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Eliza Ellen <I>Bisbee</I> Aiston

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Eliza Ellen Bisbee Aiston

Birth
Death
28 Nov 1914 (aged 73)
Burial
Azalia, Monroe County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
1860 Milan, Monroe, MI
Horace Bisbee, 38
Hannah, 46
Eliza, 9
Henry K., 4
Mary Stevens, 50 (Sister of Hannah)
Miranda Stevens, 48 (Sister of Hannah)

1860 Milan, Monroe, MI
Horace Bisbee, 49
Hannah, 56
Eliza, 19
Henry, 14 (Enlisted as a private in Co B., 6th MI Cav; died 29 Oct 1864, Barracks G. H. Orleans of disease and buried Chalmette National Historic Park in Louisiana.

1870 Milan, Monroe, MI
Alonzo Aiston, 24
Eliza, 28
Ernest, 3 (Ernest Aiston died 19 Sep 1911, Winnebago county, IL; his wife Anna Gunn FAG 148551455.)
Evert, 1
Bertha, 3 mos
Charles, 17

Albert A. Aiston, MD: Prominent among the physicians of Monroe county, Michigan, whose fields of activity have been in the country, is Dr. Albert a. Aiston, of Milan Township, where during the twenty-five years he has built up a reputation in his profession and gained the respect and gratitude of his fellow townspeople. Dr. Aiston is a veteran of the Civil War, having enlisted in January, 1864, in the Company B., Captain Benjamin Butler, afterwards a wonderful national character of the Sixth Heavy Artillery, the regiment being ordered first to New Orleans, Louisiana, and later being sent to Forts Gaines and Morgan, and at the latter place continued to be stationed until their honorable discharge. Although only a lad in his teens, Dr. Aiston proved to be a good, brave and courageous soldier, faithfully performing all his duties, and participating in every engagement in which his regiment took part, except during the time that he was confined to the hospital with a dislocated shoulder. Dr. Aiston was born November 15, 1847, in Genesee County, NY and is a son of Robert Aiston, a Canadian by birth. The latter was reared and educated in his native country, and followed the vocation of farming, his death occurring when A. A. Aiston was a lad. He married Malvina Leete, a member of a Genesee County family that had originally come from Connecticut, where it had been founded during early colonial days. A member of this family is Bishop Leete, of Detroit, a cousin of Dr. Aiston. Malvina Leete was a daughter of Alexander and Sarah (Cone) Leete. After the death of Robert Aiston, his widow and two sons, A. A. and Charles, came to Milan Township, Monroe County, and here the mother died when she was sixty-seven years of age, one of the best known and most greatly beloved women of her neighborhood, where many could testify to her kindness of heart and many Christian virtues. A. A. Aiston remained on the home farm and secured his preliminary educational training in the public schools, following which he spent some time in home study and then placed himself under the preceptorship of Dr. Jackson, one of the pioneer physicians of Monroe County. Later he studied under Dr. Mason and a law was passed in 1887 that after a physician had practiced some years he was given a regular license to practice. For twenty-five years Dr. Aiston has been engaged in carrying on his profession in Milan Township and the surrounding country, and has gained a wide and enviable reputation and a large and lucrative practice. He has a fine farm of seventy-six acres situated five miles south of Milan, and not far from Azalia, where he has a fine nine-room rural home, surrounded by a large well-kept lawn, a barn 32x40 feet, and other suitable and substantial buildings. Twin Maples Farm is one of the handsome properties of Milan Township, and its waving fields of grain, fine pasture land, sleek cattle and general air of prosperity testify eloquently to the thrift, industry and progressive ideas of its owner. Dr. Aiston was married in 1868 to Mrs. Eliza (Bisbee) Bulson, widow of Edward Bulson, a soldier, who died in the Confederate prison at Andersonville, leaving one son, Edward, Jr., Three children were born to Dr. and Mrs. Aiston, namely, Ernest, who was a well-known dentist of Rockford, Illinois, left a widow and six children, Alice, Homer, Louise, Jean and two others; Robert, who is engaged in the practice of dentistry in Chicago; and Catherine, the wife of E. R. Turner, a railroad operator of Azalia, and has four children, Walter, Helen, Ellen and Almeda. Mr. and Mrs. Turner are living on the farm with Dr. Aiston, and all are well known in the community. The widow of Dr. Ernest Aiston was formerly a Miss Gunn, daughter of John Gunn, who served in the Scotch Highlanders' Brigade in the English army. Dr. Aiston has been secretary of the board of health for seven years. He belongs to William Bell Post, Grand Army of the Republic at Dundee, Michigan, and is also a member of the Masons of the Odd Fellows. A man of frank and genial personality, during the quarter of a century that he has resided here he has made many warm friends, and no member of his profession stands higher in the estimation of either his confreres or the public at large.
1860 Milan, Monroe, MI
Horace Bisbee, 38
Hannah, 46
Eliza, 9
Henry K., 4
Mary Stevens, 50 (Sister of Hannah)
Miranda Stevens, 48 (Sister of Hannah)

1860 Milan, Monroe, MI
Horace Bisbee, 49
Hannah, 56
Eliza, 19
Henry, 14 (Enlisted as a private in Co B., 6th MI Cav; died 29 Oct 1864, Barracks G. H. Orleans of disease and buried Chalmette National Historic Park in Louisiana.

1870 Milan, Monroe, MI
Alonzo Aiston, 24
Eliza, 28
Ernest, 3 (Ernest Aiston died 19 Sep 1911, Winnebago county, IL; his wife Anna Gunn FAG 148551455.)
Evert, 1
Bertha, 3 mos
Charles, 17

Albert A. Aiston, MD: Prominent among the physicians of Monroe county, Michigan, whose fields of activity have been in the country, is Dr. Albert a. Aiston, of Milan Township, where during the twenty-five years he has built up a reputation in his profession and gained the respect and gratitude of his fellow townspeople. Dr. Aiston is a veteran of the Civil War, having enlisted in January, 1864, in the Company B., Captain Benjamin Butler, afterwards a wonderful national character of the Sixth Heavy Artillery, the regiment being ordered first to New Orleans, Louisiana, and later being sent to Forts Gaines and Morgan, and at the latter place continued to be stationed until their honorable discharge. Although only a lad in his teens, Dr. Aiston proved to be a good, brave and courageous soldier, faithfully performing all his duties, and participating in every engagement in which his regiment took part, except during the time that he was confined to the hospital with a dislocated shoulder. Dr. Aiston was born November 15, 1847, in Genesee County, NY and is a son of Robert Aiston, a Canadian by birth. The latter was reared and educated in his native country, and followed the vocation of farming, his death occurring when A. A. Aiston was a lad. He married Malvina Leete, a member of a Genesee County family that had originally come from Connecticut, where it had been founded during early colonial days. A member of this family is Bishop Leete, of Detroit, a cousin of Dr. Aiston. Malvina Leete was a daughter of Alexander and Sarah (Cone) Leete. After the death of Robert Aiston, his widow and two sons, A. A. and Charles, came to Milan Township, Monroe County, and here the mother died when she was sixty-seven years of age, one of the best known and most greatly beloved women of her neighborhood, where many could testify to her kindness of heart and many Christian virtues. A. A. Aiston remained on the home farm and secured his preliminary educational training in the public schools, following which he spent some time in home study and then placed himself under the preceptorship of Dr. Jackson, one of the pioneer physicians of Monroe County. Later he studied under Dr. Mason and a law was passed in 1887 that after a physician had practiced some years he was given a regular license to practice. For twenty-five years Dr. Aiston has been engaged in carrying on his profession in Milan Township and the surrounding country, and has gained a wide and enviable reputation and a large and lucrative practice. He has a fine farm of seventy-six acres situated five miles south of Milan, and not far from Azalia, where he has a fine nine-room rural home, surrounded by a large well-kept lawn, a barn 32x40 feet, and other suitable and substantial buildings. Twin Maples Farm is one of the handsome properties of Milan Township, and its waving fields of grain, fine pasture land, sleek cattle and general air of prosperity testify eloquently to the thrift, industry and progressive ideas of its owner. Dr. Aiston was married in 1868 to Mrs. Eliza (Bisbee) Bulson, widow of Edward Bulson, a soldier, who died in the Confederate prison at Andersonville, leaving one son, Edward, Jr., Three children were born to Dr. and Mrs. Aiston, namely, Ernest, who was a well-known dentist of Rockford, Illinois, left a widow and six children, Alice, Homer, Louise, Jean and two others; Robert, who is engaged in the practice of dentistry in Chicago; and Catherine, the wife of E. R. Turner, a railroad operator of Azalia, and has four children, Walter, Helen, Ellen and Almeda. Mr. and Mrs. Turner are living on the farm with Dr. Aiston, and all are well known in the community. The widow of Dr. Ernest Aiston was formerly a Miss Gunn, daughter of John Gunn, who served in the Scotch Highlanders' Brigade in the English army. Dr. Aiston has been secretary of the board of health for seven years. He belongs to William Bell Post, Grand Army of the Republic at Dundee, Michigan, and is also a member of the Masons of the Odd Fellows. A man of frank and genial personality, during the quarter of a century that he has resided here he has made many warm friends, and no member of his profession stands higher in the estimation of either his confreres or the public at large.


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