Person:Rebecca McMullin (2)

Watchers
Rebecca Wentworth McMullin
m. 18 Jun 1857
  1. Anna McMullin1858 - 1924
  2. Eliza "Lilo" Morgan McMullin1858 - 1962
  3. Rebecca Wentworth McMullin1860 - 1911
  4. Beauregard McMullin1861 - 1891
  5. John S. McMullin1863 - 1903
  6. Elizabeth McMullin1863 - 1940
  7. Susan H McMullinAbt 1865 -
  8. Morgan McMullin1865 - 1893
  9. Henrietta McMullin1868 - 1869
m. 16 Apr 1884
m. 17 Nov 1906
Facts and Events
Name Rebecca Wentworth McMullin
Baptismal Name Rebecca Wentworth McMullin
Married Name Mrs. Rebecca McMullin Belvin
Married Name Mrs. Rebecca Heney
Gender Female
Birth[3] 1860 California, United States
Marriage 16 Apr 1884 California, United Statesto William Wayne Belvin
Marriage 17 Nov 1906 California, United Statesto Francis Joseph Heney
Death[3] 26 Jan 1911 New York, United States
Burial[2][3] Mountain View Cemetery, Oakland, Alameda, California, United Statesplot 36 lot 113
References
  1.   Mentions, in San Francisco, California, United States. San Francisco Call. (San Francisco, California).

    9 Aug 1906 - It is is announced that the wedding of Mrs. Rebecca McMullin Belvin and Francis J. Heney, which was to have been celebrated next month, will not take place until the end of the year. Mrs. Belvin is in Arizona, spending the summer as the guest of her sister, Mrs. E. B. Perrin, and will not return for some weeks yet. Mr. Heney is in town for a few days on a brief business trip, but is returning almost immediately to Portland. He will complete the land fraud cases in which he is engaged there and will be compelled to make a trip to Washington as well; so it will be the end of November at least before he will be able to return here for his wedding.

    18 Nov 1906 - A thoroughly charming affair was the wedding of Mrs. Rebecca McMullin Belvin and Francis J. Heney; which was celebrated in the quietest, most informal way yesterday afternoon at the attractive Piedmont home of the bride's sister-in-law, Mrs. Betty Hays McMullin. Those attended: Mrs. J C Hays, Mrs. Milton Latham, Mrs. Haynes and the Misses Heney sisters of the groom: Miss Eliza McMullin, Harry Hays, John McMullin, Jessie Godley, Benjamin Heney Jr and Hays McMullin

  2. Death Notice, in San Francisco, California, United States. San Francisco Call. (San Francisco, California).

    [date needed] - FUNERAL SERVICES FOR MRS. FRANCIS J. HENEY
    Interment Private at Mountain View, Oakland. Funeral services for Mrs. Francis J. Heney, who died after a brief illness in New York while on a visit with her husband, were held yesterday morning in the First Presbyterian church. Rev. W. K. Guthrie conducted the services, and he was, assisted by Rev. Dr. William Rader and Rev. David J. Evans of Palo Alto. The pall bearers were: Judge W.B. Gilbert, Fremont Older, James D. Phelan, , Dr. Frank Wilson, Dr. Shadworth O. Beasley, C. G. Cambron, Prof. George Bunnell and Judge William F. Lawlor. Interment was in the Heney family lot in Mountain View cemetery, Oakland, and was private.

  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Rebecca Wentworth McMullin Henry, in Find A Grave.
  4.   Death Notice, in The New York Times. (New York, New York).

    27 Jan 1911 - MRS. FRANCIS J. HENEY DEAD. Wife of San Francisco Graft Prosecutor Stricken on Arrival Here.
    Mr. Francis J. Heney, wife of the San Francisco graft prosecutor, died yesterday afternoon at the home of Charles R. Crane at 31 East Twelfth Street of tubercular meningitis. She had been ill ten days. When her husband came to New York on Jan. 6 to address the Periodical Publishers' Association. Mrs. Henry accompanied him. She was taken ill soon after her arrival. The Heneys had leased the apartment at the Twelfth Street address from M. Crane, who was a close friend. Mrs. Heney grew worse from day to day, and her husband remained in New York. She was unconscious several days before her death. The body will be shipped to San Francisco for burial. Mrs. Heney was 50 years old. She was Rebecca McMullen [sic], her father being John McMullen [sic], one of the old Texas Rangers. He took part in the Texas revolution before the Mexican war. Before the gold rush to California in 1845 he emigrated to that State with Judge Terry, Capt. Jack Hayes [sic] and other noted Texans. McMullen settled in the San Joaquin Valley. Mrs. Heney's mother was Eliza Morgan of the Kentucky family of that name. Mrs. Heney's father died when she was very young and she went to live with her mother's people in Kentucky. She met Mr. Heney in San Francisco in 1906 and married him at the time he was engaged in the Reuf and Schmitz graft cases.