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Adelaide Rosie <I>Johnson</I> Bond

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Adelaide Rosie Johnson Bond

Birth
Atoka, Atoka County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
Aug 1933 (aged 91)
Chickasha, Grady County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Tuttle, Grady County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
8/17/1933- Tuttle Times:

Mrs Adelaide Johnson Bond, age 92, passed away last Tuesday at the home of her son Reford Bond at Chickasha, OK. She came to the Silver City settlement in 1873 when it took courage to face the hardships and dangers of a new country. She was married twice. Her first husband was Michael Campbell and they had 2 children, C.B. Campbell & Mrs J.H. Tuttle, both of whom preceded her in death. Her second husband was J.H. Bond and they had 2 children, Ed and Reford. After the death of Mr Bond, she left the old home place northwest of Tuttle and went to live with her son, Reford, in Chickasha. Her mind was alert & she was capable of attending to her business affairs until the last month. She was the kind of woman to build a new country. No one went empty handed when they appealed to her. Although only a few families were in the settlement, she saw to it that there was school kept for the children. The high esteem in which she was held by old settlers was evident by the number of pioneers who gathered at Silver City cemetery to show respect. As was her wish, she was laid to rest in Silver City cemetery, near the old home she loved so well.
8/17/1933- Tuttle Times:

Mrs Adelaide Johnson Bond, age 92, passed away last Tuesday at the home of her son Reford Bond at Chickasha, OK. She came to the Silver City settlement in 1873 when it took courage to face the hardships and dangers of a new country. She was married twice. Her first husband was Michael Campbell and they had 2 children, C.B. Campbell & Mrs J.H. Tuttle, both of whom preceded her in death. Her second husband was J.H. Bond and they had 2 children, Ed and Reford. After the death of Mr Bond, she left the old home place northwest of Tuttle and went to live with her son, Reford, in Chickasha. Her mind was alert & she was capable of attending to her business affairs until the last month. She was the kind of woman to build a new country. No one went empty handed when they appealed to her. Although only a few families were in the settlement, she saw to it that there was school kept for the children. The high esteem in which she was held by old settlers was evident by the number of pioneers who gathered at Silver City cemetery to show respect. As was her wish, she was laid to rest in Silver City cemetery, near the old home she loved so well.


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