Note: some records reflect Ida's middle name as Ernestine
Born: Indian Territory, Oklahoma
Died: age 27; in a sanitarium, from pulmonary tuberculosis
Married: Apr 27, 1899, CLARK SAMUEL CHATFIELD, Jr., Hyattville, Big Horn Co., Wyoming
Five children:
1. Ray CHATFIELD
1900 - 1900
2. Harold Leonard CHATFIELD
1901 - 1909
3. Clinton CHATFIELD
1903 - 1903
4. Charlotte Mary CHATFIELD
1904 - 1987
5. Norman G. CHATFIELD
1906 - 1909
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Excerpt of handwritten family history by Charlotte Mary (Chatfield) Putnam:
"My only remembrance of my Mother, who died of tuberculosis in Colorado Springs February 9, 1908, was seeing her just before her burial in Basalt. My Grandmother, Mary Elizabeth (Morrow) Chatfield and my Aunt Marjorie who was 15 years old, moved into our home to take care of my two brothers and me.
Not quite a year later my two brothers Harold and Norman died of diphtheria Feb 17, 1909. Since there was no anti-toxin in Basalt, the Colorado Midland sent a light engine from Leadville to Basalt with some anti-toxin but it arrived too late to save my brothers lives but was in time to save me. Because of being quarantined none of the immediate family could attend the services for my brothers who are buried next to my Mother and an Uncle Willard Chatfield in a little cemetery to which one has to go through a rancher's property."
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Note: some records reflect Ida's middle name as Ernestine
Born: Indian Territory, Oklahoma
Died: age 27; in a sanitarium, from pulmonary tuberculosis
Married: Apr 27, 1899, CLARK SAMUEL CHATFIELD, Jr., Hyattville, Big Horn Co., Wyoming
Five children:
1. Ray CHATFIELD
1900 - 1900
2. Harold Leonard CHATFIELD
1901 - 1909
3. Clinton CHATFIELD
1903 - 1903
4. Charlotte Mary CHATFIELD
1904 - 1987
5. Norman G. CHATFIELD
1906 - 1909
==========
Excerpt of handwritten family history by Charlotte Mary (Chatfield) Putnam:
"My only remembrance of my Mother, who died of tuberculosis in Colorado Springs February 9, 1908, was seeing her just before her burial in Basalt. My Grandmother, Mary Elizabeth (Morrow) Chatfield and my Aunt Marjorie who was 15 years old, moved into our home to take care of my two brothers and me.
Not quite a year later my two brothers Harold and Norman died of diphtheria Feb 17, 1909. Since there was no anti-toxin in Basalt, the Colorado Midland sent a light engine from Leadville to Basalt with some anti-toxin but it arrived too late to save my brothers lives but was in time to save me. Because of being quarantined none of the immediate family could attend the services for my brothers who are buried next to my Mother and an Uncle Willard Chatfield in a little cemetery to which one has to go through a rancher's property."
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Gravesite Details
Buried: Feb 11, 1908, no headstone or memorial marker