Hallett, Nancy L


BORN: 1838
DIED: 19240531
AGED: 86
DEATH LOCATION: San Bruno


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BURIED IN UNION CEMETERY WITH THE SAME LAST NAME:

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BURIED NEARBY IN PLOT N135:
CURRENT EVENTS:
  • 1845 Texas annexed into U.S.
  • 1846 Mexican-American War
  • 1849 California Gold Rush
  • 1850 California became the 31st State
  • 1860 The Pony Express
  • 1861 Abraham Lincoln elected President
  • 1861 American Civil War
  • 1865 Abraham Lincoln assassinated
  • 1866 Ku Klux Klan
  • 1869 National Woman Suffrage Assoc.
  • 1871 The Great Chicago Fire
  • 1876 Telephones (Alexander Graham Bell)
  • 1876 Baseball's National League
  • 1877 Phonograph (Thomas Edison)
  • 1879 Light Bulb (Thomas Edison)
  • 1901 Teddy Roosevelt elected President
  • 1903 First powered flight (Wright Brothers)
  • 1906 The San Francisco Earthquake
  • 1912 The Titanic sank
  • 1920 Prohibition begins
  • 1920 Women get to vote
  • 1920 The Roaring 20's

OBITUARY ---------------

NANCY LOGAN HALLETT

Redwood City Standard

June 5, 1924

Death on last Saturday claimed one of San Mateo County’s oldest women pioneers when Mrs. Nancy Logan Hallett passed away at the home of her son, Joseph H. Hallett in San Bruno. Mrs. Hallett with her husband, the late Captain Joseph H. Hallett, settled in Woodside in the early sixties where they owned a largo ranch and where they lived for many years. The husband, who was a sea captain in his early years passed away in 1907 and since that time the widow had made her home with two of her sons for thirteen years in Monterey county and the last five years in San Bruno. She was a native of Pennsylvania and was 86 years old.

Five sons and one daughter survive. They are Harry E. Hallett, well known meat merchant of this town. Joseph H., George C. and Phillip E. Hallett and Mrs. J.R. Cleveland of Santa Cruz.

The funeral was held Tuesday afternoon from the chapel of the James Crowe Company on Webster Street and was attended by relatives and a large number of friends. The services were conducted by Rev. R.J. Currie of the First Congregational Church and were followed by interment in Union Cemetery.

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