Recorded by Tyner in the American Indian Institute's "Our People And Where They Rest," James W. Tyner, Maxine Tyner and Alice Tyner Timmons, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. 1978 (Library of Congress No. QE99-C5-T97) Volume X, p. 71. This is a lost or defunct cemetery.*
Their information (including any diagrams or maps) is given here as a historical reference and is presented "as is." Their book, like many such cemetery listing compilations, may contain errors. As with any genealogy information, this is merely a "source" and should be considered as such. It falls upon the end-user to verify the accuracy. The set of books are available at many Oklahoma libraries. Once freely available for online viewing, the OPAWTR volumes can now be accessed only at a LDS Family History Library, a partner library, or a Family History Center. (LDS) Aug. 2021 update: I am informed that the set is now available on the Family Search website, but you have to be a member, and be signed in, to be able to access it under "Books."
Note that a "Susan (Comstock) Requa" was also reported to be buried here at New Hopefield Mission Cemetery, but she appears to have been placed in the Find A Grave cemetery listing at Union Mission. The discrepancy is unexplained.
The second wife of Rev. and Doctor William Comb Requa. She was the younger sister of Requa's fellow missionary, Rev. William Bell Montgomery. Jane d. at New Hopefield mission station in the Osage Indian Territory, then located on the Neosho River in either present Neosho County or south adjoining Labette County, Kansas. She had arrived at New Hopefield on Dec. 20, 1834, but it is unclear whether she arrived there as a missionary or to marry Rev. Requa, who at the time had two living children by first wife Susan Comstock. There were no children of the Requa-Montgomery marriage.
26 MAR 2023 SAC with parental links.
Recorded by Tyner in the American Indian Institute's "Our People And Where They Rest," James W. Tyner, Maxine Tyner and Alice Tyner Timmons, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. 1978 (Library of Congress No. QE99-C5-T97) Volume X, p. 71. This is a lost or defunct cemetery.*
Their information (including any diagrams or maps) is given here as a historical reference and is presented "as is." Their book, like many such cemetery listing compilations, may contain errors. As with any genealogy information, this is merely a "source" and should be considered as such. It falls upon the end-user to verify the accuracy. The set of books are available at many Oklahoma libraries. Once freely available for online viewing, the OPAWTR volumes can now be accessed only at a LDS Family History Library, a partner library, or a Family History Center. (LDS) Aug. 2021 update: I am informed that the set is now available on the Family Search website, but you have to be a member, and be signed in, to be able to access it under "Books."
Note that a "Susan (Comstock) Requa" was also reported to be buried here at New Hopefield Mission Cemetery, but she appears to have been placed in the Find A Grave cemetery listing at Union Mission. The discrepancy is unexplained.
The second wife of Rev. and Doctor William Comb Requa. She was the younger sister of Requa's fellow missionary, Rev. William Bell Montgomery. Jane d. at New Hopefield mission station in the Osage Indian Territory, then located on the Neosho River in either present Neosho County or south adjoining Labette County, Kansas. She had arrived at New Hopefield on Dec. 20, 1834, but it is unclear whether she arrived there as a missionary or to marry Rev. Requa, who at the time had two living children by first wife Susan Comstock. There were no children of the Requa-Montgomery marriage.
26 MAR 2023 SAC with parental links.
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See more Requa or Montgomery memorials in:
- New Hopefield Mission Cemetery Requa or Montgomery
- Chouteau Requa or Montgomery
- Mayes County Requa or Montgomery
- Oklahoma Requa or Montgomery
- USA Requa or Montgomery
- Find a Grave Requa or Montgomery
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