NANCY MARYLAND COREL (LAHAY) DOBBINS
March 27, 1834-November 6, 1917
Las Animas Leader, Nov. 14, 1917
Las Animas, Colorado
Transcribed by Bobby Dobbins Title
Mrs. Nannie Dobbins, one of Bent county's pioneer citizens,
passed away at the home of her son, R. G. Dobbins, last Tuesday evening, after
a gradual failing in health due to extreme age.
The funeral service was held from the home on Seventh and Grove avenue
on Thursday afternoon, the Rev. Eugene B. Kunts, D. D., officiating.
Mrs. Dobbins was born in Virginia, March 27, 1834, and at an
early age moved to Kansas, settling near Lawrence. Here she witnessed much of the border strife
that made the history of that state. She
was a witness of the sacking and burning of Lawrence in 1856 by Quantrell and
his band, and many other atrocities and wrongs of those stirring times. In 1867 she was united in marriage with James
S. Dobbins, to which union three children were born – Mary, who died in
infancy; Robert G., cashier of the American Sugar plant here at Las Animas; and
Scott W., who preceded his mother to the grave but a few weeks. They continued to live near Lawrence until
1875 when they came to Bent county and settled near Rule Creek, 14 miles east
of Las Animas. With the coming of the
railroad shortly after, the Santa Fe tracks were laid through their home and
corrals, necessitating a removal. For
several years they resided at Fort Lyon, then a big frontier post; afterwards
they settled on land just east of the Purgatoire and engaged in the stock
business. In 1904 Mr. Dobbins died, and
Mrs. Dobbins then resided for several years with a sister, Mrs. Olive McGee, at
Kansas City, Mo. Some three years ago,
on account of rapidly failing health, she returned to live with her son, R. G.
Dobbins and family, in her declining years.
Passing away at the ripe age of 83 years and 7 months, with
a residence in the west of nearly 10 years and in Colorado 42 years, would classify
Mrs. Dobbins as one of the pioneers of the Great West. What she has seen in her long lifetime, the
things that made history for this great frontier of a great nation, would make
a volume more interesting than a romance.
She was the type of woman that helped to make the development of the
west a possibility. Well educated,
rugged of health and born with the fortitude that enabled her sex to undergo
the hardships of the frontier and to face its dangers, both physical and
mental, w\she went through life never shirking her part in any scheme of events
no matter what it might be. To such
pioneers of the early days (…..) all that our county now is, for their
fortitude made all things that followed, possible.
The many friends of Mrs. Dobbins during her lifetime, and of
the family left behind, extend their deepest sympathy to the bereaved relatives
at this time of sorrow.
-o-
"Nannie," as the family called her, was married first to Francois (Frank) LaHay, in Kansas. They lived near what is now the Clinton Lake. Two children were born to that marriage, son Ollie and daughter Ella, but unfortunately Frank died in 1863 while in Missouri and both children died in 1864. At that time, Nannie moved back to Lawrence, where she lived with her sister Olivia Corel McGee and family. The McGee's lived next door to the Dobbins family....
Nannie was my great grandmother.
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