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Dr George Manley White

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Dr George Manley White

Birth
Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
21 Jan 1890 (aged 37)
Wayne, Republic County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Wayne, Republic County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block 7, Lot 5
Memorial ID
View Source
The Belleville Telescope (Belleville, KS), Friday, January 31, 1890; pg. 5

Died, at Wayne, Kansas, Jan. 21st, 1890, of consumption, Dr. Geo. Manley White.

Dr. White was born in Sheboygan county (sic), Wis., September 24th, 1852. He moved from Wisconsin to Iowa in his earlier manhood, and was married to Miss Ida B. McCain, of Harrisburg, Iowa, Saptember (sic) 9th, 1877. He began the practice of medicine in Iowa about the time of his marriage. He moved to Kansas in the fall of 1885, and continued his practice in Wayne and Talmo until his death. Two children preceded him in crossing the "chilly waters," and two little children—a boy and a girl—with his now bereaved wife, a widowed mother who lost her husband in the late war, and one sister, who lives in Michigan, mourn the loss of a husband, brother, son and father. The funeral was preached by the writer on Saturday, Jan. 29th, after which the remains were followed by a large procession of friends and neighbors to their last, long resting place in the Wayne cemetery, demonstrating beyond a doubt the high esteem in which he was held by all who knew him. Also showing to a Mrs. White that she has the deepest standing of the entire community.

A.J. MARKLEY,
Hollis, Kansas
The Belleville Telescope (Belleville, KS), Friday, January 31, 1890; pg. 5

Died, at Wayne, Kansas, Jan. 21st, 1890, of consumption, Dr. Geo. Manley White.

Dr. White was born in Sheboygan county (sic), Wis., September 24th, 1852. He moved from Wisconsin to Iowa in his earlier manhood, and was married to Miss Ida B. McCain, of Harrisburg, Iowa, Saptember (sic) 9th, 1877. He began the practice of medicine in Iowa about the time of his marriage. He moved to Kansas in the fall of 1885, and continued his practice in Wayne and Talmo until his death. Two children preceded him in crossing the "chilly waters," and two little children—a boy and a girl—with his now bereaved wife, a widowed mother who lost her husband in the late war, and one sister, who lives in Michigan, mourn the loss of a husband, brother, son and father. The funeral was preached by the writer on Saturday, Jan. 29th, after which the remains were followed by a large procession of friends and neighbors to their last, long resting place in the Wayne cemetery, demonstrating beyond a doubt the high esteem in which he was held by all who knew him. Also showing to a Mrs. White that she has the deepest standing of the entire community.

A.J. MARKLEY,
Hollis, Kansas


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