Frederick Ayskamp died at his home near the Gibson paper mill Tuesday morning after an illness of 11 months of kidney trouble. He was born in Holland 51 years ago and came to this country, settling in Kalamazoo when he was 31 years of age. For the past 18 years he had been engineer at the Gibson mill. There survive four daughters, Mrs. B. Van Dyke, Mrs. Walter Slater and Miss Lizzie Ayskamp, of Kalamazoo and Mrs. Mathew Bauters, of Boston, Mass., and five sons, John, Albert, George, Fred and Harry all of this city. The funeral will be held at the home Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. John Robbert will officiate. Burial will be In Riverside. Kalamazoo Evening Telegraph October 5, 1904 page 10
Frederick Ayskamp died at his home near the Gibson paper mill Tuesday morning after an illness of 11 months of kidney trouble. He was born in Holland 51 years ago and came to this country, settling in Kalamazoo when he was 31 years of age. For the past 18 years he had been engineer at the Gibson mill. There survive four daughters, Mrs. B. Van Dyke, Mrs. Walter Slater and Miss Lizzie Ayskamp, of Kalamazoo and Mrs. Mathew Bauters, of Boston, Mass., and five sons, John, Albert, George, Fred and Harry all of this city. The funeral will be held at the home Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. John Robbert will officiate. Burial will be In Riverside. Kalamazoo Evening Telegraph October 5, 1904 page 10
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