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Leonard Jourdan “Len” Baldwin

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Leonard Jourdan “Len” Baldwin

Birth
Michigan, USA
Death
26 Dec 1903 (aged 36)
Portland, Ionia County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Portland, Ionia County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section A2 77 10
Memorial ID
View Source
Leonard was the son of Lucinda Jourdan and George W. Baldwin.
He married Anna Patterson in Ionia, Michigan on May 19, 1890. They were the parents of one son, George J. Baldwin.

On December 26, 1903, Leonard and his wife, and their son were all killed as a result of a head on train collision near East Paris, Michigan.

TWENTY-TWO KILLED. December 26, 1903.
Results of Pere Marquette Disaster Exceed First Report.
Twenty-two persons dead and thirty-eight seriously injured is the latest report regarding Saturday night's disastrous wreck on the Pere Marquette railway near East Paris, Mich.

In the head-on collision five cars and two large locomotives were jammed into a space ordinarily occupied by three coaches, and the wreckage was strewn across the railroad right of way from fence to fence.

According to statements made by officials of the Pere Marquette, the westbound train was traveling down grade at the rate of sixty miles an hour. The eastbound train was climbing the hill at a speed of forty miles an hour. The former carried probably seventy-five passengers, while the latter is believed to have been carrying at least 125 persons.

The two trains collided at about the middle of a long, sweeping curve three-quarters of a mile west of East Paris. On the inner side of the curve is a high embankment, preventing a view of the track ahead. When the engines met one turned completely over and lay with its nose in a direction opposite to that in which it had been traveling. The other climbed the wreckage of the first, its boiler, torn from the trucks, standing erect in the center of the debris.

Investigation by the Pere Marquette officials into the cause of the wreck has brought out some conflicting statements. Operator F. M. BOOTH at McCords states most emphatically that when he received orders to hold the westbound train at McCords he immediately displayed the red light and set the board against the approaching train.

Engineer WATERMAN, his fireman and Conductor NEIL all state that the signal lamp was burning, but that instead of a red light it displayed a white light.

Published in the Ogdensburg Advance and St. Lawrence Weekly Democrat New York January 1, 1904

WRECK'S DEATH LIST CONTINUES TO GROW.

RESCUERS RECOVER TWENTY-TWO BODIES FROM RUINS OF ILL-FATED TRAINS.

Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec. 27. Tonight the death list resulting from the head-on collision between two Pere Marquette railway passenger trains near East Paris yesterday evening stands at twenty-two, with thirty-eight persons injured, several of them probably fatally.
Research of Marilynn Johnson
Leonard was the son of Lucinda Jourdan and George W. Baldwin.
He married Anna Patterson in Ionia, Michigan on May 19, 1890. They were the parents of one son, George J. Baldwin.

On December 26, 1903, Leonard and his wife, and their son were all killed as a result of a head on train collision near East Paris, Michigan.

TWENTY-TWO KILLED. December 26, 1903.
Results of Pere Marquette Disaster Exceed First Report.
Twenty-two persons dead and thirty-eight seriously injured is the latest report regarding Saturday night's disastrous wreck on the Pere Marquette railway near East Paris, Mich.

In the head-on collision five cars and two large locomotives were jammed into a space ordinarily occupied by three coaches, and the wreckage was strewn across the railroad right of way from fence to fence.

According to statements made by officials of the Pere Marquette, the westbound train was traveling down grade at the rate of sixty miles an hour. The eastbound train was climbing the hill at a speed of forty miles an hour. The former carried probably seventy-five passengers, while the latter is believed to have been carrying at least 125 persons.

The two trains collided at about the middle of a long, sweeping curve three-quarters of a mile west of East Paris. On the inner side of the curve is a high embankment, preventing a view of the track ahead. When the engines met one turned completely over and lay with its nose in a direction opposite to that in which it had been traveling. The other climbed the wreckage of the first, its boiler, torn from the trucks, standing erect in the center of the debris.

Investigation by the Pere Marquette officials into the cause of the wreck has brought out some conflicting statements. Operator F. M. BOOTH at McCords states most emphatically that when he received orders to hold the westbound train at McCords he immediately displayed the red light and set the board against the approaching train.

Engineer WATERMAN, his fireman and Conductor NEIL all state that the signal lamp was burning, but that instead of a red light it displayed a white light.

Published in the Ogdensburg Advance and St. Lawrence Weekly Democrat New York January 1, 1904

WRECK'S DEATH LIST CONTINUES TO GROW.

RESCUERS RECOVER TWENTY-TWO BODIES FROM RUINS OF ILL-FATED TRAINS.

Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec. 27. Tonight the death list resulting from the head-on collision between two Pere Marquette railway passenger trains near East Paris yesterday evening stands at twenty-two, with thirty-eight persons injured, several of them probably fatally.
Research of Marilynn Johnson


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