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Augusta Hart Williams

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Augusta Hart Williams

Birth
Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA
Death
21 Feb 1913 (aged 71)
Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA
Burial
Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section E / Lot 58 (bordering Section F)
Memorial ID
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Miss Augusta Hart Williams, daughter of the late Oliver Ellsworth and Elizabeth Crode Williams, died at her home, No. 255 Capitol avenue, last evening, after a long illness. She was 71 years old. She was born in Hartford and lived here practically all her life. She leaves no near relatives.
- Hartford Courant, Feb 22, 1913, p 9

Tribute to a Hartford Woman
The following tribute to the late Miss August Hart Williams of the city appeared recently in "The Churchman."
[....]
Always a devoted church woman, Miss Williams found her chief joy in ministering to the sick and afflicted, especially to those least wont to find friendly sympathy, the insane and the outcast. For many years, she did a remarkable work among the patients of the Retreat for the Insane at Hartford, where she was a veritable ray of sunshine, her attractive personality and ready sympathy bringing cheer and comfort to many darkened lives. In the rescue work carried on by the church in Hartford, she labored untiringly, and her name is held in touching love and veneration by many a poor girl.
[...]
- Complete article in Hartford Courant, March 21, 1913, p. 5
Miss Augusta Hart Williams, daughter of the late Oliver Ellsworth and Elizabeth Crode Williams, died at her home, No. 255 Capitol avenue, last evening, after a long illness. She was 71 years old. She was born in Hartford and lived here practically all her life. She leaves no near relatives.
- Hartford Courant, Feb 22, 1913, p 9

Tribute to a Hartford Woman
The following tribute to the late Miss August Hart Williams of the city appeared recently in "The Churchman."
[....]
Always a devoted church woman, Miss Williams found her chief joy in ministering to the sick and afflicted, especially to those least wont to find friendly sympathy, the insane and the outcast. For many years, she did a remarkable work among the patients of the Retreat for the Insane at Hartford, where she was a veritable ray of sunshine, her attractive personality and ready sympathy bringing cheer and comfort to many darkened lives. In the rescue work carried on by the church in Hartford, she labored untiringly, and her name is held in touching love and veneration by many a poor girl.
[...]
- Complete article in Hartford Courant, March 21, 1913, p. 5


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