• Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop
  Pioneers' Cemetery AssociationPhoenix, AZ
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop

12 Graves of Christmas - George W. DeGroot

12/12/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture
George W. DeGroot, 1842-1903
Railroad Employee
 
Buried in Rosedale Cemetery, North Section

(Grave marker photo courtesy of the Pioneers’ Cemetery Association, Inc.)

George Washington DeGroot was born on January 3, 1842, in New York City. His parents were Edward DeGroot and Hannah West. The surname ‘DeGroot’ suggests Dutch origins.
 
In 1850, George’s father was listed on the federal census as a "clothier," someone who made and sold good-quality men’s clothing. He might have had a small shop. Living on the same street near the DeGroots were a shoemaker and a tailor.
 
Between 1855 and 1860, Edward DeGroot moved his family to Adams County, Illinois, where he became quite a well-to-do farmer. Although George registered for the Civil War draft in 1863, no evidence of Civil War service has been found to date. George was working on his father’s farm in 1870.  
 
On December 11, 1878, George married Laura F. Garner in Illinois. Over the years, they had five children: Eugene Dawe, 1879; William Clyde, born 1881; Edith and Harry Lester (twins), born 1886; and Robert Stanley, born 1889. 
 
Instead of continuing as a farmer, George DeGroot became a railroad employee, possibly for the famous Rock Island Line. For some years between 1886 and 1890, the DeGroots were in St. Louis, Missouri. By 1900, they were back in Rock Island County, Illinois, and George and his son Clyde were working as a baggage handlers. 
 
In 1901, after 23 years of marriage, Laura DeGroot divorced George on the grounds of cruelty and infidelity. Not long thereafter, DeGroot seems to have come alone to Arizona. 
 
He was living at 4th Avenue and Jackson near the railroad tracks when on December 13, 1903, he died of pulmonary tuberculosis. He was buried in Rosedale North, where he has a grave marker.
 
© 2025 by Donna L. Carr. Last revised 7 December 2025.
 
If you would like assistance researching our interred, you can find more information on our website. You can contact us at [email protected] at any time. Thank you for your interest to preserve the history of Arizona's pioneers!
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

      Subscribe

    Subscribe to Newsletter

    Categories

    All
    12 Graves Of Christmas
    Architects
    Asian Pacific Islander (Chinese)
    Asian Pacific Islander (Japanese)
    Bad Men
    Bad Women
    Black History
    Civil War
    Farmers
    Forgotten No More
    Hispanic Heritage
    Immigrant Heritage
    Irish History
    Jewish Heritage
    Judges
    Lawmen
    Miner
    Ministers
    Music
    Native American
    Physicians
    Politicians
    Teachers
    Unusual Occupations
    Veterans
    Woe Is Me


    Additional blog

    BEHIND THE EPITAPH BLOG

We Would Love to Have You Visit Soon!


Hours

TH: 10am - 2pm

Email

[email protected]
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop