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Harriet Briggs

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Harriet Briggs

Birth
Death
3 Apr 1947 (aged 78–79)
Burial
Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.4916124, Longitude: -81.6427236
Plot
Section: 50 Lot: 108 Tier: 1 Grave: 2
Memorial ID
View Source
Name: Briggs, Harriett
Date: Apr - 4 1947
Source: Plain Dealer; Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #010.
Notes: Briggs: Harriett, a resident of Amasa Stone House, 975 East Blvd., Thursday, April 3. Services at J. H. Brown & Son Funeral Home, 8128 Carnegie Ave., Saturday at 2 p. m.

Buried in the lot reserved for the Amasa Stone House
The Amasa Stone House, dedicated on July 14, 1877 as the Home for Aged Women, served as an independent home for "Protestant Gentlewomen" sixty years of age and older, until merging with the A. M. McGregor Home in 1987. Amasa Stone built and endowed the home as a gift to the Women's Christian Association (WCA), "to give old age the security it deserves, the care it needs, and the atmosphere of love and refinement it enjoys." Located at 194 Kennard (East 46th) Street between Garden (Central) and Cedar Streets, the Home for Aged Women served eighty-eight elderly women between 1877 and 1896. Residents paid a $250.00 admission fee and turned over their property in exchange for lifelong care.
--Info from The Cleveland Encyclopedia
Name: Briggs, Harriett
Date: Apr - 4 1947
Source: Plain Dealer; Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #010.
Notes: Briggs: Harriett, a resident of Amasa Stone House, 975 East Blvd., Thursday, April 3. Services at J. H. Brown & Son Funeral Home, 8128 Carnegie Ave., Saturday at 2 p. m.

Buried in the lot reserved for the Amasa Stone House
The Amasa Stone House, dedicated on July 14, 1877 as the Home for Aged Women, served as an independent home for "Protestant Gentlewomen" sixty years of age and older, until merging with the A. M. McGregor Home in 1987. Amasa Stone built and endowed the home as a gift to the Women's Christian Association (WCA), "to give old age the security it deserves, the care it needs, and the atmosphere of love and refinement it enjoys." Located at 194 Kennard (East 46th) Street between Garden (Central) and Cedar Streets, the Home for Aged Women served eighty-eight elderly women between 1877 and 1896. Residents paid a $250.00 admission fee and turned over their property in exchange for lifelong care.
--Info from The Cleveland Encyclopedia

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