. History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut . ago, after whichthey heard from him but twice. Mr. and Mrs. Egan have three sons: William J., Edward Ambrose G. The eldest married Alice Shackley in 1916 and is employed by the Water-bury Clock Company. The second son is a foreman with the Waterbury Buckle youngest son was graduated from the Crosby high school in 1917 and was the mu-sician of his class. CHARLES WARREN JACKSON, M. D. Dr. Charles Warren Jackson, one of the best known physicians of the Naugatuckvalley, is conducting the sanitarium known as On the Hil
. History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut . ago, after whichthey heard from him but twice. Mr. and Mrs. Egan have three sons: William J., Edward Ambrose G. The eldest married Alice Shackley in 1916 and is employed by the Water-bury Clock Company. The second son is a foreman with the Waterbury Buckle youngest son was graduated from the Crosby high school in 1917 and was the mu-sician of his class. CHARLES WARREN JACKSON, M. D. Dr. Charles Warren Jackson, one of the best known physicians of the Naugatuckvalley, is conducting the sanitarium known as On the Hill Health Resort at holds to the highest professional standards, is well equipped for his chosen callingand throughout his career has kept in touch with the trend of modern scientific thought,research and investigation, so that his methods display the most progressive ideas thathave been advanced by leading physicians and surgeons. A native of New York city, was born on the 29th of Octobei, 1864. his parents being Ebenczer Conover and. PATRIClv G. EGAN WATERBURY AND THE NAUGATUCK VALLEY 429 Fi-ances (Sillcocks) Jackson. The father was well known as a manufacturer of gratesand fenders in New York city, a business in which the Jackson family was engaged formore than two hundred and fifty years. He was a member of the firm of William & Company, of Union Square. Dr. Jackson has back of him an ancestry honorable and distinguished, for on thefamily records appear the names of Sillcocks, Hull and Conover, all of which figured,too, in connection with the Revolutionary war, having sent their representatives to the fieldin defense of American interests. In his boyhood days Dr. Jackson attended the publicschools of New York, passing through consecutive grades to the high school. Ere hisstudent days were over he became a clerk in a wholesale drug store and there remainedfor a year or more. Possessing a strong desire for professional life, he then took up th
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectwaterbu, bookyear1918