|                                     __________________
|                   _________________|
|                  |                 |__________________
|_Rebecca BLAKE ___|
                   |                  __________________
                   |_________________|
                                     |__________________

INDEX

[12] Uriah Blake LEMMON
--
U.B. Lemmon, the subject of this sketch was born in Livonia, Livingston
County, New York, March 16, 1808; came to Ohio with his father's family in
1827. When a young man he learned the carpenter and joiner's trade, at which
he worked for some six years. On the 14th of August 1834 he was married to
Miss Emily McIntyre, of Ithaca, New York. For some thirty years subsequent to
his marriage he was engaged in farming. In 1864 he removed to Clyde, his
present residence. He has been blessed with a family of six sons and four
daughters. Four sons and three daughters are heads of families. He had four
sons in the last war [Civil War], two in the Seventy Second Ohio Volunteer
Infantry and two in the One Hundred and Sixty-Ninth National Guards.
[Biographical sketch from the "History of Sandusky County."]
..............................................................................
Obituary (1887)
DIED
LEMMON - In Clyde, O., on Tuesday, Feb 15, 1887, Uriah B. Lemmon aged 78
years, 10 months and 29 days. Funeral services today (Thursday) at 10
O'Clock A.M., at the M.M. Church, Clyde under the auspieces of Monticello
Lodge F & M. Sermon by Rev. R.J. Smith. Interment in McPherson Cemetary.
Deceased was the father of Judge Jno. M. Lemmon and Attorney M.B. Lemmon of
Clyde.
Uriah Blake Lemmmon was born in Livingston County, New York (Town of
Livonia), March 16, 1808. His parents lived upon a farm. His father(James)
was a soldier in the War of 1812 and served under General Scott. He was the
second of a family of seven children only two of whom survive. April 30,
1827, he with two younger brothers, came up from Livingston County, NY to
Townsend twp., this county, bringing a team wagon, two cows and household
goods. His parents and other members of the family came soon after, by water,
to Sandusky. His father bought a farm of 80 acres in the south part of the
township, where he spent the remainder of his days, and died May 7, 1854,
being nearly 75 years old.
Uriah, soon after coming to Ohio, learned the carpenter's and joiner's
trade, which he followed for many years. He worked in Lower Sandusky (Now
Fremont), Venice, Castalia, Sandusky and Norwalk at various times.
In August 1834, he was married to Emily A. McIntyre, and at about the same
time purchased 127 acres of wild land on which he cleared a small piece, built
a log house and began housekeeping. The only furniture he had, he made. It
was a very crude and humble beginning, but he was industrious and frugal. He
worked at his trade some to gain a support, and cleared away the forest as he
could, until about 90 acres was cleared.
The family had increased and in 1849 he purchased 80 acres more of land on
the ridge near "Coopertown" and in 1850 built a new and better house. July 12,
1860, his wife died of consumption. Ten children were the fruit of this union,
six of whom survive; four are living at Clyde, one in Steuben County, Ind.,
and one in Durango, Colorado. Three died in infancy, and one, the oldest girl,
died August 8, 1886 in Tama County, Iowa, leaving five grand children.
In the fall of 1860 Mr. Lemmon sold his farm, and in the spring following
purchased the Samuel Shutts farm on the north ridge, in York township. Here
he lived until the spring of 1867, when he sold his farm and removed to Clyde
where the remainder of his days were passed.
Mr. Lemmon was an active and an earnest man. His life was one of benefit to
himself and his country, and of great usefulness. He was filled with patriotic
devotion to his country and very proud to say that his grandfather served in
the American Army during the War of the Revolution, his father served in the
Army under General Scott in the War of 1812, while all his boys were in the
army that put down the great rebellion [Civil War].
Mr. Lemmon's last illness began Dec. 31, 1886, and came from a severe cold,
from which he suffered greatly for four weeks, when he became better. He was
then taken with acute albuminurin (Brights Disease) and death ensued at
2 a.m., Feb 15, 1887. His last days were full of suffering, but he bore it
all with great fortitude.
..............................................................................
Obituary No. 2
--
18 Feb 1887 Fremont [Ohio] Journal
--
AT REST -- The late Uriah B. Lemmon
--
Tuesday morning, February 15th, the venderable U.B. Lemmon passed from
earth. His illness dated from the 31st of December, 1886. On the night
previous he had attended the camp fire of the McPherson Guard, at Armory Hall,
contracting a cold there, and on the 31st imprudent exposure to a violent snow
and wind storm was the means of prostrating him with catarrhal pneumonia. From
this, after a sharp sickness, he had measurably recovered and was able to move
about the house, when Bright's Disease of the kidneys showed itself, some
three weeks since, and from the ravages of this medical skill could not avail
to rescue him. Two days prior to his death, blood poisoning supervened, a
state of coma succeeded the painful suffering he had been undergoing, the
strong constitution succumbed at last, and death closed the scene. His
resident sons and daughters, with others of the family, who had been in
constant, tender watching with him throughout the fatal sickness, were at his
bedside when the end came.
Uriah Blake Lemmon was a remarkable man in many respects. No stronger type
of the sturdy, aggressive pioneer of half a century or more ago has lived in
this community. He was born March 16, 1808, at Livonia, Livingston County,
N.Y. His father, James Lemmon, was of Irish origin, though born in
Northumberland County, Penn., July 17, 1779. The mother, Rebecca Blake, was
of nearly the same age with her husband, and is said to have been of Welsh
descent. On the 30th of April, 1827, Uriah started for Ohio, accompanied by
his younger brothers, Matthew and Eli. They came by wagon; the father with
the remainder of the family waiting for the opening of navigation on Lake
Erie. The family at this time consisted of five sons, two daughters and one
adopted daughter. A memorandum in the handwriting of Uriah now before us, says
that when he made this journey the roads were bad and bridges gone, and most
of the rivers had to be forded. In fording the Chattaraugus he was obliged to
jump into water waist deep and take the floodwood away from the wagon. It cost
him just eleven dollars to make the trip to Sandusky County, where they
arrived May 10th. His father and family got through later in the same month
and had much sickness during the summer, the eldest daughter dying. The father
purchased a tract of eighty acres in the south part of Townsend township,
where Matthew Lemmon now lives.
In 1834 Uriah B. Lemmon was married to Miss Emily McIntyre. At about this
time he went on foot to Bucyrus, where the United States Land office was, and
there entered forty acres in section 35, Townsend township, and eighty acres
adjoining it in York, but the latter tract overrun in surveying, so that he
actually got one hundred and twenty seven acres of land. On this tract he
built himself a log cabin with puncheon floor, and a rough frame barn, moved
into the cabin with his bride, and began life in earnest. The house was
without a hearth, except the bare ground, and his first bedstead was formed by
boring holes in the logs at one side, sticking pieces of timber therein and
interlacing these with strips of bark. Later he put in a hearth of stones and
constructed an independent bedstead.
At this period, says the written memorandum referred to, there were as many
Indians as whites here. Once a year the Indians went to Malden, Canada, to
draw money from the British government, and usually brought some of this money
back with them which helped the finances of the community. Mr. Lemmon had
picked up the trade of carpenter and joiner after coming to Ohio. In 1830 he
worked in Sandusky, then a small town, at carpentering; in 1831 he did some
work at Norwalk, and in 1832 he went to Lower Sandusky, now Fremont, to work
for Judge Howland; while there he boarded with Chauncey Roberts, at what was
later known as the Kessler House, now the passenger depot of the Wheeling &
Lake Erie Railroad. All this work, it will be noted, was prior to his
marriage.
The log house above described remained his home for fourteen years, which
were marked by the hardest kind of labor. A natural genius for mechanical work
stood him well in hand. Besides carpentering, he made all the shoes worn by
himself and children, ten of whom were born to him. A shoemaker's bench was
part of the furniture of the house, an occasional hide taken to a tannery in
Seneca County, furnishing leather. As the children grew older, and went to
school, breaking and tearing their shoes as youngsters are likely to do until
the end of time, at night when they were in bed the father would bring forth
his shoe bench and cobble the shoes ready for service again next morning. He
had a workshop for carpentering, or any other sort of mechanical work
necessary to be done. There are a number of old houses yet standing in
Townsend and York townships on which Mr. Lemmon worked in these early days as
a carpenter.
In 1848, Mr. Lemmon bought a farm of eighty acres near Cooperston, on the
north ridge in Townsend, and in 1850 built thereon a frame dwelling, a large
mansion for that time, and moved into it the fall of that year. Here the wife
of his youth and mother of his children died, July 12, 1860. In the spring of
1861 he bought a farm of Samuel Shutts, in York township, now owned by Randall
Sparks, and moved there with all his children. Here he remained until the
spring of 1866, when he left his sons Cyrus A. and M.B. Lemmon to manage the
farm [,and he] came to Clyde. His first place of residence was the house now
occupied by the widow of the late Henry M.Nichols. But he only remained in
town for the spring and summer, returning in the fall to his farm. The ensuing
winter he was greatly afflicted with rheumatic fever, and became crippled in
the right leg. From that time until the day he died this limb required daily
bandaging, a fact which will be new and suprising to scores of people who knew
him.
Unable from his lameness to do farm work, in the spring of 1867 Mr. Lemmon
came again to Clyde, living for a time with his son John M. Lemmon Esq. In
1870 he was married to Mrs. Dorcas Ferguson, who died three years later; and
in 1874 [to] Miss Sarah Hoyt, the widow who survives him, became his wife. His
home during this time was at the corner of Church and Duane streets, until his
property was cut in two by the building of the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway,
when he sold it and bought the place on Maple street where he died.
No man in Clyde was better known or more respected than "Uncle Uriah", as he
was familiarly called. His was essentially a strong positive character.
Whatever he believed, or whatever he did, was with all his might. The farm on
North Ridge which he bought in 1848 was owned by a man in Licking County. One
night in the old log cabin home - this incident is told by one of his sons,
who overheard the talk of his parents - Mr. Lemmon and his wife discussed long
and earnestly the question of going in debt for part of the payment, or not
making the purchase. It was decided to buy the farm. Next morning the good
wife had gotten her husband's breakfast, hours before daylight, and he had
walked to Prout's station in Erie County, twelve or fifteen miles distant, in
time for an early train on the old Mansfield & Sandusky City strap rail to
Mansfield, whence he walked to Newark, sixty miles further on, and returned on
the fourth day with the contract of purchase in his pocket.
Politically, Mr. Lemmon was an old line Whig prior to the repeal of the
Missouri Compromise in 1854; at the formation of the Republican party he
became a zealous republican and remained steadfast therein until death. In the
Civil War his patriotism was intense; indeed it is probable that physical
disability alone kept him out of the ranks of the younger men who did the
fighting, although he was then past the military age. To him, disloyalty to
the Union cause was a crime beyond excuse of palliation; nor was there any
abatement while he lived in his anger and contempt for disloyalists and
skulkers.
Mr. Lemmon was a just and true man in his family and personal relations. He
was proud of his children and kind to them. His sense of duty was very strong,
his integrity beyond question. The hard knocks of a life of labor had brought
him a competence, so that his declining years were free fromn pecuniary care.
His parents died some time in the fifties; their other sons have all passed
away save Matthew Lemmon, of Townsend, aged seventy; one daughter, Mrs Ann
Bullard, is yet living at Pleasant Lake, Ind. Uriah was older than either of
these - seventy eight years, ten months and twenty nine days being the precise
score.
Surviving sons of Mr. Lemmon are W.H. Lemmon, of Fremont, Ind.; Hon. John M.
Lemmon and M.B. Lemmon, Esq. of Clyde, and C.A. Lemmon of Durango, Colorado.
Mrs. Rebecca Gardener, widow of the late C.C. Gardener, and Mrs. Lizzie Hock,
widow of the late Howard Hock, are the surviving daughters. One daughter,
Sarah A., wife of Monroe Thorpe, of Grundy County, Ia., died within the past
year. There are twenty seven grandchildren in all.
The funeral obsequies of Mr. Lemmon are in progress at the Methodist
Episcopal Church as we go to press. Monticello Lodge of Masons, of which the
deceased was a member since 1865, is in charge; religious services and
discourse by Rev. R.J. Smith, of the Presbyterian Church. There is a very
large turn out of Masons and citizens generally, testifying the universal
respect of the community for the deceased and his family. Interment of the
remains will be made in McPherson cemetery.
We are indebted to the Clyde Enterprise for advance proof sheets of the
above sketch which was written by Mr. H.F. Paden. A large number of the
members of the bar and other citizens of Fremont attended the funeral at Clyde
yesterday morning.
..............................................................................
LDS Church Records show a Uriah B. Lemmon of Sandusky, Ohio married to a
Cornelia SPRIER 5 April 1866 [???].
..............................................................................
Uriah was active in agricultural affairs. He was listed as a director of the
Sandusky County Agricultural Society. He lived in Clyde, Ohio in later years,
and fortunately a great deal about Clyde can be found in the famous Winesburg,
Ohio, by Sherwood Anderson. Winesburg is Clyde fictionalized, and many of the
characters were known to the Lemmons, indeed, some of the characters may be
Lemmons. [M.B. Barton, Denver, CO 3-29-98]
..............................................................................
Obituary No. 3
--
17 Feb 1887 Clyde, Ohio, Enterprise
--
Tuesday morning, Febr. 15, 1887, the venerable U.B. Lemmon passed from
earth. Ill from December 31, 1886, he died of pneumonia, Bright's Disease and
blood poisoning. Born March 16, 1808 at Livonia, Livingston County, New York.
His father, James Lemmon, was of Irish origin, though born in Northumberland
County, Pennsylvania, July 17, 1779. His mother, Rebecca Blake, was of Welsh
descent. On the 30th of April, 1827, Uriah started for Ohio, accompanied by
younger brothers Matthew and Eli, by wagon. The father, James, waited with
the rest of the family for the opening of navigation on Lake Erie. The family
consisted of the parents, James and Rebecca, five sons, two daughters and one
adopted daughter.
Uriah's memorandum says that the roads were bad, bridges gone, and most
rivers had to be forded. In fording the Cattaraugus he was obliged to jump in
the water waist deep and take the floodwood away from the wagon. It cost him
just eleven dollars to make the trip to Sandusky County, Ohio, where they
arrived May 10th. His father and family got through later the same month.
They had much sickness during the summer, and the eldest daughter died. The
father purchased a tract of eighty acres in the south part of Townsend
township where Matthew Lemmon now lives.
Uriah picked up the trade of carpenter and joiner after coming to Ohio. In
1830, he worked in Sandusky, then a small town, at carpentry. In 1831, he did
some work at Norwalk, and in 1832 went to Lower Sandusky, now Fremont, to work
for Judge Howeland. While there he boarded with Chauncy Roberts-later known as
the Kessler House, now the passenger depot of the Wheeling and Lake Erie
Railroad.
In 1834, Uriah Blake Lemmon was married to Miss Emily McIntyre. At about
this time he went on foot to Bucyrus, where the U.S. Land Office was, and
there entered 40 acres in Section 35, Townsend Township, and eighty acres in
adjoining York Township, but the latter was overrun in surveying so that he
actually got one hundred twenty acres. On this tract he built himself a log
cabin with puncheon floors and a rough frame barn, moved into the cabin with
his bride, and began life in earnest. The house was without a hearth, except
for the bare ground, and his first bedstead was formed by boring holes in the
logs at one side, sticking pieces of timber therein, and interlacing these
with strips of bark. Later he put in a hearth of stones, and constructed and
independent bedstead. (Side note-At the time, there were as many Indians as
whites.)
The log house was home for 14 years. A natural genius for mechanical work
stood him well in hand; besides carpentering, he made all the shoes worn by
himself and the children, ten of whom were born to them. A shoemaker's bench
was part of the furniture in the house; an occasional hide taken to a tannery
in Seneca County furnishing leather. As the children grew older, Uriah fixed
and mended torn shoes while they slept. He built a workshop for carpentering,
or any other mechanical work necessary to be done.
In 1848, he bought a farm of 80 acres near Cooperstown, on the North Ridge
in Townsend, Sandusky County. He walked to Prout's station in Erie County, 12
or 13 miles away, and took a train on the Old Mansfield and Sandusky Straprail
to Mansfield. Then he walked 60 miles to Newark and back again on the fourth
day with the contract [of] purchase in his pocket.
In 1850 he built a frame dwelling, a large mansion for the time, and moved
into it in the fall of that year. Here the wife of his youth and the mother
of his children died July 12, 1860. In the spring of 1861, he bought a farm of
Samuel Shutts, in York Township, now owned by Randall Sparks, and moved there
with his children. He remained there until the spring of 1866, when he left
his sons, Cyrus A. and M.B. Lemmon to manage the farm. He moved into Clyde,
Ohio.
He remained in town for the spring and summer and returned to the farm in
winter. The ensuing winter he was afflicted with rheumatic fever and became
crippled in the right leg, which required daily bandaging till he died. In the
spring of 1867, he came again to Clyde, unable to work because of lameness,
living with son John J. lemmon, Esq. [This was most likely John M. Lemmon.]
In 1870 he was married to Mrs. Dorcas Ferguson, who died 3 years later. In
1874 he married Sarah Hoyt, who survives as his widow. His home at this time
was at the corner of Church and Duane Streets until his property was cut in
two by the building of the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad. He sold the
property and bought the house on Maple Street where he died. His parents died
in the 50's. One brother, Matthew, and one sister, Mrs. Anne Bullard, survived
[him].
He was 78 years, 10 months and 29 days old. Surviving children were:
W.H. Lemmon, of Fremont, Indiana; Hon. John M. Lemmon and M.B. Lemmon, Esq. of
Clyde, Ohio; Cyrus A. Lemmon of Durango, Colorado; Mrs Rebecca Gardner, widow
of the late C.C. Gardner; Mrs Lizzie Hock, widow of Howard Hock; one daughter,
Sarah A. Thorpe, wife of Monroe Thorpe, of Grundy County, Iowa, died within
the year past (1886). There were 27 grandchildren in all.
..............................................................................
DEED
(1838)
Know all men by these presents that I, George H. Parker of Huron County and
State of Ohio, for the consideration of One Hundred and Ten Dollars received
to our full satisfaction of Uriah B. Lemmon of Sandusky County, Ohio, do give
grant, bargain, sell, engraff, and convey unto him the said Uriah B. Lemmon,
his heirs and apigns forever a certain tract of land, being the North West
quarter of the North West quarter of Section No. two in Township No. Four
North Range No. Seventeen. To have and to hold to him the said Uriah B.
Lemmon, his heirs and apigns forever, to his own proper use and behoof and I,
the said George B. Parker, do hereby covenant with the said Uriah B. Lemmon,
what at the ensealing of these presents I am well seized of said tenements, as
a good indefeasible Estate in fee simple and have good right to sell the same
in manner and form above written, and the same are free from all encumbrances
whatever. And furthermore, I the said George H. Parker, for myself, my heirs,
executors and administrators do covenant with the said Uriah B. Lemmon, his
heirs and apigns, the lawful_______________of the above granted tenements
forever to Warrant and Deed, in witness of which I have set my hand and seal,
this 24th day of September A.D. 1838.
--
Signed, Sealed, Acknowleged, and Delivered in presence of John Smith and
Elisa S. Smith. State of Ohio, Huron County. Be it remembered that on this
24th day of September A.D. 1838 before me the subscriber came George H.
Parker, the signer and sealer of the above and then and there acknowledged the
same to be his act and deed, for the uses and purposes there in expressed. In
faith of which I set my name, the day and year aforesaid.
--
John Smith, J.P.
The afore going deed was received Oct. 13th, A.D. 1838, recorded the same day.
James Robinson, Recorder
Sandusky County
..............................................................................
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.
--
I, Uriah B. Lemmon of the Village of Clyde, County of Sandusky and State of
Ohio, being about 79 years of age, and being of sound and disposing mind and
memory, do make, publish and declare this my last will and testament, hereby
revoking and making null and void all other last wills and testaments by me
made heretofore.
FIRST.-- My Will is that all my just debts and funeral expenses shall be
paid out of my estate as soon after my decease as shall be found convenient.
SECOND.- I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife Sarah Lemmon the
house and lot upon which we now live and being Lot No.- situate in the Village
of Clyde, Ohio to have and to hold for and during her natural life together
with all the furniture dishes stoves and household goods therein. I direct
that my executor put at interest and to be well secured three thousand
dollars, the interest of which shall be paid annually or semi annually for her
support during her natural life.
Item Third.-- At the death of my said wife my Executor shall sell the said
house and lot given to my said wife during life and he is hereby authorized to
make a good conveyance of the same without any order of court and he shall
divide the proceeds together with the said principal sum of $3000- equally
among my heirs.
Item Fourth.- I give and devise to my son W.H. Lemmon Twelve hundred
dollars. ($1200)
Item Fifth.- I give and devise to my son Cyrus A. Lemmon One Thousand
dollars. ($1000)
Item Sixth. I give and devise to John M. Lemmon Fifteen Hundred Dollars.
($1500)
Item Seventh. I give and devise to Maurice B. Lemmon Twelve hundred
dollars. ($1200)
Item Eighth. I give and devise to the children of my deceased daughter
Sarah A. Thorp Two Hundred dollars each to be paid to them and in no event to
their father.
Item Nineth. I give and devise to my daughter Rebecca A. Gardner Two
thousand Dollars. ($2000)
Item Tenth. I give and Devise to my daughter Lizzie E. Hoch Two Thousand
Dollars. ($2000)
Item Eleven. I desire that a suitable monument shall be erected over my
grave by my executor and if necessary to provide a sufficient fund therefor he
may withhold a pro rata amount form each of the above legacies except that of
my wife.
Item Twelve. I have and hold notes against some or all my living children
and these I desire my executor to deliver to the makers severally for
cancellation. I also hold notes against Monroe Thorp I desire that these
shall be delivered to his children to be shared equally by them and I hold a
note or notes against Chas. C. Gardner. I desire that these be delivered to
my daughter Rebecca. I hold a note or notes against Howard A. Hoch deceased.
I desire that these be delivered to my daughter Lizzie by my executor.
Item Thirteen. I desire that my executor make destribution as early as
possible of the several sums herein devised and he is authorized to deliver
and transfer to my children and grand children in payment of their legacies
any notes, bonds or stocks I may hold at my decease.
Item Fourteen. If my estate shall fall short or over run my executor is
authorized to add to or deduct from the legacies herein given to my children
and grand children so as to dispose of all my estate after paying my debts and
costs of administration, after erecting a monument. I nominate and appoint
John M. Lemmon my son Executor of this my last will.
--
In Testimony Whereof, I have set my hand to this my last will and testament at
Clyde, [Ohio] this Third day of January in the year of our Lord One Thousand
Eight Hundred and Eighty Seven.
--
U.B.Lemmon.
--
The foregoing instrument was signed by the said Uriah B. Lemmon in our
presence and by him publishes and declared as and for his last will and
testament and at his request, and in his presence, and in the presence of each
other, we herewith subscribe our names as attesting witnesses at Clyde, O.
this 3rd day of January A.D. 1887.
--
Thos. P. Dewey, resides at Clyde, O.
--
James Meslet, resides at Clyde, O.
--
[This document was transcribed by Robert AJ Thorpe, great great grandson of UB
Lemmon from photocopy of a typed document. The original may have been an
original copy of UBs will or it may have been copied by an unknown family
member sometime in the past. There were no signatures on the document.
Liberties were taken with formatting and bold-facing.]
..............................................................................
Sources:
History of Sandusky County and Representative Citizens.
Hugh Lemmon Will.
U.B. Lemmon obituaries
Inscribed gold headed cane owned by Uriah B. Lemmon, now owned by the author.
..............................................................................


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Walter Michael WEIDENFELLER

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Family 1 :
Family 2 : Robyn Jean "Bobby" WARD

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INDEX


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