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Edmund Dalkin Gowen

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Edmund Dalkin Gowen

Birth
Quebec, Canada
Death
11 Mar 1934 (aged 58)
Choteau, Teton County, Montana, USA
Burial
Choteau, Teton County, Montana, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Cause of death -
Carcinoma of liver, duodenum, and stomach.
Died in Choteau Hospital at Choteau.
Residence - Byum, Teton, Montana.

Occupation - Farmer.

Edmund and Esther married on 20 April 1904
in the Holy Trinity Anglican Church
at Quebec City, Quebec.
No children were born to them.

They emigrated to U. S. A. in 1915.

OBITUARY:
********
Edmund Dalkin Gowen, passed away Sunday morning following an illness of two years.
He was a prominent Bynum stockman and rancher.
He had been a resident of the Bynum section since 1916, when he came there to assume the managership of the Northern Land Company ranch. This position he held for several years. Afterwards he acquired a large ranch about two miles north of Bynum on the old Bynum-Pendroy Road.
He received his education in Quebec and later engaged in ranching with an uncle in Saskatchewan, Canada.
When the war broke out between England and Boer States of South Africa, the young man enlisted with the Canadian Mounted Riflemen and went with his command to South Africa, where he served throughout the war, and engaged in numerous battles and rigorous campaigns. He received the Queen's medal with three bars in token of his services.
After the war, he was honorably discharged at Halifax in 1902. He received a land grant for his military services and was also made a homestead inspector at Medicine Hat in Alberta, which office he held for several years.
He was a member of the Episcopal Church.
Cause of death -
Carcinoma of liver, duodenum, and stomach.
Died in Choteau Hospital at Choteau.
Residence - Byum, Teton, Montana.

Occupation - Farmer.

Edmund and Esther married on 20 April 1904
in the Holy Trinity Anglican Church
at Quebec City, Quebec.
No children were born to them.

They emigrated to U. S. A. in 1915.

OBITUARY:
********
Edmund Dalkin Gowen, passed away Sunday morning following an illness of two years.
He was a prominent Bynum stockman and rancher.
He had been a resident of the Bynum section since 1916, when he came there to assume the managership of the Northern Land Company ranch. This position he held for several years. Afterwards he acquired a large ranch about two miles north of Bynum on the old Bynum-Pendroy Road.
He received his education in Quebec and later engaged in ranching with an uncle in Saskatchewan, Canada.
When the war broke out between England and Boer States of South Africa, the young man enlisted with the Canadian Mounted Riflemen and went with his command to South Africa, where he served throughout the war, and engaged in numerous battles and rigorous campaigns. He received the Queen's medal with three bars in token of his services.
After the war, he was honorably discharged at Halifax in 1902. He received a land grant for his military services and was also made a homestead inspector at Medicine Hat in Alberta, which office he held for several years.
He was a member of the Episcopal Church.


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