Advertisement

Advertisement

Mary Susannah Borron Hogan

Birth
Lancashire, England
Death
20 Feb 1887 (aged 72)
Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
Burial
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Plot
Garden LN, Section 105, Lot 84, Space 2
Memorial ID
View Source
(Cincinnatti Times-Star, Feb 21, 1887)

Death of Mrs. Mary Hogan
The numerous friends of Mrs. Mary Hogan will be pained to learn of the death of this noble woman, which occurred yesterday morning at the home of her son-in-law, Mr. Thomas S. Noble, on Kemper Lane, Walnut Hills. Mary Susannah Borron, the eldest daughter of John Arthur Borron, Esq., was born in Lancashire, England, the 28th day of April, 1814, and was married to John Ainslie, advocate, of Edinburg, Scotland, at her father's home, Woolden Hall, in 1832. They came to America soon after their marriage and resided at Booneville, Mo.

Of the five sons of Mr. and Mrs. Ainslie, but two are living, and they are in Idaho. After Mr. Ainslie's death she was married, in 1848, to Mr. J.S.C. Hogan, one of the early settlers of Chicago, he being the second Postmaster of that city and one of the first Board of Aldermen. Mr. Hogan died in the latter part of 1868, and since then she has made her home with their only child, Mrs. Thomas S. Noble.
(Cincinnatti Times-Star, Feb 21, 1887)

Death of Mrs. Mary Hogan
The numerous friends of Mrs. Mary Hogan will be pained to learn of the death of this noble woman, which occurred yesterday morning at the home of her son-in-law, Mr. Thomas S. Noble, on Kemper Lane, Walnut Hills. Mary Susannah Borron, the eldest daughter of John Arthur Borron, Esq., was born in Lancashire, England, the 28th day of April, 1814, and was married to John Ainslie, advocate, of Edinburg, Scotland, at her father's home, Woolden Hall, in 1832. They came to America soon after their marriage and resided at Booneville, Mo.

Of the five sons of Mr. and Mrs. Ainslie, but two are living, and they are in Idaho. After Mr. Ainslie's death she was married, in 1848, to Mr. J.S.C. Hogan, one of the early settlers of Chicago, he being the second Postmaster of that city and one of the first Board of Aldermen. Mr. Hogan died in the latter part of 1868, and since then she has made her home with their only child, Mrs. Thomas S. Noble.


Advertisement