From "Men of Mark in South Carolina" by James Calvin Hemphill, 1907
Eliza Stoll Wrightman was born in Charleston, January 25, 1800, and died in the same city, August 18, 1834. She was a daughter of Elizabeth (Douglas) Stoll, who came from England in the seventeenth century, and was of English and Scotch parentage. Her father, Justinus Stoll, was a man of large wealth, and owned a large part of the South Battery, of Charleston, in his lifetime, a relic of which is Stoll's alley, which bears his names at the present time. His wife was a noble and remarkable woman, the history of whose life reads like a romance.
From "Men of Mark in South Carolina" by James Calvin Hemphill, 1907
Eliza Stoll Wrightman was born in Charleston, January 25, 1800, and died in the same city, August 18, 1834. She was a daughter of Elizabeth (Douglas) Stoll, who came from England in the seventeenth century, and was of English and Scotch parentage. Her father, Justinus Stoll, was a man of large wealth, and owned a large part of the South Battery, of Charleston, in his lifetime, a relic of which is Stoll's alley, which bears his names at the present time. His wife was a noble and remarkable woman, the history of whose life reads like a romance.
Inscription
Wife of John Thomas. Both of Charleston.
Gravesite Details
Information taken from the WPA cemetery transcriptions of the 1930's.
Family Members
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