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Emily Green Avery Hickok

Birth
Sauquoit, Oneida County, New York, USA
Death
17 Dec 1859 (aged 37)
Vernon, Oneida County, New York, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Emily Green (Avery) Hickok was the daughter of John and Penelope (Nichols) Avery. She was the 1st wife of Rev. Dr. Henry A. Hickok. They were married Albion, New York May 1, 1844. He was a minister in the Genesee Conference and East Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He later became a Presbyterian minister.

Bashford, Rev. James Whitford
China And Methodism, c1906, Page 107
The Roll Of Honor
Missionaries Who Have Gone To China:
Hickok, Rev. Henry - 14 April 1848
Hickok, Mrs. Henry - 14 April 1848

Memorials Of Protestant Missionaries To The Chinese, c1867
"Rev. Henry Hickok was sent to China by the American Methodist Missionary Society, and reached Hongkong with Mrs. Hickok early in 1848, soon after which he proceeded to his station at Fuh-chow. At the beginning of 1849, he was obliged to retire on account of his health, and embarked for the United States, from which he has not since returned."

--"They belonged to the second wave of missionaries, entering China after the political concessions of the Opium War and the Nanking Treaty in 1842-1844."

Obituary
Northern Christian Advocate
January 18, 1860
Page 10, Col. 4
Emily Green (Avery) Hickok was the daughter of John and Penelope (Nichols) Avery. She was the 1st wife of Rev. Dr. Henry A. Hickok. They were married Albion, New York May 1, 1844. He was a minister in the Genesee Conference and East Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He later became a Presbyterian minister.

Bashford, Rev. James Whitford
China And Methodism, c1906, Page 107
The Roll Of Honor
Missionaries Who Have Gone To China:
Hickok, Rev. Henry - 14 April 1848
Hickok, Mrs. Henry - 14 April 1848

Memorials Of Protestant Missionaries To The Chinese, c1867
"Rev. Henry Hickok was sent to China by the American Methodist Missionary Society, and reached Hongkong with Mrs. Hickok early in 1848, soon after which he proceeded to his station at Fuh-chow. At the beginning of 1849, he was obliged to retire on account of his health, and embarked for the United States, from which he has not since returned."

--"They belonged to the second wave of missionaries, entering China after the political concessions of the Opium War and the Nanking Treaty in 1842-1844."

Obituary
Northern Christian Advocate
January 18, 1860
Page 10, Col. 4


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