[ Return to Index ] [ Read Prev Msg ] [ Read Next Msg ]

Lyon, George W.

LYON

Posted By: Ken Wright (email)
Date: 4/8/2007 at 10:42:51

George W. Lyon who has been confined to his home for many weeks, passed away Sunday morning, shortley after six o'clock. George W. Lyon was born in Greencastle, Indiana, May 30, 1871. He was a son of Valentine Lyon and Zurelda Myres Lyon. His boyhood days were spent on a farm in Owen County, Indiana, where he grew to manhood receiving a common school education from the public schools. At the age of eighteen he received a teacher's license and began to teach at the public schools of Putnam County, Indiana, where he taught for fourteen years. He attended the high school at Danville, Indiana, State Normal School at Terre Haute, Indiana, and was finally graduated from the Indiana Normal School at Valpariaso. He was first married to Eva L. Rockford of Camanche, Iowa, in 1891, and to this union was born one son, Leonard Lyon, who now lives with his aunt, Mrs. Leonard Smith at Camanche. The subject of this sketch moved to Clinton, Iowa, where they resided until the health of Mrs. Lyon became so bad they moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where after eighteen months of intense suffering, Mrs. Lyon passed away. Soon afterwards George was employed as bookkeeper by the gas company at Maquoketa where he has resided ever since. In May, 1912, he was married to Edna Grace Knight at Maquoketa, Iowa, who survives him. He is also survived by eight brothers and two sisters. The ancestors of George Lyon originated in Arcadia and were part of those French Arcadians who were banished by the British and cast ashore in Maryland, afterward they passed over to Fluvama County, Virginia, where the father of the subject of this sketch was born on April 3, 1798. He afterwards moved with his father Samuel Lyon to Shibyvill, Kentucky, and in 1820 moved to the wild woods of Owen County, Indiana, where he raised 23 children, one of whom was our subject, George Lyon. Mr. Lyon in his early life was converted and joined the Presbyterian Church. He was a man who believed in being honest and upright and once a friend, always a friend. He was a true and devoted husband and a kind and loving father. Funeral services were held at one o'clock Tuesday afternoon from the Knight home on West Platt Street, Rev. V.H. Ruring officiating, and the body was shipped to Camanche, Iowa, for burial(Maquoketa Excelsior-Record, March 19, 1914.)


 

Jackson Obituaries maintained by Nettie Mae Lucas.
WebBBS 4.33 Genealogy Modification Package by WebJourneymen

[ Return to Index ] [ Read Prev Msg ] [ Read Next Msg ]