Mr. Edwards was a direct descendent of the Edwards family which has been prominent in political life in Illinois since territorial times. The name was also connected with the family of Abraham Lincoln, by marriage.
The deceased was born in the old Edwards home in South Second street, December 15, 1839, and was the son of Ninian W. Edwards and Elizabeth Todd Edwards. His father was one of the celebrated "Long Nine" which Lincoln led in the Illinois legislature and had come to Illinois from Kentucky where he had been attorney general. His mother was a sister of Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of Abraham Lincoln.
Mr. Edwards spent practically all his life in Springfield, with the exception of the time during the civil war, when he was stationed at Camp Douglas, Chicago, and Cairo, being a member of the commissary department of the Union army. At the close of the war he returned to Springfield, where he followed his profession of a bookkeeper. For many years he was in the office of the H. W. Rokker company, printers and book binders. As he was deeply interested in his ancestors he gathered together many relics and when he was appointed custodian of the Lincoln home, he took them to that place, where they have been for the past nineteen years.
Mr. Edwards was married in 1863 to Josephine E. Remann of Vandalia. He is survived by his widow, three children, Miss Georgia H. Edwards, Mrs. Mary E. Brown and N. Wirt Edwards, all of this city, and one grandson, Remann A. Brown of Cleveland, Ohio.
IL State Register, Springfield, IL 12-21-1915
Mr. Edwards was a direct descendent of the Edwards family which has been prominent in political life in Illinois since territorial times. The name was also connected with the family of Abraham Lincoln, by marriage.
The deceased was born in the old Edwards home in South Second street, December 15, 1839, and was the son of Ninian W. Edwards and Elizabeth Todd Edwards. His father was one of the celebrated "Long Nine" which Lincoln led in the Illinois legislature and had come to Illinois from Kentucky where he had been attorney general. His mother was a sister of Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of Abraham Lincoln.
Mr. Edwards spent practically all his life in Springfield, with the exception of the time during the civil war, when he was stationed at Camp Douglas, Chicago, and Cairo, being a member of the commissary department of the Union army. At the close of the war he returned to Springfield, where he followed his profession of a bookkeeper. For many years he was in the office of the H. W. Rokker company, printers and book binders. As he was deeply interested in his ancestors he gathered together many relics and when he was appointed custodian of the Lincoln home, he took them to that place, where they have been for the past nineteen years.
Mr. Edwards was married in 1863 to Josephine E. Remann of Vandalia. He is survived by his widow, three children, Miss Georgia H. Edwards, Mrs. Mary E. Brown and N. Wirt Edwards, all of this city, and one grandson, Remann A. Brown of Cleveland, Ohio.
IL State Register, Springfield, IL 12-21-1915
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