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Aaron G. Anderson

Birth
Ellington, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
Death
27 Dec 1937 (aged 73)
Ellington, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
Burial
Ellington, Chautauqua County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Obituary: Jamestown NY Evening Journal, December 27, 1937
AARON G. ANDERSON
Former Town Superintendent of Highways Is Found Dead in Bed at His Home Near Ellington.
ELLINGTON, Aaron G. Anderson, aged 74 years, was found dead in bed at his home near here this morning at 8 o'clock. Death was believed by Coroner Henry C. Wadsworth to have been caused by a stroke.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Shaw Anderson, at home; two sons, George S. Anderson at home and Clair Anderson of Falconer; three brothers, George J., Arthur and Charles Anderson, all of Ellington; a sister, Mrs. Jennie Corey of Hinsdale, Mass., and two grandchildren, Dorothy and Donald Anderson, both of Falconer.
For the past several years, Mr. Anderson's Percheron stallion entries had carried off blue ribbon honors in horse shows at the county fair. He had been town superintendent of highways for 16 years prior to 1920.

Although his obituary does not specify where he was buried, the town clerk's records, death certificates, show that he was buried in Ellington and his wife was buried in Pioneer Cemetery.
Obituary: Jamestown NY Evening Journal, December 27, 1937
AARON G. ANDERSON
Former Town Superintendent of Highways Is Found Dead in Bed at His Home Near Ellington.
ELLINGTON, Aaron G. Anderson, aged 74 years, was found dead in bed at his home near here this morning at 8 o'clock. Death was believed by Coroner Henry C. Wadsworth to have been caused by a stroke.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Shaw Anderson, at home; two sons, George S. Anderson at home and Clair Anderson of Falconer; three brothers, George J., Arthur and Charles Anderson, all of Ellington; a sister, Mrs. Jennie Corey of Hinsdale, Mass., and two grandchildren, Dorothy and Donald Anderson, both of Falconer.
For the past several years, Mr. Anderson's Percheron stallion entries had carried off blue ribbon honors in horse shows at the county fair. He had been town superintendent of highways for 16 years prior to 1920.

Although his obituary does not specify where he was buried, the town clerk's records, death certificates, show that he was buried in Ellington and his wife was buried in Pioneer Cemetery.


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