| Ann Jewison, was born at Kingston Upon Hull, 
      Yorkshire on She was the daughter of Christopher Jewison and 
      Mary White in St. Catherine’s Roman Catholic Church at Mapleton, 
      (Waukesha County), Wisconsin on March 19, 1864. Soon after the 
      marriage John and Annie Eustice headed to Marquette in 
      Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, where John had secured work in the 
      mines. Judging from children’s birth records, the Eustices may 
      have remained in Michigan for as long as four years, from 1865 
      until sometime in 1867 or 1868. Sometime in late 1868 or early 
      1869, John and Ann loaded Mary, age 4 and James, less than 2, 
      into wagons and headed west toward a place then called Okamon 
      near the shores of Lake Elysian. Annie’s parents and brothers 
      had become established in this pioneer village in Waseca County, 
      Minnesota during 1868. On June 11, 1869, John and Ann finalized 
      the purchase of 80 acres in Sections 14 and 23 of Janesville 
      Township, adjacent to land owned by members of the Jewison 
      family. The Jewison family had finalized the purchase of their 
      land in Sections 14 and 15 of Janesville Township on November 
      19, 1868. John and Ann built a log home nestled in a grove of 
      oak trees, to protect their growing family from the harsh 
      Minnesota winters.    John Eustice led a long and productive life and died during the 
        night June 29, 1916 in Janesville, MN. On Wednesday, June 28th, 
        he showed no sign of approaching illness He appeared in good 
        health and was in his usual good humor as he attended to the 
        matters of home life and its details, his last work being 
        performed about sundown in his garden. Here he talked with his 
        wife and neighbors, exhibiting, to a marked degree that spirit 
        of buoyancy, congeniality and goodwill that was characteristic 
        of his life. In this spirit he retired for the night. At eleven 
        o’clock he appeared as cheerful and well as in the early evening 
        hours. Later at night, between one and two o’clock, the heavy 
        wind and rain awakened Ann, who arose to close the windows. She 
        spoke to her husband, but since he made no response, she assumed 
        he was asleep. After closing the windows, she laid down beside 
        him but discovered the coldness of his hands. Surmising that 
        something was wrong she immediately went the home of Mr. Scott, 
        a nearby neighbor. Mr. and Mrs. Scott returned to the home with 
        her where they concluded that John had passed away.   His last words were uttered at about eleven o’clock when he 
        called to Ann and said, “Mother are you all right”?    On Saturday morning July 1, 1916, Father T.J. McCarthy 
        conducted a funeral Mass for John Eustice. The remains were 
        buried in St. Ann’s Cemetery near Janesville.    The July 5th edition of the Janesville Argus contains the 
        following comments in the obituary:   “We wish here to pay more than a mere passing tribute to the 
        life and character of Mr. Eustice. Everybody in this immediate 
        vicinity knew Mr. Eustice and all were counted as his friends. 
        He had no enemies. Whether his friends resided here or 
        elsewhere, they all knew him to be a man in every sense that the 
        term implies, a man who never uttered words derogatory to any 
        person and who ever extolled the virtues of others, a man whose 
        genial disposition. and sunny smiles were pregnant with 
        blessings to mankind, a man whose honesty was never questioned 
        and whose motives were never impugned, in fact a man whose 
        loyalty to his convictions and fidelity to his friends and his 
        faith are lasting monuments to the goodness of the life he 
        lived. Such a life is worthy of the highest ecomiums that words 
        or pen may bestow and that they are not exaggerated or overdrawn 
        is abundantly reflected in his life and career.”  |