Person:Mary Blair (83)

Watchers
Mary Blair
b.12 Jan 1764 County Derry, Ireland
Facts and Events
Name Mary Blair
Gender Female
Birth[2] 12 Jan 1764 County Derry, Ireland
Marriage to John Owen Clark
Death[1][2] 11 Mar 1832 Warren, Indiana, United States
Burial[2] Clarksburg, Ross, Ohio, United StatesMemorial in Clark Family Cemetery
References
  1. Christensen, Anthony J. A branch of the Piscataway Dunn family: a few members of the Dunn family whose branches spread from Pisctaqua, New Hampshire, to Piscataway, New Jersey, to Southwestern Pennsylvania, to Harrison County, Kentucky, and to points West. (Salem, Utah: Mac Anthony Corp., c1998)
    p. 5-27.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mary Blair Clark, in Find A Grave
    accessed 14 Feb 2014.

    Mary Blair Clark
    Birth: Jan. 12, 1764, Ireland
    Death: Mar. 11, 1842, Williamsport, Warren County, Indiana, USA
    Burial: Clark Family Cemetery, Clarksburg, Ross County, Ohio, USA

    Mary Blair was born in County Deery, Ireland and immigrated to Pennsylvania where she married John Owens Clark. In 1800, she and John moved to Ohio, locating in that part of Ross County that is now included within the boundaries of Deerfield Township, where they cheerfully endured all the hardships and privations incident to frontier life. John began the pioneer labor of redeeming a farm from the forest, and until his death, while in manhood's prime, was engaged in general farming. After his death, Mary moved with her children, in 1838, to Indiana, locating on the Wabash River, near Williamsport, where she continued to reside until her death, at the age of seventy eight years. She reared a family of eleven children, as follows:
    William Henry, Thomas, John B., Samuel, James B., Daniel, Stephen, Joseph, Alexander, Wesley, and Elizabeth.
    Thomas, the second son, wandered to Texas when young and was never again heard from.
    John B., a physician, located first in Kentucky, later settling permanently in Indiana.
    Samuel, an attorney, became an associate judge in Indiana,
    Daniel, Alexander and Wesley spent the larger part of their lives in Indiana, the latter becoming a successful physician, and an extensive landholder.
    Joseph died at an early age, unmarried.
    Stephen, said to have been "the handsomest man in Ross County", was accidentally killed by a fall from a horse.
    James B., for many years one of the more prominent lawyers and chancellors of Alabama, reared a highly educated and distinguished family.
    Elizabeth, the only daughter of her parents, married James Beard.

    Note: Mary died in Indiana, but this marker says she's buried here with her husband John and son William.