Copyright USGenNet Inc., 2023 All Rights Reserved USGenNet Data Repository Please read USGenNet Copyright Statement on this page: Transcribed and submitted by Linda Talbott for the USGenNet Data Repository http://www.us-data.org/ =========================================================================== Formatted by USGenNet Data Repository Chief Archivist, Linda Talbott All of the above information must remain when copied or downloaded. =========================================================================== The Oswego Palladium Monday, 26 March 1877 Obituary Seldom has a more painful task fallen upon us than that which impels our pen to write the obituary of CAPT. MORGAN M. WHEELER. The whole city was aware that CAPT. WHEELER was seriously sick and the various changes and probabilities of his case have been watched with deep anxiety as they have been noted from time to time. For the past three or four days his symptoms var- ied, and his friends were alternately moved by hope and fear. Saturday evening he slept an hour, and during the afternoon of that day re- tained some nourishment. Yesterday however, the indications were alarming, and he continued to decline till half past six this morning, when he died, passing away calmly with scarcely a struggle. That a frame so perfectly a model of health and vigor should have been so suddenly laid low seems almost inconceivable. CAPT. WHEELER was a man of the most careful regular and abstemious habits, and till the time last fall or early in the winter, when he contract- ed the fatal disease his health had been per- fect. During one of the violent storms of wind and snow in the early part of the season he worked all day on his vessel in the harbor, securing them from the storm. He was without rubbers and did not think of it till he found his feet wet and himself exhausted. A severe cold resulted followed by diptheria, by which he was confined to his house for several weeks and became a good deal weakened. He got out, however, and came down street; several times he dropped into the Palladium office and con- versed cheerfully, and he also attended one of the public meetings on the charter amend- ments and criticized the reduction made in teacher wages, but soon thereafter he was again taken down. It appeas that his system did not clear itself of the diphtheria infec- tion and it resulted in what is commonly call- ed poisoning of the blood of which he died. He had been aware of his dangerous condition for some weeks, and had made his will and arranged all his business affairs with great particularity. Previous to his death he had lucid intervals, when he recognized his friends, but much of the time he was unconscious. CAPT. WHEELER was born in Lynne, Jefferson county, May 10, 1832. His father a New Englander, was in early life a settler in the Mohawk valley, but subsequently removed to Northern New York and was one of the founders of the town of Lyme. His mother was the daughter of DAVID KINNISON, a soldier of the revolution and again of the war of 1812, and who was the las survivor of the Boston tea party. CAPT. WHEELER'S father died when the latter was five years old, and he remained on the farm till he was nine, when the family removed to Oswego - in 1844. For ten years he worked on a farm for JUDGE HAWKS, then served six years' apprenticeship in the milling business with Lewis & Beardsley, and at the end of that time served a years' clerkship in A. F. ALLEN'S grocery store. In 1853 he became collector for the tug N. Robins owned by Dobbie and Man- warring, and subsequently became general mana- ger of a fleet of tugs and vessels which they built. He remained with them till 1859, when he bought and commanded the tug J. H. Blower which was afterwards lost at Big Sodus. He built another and became largely interested in tugs and towing, from which he went into vessels buying his first one, the Lucy J. Latham, in 1863. He has owned a large number of vessels, which yielded him a handsome es- tate, and at his death owned the Jamaice, Nevada, Maderia, Samana, and Bolivia. CAPTAIN WHEELER was one of the most active and ener- getic of men and took deep interest in affairs outside of his business. He represented the Third ward in the Common council continually from 1869 to 1875 and was one of the founders of Grace Church. Wherever known, and from Chi- cago to Ogdensburg no man was better known, he ws greatly respected, and no man could be more missed from the vessel interest, among captains and sailors nor from among his townsmen. CAPT. WHEELER leaves a wife, four boys and three girls, who are indeed terribly bereft. ===============================================================================