When Adeline Lottie Taylor was born on 29 June 1827, in Byron, Oxford, Maine, United States, her father, George Washington Taylor, was 32 and her mother, Abigail R Bacon, was 25. She married William Smith in 1847, in Minnesota, United States. She lived in Massachusetts, United States in 1870 and Melrose, Malden, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States in 1880. She died on 23 April 1899, in Melrose, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, at the age of 71, and was buried in Wyoming Cemetery, Melrose, Malden, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States.
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Being a second spiritual and religious awakening, like the First Great Awakening, many Churches began to spring up from other denominations. Many people began to rapidly join the Baptist and Methodist congregations. Many converts to these religions believed that the Awakening was the precursor of a new millennial age.
Historical Boundaries: 1833: Oxford, Maine, United States
U.S. acquires vast tracts of Mexican territory in wake of Mexican War including California and New Mexico.
English, Scottish, and Irish: occupational name for a tailor, from Anglo-Norman French, Middle English taillour ‘tailor’ (Old French tailleor, tailleur; Late Latin taliator, from taliare ‘to cut’). The surname is extremely common in Britain and Ireland. In North America, it has absorbed equivalents from other languages, many of which are also common among Ashkenazic Jews, for example German Schneider and Hungarian Szabo . It is also very common among African Americans.
In some cases also an Americanized form of French Terrien ‘owner of a farmland’ or of its altered forms, such as Therrien and Terrian .
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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