Advertisement

Annie F <I>Bartlett</I> Goodnough Wallace

Advertisement

Annie F Bartlett Goodnough Wallace

Birth
New York, USA
Death
3 Feb 1941 (aged 80–81)
Burial
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Lot 8016, Section 70
Memorial ID
View Source
She was the daughter of Walter F and Annie Bartlett. Annie was a twenty-year-old New York City native and resident when she married a clergyman in Bridgewater, MA. Her only child was also born in Plymouth County, MA. She was the force behind the building of the mausoleum 32 years after her first husband's death at age 33. She was no stranger to grief as she had loss her father at the age of six, as did her daughter. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution Long Island State Society. She re-married 62 year old lawyer, Jackson Wallace in about 1902-03. He was Deputy Dock Commission, Chairman of the Board of Alderman, and filled in for the Mayor.
He was known for his benevolence and acclaimed for about two decades in the Republican party, and a member of the Hamilton Club and other organizations.
Before the mausoleum was built, she buried her husband, a pet and a daughter in chronological order on their two cemetery plots. Green-wood acknowledges a memorial stone for a pet was a rarity even before animal burials were outlawed.
She was the daughter of Walter F and Annie Bartlett. Annie was a twenty-year-old New York City native and resident when she married a clergyman in Bridgewater, MA. Her only child was also born in Plymouth County, MA. She was the force behind the building of the mausoleum 32 years after her first husband's death at age 33. She was no stranger to grief as she had loss her father at the age of six, as did her daughter. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution Long Island State Society. She re-married 62 year old lawyer, Jackson Wallace in about 1902-03. He was Deputy Dock Commission, Chairman of the Board of Alderman, and filled in for the Mayor.
He was known for his benevolence and acclaimed for about two decades in the Republican party, and a member of the Hamilton Club and other organizations.
Before the mausoleum was built, she buried her husband, a pet and a daughter in chronological order on their two cemetery plots. Green-wood acknowledges a memorial stone for a pet was a rarity even before animal burials were outlawed.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement