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Woodruff's funeral in the Salt Lake Tabernacle Grave marker of Wilford Woodruff Grave marker of Wilford Woodruff. Woodruff died in San Francisco, California, on September 2, 1898, after a failed bladder surgery. [136] He was succeeded as church president by his son-in-law, Lorenzo Snow. Woodruff was buried at the Salt Lake City Cemetery. [137]
Woodruff also stated that by 1885, he had "had 45 persons adopted to me". [10] Woodruff recorded in his diary that when the sealing rooms of the St. George Temple were dedicated in January 1877, Woodruff—who was the temple president—adopted two couples to Brigham Young. [11]
Wilford Woodruff with his son, Abraham Owen Woodruff, 1897. On November 23, 1872, Woodruff was born just south of Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Wilford Woodruff and Emma Smith Woodruff. [3] He was the sixth of eight children. His mother was the second plural wife of Wilford Woodruff and the niece of Abraham O. Smoot, after whom Woodruff ...
Ohio's 19th House of Representatives district is currently represented by Democrat Phil Robinson.It is located entirely within Cuyahoga County and includes the municipalities of Bedford, Bedford Heights, Bentleyville, Brecksville, Chagrin Falls, Chagrin Falls Township, Cuyahoga Heights, Glenwillow, Hunting Valley, Independence, Mayfield Heights, Moreland Hills, Newburgh Heights, Orange, Pepper ...
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Southern Ohio, northern Kentucky and large swaths of Indiana saw some of the biggest increases in April rainfall in the Ohio Valley — as much as 5 to 6 inches more than usual in 2024, according ...
Cowles–Woodruff House, Macon, Georgia; Woodruff House (Hillside, New Jersey) Woodruff House (Cornwall, New York) William H. Woodruff House, Green Township, Hocking County, Ohio, listed on the NRHP in Hocking County, Ohio; Charles Woodruff House (Wyoming, Ohio) Asahel Hart Woodruff House, Salt Lake City, Utah, listed on the NRHP in Salt Lake ...
Ron Burch, TV writer and producer, screenwriter, playwright and novelist; born and raised in Columbus and attended the Ohio State University; Charlotte Curtis (1928–1987), first woman editor of the New York Times, born in Columbus and worked at the Columbus Citizen for 11 years. See Journalists above.