. Lineage and tradition of the family of John Springs III. Moore, and they settled onthe north banks of the Catawba river, known as Indian land,where her husband commanded a large and lucrative practiceof medicine, and engaged also in farming. Mrs. Moore diedin 1832 of scarlet fever, at the age of thirty-two years; two ofher children, Richard and Mary, died with the same diseaseand were buried with their mother in the family buryingground at Unity Church, near Fort Mill, S. C. Mrs. Moorewas the mother of eight children, only three of whom sur-vived her, Jane Cynthia, William S. and Baxter Harr


. Lineage and tradition of the family of John Springs III. Moore, and they settled onthe north banks of the Catawba river, known as Indian land,where her husband commanded a large and lucrative practiceof medicine, and engaged also in farming. Mrs. Moore diedin 1832 of scarlet fever, at the age of thirty-two years; two ofher children, Richard and Mary, died with the same diseaseand were buried with their mother in the family buryingground at Unity Church, near Fort Mill, S. C. Mrs. Moorewas the mother of eight children, only three of whom sur-vived her, Jane Cynthia, William S. and Baxter Harriet. afterwards moved to Yorkville, S. C, having pur-chased tlie elegant home of Judge Smith. His second wifewas the widow of Mr. Cushman and her maiden name wasJane Baxter Dinkins. She was a niece of the first wife anda daughter of Frederick Dinkins and his wife, CynthiaSprings. She was noted for her general information, intelli-gence and fine conversational powers. To this second mar-riage were born two children, Frederick, a handsome and gal-.


Size: 1791px × 1395px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidlineagetradi, bookyear1921