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Charlotte Sophia Huntington

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Charlotte Sophia Huntington

Birth
Bingham Center, Potter County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
11 May 1880 (aged 31)
Hornell, Steuben County, New York, USA
Burial
Independence, Allegany County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Charlotte Sophia Huntington was the daughter of Rev. Eleazer Peck and Stella Maria (Miller) Huntington. Charlotte died from consumption of the lung.

Obituary
Unidentified Newspaper - 1880
HUNTINGTON.--Charlotte S. Huntingtron, second daughter of Rev. E. P. and Mrs. S. M. Huntington, was born at Bingham, Potter Co., Pennsylvania, Dec. 24, 1848, and died at Hornellsville, May 11, 1880. The deceased was converted at the family altar when only eight years of age. She immediately united with the Methodist Episcopal church, of which she remained a consistent member until her death. Her sufferings were of a peculiar and distressing nature. For more then ten years she furnished to the world a demonstration of the power of Divine Grace to create and maintain a peaceful, patient, uncomplaining spirit; when every nerve is transformed into an instrument of torture, and the whole physical frame goads to irritability and unrest. Those who understand best the painful nature of a large part of her journey through life, will appreciate most highly the value and excellence of her Christian character. The influence of her quiet life does not cease with her death. And we feel assured that while there is one less who suffers on Earth, there is one more who rejoices in heaven.
Written by Rev. Sylvester Derby Pickett
Charlotte Sophia Huntington was the daughter of Rev. Eleazer Peck and Stella Maria (Miller) Huntington. Charlotte died from consumption of the lung.

Obituary
Unidentified Newspaper - 1880
HUNTINGTON.--Charlotte S. Huntingtron, second daughter of Rev. E. P. and Mrs. S. M. Huntington, was born at Bingham, Potter Co., Pennsylvania, Dec. 24, 1848, and died at Hornellsville, May 11, 1880. The deceased was converted at the family altar when only eight years of age. She immediately united with the Methodist Episcopal church, of which she remained a consistent member until her death. Her sufferings were of a peculiar and distressing nature. For more then ten years she furnished to the world a demonstration of the power of Divine Grace to create and maintain a peaceful, patient, uncomplaining spirit; when every nerve is transformed into an instrument of torture, and the whole physical frame goads to irritability and unrest. Those who understand best the painful nature of a large part of her journey through life, will appreciate most highly the value and excellence of her Christian character. The influence of her quiet life does not cease with her death. And we feel assured that while there is one less who suffers on Earth, there is one more who rejoices in heaven.
Written by Rev. Sylvester Derby Pickett


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