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Mary Caroline McIlvaine Mann

Birth
New York, New York County, New York, USA
Death
7 Dec 1899 (aged 61–62)
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
Burial
Delhi, Delaware County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
346
Memorial ID
View Source
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Mann, whose death is announced in this issue, was born in the City of New York and is of Scotch and English descent. For many years she had been an active worker in temperance cause. She was married to Dr. Mann in 1870. Consumption was the cause of her death. The deceased’s father was Cornelius P. McIlvaine, a whole sale merchant in New York and while yet in her infancy her father died, soon after which the family moved to Brooklyn where Mrs. Mann has since lived. She became a member of the Rev. Dr. Storrs Church and continued in that communion to the day of her disease. She was interested in many ways in practical Christianity and labored zealously for many years.

Mrs. Mann contributed to many papers, periodicals and magazines. She was the author of several Sunday school books which have had large circulation. Perhaps the best known work from her pen on this line were published by the American Tract Society.

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York, Friday, December 8, 1899
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Mann, whose death is announced in this issue, was born in the City of New York and is of Scotch and English descent. For many years she had been an active worker in temperance cause. She was married to Dr. Mann in 1870. Consumption was the cause of her death. The deceased’s father was Cornelius P. McIlvaine, a whole sale merchant in New York and while yet in her infancy her father died, soon after which the family moved to Brooklyn where Mrs. Mann has since lived. She became a member of the Rev. Dr. Storrs Church and continued in that communion to the day of her disease. She was interested in many ways in practical Christianity and labored zealously for many years.

Mrs. Mann contributed to many papers, periodicals and magazines. She was the author of several Sunday school books which have had large circulation. Perhaps the best known work from her pen on this line were published by the American Tract Society.

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York, Friday, December 8, 1899


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