Adeline Williams

(12 March 1819 - 26 February 1909)
Adeline Williams|b. 12 Mar 1819\nd. 26 Feb 1909|p286.htm|Samuel Williams|b. 6 Sep 1789\nd. 17 Apr 1864|p282.htm|Polly Tarbell|b. 26 Jul 1796\nd. 1875|p283.htm|Nathaniel Williams|b. probably 1753\nd. 6 Nov 1817|p275.htm|Hannah Lawrence|b. ca 1765\nd. 31 Oct 1845|p276.htm|Edmund Tarbell|b. 12 Jun 1767\nd. 11 Sep 1843|p1585.htm|Polly Boynton|b. ca Feb 1774\nd. 10 Mar 1808|p1586.htm|

3-greats-grandaunt of Darrell Allen Martin.
Adeline was born in Mount Holly, Rutland County, Vermont, on 12 March 1819.1,2 She was the daughter of Samuel Williams and Polly Tarbell. She married Zopher White in Mt. Holly on 7 July 1839.3,4 She was a resident in the household of Zopher White in the 11 July 1860 census taken in Mt. Holly as "Adeline White" age 41.4 Adeline died on 26 February 1909 at age 89.5

Child of Adeline Williams and Zopher White

Cited documentation

  1. [S101] Margaret R. Jenks., Wallingford and Mount Holly Cemetery Inscriptions, Rutland County, Vermont, Recorded Summer, 1991 (Privately Printed by the author, 1992), pg. 111, "WILLIAMS ... Adaline, dau. of Samuel & Polly, 1819 ..."
  2. [S191] White, Zopher, 1860 US Census, Mount Holly, Rutland County, Vermont; www.ancestry.com October 2002, Ancestry online image 17 of 40, pg. 5?, age 41, b. "NH" (actually a ditto for Zopher's place of birth, most likely a careless error), with her parents probably in the same household.
  3. [S101] Margaret R. Jenks, Wallingford and Mount Holly Cemetery Inscriptions, Rutland County, Vermont, Recorded Summer, 1991, pg. 102, "JAQUITH, Justina E. White, wife of H.A. ... [DAR: Justina E., dau. of Zopher & Adaline (Williams) White.]" [sic brackets].
  4. [S191] White, Zopher, 1860 Census Mt. Holly, VT.
  5. [S101] Margaret R. Jenks, Wallingford and Mount Holly Cemetery Inscriptions, Rutland County, Vermont, Recorded Summer, 1991, pg. 111, "WILLIAMS ... Adaline, dau. of Samuel & Polly, 1819 - 1909."
 
  • Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.
    — Abraham Lincoln
  • Analyzing humor is like dissecting a frog. Few people are interested and the frog dies of it.
    — E. B. White
  • Don't go around saying the world owes you a living. The world owes you nothing. It was here first.
    — Mark Twain