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Mary <I>Connell</I> Hoagland

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Mary Connell Hoagland

Birth
Kentucky, USA
Death
1875 (aged 78–79)
Kentucky, USA
Burial
Mount Washington, Bullitt County, Kentucky, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Mary Connell was the daughter of James Connell and Sarah Bennett. Her sister Lucy m. Robert Murphy on Dec 17, 1817. Shown on the same page.

No tombstone/marker of hers found there. May have been destroyed, deteriorated or removed?

Moses married Mary (Polly) Connell 18 Feb 1817 Bullitt CO, Kentucky. She was born about 1796 in Kentucky There is huge age difference here Moses was 26 years her senior. Was 47 when he married her. Makes me think that there are more than one family unit shown.

She had born to her thirteen children - ten sons and three daughters. There is no daughter of hers/theirs named Anne.

1. Lorenzo 1817 The Judge
2. John 1818
3. Sarah 1820
4. Richard 1822
5. Oliver Perry 1823
6. Amanda 1825
7. Morris 1826
8. Thomas Logan 1828 m. Martha Ann Yenowine
9. Moses 1830
10. Arterberry 1831 'of the Knobs'
11. Mary Jane 1834
12. Simpson R. 1836
13. Levi Joseph 1838
.......
Mary Connell was the daughter of James Connell and Sarah Bennett. Her sister Lucy m. Robert Murphy on Dec 17, 1817. Shown on the same page.

No tombstone/marker of hers found there. May have been destroyed, deteriorated or removed?

Moses married Mary (Polly) Connell 18 Feb 1817 Bullitt CO, Kentucky. She was born about 1796 in Kentucky There is huge age difference here Moses was 26 years her senior. Was 47 when he married her. Makes me think that there are more than one family unit shown.

She had born to her thirteen children - ten sons and three daughters. There is no daughter of hers/theirs named Anne.

1. Lorenzo 1817 The Judge
2. John 1818
3. Sarah 1820
4. Richard 1822
5. Oliver Perry 1823
6. Amanda 1825
7. Morris 1826
8. Thomas Logan 1828 m. Martha Ann Yenowine
9. Moses 1830
10. Arterberry 1831 'of the Knobs'
11. Mary Jane 1834
12. Simpson R. 1836
13. Levi Joseph 1838
.......

Gravesite Details

There may be exfoliated, sunken, buried, field stones, as grave markers, for these early Dutch/English congregation of colonists. The majority of the deceased were buried in unmarked graves.



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