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Margaret Gavin

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Margaret Gavin

Birth
Scotland
Death
1 Mar 1899 (aged 89)
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA
Burial
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 2 (Emmes/Savidge/Cassidy Plot)
Memorial ID
View Source
DIED. Gavin. - In Honolulu, H.I., Mar 1, 1899, Mrs. Margaret Gavin, aged 89 years, a native of Scotland. (SOURCE: The Independent, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

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MRS. M. GAVIN.
Mrs. M. Gavin, grandmother of Mrs. Theo. C. Porter, William Savidge, Mrs. John Cassidy and Samuel Savidge, died Inst evening. The funeral will take place from St. Andrew's Cathedral at 3 o'clock this afternoon.
(SOURCE: The Hawaiian Star, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

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Gone But Not Forgotten
Mrs. M. Gavin died last night at the residence of her daughter, after a short illness, at the age of 89 years and after a residence in Hawaii of over 50 years. The deceased was a native of Scotland and during the many years of her residence here she was noted for her charity and kind feelings towards all who were poor and in need of help. The funeral will take place this afternoon from the home of Mrs. Samuel Savidge the daughter of deceased. (SOURCE: The Independent, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

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Old Resident Dead
Mrs. Margaret Gavin died yesterday at the advanced age of 89 years. She was of Scottish nativity and one of the oldest of foreign residents. Mrs. [Sarah] Savidge and Mrs. Emmes were her children, and she leaves Mrs. Theo . Porter, Mrs. John Cassidy, Mrs. Robertson*, Mrs. Crozier*, and William and Samuel Savidge, grandchildren, with a host of great grandchildren. (SOURCE: The Evening Bulletin, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 2, 1899, Page 8)

*A similar article in The Pacific Commercial Advertiser, March 2, 1899, reports that all of the above individuals reside in Hawaii, except Mrs. Robertson and Mrs. Crozier, who live in San Francisco, California.

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PALL BEARERS.
The pall bearers for the funeral of Mrs. Gavin this afternoon will be: L. L. La Pierre, E. E. Mossman, John Sullivan, Charles B. Wilson, Charles S. Crane and H. E. McIntyre. (SOURCE: The Hawaiian Star, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, Page 5, March 2, 1899)
DIED. Gavin. - In Honolulu, H.I., Mar 1, 1899, Mrs. Margaret Gavin, aged 89 years, a native of Scotland. (SOURCE: The Independent, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

==========

MRS. M. GAVIN.
Mrs. M. Gavin, grandmother of Mrs. Theo. C. Porter, William Savidge, Mrs. John Cassidy and Samuel Savidge, died Inst evening. The funeral will take place from St. Andrew's Cathedral at 3 o'clock this afternoon.
(SOURCE: The Hawaiian Star, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

==========

Gone But Not Forgotten
Mrs. M. Gavin died last night at the residence of her daughter, after a short illness, at the age of 89 years and after a residence in Hawaii of over 50 years. The deceased was a native of Scotland and during the many years of her residence here she was noted for her charity and kind feelings towards all who were poor and in need of help. The funeral will take place this afternoon from the home of Mrs. Samuel Savidge the daughter of deceased. (SOURCE: The Independent, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, March 2, 1899)

==========

Old Resident Dead
Mrs. Margaret Gavin died yesterday at the advanced age of 89 years. She was of Scottish nativity and one of the oldest of foreign residents. Mrs. [Sarah] Savidge and Mrs. Emmes were her children, and she leaves Mrs. Theo . Porter, Mrs. John Cassidy, Mrs. Robertson*, Mrs. Crozier*, and William and Samuel Savidge, grandchildren, with a host of great grandchildren. (SOURCE: The Evening Bulletin, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 2, 1899, Page 8)

*A similar article in The Pacific Commercial Advertiser, March 2, 1899, reports that all of the above individuals reside in Hawaii, except Mrs. Robertson and Mrs. Crozier, who live in San Francisco, California.

==========

PALL BEARERS.
The pall bearers for the funeral of Mrs. Gavin this afternoon will be: L. L. La Pierre, E. E. Mossman, John Sullivan, Charles B. Wilson, Charles S. Crane and H. E. McIntyre. (SOURCE: The Hawaiian Star, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, Page 5, March 2, 1899)


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