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Mary Jane <I>Aldrich</I> Hallock

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Mary Jane Aldrich Hallock

Birth
Mattituck, Suffolk County, New York, USA
Death
1862 (aged 25–26)
Mattituck, Suffolk County, New York, USA
Burial
Riverhead, Suffolk County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Mary Jane Aldrich was the girl, who at age 16, embroidered the sampler that is in custody of the Suffolk County Historical Society, where she embroidered her family's names and birthdates - giving us valuable information about her family:
_____________________

Begin Sampler transcript:

Family Record

Married November the 14th AD 1835

John Y. Aldrich to
Eleanor __ Wells

Births:

John Y. Aldrich born July the 6th AD 1810
Eleanor Aldrich born March the 22nd AD 1810


Mary J. Aldrich born November the 17th AD 1836
Jacob W. Aldrich born December the 15th AD 1839
John Y. Aldrich born July the 30th AD 1841
Charles A. Aldrich born September the 17th AD 1844
Warren J. Aldrich born February the 9th AD 1846
Eleanor A. Aldrich born February the 21st AD 1848

End Sampler transcript
______________________

Mary Jane was the daughter of John Youngs and Eleanor (Wells) Aldrich.

Mary Jane married John Kasar Hallock, about 1854, and had three children with him: Lowell Mason 1855, Morris Wells 1858, and Adney Winslow 1861. She died in 1862, age 26, very shortly after Adney Winslow was born. She left three young children with John Kasar Hallock. He remarried shortly after to Joanna Downs, who became the stepmother of Mary Jane's children.

Mary Jane is a multi-generation Long Island descendant through her father. All of her father's ancestors since 1630 were from Puritan immigrants during the Great Migration. She is descended from perhaps 20 of the original Southold, LI Settlers.

Mary Jane's Aldrich line of descent is Mary Jane-8, John Youngs-7, Jacob-6, Jacob-5, Jacob-4, Jacob-3, Peter-2, George-1. George-1 was the original Puritan Settler to Mass, his son Peter-2 removed to Long Island and started the Long Island branch of Aldriches.

Her grave was originally in the family plot at Laurel Cemetery, but was moved approximately 1980 to Riverhead Cemetery because an area of Laurel Cemetery impeded highway construction.
Mary Jane Aldrich was the girl, who at age 16, embroidered the sampler that is in custody of the Suffolk County Historical Society, where she embroidered her family's names and birthdates - giving us valuable information about her family:
_____________________

Begin Sampler transcript:

Family Record

Married November the 14th AD 1835

John Y. Aldrich to
Eleanor __ Wells

Births:

John Y. Aldrich born July the 6th AD 1810
Eleanor Aldrich born March the 22nd AD 1810


Mary J. Aldrich born November the 17th AD 1836
Jacob W. Aldrich born December the 15th AD 1839
John Y. Aldrich born July the 30th AD 1841
Charles A. Aldrich born September the 17th AD 1844
Warren J. Aldrich born February the 9th AD 1846
Eleanor A. Aldrich born February the 21st AD 1848

End Sampler transcript
______________________

Mary Jane was the daughter of John Youngs and Eleanor (Wells) Aldrich.

Mary Jane married John Kasar Hallock, about 1854, and had three children with him: Lowell Mason 1855, Morris Wells 1858, and Adney Winslow 1861. She died in 1862, age 26, very shortly after Adney Winslow was born. She left three young children with John Kasar Hallock. He remarried shortly after to Joanna Downs, who became the stepmother of Mary Jane's children.

Mary Jane is a multi-generation Long Island descendant through her father. All of her father's ancestors since 1630 were from Puritan immigrants during the Great Migration. She is descended from perhaps 20 of the original Southold, LI Settlers.

Mary Jane's Aldrich line of descent is Mary Jane-8, John Youngs-7, Jacob-6, Jacob-5, Jacob-4, Jacob-3, Peter-2, George-1. George-1 was the original Puritan Settler to Mass, his son Peter-2 removed to Long Island and started the Long Island branch of Aldriches.

Her grave was originally in the family plot at Laurel Cemetery, but was moved approximately 1980 to Riverhead Cemetery because an area of Laurel Cemetery impeded highway construction.


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