When Lydia Elliot Hutchins was born on 15 February 1826, in Rumford, Oxford, Maine, United States, her father, David Hutchins, was 30 and her mother, Sarah Abbott, was 27. She married Thomas Coolidge Robbins on 18 January 1849, in Lowell, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son. She died on 26 July 1850, in Lowell, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, at the age of 24.
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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.
The State of Maine chartered the Calais Railway in 1832, one of the first railway charters to be granted by the state. Construction was very long, as the project was reorganized, abandoned, transferred to other companies, and extended several times. It was finally completed in 1898.
Being a monumental event in the Texas Revolution, The Battle of the Alamo was a thirteen-day battle at the Alamo Mission near San Antonio. In the early morning of the final battle, the Mexican Army advanced on the Alamo. Quickly being overrun, the Texian Soldiers quickly withdrew inside the building. The battle has often been overshadowed by events from the Mexican–American War, But the Alamo gradually became known as a national battle site and later named an official Texas State Shrine.
English: variant of Hutcheon , with genitival or post-medieval excrescent -s; see Houchin .
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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