FLAVILLA ANN ADAMSON
Flavilla Ann Adamson was born near Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio and died in Raymond, Lancaster County, Nebraska, April 13, 1908, aged 67 years, 9 months and 14 days. She was the daughter of Washington Adamson, a pioneer M. E. preacher.
In an early day of Ohio, March 2, 1865 she was united in marriage to W. J. Weller of Deavertown, Morgan County, Ohio. On April 6th, of the same year, they left Zanesville in a covered wagon for Afton, Iowa, arriving there May 11, 1865 and located on a farm.
After spending four years in Iowa, she, with her husband and two small children, came to Lancaster County, Nebraska and settled on a farm three miles north of the village of Raymond.
In the fall of 1888, she, with her family, moved to Raymond where she resided at the time of her death.
Early in life, at the age of 14, she was converted and joined the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which she was a devoted and consistent member for about 54 years, always attending all the services at the church in all its branches.
She was the mother of eight children, three boys and five girls, of which one boy and three daughters have gone on before her, leaving two sons and two daughters, with her companion, to mourn her loss.
The Review, with a host of friends, extends sympathay to the bereft husband and children.
(Copied from the Raymond Review, April 18, 1908).
FLAVILLA ANN ADAMSON
Flavilla Ann Adamson was born near Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio and died in Raymond, Lancaster County, Nebraska, April 13, 1908, aged 67 years, 9 months and 14 days. She was the daughter of Washington Adamson, a pioneer M. E. preacher.
In an early day of Ohio, March 2, 1865 she was united in marriage to W. J. Weller of Deavertown, Morgan County, Ohio. On April 6th, of the same year, they left Zanesville in a covered wagon for Afton, Iowa, arriving there May 11, 1865 and located on a farm.
After spending four years in Iowa, she, with her husband and two small children, came to Lancaster County, Nebraska and settled on a farm three miles north of the village of Raymond.
In the fall of 1888, she, with her family, moved to Raymond where she resided at the time of her death.
Early in life, at the age of 14, she was converted and joined the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which she was a devoted and consistent member for about 54 years, always attending all the services at the church in all its branches.
She was the mother of eight children, three boys and five girls, of which one boy and three daughters have gone on before her, leaving two sons and two daughters, with her companion, to mourn her loss.
The Review, with a host of friends, extends sympathay to the bereft husband and children.
(Copied from the Raymond Review, April 18, 1908).
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