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Cassandra Alice <I>Sweeting</I> Dixon

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Cassandra Alice Sweeting Dixon

Birth
England
Death
1948 (aged 64–65)
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, USA
Burial
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Plot
Plot 130 Grave 4
Memorial ID
View Source
Born in Pinner, England; daughter of Henry Newton Sweeting and Alice Isabel Bourchier Sweeting. Because of her heart condition her parents came to the US and first settled in West Florida near her uncle William Sweeting. Her father opened a jewelry store in Milton. By 1888 they had moved to Tallahassee where Mrs. Sweeting's sister Emma Corbett lived. Her father opened a jewelry store on the west side of the 100 block of South Monroe St. and they lived on the corner of Call and Adams Streets, later on the 100 block of South Calhoun. "Cassie" (grad of FSCW in music) married Warren Coleman Dixon of Lee, Madison County. They owned Dixon Transfer, a moving company, and held a contract with Seaboard Air Line Railway to deliver less-than-car-load freight to local merchants. In 1929 they built a home on Ward St. in Melrose Pard Subdivision, designed by Cassie who also designed three other homes there. She died in 1948 after a long battle with cancer.
Born in Pinner, England; daughter of Henry Newton Sweeting and Alice Isabel Bourchier Sweeting. Because of her heart condition her parents came to the US and first settled in West Florida near her uncle William Sweeting. Her father opened a jewelry store in Milton. By 1888 they had moved to Tallahassee where Mrs. Sweeting's sister Emma Corbett lived. Her father opened a jewelry store on the west side of the 100 block of South Monroe St. and they lived on the corner of Call and Adams Streets, later on the 100 block of South Calhoun. "Cassie" (grad of FSCW in music) married Warren Coleman Dixon of Lee, Madison County. They owned Dixon Transfer, a moving company, and held a contract with Seaboard Air Line Railway to deliver less-than-car-load freight to local merchants. In 1929 they built a home on Ward St. in Melrose Pard Subdivision, designed by Cassie who also designed three other homes there. She died in 1948 after a long battle with cancer.


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