When Hannah was a little girl her father built the house that is still standing today on the corner of Main and Southampton roads in Westhampton, near the present-day Outlook Farm. It was in the front parlor of this house on Hannah's twenty-second birthday that she married Abner Pomeroy Bridgman. The wedding was a double service, as her brother Almon Strong Ludden married Laura Clark at the same time.
Hannah and Abner set up housekeeping with Abner's parents in the Israel Bridgman farm on North Road in Westhampton. This house, too, is still standing today. There Hannah gave birth to six children, two boys and four girls. The youngest boy died in infancy, but the rest of the children lived into adulthood, with the eldest, Dwight Stuart Bridgman, reaching the age of ninety-seven years.
Abner Bridgman served briefly during the Civil War, returning home to Westhampton much broken in health. He never fully regained his strength. In 1875, Hannah and Abner relocated to Onarga, Iroquois County, Illinois, where they lived for a year-and-a-half. The reason for the move was an effort to find a climate more suitable to Abner's health. They returned to Westhampton in September of 1876, where Abner once again tried to continue on the work of the farm.
In the fall of 1881, Abner and Hannah and their four daughters moved to the village of Florence, where Abner took the less strenuous job of custodian at the Florence High School on Pine Street. They lived in rented housing for a few years, but in 1887 they purchased the house at 12 Pine Street in Florence, where Hannah lived for the rest of her life.
Hannah was a homemaker, caring for her sickly husband and keeping house for her daughters. She was also a loyal attendant at the Florence Congregational Church. She survived her husband by thirty years, dying at the age of eighty-five.
© 2013 James E. Bridgman
When Hannah was a little girl her father built the house that is still standing today on the corner of Main and Southampton roads in Westhampton, near the present-day Outlook Farm. It was in the front parlor of this house on Hannah's twenty-second birthday that she married Abner Pomeroy Bridgman. The wedding was a double service, as her brother Almon Strong Ludden married Laura Clark at the same time.
Hannah and Abner set up housekeeping with Abner's parents in the Israel Bridgman farm on North Road in Westhampton. This house, too, is still standing today. There Hannah gave birth to six children, two boys and four girls. The youngest boy died in infancy, but the rest of the children lived into adulthood, with the eldest, Dwight Stuart Bridgman, reaching the age of ninety-seven years.
Abner Bridgman served briefly during the Civil War, returning home to Westhampton much broken in health. He never fully regained his strength. In 1875, Hannah and Abner relocated to Onarga, Iroquois County, Illinois, where they lived for a year-and-a-half. The reason for the move was an effort to find a climate more suitable to Abner's health. They returned to Westhampton in September of 1876, where Abner once again tried to continue on the work of the farm.
In the fall of 1881, Abner and Hannah and their four daughters moved to the village of Florence, where Abner took the less strenuous job of custodian at the Florence High School on Pine Street. They lived in rented housing for a few years, but in 1887 they purchased the house at 12 Pine Street in Florence, where Hannah lived for the rest of her life.
Hannah was a homemaker, caring for her sickly husband and keeping house for her daughters. She was also a loyal attendant at the Florence Congregational Church. She survived her husband by thirty years, dying at the age of eighty-five.
© 2013 James E. Bridgman
Inscription
Abner P. Bridgman/Member/of Co. K/52 Reg. M.V.M./Died/Feb. 26 1889/Æ 57 yrs./
His Wife/Hannah S. Ludden/ Died/Oct. 1 1919/Æ 86 yrs.//
Henry Noble/Son of/A. P. & H. S. Bridgman/Died Mar. 12 1872/Æ 9 mos.//
Delia L. B./Wife of/J. H. Gilpin/1865 – 1918
Emily D./1859 – 1924
Myra B./1869-1939//
Family Members
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