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Maggie Marshall 1874

Maggie Marshall was born on February 11, 1874 at Lattery, Markethill, in County Armagh County, Ireland to William Marshall and Margaret ( Shields) Marshall, and has siblings Joseph Gilbert Marshall, Mary Marshall, Rachael Ann Marshall, Margaret Marshall, Robert Marshall, Thomas James Marshall, Rachael Marshall, David William Marshall, Eliza Jane (Marshall) Edgar, Hugh Ancrum Marshall, and Sarah Elizabeth Marshall. Maggie was baptized on February 11, 1874 at Markethill 2nd Presbyterian Church in Lattery, Markethill.
Maggie Marshall
February 11, 1874
Lattery, Markethill, in County Armagh County, Ireland
Female
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Maggie Marshall's History: 1874

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  • 02/11
    1874

    Birthday

    February 11, 1874
    Birthdate
    Lattery, Markethill, in County Armagh County, Ireland
    Birthplace
  • 02/11
    1874

    Baptism

    February 11, 1874
    Baptism date
    Markethill 2nd Presbyterian Church in Lattery, Markethill, County Armagh County, Ireland
    Place of worship
  • Religious Beliefs

    Presbyterian
  • date of
    Death

    Death

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Unknown
    Death location
  • share
    Memories
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Did you know?
In 1874, in the year that Maggie Marshall was born, on September 14th, the Battle of Liberty Place occurred in New Orleans - the capital of Louisiana. Some members of the previous Confederate Army assembled for the purpose of "driving the usurpers from power" and the Republican Governor - William P. Kellogg - was physically driven from his office. The former Confederates temporarily replaced him with (the former) Democratic Governor John McEnery. Federal forces arrived, put down the insurrection, and five days later the legally elected government was restored.
Did you know?
In 1913, the Philippine–American War ended for good in June. While the official end of the war was in 1902, fighting continued for several years. An estimated 200,000 to 250,000 total Filipino civilians died and although the U.S. viewed its role as a colonial presence as one of preparing the Philippines for independence, American colonization drastically changed the character off the culture. The Catholic Church was no longer the state religion and English became the primary language of the government.
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