Sarah
Farnum Sargent
Jackman
Sarah Farnum Sargent Jackman
was born on
December 18, 1816 in Boscawen,
New Hampshire. She
was the oldest
of five children born to Isaac, (b. November 21, 1786, d. December 6,
1825) and
Rebecca Merrill Farnum Sargent, (n.d.). Her family was one of the
earliest
settlers of the Massachusetts colony
and the New Hampshire
land
grants. Her father died when she was nine years old in a barn raising
accident.
Her mother was left to raise five children and run the family farm by
herself,
which she did.
Sarah went to school in Boscawen and then
attended Salisbury
Academy
where she studied
to become a teacher. She began teaching in Boscawen and Warner, New Hampshire, before she moved on to study more
in Lowell, Massachusetts.
She worked as an assistant teacher while attending school in Lowell around
1840. Her salary was $12 a
month, which is the equivalent of about $254 in today’s money.
Sarah was a very eloquent writer, having
written many letters in the early years of her life. She has been
quoted to
have said that she considered letter writing an art. She also
contributed to
the Offering, in Lowell,
MA. The Offering
was the
first magazine published by women in the United States, between 1841
and
1849.
After completing her schoolwork in Lowell,
she moved to Quincy,
MA to continue
teaching. While in
Quincy, Sarah contributed poems
frequently to
various newspapers in the area, especially the Boston Olive Branch. After
her
marriage to John A. Jackman on November 22, 1843 in West Newton, MA,
she gave up her ambitions of being a writer and devoted her life to her
husband
and raising a family.
She and her husband John moved their
family to Bloomington,
Illinois in May
1864. The reason for the
move was John was promoted to be the superintendent of the Chicago
& Alton
Railroad, which came through Bloomington.
Sarah and John spent the rest of their lives in Bloomington at their home located at 507 West Locust Street,
which they had purchased from the attorney William Holmes in 1873.
Their home
remained in their family for many years after their deaths.
Sarah was also very active in community
life in Bloomington.
She was admired for her compassion and charity towards those who were
less
fortunate than she. Many who knew her said that she never turned anyone
away
who came to her door.
Sarah was very active in public
philanthropy. She was one of the promoters and charter members of the
Bloomington Benevolent Association, which organized soon after the
Civil War. She
was even treasurer of this association for a short time.
Because of her interest in books and
literature, Sarah became heavily involved in the reorganization of the
Bloomington Library Association. In 1867, because of her contributions
and
efforts for the library association, she was named as one of Board of
Directors.
She also served as Vice President of the library association from 1870
until
her retirement in 1878. She had spent much of her own time and money to
supply
the library with whatever it needed.
Sarah was one of the charter members of
the Women’s Educational Association at Wesleyan
University in Bloomington. She
was also instrumental in
getting a place set aside in the Bloomington City
Cemetery
in “Memory of our unknown dead” during the city’s 2nd
Decoration
Day, (also known as The Unknown Soldier Monument).
After her children were grown, Sarah began
to focus more of her time on developing her artistic talents. She took
up
painting landscapes and portraits. She took oil painting lessons from a
noted
portrait painter, Albert Jenks of Chicago.
She painted two portraits of her grandchildren and several other
studies. These
works were lost in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, which destroyed the
studio
where she had worked. She liked to paint landscapes the most, but china
painting was her best form. She painted many examples, some of which
she left
to members of her family.
Sarah was very active up until the time of
her death. She had been ill for several weeks before her death, having
succumbed
to an acute infection of the throat and lungs. She died on December 17,
1900
and is buried at the Jackman family plot next to her husband at Evergreen Memorial
Cemetery in Bloomington.
John A. Jackman was born on March 22, 1816
in Boscawen, NH. After completion of his
education at age
21, he became a station agent for the Boston & Worcester Railroad
in 1837. In
1852, he became a machinist and he and his family moved to Ohio
where he helped open the Toledo
and Cleveland Railroad, which was part of the Lakeshore Railway System.
He
served as master mechanic in Norwalk,
OH for 7 years.
In 1859, the Jackman family moved back to Boston so John could become superintendent of
machinery
for the railroad he began with- the Boston
&
Worcester
line.
While in Boston,
he helped facilitate troop movements during the American Civil War.
Besides working for the C & A Railroad
in Bloomington,
John was one of the directors and organizers of the Bloomington Board
of Trade
in 1870. The Bloomington Board of Trade was formed to look after the
interests
of the city, especially of the water works. He worked for the
Bloomington Board
of Trade until January 1879, when he retired to spend the last
seventeen years
of his life at home with his family. John A. Jackman Sr. died on July
29, 1896
at the age of 80.
John and Sarah had seven children, five of
whom survived into adulthood.
Caroline
“Carrie” F. Jackman Kimball- was born in November
1844 in Massachusetts.
She married Benjamin R. Kimball. They moved back to live in Bloomington
after the Chicago Fire in 1871,
which had destroyed their home. Caroline died in February 1934 and is
buried in
Bloomington.
John A.
Jackman Jr.-
was
born May 28, 1848 in Massachusetts.
Like his father, he was also involved in railroad work in Bloomington. He
died on July 20, 1896 in St.
Louis. His father,
John Sr., was not told of his death, which was nine days before his
own,
because his condition was very serious before his own death.
Georgina
J. Jackman Soper-
was born in 1851 in Massachusetts.
She married Horace W. Soper in 1880. Horace died in 1898 and she moved
back in
with her family on West
Locust Street. She died in 1938 and is
buried in Bloomington.
Frank S.
Jackman-
was born
on February 21, 1854 in Ohio.
He died on May 11, 1911 and is buried in Bloomington.
Frederick
Osborn Jackman- was
born October 23, 1858 in Ohio.
He was a doctor. He died on May 30, 1932 and is buried in Bloomington.
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