Harriet Eveline George

Brief Life History of Harriet Eveline

When Harriet Eveline George was born in 1834, in Vermont, United States, her father, Fabius Taylor George, was 23 and her mother, Mary Atherton, was 23. She married Harrison Bingham George on 16 October 1866, in Vermont, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 1 daughter. She lived in Lamoille, Vermont, United States in 1900. She died on 11 May 1906, in Morristown, Lamoille, Vermont, United States, at the age of 72, and was buried in Morrisville, Morristown, Lamoille, Vermont, United States.

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Family Time Line

Harrison Bingham George
1837–1910
Harriet Eveline George
1834–1906
Marriage: 16 October 1866
Fabius Lyman George
1869–1927
Henry S George
1871–
Anna Mary George
1873–1904

Sources (21)

  • Harriet George in household of Harrison H George, "United States Census, 1870"
  • Harriet E. George, "Find A Grave Index"
  • Harriet E George, "Vermont, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1732-2005"

World Events (8)

1834 · Vermont Anti-Slavery Society is Formed

The Anti-Slavery Society of Vermont was established in 1834. 100 people from different towns were at the first meeting, with the intent to abolish slavery. 

1836 · Remember the Alamo

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.

1863

Abraham Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation, declaring slaves in Confederate states to be free.

Name Meaning

English, Welsh, French, and Romanian: from the personal name George, Latin Georgius, Greek Geōrgios, from an adjectival form, geōrgios ‘rustic’, of Greek geōrgos ‘farmer’. This became established as a personal name in classical times through its association with the fashion for pastoral poetry. Its popularity in western Europe increased at the time of the Crusades, which brought greater contact with the Orthodox Church, in which several Christian martyrs and saints of this name are venerated, in particular a saint believed to have been martyred at Nicomedia in AD 303, who, however, is at best a shadowy figure historically. Nevertheless, by the end of the Middle Ages Saint George had become associated with an unhistorical legend of dragon-slaying exploits, which caught the popular imagination throughout Europe, and he came to be considered the patron saint of England among other places. In North America, the English form of the surname has absorbed many cognates from other languages, e.g. German Georg , Assyrian/Chaldean Giwargis, Gewargis , or Georgis , and Albanian Gjergji , and also their patronymics and other derivatives, e.g. Greek Georgiadis , Georgopoulos , Hatzigeorgiou ‘George the Pilgrim’, and Papageorgiou , Romanian Georgescu or Gheorghescu, Serbian Djordjevic . The name George is also found among Christians in southern India (compare Geevarghese and Varghese ), but since South Indians traditionally do not have hereditary surnames, the southern Indian name was in most cases registered as such only after immigration of its bearers to the US.

German: variant of Georg .

Native American (e.g. Navajo): adoption of the English personal name George (see 1 above) as a surname.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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