Alice Frank Bush was born in Illinois in 1856 to William Millard Bush and
his wife, the former Mary Amanda Hubbard. By 1860, the Bush family was living
in Erie County, Ohio,
where William Bush worked as a farmer in Perkins Township. According to pedigree charts on FamilySearch, Alice's Bush lineage goes back to John Bush (1593-1662), who is also an ancestor of President George Herbert Walker Bush.
In 1873, when Alice was only
age 17, she married James Lloyd DeWitt, an attorney who would become Mayor of
Sandusky from 1883 to 1886, and later served as Common Pleas Judge for Erie County.
Judge J.L. DeWitt died in 1890, when he was struck by a train as he was walking
along the railroad tracks. The whole community mourned his loss. Alice was left a widow,
with two children. Alice’s son Rufus DeWitt
moved to Idaho,
where he was a farmer. Her daughter Maud DeWitt married well known biologist
Raymond Pearl.
Alice
became the wife of F.A. Akins in 1903. Mr. Akins was a widower who also resided
in Perkins Township. Mr. Akins passed away in 1920.
In May of 1951, Mrs. Alice Akins died at the age of 94. She
was survived by three grandchildren. One of Alice’s granddaughters became a
psychotherapist and author. Penelope Russianoff wrote the books Why Do I think I am Nothing Without a Man?
and When Will I Be Happy?
Alice DeWitt Akins outlived her two children and both
husbands. She was buried at Lot 106 in Oakland Cemetery
in Sandusky, Ohio. Both Judge J.L. DeWitt and F.A. Akins
are buried nearby. Alice
lived through the Civil War, and two world wars. She saw a multitude of
inventions during her lifetime, including electricity, the airplane, the
automobile, the telephone, and radio and television. She was truly a pioneer
woman.
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