Ingersoll, Susannah: Difference between revisions
From Salem Links and Lore
mNo edit summary  | 
				No edit summary  | 
				||
| (8 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Susannah Ingersoll (1783-1858), inherited what we now call The [[House of the Seven Gables]] from her parents and remained there during her entire life. She was able to make a comfortable living from her farm in nearby Danvers.  | *Susannah Ingersoll (1783-1858), inherited what we now call The [[House of the Seven Gables]] from her parents, Captain Samuel and Susannah Hathorne Ingersoll, and remained there during her entire life.    | ||
She never married, but did adopt a boy name Horace Connolly whom she doted on.  | |||
Nathaniel Hawthorne visited Susannah's home quite regularly, being her second cousin. Many think her stories about Salem and their family made their way into his later writings.  | *She was able to make a comfortable living from her farm in nearby Danvers.  | ||
*She never married, but did adopt a boy name Horace Connolly whom she doted on.  | |||
*[[Hawthorne, Nathaniel|Nathaniel Hawthorne]] visited Susannah's home quite regularly, being her second cousin. Many think her stories about Salem and their family made their way into his later writings.  | |||
| Line 8: | Line 12: | ||
==See Also==  | ==See Also==  | ||
*[http://www.  | |||
*[http://salem.noblenet.org/Record/1958881 Salem Women's Heritage Trail] B. H Smith, p. 9-10  | |||
*[https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/156691099/susannah-ingersoll Susannah Ingersoll] Find a grave site  | |||
Latest revision as of 19:33, 2 October 2025
- Susannah Ingersoll (1783-1858), inherited what we now call The House of the Seven Gables from her parents, Captain Samuel and Susannah Hathorne Ingersoll, and remained there during her entire life.
 
- She was able to make a comfortable living from her farm in nearby Danvers.
 
- She never married, but did adopt a boy name Horace Connolly whom she doted on.
 
- Nathaniel Hawthorne visited Susannah's home quite regularly, being her second cousin. Many think her stories about Salem and their family made their way into his later writings.
 
See Also
- Salem Women's Heritage Trail B. H Smith, p. 9-10
 
- Susannah Ingersoll Find a grave site
 
