30803. George Clifton Haskell Jr.
Maryland Military Men, 1917-1918
Name: George C Haskell
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 24
Birth Date: 31 Oct 1893
Birth Place: Baltimore, MD.
Residence Place: Rogers Ave., MT. Washington, Baltimore Co.
Decorations: Order of St. Sava (Serbian)
Military Year: 1917-1919
Military Place: Maryland, USA
Comments: Ind 9/28/17 pvt; bn sgt maj 11/16/17, 1 Tng Bn 154 Dep Brig; Co D 313 Inf 10/3/17; Hq Tr 82 Div 10/16/17; Patient at Hosp 10/9/18; Classification Camp 1 Repl Dep 11/8/18; 477 St Aignan Casual Co 1/14/19; 6 Co 154 Dep Brig 2/16/19, Hon disch 2/25/19, Overseas 4/25/18 to 2/11/19, Lucey Sector; Marbache Sector; St Mihiel; Marbache Sector; Meuse-Argonne
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Morning Herald (Hagerstown, Maryland)
May 29, 1929
Baltimore, May 28, a/p - George Haskell, 30, farmer, was killed late today when struck by lightning while taking refuge in a barn from a sudden thunder shower.
The Hartford Courant
December 6, 1917Mrs. Mary Brainard Clark, formerly of this city, died yesterday in New York City of heart trouble. She was the daughter of the late Charles H. Brainard and Mary J. Brainard of this city. Her father was president of the State Bank fom 1865 to his death, about 1890. He built and lived in the old Brainard mansion at No. 119 Capitol avenue. Mrs. Clark was the eldest of four daughters, the only one now living being Mrs. Robert Mowe of New York. Mrs Clark also leaves a niece, Miss Alice Welles a granddaughter of Gideon Welles, secretary of war under President Lincoln. Mrs. Clark visited this city occasionally to see her girlhood friends, her last visit being in 1916.
New York Times
May 30, 1907South Framingham, Mass., May 29. - Edmund Sanford Clark, one of Framingham's foremost citizens and a well known Boston and New York merchant, died last night at the family home here from heart disease. He was 64 years old and a native of Boston. He leaves a widow and one son, Charles Brainerd Clark of New York, his business partner; two brothers, James Wilson Clark, another New York partner, and the Rev. Arthur March Clark of Dubuque, Iowa, and one sister, Mrs. Emily J. Lewis of Sherborn.
Mr. Clark's father was a prominent manufacturer, banker, and merchant and one of the founders of the commission house for converting of cottons, of which the two sons have been the main factors since his death, a few years ago.
Mr. Clark prepared for college at Phillips Andover Acadamry and was graduated from Trinity College in 1865.
unmarried
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New York Times
November 28, 1911
Clark - Suddenly, on Monday, Nov. 27, Charles Brainard Clark, in his 37th year.
New York Times
August 23, 1914Edgar T. Welles, Vice President of the Wabash Railroad, and the son of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy in Lincoln's Cabinet, died yesterday at his residence, 550 Park Avenue, in his seventy-second year. He was born in Hartford, Conn., and was graduated from Yale University with the class of 1864. Shortly after this Mr. Welles was admitted to the bar but never practiced. In 1866 he was appointed Chief Clerk of the United States Navy Department and held this post until 1869, when he resigned to become manager of the Gatling Gun Company of Hartford.
Following this Mr. Welles held a number of important positions, among them being President of the Ganby Mining and Smelting Company, President of the Consolidated Coal Company of St. Louis, reciever of the National Bank of the State of Missouri in St. Louis, President of the International Company of Mexico, the Mexican Steamship Company and their subsidiary companies; Vice President of the National Heating Company, and he was a Director in the Ohio & Mississippi Railroad Company, the Peoria & Pelkin Railroad Company, the Wabash Railroad Company, and the United States Trust Company of Hartford, Conn.
Mr. Welles was a member of the University, The Union, the Lawyers, the New York, and the Down Town Clubs. He was also a member of out-of-town clubs, among them the University Club of St. Louis, the Chicago Club, of Chicago, the Hartford club of Hartford, and the Yale Akumni Association.
In September, 1870, Mr. Welles married Miss Alice Brainard, the daughter of Charles H. Brainard of Hartford.
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Hartford Courant
August 25, 1914The funeral of EDgar T. Welles formerly of Hartford and son of Gideon Welles, secretary of the navy at the time of the Civil War, will be held at 10:30 o'clock this morning at his home, No. 550 Park avenue, New York; and the body will be brought to this city for burial this afternoon in the family lot in Cedar Hill cemetery.
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American Civil War Soldiers
Name: Edgar Welles
RESIDENCE: Hartford, Connecticut
Enlistment Date: 6 Aug 1862
Side Served: Union
State Served: Connecticut
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 6 August 1862.
Enlisted in Company F, 16th Infantry Regiment Connecticut on 24 Aug 1862.
Received a disability discharge from Company F, 16th Infantry Regiment Connecticut on 28 Nov 1862.
New York Times
January 3, 1959Welles - Alice, On Jan. 2, 1959, daughter of the late Edgar Thadeus and Alice Brainard Welles. Reposes at Horne-Dannecker Funeral Home, 336 West 23rd St. Services Monday, Jan. 5, St. Luke's chapel, 487 Hudson St., New York City at 10:30 A.M. Interment ptivate. Hartford, Conn.
14990. Katherine Louise Brainard
The News (Frederick, Maryland)
May 21, 1897Mrs Katherine Cotton, wife of Rev. Henry E. Cotton, died suddenly in Hagerstown.
The News (Hagerstown)
December 3, 1914Rev. Henry Evan Cotton, former rector of St. John's Protestant Episcopal church, of Hagerstown, and some years ago assistant at Emmanuel Protestant Episcopal church, Baltimore, died at his home at Hagerstown at the age of 62 years. He went to Hagerstown last September from his summer home in Damariscotta, Maine, and took a lease on the residence of his brother-in-law, Capt. John K. Breckenbaugh, for the winter. Last summer he was treated in a Baltimore hospital for stomach trouble.
Hartford Courant
November 20, 1927Avon, Nov. 19 - (Special) - Mrs. Mary Haskell Recor, widow of Ralph H. Recor, died Thursday after a long illness, She was born in Newington, December 29, 1843, tha daughter of Lorin A. Curtis and Susan A. Skaats.
The Hartford Courant
January 28, 1939Avon. Jan. 27 - Special - Mrs. Sarah Curtiss Colvin, 92, the oldesr resident of Avon and widow of Frederick Colvin, died at her home in West Avon Friday.
She was born in Newington, November 6, 1846, the daughter of Loren and Susan Skaats Curtiss. She leaves a daughter, Miss Ethel I. Colvin of West Avon; a step daughter, Mrs Warren Palmetier of Oakvilee; a sister, Miss Virginia Curtiss of West Avon; four grandchildren and three great grandchildren.
Burial will be in West Avon cemetery.
The Hartford Courant
May 18, 1912Henry H. Mack, a prominent resident of Guilford, died at his home in York street, in that town, Sunday afternoon, aged 70 years and five months. He was a native of Wethersfield and he was a harness maker. He served in the Civil War and was a member of Parmelee Post, G. A. R., of Guilford and of St Alban's Lodge, A.F. and A.M., of that town. He was a republican in politics and had held various town offices.
Besides his window he leaves three children, Louis C., who lives in the west; Mrs. Mabel E. Alden of Waterbury, and Miss Jessie L. Mack, who lives at home.
Burial will be in Alderbrook Cemetery.