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Mamie E. <I>Stott</I> Neiswanger

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Mamie E. Stott Neiswanger

Birth
Dakota County, Nebraska, USA
Death
26 Jan 1909 (aged 43)
Dakota City, Dakota County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Dakota City, Dakota County, Nebraska, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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The grim messenger of death has again entered the home of a Dakota City family and carried away one who was the guardian angel of that household. On Tuesday morning at nine o'clock Mrs D M Neiswanger answered the summons that sooner or later will come to us all. She had been sick only one about week, with an attack of pleurisy, which, with other complications that set in, was more than her frail constitution would bear and her life soon ebbed away. Mamie E Stott was was born in Covington, this county, May 12, 1865, Her mother passed away when she was but ten days old, leaving her to the tender care of elder sisters. The family soon afterward moved to Dakota City, where Mamie grew to womenhood, and on November 25, 1886, was married to David M Neiswanger. A husband and four ohildren: Nana, Kathleen, Barbara and Stott, are left to mourn the loss of a devoted wife and mother. The funeral services were held on Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Lutheran church, and were conducted by Rev W 8 Oberholtzer. The remains were deposited in their last long resting place in the Dakota City cemetery.

Published in the Dakota County Herald, Dakota City, Nebraska Friday, January 29, 1909 Page 5

Note: Covington is a ghost town in Dakota County, existing from 1857 until 1893. It eventually became part of South Sioux City.

Children were James Stott; Wona (Mrs H C Paguin), Kathleen (Mrs Frank G Bordner), and Barbara (Mrs Dan J Buckley). David Melville Neiswanger remarried Elizabeth Hoase on May 4, 1911. He died Sept 11, 1926. [See entry for Elizabeth Neiswanger in "Dakota County" by Elizabeth H. Neiswanger NEGenNeb Project Dakota County Who's Who in Nebraska, 1940]

The grim messenger of death has again entered the home of a Dakota City family and carried away one who was the guardian angel of that household. On Tuesday morning at nine o'clock Mrs D M Neiswanger answered the summons that sooner or later will come to us all. She had been sick only one about week, with an attack of pleurisy, which, with other complications that set in, was more than her frail constitution would bear and her life soon ebbed away. Mamie E Stott was was born in Covington, this county, May 12, 1865, Her mother passed away when she was but ten days old, leaving her to the tender care of elder sisters. The family soon afterward moved to Dakota City, where Mamie grew to womenhood, and on November 25, 1886, was married to David M Neiswanger. A husband and four ohildren: Nana, Kathleen, Barbara and Stott, are left to mourn the loss of a devoted wife and mother. The funeral services were held on Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Lutheran church, and were conducted by Rev W 8 Oberholtzer. The remains were deposited in their last long resting place in the Dakota City cemetery.

Published in the Dakota County Herald, Dakota City, Nebraska Friday, January 29, 1909 Page 5

Note: Covington is a ghost town in Dakota County, existing from 1857 until 1893. It eventually became part of South Sioux City.

Children were James Stott; Wona (Mrs H C Paguin), Kathleen (Mrs Frank G Bordner), and Barbara (Mrs Dan J Buckley). David Melville Neiswanger remarried Elizabeth Hoase on May 4, 1911. He died Sept 11, 1926. [See entry for Elizabeth Neiswanger in "Dakota County" by Elizabeth H. Neiswanger NEGenNeb Project Dakota County Who's Who in Nebraska, 1940]



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