In New York the year of 1864, Miss Mary Moore, A native of Catskill, New York , the daughter of William and Katherine Moore, married Cassius F Boardman. Mary was a gifted woman who was reared and educated in New York. Seven children were raised by this couple, the first born was William who was born in a ship on the Pacific Ocean in 1866 while Cassius and Mary were travelers to the Golden State entering the San Francisco Coast. the other six children came along, Edward, Herbert, Fred and the girls Alice, Lilly and Katherine. The Boardman's also raised the children of Alice who married William Scott when they both died in the early 1900's leaving , Ray, Stella and Mary orphans.
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In the book, Pebbles in the Stream; A history of Beale Air Force Base and neighboring areas, by Peggy Bal. On page 52 she included stories of the families who live in the lower reaches of Beale, the land the Government took, was this line; there are other stories of the plains of Beale worth recalling. There was Mary Boardman who taught school and raised seven children despite the fact that she had been blind since the age of three.
In New York the year of 1864, Miss Mary Moore, A native of Catskill, New York , the daughter of William and Katherine Moore, married Cassius F Boardman. Mary was a gifted woman who was reared and educated in New York. Seven children were raised by this couple, the first born was William who was born in a ship on the Pacific Ocean in 1866 while Cassius and Mary were travelers to the Golden State entering the San Francisco Coast. the other six children came along, Edward, Herbert, Fred and the girls Alice, Lilly and Katherine. The Boardman's also raised the children of Alice who married William Scott when they both died in the early 1900's leaving , Ray, Stella and Mary orphans.
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In the book, Pebbles in the Stream; A history of Beale Air Force Base and neighboring areas, by Peggy Bal. On page 52 she included stories of the families who live in the lower reaches of Beale, the land the Government took, was this line; there are other stories of the plains of Beale worth recalling. There was Mary Boardman who taught school and raised seven children despite the fact that she had been blind since the age of three.
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