Birth: 22 APR 1841, Olive,Noble,OH
Death: 27 OCT 1908, Caldwell,Noble,OH
Burial: 29 OCT 1908, Olive,Noble,OH,Olive Cemetery
 
  BIRTH: 22 Apr 1841 near Olive, Noble Co., OH
 
  AKA: Martha Eagler
 
  OBITUARY: 1841 Mrs. B.F. Atkinson 1908
  On a beautiful autumn day, the twenty-seventh of October [1908] at her home in   Caldwell, Ohio, surrounded by her immediate family, calmly as an infant closes   its eyes in slumber, thus calmly and peacefully did Lydia Martha Atkinson passed   to her long sleep and her spirit returned to the God who gave it.
 
  She was born near Olive, in Noble county, O., April 22, 1841, her parents being   John and Mary (Schofield) Eagler both natives of Pennsylvania.  In the early   years of the last century they settled in what is now Noble county, to which   union were born the following children: Elizabeth (deceased); Will and Joseph   both residing in Illinois; Charles of Macksburg; Lydia Martha, the subject of   this sketch; John (deceased); Nancy J. of Macksburg; and David.
 
  She obeyed the scriptural injunction: "Remember now thy Creator in the days of   thy youth," having united [with] the Methodist Episcopal church [at] the age   of sixteen.
 
  On the third [day] of September 1865, she was united in marriage with B.F.   Atkinson and [trans]ferred her membership to the [Christ]ian Church of which   her hus[band] was a member, thus for nearing ... century theirs was a united   .. in all things religious, as well [as] social and moral.
 
  She was an ... ... christian, wife and mother, one whose christian character   portrayed itself in all her daily walk and conversation, and her absence from   her loved ones leaves aching hearts whose consolation rests in the faith that   wife, mother and sister has gone to her Savior [sic] as she so earnestly prayed   to do during her long sickness.
 
  Mrs. Atkinson's sickness dates from the 25th of April last and she has been   confined to her bed for the past seven weeks, during all of which time she was   a most patient sufferer, never complaining and hoping for the best.  When it   became evident to her that her days were nearly numbered and the sands of life   were nearly run, her contentment was perfect for she had long ago "set her  house in order," and occupied much of her last hours in arranging for the   welfare of her family.
 
  On the 22nd day of April, 1886, the family removed from their home in Macksburg   and have ever since made their home in Caldwell, a community whose loving   kindness and sympathy cannot be bounded by time but reaches beyond into the   sunshine of Eternity.
 
  She leaves behind to mourn their great loss, besides brothers and sisters, a   lonely husband and the following children: William S. Atkinson, Miss Mary   Atkinson, Mrs. Alma Quick, Mrs. Lillie Kean, Mrs. Jessie Way of Wheeling,   W.Va., Mrs. Bertha Brennan, and C.F. Atkinson of Dexter City, Ohio, one sweet   little infant, Lula Jones, whom she has joined after many years of waiting,   never again to part, but who watch and wait with beckoning hands until they all   may be reunited in the home, "Over There."
 
  The last sad rites will be conducted by Rev. L.W. Finley at the family   residence on Main St., Thursday, at 10 a.m. after which interment will be made   in the Olive cemetery.
  (Source: undated newspaper clipping - furnished by Gary Chesney)
  
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