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Artemus Homer Arter

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Artemus Homer Arter

Birth
Ohio, USA
Death
6 Jan 1955 (aged 91)
Florida, USA
Burial
Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Plot
Old Section (Garden of Faith) : Lot 1098 West 1/3.
Memorial ID
View Source
Per Passport his full name is:
U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 about Artemus Homer Arter
Name: Artemus Homer Arter
Birth Date: 13 Feb 1863
Birth Place: Lisbon, Ohio
Age: 54
Passport Issue Date: 13 Aug 1917
Passport Includes a Photo: Yes
Residence: Lisbon, Ohio
Father Name: Aaron B Arter
Father's Birth Location: Lisbon, Ohio
Information supplied by Anne Rupert

"A. HOMER ARTER is among the most enterprising and successful young farmers of Columbiana county. His birthplace is in Hanover township, where he first saw the light in 1863. His parents are Aaron B. and Mary A. (Pike) Arter. The former was born in Salem township, the son of Simon Arter, a native of Maryland, who came to Ohio about 1806 and settled in Center township. A. Homer Arter received a good preliminary education and then became a student in the Damascus academy, where he remained for several terms. The school was then taught by Prof. I. P. Hole. Although Mr. Arter passed the required examination for a teacher's license he was never taught. In 1885, he espoused Miss Sarah E. Williard, daughter of Peter and Susan (McCarns) Williard. This union has been blessed by the birth of two children: Irwin D. and Hazel V. Mrs. Arter was born in Franklin township, in 1865. Mr. Arter decided to follow agriculture as his life's vocation. HE began farming in a small way on a rented farm. Although still a very young man, he has succeeded in acquiring eighty-eight acres of very fine farming land, which is under a state of the highest cultivation, with substantial buildings and all needed accessories. He is a man of most liberal mind and is a firm friend and supporter of all enterprises calculated to benefit the community in which he resides. He and his wife are active and efficient members of the Lutheran church, and are held in the highest respect and esteem by all who known them best.
Source: History of the Upper Valley - Vol. II - Publ. Madison, Wisc. - Brant & Fuller - 1891 - Page 207 - Center Twp.
Contributor: Dave & Joyce Humphrey (46982348)"
Per Passport his full name is:
U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 about Artemus Homer Arter
Name: Artemus Homer Arter
Birth Date: 13 Feb 1863
Birth Place: Lisbon, Ohio
Age: 54
Passport Issue Date: 13 Aug 1917
Passport Includes a Photo: Yes
Residence: Lisbon, Ohio
Father Name: Aaron B Arter
Father's Birth Location: Lisbon, Ohio
Information supplied by Anne Rupert

"A. HOMER ARTER is among the most enterprising and successful young farmers of Columbiana county. His birthplace is in Hanover township, where he first saw the light in 1863. His parents are Aaron B. and Mary A. (Pike) Arter. The former was born in Salem township, the son of Simon Arter, a native of Maryland, who came to Ohio about 1806 and settled in Center township. A. Homer Arter received a good preliminary education and then became a student in the Damascus academy, where he remained for several terms. The school was then taught by Prof. I. P. Hole. Although Mr. Arter passed the required examination for a teacher's license he was never taught. In 1885, he espoused Miss Sarah E. Williard, daughter of Peter and Susan (McCarns) Williard. This union has been blessed by the birth of two children: Irwin D. and Hazel V. Mrs. Arter was born in Franklin township, in 1865. Mr. Arter decided to follow agriculture as his life's vocation. HE began farming in a small way on a rented farm. Although still a very young man, he has succeeded in acquiring eighty-eight acres of very fine farming land, which is under a state of the highest cultivation, with substantial buildings and all needed accessories. He is a man of most liberal mind and is a firm friend and supporter of all enterprises calculated to benefit the community in which he resides. He and his wife are active and efficient members of the Lutheran church, and are held in the highest respect and esteem by all who known them best.
Source: History of the Upper Valley - Vol. II - Publ. Madison, Wisc. - Brant & Fuller - 1891 - Page 207 - Center Twp.
Contributor: Dave & Joyce Humphrey (46982348)"


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