merchant Masons bldg. material; pneumonia; resident 81 Summer St.; informant Emma A. Hadley [sister], 81 Summer St.; burial Oak Grove Cemetery
son of William A Paisler &
Coralena "Caroline" (Kind) Paisler
Coralena b. c.1807
siblings: Augusta b. c.1831, Emma b. c.1836 m. Joseph E. Bucklyn & Jacob B Hadley, Henry b. c.1838, Mary H. (1829-1848) and William A.
Charles' final will, which he executed 4 May 1914 and then made a codicil dated 30 Dec 1914, was filed in Bristol County court are available on ancestry.com.
Charle's will is very lengthy and has many specific terms of settlement that are much too complicated to detail here.
He names dozens of individuals and organizations in addition to his sister Emma Hadley and his brother Henry Paisler. Included in the details is that he ordered an above ground sarcophagus, tomb or mausoleum for himself and his deceased niece Ella Frances Bucklyn who d. 25 Dec 1912 and who "very strongly in her lifetime objected to being placed underground." He included details of the stone to be used, the carving, etc. and alternatives if the initial instructions could not be adhered to. Charles was a partner in business with William H. Willis, "Paisler and Willis." Mr. Willis was named as one of the executors and had a number of directives Charles expected him to fulfill.
merchant Masons bldg. material; pneumonia; resident 81 Summer St.; informant Emma A. Hadley [sister], 81 Summer St.; burial Oak Grove Cemetery
son of William A Paisler &
Coralena "Caroline" (Kind) Paisler
Coralena b. c.1807
siblings: Augusta b. c.1831, Emma b. c.1836 m. Joseph E. Bucklyn & Jacob B Hadley, Henry b. c.1838, Mary H. (1829-1848) and William A.
Charles' final will, which he executed 4 May 1914 and then made a codicil dated 30 Dec 1914, was filed in Bristol County court are available on ancestry.com.
Charle's will is very lengthy and has many specific terms of settlement that are much too complicated to detail here.
He names dozens of individuals and organizations in addition to his sister Emma Hadley and his brother Henry Paisler. Included in the details is that he ordered an above ground sarcophagus, tomb or mausoleum for himself and his deceased niece Ella Frances Bucklyn who d. 25 Dec 1912 and who "very strongly in her lifetime objected to being placed underground." He included details of the stone to be used, the carving, etc. and alternatives if the initial instructions could not be adhered to. Charles was a partner in business with William H. Willis, "Paisler and Willis." Mr. Willis was named as one of the executors and had a number of directives Charles expected him to fulfill.
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