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Olive <I>Wheeler</I> Knight

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Olive Wheeler Knight

Birth
Cavendish, Windsor County, Vermont, USA
Death
11 Sep 1905 (aged 87)
Rome, Floyd County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Rome, Floyd County, Georgia, USA GPS-Latitude: 34.2511406, Longitude: -85.1782303
Plot
Section OR; Lot 401
Memorial ID
View Source
Mrs. Ira Minard's sister dies, Rome, Ga., 1905
From St. Charles (Illinois) Chronicle, 22 September 1905:

Dies in Sunny South, Mrs. Job Knight
Many people yet residing in St. Charles will remember the family of Job Knight, an early west side blacksmith of whom I have previously written for the Chronicle. They will especially remember the wife and mother and will regret to learn of her death, which occurred early Monday morning Sept. 11, 1905, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ione Knight Walton, at Rome, Georgia. This news reached relatives in Aurora only yesterday through a marked copy of the Rome Tribune of September 12.

Mrs. Knight would have been 88 years of age had she lived until next month. I am unable to state the time of her coming to St. Charles but it was at an early date. She was a native of Cavendish, Vermont, her maiden name being Olive Wheeler. She was a sister of Amos R. Wheeler, who came to this region in 1835, and on her mother's side a direct descendant from the presidents John Quincy Adams and John Adams, her mother, Lydia Adams, became the wife of Amos Wheeler, whose (father's) name is inscribed with that of other patriots on the Bunker Hill monument.

Miss Wheeler became the wife of Job Knight in 1838. The family removed to Rome, Georgia, soon after the war of the rebellion, and there Mr. Knight died about 1885. Mrs. Knight had since made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Walton, and son Ray Knight. She suffered a severe, paralytic stroke about three years ago and never fully recovered. Another son, Job, is living, but his Aurora relatives do not know his whereabouts, not having heard from him for twenty years.

Mrs. Knight was a member of the Episcopal church and a woman very greatly esteemed in the community where she lived and died. Her son Ray was absent in the Indian territory at the time of her death. The lady was a sister of three other highly esteemed early residents of St. Charles, Mrs. Ira Minard, Mrs. Read Ferson and Mrs. Horace Bancroft. She dies far from the land of her birth and far from the scenes of her later years in St. Charles, but evidently in the midst of a community which accorded her great honor and respect. Her funeral was held Sept. 12.
Pliny A. Durant, Aurora, Ill., Sept. 19, 1905.

provided by Pat Shaw
Mrs. Ira Minard's sister dies, Rome, Ga., 1905
From St. Charles (Illinois) Chronicle, 22 September 1905:

Dies in Sunny South, Mrs. Job Knight
Many people yet residing in St. Charles will remember the family of Job Knight, an early west side blacksmith of whom I have previously written for the Chronicle. They will especially remember the wife and mother and will regret to learn of her death, which occurred early Monday morning Sept. 11, 1905, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ione Knight Walton, at Rome, Georgia. This news reached relatives in Aurora only yesterday through a marked copy of the Rome Tribune of September 12.

Mrs. Knight would have been 88 years of age had she lived until next month. I am unable to state the time of her coming to St. Charles but it was at an early date. She was a native of Cavendish, Vermont, her maiden name being Olive Wheeler. She was a sister of Amos R. Wheeler, who came to this region in 1835, and on her mother's side a direct descendant from the presidents John Quincy Adams and John Adams, her mother, Lydia Adams, became the wife of Amos Wheeler, whose (father's) name is inscribed with that of other patriots on the Bunker Hill monument.

Miss Wheeler became the wife of Job Knight in 1838. The family removed to Rome, Georgia, soon after the war of the rebellion, and there Mr. Knight died about 1885. Mrs. Knight had since made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Walton, and son Ray Knight. She suffered a severe, paralytic stroke about three years ago and never fully recovered. Another son, Job, is living, but his Aurora relatives do not know his whereabouts, not having heard from him for twenty years.

Mrs. Knight was a member of the Episcopal church and a woman very greatly esteemed in the community where she lived and died. Her son Ray was absent in the Indian territory at the time of her death. The lady was a sister of three other highly esteemed early residents of St. Charles, Mrs. Ira Minard, Mrs. Read Ferson and Mrs. Horace Bancroft. She dies far from the land of her birth and far from the scenes of her later years in St. Charles, but evidently in the midst of a community which accorded her great honor and respect. Her funeral was held Sept. 12.
Pliny A. Durant, Aurora, Ill., Sept. 19, 1905.

provided by Pat Shaw


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  • Maintained by: Patty Shaw
  • Originally Created by: E Jones
  • Added: May 7, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69468891/olive-knight: accessed ), memorial page for Olive Wheeler Knight (11 Dec 1817–11 Sep 1905), Find a Grave Memorial ID 69468891, citing Myrtle Hill Cemetery, Rome, Floyd County, Georgia, USA; Maintained by Patty Shaw (contributor 46621490).