Submitted by: Dan Rich
William P. Bryson
1855 Aug. 1, 1931
South Bend Tribune, Sunday, August 2, 1931,
(excerpted)
Three persons, one of them a prominent Mishawakan, were killed
and five others injured in traffic accidents late Saturday in the
vicinity of South Bend. The dead are:
William P. Bryson, age 76, 223 Lincoln Way West,
Mishawaka.
Mr. Bryson, one-time secretary of the Perkins Windmill company in
Mishawaka and one of the best known men of early Mishawaka, was
instantly killed Saturday afternoon when his light coupe was
demolished two miles north of Mishawaka by a west-bound Grand
Trunk passenger train.
Mrs. Bryson, who has been blind for several years, was informed
of her husband's death by a relative more than an hour after the
accident occurred. At the time of the crash, Mr. Bryson was
driving south on Fir road, en route home from Eagle lake,
Michigan, where he had gone Saturday morning.
Witnesses said that he was traveling slowly but apparently failed
to see the train approaching. His car was hurled more than 200
feet west of the crossing and into a deep ditch. The track is
visible hundreds of yards in both directions from the crossing.
Mr. Bryson had been employed for the last year by the Fire
Prevention Engineers, 126 Lincoln Way West. He was born in 1855
in Elkhart county, Ind., and went to Mishawaka from Michigan City
while a young man. He married Miss May Eggleston in
Mishawaka in 1871.
Besides his widow he is survived by three children, Mrs. Fred Hertz,
of Asbury, N. J., LaVerne Bryson, of Honolulu, and C. E. Bryson,
of Los Angeles, Calif., and by one brother, Frank, of Elkhart.
South Bend Tribune
Monday, August 3, 1931)
William P. Bryson, age 75, of 223 Lincoln Way East, killed
Saturday afternoon by a west bound Grand Trunk Western passenger
train at the Fir road crossing, was at one time
secretary-treasurer of the Perkins Windmill company, the largest
plant of its kind at the time in the world. The picture was taken
about 25 years ago and is a good likeness of Mr. Bryson, as he
retained his youthful appearance. Mr. Bryson was one of the
city's best-known men. Funeral arrangements are not complete.