Blanch Amanda Bishop

Brief Life History of Blanch Amanda

When Blanch Amanda Bishop was born on 29 May 1899, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, her father, Thomas Bishop, was 65 and her mother, Amanda Charlotta Eriksdotter Fagerstrom, was 33. She lived in Salt Lake, Utah, United States in 1900. She died on 3 November 1903, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, at the age of 4, and was buried in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States.

Photos and Memories (3)

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Family Time Line

Thomas Bishop
1833–1909
Amanda Charlotta Eriksdotter Fagerstrom
1866–1951
Blanch Amanda Bishop
1899–1903
Bennett Thomas Bishop
1899–1919
Lillian Charlotte Bishop
1900–1967
Oscar Gordon Bishop
1903–1963
Elsie Sophia Bishop
1905–1988

Sources (14)

  • Blanch A Bishop in household of Thomas Bishop, "United States Census, 1900"
  • Blanch Bishop, "Utah, Salt Lake County Birth Records, 1890-1915"
  • Blanch A Bishop, "Utah, Salt Lake County Death Records, 1849-1949"

World Events (6)

1900 · Gold for Cash!

This Act set a price at which gold could be traded for paper money.

1900 · Giving Puerto Rico an American Welcome

A law that established government on the island of Puerto Rico and gave all Puerto Ricans citizenship. This law was replaced by the Jones–Shafroth Act in 1917.

1901 · Assassination of Mckinley

President William McKinley was shot at the Temple of Music, in the Pan-American Exposition, while shaking hands with the public. Leon Czolgosz shot him twice in the abdomen because he thought it was his duty to do so. McKinley died after eight days of watch and care. He was the third American president to be assassinated. After his death, Congress passed legislation to officially make the Secret Service and gave them responsibility for protecting the President at all times.

Name Meaning

English: from Middle English bissop, biscop, Old English bisc(e)op ‘bishop’, which comes via Latin from Greek episkopos ‘overseer’. The Greek word was adopted early in the Christian era as a title for an overseer of a local community of Christians, and has yielded cognates in every European language: French évêque, Italian vescovo, Spanish obispo, Russian yepiskop, German Bischof, etc. The word came to be applied as a surname for a variety of reasons, among them a supposed resemblance in bearing or appearance to a bishop, and selection as the ‘boy bishop’ on Saint Nicholas's Feast Day. In some instances the surname is from the rare Middle English (Old English) personal name Biscop ‘bishop’. As an Irish surname it is adopted for Mac Giolla Easpaig, meaning ‘servant of the bishop’ (see Gillespie ). In North America, this surname has absorbed, by assimilation and translation, at least some of continental European cognates, e.g. German Bischoff , Polish, Rusyn, Czech, and Slovak Biskup , Slovenian Škof (see Skoff ).

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

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