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Ellen “Nellie” <I>Stevens</I> Eungard

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Ellen “Nellie” Stevens Eungard

Birth
Mendota, LaSalle County, Illinois, USA
Death
24 Aug 1914 (aged 51)
Caldwell, Sumner County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Caldwell, Sumner County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
The Caldwell News
Caldwell, Kansas
Thursday, September 3, 1914
page 5

Nellie Stevens

Nellie Stevens was born in Mendota, Illinois, September 15, 1862, and died at her home in Caldwell, Kansas, August 26, 1914, at the age of fifty-one years, eleven months and ten days.

At the age of nine years she moved with her parents to Raymond, Rice county, Kansas, where she grew to womanhood. She was united in marriage to James H. Eungard in Pueblo, Colorado, November 14, 1887. In 1893 she moved to Wichita, Kansas, where she was converted and became a member of St. Paul Methodist church, where she has always held her membership. She has many friends in Wichita and Caldwell, who will mourn her loss.

In 1902 she moved to Caldwell, Kansas, where she has (with the exception of three years) made her home.

She was a devoted wife, a kind and loving mother, and though her life has not always been a path of roses she never complained. Even to the last she was worried for fear she would be a burden to someone, and bore her sufferings patiently and with hardly a murmur.

She leaves behind to mourn her loss a loving mother, husband, son, daughter, four brothers and one sister.
(transcribed by Judy Mayfield)
The Caldwell News
Caldwell, Kansas
Thursday, September 3, 1914
page 5

Nellie Stevens

Nellie Stevens was born in Mendota, Illinois, September 15, 1862, and died at her home in Caldwell, Kansas, August 26, 1914, at the age of fifty-one years, eleven months and ten days.

At the age of nine years she moved with her parents to Raymond, Rice county, Kansas, where she grew to womanhood. She was united in marriage to James H. Eungard in Pueblo, Colorado, November 14, 1887. In 1893 she moved to Wichita, Kansas, where she was converted and became a member of St. Paul Methodist church, where she has always held her membership. She has many friends in Wichita and Caldwell, who will mourn her loss.

In 1902 she moved to Caldwell, Kansas, where she has (with the exception of three years) made her home.

She was a devoted wife, a kind and loving mother, and though her life has not always been a path of roses she never complained. Even to the last she was worried for fear she would be a burden to someone, and bore her sufferings patiently and with hardly a murmur.

She leaves behind to mourn her loss a loving mother, husband, son, daughter, four brothers and one sister.
(transcribed by Judy Mayfield)


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