St. Andrews Beacon
January 15 1891Greenlief HOULTON, for thirty years a resident of St. Andrews, died at San Jose, California, Christmas morn. of paralysis. The deceased was 68 years of age and a native of Houlton, Maine which town had been named after his father. Mr. Houlton left St. Andrews for the west six years ago. He leaves a wife and four daughters.
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Bay Pilot
September 11, 1884Greenleaf HOULTON, with his wife and family departed Friday last by rail for San Francisco, California. With them also went Edward RIGBY and Hedley Vicars TREADWELL. Mr. Houlton has been a resident of St. Andrews over 25 years. His departure together with that of Mr. Rigby is due to the removal of the railway works from St. Andrews to McAdam. Mr. Treadwell is the youngest s/o Nathan TREADWELL. He has been going to sea for some years past, sailing out of Liverpool, England.
St. Andrews Standard
May 9, 1860d. 3rd inst., Mrs. w/o Greenloaf HOULTON, age 37.
Marriage Notes for Alice Houlton and Lewis A. Gardner
MARRIAGE:
Saint Croix Courier
June 28, 1888m. San Francisco, California, 20th inst., Alice HOULTON eldest d/o Greenleaf HOULTON, formerly of St. Andrews (Charlotte Co.) / Lewis A. GARDENER, San Francisco.
Marriage Notes for Greenleaf Houlton and Mary Richards
MARRIAGE:
St. Andrews Standard
July 11, 1866m. Brooklyn, E.D., Thursday 21st June, at residence of bride's parents, by Rev. Payne, Greenleaf HOULTON, Esq., St. Andrews (Charlotte Co.) / Mary F. only d/o Joseph RICHARDS, Esq. of above city.
U.S., Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865
Name: Thomas S Haskell
Birth Year: abt 1833
Place of Birth: Rhode Island
Age on 1 July 1863: 30
Race: White
Marital Status: Married
Residence: Cranston, Rhode Island
Congressional District: 2nd
Class: 1
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Newport Daily News
March 11, 1914Haskell, died West Barrington ?th inst. Thomas S. Haskell in his ?th year
Thomas Woodbury converted to LDS in 1841, and moved to Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1842. He rented a farm from Prophet Joseph Smith and was ordained an elder in December 1841, later a Seventy, and became a member of the 18 quorum.He was a mechanic as well as a farmer. He crossed the plains with his father's family in the A.O. Smoot Company, arriving in the Valley September 26, 1847. He built a house within the old fort. After spending his second winter in the fort, he moved his family to a log house in the Seventh Ward. This house would be between First and Scond West at about 244. On 25, February 1852, he was ordained high priest and as counselor to Bishop William G. Perkins.
In 1861 he set out on a mission in southern Utah to start a nursery to supply the local population with fruit trees. In Grafton, he was made justice of the peace and postmaster. He held these positions until the town was abandoned due to Indian trouble. The population moved to Rockville, Washington county, in southwest Utah. In December 1866, Thomas returned to Salt Lake City to join his first wife Catherine, who had moved north two years earlier due to health concerns for her daughter. On August 29, 1873, he was made second counsellor to Bishop William Thorn.
He died at age 76 of pneumonia.
15598. Malinda McKenzie Woodbury
Malinda died of a paralitic stroke.
Garden City Herald
September 13, 1923Mrs. Elizabeth Fall Haskell died at her home in this city Thursday norning, September 13, about 7 o'clock.
Mrs. Elizabeth Fall Haskell was born in Albion, Maine, December 11, 1830, and would have been 93 if she had lived until December. She was united in marriage with John R. Haskell in Holton Maine, and to this union two sons were born. Charles B. Haskell (deceased) and William R. Haskell of this city. She came to Garden City in 1894, and resided here ever since with the exception of a few years when she resided on a homestead in Kearney county.
She leaves to mourn her loss her son, two grandchildren, John J. Haskell of this city and Harold Haskell, of Hartford, Connecticut, and two great grandchildren, Joyce and Jacqueline Haskell of this city, besides a number of old friends and neighbors.
Mrs. Haskell was the oldest resident of this city and up to the very last retained all her faculties, taking an interest in everything concerning the town and nation.Her mind was clear and alert, and owing to her remarkable constitution and vitality, she but seldom needed medicine or a doctor, and that only in recent years, and when her time came she went peacefully to sleep and passed to the great beyond. On Monday, she took each member of her immediate family by the hand and bid them a silent farewell, no doubt realizing that her span of life was nearly run, and in her eyes was the look of love and kindliness that characterized her life.
Mrs. Haskell was quiet, and gentle, a woman who bore her sorrows with fortitude and Christian patience, and who drank deep in the joys that come to her, and the end was fitting of such a life, drifting out like a leaf on the quiet stream, without fear and with certainty of a glorious eternity.
Atchison Daily Globe
January 9, 1907Benjamin Haskell, 79, former livestock commision man, died at the home of his son in law C. S. Osborn