Mary Lucretia Hyde

Brief Life History of Mary Lucretia

When Mary Lucretia Hyde was born on 23 December 1848, in Council Bluffs, Pottawattamie, Iowa, United States, her father, William Hyde, was 30 and her mother, Elizabeth Howe Bullard, was 35. She married John Anthony Woolf on 21 December 1866, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 8 sons and 5 daughters. She lived in Hyde Park, Cache, Utah, United States in 1880 and Logan, Cache, Utah, United States in 1910. She died on 16 June 1915, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, at the age of 66, and was buried in Hyde Park Cemetery, Hyde Park, Cache, Utah, United States.

Photos and Memories (36)

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Family Time Line

John Anthony Woolf
1843–1928
Mary Lucretia Hyde
1848–1915
Marriage: 21 December 1866
Sarah Elizabeth Woolf
1867–1884
James E Woolf
1874–1880
John William Woolf
1869–1950
Willard Woolf
1871–1874
Jane Eliza Woolf
1873–1951
Arthur Hyde Woolf
1875–1877
Mary Lula Woolf
1877–1955
Simpson Melvin Woolf
1879–1973
Wilford Woolf
1882–1963
Milton Howe Woolf
1885–1976
Zina Alberta Woolf
1887–1956
Grace Myrtle Woolf
1889–1960
Charles Oliver Woolf
1891–1904

Sources (67)

  • Mary Wolf in household of John Wolf, "United States Census, 1870"
  • England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
  • Utah, Select County Marriages, 1887-1937

World Events (8)

1859 · Logan is Founded

"\""During the end of April, David Reese and his company settled the land north of the Logan River. That area was the second permanent settlement in Cache Valley and the future location of Logan. The city's boundary was drawn by Logan's first bishop, Jesse W. Fox, a government engineer. The name \""\""Logan\""\"" comes from a trapper that used to frequent the area before the pioneers came to the valley.\"""

1863

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

1866 · The First Civil Rights Act

The first federal law that defined what was citizenship and affirm that all citizens are equally protected by the law. Its main objective was to protect the civil rights of persons of African descent.

Name Meaning

English: habitational name from one or other of various places so called in Bedfordshire, Cheshire, Hampshire, and Middlesex. They were named with Old English hīd ‘hide (of land)’, a variable measure of land, differing from place to place and time to time, and seems to have been originally fixed as the amount necessary to support one (extended) family (Old English hīgan, hīwan ‘household’). The surname may also be topographic for someone living on (and farming) a hide of land. The Hyde family has been in Leinster, Ireland, since the early 13th century and one family has been established in the county of Cork since the 16th century. The name was Gaelicized as both Dalaithíd and de hÍde. Compare Hyder .

Americanized form of Jewish Haid .

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

Possible Related Names

Story Highlight

MARY LUCRETIA HYDE

(Biographical Sketch) Written by Jane E. Bates Mary Lucretia Hyde Woolf, the subject of this sketch, was descended from a long line of worthy ancestry. Her father, William Hyde, son of Heman Hyd …

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