Difference between revisions of "Hannah Elizabeth Walker"

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| spouse            = {{marriage|[[Hannah Elizabeth Walker]]|December 7, 1898}}
 
| spouse            = {{marriage|[[Hannah Elizabeth Walker]]|December 7, 1898}}
 
| children          = [[Harry Deforest Linn]]<br />[[Dwight Russel Linn]]<br />[[Lily Gladys Linn]]<br />[[Laura Lavina Linn]]<br />[[Hugh Alva Linn]]<br />[[Jacob Bryce Linn]]<br />[[Mary Fern Linn]]<br />[[Franklin John Linn]]<br />[[Leslie Leonard Linn]]<br />[[Samuel Dale Linn]]<br />[[Everette Edward Linn]]
 
| children          = [[Harry Deforest Linn]]<br />[[Dwight Russel Linn]]<br />[[Lily Gladys Linn]]<br />[[Laura Lavina Linn]]<br />[[Hugh Alva Linn]]<br />[[Jacob Bryce Linn]]<br />[[Mary Fern Linn]]<br />[[Franklin John Linn]]<br />[[Leslie Leonard Linn]]<br />[[Samuel Dale Linn]]<br />[[Everette Edward Linn]]
| parents          = [[Samuel Walker]]<br />[[Elizabeth Stover Walker]]
+
| parents          = [[Samuel Walker]]<br />[[Elizabeth Stover]]
 
| relatives        = [[John Walker]] (Grandfather)<br /> [[Sarah Burnett]] (Grandmother)
 
| relatives        = [[John Walker]] (Grandfather)<br /> [[Sarah Burnett]] (Grandmother)
 
}}
 
}}
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Libbie is buried in the Shelby County Cemetery as "H. Elizabeth."  Libbie's ascendant family is buried  outside of Iowa City, Iowa, in the [[Walker Family Cemetery]], a very small prairie cemetery cared for by [[James Frank Linn|Jim Linn]].
 
Libbie is buried in the Shelby County Cemetery as "H. Elizabeth."  Libbie's ascendant family is buried  outside of Iowa City, Iowa, in the [[Walker Family Cemetery]], a very small prairie cemetery cared for by [[James Frank Linn|Jim Linn]].
 +
 +
== Linn Clan Entry ==
 +
 +
John Walker, an Ohio farmer, was married to Sarah Burnett, who was three-fourths American Indian.  John's three sons: Samuel, James, and Joseph, emigrated to Johnson County, Iowa from Ohio in 1837.  Their father followed his sons in 1841.  [[Samuel Walker]] and his wife, [[Elizabeth Stover]], were members of very respected families which were community leaders in the early pioneer days of Iowa.  Their son John S. Walker, married Sarah Woodruff.  John and Sarah and their two daughters, Libbie and Hattie, moved to western Iowa and thence to the silver mines of Jefferson City, Montana.  Elizabeth Stover Walker, having lost her husband, Samuel, in 1852, accompanied them.  Elizabeth died on 29 July 1888 in Jefferson City.  The walker family returned to Iowa by wagon, as they had gone.  They settled near Shelby, Iowa, where Libbie married Frank B. Linn.  The children of Libbie and Frank were 3/64ths American Indian.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 02:29, 13 October 2010

Hannah Elizabeth ("Libbie") Walker
Born 1878
Johnson County, Iowa, USA
Died 1959
Resting place Shelby Township Cemetery, Shelby, Iowa, USA[1]
Spouse Hannah Elizabeth Walker (m. 1898) «Did not recognize date. Try slightly modifying the date in the first parameter.»"Marriage: Hannah Elizabeth Walker to Hannah Elizabeth Walker" Location: (linkback:http://jimlindstrom.com/mediawiki/index.php/Hannah_Elizabeth_Walker)
Children Harry Deforest Linn
Dwight Russel Linn
Lily Gladys Linn
Laura Lavina Linn
Hugh Alva Linn
Jacob Bryce Linn
Mary Fern Linn
Franklin John Linn
Leslie Leonard Linn
Samuel Dale Linn
Everette Edward Linn
Parents Samuel Walker
Elizabeth Stover
Relatives John Walker (Grandfather)
Sarah Burnett (Grandmother)

Sarah Burnett was 3/4ths American Indian.[2]

Libbie is buried in the Shelby County Cemetery as "H. Elizabeth." Libbie's ascendant family is buried outside of Iowa City, Iowa, in the Walker Family Cemetery, a very small prairie cemetery cared for by Jim Linn.

Linn Clan Entry

John Walker, an Ohio farmer, was married to Sarah Burnett, who was three-fourths American Indian. John's three sons: Samuel, James, and Joseph, emigrated to Johnson County, Iowa from Ohio in 1837. Their father followed his sons in 1841. Samuel Walker and his wife, Elizabeth Stover, were members of very respected families which were community leaders in the early pioneer days of Iowa. Their son John S. Walker, married Sarah Woodruff. John and Sarah and their two daughters, Libbie and Hattie, moved to western Iowa and thence to the silver mines of Jefferson City, Montana. Elizabeth Stover Walker, having lost her husband, Samuel, in 1852, accompanied them. Elizabeth died on 29 July 1888 in Jefferson City. The walker family returned to Iowa by wagon, as they had gone. They settled near Shelby, Iowa, where Libbie married Frank B. Linn. The children of Libbie and Frank were 3/64ths American Indian.

Notes