NameNancy Anne HENDRIX 
52,64,64
Birth PlaceIowa
Death Date31 May 1899 Age: 37
Death PlaceDorrance, Russell County, Kansas
Burial PlaceDorrance, Russell County, Kansas, Hyde Park Cemetery
Spouses
Birth Date13 Apr 1839
Birth PlaceGasconade County, Missouri
Death Date10 Nov 1911 Age: 72
Death PlaceLiberal, Seward County, Kansas
Burial Date12 Nov 1911
Burial PlaceLiberal, Seward County, Kansas, Liberal Cemetery
OccupationUnion Civil War Soldier: Missouri Volunteer Infantry, Company K, 48th Regiment; Farmer
ReligionQuakers And Reorganized LDS
Family ID1199
Marr Date6 Feb 187864 
Marr PlaceCarrollton, Carroll County, Missouri
Notes for Nancy Anne HENDRIX
Daughter of John C Hendrix and Nancy Matilda Ryan. 3rd wife of Joseph Howard, married 06 Feb 1878 in Carrolton, Missouri. Mother of Charles Madison, Bessie F, Benjamin F, Joseph Clyde, Clarence Earl, Lawrence Roy and Jesse ZElmena Howard. Niece of Mary Elizabeth Ryan, Joseph's 1st wife. Nancy mother Nancy Matilda Ryan and Mary Elizabeth Ryan were sisters. Mary Elizabeth died in 1871.
On Find A Grave.
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Mrs. Jos Howard, who lived about nine miles south west of Dorrance departed this life last Thursday, leaving a large circle of relatives and friends to mourn her loss.
The Wilson World, Wilson, Kansas, 08 Jun 1899, Thu • Page 2
On Ancestry from don_jager.
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Medical notes for Nancy Anne HENDRIX
Tuberculosis?
Notes for Joseph H. "Joe" (Spouse 1)
Joseph had moved to Nebraska about June or July of 1864 before he enlisted. The Company was made up at Fall city, NE and moved by boat from Rulo, NE to St. Joseph, MO and mustered into the regiment. On August 4, 1864, Joseph enlisted at St. Joseph, Buchanan Co, Missouri as a private, in Company K, 48th Regiment, Missouri Volunteer Infantry for the United States, in the Civil War. He gave his height as 6 feet 2 inches, fair complexion; color of eyes as Black; color of hair as Dark; that his occupation was Farmer; that he was born April 13th, 1839, at Gasconade Co, MO.
While on duty in the area of Columbia, TN, he developed chronic Diarrhea and Rheumatism on the account of severe exposure to the weather, not being provided with any tents from the time they left Rolla in Phelps Co, MO, until they made the campaign to columbia and until they got to Chicago, IL being very cold and damp a great part of the time. On the 12th of January 1865, he was in the hospital at Columbia, TN. He was Honorably Discharged at Benton Barracks (St. Louis), MO, on June 29, 1865.
64
Medical notes for Joseph H. "Joe" (Spouse 1)
Softening of the Brain