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Isaac Schwartz Sr.

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Isaac Schwartz Sr.

Birth
Virginia, USA
Death
18 May 1934 (aged 86)
Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section B-4 Home for Incurables
Memorial ID
View Source
Isaac worked as a butcher.

He married 1st Georgiana Rollins (my great-great aunt) about 1870-1871. They had seven children that survived infancy.

He married 2nd the widowed Lucy B. Garthright Watkins on 2 Aug 1893 in Henrico Parish, VA.

His third wife was Mamie, married around 1895. They had 2 (known) children.

Lastly, he married Anna Bell "Nina" Cheatham Powell on 16 Feb 1905. They had several more children.

Isaac died in 1934 in what was then the Virginia Home for Incurables, now The Virginia Home. The home was opened with 8 patients on March 1, 1894, by Mary Tinsley Greenhow, who was paralyzed when she fell from a horse at a young age. From a well-to-do family, she realized not everyone was fortunate enough to have the means to live a quality, dignified life. She dedicated her life to providing such a home to adults with permanent disabilities. The Home continues today, serving 130 adults with "compassionate, professional care" and "ensuring that the lifelong comfort and security of these individuals will never be compromised, regardless of ability to pay." --www.thevirginiahome.org/
Isaac worked as a butcher.

He married 1st Georgiana Rollins (my great-great aunt) about 1870-1871. They had seven children that survived infancy.

He married 2nd the widowed Lucy B. Garthright Watkins on 2 Aug 1893 in Henrico Parish, VA.

His third wife was Mamie, married around 1895. They had 2 (known) children.

Lastly, he married Anna Bell "Nina" Cheatham Powell on 16 Feb 1905. They had several more children.

Isaac died in 1934 in what was then the Virginia Home for Incurables, now The Virginia Home. The home was opened with 8 patients on March 1, 1894, by Mary Tinsley Greenhow, who was paralyzed when she fell from a horse at a young age. From a well-to-do family, she realized not everyone was fortunate enough to have the means to live a quality, dignified life. She dedicated her life to providing such a home to adults with permanent disabilities. The Home continues today, serving 130 adults with "compassionate, professional care" and "ensuring that the lifelong comfort and security of these individuals will never be compromised, regardless of ability to pay." --www.thevirginiahome.org/

Gravesite Details

**Per his granddaughter, the birth date on the stone is incorrect: he was born in 1848.**



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