Annie married into the Curley family of Roxbury, whom had two sons that were tobacconists and another son, her husband, a railway engineer.
She had a brother, Patrick Craven, who was a brewer and farmer in Lincoln. Later, the Curley's would move from Roxbury to Wayland onto Craven property from the farm and apple orchard. Patrick Craven's daughter, Annie, also married one of the Curley nephews in 1904, so the two were intertwined and huge. They lived on Linden Ave on Hyde Park as well as in out in the country, in Wayland.
Annie married into the Curley family of Roxbury, whom had two sons that were tobacconists and another son, her husband, a railway engineer.
She had a brother, Patrick Craven, who was a brewer and farmer in Lincoln. Later, the Curley's would move from Roxbury to Wayland onto Craven property from the farm and apple orchard. Patrick Craven's daughter, Annie, also married one of the Curley nephews in 1904, so the two were intertwined and huge. They lived on Linden Ave on Hyde Park as well as in out in the country, in Wayland.
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