Mary Ann Horn was the fourth of six children born to Frederick P. Horn (1796-1867) and Hepzibah Clark (1790-1882). They lived in Pennsylvania, where, at age 20, she married Henderson McMurray on 19 Feb. 1845 in Huntingdon County.
Mary Ann and Henderson had thirteen children: William, Anna Marie, Joseph Philmore, Frederick Asbury, John Wesley, James Turner, Mary ( who lived to be 100 years old), Henry B., Emma, David, the twins Ella Rosetta and Hepzibah Jeanetta born in 1865 during the Civil War, and Margaret. Son John Wesley and the children before him were b. in Pennsylvania, but by 1854 the family had migrated to Tipton, Cedar Co., Iowa, where son James Turner was born. In 1856 the family was in Rochester, Cedar Co., IA, and in the 1860 census, they are found in Sugar Creek, Cedar, IA. They were still in Cedar County when their last child, Margaret, was born, but by the 1870 census had moved to Newton, Jasper County, Iowa where mary Ann and Henderson lived out the rest of their days.
They both were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Mary Ann Horn was the fourth of six children born to Frederick P. Horn (1796-1867) and Hepzibah Clark (1790-1882). They lived in Pennsylvania, where, at age 20, she married Henderson McMurray on 19 Feb. 1845 in Huntingdon County.
Mary Ann and Henderson had thirteen children: William, Anna Marie, Joseph Philmore, Frederick Asbury, John Wesley, James Turner, Mary ( who lived to be 100 years old), Henry B., Emma, David, the twins Ella Rosetta and Hepzibah Jeanetta born in 1865 during the Civil War, and Margaret. Son John Wesley and the children before him were b. in Pennsylvania, but by 1854 the family had migrated to Tipton, Cedar Co., Iowa, where son James Turner was born. In 1856 the family was in Rochester, Cedar Co., IA, and in the 1860 census, they are found in Sugar Creek, Cedar, IA. They were still in Cedar County when their last child, Margaret, was born, but by the 1870 census had moved to Newton, Jasper County, Iowa where mary Ann and Henderson lived out the rest of their days.
They both were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.