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Calista H. <I>Morse</I> Aldrich

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Calista H. Morse Aldrich

Birth
Douglas, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
6 Apr 1867 (aged 59)
Charlton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Charlton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Daughter of Lydia (Humes) and Levi Morse, married John M. Aldrich on 27 Aug 1826 in Douglas, Worcester, Massachusetts. She was enumerated alone as head of a household in 1860 Charlton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, implying she was widowed by that year. On that census her name was shown as H. Calista Aldrich so her first name may have begun with an H.

It is believed she is buried in the family plot in Bay Path Cemetery with her husband and children but there is no tombstone there as of October 2013. Mowry Aldrich, her only living child, left for Kansas sometime after the birth of his first child in June 1867 and his enumeration in the 1870 Neosho Co., Kansas Census. Perhaps he did not place a tombstone on his mother's grave believing that no one would be left to visit her grave and the young couple may have needed all the money they could put together for the relocation to Kansas. If a stone was placed on her grave it was removed later.

Daughter of Lydia (Humes) and Levi Morse, married John M. Aldrich on 27 Aug 1826 in Douglas, Worcester, Massachusetts. She was enumerated alone as head of a household in 1860 Charlton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, implying she was widowed by that year. On that census her name was shown as H. Calista Aldrich so her first name may have begun with an H.

It is believed she is buried in the family plot in Bay Path Cemetery with her husband and children but there is no tombstone there as of October 2013. Mowry Aldrich, her only living child, left for Kansas sometime after the birth of his first child in June 1867 and his enumeration in the 1870 Neosho Co., Kansas Census. Perhaps he did not place a tombstone on his mother's grave believing that no one would be left to visit her grave and the young couple may have needed all the money they could put together for the relocation to Kansas. If a stone was placed on her grave it was removed later.



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