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Arthur Eugene Dyer

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Arthur Eugene Dyer

Birth
Cape Rosier, Hancock County, Maine, USA
Death
4 Oct 1954 (aged 80)
Hyannis, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Cotuit, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Born Cape Roller, Maine. Son of Benjamin and Eliza Dyer.
married Clara Coleman 1901
President and founder of the Dyer Electrical company, Hyannis

Yarmouth Register, Friday, November 15, 1940; Page:3
DYER STONE TO BE MOVED
A 3,000 pound stone that represents a sentimental attachment between scattered members of the Old Cape Cod Dyer family will be brought 400 miles from Cape Rozier, Me., to the Mosswood cemetery, Cotuit.
The boulder is located on the shore of Penobscot Bay on land to which one branch of the Dyer family migrated. Arthur Dyer of Hyannis spent his childhood at the farm there.
Dr William Dyer settled in Barnstable in 1688 and in 1705 he moved to Truro. Of his several children, most established homes in Cape Cod towns but one moved to Cape Rozier.
At a Dyer family conference recently, it was decided to bring the boulder to Cape Cod to be set in place in the Cotuit cemetery as an appropriate monument. A bronze nameplate recording a brief history of the family will be set in it.
Born Cape Roller, Maine. Son of Benjamin and Eliza Dyer.
married Clara Coleman 1901
President and founder of the Dyer Electrical company, Hyannis

Yarmouth Register, Friday, November 15, 1940; Page:3
DYER STONE TO BE MOVED
A 3,000 pound stone that represents a sentimental attachment between scattered members of the Old Cape Cod Dyer family will be brought 400 miles from Cape Rozier, Me., to the Mosswood cemetery, Cotuit.
The boulder is located on the shore of Penobscot Bay on land to which one branch of the Dyer family migrated. Arthur Dyer of Hyannis spent his childhood at the farm there.
Dr William Dyer settled in Barnstable in 1688 and in 1705 he moved to Truro. Of his several children, most established homes in Cape Cod towns but one moved to Cape Rozier.
At a Dyer family conference recently, it was decided to bring the boulder to Cape Cod to be set in place in the Cotuit cemetery as an appropriate monument. A bronze nameplate recording a brief history of the family will be set in it.


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