Home | Index |

Search
Husb: George Smith Baldwin
Father: Henry J. Baldwin
Mother:
Birth About 1892  Greenwich, Fairfield, Connecticut 
Wife: Eleanor Workman
Father: Andrew Boyle Workman
Mother: Martha Frances Widney
Birth March 24, 1897  Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 
Death February 29, 1972  Greenwich, Fairfield, Connecticut 
Other spouses: (1) James G. Scarborough
Family Events
Marriage  August 14, 1934  Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 
Sources and Notes:

Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, August 14, 1934

Mrs. Eleanor Workman To Be Bride of George S. Baldwin Today

Noon Service Arranged at Channel City

Couple Will Go East to Make Home in Connecticut

Mrs. Eleanor Workman Scarborough, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Boyle Workman, will be married at noon today in the First Presbyterian Church of Santa Barbara to George S. Baldwin of Greenwich, Ct. Rev. Robert McLean will officiate.

Mr. Baldwin arrived last Wednesday and Thursday he and Mrs. Scarborough motored to Santa Barbara and obtained their marriage license. Returning to Los Angeles they disclosed their plans to relative and a few friends.

Home to Be In East

Following the ceremony Mr. Baldwin and his bride will leave for the East and plan to make their home in Greenwich, where they will be joined by Mrs. Scarborough?s daughter, Alice, who is at school in the East and on vacation.

Mr. Baldwin, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Baldwin of Youngstown, O., was graduated from the University of Wisconsin. He is president of the Greenwich Chamber of Commerce.

Native Daughter

Mrs. Scarborough, a native of Los Angeles, is a grand-daughter of pioneer families. She is a grand-daughter of W. H. Workman, one of the early mayors of Los Angeles, and of Mariah Boyle Workman, whose father, Andrew Boyle, owned Boyle Heights.

On her mother?s side of the house, she is the grand-daughter of Judge Robert W. Widney, founder and first president of the board of trustees of the University of Southern California, and Mary Barnes Widney, whose father, Alexander Barnes, organized and captained a covered wagon train that came to California in 1856.