Although she has no tombstone, I believe she is buried in this cemetery because:
The Miami County, Ohio deed that names all of her heirs, book 6, p. 421, 2 August 1827, states that Sarah Jennings was "late of Montgomery County", Ohio. Montgomery County is thus likely where she died and is buried. Some time between 1820, when she lived in Clark County, and when she died before 2 Aug 1827, she probably moved in with her son, Henry and family, who lived in Wayne Twp, Montgomery Co, Ohio. Henry's first wife, Sarah Smith Jennings had died 6 Dec 1824, and Sarah probably moved there to help with the young children. Sarah Smith Jennings has one of the only two legible tombstones in the Jennings Cemetery.
Montgomery County, Ohio Cemetery Inscriptions ETC, Volume 1, Montgomery Co Chapter of OGS, 1982, Dayton, Ohio, p. 55, describes the Jennings Cemetery as an inactive family cemetery "located in a tilled field in a clump of stones and saplings; no fence, and only two legible stones as of April 1960. Deed book P, p. 209 shows that when Henry and his second wife, (whom he married about the time his mother died), Christina Jennings sold some of the land on 26 May 1832, they excepted a 3 rod square "whereon is a grave yard".
Although she has no tombstone, I believe she is buried in this cemetery because:
The Miami County, Ohio deed that names all of her heirs, book 6, p. 421, 2 August 1827, states that Sarah Jennings was "late of Montgomery County", Ohio. Montgomery County is thus likely where she died and is buried. Some time between 1820, when she lived in Clark County, and when she died before 2 Aug 1827, she probably moved in with her son, Henry and family, who lived in Wayne Twp, Montgomery Co, Ohio. Henry's first wife, Sarah Smith Jennings had died 6 Dec 1824, and Sarah probably moved there to help with the young children. Sarah Smith Jennings has one of the only two legible tombstones in the Jennings Cemetery.
Montgomery County, Ohio Cemetery Inscriptions ETC, Volume 1, Montgomery Co Chapter of OGS, 1982, Dayton, Ohio, p. 55, describes the Jennings Cemetery as an inactive family cemetery "located in a tilled field in a clump of stones and saplings; no fence, and only two legible stones as of April 1960. Deed book P, p. 209 shows that when Henry and his second wife, (whom he married about the time his mother died), Christina Jennings sold some of the land on 26 May 1832, they excepted a 3 rod square "whereon is a grave yard".
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