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Catherine Elizabeth “Kate” <I>Flach</I> Fox

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Catherine Elizabeth “Kate” Flach Fox

Birth
Bingen am Rhein, Landkreis Mainz-Bingen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany
Death
17 Aug 1908 (aged 68)
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
Burial
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Plot
Garden LN, Section 101, Lot 151, Space 12
Memorial ID
View Source
Parents Carl and Frances Flach
cod heart and liver disease

Catherine, later known as Kate, was born at Bingen-on-the-Rhine in Prussia. It is not known when she came to Cincinnati, but she was living there at the time of her marriage in 1862. Probably she emigrated with other members of her family as she had a brother, Charles Flach and a sister, Nettie Flach Diflo who also lived in Cincinnati. At the time of her death she lived at 1534 Fairfax in Cincinnati which presumably was the same house that had earlier been listed as at the intersection of Fairfax and Hackberry. [?prob by Elizabeth Morrison Eha as edited by Patti]


Yes, the modest Walnut Hills, Cincinnati home of the Fuchs/Fox family -- which forever binds Cincinnati's heritage to Mexico's -- still stands (2015); many of us (cousins) were kindly allowed to tour it back in 2007 through the events sponsored by The Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. It is several blocks behind the large Catholic Church at DeSales Corner, at Hackberry/Fairfax offhand.
Parents Carl and Frances Flach
cod heart and liver disease

Catherine, later known as Kate, was born at Bingen-on-the-Rhine in Prussia. It is not known when she came to Cincinnati, but she was living there at the time of her marriage in 1862. Probably she emigrated with other members of her family as she had a brother, Charles Flach and a sister, Nettie Flach Diflo who also lived in Cincinnati. At the time of her death she lived at 1534 Fairfax in Cincinnati which presumably was the same house that had earlier been listed as at the intersection of Fairfax and Hackberry. [?prob by Elizabeth Morrison Eha as edited by Patti]


Yes, the modest Walnut Hills, Cincinnati home of the Fuchs/Fox family -- which forever binds Cincinnati's heritage to Mexico's -- still stands (2015); many of us (cousins) were kindly allowed to tour it back in 2007 through the events sponsored by The Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. It is several blocks behind the large Catholic Church at DeSales Corner, at Hackberry/Fairfax offhand.

Gravesite Details

springgrove.org=76881.tif.pdf



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