Doctor Stephen A. Douglas was born at Stephentown, in Rensselaer County, New York, and when quite a youth removed with his parents to Brandon, Rutland County, Vermont, where, after his regular course at Middlebury College [my note: they have no record he ever attended the college], he studied medicine, and became distinguished in his profession. He married Miss Sarah Fisk, the daughter of an extensive farmer in Brandon, by whom he had two children, the first a daughter, and the second a son. On the first of July, 1813, without any previous illness or physical warning, he died suddenly of a disease of the heart. At the very moment of his attack and of his death, he was playing with the daughter at his knees, and holding his son Stephen in his arms. (from The Life of Stephen A. Douglas, by By James Washington Sheahan; pub. by Harper & Brothers, New York, 1860)
Soon after Stephen A. Douglas was born, early in the morning, his father was sitting in the living room before an open fire holding the infant in his arms. John Conant, neighbor and friend, came in, and just as he opened the door into the room the father died suddenly of apoplexy, and the infant rolled into the fire. John Conant literally rescued the child from the fire. (portion of a 1911 letter by Horatio L. Wait, Chicago, whose wife was Conant's granddaughter. Letter appeared in Stephen A. Douglas, A Memorial by Edward Sprague Marsh, privately printed at Brandon, Vermont 1914)
Doctor Stephen A. Douglas was born at Stephentown, in Rensselaer County, New York, and when quite a youth removed with his parents to Brandon, Rutland County, Vermont, where, after his regular course at Middlebury College [my note: they have no record he ever attended the college], he studied medicine, and became distinguished in his profession. He married Miss Sarah Fisk, the daughter of an extensive farmer in Brandon, by whom he had two children, the first a daughter, and the second a son. On the first of July, 1813, without any previous illness or physical warning, he died suddenly of a disease of the heart. At the very moment of his attack and of his death, he was playing with the daughter at his knees, and holding his son Stephen in his arms. (from The Life of Stephen A. Douglas, by By James Washington Sheahan; pub. by Harper & Brothers, New York, 1860)
Soon after Stephen A. Douglas was born, early in the morning, his father was sitting in the living room before an open fire holding the infant in his arms. John Conant, neighbor and friend, came in, and just as he opened the door into the room the father died suddenly of apoplexy, and the infant rolled into the fire. John Conant literally rescued the child from the fire. (portion of a 1911 letter by Horatio L. Wait, Chicago, whose wife was Conant's granddaughter. Letter appeared in Stephen A. Douglas, A Memorial by Edward Sprague Marsh, privately printed at Brandon, Vermont 1914)
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