Death of Mrs. Judge Tuck (Special Dispatch to the Baltimore Sun)
ANNAPOLIS, MD. – March 12. – Mrs. Margaret S. Bowie Tuck, widow of the late Judge Wm. H. Tuck, died in Annapolis at an early hour this morning.
She had been an invalid for many years, and had been confined to her room more or less since the death of her husband, March 17, 1884.
Her father was the late Philemon Lloyd Chew, of Prince George's county, who was twice a member of the Governor's Council, and her brother is ex-Judge Richard Benjamin Brookes Chew, of Prince George's county. Mrs. Tuck was the great niece of Gov. Robert Bowie and granddaughter of Major Benjamin Brooke, of the Maryland Line in the revolution, who died from wounds received at the battle Monmouth.
Judge Chew was telegraphed for and arrived this morning a few hours after his sister's death. Mrs. Tuck was in the 68th year of her age. A daughter and two sons – S. Pinkney and Philemon H. Tuck – survive her.
(Baltimore Sun, Baltimore, Md., 13 Mar 1885, pg. 4)
Death of Mrs. Judge Tuck (Special Dispatch to the Baltimore Sun)
ANNAPOLIS, MD. – March 12. – Mrs. Margaret S. Bowie Tuck, widow of the late Judge Wm. H. Tuck, died in Annapolis at an early hour this morning.
She had been an invalid for many years, and had been confined to her room more or less since the death of her husband, March 17, 1884.
Her father was the late Philemon Lloyd Chew, of Prince George's county, who was twice a member of the Governor's Council, and her brother is ex-Judge Richard Benjamin Brookes Chew, of Prince George's county. Mrs. Tuck was the great niece of Gov. Robert Bowie and granddaughter of Major Benjamin Brooke, of the Maryland Line in the revolution, who died from wounds received at the battle Monmouth.
Judge Chew was telegraphed for and arrived this morning a few hours after his sister's death. Mrs. Tuck was in the 68th year of her age. A daughter and two sons – S. Pinkney and Philemon H. Tuck – survive her.
(Baltimore Sun, Baltimore, Md., 13 Mar 1885, pg. 4)
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