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Charles Sanders Tuckerman

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Charles Sanders Tuckerman

Birth
Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
27 Aug 1904 (aged 52)
Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Died at Appleton Farms in Ipswich, MA. Buried Aug 30 1904. Son of John Francis Tuckerman and Lucy Saltonstall.

Ipswich, Maas, Aug 2T. audio tienly, Charles Sanders Tuckerman. 52 Fut trill at Aseemtion Memorial church. wich. Tuesday.

Aug 30, at 1:43 in. Special train will leave Boston for Ipswich at 12:22 An, stopping itt Salem at bout 13.V19.4b I 12 Hamilton and Wenham 1 o'clock. Aft turning, will leave Ipswich about to stopping at Hamilton awl Wenhatiw. Beverly.
$at in awl Boston. Burial at Harmony grove, Salem. at 11:45 a.m.
United States
Massachusetts
Boston
The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe, August 29, 1904, Page 9. via Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-boston-globe-charles-tuckerman/131364242/ : accessed September 6, 2023), clip page for Charles tuckerman

CHARLES S. TUCKERMAN
A large circle of business associates and of warm personal friends mourn the unexpected death of Charles S. Tuckerman, vice-president and treasurer of the Old Colony Trust Company, of Boston. Mr. Tuckerman enjoyed the best of health and his death is therefore a greater shock to all who knew him and admired him for his admirable personal traits. While bathing in the Ipswich River. near his Summer home. Mr. Tuckerman was seized with illness August 27 and soon after succumbed, death being due to apoplexy.
Mr. Tuckerman was one of the ablest financiers of Boston. He descended from one of the old Salem families. His father, [John Francis] Tuckerman, was one of the prominent citizens of Salem. The deceased graduated from Harvard with the class of '74 and shortly after leaving college married Miss Ruth Appleton, of Ipswich, whose father was the owner of one of the largest estates on the North Shore. Mr. Tuckerman was interested in the financing of the Atchison railroad system and in 1890 when the Old Colony Trust Company was organized, became its vice-president and treasurer. At the time of his death he was President of the Helena Water Works Company and secretary of the Mackay Companies. Mr. Tuckerman leaves a widow, two sons and two daughters. He was a member of the Somerset Club and was prominent also in public affairs of Boston.
Died at Appleton Farms in Ipswich, MA. Buried Aug 30 1904. Son of John Francis Tuckerman and Lucy Saltonstall.

Ipswich, Maas, Aug 2T. audio tienly, Charles Sanders Tuckerman. 52 Fut trill at Aseemtion Memorial church. wich. Tuesday.

Aug 30, at 1:43 in. Special train will leave Boston for Ipswich at 12:22 An, stopping itt Salem at bout 13.V19.4b I 12 Hamilton and Wenham 1 o'clock. Aft turning, will leave Ipswich about to stopping at Hamilton awl Wenhatiw. Beverly.
$at in awl Boston. Burial at Harmony grove, Salem. at 11:45 a.m.
United States
Massachusetts
Boston
The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe, August 29, 1904, Page 9. via Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-boston-globe-charles-tuckerman/131364242/ : accessed September 6, 2023), clip page for Charles tuckerman

CHARLES S. TUCKERMAN
A large circle of business associates and of warm personal friends mourn the unexpected death of Charles S. Tuckerman, vice-president and treasurer of the Old Colony Trust Company, of Boston. Mr. Tuckerman enjoyed the best of health and his death is therefore a greater shock to all who knew him and admired him for his admirable personal traits. While bathing in the Ipswich River. near his Summer home. Mr. Tuckerman was seized with illness August 27 and soon after succumbed, death being due to apoplexy.
Mr. Tuckerman was one of the ablest financiers of Boston. He descended from one of the old Salem families. His father, [John Francis] Tuckerman, was one of the prominent citizens of Salem. The deceased graduated from Harvard with the class of '74 and shortly after leaving college married Miss Ruth Appleton, of Ipswich, whose father was the owner of one of the largest estates on the North Shore. Mr. Tuckerman was interested in the financing of the Atchison railroad system and in 1890 when the Old Colony Trust Company was organized, became its vice-president and treasurer. At the time of his death he was President of the Helena Water Works Company and secretary of the Mackay Companies. Mr. Tuckerman leaves a widow, two sons and two daughters. He was a member of the Somerset Club and was prominent also in public affairs of Boston.


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