. Biographical history of Tippecanoe, White, Jasper, Newton, Benton, Warren and Pulaski counties, Indiana . r. His children wereSarah, George H., Leonard and Jonathan. After his death his widow married, in Pickaway county, Ohio, JohnWeider, and they moved to Tippecanoe county, Indiana, about 1845, ^nd nearTaylors station, Mr. Weider entered four hundred acres of land for himselfand eighty acres for each of the Baugh children, to whom indeed he wasalways as kind as if they were his own children. He had no children of hisown. Erecting a substantial residence, he proceeded to improve his landand


. Biographical history of Tippecanoe, White, Jasper, Newton, Benton, Warren and Pulaski counties, Indiana . r. His children wereSarah, George H., Leonard and Jonathan. After his death his widow married, in Pickaway county, Ohio, JohnWeider, and they moved to Tippecanoe county, Indiana, about 1845, ^nd nearTaylors station, Mr. Weider entered four hundred acres of land for himselfand eighty acres for each of the Baugh children, to whom indeed he wasalways as kind as if they were his own children. He had no children of hisown. Erecting a substantial residence, he proceeded to improve his landand to make a comfortable home. He set out an excellent orchard, one ofthe first in his neighborhood, and it has been greatly appreciated by thefamily. He was a member of no church, was a temperate, moral and uprightman, a good neighbor and friend, a substantial citizen, and much loved andrespected. His stepsons have erected a tasteful and substantial tombstoneto his memory. He lived to the venerable age of eighty years. Mrs. Weiderin her younger days was a member of the Methodist church, but later in life. /d^-fl^^/7i^/ iy. BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY. 161 connected herself with the Lutheran church. She was a well known pioneerwoman, who brought up her children in excellent habits. Her homesteadwas known far and wide for its hospitality. Leonard Baugh, the father of the Doctor, received a common-schooleducation in his youth, and when a young man came to Tippecanoe county,Indiana, continuing in the vocation in which he had been reared, that offarming. After marriage he settled upon prairie land, which he improvedand converted into a good farm, in Union township, this county. He becamethe owner of over two hundred acres of land, and died at the comparativelyearly age of thirty-five years, in 1855, of typhoid fever. In this county hemarried Sarah A. Talbert, a daughter of Joseph and Catherine Talbert, iiceStillwell. Her father came to this county as a pioneer, was a farmer, andhis ch


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