January 20, 1888 Idaho County Free Press |
DIED |
EASTMAN - Near Grangeville, I.T. January 12, 1888.
Joseph W. Eastman, aged 56 years. |
2nd Article
January 20, 1888 Idaho County Free Press |
SUDDEN DEATH |
The community of Camas prairie in general and Grangeville
in particular were startled and distressed to hear, on the morning of
Friday last, of the sudden death of Joseph W. Eastman, on the previous
evening. Mr. Eastman had gone to the wood shed to split some fire
wood, when he fell over in a state of insensibility, and soon breathed
his last- the cause of death being attributed to heart disease, a
complaint which on previous occasions had visited upon him similar
attacks. He was a robust and physically active, man, and his
awfully sudden removal from our midst is another illustration of the
Biblical warning that death comes when least expected. Joseph W.
Eastman was born in Corinth, Orange County, Vermont, Sept 3, 1831, and
was therefore 56 years of age. In 1852 he came to California, and
experienced the vicissitudes of pioneer life in the golden state until
1861, when he removed to Corvallis, Oregon and in 1863 left for Idaho
and settled on Craig's mountain, at the old Durken place, better known
as the Me?? Ranch, where he kept a hotel and stage station until 1868,
when he finally removed to the ranch which bears his name in the
foothills south of town. On Nov. 18, 1861 he married Mary J.
Fountain. Mr. Eastman was universally liked and respected by his
friends and neighbors, to many of whom he has extended assistance,
comfort and counsel in the hour of need. Thus one by one the
venerable patriarchs of the valley close their eyes in the eternal sleep
beneath the sod of the prairie they loved so well. The Grocks said
grandly in their tragic phrase: "Let no one be called happy
until he dies," and if happiness is the sequence of a life spent in
the contented performance of duty, then the friends of Joseph E. Eastman
need not mourn his departure into the gates Elysian, which we call
death. |
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