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J.W. Parmley : ウィキペディア英語版
J.W. Parmley
J.W. Parmley was a pioneer and early developer of the north central region of South Dakota during its early statehood. He is considered the “Father of the Yellowstone Trail,” and is today memorialized by the J.W. Parmley Historical Home and Parmley Western Land Office museums in Ipswich, South Dakota.
==Life and Family==
Joseph William Lincoln Parmley was born January 12, 1861 in Mifflin, Wisconsin to parents originally from Durham County, England. His father was also named Joseph Parmley. His mother, Jane Ashton Parmley, died when he was seventeen. He had a brother, John Pearson Parmley, and a sister, Sarah Tamar Parmley. In Wisconsin, he attended school at Platteview Normal in Platteville, and also Lawrence College at Appleton.
On October 13, 1887, he married Melissa Baker, who was also of English descent and grew up in Wisconsin. They would have three children: Loren, Irene, and Bernice, who died before she was two of scarlet fever. J. W. Parmley himself would die on December 12, 1940.〔Trotzig “Joe Parmley: South Dakota Pioneer and Roadbuilder” p. 22〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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