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Sarah Jane <I>Sloper</I> Woolson

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Sarah Jane Sloper Woolson

Birth
Bolton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
6 Dec 1901 (aged 53)
Windom, Cottonwood County, Minnesota, USA
Burial
Windom, Cottonwood County, Minnesota, USA Add to Map
Plot
3-11, card 8 #127
Memorial ID
View Source
Sexton's Register gives very little information.
She is listed as Mrs. A Woolson. An Albert Woolson was the first superintendant of the Windom Lighting Plant. The family is listed in the 1900 census of Windom which gives her name, year and place of birth. They had 5 grown children.
Cause - abscess of the brain

Find a Grave contributor, 47305175 has made the following suggested edits.
Sarah Woolson (57559026)
Suggested edit: After his discharge from the Army, Woolson returned to Minnesota. He married Sarah Sloper in 1869 and began a family that eventually numbered seven children, including son, Albert, Jr., who served in the Spanish-American War.
The Woolsons lived in Mankato and in St. Peter, where he worked as a wood turner in a furniture factory, before moving to Windom, Minnesota, in 1895. The town was new—it was founded after the Civil War in 1870—and there were opportunities for work. He became Superintendent of the Windom Waterworks and Electric Plant, a position he held for about a decade.
Sexton's Register gives very little information.
She is listed as Mrs. A Woolson. An Albert Woolson was the first superintendant of the Windom Lighting Plant. The family is listed in the 1900 census of Windom which gives her name, year and place of birth. They had 5 grown children.
Cause - abscess of the brain

Find a Grave contributor, 47305175 has made the following suggested edits.
Sarah Woolson (57559026)
Suggested edit: After his discharge from the Army, Woolson returned to Minnesota. He married Sarah Sloper in 1869 and began a family that eventually numbered seven children, including son, Albert, Jr., who served in the Spanish-American War.
The Woolsons lived in Mankato and in St. Peter, where he worked as a wood turner in a furniture factory, before moving to Windom, Minnesota, in 1895. The town was new—it was founded after the Civil War in 1870—and there were opportunities for work. He became Superintendent of the Windom Waterworks and Electric Plant, a position he held for about a decade.

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Mother. wife of Albert H



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