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Lucy Jane “Jennie” <I>Ayars</I> Kellogg

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Lucy Jane “Jennie” Ayars Kellogg

Birth
Clarence, Erie County, New York, USA
Death
18 Apr 1935 (aged 91)
Takoma Park, Montgomery County, Maryland, USA
Burial
LeRoy, Osceola County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
in colaboration with Ruth Conard, a series of articles in the Review and Herald entitled "Growing Up in the Third Angel's Message", run serially in 1935.

!SOURCE: Notes by Myrta Kellogg-Lewis. Quotes article from an unknown source: "Mrs. A. F. Kellogg, of 200 Flower Avenue, accompanied by her sister, Mrs. J. E. Bennett, of Carson City, Mich., and her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Lewis, took a trip to Shiloh, N. J., and nearby places, where she lived when a child, about 75 years ago. At that time her parents, who lived in western New York, having accepted the doctrines preached by the believers in the personal second coming of Christ, were anxious to return to his father's old home in New Jersey, to tell his relatives living there all about the new ideas he had received. As a result they with their four children traveled with horse and carriage across Pennsylvania to New Jersey, where they lived several years. This is the first time Mrs. Kellogg and her sister, who was a baby then, have ever been back, and they much enjoyed looking up some of the old places."

KELLOGG, LUCY JENNIE AYARS--Mrs. L. Jennie Ayars-Kellogg was born at Clarence, Erie County, New York, Sept. 12, 1843; and lived to the ripe age of ninety-one years. She died at Takoma Park, Md., April 18, 1935. Mrs. Kellogg was reared in the atmosphere of devotion to God. Her father was an active church worker, and was accustomed to visit and comfort the sick. On these visits he was often accompanied by his wife and daughter. When she was nine years old, her father sold his farm in New York, and returned to New Jersey, in order to bring the truth of the near coming of Christ to his relatives and friends of the old home community. After five years, the family returned to New York. Later they moved to Pewamo, Mich. Here, at the age of twenty-three, Jennie Ayars was united in marriage to Alonzo Franklin Kellogg, who had been a Seventh-day Adventist since he was a small boy. Like her father, her husband was an earnest Christian and a faithful church worker. Sister Kellogg was a dressmaker and a practical nurse, and often made use of her skill in these lines to bring help and healing to those in need. She and her hyusband were also active in the distribution of literature. Sister Kellogg died in the full assurance of the resurrection. There are left to mourn, her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Lewis, and an adopted son, Charles Kellogg, of Chicago, Ill. (Obituary, Review and Herald, Jun. 6, 1935.)

Interment unknown. Records show she is not in the cemetery with her daughter in Maryland. So I placed her next to her husband in Michigan.
in colaboration with Ruth Conard, a series of articles in the Review and Herald entitled "Growing Up in the Third Angel's Message", run serially in 1935.

!SOURCE: Notes by Myrta Kellogg-Lewis. Quotes article from an unknown source: "Mrs. A. F. Kellogg, of 200 Flower Avenue, accompanied by her sister, Mrs. J. E. Bennett, of Carson City, Mich., and her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Lewis, took a trip to Shiloh, N. J., and nearby places, where she lived when a child, about 75 years ago. At that time her parents, who lived in western New York, having accepted the doctrines preached by the believers in the personal second coming of Christ, were anxious to return to his father's old home in New Jersey, to tell his relatives living there all about the new ideas he had received. As a result they with their four children traveled with horse and carriage across Pennsylvania to New Jersey, where they lived several years. This is the first time Mrs. Kellogg and her sister, who was a baby then, have ever been back, and they much enjoyed looking up some of the old places."

KELLOGG, LUCY JENNIE AYARS--Mrs. L. Jennie Ayars-Kellogg was born at Clarence, Erie County, New York, Sept. 12, 1843; and lived to the ripe age of ninety-one years. She died at Takoma Park, Md., April 18, 1935. Mrs. Kellogg was reared in the atmosphere of devotion to God. Her father was an active church worker, and was accustomed to visit and comfort the sick. On these visits he was often accompanied by his wife and daughter. When she was nine years old, her father sold his farm in New York, and returned to New Jersey, in order to bring the truth of the near coming of Christ to his relatives and friends of the old home community. After five years, the family returned to New York. Later they moved to Pewamo, Mich. Here, at the age of twenty-three, Jennie Ayars was united in marriage to Alonzo Franklin Kellogg, who had been a Seventh-day Adventist since he was a small boy. Like her father, her husband was an earnest Christian and a faithful church worker. Sister Kellogg was a dressmaker and a practical nurse, and often made use of her skill in these lines to bring help and healing to those in need. She and her hyusband were also active in the distribution of literature. Sister Kellogg died in the full assurance of the resurrection. There are left to mourn, her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Lewis, and an adopted son, Charles Kellogg, of Chicago, Ill. (Obituary, Review and Herald, Jun. 6, 1935.)

Interment unknown. Records show she is not in the cemetery with her daughter in Maryland. So I placed her next to her husband in Michigan.


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