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Capt Hosea W. Atwood

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Capt Hosea W. Atwood Veteran

Birth
Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
9 Mar 1909 (aged 71)
Collins, Story County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Collins, Story County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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DEATH OF H. W. ATWOOD
It is our painful duty to chronicle the death of H. W. Atwood of Clear Creek Township. He took suddenly ill at the supper table of his home Monday. Dr. Knepper was called and found the patient suffering from appendicitis. Remedies were given and, while his condition was undoubtedly serious, he rallied wonderfully for a few hours. But death came very suddenly Tuesday 5:20 p.m. He died of heart failure and was ill less than 24 hours.
The deceased was a leading grand army man in his neighborhood, an honored citizen and a loyal friend. The funeral is being held at the M. E. church of Collins as we go to press. We will have full obituary notice in our issue next week. In the meantime we join in the sympathy of a large circle of friends in Collins township and Jasper County for the bereaved wife and family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hosea W. Atwood was born in Susquehannah county, Penn., July 2, 1837. Died at his home near Collins, Iowa, March 9, 1909.
He came with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Atwood to Sycamore, Ill., in 1851 when but forteen years of age. He was the fifth in order of birth of a family of nine children. He grew to manhood in Sycamore, Ill., where he enlisted in the army in April 1862. He was first Lieut. and for bravery in the field was promoted to Captain of Co. F 65th Ill. Inft. Was taken prisoner at Harper's Ferry and remained a prisoner about fourteen months. After his release he returned to his regiment and served till the close of the war.
The funeral was held Thursday afternoon in the M.E. church, which was crowded to the door. Rev. C. E. Burton of Dawson, formerly of Collins, and (illegible) friend of the deceased, presided and preached a tender and sympathetic sermon in which he referred to the deceased as a loving father and a brave soldier of his country in her time of peril, and speaking of his own father's death when the conditions were similar. Rev. Burton was assisted in the exercises by Rev. H. A. Hayes of Collins.
An efficient chorus choir sang the hymns and Jas. G. Gingles sang a solo "In the Upper Garden." All the selections were given with touching sympathy and all were by request of the bereaved wife, Mrs. Atwood. Beautiful floral tributes were abundant.
He was united in marriage at Beloit, Wis., Nov. 15, 1865, to Miss Martha Stark of Sycamore, Ill. The following spring they moved to Nebraska and resided there nearly two years, then moving back to Sycamore, where he was city marshal for seven years. They moved from Sycamore to near Collins, Iowa, in 1883, where he continued to reside until his death.
To Mr. and Mrs. Atwood were born six children: Richard M. and John O. of Mingo, Iowa; Henry J. of DeKalb, Ill.; Stark of Collins, Iowa; Mrs. E. J. Landfors of Des Moines, Iowa; and Morris G., who resides on the home farm; also ten grandchildren all of whom, with his wife, survive. He also leaves one brother and three sisters.
The I.O.O.F. closed the service at the church with the funeral ritualistic exercises of the order, led by W. H. Thompson and W. T. B. Shenkle.
The interment was at Evergreen Cemetery, where the G.A.R. conducted their burial exercises with great impressiveness. The choir sang a tender selection and the "eartly house" of the gallant comrade was consigned "earth to earth; dust to dust."
Capt. Atwood was one of Nature's noblemen, a brave soldier, a good citizen, devoted husband and loving father, a true friend and ever faithful to his fraternal relations.
All the members of deceased's family were present at the funeral, also the brother of deceased, C. P. Atwood of Anamosa, Iowa, his oldest sister, Mrs. Mary Ann Mitchell of Sycamore, Ill.; his niece, Mrs. Cora Tadd of DeKalb, Ill; Mrs. Atwood's three brothers, Harmon Stark, with wife, of Kingston, Ill.; Henry J. and Theran Stark of Sycamore, Ill.; and Mrs. Stark's (sic) sisters, Mrs. Ella Brower and Mrs. Hattie Lee of Sycamore, Ill.
*****
The monument to Capt. Atwood in the Collins Cemetery is a handsome addition to the many fine monuments in our city of the dead. It is of gray granite, weight 9300 lbs. (?!) and the workmanship is chaste and, like the monument, in keeping with the Captain's strong and unaffected personality. The inscription is as follows:
Capt. H. W. Atwood
1837-1909
Co. F, 65 Ill. Inft.
DEATH OF H. W. ATWOOD
It is our painful duty to chronicle the death of H. W. Atwood of Clear Creek Township. He took suddenly ill at the supper table of his home Monday. Dr. Knepper was called and found the patient suffering from appendicitis. Remedies were given and, while his condition was undoubtedly serious, he rallied wonderfully for a few hours. But death came very suddenly Tuesday 5:20 p.m. He died of heart failure and was ill less than 24 hours.
The deceased was a leading grand army man in his neighborhood, an honored citizen and a loyal friend. The funeral is being held at the M. E. church of Collins as we go to press. We will have full obituary notice in our issue next week. In the meantime we join in the sympathy of a large circle of friends in Collins township and Jasper County for the bereaved wife and family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hosea W. Atwood was born in Susquehannah county, Penn., July 2, 1837. Died at his home near Collins, Iowa, March 9, 1909.
He came with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Atwood to Sycamore, Ill., in 1851 when but forteen years of age. He was the fifth in order of birth of a family of nine children. He grew to manhood in Sycamore, Ill., where he enlisted in the army in April 1862. He was first Lieut. and for bravery in the field was promoted to Captain of Co. F 65th Ill. Inft. Was taken prisoner at Harper's Ferry and remained a prisoner about fourteen months. After his release he returned to his regiment and served till the close of the war.
The funeral was held Thursday afternoon in the M.E. church, which was crowded to the door. Rev. C. E. Burton of Dawson, formerly of Collins, and (illegible) friend of the deceased, presided and preached a tender and sympathetic sermon in which he referred to the deceased as a loving father and a brave soldier of his country in her time of peril, and speaking of his own father's death when the conditions were similar. Rev. Burton was assisted in the exercises by Rev. H. A. Hayes of Collins.
An efficient chorus choir sang the hymns and Jas. G. Gingles sang a solo "In the Upper Garden." All the selections were given with touching sympathy and all were by request of the bereaved wife, Mrs. Atwood. Beautiful floral tributes were abundant.
He was united in marriage at Beloit, Wis., Nov. 15, 1865, to Miss Martha Stark of Sycamore, Ill. The following spring they moved to Nebraska and resided there nearly two years, then moving back to Sycamore, where he was city marshal for seven years. They moved from Sycamore to near Collins, Iowa, in 1883, where he continued to reside until his death.
To Mr. and Mrs. Atwood were born six children: Richard M. and John O. of Mingo, Iowa; Henry J. of DeKalb, Ill.; Stark of Collins, Iowa; Mrs. E. J. Landfors of Des Moines, Iowa; and Morris G., who resides on the home farm; also ten grandchildren all of whom, with his wife, survive. He also leaves one brother and three sisters.
The I.O.O.F. closed the service at the church with the funeral ritualistic exercises of the order, led by W. H. Thompson and W. T. B. Shenkle.
The interment was at Evergreen Cemetery, where the G.A.R. conducted their burial exercises with great impressiveness. The choir sang a tender selection and the "eartly house" of the gallant comrade was consigned "earth to earth; dust to dust."
Capt. Atwood was one of Nature's noblemen, a brave soldier, a good citizen, devoted husband and loving father, a true friend and ever faithful to his fraternal relations.
All the members of deceased's family were present at the funeral, also the brother of deceased, C. P. Atwood of Anamosa, Iowa, his oldest sister, Mrs. Mary Ann Mitchell of Sycamore, Ill.; his niece, Mrs. Cora Tadd of DeKalb, Ill; Mrs. Atwood's three brothers, Harmon Stark, with wife, of Kingston, Ill.; Henry J. and Theran Stark of Sycamore, Ill.; and Mrs. Stark's (sic) sisters, Mrs. Ella Brower and Mrs. Hattie Lee of Sycamore, Ill.
*****
The monument to Capt. Atwood in the Collins Cemetery is a handsome addition to the many fine monuments in our city of the dead. It is of gray granite, weight 9300 lbs. (?!) and the workmanship is chaste and, like the monument, in keeping with the Captain's strong and unaffected personality. The inscription is as follows:
Capt. H. W. Atwood
1837-1909
Co. F, 65 Ill. Inft.


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  • Created by: Burt
  • Added: Jun 24, 2008
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/27783481/hosea_w-atwood: accessed ), memorial page for Capt Hosea W. Atwood (2 Jul 1837–9 Mar 1909), Find a Grave Memorial ID 27783481, citing Collins Cemetery, Collins, Story County, Iowa, USA; Maintained by Burt (contributor 46867609).