Sarah remained single, working as a housekeeper. She retained a job in the home of John Cutler Nichols ca 1875, a young widower with 3 children. She remained with him, until when, at 28, She married him in about 1882. She and her sister, Mary, lived next door to one another ater in life in Waterford, New London, Connecticut.
It is Sarah's step-son, George W. Nichols, who administrates her sister, Mary's, estate, and corresponds with Mary's son who had moved to Australia by 1880.
Sarah died in 1921 in Waterford, Connecticut, at the age of 74, and was buried there in her husband's Nichols Family Plot, near her sister, Mary E. Dolbeare's family plot.
Sarah remained single, working as a housekeeper. She retained a job in the home of John Cutler Nichols ca 1875, a young widower with 3 children. She remained with him, until when, at 28, She married him in about 1882. She and her sister, Mary, lived next door to one another ater in life in Waterford, New London, Connecticut.
It is Sarah's step-son, George W. Nichols, who administrates her sister, Mary's, estate, and corresponds with Mary's son who had moved to Australia by 1880.
Sarah died in 1921 in Waterford, Connecticut, at the age of 74, and was buried there in her husband's Nichols Family Plot, near her sister, Mary E. Dolbeare's family plot.
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