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Albert H Sargeant

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Albert H Sargeant

Birth
Wisconsin, USA
Death
3 Oct 1900 (aged 39)
Brandon, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Spirit Lake, Dickinson County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Plot
0-033-5
Memorial ID
View Source
Parents are Austin Sargeant (VT) & Lucy M. (Murray) Sargeant (NY)

Husband of Alice M. Randlett
(Married: March 22, 1883, Mitchell Co. Iowa)

Four children were born to this union, one dying in infancy.

Known children are:
Infant son
Ida Mae, m. Dennis James Clark
Harry Lee
Florence Fay, m. George F. Lineburg

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Died: At Brandon,Wis., Oct. 3, of Brights disease, Albert H. Sargeant, aged thirty-nine years. The news was a great shock to the entire community. Mr. Sargeant had borne up under the sorrow of his wife's death even when it was the first stroke to sever his own hold upon life, for it is thought by friends that he never recovered, but gradually failed, so imperceptibly that friends scarcely realized that he was slipping into the great beyond and only became alarmed when he was really beyond all human aid. He was a quiet man and had a large circle of warm friends. To his brother and children, so sorely bereft, goes out a large measure of sympathy. His brother, Freeman, returned with the remains Friday morning. Funeral services were held at the Presbyterian church at ten o'clock a.m., and all that was mortal interred beside his wife in Lakeview cemetery.

*Obituary is published in the Terril Tribune, Oct. 12, 1900.
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Parents are Austin Sargeant (VT) & Lucy M. (Murray) Sargeant (NY)

Husband of Alice M. Randlett
(Married: March 22, 1883, Mitchell Co. Iowa)

Four children were born to this union, one dying in infancy.

Known children are:
Infant son
Ida Mae, m. Dennis James Clark
Harry Lee
Florence Fay, m. George F. Lineburg

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Died: At Brandon,Wis., Oct. 3, of Brights disease, Albert H. Sargeant, aged thirty-nine years. The news was a great shock to the entire community. Mr. Sargeant had borne up under the sorrow of his wife's death even when it was the first stroke to sever his own hold upon life, for it is thought by friends that he never recovered, but gradually failed, so imperceptibly that friends scarcely realized that he was slipping into the great beyond and only became alarmed when he was really beyond all human aid. He was a quiet man and had a large circle of warm friends. To his brother and children, so sorely bereft, goes out a large measure of sympathy. His brother, Freeman, returned with the remains Friday morning. Funeral services were held at the Presbyterian church at ten o'clock a.m., and all that was mortal interred beside his wife in Lakeview cemetery.

*Obituary is published in the Terril Tribune, Oct. 12, 1900.
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