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Mrs E Judge “AKA Emily Jane” <I>Hall</I> Oliver

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Mrs E Judge “AKA Emily Jane” Hall Oliver

Birth
Tennessee, USA
Death
1 Oct 1905 (aged 82–83)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Plot
Lot 107 grave 13
Memorial ID
View Source
Emily Jane Hall was the second wife of Judge Mordecai Oliver. Frances Ann Pollard the first wife. I believe he and Frances had 3 children, and him and Emily Jane had 4 children.

Emily was killed by a street car in Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri on the corner of Prospect and 9th Street.

U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 Name: widow of Mordecai Oliver Emily J Oliver Kansas City, Missouri, City Directory, 1901

I found this lady listed on page 90 of Greene County, Missouri Cemeteries Volume XI as:
"* Oliver Mrs. E. Judge died - Oct 1 1905 ae 83yr"
The asterisk means she does not have any monument. Seems odd that a woman married to Mordecai Oliver would not have any monument in the cemetery plot.

Information seems to be very sparse about this woman. I have found some information that shows her to be Emily Jane Hall. The above listing shows her as E Judge Oliver so I am not sure of the middle name, or if she remarried after the death of her husand to a man named Judge.

Known names so far:
Emily Jane/Emily Judge [Hall] Oliver.

This little paragraph may help the maiden name of Hall as correct for her as her brother was William Alexander Hall, a mayer of Springfield, Greene, MO. From Past and Present of Greene County Missouri.

"Mr. Hall was born in Nashville, Tennessee, November 27, 1834. He was a son of John and, Elizabeth Hall, both natives of Scotland, from which country they emigrated to America when young and located in Pennsylvania, and were married in the city of Philadelphia. They removed to Tennessee in the year 1828, where they lived ten years, thence moved to Missouri in 1838, settling in St. Louis, where the father established the first water-works of that city, and where his death occurred in 1862. In 1848 the mother of our subject, together with her youngest child, perished in a steamboat disaster on the Alabama river. William A. Hall was about fifteen years old at the time of his mother's death, and he then went to live with his sister, Mrs. Emily Jane Oliver, wife of Judge Mordecai Oliver, of Richmond, Missouri. While living in Richmond he supplemented the public school education acquired in St. Louis with an academic training under the tutelage of Prof. A. Coke Redman, completing the course of study."
Emily Jane Hall was the second wife of Judge Mordecai Oliver. Frances Ann Pollard the first wife. I believe he and Frances had 3 children, and him and Emily Jane had 4 children.

Emily was killed by a street car in Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri on the corner of Prospect and 9th Street.

U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 Name: widow of Mordecai Oliver Emily J Oliver Kansas City, Missouri, City Directory, 1901

I found this lady listed on page 90 of Greene County, Missouri Cemeteries Volume XI as:
"* Oliver Mrs. E. Judge died - Oct 1 1905 ae 83yr"
The asterisk means she does not have any monument. Seems odd that a woman married to Mordecai Oliver would not have any monument in the cemetery plot.

Information seems to be very sparse about this woman. I have found some information that shows her to be Emily Jane Hall. The above listing shows her as E Judge Oliver so I am not sure of the middle name, or if she remarried after the death of her husand to a man named Judge.

Known names so far:
Emily Jane/Emily Judge [Hall] Oliver.

This little paragraph may help the maiden name of Hall as correct for her as her brother was William Alexander Hall, a mayer of Springfield, Greene, MO. From Past and Present of Greene County Missouri.

"Mr. Hall was born in Nashville, Tennessee, November 27, 1834. He was a son of John and, Elizabeth Hall, both natives of Scotland, from which country they emigrated to America when young and located in Pennsylvania, and were married in the city of Philadelphia. They removed to Tennessee in the year 1828, where they lived ten years, thence moved to Missouri in 1838, settling in St. Louis, where the father established the first water-works of that city, and where his death occurred in 1862. In 1848 the mother of our subject, together with her youngest child, perished in a steamboat disaster on the Alabama river. William A. Hall was about fifteen years old at the time of his mother's death, and he then went to live with his sister, Mrs. Emily Jane Oliver, wife of Judge Mordecai Oliver, of Richmond, Missouri. While living in Richmond he supplemented the public school education acquired in St. Louis with an academic training under the tutelage of Prof. A. Coke Redman, completing the course of study."


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  • Created by: Judy Young
  • Added: Jan 10, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/32805922/e_judge-oliver: accessed ), memorial page for Mrs E Judge “AKA Emily Jane” Hall Oliver (1822–1 Oct 1905), Find a Grave Memorial ID 32805922, citing Hazelwood Cemetery, Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, USA; Maintained by Judy Young (contributor 46792475).