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2351 Martha was born 16 May 1844 in Maxstoke, Warwickshire, England. She was the youngest of the twelve children and the fifth daughter born to George and Elizabeth West Craner. She lived in Maxstoke until she was nine years old. She then immigrated to America with her family.
In 1845, Martha’s family listened to the missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Her mother was the first to be baptized, 5 June 1845 followed by her brother, George, 1 January 1846, and then Harriet, 6 January 1846. Her father was baptized 10 March 1846. In 1852, Ann and Martha were baptized. Another brother, Abraham Fredrick was baptized in 1856. The Saints were encouraged to gather to Zion in America.
George, her brother, came first in 1851 and established a home and farm in Tooele, Tooele, Utah, and then sent money for the rest of the family to come. On 22 February 1854, Martha’s parents, two of her sisters, Harriet (age 20) and Ann (age 15), her brother, John (age 11) and Martha (age 9) set sail from Liverpool, England on the ship Windermere for America.
They had many harrowing experiences at sea. They arrived at New Orleans 23 April 1854. A few days later they boarded a steam boat and journeyed to St. Louis, Missouri. The journey then continued on to Kansas City. Martha celebrated her tenth birthday crossing the Kansas plains. Her father became very ill with cholera and died two days later. Her mother and the four children continued on to Salt Lake, arriving 1 Oct 1854. They then went on to Tooele, Tooele, Utah to live with her brother, George.
In May of 1860, when Martha was sixteen, she married George Tanner. They were sealed in 1865 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Martha and George were pioneer farmers in Tooele, Tooele, Utah. They lived several miles from the center of Tooele. When the children got old enough to go to school they went on horseback. In the winter, the children didn’t always go to school as Martha thought it was too dangerous and cold to send them. Martha must have a hard time in child bearing as five of their nine children died as infants.
Martha and George were the parents of nine children:
Name: Birth Date: Death Date:

1. George Craner Tanner 29 Jun 1861 1 May 1917
2. Mary Elizabeth Tanner 5 Nov 1862 29 Feb 1952
3. James Tanner Abt 1864 child
4. Thomas Craner Tanner 9 Aug 1865 10 Feb 1917
5. William Tanner abt 1867 child
6. Joseph Tanner abt 1868 child
7. Harriet Ann Tanner abt 1869 child
8. Martha Tanner abt 1870 child
9. John Alma Tanner 9 Mar 1872 23 Jan 1958

Martha’s husband, George Tanner, died 17 April 1872, leaving her with a baby only a month old and three other children, ages 11 and younger. This must have been a difficult time for her. Her sister Harriet Ann died two years later, 15 Sep 1874, leaving a baby just a month old and seven other children. In June 1875, Martha married Harriet Ann’s husband, Alexander Harris. They lived in Gentile Valley, (Thatcher) Idaho. They obtained a fine cattle ranch, where “they prospered and enjoyed the business of stock raising.” (Logan Herald-Journal) They also lived in Mound Valley, (Cleveland) Idaho.
Martha and Alexander were the parents of six children:

Name: Birth Date: Death Date:
1. Daniel Hammer Harris 11 May 1876 23 Nov 1943
2. Frank Albert Harris 8 Jul 1877 22 Jun 1962
3. Louisa Harris 28 Jul 1880 14 Apr 1967
4. Charles Eli Harris 7 May 1882 25 May 1957
5. Annie Jane Harris 8 Feb 1884 29 May 1957
6. Darcus Harris 1886 Child
Martha endured all the hardships and challenges of pioneer life and of raising a large family. Not only was she mother to her own children, but she took on the role of mother to her sister’s family. Shortly after Alexander’s death, Martha filed on a homestead at Turner, Idaho. Martha died 19 September 1916 in Cleveland, Franklin, Idaho and was buried there. She was 72 years old. 
Craner, Martha (I89072)
 
2352 Martin Benjamin Bushman was born 5 February 1841, in Bart Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, son of Martin and Elizabeth Degen, who was the son of Abraham Bushman, who was the son on Henry Bushman. At the age of one year he was taken from Lancaster to Nauvoo, Illinois by horse team, which was about one thousand miles. At Nauvoo his parents labored hard to make their children comfortable. He saw the Prophet Joseph and Hyrum Smith and remembered, though very young, of sitting on their laps. He remembered how his parents mourned because of their deaths. His parents were driven from their homes. They had to leave their crops in the fields and take a few of their things in their wagon and bid good-bye to the city they loved. He remembered going into the Temple with his mother to take their last look at this beautiful house. Then they started on their journey through Iowa. They suffered much with cold and hunger. On that journey he remembered seeing two of his sisters laid in the silent grave who had died from exposure and for want of proper food. One of them was buried without a coffin. When they got to Winter Quarters in the western part of Iowa the family built a log house and a place for their team. His father and older brother went to Missouri to get work so they could obtain some food for the family. In their absence it was his job to take care of the team and get wood and chop it up. They often had to grind corn on a coffee mill before they had their meals. He used to set traps and catch quail and pheasant to help out with their meals. They lived there for four years to obtain an outfit to go on to Utah. While living there he was baptized a member of the church and also received a patriarchal blessing by William Draper. There were no schools in the little village he lived in, but his sister taught him to read. Though he never went to school but very little, he tried to educate himself by studying hard. He was ten years old when he came to Utah. The one thousand mile journey was long and tiresome. They were about four months on the way. The family spent one week in Salt Lake City, Utah, then moved on to Lehi. For the next ten years he stayed with his father and helped on the farm. Other jobs he did were to help build houses, make fences, reap and sow crops, herd cows and haul wood and timber from the canyons. Bushman, Martin B. age 20 abt 1861 At the age of twenty he started out to make a start for himself and just as he was planning on what he was going to do, he had a call from the Bishop for a short mission to drive an ox team to the Missouri River and back without any pay. He and five other boys from Lehi went. They had five wagons and four yoke of oxen to the wagon, two oxen to the yoke. That was forty oxen Lehi furnished. They were nearly five months on the journey and the trip was about two thousand miles there and back. When the Lehi teams got with their company there were sixty wagons, eight oxen to the wagon, making 480 oxen in the train. They made a caravan with the wagons. On the return trip they had from eight to twelve persons in each wagon. The wagons were so heavily loaded that the teamster had to walk the thousand miles and drive the teams. It was a hard journey, but the boys felt that they were doing a good work, and said they were glad they went and when they arrived home they returned the teams to the owners and had not lost a one. Bushman, Martin B. age abt 25 He now started out to make some means for himself, he thought he ought to get him a home for himself for he felt that he should get married and have a family of his own, so he obtained a small house and lot, some furniture-such as a stove, table and chairs and other necessary things. He had a cow and a yoke of oxen and a wagon. All this he obtained in three years. Then he obtained the consent of Lucinda Ladelia Goodwin to marry him. They were married 22 March 1863 by President Brigham Young. They stayed one week with her parents, then moved into their own home. One year later they had a baby girl born to them but she only lived sixteen days. One year later twins were born, a boy they named Martin Isaac and the girl Laura Ellen. They were born 9 October 1865. Both children were strong and healthy so they had to get a girl to help take care of them. They obtained the services of a young lady by the name of Martha Worlton. She lived with them for two years. He became so attached to her that he asked her to marry him as a plural wife. She said she would if her parents would give their consent. It was then that he realized the responsibility that he was taking upon himself being a young man of only 27 years and in poor circumstances to take care of two families, so he went to the Lord in secret prayer and asked that if it was his will that he should marry her that it would be so, if not, that something may turn up to stop the marriage. Her parents and his first wife gave their consent and they were married on the 2nd of March 1867 by Wilford Woodruff. Bushman, Martin Benjamin and Martha Worlton Martin and Martha on their wedding day, 2 March 1867 Bushman, Martin Benjamin and Martha Worlton 1 Both wives and their children lived in peace in the same house for ten years, then he provided each family with a home and he was always able to pay his debts and his tithing. After living with these two wives for thirty-two years he was arrested by a United States Official, taken to court and there he was given the privilege of turning one family away or go to prison and pay a fine. He chose to go to prison rather than turn away a wife that had been true and faithful to him. He was sent to prison for three months and paid a fine. He made it a practice to live with each family the dame, that he might help them take care of their children and have prayers with them. He tried to set a good example before them by having prayers night and morning as well as going to Sunday School and to meetings, also by paying his tithing and all other requirements. He wishes to say that his wives and their children have tried to obey his counsel and have shown him all the respect he could ask of them. As a member of the church he has tried to live a consistent life. In the priesthood he has acted as a deacon in caring for the house of worship, he has acted as a block teacher for many years and as a priest in visiting the saints in their homes and teaching them the gospel. He was in the Elder’s Quorum for five years and a member of the 68th Quorum of Seventies for 39 years and was one of the Presidents. He served as a member of the High Priests Quorum for 18 years. He was a Sunday School teacher for thirty years. At the age of sixty he went back to his native state of Pennsylvania to visit his relatives. He also visited New York, Philadelphia and many of the large cities and places of interest. Twenty children were born to him and he was present when each one of them was born. Out of the twenty, he lived to see thirteen of them and one wife that was very dear to him laid away. Of the 7 children still living at the time he wrote this history, two lived in Canada, one in Washington State, one in Salt Lake City, one in Provo (Martin Isaac Bushman) and two in Lehi. In writing the closing of this history he wishes to say to his children-Be faithful to God and his church and he will bless you. He has written this sketch of his life that his children might know of his life’s labors. * * * * * * [Handwritten on to the copy of this account:] He died 31 Oct 1927 in Lehi, Utah at age 86. 2nd wife Martha Worlton died 20 Jan 1938 at age 89. Martha Worlton’s father was James Worlton born at Bath, Sommersetshire, Mother Elizabeth Borne [?] 1848, Sommersetshire, Eng. The following is a list of the children born to Martin Benjamin Bushman and Lucinda Ladelia Goodwin Bushman. Their birth dates and death dates. Mary Elizabeth 29 Sept. 1864 Lehi, Utah 15 Oct. 1864 Martin Isaac 9 Oct. 1865 “ ” 24 Sept. 1933 Laura Ellen 9 Oct. 1865 “ ” 4 May 1899 Nancy Lucinda 3 Oct. 1868 “ ” 22 Ma.r. 1872 Sarah 17 June 1870 “ ” 30 Sept. 1871 Lewis Jacob 16 July 1872 “ ” 31 Oct. 1897 Edith 3 Mar. 1875 “ ” 30 Oct. 1875 Ester 5 Sept. 1877 “ ” 8 Oct. 1878 Rhoda 5 Sept. 1877 “ ” 30 Aug. 1922 Emerette Ruth 20 June 1884 “ ” 27 Nov. 1939 Bushman, Lucinda Ladelia b. 1843 headstone Bushman, Martin Benjamin headstone [Handwritten on to the copy of this account:] 10 by Lucinda 10 by Martha James Albert 4 June 1868 “ ” 12 Oct. 1917 John Benjamin 16 Nov. 1870 “ ” 10 Aug. 1871 Alvin Alonzo 28 Dec. 1872 “ ” 28 Sept. 1873 Flora Elizabeth 15 Aug. 1874 “ ” - Eugene Worlton 14 Dec. 1876 “ ” 28 Feb 1931 Annie Lois 27 Apr. 1880 “ ” 22 Jan. 1950 Martha Emma 3 Sept. 1882 “ ” 13 Sept. 1936 Cyrus William 23 Sept. 1884 “ ” 22 Apr. 1909 Drucella Jane 24 Nov 1886 “ ” 15 Dec. 1887 Vera 22 Jun. 1891 “ ” -  Bushman, Martin Benjamin (I115543)
 
2353 Martin was born April 1, 1802 in Strasburg, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He married Elizabeth Degen 20 March 1827 in Bart, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania. Their first 2 children were born quickly and did not survive long. After the first 6 children were born, they joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints May 10, 1840, in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Most likely in Bart or Strasburg, Pennsylvania.

After joining the church, they moved to Nauvoo, Illinois where they lived for four years. They were forced to leave Nauvoo due to mob violence. Two of their children died from exposure during that winter.

They lived in western Iowa for 4 years until accruing sufficient means to ultimately cross the plains to Utah in 1851, ultimately settling in Lehi, Utah.

In physique he was very strong and healthy, standing six feet high and weighing 175 pounds. He had light brown hair and blue eyes.

They are the parents of 10 children, six grew to maturity.
 
Bushman, Martin (I114459)
 
2354 Marva Elaine Price returned to her Heavenly Father and family peacefully at 91 years young, on Feb. 23, 2012 of a heart that could not keep up with her great spirit. Her love and her passions were family, faith, friends, shopping, and travel. She was born on April 25, 1920, to David Louis and Emma Jane Jensen Price. She was the last living child of her parents. She was raised in Brigham City, Utah, and attended Box Elder High School, and then graduated from Jordan High School when her family moved to Draper, Utah.
There she met Alfred Engstrum and they were married on May 2, 1939. Together, they raised five children. She was an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, where she faithfully held many church positions, too numerous to name. After her husband's passing, she was able to go on an LDS proselytizing mission in the Seattle, Washington area. She loved missionary work and went on to serve other missions. She was a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, aunt and friend. Her loving spirit touched everyone she met and all became her friends. She touched many people's lives for the better, loved them all, and taught us the true meaning of serving others. She didn't like to be idle and always had a full social schedule.
She is survived by her children, Arnold, Barry, Richard, Marva, and Juliann. She has 14 grandchildren, 27 great grandchildren and 4 great great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, and a granddaughter, Traci Ann Engstrum. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Primary Children's Medical Center in her name.
Funeral services were held Feb. 27, 2012. Interment was at Valley View Memorial Gardens, 4335 W. 4100 S. 
Price, Marva Elaine (I132609)
 
2355 Mary A. TINKHAM daughter of Russell TINKHAM & Mary Elliott COOK born 29 June 1820 at Spafford, New York. She married
Uriah ROUNDY 3 April 1842. She died 11 April 1912. Record in TINKHAM Biographical Index page 270 Entry M:094. 
Tinkham, Mary Ann (I83951)
 
2356 Mary Alden was unmarried and did not have children according to the Mayflower Society in Plymouth Mass. Also according to Mayflower Families Through Five Generations Volume 16 Part 1 John Alden Published by General Society of Mayflower Descendants 2002 Edition Pages 20. Page 20 and Page 48 tell us the Rebecca was married to Dr. Thomas Delano

Sources use both names:
Savage 1:24 (ALDEN) JOHN, Plymouth, *** Mary m. Thomas Delano.
Torrey P. 214 Thomas Delano (?1642-1722/23) & 1/wf [Rebecca] (Alden) m. bef 1667, Duxbury.
Thomas Delano & Hannah (Warren) Bartlett, w/Ebenezer m. 24 Oct 1699, Duxbury.

[Source: Note posted in the name field on Rebecca's page by danielwilsonashworth1.]

According to an older record, the book, "Early Mayflower Descendants" lists Mary as the wife of Thomas Delano. 
Alden, Mary (I118347)
 
2357 Mary Bonnell was born in 1705. She married Samuel Chandler as his 1st wife and died on 04 Nov 1763.

Find a Grave: Mary Bonnell Chandler 
Bonnell, Mary (I2137)
 
2358 Mary Ellen Harris Able Kimball
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Birth: Oct. 5, 1818
Charleston
Montgomery County
New York, USA
Death: Oct. 28, 1902
Robbe
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Daughter of Mathias Able and Sarah Harris

Married Heber Chase Kimball, 1 Oct 1844

Family links:
Spouse:
Heber Chase Kimball (1801 - 1868)

Children:
Peter Kimball (1858 - 1860)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Salt Lake City Cemetery
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA
Plot: H_9_11_2_E

Created by: SMSmith
Record added: Jan 18, 2008
Find A Grave Memorial# 24026247 
Abel, Mary Ellen Harris (I107523)
 
2359 Mary Elvira Bigelow Lee
Posted 10 Aug 2012 by toyman791
Ancestry.com, Sehl Family Tree

MARY ELIVIRA BIGELOW LEE

In the early morning of the first day of November, 1858 a little black eyed daughter was born to Hyrum Bigelow and Martha Mecham in a two-story log house in Provo, Prove, Utah.

She was named Mary Elvira for her two grandmothers Mecham and Bigelow. As soon as she learned to talk, her Grandmother Bigelow began teaching her to read and continued at every opportunity to instill in her little granddaughter, along with the others, the value of education. As a result she obtained a very good education for the times and circumstances, and taught schools in a number of locations where she later lived.

She was fortunate to live near both grandparents and enjoy their interest and love. Her Grandfather Moses Worthen Mecham held her on his lap many a times and told her a story. It was at his house she saw her great grandmother Permelia Chapman Mecham when she was an old lady in a pretty white cap all trimmed with lace ruffles. When she was about seven her parents moved to Round Valley, a sort of summer resort. Cool, lots of water and grass and wild fruit, but they did not fare too well here, and the Indians drove them out and so they moved back to Provo when she was about eight or nine years old. In Provo they had a good home, with a half block of orchard, and a garden spot, also some land down by the creek about five miles away which was rented to some Danish people who brought vegetables, fruit, and hay for their rent.

Her father was a lather and carpenter by trade, but was handy in many ways. Mary Elvira was the eldest girl of her brothers and sisters who were all much above the ordinary of attractiveness and beauty, but Mary Elvira was the favorite of her father and her other relatives. It was while she lived in Provo that she went to visit her father’s sister Aunt Mary Jane Bigelow Young. Aunt Lucy had an adopted daughter Ina and a daughter Mabel and between Mabel and Ella, as she was called, there began a friendship that grew along with their continued relationship in St. George, Utah and lasted until death ended their correspondence many years later.

The family continued in Provo until Ella was about fifteen or sixteen and attending the Timpanogos University, but soon there after, in response to a call by President Brigham Young, they prepared to go to St. George, Utah where her Aunt Lucy was already installed in President Young’s summer home, and who was very lonesome.

Here Mary Elvira lived with her Aunt Lucy for a year before her family was persuaded to join the United Order at Middleton which was organized and functioned as such for about a year, after which the family moved back to St. George [where the] Temple was under construction. Her father, Hiram Bigelow, worked for five years beginning first at the quarry and only stopping when all the floors were laid. During this time the family received help from the Tithing Office.

Ella and her sisters were very popular at the dances held in the upper story of the large court house in St. George and had many beaux who took them to the dances and theaters. But Ella would never get too serious with any of them. She would like one and then another, making fun of or jilting those who became serious with her, or if some young man persuaded her to promise to have him, she would change her mind when she saw someone else. It seemed that as soon as she saw she could wind him around her little finger, that she no longer cared for her suitor.

These were the circumstances that prevailed when her Aunt Elvira Mecham Bigelow came down from the Magadso to visit. After talking over the matter, the Two sisters decided to persuade their daughter and niece to go ahead and marry the nice young man she was engaged to. But Ella had already found someone else more attractive and already didn’t care for her suitor.

However after considerable persuasion, she reluctantly married Lyman Peck 17 Apr. 1878. About three weeks later, Hyrum Her brother, married Amelia Peck, Lyman’s sister, and the two boys went on a freighting trip and were gone for many days.

Although Lyman loved her devotedly, and Ella felt sorry for him, she was ill and unhappy nearly all the time until she moved back with her family. Lyman followed and lived with them a summer, and made a number of attempts to persuade his wife to come back to him.

It was while Ella and Lyman, Hiram and Amelia and Ella family were crossing Lee’s ferry on their way to Arizona that she first met her future second husband. Ella had a gay time crossing in the little life boat, but Lyman, afraid of the water, had crawled under the covers in one of the wagons and covered up his head.

On the way up Lee’s backbone on the south side when, they were having such difficulty getting the wagons up the grade, two young men came riding down the dugway on their horses, and one of them lassoed the wagon tongue and helped them for hours, as his wonderful horse just squatted to the ground in response to his rider’s wishes.

It was when he saw Ella standing against a big rock that John Lee said to his brother Frank, “That’s my girl, right there.” But Frank only laughed and said, “Oh! You’ll never see her again.” Neither knew she was married.

The next time she saw John was when she and Lyman had separated and her family was settled in Springerville, where her father was threshing for Billy Waddell and Ed Lewis; and the girls, Ella and Lucy, were cooking for the threshers. Ella didn’t remember him when John came in with the thresher but John remembered Ella very well and was very much surprised to see her come in with the food.

John began to call on Ella, as had many others, and perhaps because John was too proud and sensitive to be treated as Ella had the others, she found she could not wind him around her finger, and there began to grow Ella a new love based on admiration and respect. After a courtship of several years, during which Ella learned something about ‘give and take”, they were married in Springerville by brother Hales on 1 Jan 1883, the same day Janey and Milton Gibbs were married.

Very shortly there after they, with her husband’s relatives, Grandma Lee, Mabel, Hebe and Nancy Dalton left for the Gila River. After three weeks of mud and sleet, they arrived at Smithville, near Pima, and lived on that side of the river for about a year while they raised corn, melons, worked for wages and freighted and improved themselves generally.

Then they crossed the river and rented a farm up the river by the Brewery, and then moved to Layton near Safford where they farmed and John built homes of adobe and brick for the townspeople. He also freighted, as did many other settlers of that day.

Each time they moved, they bettered themselves a little. But Ella’s heath was not good, and in an effort to find a more healthful situation, they left their two-story brick house in Layton and moved out to where Lebanon now is and bought the Goodspeed ranch of 160 acres with a well and mountain water and obtained Artesian water.

His relatives and others also moved out and a prosperous settlement was begun. Here they raised their children to be active in the Church, meanwhile extending the traditional Lee hospitality which included an always well-laden table.

Except for intervals in Gila, New Mexico, and San Diego, California, their lives were spent in Lebanon until the death of her husband 29 Apr. 1939. Ella then lived with her daughter Effie for a number of years, and then went to Mesa, Arizona to work in the Temple where she died in her sleep 27 Dec 1946.

Her son Doyle lived with her much of the time after her husband’s death and was always very good to her. It was quite surprising that such a frail little body would outlast the exceptionally sturdy and strong body of her husband.

Her husband was always very tender and considerate of her, and despite her frailty and poor health, they were the parents of ten children. Ella had a strong testimony of the gospel and was known for her faithfulness. She was an ardent tithe payer and devout. She was a strong believer on the power of prayer, and loved to read the Bible.

May God bless the memory of the sweet mother, grandmother and great great grand mother who set such a wonderful example in so many ways. 
Bigelow, Mary Elvira (I91413)
 
2360 Mary Eunice Harlan Lincoln
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Birth: Sep. 25, 1846
Iowa City
Johnson County
Iowa, USA
Death: Mar. 31, 1937
Washington
District of Columbia
District Of Columbia, USA

Daughter of Senator James Harlen of Iowa. Married Robert Todd Lincoln, son of President Abraham Lincoln. She met Robert in Washington while his father was still President. They were married in 1866

Family links:
Parents:
James Harlan (1820 - 1899)
Ann Eliza Peck Harlan (1824 - 1884)

Spouse:
Robert Todd Lincoln (1843 - 1926)

Children:
Mary Todd Lincoln Isham (1869 - 1938)*
Abraham Lincoln (1873 - 1890)*
Jessie Harlan Lincoln Randolph (1875 - 1948)*

Siblings:
Mary Eunice Harlan Lincoln (1846 - 1937)
Silas James Harlan (1850 - 1850)*
William Aaron Harlan (1852 - 1876)*
Julia Josephine Harlan (1856 - 1862)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Arlington National Cemetery
Arlington
Arlington County
Virginia, USA
Plot: Section 31
GPS (lat/lon): 38.88377, -77.06535

Created by: Laurie
Record added: Feb 15, 2003
Find A Grave Memorial# 7186237
 
Harlan, Mary Eunice (I139075)
 
2361 Mary Farr was at least 24 years younger than Mathias. She was almost certainly his second wife. She is too young to be the mother of the first several children of Mathias.  Farr, Mary (I123361)
 
2362 Mary Farr was at least 24 years younger than Mathias. She was almost certainly his second wife. She is too young to be the mother of the first several children of Mathias.  Butterfield, James Acton (I120955)
 
2363 Mary Hansen was born May 16, 1857 in Sonder, Denmark.
She was the daughter of Peter Olsen Hansen and Anna Christina Larsen (Rassmussen). When 5 years of age Mary left her home in Denmark with her parents, 2 sisters and 1 brother.
They were on the ocean 8 weeks and 2 days and were happy when they landed.
Their destination was Utah so the father purchased a wagon, 3 oxen and a cow. The cow was yoked in with the oxen to help pull the wagon.
They arrived in the Salt Lake Valley after 8 weeks of traveling. They went on to Brigham City where they lived until the following spring of 1864. At this time the father moved the family to Mantua where they lived for many years.
In 1875 Eliza R Snow came to Mantua and organized the Young Women's Improvement Association with Sophia Larsen as president and Mary Hansen 1st counselor. Mary was but 18 years of age. She served in this office until 1882. At this time she was called to be president of the Primary Association.
On 14th of November 1876 Mary Hansen married Lewis Peter Munk in Brigham City, Utah. In 1888 they moved to Bennington, Idaho. Everyone worked very hard. Mary was busy caring for the garden, chickens and washing wool. She made this wool into quilt batts and yarns. She worked the spinning wheel and also the loom, knit sox for the family, dresses for girls and ladies. She also knit and crocheted table clothes, bed spreads, doilies, scarfs and many beautiful pieces to adorn and make the home beautiful.
The family was delighted to get into their new home but then they encountered a new trouble. The new lumber was almost alive with bed bugs. The bedsteads were wooden and had many places for bedbugs to hide. They came out of their hiding places at night and made life miserable for everyone. However Mary made it miserable for the bugs in return. She kept the beds in the center of the room. Every morning and night she saturated everything (walls, floors and bedsteads) with kerosene. She used a stiff chicken feather to get into cracks. Soon they were gone and everyone could rest at night.
Mary served in the Relief Society for many years. She moved to Montpelier in 1917. During World War I she was very active in Red Cross work. She was a teacher in 1st Ward Relief Society, a member of the ward Genealogical Society and a member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers Jane Davis Camp.
Mary Hansen died February 10, 1948 following a long illness.
[History of Bear Lake Pioneers page 481-484] 
Hansen, Maren (I82992)
 
2364 MARY HILL CRISMON

Mary Hill was born 1 October 1814 in Pendleton, Anderson, South Carolina. Her father was John (Jehu) Hill and her mother was Martha “Patsy” Carlton or Carlin. Her history is quite sketchy. Her family moved to Illinois where her mother died in 1838.
So far as I can ascertain, Mary was the first child of John and Martha. Emily was born 25 Nov 1815 in South Carolina. Elizabeth and Jane were twins, born 14 Oct 1818 in South Carolina. Franklin was born in 1823 in Carlinville, Illinois. Adeline, 5 Oct 1831in Carlinville and John M. born 13 Nov 1832 in Carlinville, Macoupin County, Illinois.
Mary Hill married Charles Benjamin Crismon 6 May 1830 in Illinois. Charles was baptized in 1838 and, although he moved to Missouri to join the body of the Saints, he soon returned to his home in Illinois because Mary was so opposed to the church. What little we know of Mary was left by her children in later years. Her daughter Martha wrote that Mary joined the church after Charles was healed from a serious illness by the laying on of hands by the brethren.
Charles and Mary did eventually join the body of the church in Missouri in the fall of 1838. At this time they had four children, three living: Martha Jane, 18 Sep 1931; George, 5 Jul 1833; James, 8 Sep 1835 and died Jan 1837; and Esther Ann, 17Nov 1837. Also living with them in 1838 was Mary’s sister Emily Hill Harris (we might presume a widow). Emily later would become a plural wife of Abraham O. Smoot.
Mary and Charles and their family had settled on a farm about 25 miles from Far West, Missouri. After prayer one evening, Emily told Charles that he should take his family to Far West as soon as possible. The following morning Charles took his family to Far West, along with what possessions were possible in one wagon, leaving livestock, valuables, and their home. When Charles returned, the house was destroyed and all possessions and livestock either gone or destroyed.
When the Saints left Far West, the Crismons moved back to their old home in Illinois. Then they moved to Macedonia, Illinois. During this period, three more children were born in Illinois: Samantha, 27 Mar 1840; Mary Ann, 13 Feb 1842; Charles Jr., 14 Jun 1844.
When the body of the Saints was driven from Illinois, Charles and Mary Crismon and children left in February 1846, wintering on the Punca River, having a daughter, Emily Precinda born 18 Jan 1846 somewhere in the Pawnee Nation, Iowa. Arriving in Winter Quarters, Charles took his family north with Bishop Miller’s company, although they returned to Winter Quarters sometime during the winter. Charles was sent to Mississippi to help the Saints there prepare for the immigration West. Mary and children stayed in Winter Quarters. Fortunately, Martha Jane and George were old enough to be helpful to their mother. Because Charles had the ability to make money and accumulate possessions, I would doubt that Mary and her family went without the necessities. When Charles returned from Mississippi, he and son George made trips into Missouri to obtain supplies for the Saints on the westward immigration.
Charles and Mary Crismon and family went west with the Daniel Spencer Company of the Jedediah M. Grant Company, arriving in the Salt Lake Valley 4 October 1847. There are no records of anything regarding Mary during the brief time they lived in the Salt Lake area, although we know that Mary was pregnant again when they left for the gold fields of California in early spring of 1849, Ellen being born 18 Jul 1849 on the American River in California.
Mary’s last three children were born in San Bernardino, California: John Franklin, 14 Feb 1852; Cynthia Ann, 18 Jun 1854; and Walter Scott, 24 Aug 1856.
Without leaving a journal or any personal history, we see Mary living in the shadow of her prosperous, outgoing husband. Over the years, Mary finally accepted, evidently with some reluctance, Charles’ decision to take four plural wives. Although Mary most likely didn’t want for anything, she and Charles seem to have lived apart after his plural marriages in the 1860s. When Charles was called to colonize in Arizona in 1877, he took three plural wives, having divorced Christina Hassel. Mary chose not to immigrate again, whether because of the plural wives or because she was tired of colonizing, we cannot tell.
Mary stayed in Utah, living with one of her married daughters living in Weber County, as she died in Harrisburg, Weber County, Utah, on May 15, 1892 and was buried in Salt Lake City.
 
Hill, Mary (I98198)
 
2365 Mary Hooker was the daughter of Thomas Hooker and Susannah Garbrand. She was born about 1624, and married by about 1646 Rev. Roger Newton (she had one child by the date of her father's will, 7 July 1647. (Great Migration)

HARTFORD GENEALOGY WIKIA
Mary (Hooker) Newton (1624-1675)
Mary Hooker (1624 - February 4, 1675) was a resident of Farmington, Connecticut, and Milford, Connecticut. She was also the daughter ofThomas Hooker, one of the founders of Hartford, Connecticut.
Hooker was born in 1624 in England as the daughter of Thomas Hooker, one of the founders of Hartford, Connecticut. After her marriage in 1644, she settled in Farmington, Connecticut, where she remained for two decades. She then moved to Milford, Connecticut, with her young family. It is here that she remained for her last years.
On February 4, 1675, Hooker died in Milford, Connecticut. 
Hooker, Mary (I143762)
 
2366 Mary is an adopted daughter of John and Ruth Harrington United States Census 1900 Glenwood, Sevier, Utah, USA  Huntsman, Mary (I88220)
 
2367 Mary Jane Baum was born on April 25, 1854, in Provo, Utah, to Hannah Jane Cloward, age 20, and George Baum, age 24. Mary Jane Baum died on October 14, 1928, in Provo, Utah, when she was 74 years old.  Baum, Mary Jane (I123455)
 
2368 Mary Jordan, daughter of Mr. And Mrs. David Jordan, was born in Myrthyr Tydfil, South
Wales, on the 5th day of December 1844. Her parents were converted to Mormonism
when she was three years of age. And when she was eight years old she was baptized.
1852. 
Jordan, Mary (I94056)
 
2369 Mary Judd was born in February 1647 in Farmington, Connecticut. She married Thomas Loomis on January 1, 1663. They had two children during their marriage. She died on August 8, 1684, at the age of 37.  Judd, Mary (I20630)
 
2370 Mary Judd was born in February 1647 in Farmington, Connecticut. She married Thomas Loomis on January 1, 1663. They had two children during their marriage. She died on August 8, 1684, at the age of 37.  Judd, Mary (I8803)
 
2371 Mary Kingsley was born 6 August 1730 in Windham, Windham, Connecticut, U.S. to parents Ezra Kingsley and Elizabeth Wight. She married Samuel Stoddard 12 March 1753 in Windham, Windham, Connecticut, U.S. They had 4 children, Elizabeth, Lemuel, Samuel, and Azariah Stoddard. Then she married Thomas Davison November 1753 Connecticut, U.S. They had 6 children, Uriah, Thomas, Mary, Jonathan, Rachael, and Rachel Davison. She died 1802 in Vermont, U.S. She was 72 years old.  Kingsley, Mrs. Mary (I93589)
 
2372 Mary Lincoln "Peggy" Beckwith
Birth: Aug. 22, 1898
Mount Pleasant
Henry County
Iowa, USA
Death: Jul. 11, 1975
Rutland
Rutland County
Vermont, USA

Was a prominent descendant of Abraham Lincoln. She was one of the last two descendants (great-grandchildren) of Abraham Lincoln with her brother, Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith.

"Peggy" Lincoln at age 14.Mary Beckwith, or "Peggy" as she was occasionally called, was born to Jessie Harlan Lincoln and Warren Beckwith on August 22, 1898, in Mt Pleasant, Iowa. Raised in Hildene with her brother, Peggy later grew up in Washington, D.C., and was said to have become ‘a squat, fair-haired, blue-eyed, chain smoker who golfed and dabbled in oil painting and sculpture. She got the nickname "Peggy" when her grandfather, Robert Todd Lincoln, described Mary Lincoln as her hair ‘flying in the sun' when he wrote to his Aunt Emile Todd Helm and gave Mary the name. She never married and died on July 10, 1975 at around 2:15 a.m. Mary Lincoln Beckwith died at Rutland Hospital in Rutland, Vermont. She requested when she died that her ashes be spread over her estate, this request was granted and there was no funeral or memorial service held. At her death, her brother, Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith, became the last living Lincoln descendant.

Family links:
Parents:
Warren Wallace Beckwith (1874 - 1955)
Jessie Harlan Lincoln Randolph (1875 - 1948)

Siblings:
Mary Lincoln Beckwith (1898 - 1975)
Infant Beckwith (1901 - 1901)*
Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith (1904 - 1985)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Cremated, Ashes scattered. 
Beckwith, Mary ‘peggy’ Lincoln (I139287)
 
2373 Mary Lott arrived in New England with her mother, Sarah, and stepfather Adam Mott in 1635 on board the Defense from Cambridge. They arrived into Massachusetts and later removing to Portsmouth, RI. She married her step-brother Adam Mott.

Mary [Lott] Mott wrote her will on 12 February 1710/11. She named her children:
(1) Sarah [Mott] Tripp
(2) Bethyah [Mott] Abbitt
(3) Elizabeth [Mott] Wing
(4) Abigail [Mott] Hefferland

Her son-in-law Daniel Lawton, husband of daughter Rebecca, witnessed the will, as well as her half-brother Jacob Mott.

Children who predeceased her included Adam Mott, Mary Mott, and Phebe Mott. 
Lott, Mary Englebert (I139572)
 
2374 Mary Louise Young Doxey
January 27, 1930 ~ November 10, 2017
Mary Lou was born in Salt Lake City, Utah as the third child of Gaylen Snow Young and Mary Louise Ross Young with older sister Betsy Young Newton, older brother Gaylen Snow Young Jr., and younger brother Edwin Ross Young (deceased). Mary Lou graduated from East High School and the University of Utah.
Mary Lou Young married Graham W. Doxey (Bud) on June 22, 1950, and together began a remarkable family experience. They are the parents of 12 children (1 deceased-Amie), 84 grandchildren (3 deceased), and 149 great-grandchildren and 5 great-great-grandchildren; a total of 250 offspring. Mary Lou's surviving children are Diane Jones (Max), Carol Richards (Stephen), Marilee Page (Richard), Graham, Robert (Denise), Lisa Patch (Timothy), Scott (Annelle), Margaret Ann Boud (Thomas), Rebecca Louise Schettler (Richard), Sarah Elizabeth Sheffield (Joseph), and Mary Kim Oswald (Kevan).
Her family was the focus of her life. Her descendants describe Grandma Lou's legacy that will live in their hearts forever...
"When I think of Grandma Lou - It's hard for me to describe her without thinking of Grandpa - They were very much one - She was the perfect example of what it means to cleave to your spouse and become one - She and Grandpa were both steadfast and immovable, always abounding in good work - Visionary, they could see and understand the importance of things that others didn't or couldn't yet - They had an eternal perspective with an eye single to the glory of God - Love of children, love of husband, love of the Lord - love of flowers - bright smile - she brings joy to my life - laughter - choose happy - cheerful - genuine - elegant - focus - obedient - optimistic - positive - selfless - sincere - sparkly - high energy - faithful - adoring wife - anxiously engaged - confidence - connected - enthusiasm - eternal - family - feminine - grateful - hard worker - jubilant - matriarch - noble-strength - serving - tireless - twinkle in her eye - uplifting - valiant - warmth - welcoming - whistle. Shine On Mom!!! You are our hero and inspiration of dignity, grace, and love. You are our sunshine and have been a light to us and all those who know you. Your love is engraved in our hearts."
Funeral services will be held on Monday, November 20, 2017 at 11:00 am at the Foothill Stake Center, 1933 South 2100 East. A viewing will be held on Sunday evening from 6-8 pm as well as from 9:30-10:30 am, prior to the services at the church, all viewings are also at the Foothill Stake Center. Interment to follow the services in the Salt Lake City Cemetery.
Published in Deseret News from Nov. 17 to Nov. 18, 2017 
Young, Mary Louise (I40231)
 
2375 Mary Packard lived on a farm on Lake Nipenicket, "Scotland". House probably still standing.  Packard, Mary (I79990)
 
2376 Mary TINKHAM daughter of Ephraim TINKHAM & Esther WRIGHT born 13 August 1685 at Sandwich, Massachusetts. She married Ichabod TUPPER ca. 1711 in Massachusetts. She died 8 October 1728 at Sandwich, Massachusetts. Record in TINKHAM Biographical Index page  Ellis, Mary (I49918)
 
2377 Mary TINKHAM daughter of Helkiah TINKHAM & Ruth COOKE born 13 August 1687 at Plymouth, Massachusetts. She married Ebenezer CURTISS 19 January 1710 at Plymouth, Massachusetts. She died in 1718 at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Record in TINKHAM Biographical Ind  Tinkham, Mary (I53129)
 
2378 Mary was born 22 September 1849 in Council Bluffs, Iowa. At the age of 12 she departed Florence, Nebraska with the James Wareham wagon company in July 1862 and traveled 80 days. She died 29 January in Ogden, Utah.  Eggleston, Mary Elizabeth (I113456)
 
2379 Mary's father Robert is listed in The Great Migration. Vol 3, G-H Robert Charles Anderson's (under sources attached below). Starting on page 101, identifies the migration of Robert Goodall, aged 30, Kathern, his wife, age 28, Mary Goodale, age 4, Abraham Goodale, age 2, and Isaacke Goodale, age half a year, on board the Elizabeth in 1634. His first residence in Massachusetts was in Salem, although over his lifetime he managed to amass a large collection of land. In a 1662 deed he was described as "sometime of Salem." He and his wife Katherine had eight known children, including the 3 born in England. Her father was likely from Dennington, although see page 107 of the above-referenced book for a better discussion.
The marriage record between John Pease and Mary Goodell did not survive. See pages 104 and 105 of the above reference. Anderson quotes a deed of 7 November 1682 where "John Pease Senior, aged about 53 years, saith...the land that my father-in-law Goodell..." They likely married about 1653 as their oldest known child was born in 1654, and probably where the bride's family was living at the time, which was Salem, as was customary in those days.
John and Mary have several children listed in Salem vital records:
Pease, John, s. John and Mary, 20: 3m: 1654. CTR
Pease, Robert, s. John and Mary, 14: 3m: 1656. CTR
Pease, Margaret, d. John and Mary, Oct. 8, 1658. CTR
Pease, Abraham, s. John and Mary, 5: 4m: 166-. CTR [1662. TC]
Peas, Mary, d. John, bp. 5: 3m: 1667.
Pease, Jonathan, s. John and Mary, Jan. 2, 1668. CTR
There is an attached source below for a Mary born in 1658 the same day as Margaret above was born. It looks like what happened is that in the original record, the name looks like "Marg" so it was identified as Margaret by one set of indexers, and by Mary by another set. Obviously, if there was a Mary born in 1658, they wouldn't have named the daughter baptized in 1667 Mary as well.
From "Three Mary Peases of Salem, Massachusetts..." by Ian Watson, published in The American Genealogist, volume 70, 205 - 208: "Robert's son John ...had a daughter named Mary, born 8 October 1658. Savage, Frederick S. Pease, and A.S. Pease all called her Mary. But the compiler of the published Salem vital records misread her name as "Marg" and extrapolated that to "Marg[aret]"...Most Pease historians since the publication of the Salem vital records have copied this error. But an examination of the original record at the Essex Institute in Salem ... shows conclusively that the entry reads "Mary"...As further confirmation, John's probate shows that he had a daughter Mary living in 1690, but no Margaret...And a Mary Pease was one of four children of John Pease baptized at Salem in 1667 in order by age...Many other pieces of evidence show that John Pease had a daughter Mary but no daughter Margaret."
So in total, I think it is safe to say that John and Mary had five known children:
1. John Pease
2. Robert Pease
3. Mary Pease
4. Abraham Pease
5. Jonathan Pease
Unfortunately, Mary died a few days after her youngest son Jonathan was born. Her death is listed in Salem vital records. See source below. Her husband remarried after her death (Ann Cummings) and had three more known children.
Her father Robert also outlived her by several years. Robert left behind a will dated 12 October 1682, which only mentions by name his daughter Elizabeth and her son from her first marriage, John Smith. It is likely that he had already gifted Mary's portion of his estate at the time of her marriage.
Although all of her husband's children with his second wife have birth records in Salem, it appears that he moved the whole family to Enfield, Connecticut about 1682. All of his children have death records there.
Enfield was originally settled in 1679 by settlers from Salem, Massachusetts. Enfield was incorporated in Massachusetts in 1683 as the Freshwater Plantation. Around 1700 the town changed its name to Enfield after Enfield Town in Middlesex. In 1749, following the settlement of a lawsuit in which it was determined that a surveyor's error placed a section of present-day Hartford County (including Enfield) within the boundaries of Massachusetts, the town seceded and became part of Connecticut. So actually the whole time that her husband and children lived there, it was still part of Massachusetts.
Mary may have been buried in The Burying Point (1637) on Charter Street, the oldest cemetery in Salem, but since there is no headstone, this is just speculation.
Mary had some 36 grandchildren. Mary's son Robert and his wife had 12 of these grandchildren. Undoubtedly, they have a large number of descendants.

Margaret Pease Not A Daughter Of John Pease & Mary Goodale. John Pease & Mary Goodale didn't have a daughter named Margaret Pease. They had a daughter named Mary Pease. See the Memories section on the page for proof under the heading "3. Mary (Margaret) Pease." The person who transcribed the Original paperwork mistook "Mary" as "Marg" (an abbreviation for Margaret) which is why past Historians / Genealogist mistook MARY's name for Margaret. If past Historians would have actually looked at the Original Document (Essex Co. Superior Court Recs., Ser. VI, Book 3) for MARY PEASE it clearly spells MARY not Marg. The original document is now part of the PEABODY ESSEX MUSEUM. Further evidence in John Pease Probate shows his daughter Mary living in 1690. Mary Pease was also 1 of 4 children of John Pease Baptised in 1667 in Salem, MA in order of Birth/Age. John Pease daughter Mary Pease married Hugh Pasco. 
Goodale, Mary (I86316)
 
2380 Mary's husband Richard came to Watertown from England when he was about 11. He lived in Watertown with his family for a short time until he moved with his father to Ipswich about 1637. It was here in Ipswich that he likely met and married his first wife Mary.

It is likely that sometime after the birth of Samuel, Mary moved with her husband Richard to Wenham. They likely lived in Wenham, more or less, until their deaths, roughly 20 years.

There are several children listed in Wenham vital records as belonging to Richard. Unfortunately, they don't list the child's mother, only the father:
Kimball, Thomas, s. Richard, Nov. 12, 1657. CTR
Kimball, Ephraim, s. Richard, Feb. 18, 1660. CTR
Kimball, Caleb, s. Richard, Apr. 9, 1665. CTR

To my knowledge, the only original record with Mary's name on it that we have found was her death record, published in Wenham vital records:
Kimball, Mary, w. Richard, Sept. 2, 1672. CTR

She died before her husband, and he remarried after her death, another woman named Mary.

Wenham was first settled in 1635 and officially incorporated in 1643, but I don't think that Richard and Mary came until the 1650s. Wenham was originally a part of Salem and was the first town to be set off from Salem. Because many of its early settlers came from Suffolk County in England, it is presumed that the name of the town derives from two small villages there-Great Wenham and Little Wenham. Wenham means "home on the moor". A church was formed in October 1644, with John Fiske as pastor and seven families as members. Wenham provided volunteers in King Philip's War in the 1670s.

Mary's husband Richard is mentioned briefly in his father's entry in The Great Migration series. See source attached below. This series is the "gold standard" of all sources related to early New England settlers. According to this source, Richard's first wife Mary may have been Mary Cooley, daughter of John Cooley of Ipswich. On 6 July 1665 Richard Kimball of Wenham sold to Caleb Kimball of Ipswich "my dwelling and land about it, containing one acre...which was late John Coolye's deceased." This is not a "smoking gun," because maybe Richard bought the property instead of inheriting it. But perhaps Mary's maiden name may have been Cooley.
 
Cooley, Mary (I28953)
 
2381 MARY, eldest known child of Thomas Willett, was born 10 November 1637. She married at Plymouth 22 September 1658 Samuel Hooker, son of THOMAS HOOKER. She married (2) at Farmington 10 August 1703 Rev. Thomas Buckingham.
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins. 
Willett, Mary Brown (I143761)
 
2382 Mary, sister and heir of Henry and Edward Gardiner, and daughter and heir of Henry Gardiner, esq.; the bans for this marriage were published [at All Saints, Hertford] 20th May, 1655; she was buried 10th October, 1718 [at All Saints, Hertford], aged 82.  Gardiner, Mary (I131050)
 
2383 Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840–1911. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.

Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.

 
Kilde (S465)
 
2384 måtte iflg. kgl. Resolution af 18 Sept. 1782 »påtage sig Gisselfeld Klosters Direktion sammen med Geheimeraad Carl Adolph Raben efter Geheimeraad Holger Baron Rosenkrantz«.  Von Kleist, Sophie Frederikke Louise (I23527)
 
2385 MATTHIAS ELLIS, along with his brothers Freeman and Manoah, took the Oath of Allegiance in 1681 (Freeman, op. cit., vol.2, p73).

He served on a grand jury 2 June 1685 (Plymouth Colonial Records, vol 6, page 166).

He and his brother Mordecai are listed as Sandwich freemen in 1702 (Freeman, op. cit., vol.2, p85).

In 1705 he was named to a committee to act as agents for the settlement of the bounds between Marshpee and Sandwich (ibid, p.86). 
Ellis, Matthias Lt. (I49821)
 
2386 May have been born in Little Compton but recorded in Tiverton. Conflicting records. Tiverton sources have been detached. Several sources show family living in Little Compton but children's births recorded in Tiverton.
Sarah's will was proved in Tiverton 1807 (See notes). 
Davenport, Sarah (I139593)
 
2387 Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol 1 and 2, pg 26
Both Thomas children are listed in this record.
Death date given for 1st Thomas as same day as birth.
Spouse and children are listed with Thomas born in 1707. 
Alden, Thomas (I114827)
 
2388 Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol. 1 and 2, pg 26
Lists Ann as a twin to Gilliam. 
Alden, Anna (I114824)
 
2389 Mayflower Cemetery  Simmons, Mary (I120878)
 
2390 Mayflower Cemetery  Alden, Samuel (I115000)
 
2391 Mayflower descendant  Freeman, John II (I35292)
 
2392 MCCLOY, GERTRUDE HARBAUGH - Age 80 years of Mather, Pa., died Tuesday, December 3, 1974 in Greene County Memorial Hospital after a lingering illness. She was born June 17, 1894 at Bear Run, Pa., Fayette County, and was the son [sic] of the late William Harrison and Martha Linderman Stull. She was predeceased by her first husband, Joseph S. Harbaugh in 1928 and her second husband, Ira J. McCloy in 1964. She had resided in Mt. Pleasant for 20 years and she and her husband had operated a general store. Surviving are two daughters, Martha Litten, Mather, Pa., Doreas Moore, Baden, Pa.; two sons, Mark Harbaugh, Rices Landing, and John Harbaugh, Greensburg; nine grandchildren; three great grandchildren; a sister, Lena Richmond, Cumberland, Md.; five stepsons, Howard, Harold, Clair, Richard, Dr. Merritt McCloy, all of Mt. Pleasant, Pa.; four step daughters, Melva, Frances, Marlyn, Violet, all of Mt. Pleasant. Friends will be received in the Lucas-Behm Funeral Home, Jefferson, Thursday 2 to 8:30 p.m. the hour of service. Rev. H. Walton Roigt (?) will officiate. Interment Friday at 11 a.m. in the Mill Run Cemetery.
The Morning Herald, Uniontown, Pennsylvania, Thursday, December 5, 1974, Page 37, column 8
 
Stull, Gertrude T (I45476)
 
2393 MEDI: Aviser
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S790)
 
2394 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S698)
 
2395 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S697)
 
2396 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S696)
 
2397 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S695)
 
2398 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S694)
 
2399 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S693)
 
2400 MEDI: Bog
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y 
Kilde (S692)
 

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