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Harriet May “Hattie” Tryon Moore

Birth
Middleburgh, Schoharie County, New York, USA
Death
16 Jun 1937 (aged 61)
Barnerville, Schoharie County, New York, USA
Burial
Bramanville, Schoharie County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Hattie was the daughter of Nelson Tryon and Jemima "Jennie" Lawyer. She married Byron Bedent Moore when she was 16 on July 4, 1892. They had 7 children.

She became a professional wallpaper hanger. She had a lovely china cabinet with a round front and beautiful ruby red dishes. The Moores attended the Free Methodist Church. There was a footbridge across the creek behind the Moore home. It was a rope bridge and swung when you crossed. There used to be drying fields for flax across the road. The flax pulp was used to make fine linen writing paper.

Hattie's old home was still a home in 1992. It had a large sunny kitchen/dining room, and a parlor, and a staircase that went upstairs to four bedrooms. A large bedroom ran across the entire back of the house. A big two story barn faced the road with an inclined drive into the second floor where the Moores kept their cars. The ground floor was for cows and hogs. The chicken coop was near the garden.

Hattie died 1937 in Barnerville.

Source:
John Moore Family in America, by Charles B. Moore.
Hattie was the daughter of Nelson Tryon and Jemima "Jennie" Lawyer. She married Byron Bedent Moore when she was 16 on July 4, 1892. They had 7 children.

She became a professional wallpaper hanger. She had a lovely china cabinet with a round front and beautiful ruby red dishes. The Moores attended the Free Methodist Church. There was a footbridge across the creek behind the Moore home. It was a rope bridge and swung when you crossed. There used to be drying fields for flax across the road. The flax pulp was used to make fine linen writing paper.

Hattie's old home was still a home in 1992. It had a large sunny kitchen/dining room, and a parlor, and a staircase that went upstairs to four bedrooms. A large bedroom ran across the entire back of the house. A big two story barn faced the road with an inclined drive into the second floor where the Moores kept their cars. The ground floor was for cows and hogs. The chicken coop was near the garden.

Hattie died 1937 in Barnerville.

Source:
John Moore Family in America, by Charles B. Moore.


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