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Spencer Sterling Mitchell

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Spencer Sterling Mitchell

Birth
Death
19 Mar 1849 (aged 73)
Burial
Sparta, White County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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DIED--At his residence in White County Tennessee on the 20th of March last, SPENCE
MITCHELL, in the 74th year of his age. The subject of this notice was born in the
state of North Carolina, on the 4th of June 1775; married December 22nd 1796 and
emigrated with his wife to Tennessee in the year 1804. He settled in White County,
on the farm where he died, in about two years after he came to this State.
He professed religion upward of 46 years ago, and was first a member of the
Presbyterian church but after he settled in Tennessee he joined the Cumberland
Presbyterians, and was elected and ordained ruling Elder in Union congregation near
where he lived. In which congregation he lived a devoted member and an efficient
elder until the great Head of the church, in His wise Providence, saw proper to call
him from the church militant to the church Triumphant. He was the subject of many
afflictions through life but more especially in the latter part. He was taken sick
on the 1st day of March and suffered a great amount of pain until he died on the
20th.
The day after he was taken sick, he arranged his temporal business, and then
remarked that he could die satisfied. From that time he seemed to have a great
desire to depart and be with Christ which is far better than to remain in this
world.
His anxiety to depart was so great that he sometimes seemed to be very sorry that he
lingered so long, and suffered so much, but yet he bore his affliction with
christian fortitude and left strong evidence of his acceptance with God.
He has left an aged companion, eight sons, and one daughter an a long train of
connections to mount for him. In this dispensation of the wise Providence of God the
church has lost one of its brightest ornaments, the bereaved widow an affectionate
husband the children a kind father and the neighborhood one of its best members. But
we sorrow not as those who have no hope; for we believe that while friends weep on
earth, that the aged father, who was the subject of so much affliction in life, is
now free from sickness, sorrow, pain and death, and his immortal spirit enjoys the
society of Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect.
Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from henceforth: yea, saith the spirit that
they may rest from their labors, and their works do follow them. A word of
exhortation to the relatives of the departed father He is dead. He cannot come to
you, but you may go to him.
A Friend

Source: Banner of Peace, Vol. 7, number 50. 11 May 1849, page 3


DIED--At his residence in White County Tennessee on the 20th of March last, SPENCE
MITCHELL, in the 74th year of his age. The subject of this notice was born in the
state of North Carolina, on the 4th of June 1775; married December 22nd 1796 and
emigrated with his wife to Tennessee in the year 1804. He settled in White County,
on the farm where he died, in about two years after he came to this State.
He professed religion upward of 46 years ago, and was first a member of the
Presbyterian church but after he settled in Tennessee he joined the Cumberland
Presbyterians, and was elected and ordained ruling Elder in Union congregation near
where he lived. In which congregation he lived a devoted member and an efficient
elder until the great Head of the church, in His wise Providence, saw proper to call
him from the church militant to the church Triumphant. He was the subject of many
afflictions through life but more especially in the latter part. He was taken sick
on the 1st day of March and suffered a great amount of pain until he died on the
20th.
The day after he was taken sick, he arranged his temporal business, and then
remarked that he could die satisfied. From that time he seemed to have a great
desire to depart and be with Christ which is far better than to remain in this
world.
His anxiety to depart was so great that he sometimes seemed to be very sorry that he
lingered so long, and suffered so much, but yet he bore his affliction with
christian fortitude and left strong evidence of his acceptance with God.
He has left an aged companion, eight sons, and one daughter an a long train of
connections to mount for him. In this dispensation of the wise Providence of God the
church has lost one of its brightest ornaments, the bereaved widow an affectionate
husband the children a kind father and the neighborhood one of its best members. But
we sorrow not as those who have no hope; for we believe that while friends weep on
earth, that the aged father, who was the subject of so much affliction in life, is
now free from sickness, sorrow, pain and death, and his immortal spirit enjoys the
society of Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect.
Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from henceforth: yea, saith the spirit that
they may rest from their labors, and their works do follow them. A word of
exhortation to the relatives of the departed father He is dead. He cannot come to
you, but you may go to him.
A Friend

Source: Banner of Peace, Vol. 7, number 50. 11 May 1849, page 3




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