Son of Jacques Adolphe Olivie and Mary Rosalie Sberna, husband of Emma Blydenburgh, and father of Lillie R., Jennie Louise (married George Price MaCrone, Jesse Talbert, and Viola Grace (married Elwood C. Conklin), William Adolph, Bernard A. and Delphine Olivie (married King).
In 1860, Adolphe Olivie, aged 18, an engraver, was living in Smithtown, New York, post office Hauppauge, with his parents, Adolph Olivie, aged 52, an engraver, and Ursula Olivie, aged 38, and siblings, Mary Olivie, aged 16, Louise Olivie, aged 6, and Alfred Olivie, aged 2, in the home of James Griffin, aged 58, a farmer, and his wife, Zipporah Griffin, aged 54, and daughter, Zipporah Griffin, aged 11.
Obituary - Adolph Olivie of Hauppauge, during the recent blizzard got bewildered in the snow and wandered over a picket fence, upon which he fell, one of the pickets entering his abdomen, cutting off the stem of his bladder. Blood poisoning resulted causing his death. He leaves a widow and nine children in destitute circumstances, He was drill major of Wm. Gurney Post, No. 538, G. A. R.
(1860 US Federal Census; U.S., Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914, 1867, A-O; Adolph A. Olivie in the New York, U.S., Death Index, 1852-1956, Certificate Number 46415; The Long Island traveler., March 30, 1888, Page 2)
Son of Jacques Adolphe Olivie and Mary Rosalie Sberna, husband of Emma Blydenburgh, and father of Lillie R., Jennie Louise (married George Price MaCrone, Jesse Talbert, and Viola Grace (married Elwood C. Conklin), William Adolph, Bernard A. and Delphine Olivie (married King).
In 1860, Adolphe Olivie, aged 18, an engraver, was living in Smithtown, New York, post office Hauppauge, with his parents, Adolph Olivie, aged 52, an engraver, and Ursula Olivie, aged 38, and siblings, Mary Olivie, aged 16, Louise Olivie, aged 6, and Alfred Olivie, aged 2, in the home of James Griffin, aged 58, a farmer, and his wife, Zipporah Griffin, aged 54, and daughter, Zipporah Griffin, aged 11.
Obituary - Adolph Olivie of Hauppauge, during the recent blizzard got bewildered in the snow and wandered over a picket fence, upon which he fell, one of the pickets entering his abdomen, cutting off the stem of his bladder. Blood poisoning resulted causing his death. He leaves a widow and nine children in destitute circumstances, He was drill major of Wm. Gurney Post, No. 538, G. A. R.
(1860 US Federal Census; U.S., Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914, 1867, A-O; Adolph A. Olivie in the New York, U.S., Death Index, 1852-1956, Certificate Number 46415; The Long Island traveler., March 30, 1888, Page 2)
Inscription
Adolph Olivia
Sergeant
Co. G, 95th Reg't
N.Y.V
Died March, 1888
Aged About 50 Yrs.
Gravesite Details
Zinc military marker has slightly different spelling of first and last name
Family Members
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Records on Ancestry
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