Joseph Hyde (b. 1761)
Arete Jessup (b. 1761)
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excerpt from History of the Western Reserve, Volume 3
By Harriet Taylor Upton, Harry Gardner Cutler
"...Ebenezer Andrews was married in August, 1825, to Miss Rachel Hyde, who was born June 13, 1802, a daughter of Joseph Hyde, of Greensfarms, Connecticut, and granddaughter of Ebenezer Jesup, of Westport, Connecticut. Her grandfather, Dr. Jesup, a graduate at Yale in the class of 1760, was a surgeon in the Revolutionary army and served as a representative of the government to negotiate one of the Indian treaties at Detroit, Michigan. He was a man of unusual ability as well as of substantial prosperity.
Rachel Hyde was educated at Fairfield Academy, Connecticut. She moved to Ohio soon after her marriage and resided the greater portion of her wedded life at Milan, Ohio, where she died August 13, 1881. She was a woman of great energy and resolution, well fitted to move in the society of cultured people, or, if need be, to meet the hardships of pioneer life."
(info provided by Msmith #47320929)
-------------------------
Joseph Hyde (b. 1761)
Arete Jessup (b. 1761)
---
excerpt from History of the Western Reserve, Volume 3
By Harriet Taylor Upton, Harry Gardner Cutler
"...Ebenezer Andrews was married in August, 1825, to Miss Rachel Hyde, who was born June 13, 1802, a daughter of Joseph Hyde, of Greensfarms, Connecticut, and granddaughter of Ebenezer Jesup, of Westport, Connecticut. Her grandfather, Dr. Jesup, a graduate at Yale in the class of 1760, was a surgeon in the Revolutionary army and served as a representative of the government to negotiate one of the Indian treaties at Detroit, Michigan. He was a man of unusual ability as well as of substantial prosperity.
Rachel Hyde was educated at Fairfield Academy, Connecticut. She moved to Ohio soon after her marriage and resided the greater portion of her wedded life at Milan, Ohio, where she died August 13, 1881. She was a woman of great energy and resolution, well fitted to move in the society of cultured people, or, if need be, to meet the hardships of pioneer life."
(info provided by Msmith #47320929)
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Inscription
died in Milan, Ohio
Gravesite Details
wife
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