The new couple became partners with her father in the construction of the two-story Green Springs House, a hotel and freighting stop, at Green Springs in Tuolumne County on the way to the southern Gold Mines. The couple produced four children while remaining as successful farmers in Petaluma before John's death in 1858 from consumption.
Within a year, Mary remarried to the widower, Joshua Bailey, of Missouri. Another six children were born to the union besides those added from previous marriages. Scraping together a living as a farming family meant continual movement from Sonoma County to Tulare County, to Jackson County in Oregon, and back into California.
Upon her death from cancer of the duodenum, Mary was the first buried in her father's burial plot on 14 Jul 1891.
The new couple became partners with her father in the construction of the two-story Green Springs House, a hotel and freighting stop, at Green Springs in Tuolumne County on the way to the southern Gold Mines. The couple produced four children while remaining as successful farmers in Petaluma before John's death in 1858 from consumption.
Within a year, Mary remarried to the widower, Joshua Bailey, of Missouri. Another six children were born to the union besides those added from previous marriages. Scraping together a living as a farming family meant continual movement from Sonoma County to Tulare County, to Jackson County in Oregon, and back into California.
Upon her death from cancer of the duodenum, Mary was the first buried in her father's burial plot on 14 Jul 1891.
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