Mabel Elizabeth Richardson: Difference between revisions

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<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson obituary.jpg|Obituary
File:Rosie Richardson, Marianne Richardson, Mabel Ivey.jpg|[[Rose Estelle Richardson]], [[Mary Anne Jones]], and [[Mabel Elizabeth Richardson]]
Image:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson Obituaries.jpg|Obituaries
File:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson obituary.jpg|Obituary
Image:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson-Paul Pressler Ivey Wedding Society Article.jpg|Society article regarding wedding.
File:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson Obituaries.jpg|Obituaries
Image:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson Headstone.jpg|Headstone
File:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson-Paul Pressler Ivey Wedding Society Article.jpg|Society article regarding wedding.
Image:1900 U.S. Census - San Marcos Township, Hays County, Texas, Page 12 of 52.jpg|1900 U.S. Census - San Marcos Township, Hays County, Texas, Page 12 of 52
File:Mabel Elizabeth Richardson Headstone.jpg|Headstone
File:1900 U.S. Census - San Marcos Township, Hays County, Texas, Page 12 of 52.jpg|1900 U.S. Census - San Marcos Township, Hays County, Texas, Page 12 of 52
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Revision as of 09:50, 25 June 2011

Dorothy Langdon Ivey, Mary Anne Jones, Mabel Elizabeth Richardson, and Evelyn Dorothy Gallinger
  Thomas John Edwards (family)
Mabel Elizabeth Richardson  
  Mary Anne Jones
Spouse
Paul Pressler Ivey (family)
24 August 1904
Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Texas

Data

Birth
22 Sep 1876
Camberwell, England
Death
19 Dec 1961
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California

Notes

Emigrated in 1879.

There is some mystery surrounding the change in surname between this generation and the one just prior. As has been related to me (Sean M. Cox) Thomas John Edwards, Mabel's father, is suspected to have run up debts back in England and to have fled to America and changed his name in order to escape his creditors. Some details of the source for this story and any updates will be necessary.

Perhaps it is a bit poetic that Thomas John Edwards, a man robbed of his paternity, and hence, his father's surname; that he would run off and off the surname he received, passing a different one on to his children than the one his mother gave him. Perhaps it is more significant than poetry. An interesting sequence of events, to be sure.

Sources