Person:Sidney Hall (3)

Watchers
Sidney Calhoun Hall
d.1907
m. Abt 1822
  1. Sidney Calhoun Hall1823 - 1907
  2. Margaret Louisa HallAbt 1825 -
  3. Lydia Abbot Hall1829 - 1856
  4. Anna Maria Hall1831 - 1878
  5. William Carvil HallAbt 1833 - 1879
m. Bef 1852
  1. William Hall Harris, Esq.1852 -
Facts and Events
Name Sidney Calhoun Hall
Married Name Sidney Calhoun Hall Harris
Gender Female
Birth[1] Dec 1823 Maryland, United States
Marriage Bef 1852 to James Morrison Harris, Esq.
Death[1] 1907
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Portrait catalogued, in Smithsonian Institution.
  2.   Family Recorded, in Steiner, Bernard Christian (Ph.D.); David Henry Carroll; Lynn Roby Meekins; and Thomas G Boggs. Men of mark in Maryland: biographies of leading men in the state ; illustrated with many full page engravings (in 4 Volumes). (Washington, DC and Baltimore, MD: Johnson-Wynne and BF Johnson, 1907-1912)
    Vol 1, pp 175-176.
  3.   Family Recorded, in Hanson, George Adolphus. Old Kent: the eastern shore of Maryland; notes illustrative of the most ancient records of Kent County Maryland, and of the parishes of St. Paul's, Shrewsbury and I. U. and genealogical histories of land and distinguished families of Maryland, and their connections by marriage, etc. (Baltimore, Maryland: John P. Des Forges, 1876).

    p 49 -
    ... Ann Calhoun, dau. of William and Lydia Cattel Calhoun, after the death of his sister, Mary Calhoun Hall, m. and was the 2d wife of Benedict Wm. Hall, and had child., viz.,
    - Sidney Calhoun Hall, who m. 2d Oct. 1851, James Morrison Harris, and had a son William Hall Harris, ...

  4.   Family Recorded, in Baltimore Heritage website - http://baltimoreheritage.org/history/broads-choice-eutaw-farm-hall-springs-early-history-herring-run-park/.

    ... On the southwestern bank of the Herring Run, a 30-acre parcel, which was part of John Broad’s original 1695 patent, was given to Sidney Calhoun Hall and her husband, United States Congressman, James Morrison Harris. The couple built a stately manor house on the property, calling it Ivy Hill. In 1900, Sidney, now a widow, sold the property to her son, William Hall Harris, who at the time was employed as a lawyer in Baltimore City. Four years later, he was appointed by Theodore Roosevelt’s administration as Baltimore’s postmaster. On June 18, 1908, William Hall Harris sold Ivy Hill to the City of Baltimore which converted his and the rest of the former Eutaw farm into Herring Run Park. ...