Family: George W Mabon / Carrie Baker (F722) [1, 2]
-
Male
George W Mabon
Birth May 1845 New York Death 1927 Burial Mount View Cemetery, Pekin, NY Marriage Father Alexander Mabon | F2799 Group Sheet Mother Phoebe A Longstreet | F2799 Group Sheet
Female
Carrie Baker
Birth 1854 Cambria, Niagara, NY Death 27 Nov 1948 Burial 29 Nov 1948 Mount View Cemetery, Pekin, NY Father Oscar F Baker | F479 Group Sheet Mother Sarah Jane LeVan | F479 Group Sheet
Female
+ Grace E Mabon
Birth 22 Jan 1882 Missouri Death 26 Mar 1973 San Diego Co, CA Burial Spouse John F Landy | F2795 Marriage
Male
+ Carl Robert Mabon
Birth 2 Feb 1883 Missouri Death Jan 1980 Niagara Falls, Niagara, NY Burial Spouse Grace Waggoner | F2800 Marriage
Female
+ Leona B Mabon
Birth 30 May 1887 Pekin, Niagara, NY Death 30 Jun 1937 San Diego Co, CA Burial Spouse Jesse Munson Coykendall | F2796 Marriage 16 Sep 1906 Niagara Falls, Niagara, NY Spouse Harry Leo Forsythe | F2797 Marriage 4 Oct 1927 Morrow Co, OH
Male
+ Leroy Winfield Mabon
Birth 16 Jun 1893 Bradford, McKean, PA Death 3 Aug 1970 Niagara Falls, Niagara, ONT Burial Fairview Cemetery, Niagara Falls, ONT Spouse Jennie Stella Tenbroeck | F2790 Marriage 12 Sep 1922 St Davids, Lincoln, ONT
-
Histories Genealogical record of the Le Van family
-
Notes - from "The Lockport Daily Journal", 1882 (fultonhistory.com)
A GOOD COUNTRY
Mr. GEORGE MABON of Pekin, writes from Canton, Mo., his present home, that the storm which destroyed CRIST'S evaporator, also demolished the windows and chimneys of his planing mill. He writes that the thunder and lightning was seen and heard for eighteen consecutive hours, doing much damage to buildings, trees and stock. He lost a valuable cow, which was killed by lightning. Niagara county farmers wishing to exchange their valuable farms for western property, would do well to correspond with some whose property has been blown out of existence. A country where the people have to chain down the wells to prevent them from being blown out of the ground, is no place for light weights. Better stay here and starve to death with the present crops, than to go to a country where you have to walk under ground to prevent being blown "clean off the world."
- from "The Lockport Daily Journal", 1882 (fultonhistory.com)
-