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Daniel Baum Jr.

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Daniel Baum Jr.

Birth
Pickaway County, Ohio, USA
Death
10 Sep 1891 (aged 76)
Norway, White County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Delphi, Carroll County, Indiana, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.5977931, Longitude: -86.6732056
Memorial ID
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Daniel Baum was the eighth of twelve known children of Daniel Baum (1780-1857) and Asenath (Ascenith on her gravemarker) Meyers Rothrock Baum (1781-1870), who married 20 Feb 1801 at Mifflin County, Pennsylvania.

Daniel first married to Rebecca Vandeventer (1812-1865) on 07 Apr 1836 at Carroll County, Indiana. Daniel and Rebecca were the parents of one known child, namely:

1. Mary Ann Baum Smith (1837-1884)

After Rebecca died, Daniel remarried to the widow, Mrs. Mary Bassett Mason (1823-1908) on 29 Mar 1866 in presumably Indiana. It is not believed that Daniel and Mary had any children together. After Daniel died, Mary remarried to Daniel's cousin, Abraham Hanawalt in 1894.

Links to Daniel's parents, both of his wives and his only known child are included below.

Following obituary courtesy of Robin Farley Dixon:

Daniel Baum, who died at his home near Norway on the 10th ?? was born in Pickaway county, O, March 29, 1815, and was aged 76 years, 5 months and 11 days at his death.
He was one of the pioneers of the Wabash Valley, and in a brief biography written by himself shortly before his death he says: "When was in my tenth year I moved from our home in Ohio to Delphi, Carroll county with my father and mother, six brothers and five sisters in the spring of 1825. We started from Chillicothe on the sixth day of March in a boat. My father brought four other families with him to Delphi. The land there belonged to the government at that time. There were in our party 85 in all - men, women and children. We came down the Sciota river to the Ohio and then down that river to the Wabash, up which we came to Deer creek and then up Deer creek to where a railroad bridge now crosses it, reaching that point April 30th, 1825. There were then only three or four families living in Carroll county. We had almost daily visits from the Pottawattomie Indians. The land on the west side of the Wabash all belonged to the Indians at that time. They were very friendly and often brought venison and other game to trade for pork, flour or whiskey - the last we never let them have. Deer was very
..

Monticello Herald - 10/1/1891
Daniel Baum was the eighth of twelve known children of Daniel Baum (1780-1857) and Asenath (Ascenith on her gravemarker) Meyers Rothrock Baum (1781-1870), who married 20 Feb 1801 at Mifflin County, Pennsylvania.

Daniel first married to Rebecca Vandeventer (1812-1865) on 07 Apr 1836 at Carroll County, Indiana. Daniel and Rebecca were the parents of one known child, namely:

1. Mary Ann Baum Smith (1837-1884)

After Rebecca died, Daniel remarried to the widow, Mrs. Mary Bassett Mason (1823-1908) on 29 Mar 1866 in presumably Indiana. It is not believed that Daniel and Mary had any children together. After Daniel died, Mary remarried to Daniel's cousin, Abraham Hanawalt in 1894.

Links to Daniel's parents, both of his wives and his only known child are included below.

Following obituary courtesy of Robin Farley Dixon:

Daniel Baum, who died at his home near Norway on the 10th ?? was born in Pickaway county, O, March 29, 1815, and was aged 76 years, 5 months and 11 days at his death.
He was one of the pioneers of the Wabash Valley, and in a brief biography written by himself shortly before his death he says: "When was in my tenth year I moved from our home in Ohio to Delphi, Carroll county with my father and mother, six brothers and five sisters in the spring of 1825. We started from Chillicothe on the sixth day of March in a boat. My father brought four other families with him to Delphi. The land there belonged to the government at that time. There were in our party 85 in all - men, women and children. We came down the Sciota river to the Ohio and then down that river to the Wabash, up which we came to Deer creek and then up Deer creek to where a railroad bridge now crosses it, reaching that point April 30th, 1825. There were then only three or four families living in Carroll county. We had almost daily visits from the Pottawattomie Indians. The land on the west side of the Wabash all belonged to the Indians at that time. They were very friendly and often brought venison and other game to trade for pork, flour or whiskey - the last we never let them have. Deer was very
..

Monticello Herald - 10/1/1891


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