Golden Wedding Celebration of Mr. and Mrs. George Beed
March
18, 1933
The
following article taken from the Elkhorn Journal, Battle Creek.s first
newspaper, was printed in
1883, and read at the golden wedding celebration.
Highland's
constable, no doubt thinking that somebody might harm the happy pair, summoned
about a dozen able assistants to his aid, went and guarded their premises the
same evening,
took such weapons as old shotguns, cowbells, etc., which I believe kept at ball
all who would
be liable to harm them. This, of course, is rather unusual occurrence on a
Sabbath evening
but the majesty of the law must be upheld at all hazards.
Signed,
The Esq.
In
the blizzard of 1888, Mr. Beed became lost in the storm. Mrs. Beed went in
search of him
and found him wandering near the house with both eyes and his mouth frozen shut
and his mittens
frozen to his hands.
They
lived on their timber claim until 1911 when they came to Meadow Grove to make their
residence. They had both come to Madison County in covered wagons, Mr. Beed in
1872, and
Mrs. Beed in 1881.
Source: They Called It Meadow Grove, compiled by Gary Kuchar and Mrs.
Lenora Kuchar, page 153.
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