. British bee journal & bee-keepers adviser. Bees. Jan. 26, 1905.] THE BRITISH BEE JOURNAL. 35 established a very large photographic busi- ness at New Jersey. He always returned home reinvigorated by his American trip, the last outing being notified in our pages a few months ago. The latest communication received at Bromley from Mrs. Campbell mentioned his having paid a visit to Philadelphia, and the weather turning cold very suddenly, he caught a chill, which caused him to return to New Jersey at once, where he was con- died in 1889. He never had any family, but of late years Mr. Edwin R.
. British bee journal & bee-keepers adviser. Bees. Jan. 26, 1905.] THE BRITISH BEE JOURNAL. 35 established a very large photographic busi- ness at New Jersey. He always returned home reinvigorated by his American trip, the last outing being notified in our pages a few months ago. The latest communication received at Bromley from Mrs. Campbell mentioned his having paid a visit to Philadelphia, and the weather turning cold very suddenly, he caught a chill, which caused him to return to New Jersey at once, where he was con- died in 1889. He never had any family, but of late years Mr. Edwin R. Seadon (who is seen in the apiary along with Mr. Baldwin), son of Mrs. Seadon, has been intended to carry on the business for his mother, and was very carefully trained with that object by Mr. Baldwin himself. Indeed, Mr. Seadon for some years has, we learn, done all the expert work con- nected with the apiary, and is fully ac- quainted with all the necessary details of. MR. S. J. BALDWIN S APIARY, BROMLEY, KENT. fined to his room for some days. The last letter he ever wrote was penned from this room on Boxing Day, and in it he men- tions " having to keep his room through a bad cold, but hoped to be well enough to start for home on January 7, for which date his passage had been already ; He died on December 30, and was in- terred at Elizabeth, New Jersey, It will, we think, surprise many besides ourselves to find that our late friend would have completed his seventy-third year on March 20 next had he lived. The portrait on page 34 is from the latest photograph of him, taken in America at Mr. Camp- bell's studio. Mr. Baldwin has willed the business to Mrs. Elizabeth Seadon, who was his de- voted housekeeper during the whole time he was a widower, Mrs. Baldwin having the business in all its branches, so that it will continue, as heretofore, at the old place under the old name. (" Notes by the Way" continued from page 33.) bee-keeping—tx> wh
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