Advertisement

Charlotte Eveline <I>Sullivan</I> Sullivan

Advertisement

Charlotte Eveline Sullivan Sullivan

Birth
Jefferson County, Indiana, USA
Death
21 Aug 1907 (aged 79)
Texarkana, Miller County, Arkansas, USA
Burial
Madison, Jefferson County, Indiana, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.7420157, Longitude: -85.3882222
Plot
North of center, East ½, Lot 14, Plat 1 (no marker)
Memorial ID
View Source
Married John H. Sullivan 21 June 1849
John Henderson Sullivan was the son of Joseph Sullivan (brother of Jeremiah Sullivan) and Susan Vanniman Henderson)

Cause of death: Senile debility
====================
The Box Elder News
Brigham City, Utah
22 Aug 1907
Thursday

MRS. CHARLOTTE E. SULLIVAN

Member of Distinguished Madison Family Dead.

"Hon. John H. Sullivan, attorney-at-law, of Louisville, Ky., is in the city, stopping at the Madison Hotel. The object of his coming is to arrange for the funeral of his mother, Mrs. Charlotte E. Sullivan, who died Wednesday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John J. Boyington, in Texarkana, Arkansas, and whose remains will arrive in Madison for burial tomorrow morning.

The decedent, Charlotte E. Sullivan, was the third daughter of the late Judge Jeremiah and Charlotte R. Sullivan, and was born in the Sullivan homestead on West Second street (now occupied by the Eaversons) April 21, 1827. Her husband, John H. Sullivan, deceased, was a leading citizen of Madison in the fifties and later on, and at one time kept a wholesale grocery on "Main Cross" street, as Main street was then called.

The surviving children are Dr. Jerry C. Sullivan, of Idaho, Mrs. Mary I. Engler, of New York City, John H. Sullivan of Louisville, and Mrs. John J. Boyington, at whose home the mother died.

the body will be brought to the city tonight, and the funeral services will be held tomorrow morning by Rev. C.D. Williamson, pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church, of which congregation the Sullivans' were prominent members prior to their removal from Madison.

{Mrs. Sullivan and her daughter had charge of the Camp Mission school in this city for a number of years and have many friends here. We are sincerely grieved to hear of Mrs. Sullivan's death.}
Married John H. Sullivan 21 June 1849
John Henderson Sullivan was the son of Joseph Sullivan (brother of Jeremiah Sullivan) and Susan Vanniman Henderson)

Cause of death: Senile debility
====================
The Box Elder News
Brigham City, Utah
22 Aug 1907
Thursday

MRS. CHARLOTTE E. SULLIVAN

Member of Distinguished Madison Family Dead.

"Hon. John H. Sullivan, attorney-at-law, of Louisville, Ky., is in the city, stopping at the Madison Hotel. The object of his coming is to arrange for the funeral of his mother, Mrs. Charlotte E. Sullivan, who died Wednesday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John J. Boyington, in Texarkana, Arkansas, and whose remains will arrive in Madison for burial tomorrow morning.

The decedent, Charlotte E. Sullivan, was the third daughter of the late Judge Jeremiah and Charlotte R. Sullivan, and was born in the Sullivan homestead on West Second street (now occupied by the Eaversons) April 21, 1827. Her husband, John H. Sullivan, deceased, was a leading citizen of Madison in the fifties and later on, and at one time kept a wholesale grocery on "Main Cross" street, as Main street was then called.

The surviving children are Dr. Jerry C. Sullivan, of Idaho, Mrs. Mary I. Engler, of New York City, John H. Sullivan of Louisville, and Mrs. John J. Boyington, at whose home the mother died.

the body will be brought to the city tonight, and the funeral services will be held tomorrow morning by Rev. C.D. Williamson, pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church, of which congregation the Sullivans' were prominent members prior to their removal from Madison.

{Mrs. Sullivan and her daughter had charge of the Camp Mission school in this city for a number of years and have many friends here. We are sincerely grieved to hear of Mrs. Sullivan's death.}


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

See more Sullivan or Sullivan memorials in:

Flower Delivery Sponsor and Remove Ads

Advertisement