NamePearl BABCOCK214
Birth23 Aug 1863, Fremont, Lyon Co., Kansas
Death3 May 1910
BurialEvergreen Cemetery, Albion, Dane Co., Wisconsin
FatherThomas E. BABCOCK (1817-1879)
MotherEliza POTTER (1824-1917)
Spouses
Birth17 Oct 1869, Albion, Dane Co., Wisconsin
Death5 Dec 1964
BurialEvergreen Cemetery, Albion, Dane Co., Wisconsin
ReligionSeventh-Day Baptist
FatherFranklin Rial WESCOTT (1827-1907)
MotherHarriet Adella LANGWORTHY (1827-1916)
Marriage18 Oct 1886, Albion, Dane Co., Wisconsin174
ChildrenLetta C. (Ione) (1887-1962)
 Harriet B. (1889-1969)
 Thomas LeClaire (1890-)
Notes for Pearl BABCOCK
Pearl Babcock 1863-1910  
"The Sabbath Recorder", Vol 68, No 21, p 670, May 23, 1910.
  At his home in Oshkosh, Wis., May 3, 1910, Pearl Babcock, in the forty-seventh year of his age.
  He was the only son of the late Rev. Thomas E. and Eliza Potter Babcock, born near Emporia, Kan., August 23, 1863.   He came with his parents to Albion in 1864, where he grew to manhood.   After a course of training in Albion Academy, he graduated from the musical department of Milton College in 1883.
  He was baptized by Eld. S. H. Babcock and joined the Albion Seventh-day Baptist Church in 1886.   His marriage to Louise, daughter of Franklin L. Wescott, occurred the same year.   For many years he wrought at his trade as a sign-painter with rare skill in the city of Oshkosh.   Having also a fine gift for music, he was identified with the musical interests of that city.
  Though suffering from poor health for a number of years, his final illness was brief.   He was brought to Albion for burial by the side of his father.   Funeral services in the presence of a large circle of relatives and friends of former years, was conducted by Pastor Van Horn at the home of his mother, Mrs. Eliza Crandall, on Sabbath afternoon, May 7.   The text: "And when he saw her, he had compassion on her and said, Weep not."   The aged mother, the wife, three children - Ione, Harriet and Thomas L. - and an adopted sister, Mrs. J. J. Noble, are thus left in sorrow and loneliness by his departure.     T. J. V.

Individual Record 1880 United States Census
Pearl BABCOCK
Male
Other Information:
Birth Year <1864>
Birthplace KS
Age 16
Occupation Farmer
Marital Status S <Single>
Race W <White>
Head of Household Eliza P. BABCOCK
Relation Son
Father's Birthplace NY
Mother's Birthplace NY
Source Information:
Census Place Albion, Dane, Wisconsin
Family History Library Film 1255421
NA Film Number T9-1421
Page Number 183A

FAMILY REMINISCENCES contributed by Louise Wescott Pauly
Oshkosh, Wisconsin was a booming, fast growing lumber town at the junction of the Fox River and Lake Winnebago. There was beginning to be enough prosperity and leisure to allow an interest in “culture”, and they decided the town should have a band. (If you know the musical, “The Music Man”, it caricatures what was a real hunger in the new communities growing up all over America.) They recruited back East for specific instrumentalists, and Grump Pearl was recruited as the oboeist. There is a fine museum in Oshkosh which has many items in its collection concerning this project. The musicians arrived from a variety of places, and the band was a great success. Everyone loved it, and community pride was high. There was just one problem. The musicians had an insistent and stubborn desire to eat three squares a day,. In the early months they were probably given hearty welcomes in the homes of the many supporters of the band, and the promised stipends were paid, but the community gradually lost interest in providing the financial support. The band continued, and was still popular, but many became only part-time musicians of necessity. Pearl was an artist. I gave one of his oil paintings to the Oshkosh Museum, and I have one up here with me. He was a hunter, and the scenes he painted usually reflected this love of the outdoors. Music was important in his home, and his two daughters both became quite competent on the piano. My mother loved and played Chopin lovingly until what we now call Alzheimer’s took her consciousness-but after almost all her cognitive skills were lost, the one communication we had left between us was playing recordings for her of her favorite music, much of which she had learned to love and play from Pearl.

However, however great his artistic talents were, he put food on the table by setting up as a sign painter, which served as his chief occupation thenceforth. In the 1940’s there were still several signs around town left from his output-precise, often gold-leafed, mostly restrained and utilitarian, to suit the desires of his customers. In these times he carried most of his kit around with him as he moved from one location to another to ply his skills. He rode the “slowest bicycle in town”-a tribute to his dignity and dexterity in moving not only himself but his tools and supplies from one job to another and back to home. If you ride a bike, you’ll understand the praise implicit in it. A quiet man, who did his work, loved music, and was a kind, loving and indulgent father. His wife Louise was the “Grump Wescott” of the family, a role which was, of course, much needed too. Tom and Harriet were a mischievous pair who got away with a lot with Pearl, but not too much, because of Louise.

The Louise Ellingsrud, quoted in the Franklin Rial Wescott notes, was somewhat of a mother figure for me in the Edgerton area when we visited there. Her description of “Grump Wescott” matches the picture I got of him from my mother and her siblings,-a no-nonsense, energetic personality, as was, of course, needed in those “Little House in the Big Woods” days. Evidently, from Ione Babcock’s understanding of family reminiscences, she considered that Caldicott Award winning book could, in most ways, have been the story of Franklin Rial Wescott on arrival in Wisconsin, except that he stuck it out and made a go of it.


Res. 1902 Oshkosh, Wis.
1889 Milton Junction, WI
Notes for Louise May (Spouse 1)
Individual Record 1880 United States Census
Louisa M. WESCOTT
Female
Other Information:
Birth Year <1870>
Birthplace WI
Age 10
Occupation At School
Marital Status S
Race W
Head of Household Franklin R. WESCOTT
Relation Dau
Father's Birthplace NY
Mother's Birthplace NY
Source Information:
Census Place Albion, Dane, Wisconsin
Family History Library Film 1255421
NA Film Number T9-1421
Page Number 178C

of Oshkosh, WI in 1917
Louise resided with her daughter Ione in Oshkosh, WI, in 1948

Louise Wescott Babcock was received 6/5/1886 by baptism and dismissed only at death 12/6/1964.177
Last Modified 12 Apr 2010Created 17 Jan 2012 using Reunion for Macintosh