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Charlotte <I>Doran</I> Monier

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Charlotte Doran Monier

Birth
Marshall County, Illinois, USA
Death
18 May 1901 (aged 49)
Hopkins, Nodaway County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Hopkins, Nodaway County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Maryville Republican (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 2, 1901
--Mrs. Charles Monier, who has been taking medical treatment in Chicago for several months, is in a critical condition, it now being feared that she has cancer of the neck.She was some better when last heard from and may be brought home the first of next month. --Hopkins Journal.

Maryville Tribune (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 16, 1901
Mrs. Monier Worse.
Mrs. Charles Monier of near Hopkins, who has been in Chicago this winter taking treatment for cancer, but who returned home a week or so ago, is much worse.

Maryville Tribune (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 23, 1901
Mrs. Monier Dead.
Taken With Hemorrhage Friday and Died Saturday Morning.
Mrs. Charles Monier, who has been seriously ill the past few weeks, was seized with hemorrhage Friday at her home near Hopkins and died Saturday morning at 10:30.
Mr. and Mrs. Monier resided in Northeast Maryville a year or more and moved from this place to their farm near Hopkins a year ago last March. Their only son, Roy Monier, attended the Seminary and was employed by The Tribune for a time.
The funeral occurred Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

Hopkins Journal (Hopkins, Missouri), Thursday, May 23, 1901
Mrs. Chas. Monier Dead.
The Funeral Held Monday and Very Largely Attended—Floral Offerings Profuse.
Mrs. Chas. Monier, who has been sick for several months with throat trouble, died at her home, three miles south of Hopkins last Saturday morning at six o'clock.
Her trouble first annoyed her last February and the disease from the start stubbornly refused to yield to the treatment of the very best specialists in the country. Several weeks were spent in Chicago under the care of the foremost physicians of that city but to no avail, death being the only relief.
Mrs. Monier had a beautiful home, and loved her family in a marked degree, which affection was fully reciprocated, making her demise the sadder, but death is no respecter of person—the rich and the poor, the high and the low, all being required to pass through its dark valley.
The funeral services were held at the family residence on Monday afternoon, and the immense crowd in attendance told of the high esteem in which the deceased was held in this community, there being fully three hundred present.
Rev. Seelig, pastor of the Presbyterian church, preached the funeral discourse and his words were full of comfort and hope.
Burial took place in the Hopkins cemetery, the funeral procession containing more than seventy rigs.
The grave was lined with white cloth and flowers and the floral offerings from the family and friends were especially handsome and costly.
The pall bearers were E. C. Wolfers, A. C. Monroe, H. C. Russell, B. Wooldridge, Henry Demott and J. F. Robb.
Obituary - Charlotte Doran was born in Marshall Co., Ill., Dec. 23, 1852, where she lived till the death of her father in 1867. She then made her home with her mother and other relatives, spending part of the time in Wesleyan College, till her marriage to Charles Monier in 1879. One year later they moved to the place that has so long born the name of home and from which she took her last leave of earth, May 18, 1901.
Mrs. Monier leaves a husband, a son, two brothers, one sister and a multitude of friends with bowed heads and bleeding hearts.
The name, Charlotte, means noble spirited and truly did she fill its meaning. As a wife, the kindest of the kind; as a mother, the wisest of the wise; as a friend, the truest of the true; and as a woman, honored being one of the best in the community. Neighbors and friends join in sympathy with these bereaved ones in their great loss.
Not only will she be missed in the home, but in the hearts and lives of neighbors and friends. Her life of light, though gone out, will still shine in the hearts of those who knew her.
Those in attendance at the funeral from a distance were three brothers of Mr. Monier, namely, William Monier and wife, of Sparland, Ill.; Thomas Monier, Henry, Ill.; and James Monier, Emerson, Neb.; Mrs. Eva Brassfield and Chas. Doran, brother and sister of Mrs. Monier, Chicago; Mrs. Janet Monier, Champaign, Ill., and Mrs. Emma Monier, Maryville, Mo.

She married Charles Monier January 30, 1878, at Sparland, Marshall County, Illinois.
Maryville Republican (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 2, 1901
--Mrs. Charles Monier, who has been taking medical treatment in Chicago for several months, is in a critical condition, it now being feared that she has cancer of the neck.She was some better when last heard from and may be brought home the first of next month. --Hopkins Journal.

Maryville Tribune (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 16, 1901
Mrs. Monier Worse.
Mrs. Charles Monier of near Hopkins, who has been in Chicago this winter taking treatment for cancer, but who returned home a week or so ago, is much worse.

Maryville Tribune (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, May 23, 1901
Mrs. Monier Dead.
Taken With Hemorrhage Friday and Died Saturday Morning.
Mrs. Charles Monier, who has been seriously ill the past few weeks, was seized with hemorrhage Friday at her home near Hopkins and died Saturday morning at 10:30.
Mr. and Mrs. Monier resided in Northeast Maryville a year or more and moved from this place to their farm near Hopkins a year ago last March. Their only son, Roy Monier, attended the Seminary and was employed by The Tribune for a time.
The funeral occurred Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

Hopkins Journal (Hopkins, Missouri), Thursday, May 23, 1901
Mrs. Chas. Monier Dead.
The Funeral Held Monday and Very Largely Attended—Floral Offerings Profuse.
Mrs. Chas. Monier, who has been sick for several months with throat trouble, died at her home, three miles south of Hopkins last Saturday morning at six o'clock.
Her trouble first annoyed her last February and the disease from the start stubbornly refused to yield to the treatment of the very best specialists in the country. Several weeks were spent in Chicago under the care of the foremost physicians of that city but to no avail, death being the only relief.
Mrs. Monier had a beautiful home, and loved her family in a marked degree, which affection was fully reciprocated, making her demise the sadder, but death is no respecter of person—the rich and the poor, the high and the low, all being required to pass through its dark valley.
The funeral services were held at the family residence on Monday afternoon, and the immense crowd in attendance told of the high esteem in which the deceased was held in this community, there being fully three hundred present.
Rev. Seelig, pastor of the Presbyterian church, preached the funeral discourse and his words were full of comfort and hope.
Burial took place in the Hopkins cemetery, the funeral procession containing more than seventy rigs.
The grave was lined with white cloth and flowers and the floral offerings from the family and friends were especially handsome and costly.
The pall bearers were E. C. Wolfers, A. C. Monroe, H. C. Russell, B. Wooldridge, Henry Demott and J. F. Robb.
Obituary - Charlotte Doran was born in Marshall Co., Ill., Dec. 23, 1852, where she lived till the death of her father in 1867. She then made her home with her mother and other relatives, spending part of the time in Wesleyan College, till her marriage to Charles Monier in 1879. One year later they moved to the place that has so long born the name of home and from which she took her last leave of earth, May 18, 1901.
Mrs. Monier leaves a husband, a son, two brothers, one sister and a multitude of friends with bowed heads and bleeding hearts.
The name, Charlotte, means noble spirited and truly did she fill its meaning. As a wife, the kindest of the kind; as a mother, the wisest of the wise; as a friend, the truest of the true; and as a woman, honored being one of the best in the community. Neighbors and friends join in sympathy with these bereaved ones in their great loss.
Not only will she be missed in the home, but in the hearts and lives of neighbors and friends. Her life of light, though gone out, will still shine in the hearts of those who knew her.
Those in attendance at the funeral from a distance were three brothers of Mr. Monier, namely, William Monier and wife, of Sparland, Ill.; Thomas Monier, Henry, Ill.; and James Monier, Emerson, Neb.; Mrs. Eva Brassfield and Chas. Doran, brother and sister of Mrs. Monier, Chicago; Mrs. Janet Monier, Champaign, Ill., and Mrs. Emma Monier, Maryville, Mo.

She married Charles Monier January 30, 1878, at Sparland, Marshall County, Illinois.

Inscription

Charlotte Wife of Charles Monier Died May 18, 1901 Aged 49 y 4 m 25 d.



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