Zij is getrouwd met Karel Morton Stewart.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 30 april 1866 te Baltimore, Maryland , zij was toen 19 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
Birth: Jul., 1828
Maryland, USA
Death: Aug. 13, 1900
Hampton City
Virginia, USA
Charles was educated at St. Mary's College, Maryland, and at Geneva, Switzerland.
Charles [1st] married Sophie (De Butts) Stewart, and they had four daughters.
Charles [2nd] married Josephine (Lurman) Stewart (27 Jan 1847 - 23 Mar 1929) on 30 Apr 1866 in Baltimore, Maryland. Charles and Josephine had 14 children.
Charles and Josephine had a summer home called "Cliffeholme," which was at the upper end of the Green Spring Valley of Baltimore County, and a winter home at 924 N. Charles Street in Baltimore City, which is now the Brass Elephant Restaurant.
Charles' business was called C. Morton Stewart & Company. He owned a fleet of coffee ships [barkentines] which traded with Brazil. His barkentine, Josephine, held the fastest record out of Baltimore to Rio de Janeiro.
Charles and Josephine had a summer home called "Cliffeholme," which was at the upper end of the Green Spring Valley of Baltimore County, and a winter home at 924 N. Charles Street, which is now the Brass Elephant Restaurant.
Charles died at Old Point Comfort where he had gone for a few days with his daughter, Rebecca, and her husband, Robert McLean.
The Death of Mr. C. Morton Stewart
Baltimore Press
The news of the sudden death of Mr. C. Morton Stewart, which occurred at Old Point Comfort yesterday afternoon, will be a great shock to the people of Baltimore and to Marylanders generally, as well as to thousands of people outside of the State who knew and esteemed the deceased. The circumstance that Mr. Stewart was in moderately good health, being debilitated only by the severe heat of the past few days and the fact that his demise was wholly unexpected, will serve to accentuate the grief of his friends and the regret of the public.
Mr. Stewart was in all respects a citizen of whom the State and city might well be proud. During a long business career he had been prominently identified with enterprises that looked to the advancement of this city as a great commercial port. In the furtherance of all undertakings that promised municipal development he was untiring, his devotion to the public good being conspicuous on all occasions.
Mr. Stewart's field of business operations was ample and far-reaching. As the owner of a fleet of vessels plying to and from the coffee ports of South American and as a coffee merchant his transactions were important and promotive of the general prosperity. For a long period he was a most influential director in the National Bank of Baltimore. In public affairs Mr. Stewart was notably broad minded and progressive. He was formerly a vice-president of the "Reform League," an organization which has done so much for the purification of politics in this city. At the time of his death he was President of the Board of Trustees of Johns Hopkins University, in which splendid institution of learning he always evinced an active and substantial interest. He was always a student and recognized everywhere as a cultural scholar.
As a man Mr. Stewart was admired and loved by all who knew him for noble qualities of head and heart. His generosity knew no bounds. To the unfortunate he never failed to extend a helping hand and words of comfort. His benefactions among the poor were innumerable. As a husband and father he was affectionate, kind, and devoted. The generous hospitality of his home was noted throughout Maryland. The loss of such a man is irreparable to any community.
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Some other children of Charles were:
1) Adelaide Morton Stewart died young. Her mother was Sophia (De Butts) Stewart.
2) Rebecca (Stewart) McLean (born c.1863) married Robert McLean, Sr. Her mother was Sophia (De Butts) Stewart.
3) Frances Lurman (Stewart) Coster ["Fanny"] (born 2 Mar 1867) was the daughter of Josephine (Lurman) Stewart. She married Edward Livingston Coster on 12 Jan 1892 in Baltimore, Maryland. The first home to be built on "Cliffeholme" lands was "The Rookery," which was built for Fanny and Edward. They later moved to New York, where their town home was on 47th Street. Their summer home was first at "Idlewild" in Narragansett, Rhode Island, and then "Beech Lawn" at Irvington-on-Hudson.
Family links:
Parents:
David Stewart (1800 - 1858)
Mary "Adelaide" Morton Stewart (1806 - 1834)
Spouse:
Josephine Lurman Stewart (1847 - 1929)
Children:
Sophia De Butts Stewart (1854 - 1916)*
Banny Stewart Johnston (1861 - 1896)*
Mary Morton Stewart (1868 - 1869)*
Charles Morton Stewart (1870 - 1956)*
Gustav Lurman Stewart (1871 - 1941)*
Redmond Conyngham Stewart (1873 - 1936)*
Priscilla Pinkney Stewart McHenry (1876 - 1962)*
Ellinor Stewart Heiser (1879 - 1971)*
Stephan Lurman Stewart (1881 - 1947)*
Doris Lurman Stewart (1882 - 1952)*
Donnell Stewart (1886 - 1887)*
William Donnell Stewart (1889 - 1921)*
Sibling:
Charles Morton Stewart (1828 - 1900)
David Stewart (1833 - 1834)*
*Calculated relationship
Burial: Saint Thomas Episcopal Church Cemetery , Owings Mills, Baltimore County, Maryland, USA
Plot: Lot 67 in the church yard
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=64008765
Josephine Lurman | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Karel Morton Stewart |
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