Edward Monroe Woolsey

Brief Life History of Edward Monroe

When Edward Monroe Woolsey was born on 16 April 1881, in Hancock, Pulaski, Missouri, United States, his father, James Henderson Woolsey, was 36 and his mother, Sarah Catherine Houser, was 31. He lived in Choctaw Nation Reservation, Pushmataha, Oklahoma, United States in 1900. He died on 17 June 1904, at the age of 23.

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Family Time Line

James Henderson Woolsey
1844–1920
Sarah Catherine Houser
1850–1944
Sarah Emmeline Woolsey
1869–1869
Woolsey
1891–
George Wesley Woolsey
1870–1948
John Cornelius Woolsey
1872–1933
Naomi Elizabeth Woolsey
1874–1875
Mary Tabitha Woolsey
1875–1940
Charles William Woolsey
1877–1964
Martha Rosetta Woolsey
1879–1968
Rosa Woo Wilkins
1880–1968
Edward Monroe Woolsey
1881–1904
Matilda Frances Woolsey
1882–1960
Ora Rogers
1885–1967
Nora Belle Woolsey
1887–1918
Cora Florence Woolsey
1889–1912
James Richard Woolsey
1893–1973
Walter Franklin Woolsey
1895–1960

Sources (1)

  • Edward M Woolsey in household of James H Woolsey, "United States Census, 1900"

World Events (8)

1882 · The Chinese Exclusion Act

A federal law prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers. The Act was the first law to prevent all members of a national group from immigrating to the United States.

1886

Statue of Liberty is dedicated.

1889

The Oklahoma Land Run on April 22, 1889, was the first land rush, or land opened for settlement on a first-come basis, opened to the Unassigned Lands. The land rush lured approximately 50,000 people, saddled with their fastest horses, looking to claim their piece of the newly available two million acres. The requirements included the settler to live and improve on their 160 acres for five years in order to receive the title. Choice land tempted people to hide out and get an early lead on their claim. These people became known as “sooners.” It is estimated that eleven thousand homesteads were claimed. Oklahoma Historical Society - Land Run of 1889

Name Meaning

English (Norfolk): from the Middle English personal name Wulsy (Old English Wulfsige, from wulf ‘wolf’ + sige ‘victory’). The personal name was common in Suffolk, where it gave rise to the surname of Henry VIII's minister Cardinal Wolsey.

History: George Woolsey came to New Amsterdam in New Netherland (now New York City, NY) from England via the Netherlands in 1623.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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