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Adelaide Almira <I>McWilliams</I> Chambliss

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Adelaide Almira McWilliams Chambliss

Birth
Marshall County, Alabama, USA
Death
1909 (aged 72–73)
Burial
Bastrop, Bastrop County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section C, Row 11, Plot 20
Memorial ID
View Source
CHAMBLISS, ADLAIDE ALMIRA
Death of Mrs. Chambliss
The death of Mrs. Adlaide Almira Chambliss occurred -nday at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. ----. Deceased was born in Marshall county Ala June 1835, dying at the age of 73. She came to Bastrop soon after the war, and located at Walnut Creek, near Red Rock. During the war she assisted in making clothes and preparing food for Forrest's Command in Alabama.
Mrs. Chambliss was the wife of Henry F. Chambliss, the mom of three children, two of them preceded her in death. Though an invalid for many years she wrestled nobly with the trials of our being - smiling on, and sadly and long shall we listen in vain to hear the cheerful tones of her welcome, and though her gentle smile of greeting we shall not see again in this world the memory of it will light the way of those who loved her to that house not made with hands, eternal in the Heavens, where she waits to welcome them home. While the hope of that World show existence is bliss doe s not stifle the tears of the mourners in this sad world, yet if the freed spirit heedth aught beneath the brightness of its new inheritance, it may be joyful tot eh departed one to feel that all who knew her remember her in love. All Bastrop mourns the passing of this noble Christian lady. The advertiser extends sympathy to the sorrowing relatives. (The Bastrop Advertiser, Bastrop, Tex, Jan 9, 1909
CHAMBLISS, ADLAIDE ALMIRA
Death of Mrs. Chambliss
The death of Mrs. Adlaide Almira Chambliss occurred -nday at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. ----. Deceased was born in Marshall county Ala June 1835, dying at the age of 73. She came to Bastrop soon after the war, and located at Walnut Creek, near Red Rock. During the war she assisted in making clothes and preparing food for Forrest's Command in Alabama.
Mrs. Chambliss was the wife of Henry F. Chambliss, the mom of three children, two of them preceded her in death. Though an invalid for many years she wrestled nobly with the trials of our being - smiling on, and sadly and long shall we listen in vain to hear the cheerful tones of her welcome, and though her gentle smile of greeting we shall not see again in this world the memory of it will light the way of those who loved her to that house not made with hands, eternal in the Heavens, where she waits to welcome them home. While the hope of that World show existence is bliss doe s not stifle the tears of the mourners in this sad world, yet if the freed spirit heedth aught beneath the brightness of its new inheritance, it may be joyful tot eh departed one to feel that all who knew her remember her in love. All Bastrop mourns the passing of this noble Christian lady. The advertiser extends sympathy to the sorrowing relatives. (The Bastrop Advertiser, Bastrop, Tex, Jan 9, 1909


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