Elizabeth Rice

Brief Life History of Elizabeth

When Elizabeth Rice was born on 14 March 1847, in South Carolina, United States, her father, Jordan Rice, was 35 and her mother, Emilia Alexander, was 28. She married Jacob Watson Collins on 24 August 1865, in Crow Creek, Pickens, South Carolina, United States. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 6 daughters. She lived in Easley, Pickens, South Carolina, United States in 1870 and Eastatoe, Pickens, South Carolina, United States in 1880. She died on 6 September 1891, in Anderson, South Carolina, United States, at the age of 44, and was buried in Cedar Grove Church, Anderson, South Carolina, United States.

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Family Time Line

Jacob Watson Collins
1843–1927
Elizabeth Rice
1847–1891
Marriage: 24 August 1865
Adolphus Alexander Collins
1864–1932
Ruth Collins
Mary Deloma Collins
1869–1949
Dr Vandeuo V "Van" Collins
1872–1927
Mildred Iona Delona Collins
1873–1949
Cidney Ocie Leuenia Collins
1876–1912
Clayton C. Collins
1879–1954
Dean Arthur Collins
1882–1946
Elizabeth Ida Collins
1882–1972
Lillie Leora Collins
1886–1955
Eugene Furman Collins
1890–1962

Sources (14)

  • E A Collins in household of J W Collins, "United States Census, 1880"
  • Elizabeth Rice, "South Carolina Deaths, 1915-1973"
  • Rice in entry for Adolphus A. Collins, "South Carolina Deaths, 1915-1965"

World Events (6)

1860

In 1860, South Carolina quit the United States because its citizens were in favor of slavery and President Lincoln was not. The Civil War started a year later.

1863

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

1870 · The Fifteenth Amendment

Prohibits the federal government and each state from denying a citizen the right to vote based on that citizen's race, color, or previous condition of servitude. It was the last of the Reconstruction Amendments.

Name Meaning

Welsh: Anglicized pronunciation of one of the most common Welsh personal names, Rhys, from a form originally meaning ‘rash, impetuous’, also spelled Rys and Re(e)s. See also Reese , with which it is interchangeable as a result of different Anglicized forms of the Welsh vowel y, and also compare Preece and Price . Initial R- in Welsh is voiceless and often spelled Rh-, but in English R- is voiced as in the Anglicized surnames Rees and Rice. Welsh y is a short back vowel /ɪ/. In the medieval period the English approximation of this vowel was either /i/ or /e/, lengthened to /i:/ and /e:/. Subsequent sound changes in English produced the alternative pronunciations represented in Rees, Preece and Rice, Price. The name has also been established in Ireland from an early date.

English: either a topographic name for someone who lived in or near a thicket (Middle English ris, rice, ris, from Old English hrīs, Old Norse hrís), or a habitational name for someone who came from a place called with this word, such as Rise (East Yorkshire).

English: perhaps a nickname from Middle English Rys(e) and Re(e)s which when without a preposition could derive from one or other of several Old French and Middle English words, including Anglo-Norman French ris ‘laughter, smile’, Middle English ris, res ‘stem, stalk’, in origin the same word as in 2 above, and Middle English ris, rise, rice, res, Old French ris, riz ‘rice’, perhaps a nickname for a rice dealer or a cook.

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

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