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Anna S. Trout

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Anna S. Trout

Birth
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
21 Oct 1890 (aged 24–25)
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Lancaster, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Plot
Grid K15W
Memorial ID
View Source
Anna S. TROUT was the daughter of John Ferree TROUT and Sarah Jane BOWER.
Photography by Donald Eugene Trout, Akron, PA.

Newspaper Article
THREE DEAD IN TWO MONTHS.
Typhoid Fever Carries a Third Victim From the Trout Family.
The hand of death has again visited the home of the late John F. Trout, and in this case as in the two previous ones, all in the period of two months, typhoid fever is the dread disease which has brought the affliction. Miss Annie E. Trout, aged about twenty-six years is the last of the victims.
After the death of Mrs. Trout the sewers were cleaned and the house thoroughly renovated, but within ten days after the death of her mother Miss Annie, who had nursed her mother and two sisters during their illnesses, was down with the fever. Three of the most talented physicians in the city were called in consultation, and together with two trained nurses they fought the sickness for nearly four weeks. They seem to have stayed the ravages of the fever, but the case took a turn, and last evening at 8:15 o'clock she died.
Miss Trout was a trained nurse and a member of the New Mennonite church. She was a most estimable lady, and the sympathy of the community goes out to the family in their great bereavement.
((The News-Journal, Lancaster, Pa., Wed 22 Oct 1890, p. 1)
Anna S. TROUT was the daughter of John Ferree TROUT and Sarah Jane BOWER.
Photography by Donald Eugene Trout, Akron, PA.

Newspaper Article
THREE DEAD IN TWO MONTHS.
Typhoid Fever Carries a Third Victim From the Trout Family.
The hand of death has again visited the home of the late John F. Trout, and in this case as in the two previous ones, all in the period of two months, typhoid fever is the dread disease which has brought the affliction. Miss Annie E. Trout, aged about twenty-six years is the last of the victims.
After the death of Mrs. Trout the sewers were cleaned and the house thoroughly renovated, but within ten days after the death of her mother Miss Annie, who had nursed her mother and two sisters during their illnesses, was down with the fever. Three of the most talented physicians in the city were called in consultation, and together with two trained nurses they fought the sickness for nearly four weeks. They seem to have stayed the ravages of the fever, but the case took a turn, and last evening at 8:15 o'clock she died.
Miss Trout was a trained nurse and a member of the New Mennonite church. She was a most estimable lady, and the sympathy of the community goes out to the family in their great bereavement.
((The News-Journal, Lancaster, Pa., Wed 22 Oct 1890, p. 1)


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