When Rebecca made her will in 1830, she was living on East Bay in Charleston, South Carolina.
She died in a town that was known as Newberry Courthouse while she was traveling to Greenville for her health.
According to "The Town of Dorchester, in South Carolina: A Sketch of Its History" by Henry A. M. Smith, St. George's, Dorchester Parish Churchyard was "the hereditary burying place of many of the families of this neighborhood, the Blakes, the Izards and others."
When Rebecca made her will in 1830, she was living on East Bay in Charleston, South Carolina.
She died in a town that was known as Newberry Courthouse while she was traveling to Greenville for her health.
According to "The Town of Dorchester, in South Carolina: A Sketch of Its History" by Henry A. M. Smith, St. George's, Dorchester Parish Churchyard was "the hereditary burying place of many of the families of this neighborhood, the Blakes, the Izards and others."
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