Obit: Boardman, August (1837 - 1914)
Contact: Stan
Surnames: BOARDMAN
FULTS FRANK ----Source:
REPUBLIC (Stanley, Clark County, Wis.) 04/09/1914 Boardman, A. (17
MAR 1837 - 1 Apr 1914) August Boardman
died at his home in this village (Stanley, Clark County, Wis.)
about 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 1, 1914, aged seventy-seven
years and fourteen days. Mr. Boardman was born in Tioga Co., Penn.,
on March 17, 1837, and was the son of Benoni Boardman, a native of
Cattaraugus Co., N.Y. In 1852 the family moved to Olmsted Co.,
Minn., and in 1872 Mr. Boardman came to Clark County, Wis., and
took up a homestead of 160 acres, which now comprises a large part
of the east one-half portion of the village of Stanley. Here Mr.
Boardman as the fist settler, began to clear land and build a home,
and in the spring of 1873 was followed by several others with like
purposes in view. He also began handling supplies needed by the new
settlers hauling his good from Chippewa Falls, Greenwood and later
from Colby, and also became the first postmaster, the place being
then known as North Fork. In 1876 the town of Stanley was formed,
the territory including the present town of Withee, Stanley,
Reseburg, Worden and village of Stanley, and Mr. Boardman was
elected chairman, which office he held for several terms. The new
railroad came through in 1880 and cut Mr. Boardman's homestead
through the center. This progressive period he heartily welcomed,
the event being celebrated in a becoming manner by the settlers
hereabouts. He was a man of generous impulses and never forgot the
hospitable ways of the pioneer. He had borne adversity bravely and
enjoyed prosperity quietly. He had filled the various relations of
life, as son, husband, father, brother and friend, and filled them
well. Who can do more? Another name is stricken from the ever
lessening roll of our old settlers. His life work was done, and
well done. How much this town owes him it is impossible to
estimate, though it would be a grateful task to trace his influence
in his various characters of husband and father, of neighbor and
friend, to perpetuate his name and emulate his virtues. But it
comes not within this brief article to do so. Suffice it to say he
lived nobly and died peacefully. The stern Reaper found him "as a
shock of corn, full ripe for the harvest." Mr. Boardman was united
in marriage with Miss Servile L. Fults on Feb. 13, 1860, at
Rochester, Minn., who shared with him the joys and sorrows of life
for a period of forty-nine years, and on Dec. 7, 1909, passed
peacefully into that slumber which spans the dark gulf between time
and eternity. Mr. Boardman is survived by three children, Anson and
Melvin Boardman, and Mrs. W.J. Frank, all residents of this
village, and one brother, Marcus Boardman, of Rochester, Minn. five
children preceded him into the beyond. The funeral took place on
Saturday afternoon last from the residence, the services being
conducted by the officers of Forest Queen Lodge No. 321 I.O.O.F.,
of which Order deceased had been a member for thirty years,
interment following in the Stanley Village Cemetery. © Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
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