Ann and Samuel might have had one daughter, Elizabeth Ann, based on census records. However, they do not appear to have had any children to survive to the time of Samuel's will (in which he devised his real estate to his nephew Samuel Mead after Ann's death) or Ann's own 1886 will (in which she named her three surviving sisters--Permelia Coombs, Charlotte Hoffman, and Patience Strange--as her heirs).
Note: Heartfelt thanks to R Schuerer for creating this memorial and to Mary Ann Missimer-Moore for the gravestone image.
Ann and Samuel might have had one daughter, Elizabeth Ann, based on census records. However, they do not appear to have had any children to survive to the time of Samuel's will (in which he devised his real estate to his nephew Samuel Mead after Ann's death) or Ann's own 1886 will (in which she named her three surviving sisters--Permelia Coombs, Charlotte Hoffman, and Patience Strange--as her heirs).
Note: Heartfelt thanks to R Schuerer for creating this memorial and to Mary Ann Missimer-Moore for the gravestone image.
Inscription
ANN
Wife of
SAMUEL MEAD
died Nov. 30,
1888
In her 85th year.
_______
[1 line, TBD]
Family Members
-
Rebecca Jackson Hewitt
1790–1871
-
Sarah Jackson Wells
1794–1850
-
Amy Jackson Abbott
1795 – unknown
-
Mary Jackson Groff
1798–1873
-
Elizabeth Jackson Garrison
1802–1882
-
Hannah Jackson Ashcraft
1806–1830
-
Permelia Jackson Coombs
1807–1893
-
Charlotte Jackson Hoffman
1810–1891
-
Patience Jackson Strang
1816–1890