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James Earl Sackett

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James Earl Sackett

Birth
Wildwood, Van Buren County, Michigan, USA
Death
6 Dec 1920 (aged 52)
Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara County, California, USA
Burial
Mabton, Yakima County, Washington, USA Add to Map
Plot
Blk 1, Lot 2, Grave 7
Memorial ID
View Source
1910 Census
Household Members: Name Age
Earl Sackett 42
Antinetta Sackett 43
Clista M Sackett 15
William E Sackett 18
Clella F Sackett 11
Mildred Sackett 10
Manley Sackett 6[8]
Fredrick Sackett 4
Jolhan H Sackett [7/12]

Fredrick Plummer Sackett* 1837 – 1905
Susan Earl* 1843 – 1916

Notes for James Earl "Earl" Sackett:

He was the eldest child of Frederick Plummer Sackett and his wife, Susan-Earl Sackett. He was born March 31, 1868, on his father's farm about four miles from Gobles, Van Buren County, Michigan. He grew up as a 'handsome normal boy who worked and played and enjoyed life." In later years he told of how hungry he would get when working in the fields as a boy, and about ten o'clock in the morning he would start looking toward the house. His father did not believe much in eating meat but he provided plenty of apples and took wheat to the mill and had it ground into graham flour so that they had graham gems (which his mother was expert in making) and apple sauce at home.

From his ancestry.com site.
1910 Census
Household Members: Name Age
Earl Sackett 42
Antinetta Sackett 43
Clista M Sackett 15
William E Sackett 18
Clella F Sackett 11
Mildred Sackett 10
Manley Sackett 6[8]
Fredrick Sackett 4
Jolhan H Sackett [7/12]

Fredrick Plummer Sackett* 1837 – 1905
Susan Earl* 1843 – 1916

Notes for James Earl "Earl" Sackett:

He was the eldest child of Frederick Plummer Sackett and his wife, Susan-Earl Sackett. He was born March 31, 1868, on his father's farm about four miles from Gobles, Van Buren County, Michigan. He grew up as a 'handsome normal boy who worked and played and enjoyed life." In later years he told of how hungry he would get when working in the fields as a boy, and about ten o'clock in the morning he would start looking toward the house. His father did not believe much in eating meat but he provided plenty of apples and took wheat to the mill and had it ground into graham flour so that they had graham gems (which his mother was expert in making) and apple sauce at home.

From his ancestry.com site.

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