Person:Elizabeth Montague (19)

Watchers
m. 15 Dec 1715
  1. Anna Montague1718 - 1761
  2. Elizabeth Montague1720 - 1816
  3. Captain Moses Montague1724 -
m. Bef 1743
  1. Elizabeth Montague1744 - 1824
m. Aft 17 Jan 1777
Facts and Events
Name[1] Elizabeth Montague
Married Name Elizabeth Montague
Married Name Elizabeth Smith
Gender Female
Birth[1] 13 Nov 1720 Hadley, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage Bef 1743 Estimate based on date of birth of eldest known child (Samuel).
Samuel Montague and Elizabeth Montague were first cousins.
to Samuel Montague
Marriage Aft 17 Jan 1777 After death of her first husband.
to Rev. James Smith
Death[2] 31 Jan 1816 Pittsford, Rutland, Vermont, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 814. Elizabeth Montague, in Montague, George William, and William L. Montague. History and Genealogy of the Montague Family of America: Descended from Richard Montague of Hadley, Mass., and Peter Montague Of Lancaster Co., Va., with Genealogical Notes of other Families by Name of Montague. (Amherst, Mass.: Press of J. E. Williams, 1886)
    145.

    814. Elizabeth (Montague), b. (South Hadley) Nov. 13, 1720; m. Samuel Montague of Sunderland."

  2. 2440. Samuel Montague, in Montague, George William, and William L. Montague. History and Genealogy of the Montague Family of America: Descended from Richard Montague of Hadley, Mass., and Peter Montague Of Lancaster Co., Va., with Genealogical Notes of other Families by Name of Montague. (Amherst, Mass.: Press of J. E. Williams, 1886)
    308-09.

    "Elizabeth Montague … dau. of Peter and Mary [Hubbard] Montague of South Hadley, Mass. … She d. Jan. 31, 1816, in Pittsford, aged 95 years and 3 months. …

    "Judge Samuel H. Kellogg, of Pittsford, in a biographical sketch of his ancestors, says: 'Elizabeth Montague Smith (a widow by a second marriage), came to live in grandfather's family (Rev. Eleazer Harwood's family), about the year 1805, and remained with us till her decease. During those years there were five generations in this house, and I have often heard that more than once Granny Smith, as she was called, said,─'Arise, my daughter, and go to thy daughter, for thy daughter's daughter has a daughter''"