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Mary Ann <I>Richardson</I> Hull

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Mary Ann Richardson Hull

Birth
Leicester, Livingston County, New York, USA
Death
14 May 1906 (aged 59)
Leicester, Livingston County, New York, USA
Burial
Leicester, Livingston County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Note: Newspaper obituaries list Mary as interred at Perry Hope cemetery. Her gravestone however is next to her husband in Leicester cemetery.

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(Perry, NY, Herald, May 17, 1906)
Mrs. Mary Hull, wife of John Kelsey Hull, died Monday morning at the farm home two miles east of this village, aged 59 years.
She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Richardson, and was born in the same neighborhood where her life has been spent. She was married to J.K. Hull twenty-eight years ago and had been a devoted wife and mother and an exemplary member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. She is survived by her husband and one son, Clarence, on the farm; two brothers, George W. Richardson of Buffalo and Fred Richardson of Gibsonville; four sisters, Mrs. W. E. Tuttle, Mrs. A. W. LaSure, Mrs. John Centerline, and Miss Edith Richardson, just returned from California. The funeral was held from the family home Wednesday, Rev. Frank Cole officiating. Burial in Hope Cemetery.

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HULL – At her home in Leicester on the morning of May 14th, occurred the death of Mrs. Kelsey Hull, after a long and painful illness. The deceased was the daughter of Hiram W. and Jane Richardson and was born in Leicester, August 18th, 1846. She was married in 1867 to J. K. Hull and her husband and one son, Clarence W. Hull, survive her. Mrs. Hull was a lady of sterling worth and character. A Christian, she lived her religion in her everyday life, consistently and without ostentation. Kind and considerate to all with whom she came in contact she leaves a wide circle of friends and neighbors to mourn the loss of a generous, sympathetic friend on whom they could always rely for help or comfort. Her home was known for its hospitable, unselfish spirit, and she has left there a husband and son who loved her as an ideal wife and mother. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Jane Richardson, four sisters, Mrs. William Tuttle, Mrs. AlvinLeSure, Mrs. John Casterline and Miss Edith Richardson; and two brothers, George W. Richardson and Fred H. Richardson. Death has taken from them a loving daughter and devoted sister. A cheerful, helpful, successful life has ended. The funeral was held Wednesday afternoon at her home, and the large gathering of relatives and friends, many of them from a distance together with the numerous and beautiful floral tributes, testified to the high esteem in which she was held.
Obituary published in The Livingston Republican, Geneseo, New York on Thursday, May 24, 1906.

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Note: Newspaper obituaries list Mary as interred at Perry Hope cemetery. Her gravestone however is next to her husband in Leicester cemetery.

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(Perry, NY, Herald, May 17, 1906)
Mrs. Mary Hull, wife of John Kelsey Hull, died Monday morning at the farm home two miles east of this village, aged 59 years.
She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Richardson, and was born in the same neighborhood where her life has been spent. She was married to J.K. Hull twenty-eight years ago and had been a devoted wife and mother and an exemplary member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. She is survived by her husband and one son, Clarence, on the farm; two brothers, George W. Richardson of Buffalo and Fred Richardson of Gibsonville; four sisters, Mrs. W. E. Tuttle, Mrs. A. W. LaSure, Mrs. John Centerline, and Miss Edith Richardson, just returned from California. The funeral was held from the family home Wednesday, Rev. Frank Cole officiating. Burial in Hope Cemetery.

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HULL – At her home in Leicester on the morning of May 14th, occurred the death of Mrs. Kelsey Hull, after a long and painful illness. The deceased was the daughter of Hiram W. and Jane Richardson and was born in Leicester, August 18th, 1846. She was married in 1867 to J. K. Hull and her husband and one son, Clarence W. Hull, survive her. Mrs. Hull was a lady of sterling worth and character. A Christian, she lived her religion in her everyday life, consistently and without ostentation. Kind and considerate to all with whom she came in contact she leaves a wide circle of friends and neighbors to mourn the loss of a generous, sympathetic friend on whom they could always rely for help or comfort. Her home was known for its hospitable, unselfish spirit, and she has left there a husband and son who loved her as an ideal wife and mother. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Jane Richardson, four sisters, Mrs. William Tuttle, Mrs. AlvinLeSure, Mrs. John Casterline and Miss Edith Richardson; and two brothers, George W. Richardson and Fred H. Richardson. Death has taken from them a loving daughter and devoted sister. A cheerful, helpful, successful life has ended. The funeral was held Wednesday afternoon at her home, and the large gathering of relatives and friends, many of them from a distance together with the numerous and beautiful floral tributes, testified to the high esteem in which she was held.
Obituary published in The Livingston Republican, Geneseo, New York on Thursday, May 24, 1906.

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