Maude May Stone 1879 –
Clarence L Stone 1881 – 1883
Lilly Stone 1884 –
Grace A Stone 1885 – 1980
Leon C Stone 1889 – 1955
Bertha Lavina Stone 1894 – 1952
Ernest C Stone 1901 – 1920
http://www.joycetice.com/1883/uniohist.htm
Luther S. Ogden, son of John and Polly Ogden, was born in Catharine, Schuyler County, N.Y., May 31st 1825, and was educated in that county and Tioga in the common schools. He removed from Catharine to Union in 1840 with his parents, who located on the site of Ogdensburg. There was no land cleared at that time where they located. Mr. Ogden learned the carpenter's trade with his father and pursued that vocation a number of years. He was married in march 1848 to Miss Betsy J. Dann, of Union, by whom he has five children - Emeline, wife of Clay Devall; Mary Alice, wife of W.W. Allen; Edgar, a merchant at Ogdensburg; Addie, wife of Charles E. Stone; and William G. Mr. Ogden has a farm of seventy acres of improved land, with good buildings and a fine apple orchard. He is one of the representative men of Union, and enjoys the confidence and esteem of his neighbors. Forty-two years ago Union was a wild and uncultivated township, and Mr. Ogden has witnessed the great change in the appearance of the country and can justly be called one of the pioneers.
Maude May Stone 1879 –
Clarence L Stone 1881 – 1883
Lilly Stone 1884 –
Grace A Stone 1885 – 1980
Leon C Stone 1889 – 1955
Bertha Lavina Stone 1894 – 1952
Ernest C Stone 1901 – 1920
http://www.joycetice.com/1883/uniohist.htm
Luther S. Ogden, son of John and Polly Ogden, was born in Catharine, Schuyler County, N.Y., May 31st 1825, and was educated in that county and Tioga in the common schools. He removed from Catharine to Union in 1840 with his parents, who located on the site of Ogdensburg. There was no land cleared at that time where they located. Mr. Ogden learned the carpenter's trade with his father and pursued that vocation a number of years. He was married in march 1848 to Miss Betsy J. Dann, of Union, by whom he has five children - Emeline, wife of Clay Devall; Mary Alice, wife of W.W. Allen; Edgar, a merchant at Ogdensburg; Addie, wife of Charles E. Stone; and William G. Mr. Ogden has a farm of seventy acres of improved land, with good buildings and a fine apple orchard. He is one of the representative men of Union, and enjoys the confidence and esteem of his neighbors. Forty-two years ago Union was a wild and uncultivated township, and Mr. Ogden has witnessed the great change in the appearance of the country and can justly be called one of the pioneers.
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