Home Surname List Name Index Sources Email Us | Tenth Generation31. Jane W. TAYLOR was born on 7 July 1832 in Perinton Township, Monroe County, NY.10,24,37,38,39 (She was not mentioned in her father's obituary, but she was listed in the 1840 and 1850 census' with her parents.) She appeared in the census in 1840 in Perinton Township, Monroe County, NY.38 She appeared in the census in 1850 in Penfield Township, Monroe County, NY.39 Jane appeared in the census in 1860 in Berrien County, MI.66 From "Family History, New Lisbon, Wisconsin: Argus, Volume 2, #52, 30 July 1868": "A Base and Heartless Desertion. In the fall of 1866, a man named Wallace Hipp, with his wife, Jane, and family of two children, removed to this village from Michigan and lived here during the winter. The wife, being in a poor state of health, afflicted with epileptic fits and other ailments while he, Wallace, favored with the blessings of good health, for which he seemed unworthy, turned his attentions, which were of an affectionate order, to a hired female servant named Harriet Carrier, who accompanied the family from Michigan, resulting in Hipp and his newly made lady love devising a concealed plan of selling furniture and household effects the following spring and absconding with the proceeds, taking the children with them, leaving his wife destitute, an object of sympathy. Her health impaired, her mind troubled with derangement, and nothing but the cold charity of the world to support her, the attention of our village authorities was solicited in her behalf and she became a county pauper. Afterward the emergencies of her case called for her removal to the insane asylum at Madison, where she was kept for only a few days and subsequently sent to Michigan, where it was supposed her residence was established. She remained there a few weeks, an inmate of an asylum for the poor, her health being somewhat recovered, the authorities in Michigan paid her expenses to our neighboring village of Tomah. Her father, Pascal Taylor, who lives on a farm within a few miles of the latter place, being comfortably situated in worldly means, and when appealed too, utterly refused all aid and protection to his daughter. A brother, living at Jacksonville, Monroe County, also refused to assist her, and thus she was forsaken by husband, father and brother. Mrs. Hipp returned to this place last autumn since which time she has been a county pauper, suffering from mental depression and internal disease until last sabbath afternoon when her troubles were no more, death summoned her to a more happy region and she is no longer sub-servient to the ungratefulness of her wretched husband, a miserly father and an ill-natured brother. To their shame be it recorded that they were endowed with ample means to assist her and still refused her shelter and protection even in her distracted hours." . She died on 2 August 1868 at the age of 36 in New Lisbon, Juneau County, WI.10,37 Family History, New Lisbon, Wisconsin: Argus, Volume 2, #52, 30 July 1868: "A Base and Hearless Desertion" Her health impaired, her mind troubled iwth derangement, and nothing but the cold charity of the world to support her, the attention of our village authorities was solicited in her behalf and she became a county pauper. Afterward the emergencies of her case called for her removal to the insane asylum at Madison, where she was kept for only a few days and subsequently sent to Michigan, where it was supposed her residence was established. She remained there a few weeks, an inmate of an asylum for the poor, her health being somewhat recovered, the authorities in Michigan paid her expenses to our neighboring village of Tomah. Her father, Pascal Taylor, who lives on a farm within a few miles of the latter place, being comfortably situated in worldly means, and when appealed too, utterly refused all aid and protection to his daughter. A brother, living at Jacksonville, Monroe County, also refused to assist her, and thus she was forsaken by husband, father and brother. Mrs. Hipp returned to this place last autumn since which time she has been a county pauper, suffering from mental depression and internal disease until last sabbath afternoon when her troubles were no more, death summoned her to a more happy region and she is no longer sub-servient to the ungratefulness of her wretched husband, a miserly father and an ill-natured brother. To their shame be it recorded that they were endowed with ample means to assist her and still refused her shelter and protection even in her distracted hours." Jane W. TAYLOR and James Wallace HIPP were married before 1857.10,23,37 James Wallace HIPP, son of James HIPP and Sarah WALLACE, was born about 1834 in Penfield Township, Monroe County, NY.23,27,37 He appeared in the census in 1860 in Berrien County, MI.66 He appeared in the census in 1870 in Penfield Township, Monroe County, NY.67 James appeared in the census in 1880 in Penfield Township, Monroe County, NY.68 He died in December 1897 at the age of 63.27 He was buried on 17 December 1897 in Penfield Township, Monroe County, NY.27 in the Oakwood Cemetery. Jane W. TAYLOR and James Wallace HIPP had the following children:
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