Esther married again to Darius Remington, also a veteran of the War, who died in 1884, the couple had no children. Finally she married Canfield Fisk. He was also a Civil War vet with the 4th Michigan. He saw action at some of the worst battles of the War. He had been married before and had several grown children. She spent some time caring for him after their marriage in 1891, but in 1905 for reasons unknown to me at this time they separated. She was living with her son Lewis and he with his son in Colorado. She lived out her days on her small farm north of Rose Lake in Batavia. She died at home. Her obituary in the Coldwater Daily Reporter on May 10, 1917 states that she was an early member of the Branch County Community.
Esther married again to Darius Remington, also a veteran of the War, who died in 1884, the couple had no children. Finally she married Canfield Fisk. He was also a Civil War vet with the 4th Michigan. He saw action at some of the worst battles of the War. He had been married before and had several grown children. She spent some time caring for him after their marriage in 1891, but in 1905 for reasons unknown to me at this time they separated. She was living with her son Lewis and he with his son in Colorado. She lived out her days on her small farm north of Rose Lake in Batavia. She died at home. Her obituary in the Coldwater Daily Reporter on May 10, 1917 states that she was an early member of the Branch County Community.
Gravesite Details
She was buried in the same plot as her son, Lewis, no marker to attest to it.