The

Edgerton

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Zephronie Edgerton, daughter of Ezekiel and Martha (Furniss) Edgerton.

 

born:

September 6, 1858; Cleveland, Cuyahoga Co., OH.

died:

May 21, 1949; Seattle, King Co., WA.  (WA State DC #8528)

buried:

Masonic Memorial Park; Tumwater, Thurston Co., WA.  (GI)

 

married:

June 25, 1878; Cuyahoga Co., OH.

 

Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove, son of Elliot and Emily (Berkshire) Cosgrove.                                                                                     PHOTO

 

born:

April 10, 1847; Tuscarawas Co., OH.

died:

March 28, 1909; Paso Robles, San Luis Obispo Co., CA.

buried:

Masonic Memorial Park; Tumwater, Thurston Co., WA.  (GI)

 

Children:

  1. Howard Goodlove, b. February 8, 1881; Cleveland, Cuyahoga Co., OH.
  2. Elliott Ezekiel, b. January 1, 1883; California.
  3. Zephronie Myrtle, b. June 18, 1885; Seattle, King Co., WA.

 


The following biography of Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove is provided by the National Governor’s Association:

 

“SAMUEL G. COSGROVE was born in Tuscarawas County, Ohio.  After serving as an infantryman in the Civil War, he received M.A. and L.L.B. degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University and was a teacher and principal of a Cleveland high school.  He moved to the Nevada mining district and then on to Pomeroy, Washington Territory in 1882, where he was president of the Pomeroy School Board for eight years and the city's mayor for five terms.  He was a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination at several state conventions before filing for nomination in the first primary after adoption of a direct primary law.  When no candidate won the majority of votes, the votes for second-choice candidates were added and Cosgrove won the nomination accordingly.  He went on to win election, but suffered a heart attack shortly thereafter.  Too weak to complete his address during his inaugural ceremony, he was granted a leave of absence.  He went to Paso Robles, California to recuperate but died there two months later.  His body was returned to Olympia and laid in the Capitol rotunda, and he was buried in the Masonic Cemetery in Olympia.”