To Sarah and Dr. Williams, were born six children, Cromwell Harn, d. in infancy; Emma Loomis, wife of I.D. Evans, Kenesaw, NE; Mary Harn, of Kenesaw; Minnie, who died at age of twenty-two; Kate, now Mrs. Joseph R. Thrall, Hemet, CA, and George Thomas, of Denver, CO, working in the Denver papers.
Mrs. Sarah Harn Williams was an active co-worker with her husband in the home and also in religious and social work. She was a member of the Woman Suffrage Association and was in the early days president of the Free Baptist Woman's Mission Society for Nebraska and Kansas. The burden of the pioneer life, the management of their large farm, and the care and education of their children fell largely on her.
When they arrived in Kenesaw, she, with her husband and two children, lived in the wagon box for three weeks, setting up a stove in a kitchen outside, with the horizon for the walls. They built the first house and dug the first well in Kennesaw. She truly was a pioneer and a mentor to her children, being widely read and educated. She retained an interest in education and was active in the affairs of the day.
To Sarah and Dr. Williams, were born six children, Cromwell Harn, d. in infancy; Emma Loomis, wife of I.D. Evans, Kenesaw, NE; Mary Harn, of Kenesaw; Minnie, who died at age of twenty-two; Kate, now Mrs. Joseph R. Thrall, Hemet, CA, and George Thomas, of Denver, CO, working in the Denver papers.
Mrs. Sarah Harn Williams was an active co-worker with her husband in the home and also in religious and social work. She was a member of the Woman Suffrage Association and was in the early days president of the Free Baptist Woman's Mission Society for Nebraska and Kansas. The burden of the pioneer life, the management of their large farm, and the care and education of their children fell largely on her.
When they arrived in Kenesaw, she, with her husband and two children, lived in the wagon box for three weeks, setting up a stove in a kitchen outside, with the horizon for the walls. They built the first house and dug the first well in Kennesaw. She truly was a pioneer and a mentor to her children, being widely read and educated. She retained an interest in education and was active in the affairs of the day.
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