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Isabella Jane “Belle” <I>Daily</I> Barnes

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Isabella Jane “Belle” Daily Barnes

Birth
Clark County, Indiana, USA
Death
10 Apr 1925 (aged 84)
Tucson, Pima County, Arizona, USA
Burial
Tucson, Pima County, Arizona, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 16, Section B, Grave 101-2
Memorial ID
View Source
Daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth Jane (Beckett) Daily.

Arizona Daily Star - Tucson, AZ
Saturday - 11 April 1925
Page 1 - Column 3

WIDOW OF TUCSON PIONEER IS DEAD

Mrs. Belle Janes Barnes, pioneer of Tucson and widow of Judge W. H. Barnes one of the early territorial judges of Arizona, died early yesterday afternoon. Funeral services will be conducted in her home at Homecrest, East Speedway, at 4:30 p.m. Monday by Rev. Julian C. McPheeters of the University Methodist Episcopal church. Burial will be in the Masonic cemetery. The funeral will be in charge of the Parker-Grimshaw company.

Mrs. Barnes was 40 years a resident of Tucson coming here in 1885 after her husband had accepted from President Cleveland the appointment of judge of the territorial court for the first district of Arizona. Until the time of his death in 1904, Judge Barnes was one of the community leaders and had a reputation as a jurist of ability not only in Tucson but in the territory at large. Mrs. Barnes was a helpmate of the jurist and identified herself with the public-spirited work in which he was interested.

Mrs. Barnes was a native of Kentucky. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. John H. Martin of Tucson; three brothers, George H. Daily, for many years a resident of Tucson, Phil Daily of Carthage, Illinois, and Henry P. Daily, of Oberlin, Kansas, two granddaughters, Mrs. E. T. Hazlett of Phoenix, Arizona, Mrs. Gladstone McElhiney of Los Angeles, Calif., and a grandson, Jack B. Martin of Tucson.

-END-
Daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth Jane (Beckett) Daily.

Arizona Daily Star - Tucson, AZ
Saturday - 11 April 1925
Page 1 - Column 3

WIDOW OF TUCSON PIONEER IS DEAD

Mrs. Belle Janes Barnes, pioneer of Tucson and widow of Judge W. H. Barnes one of the early territorial judges of Arizona, died early yesterday afternoon. Funeral services will be conducted in her home at Homecrest, East Speedway, at 4:30 p.m. Monday by Rev. Julian C. McPheeters of the University Methodist Episcopal church. Burial will be in the Masonic cemetery. The funeral will be in charge of the Parker-Grimshaw company.

Mrs. Barnes was 40 years a resident of Tucson coming here in 1885 after her husband had accepted from President Cleveland the appointment of judge of the territorial court for the first district of Arizona. Until the time of his death in 1904, Judge Barnes was one of the community leaders and had a reputation as a jurist of ability not only in Tucson but in the territory at large. Mrs. Barnes was a helpmate of the jurist and identified herself with the public-spirited work in which he was interested.

Mrs. Barnes was a native of Kentucky. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. John H. Martin of Tucson; three brothers, George H. Daily, for many years a resident of Tucson, Phil Daily of Carthage, Illinois, and Henry P. Daily, of Oberlin, Kansas, two granddaughters, Mrs. E. T. Hazlett of Phoenix, Arizona, Mrs. Gladstone McElhiney of Los Angeles, Calif., and a grandson, Jack B. Martin of Tucson.

-END-


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