Civil War Veterans Buried In Washington State - William White

William Harbough White

Representing: Union


G.A.R Post

  • Isaac Stevens Post #1 Seattle, King Co. WA

Unit History

  • 102nd Ohio Infantry B
William White
Family History

CWV WHITE WILLIAM HARBAUGH UNION CENSUS CHRON 2023

Isaac Stevens Post

1850 district 3 Brooke Co. VA

Thompson White 430/1807/PA miller grain mill

Sarah 38/1812/PA

*Hugh 17

Mary M 12/1838/VA

*Wm H 7

Albert 6/1844/VA

*Martha 4/1846/VA

Clarissa 2/1848/VA

 

1860 District 2 Brooke Co. VA

Thompson White 49/1811/PA Hotel Keeper

Sarah 46

Mary M 21

Wm H 18

Martha J 14

Albert W

Clara 12

Nannie 9

 

Name

Thompson White

Gender

Male

Birth Date

12 Jul 1807

Birth Place

Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, United States of America

Death Date

28 Jul 1880

Death Place

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, United States of America

Cemetery

Brooke Cemetery

Burial or Cremation Place

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, United States of America

Has Bio?

N

Spouse

Sarah White

Children

Hugh White 1834/Brooke Co. WV d. 1906/IL

William Harbaugh White

Martha Fulton White 5/5/1848 d, 12/18/1912 King Co. WA

Mary Margaret Odenbaug 1827 Brooke Co. WV d. 4/1/1915/IL

Thompson White

BIRTH

12 Jul 1807

Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, USA

DEATH

28 Jul 1880 (aged 73)

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, USA

BURIAL

Brooke Cemetery

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, USA

MEMORIAL ID

163274783 · View Source

 

 

Sarah Fulton White

BIRTH

21 Jan 1811

Pennsylvania, USA

DEATH

14 Aug 1862 (aged 51)

Brooke County, West Virginia, USA

BURIAL

Brooke Cemetery

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, USA

MEMORIAL ID

163274778 · View Source

 

 

William H. White
Residence was not listed; 20 years old.

Enlisted on 7/30/1862 as a Sergeant.

On 9/6/1862 he mustered into "B" Co. OH 102nd Infantry

He was Mustered Out on 5/15/1865 at Huntsville, AL

Promotions:

* 1st Sergt 2/28/1863

 

1870 Wellsburg Brooke Co. WVA

Thompson White 61/1809/PA lumber Dealer

W H 30 recorder

Mattie 22/1848/WV

 

Name

William H White

Gender

Male

Unit

1 Sgt B 102 Ohio Infantry

Filing Date

7 Jun 1880

Filing Place

Washington, USA

Relation to Head

Soldier

Spouse

Emma F White

Child

Emma F White

Comments

Emma F. White, Gdn.

 

1892 Seattle Ward 4 King Co. WA

Wm H White 1842/WV single Lawyer

 

Name

Emma McRedmond

Marriage Date

27 Sep 1898

Marriage Place

Seattle, King, Washington, USA

Father

Luse McRedmond

Mother

Catherine McRedmond

Spouse

William W White

 

1900 Redmond King Co. WA

William White 55/PA Lawyer

Emma 2/1869/ married 1898 1ch 1liv

Martha 5/1899/WA

 

1910 Redmond King Co. WA

Wm H White 68/1842/VA parents PA/PA lawyer says UA

Emma F 41/1869/WA parents Ire/Ire hotel keeper 3ch 3liv (Emma F McRedmond)

Ruth 4/1906/WA (Ruth White 5/16/1906 King Co. WA d. 8/1980 King Co. WA)

Dorothy R 6/1904/WA (7/18/1903 King Co. WA d. 2/8/2002 King Co. WA)

Fay Hicks 30 servant

Lelia O 10 lodger

Lee L 8 lodger

Winefred H 6 lodger

Nick Nearyck 22 lodger

 

Name

William H White

Gender

Male

Birth Date

abt 1841

Death Date

29 Apr 1914

Age at Death

73

Death Location

Seattle, King, Washington

Father

Hugh White

Mother

Sarah Fulton

Record Source

Washington State Death Records

 

Judge William Harbaugh “War Horse Bill” White

BIRTH

28 May 1842

Wellsburg, Brooke County, West Virginia, USA

DEATH

29 Apr 1914 (aged 71)

Seattle, King County, Washington, USA

BURIAL

Lake View Cemetery

Seattle, King County, Washington, USA

MEMORIAL ID

29211191 · View Source

Enlisted as a sergeant in Co. B, 102nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry, on 30 July 1862 at the age of 20. He was promoted to company First Sergeant on 28 February 1863 and mustered out at Huntsville, Alabama, on 15 May 1865.

 

Name

William Harbaugh War Horse Bill White

Gender

M (Male)

Birth Date

28 mai 1842 (28 May 1842)

Birth Place

Wellsburg, Brooke (Wellsburg), West Virginia, USA

Death Date

29 avr. 1914 (29 Apr 1914)

Death Place

Seattle, King (Seattle), Washington, USA

Father

Thompson Thomas Hugh White

Mother

Sarah Fulton

Spouse

Emma F McREDMOND

Child

Dorothy R WhiteMartha Jane WhiteRuth B White

 

Name

Emma White[Emma Redmond]

Gender

Female

Birth Date

abt 1869

Death Date

21 Jul 1932

Age at Death

63

Death Location

Seattle, King, Washington

Father

Luke Mc Redmond

Mother

Catherine Berry

Record Source

Washington State Death Records

Emma Francis McRedmond White

BIRTH

11 Feb 1869

Seattle, King County, Washington, USA

DEATH

21 Jul 1932 (aged 63)

BURIAL

Lake View Cemetery

Seattle, King County, Washington, USA

MEMORIAL ID

65405948 · View Source

age 63, daughter of Luke Mc Redmond - Catherine Berry

Find A Grave contributor, Carolyn Farnum provided the following information: {Emma Francis McRedmond White, the widow of Judge White. She was buried 25 July 1932 at Lake View with her husband, per the cert,}

Emma McRedmond married William H White 09-27-1898 in Seattle. (The transcript shows middle initial W, but the original document shows an ornate H for the middle initial.) He was 56, born in Virginia. She was 29. born in Seattle, WA .∼Born in Seattle on February 11, 1869. Her masculine middle name, Francis, was bestowed to honor Father Francis Xavier Prefontaine (1838-1909), early and revered Catholic priest. Emma died July 24, 1932. Emma married Judge William White.

1869 Father Prefontaine established Seattle's first Catholic church, Our Lady of Good Help. Seattle had roughly six hundred inhabitants, though Father Prefontaine found only ten people who professed to be Catholic. (The Luke McRedmond family lived in Seattle at this time and would have been part of this small group.) http://www.acc-seattle.com/cchistry.html


Emma McRedmond was born in Seattle on February 11, 1869, the daughter of Captain Luke and Kate (BARRY) Morse McRedmond. Her masculine middle name, Francis, was bestowed to honor Francis Prefontaine, early and revered Catholic priest. Her father, a sea captain, took out a homestead on the site of the town of Redmond when she was three years old.

As a child she helped her family clear the property. At the age of 12 she came to Seattle to be educated at Holy Names Academy, then located at Sixth Avenue and Jackson Street. She remained there four years. Prior to that, she attended school at her own and at the nearby farm house.

The school came to the pupil in those days, the students, congregating at one another's homes for a month or two, the teacher staying with them. Among other youngsters her own age with whom she studied in this fashion was Mary Woodin, whose father established the settlement that later became Woodinville.

"Redmond today is a thriving, bustling little community in the fertile Sammamish River Valley, but a woman whose requiem will be sung at St. Joseph's Church tomorrow morning (July 25, 1932) could remember when her family constituted the entire population of the town.

She could remember when Redmond was a day's trip up the Sammamish slough from Bothell, when she was appointed postmistress there at the age of 16 years on March 21, 1885 until January 26, 1898. She became proprietress of the famous Hotel Redmond which opened in 1900, to which future Presidents Howard Taft, Teddy Roosevelt as well as William Jennings Bryan, Percy Rockefeller, Sam Hill and other notables came to hunt, fish and ride horseback.

The State Constitution was amended in 1910 to allow women to vote. This date marks the rise of women to positions of prominence in public office at state and local levels. Emma was one of the first women in the State to run for public office. She was nominated without contest on the Democrat's ticket for County Clerk for King County in 1912. Emma, organized the Woman's Democratic Club. The political power of women began to be a factor in a number of issues, including prohibition of alcohol, education, and the elimination of corruption in government. Women also became a powerful force in professional life and the labor movement. The contributions of women and their organizations to the political, social and cultural legacy of King County has been enormous. Many parks, hospitals, churches, schools, libraries, arts organizations and museums are the result of their pioneering work.

Judge White's reputation first as an attorney and later as a jurist, grew. The family was drawn to Olympia, and again to Seattle to live, but always harkened back to Redmond. Both the Judge and his wife liked the quiet restfulness of the country.

The Hotel Redmond prospered in 1910-12. It was a popular weekend place for tourists crossing Lake Washington by ferry and traveling overland by horse and carriage. The train was running in those days, too. Mrs. White remembered when they laid the rails of the Seattle, Lakeshore & Eastern into and through the town that took her father's name.

Mrs. Emma Frances White was the widow of former Supreme Court Justice William H. White who died in 1914. His widow lived on the old farm, in the old hotel, until six months ago (in January 1932). She preferred it to life in the city. Emma was charter member of the Pioneer Daughters of Washington State.

She died Thursday night, July 24, 1932, at Providence Hospital at the age of 63, leaving a colorful history, an enviable reputation for resourcefulness, kindliness and neighborliness. Her daughters, Mrs. Raymond Locke Gardner of Seattle, Mrs. Lloyd Eacrett of Bellingham and Miss Dorothy R. White of New York City, and her sister, Mrs. Anna M. Smith of Seattle (now Portland) were recalling her life yesterday.

Cemetery

Buried at Lake View Cemetery Seattle


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