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Agnes Estelle <I>Stevens</I> Bagley

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Agnes Estelle Stevens Bagley

Birth
Peoria County, Illinois, USA
Death
29 Mar 1968 (aged 80)
Lincoln County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Fayetteville, Lincoln County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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MARRIED IN SEATTLE --

Mr. James Warren Warren Bagley, Washington, D. C., and Miss Agnes Stevens were married at Seattle, Washington, at 2 p.m. last Thursday. The bride is a native of Ohio, but was engaged in teaching at Valdez, Alaska. Mr. Bagley is in the government service and has for some time been in charge of a surveying corps in Alaska establishing the boundary in the frozen north. The happy couple will arrive in Fayetteville in a few days to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Bagley.

Source:
The Fayetteville Observer
Fayetteville, Tennessee
Thursday, November 2, 1911

Funeral Services Held Here Sunday Afternoon For Mrs. Agnes S. Bagley --

Funeral services for Mrs. Agnes Stevens Bagley were conducted on Sunday afternoon, at the Higgins Funeral Home, by the Rev. William Shouse, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Burial was in Rose Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Bagley died last Friday afternoon in the Lincoln County Hospital after a long illness.

Daughter of the late Edward Augustus and Katie Owens Stevens, Mrs. Bagley was born in Peoria, Illinois. Orphaned at an early age, she and her sister were reared by an aunt, Mrs. Mary Stevens, in Peoria.

After completing her education, she accepted a teaching poisiton in Alaska, where she met Col. J. W. Bagley of Fayetteville, who was at that time a geological surveyor for the United States. They were married in Seattle, Washington in 1911.

Following Col. Bagley's retirement in 1945, they moved to Fayetteville, making their home on the Winchester Highway. Col. Bagley died in 1947.

Mrs. Bagley was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Fayetteville.

She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Charles Tinker of Stowe, Vermont; two sons, Sam S. Bagley of Fayetteville and Tom Bagley of Atlanta, Georgia; ten grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Source:
Lincoln County News
Fayetteville, Tennessee
MARRIED IN SEATTLE --

Mr. James Warren Warren Bagley, Washington, D. C., and Miss Agnes Stevens were married at Seattle, Washington, at 2 p.m. last Thursday. The bride is a native of Ohio, but was engaged in teaching at Valdez, Alaska. Mr. Bagley is in the government service and has for some time been in charge of a surveying corps in Alaska establishing the boundary in the frozen north. The happy couple will arrive in Fayetteville in a few days to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Bagley.

Source:
The Fayetteville Observer
Fayetteville, Tennessee
Thursday, November 2, 1911

Funeral Services Held Here Sunday Afternoon For Mrs. Agnes S. Bagley --

Funeral services for Mrs. Agnes Stevens Bagley were conducted on Sunday afternoon, at the Higgins Funeral Home, by the Rev. William Shouse, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Burial was in Rose Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Bagley died last Friday afternoon in the Lincoln County Hospital after a long illness.

Daughter of the late Edward Augustus and Katie Owens Stevens, Mrs. Bagley was born in Peoria, Illinois. Orphaned at an early age, she and her sister were reared by an aunt, Mrs. Mary Stevens, in Peoria.

After completing her education, she accepted a teaching poisiton in Alaska, where she met Col. J. W. Bagley of Fayetteville, who was at that time a geological surveyor for the United States. They were married in Seattle, Washington in 1911.

Following Col. Bagley's retirement in 1945, they moved to Fayetteville, making their home on the Winchester Highway. Col. Bagley died in 1947.

Mrs. Bagley was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Fayetteville.

She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Charles Tinker of Stowe, Vermont; two sons, Sam S. Bagley of Fayetteville and Tom Bagley of Atlanta, Georgia; ten grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Source:
Lincoln County News
Fayetteville, Tennessee


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