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James Monroe Babbitt

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James Monroe Babbitt

Birth
Farmington, Fulton County, Illinois, USA
Death
8 Oct 1895 (aged 44)
Emerson, Mills County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Malvern, Mills County, Iowa, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.98796, Longitude: -95.57934
Plot
Section 6 Lot 553
Memorial ID
View Source
The death of Mr. J. M. Babbitt, who lived five miles north-east of Emerson, occurred Tuesday of last week. Mr. Babbitt, was one of the best known and most highly esteemed citizens of the East End. We clip the following from last week’s Chronicle in regard to the sad event; “Mr. James Babbitt, who resides five miles northeast of Emerson died of consumption at his home on Tuesday, October 8, 1895. Mr. Babbitt was a man of sterling quality and he will be greatly missed among the people of the community in which he lived. He leaves a wife and three children who have the heartfelt sympathy of a large circle of friends in this their and loss of husband and father. The funeral was held at the residence on Wednesday, Rev. S. M. Perkins, pastor of the Christian Church of Henderson, conducting the service. The remains were interred in the Malvern Cemetery.”
Glenwood Opinion Tribune, October 17, 1895, page 3
The death of Mr. J. M. Babbitt, who lived five miles north-east of Emerson, occurred Tuesday of last week. Mr. Babbitt, was one of the best known and most highly esteemed citizens of the East End. We clip the following from last week’s Chronicle in regard to the sad event; “Mr. James Babbitt, who resides five miles northeast of Emerson died of consumption at his home on Tuesday, October 8, 1895. Mr. Babbitt was a man of sterling quality and he will be greatly missed among the people of the community in which he lived. He leaves a wife and three children who have the heartfelt sympathy of a large circle of friends in this their and loss of husband and father. The funeral was held at the residence on Wednesday, Rev. S. M. Perkins, pastor of the Christian Church of Henderson, conducting the service. The remains were interred in the Malvern Cemetery.”
Glenwood Opinion Tribune, October 17, 1895, page 3


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