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Carl Victor Abbott

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Carl Victor Abbott

Birth
Cass County, Missouri, USA
Death
16 May 1953 (aged 78)
Woodson County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Yates Center, Woodson County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section B, Lot 34
Memorial ID
View Source
Carl Victor Abbot was the Son of Rollin and Rilla Abbott. He married Eva Mae Darst on October 27, 1906.
They had four children, Alma Antoinette (who never married), Clifford Eldon (who died while attending Law School), Alice Elvira (who married Mervin Terrell and moved to Kentland Indiana), and Barbara Jean (who married Warren Kenneth Stockebrand and lived at the homestead until near her own death).
During their first four years of marriage they lived in Rose, Kansas until they moved just outside of Yates Center, Kansas in 1912 and lived there for the remainder of his life.
He raised dwarf cows (cows with very short legs) and very big draft horses.
When he moved to Yates Center he became a member of the Methodist church.
When he retired he sold the farm to his youngest daughter and her husband (Barbara Jean & Warren Kenneth Stockebrand). When they expanded the original house years later, they straightened every nail and used every piece of wood they could from the original.
**If choosing to copy this bio to somewhere else, please include where it came from, as the manager of this memorial compiled this from written information and first hand knowledge.**
Carl Victor Abbot was the Son of Rollin and Rilla Abbott. He married Eva Mae Darst on October 27, 1906.
They had four children, Alma Antoinette (who never married), Clifford Eldon (who died while attending Law School), Alice Elvira (who married Mervin Terrell and moved to Kentland Indiana), and Barbara Jean (who married Warren Kenneth Stockebrand and lived at the homestead until near her own death).
During their first four years of marriage they lived in Rose, Kansas until they moved just outside of Yates Center, Kansas in 1912 and lived there for the remainder of his life.
He raised dwarf cows (cows with very short legs) and very big draft horses.
When he moved to Yates Center he became a member of the Methodist church.
When he retired he sold the farm to his youngest daughter and her husband (Barbara Jean & Warren Kenneth Stockebrand). When they expanded the original house years later, they straightened every nail and used every piece of wood they could from the original.
**If choosing to copy this bio to somewhere else, please include where it came from, as the manager of this memorial compiled this from written information and first hand knowledge.**


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