Mrs. Robert B. Boyd
Nancy
J. Weir was born at Adamsville, Crawford County, Pa., in 1831. She died
at Mercer. Pa., Saturday, Sept. 11, 1926, and was buried the following
Monday from the Methodist Church in Mercer. The interment was in
Coolspring.
When two years of age she was brought by her
parents— Mr. and Mrs. John Weir, to Coolspring Township, Mercer County,
where she grew to womanhood. In 1857 she was married to Robert B. Boyd,
a member of the Erie Conference, and they had as their first
appointment Pine Grove, now Grove City.
Robert Boyd died at
Brookville, Pa., March 30th, 1876. Thus it appears that Mrs. Boyd had
been a widow more than fifty years. During these fifty years her home
had been in Mercer and in the house where she died. Soon after Brother
Boyd’s death the widow brought her family to Mercer, near the
neighborhood where her early life was spent, and where her husband was
converted in 1850, and where their married | | life
began. It is said of him that he “died with the harness on.” They were
true team-mates pulling evenly on the load assigned them by
the church.
Mrs. Boyd was a real gentlewoman. “Blood tells,”
people say. And it does, more or less, and here is one of the
multitudinous cases where the blood of Calvary loudly proclaims in
character product “If we walk in the light as He is in the light we
have fellowship one with another and the blood of Jesus Christ His Soil
cleanseth us from all sin.” To say she had graciousness, faithfulness,
gentility, motherly nobility, Christlikeness is no overstatement, and
of this her nearest neighbors would be most willing witnesses.
In
the fifty years of her residence at Mercer a long list of pastors have
proved her faithfulness. She never willingly failed the King or
hindered the coming of the Kingdom. Rather, she steadily contributed to
the progress of the work of God in the community in which she lived,
doing her best and helping others to do their best. She was rich in the
anticipation for the future,—the Father’s house, the rest, the welcome,
the loved ones waiting her.
Mrs. Boyd was in an enfeebled
condition for many months before her home-going, but to the last, glad,
strong, expectant and triumphant.
Mrs. Boyd is survived by three
daughters—Mrs. Charles E. Amberson, of Superior, Neb.; Mrs. James A.
Lawrie, Duluth, Minn.; and Mrs. Walter D. Spaulding, Detroit, Mich.
Besides these, an adopted daughter, Mrs. John H. Baer, of Mercer,
survives.
In utmost tenderness these daughters eased the way
down to the last smiling farewell, and their inheritance is a glorious
memory. |
Source: Written by C. O. Mead. Deceased Wives
of Preachers, Erie Conference Journal and Yearbook, Ninety-first
session, 1926, pages 611-612
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