Married
(1) Dudley S. Jennings
(2) Lewis A. Hinesdale
From the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Friday, July 8, 1921, p. 19:
Mrs. Carrie M. Hinesdale, 70, died at her residence, 112 Camp Bowie Boulevard, Thursday at 10 p.m. Funeral services will be held from the residence at 3 p.m. Saturday. Interment will be in Greenwood Cemetery.
She is survived by one son, J. M. Jennings of Fort Worth, and two sisters, Mrs. Tenie M. Smith of Fort Worth and Mrs. Addie M. Corley of Marshall.
Bio from a memorial merged into this one (I cannot vouch for any of the information here):
Daughter of Josiah Marshall and Mary C. Witherspoon, she was born in Mississippi and came with her family who settled at Marshall, Texas.
Her first husband, Dudley S. Jennings Jr., had made the same journey from Mississippi with his family, and Carrie and Dudley were married at Marshall on 17 Nov 1873.
By 1880, they had removed to Longview, Texas where her husband was practicing law. They were the parents of one surviving child, Josiah. She discloses on the 1900 and 1910 census that she'd had two additional children who did not survive.
After the death of her first husband, Carrie moved to Fort Worth where she appears in the 1892 city directory on Second Street.
By 1900, she had married photographer Lewis Albert Hinsdale and was residing with him at 503 1/2 Main Street.
By the next census, she and Lewis had separated. She lists her status as 'divorced,' he as 'single.' Despite them living apart, each continued to list themselves as the spouse of the other in directories; something Lewis continued for decades after Carrie's death.
In 1897, the Spiritualist Church organized in Texas and news stories show that Carrie was an early and ardent supporter, delivering lectures as early as 1898. She lists herself as a Minister of the denomination on the 1910 census. In August of 1920, she attended the twenty-fourth annual convention of the Texas State Spiritualist Association and addressed the group as its president emeritus.
Her son Marshall was the informant on her death certificate.
(Although her husband's surname was 'Hinsdale,' she is named in all news accounts and in vital records as 'Hinesdale.')
Married
(1) Dudley S. Jennings
(2) Lewis A. Hinesdale
From the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Friday, July 8, 1921, p. 19:
Mrs. Carrie M. Hinesdale, 70, died at her residence, 112 Camp Bowie Boulevard, Thursday at 10 p.m. Funeral services will be held from the residence at 3 p.m. Saturday. Interment will be in Greenwood Cemetery.
She is survived by one son, J. M. Jennings of Fort Worth, and two sisters, Mrs. Tenie M. Smith of Fort Worth and Mrs. Addie M. Corley of Marshall.
Bio from a memorial merged into this one (I cannot vouch for any of the information here):
Daughter of Josiah Marshall and Mary C. Witherspoon, she was born in Mississippi and came with her family who settled at Marshall, Texas.
Her first husband, Dudley S. Jennings Jr., had made the same journey from Mississippi with his family, and Carrie and Dudley were married at Marshall on 17 Nov 1873.
By 1880, they had removed to Longview, Texas where her husband was practicing law. They were the parents of one surviving child, Josiah. She discloses on the 1900 and 1910 census that she'd had two additional children who did not survive.
After the death of her first husband, Carrie moved to Fort Worth where she appears in the 1892 city directory on Second Street.
By 1900, she had married photographer Lewis Albert Hinsdale and was residing with him at 503 1/2 Main Street.
By the next census, she and Lewis had separated. She lists her status as 'divorced,' he as 'single.' Despite them living apart, each continued to list themselves as the spouse of the other in directories; something Lewis continued for decades after Carrie's death.
In 1897, the Spiritualist Church organized in Texas and news stories show that Carrie was an early and ardent supporter, delivering lectures as early as 1898. She lists herself as a Minister of the denomination on the 1910 census. In August of 1920, she attended the twenty-fourth annual convention of the Texas State Spiritualist Association and addressed the group as its president emeritus.
Her son Marshall was the informant on her death certificate.
(Although her husband's surname was 'Hinsdale,' she is named in all news accounts and in vital records as 'Hinesdale.')
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