Ingersoll, Susannah: Difference between revisions

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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 who 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.




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==See Also==
==See Also==
*[http://www.salemwomenshistory.com/Susannah_Ingersoll.html Susannah Ingersoll] Salem Women's History website by Bonnie Hurd Smith
 
*[http://evergreen.noblenet.org/eg/opac/record/1958881?locg=63 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 12:27, 11 August 2021

  • 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