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Harriet <I>Robinson</I> Phillips

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Harriet Robinson Phillips

Birth
Fauquier County, Virginia, USA
Death
5 Nov 1886 (aged 82)
Parke County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Parke County, Indiana, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
1886 Nov 7 Rockville Tribune - OBIT: Harriet Robinson Phillips
Died: - November 5, 1886, at the residence of her son Benjamin, Mrs. Harriet Robinson Phillips, aged eighty-two.
Harriet Robinson, was born in Virginia, September 15, 1804, and was married to William Phillips the 30th of October 1821. They come to Parke county, as near as surviving friends can estimate, in 1835, and have resided here ever since, rearing a large family and doing their duty to God and their fellow man to the best of their light and strength. A few years ago the husband died, and now Grandmother Phillips is laid beside him, at the Warner graveyard in Reserve township. The funeral services Sunday morning were conducted by Rev. W.P. Cummings, assisted by Rev. Z.D. Maria and Rev. Mr. Risher, in change at Linebarger chapel. A very large assembly was present to testify their respect for deceased, and the universal expression was that a mother in Israel had completed a good life. She had been a consistent members of the Methodist church for fifty-five years.



1886 Nov 7 Rockville Tribune - OBIT: Harriet Robinson Phillips
Died: - November 5, 1886, at the residence of her son Benjamin, Mrs. Harriet Robinson Phillips, aged eighty-two.
Harriet Robinson, was born in Virginia, September 15, 1804, and was married to William Phillips the 30th of October 1821. They come to Parke county, as near as surviving friends can estimate, in 1835, and have resided here ever since, rearing a large family and doing their duty to God and their fellow man to the best of their light and strength. A few years ago the husband died, and now Grandmother Phillips is laid beside him, at the Warner graveyard in Reserve township. The funeral services Sunday morning were conducted by Rev. W.P. Cummings, assisted by Rev. Z.D. Maria and Rev. Mr. Risher, in change at Linebarger chapel. A very large assembly was present to testify their respect for deceased, and the universal expression was that a mother in Israel had completed a good life. She had been a consistent members of the Methodist church for fifty-five years.





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