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Rose Elizabeth Cleveland

Rose Elizabeth Cleveland[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

Female 1846 - 1918  (72 years)

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  • Name Rose Elizabeth Cleveland 
    Birth 13 Jun 1846  Fayeville, Onodaga, New York Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    _AMTID 132543098930:1030:194851487 
    _FSFTID LHH3-H61 
    _UID 57C2DAFE86A655FD07C332C6500007008826 
    Death 22 Nov 1918  Bagni di Lucca, Italy Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I1785  World of Hyde
    Last Modified 27 Dec 2017 

    Father Reverend Richard Falley Cleveland,   b. 19 Jun 1804, Norwich Township, New London, Conneticut, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1 Oct 1853, Holland Patent, Oneida County, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 49 years) 
    Mother Anne Neal,   b. 4 Feb 1806, Baltimore, Baltimore (City), Maryland, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 19 Jul 1882, Holland Patent, Oneida, New York Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 76 years) 
    Marriage 10 Sep 1829  Baltimore City, Marylnd, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    • Spouse: Anne Cleveland (born Neal)
    Family ID F478  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 22 Nov 1918 - Bagni di Lucca, Italy Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Sources 
    1. [S2] WikiTree, https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-10109/wikitree?s=230807621&itemId=26200085&action=showRecord.
      Rose Elizabeth Cleveland Gender: Female Birth: June 13 1846 - Fayeeville, Onondaga, New York, USA Death: Nov 22 1918 - Bagni di Lucca, Italy Father: Reverend Richard Falley Cleveland Mother: Anne Cleveland (born Neal) Siblings: President Stephen Grover ClevelandAnne Neal Hastings (born Cleveland)William Neal ClevelandMary Allen Hoyt (born Cleveland)Richard Cecil ClevelandMargaret Louise Falley Bacon (born Cleveland)Lewis Frederick ClevelandSusan S. Yeomans (born Cleveland) Photos:

    2. [S182] Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10449-1040302/new-york-tribune.
      New-York Tribune Publication: New York, New York, New York, USA Date: Nov 27 1918 ext: "...Cleveland, is dead, here ? of influenza. She will be buried in Hie cemetery* planned by Carlo LodovicS, where the French authores- Ouida is buried. Rose Elizabeth Cleveland was born in Fayeeville, N. Y She ..., baseball, and hockey star, had been "dissolved by mutual consent" Both Captain Baker ind Miss Sco arc in France. Miss Scott has been nerving as a nurse in a hospital in Paris. The engagement was announced ... are to be held in various parts of I Chicago on behalf of Paul Chapman, the New York choir boy. under sen? tence of death for murder, according to plans announced from the head? quarters of the Boys' Brotherhood ... with reference to Paul Chapman, sixteen years old, con? victed..." About this sourceHorace Greeley founded the New York Tribune as a Whig party, penny paper on April 10, 1841, and would continue as its editor for the next thirty years. During Greeley's tenure the Tribune became one of the more significant newspapers in the United States. In 1924 the Tribune merged with the New York Herald to form the New York Herald Tribune, a publication which would remain a major United States daily until its demise. Distinguishing features of the early penny press were their inexpensiveness, their appeal to the average reader, their coverage of more and different types of news, and, in some instances, a marked political independence. Penny papers such as the New York Sun and the New York Herald were known for their emphasis on lurid crime reporting and humorous, human interest stories from the police court. The Tribune offered a strong moralistic flavor, however, playing down crime reports and scandals, providing political news, special articles, lectures, book reviews, book excerpts and poetry. As with other penny papers, the Tribune was not averse to building circulation by carrying accounts involving sex and crime, but it was careful to present this material under the guise of cautionary tales. Greeley gathered an impressive array of editors and feature writers, among them Henry J. Raymond, Charles A. Dana, Bayard Taylor, George Ripley, Massachusetts rgarettt Fuller, and, for a while, Karl Marx served as his London correspondent. Reflecting his puritanical upbringing, Greeley opposed liquor, tobacco, gambling, prostitution, and capital punishment, while actively promoting the anti-slavery cause. His editorial columns urged a variety of educational reforms and favored producer's cooperatives, but opposed women's suffrage. He popularized the phrase "Go west, young man; go west!" The Tribune supported Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War, but opposed his renomination in 1864. While the Tribune's circulation always trailed its rivals the Sun and the Herald, neither could match the immense success of its weekly edition. First published on September 2, 1841, the Tribune weekly enjoyed a wide popularity in small cities and towns, and by 1860 had registered a record-breaking circulation of 200,000. Greeley died in 1872. Under Whitelaw Reid's control (1873-1912), the Tribune became one of the nation's leading Republican dailies. Reid's son, Ogden, succeeded him and purchased the New York Herald in 1924, merging the two newspapers to form the New York Herald Tribune. Noted for its typographical excellence, the high quality of its writing, its Washington and foreign reporting, and its political columnists, the Herald Tribune would reign as the voice of moderate Republicanism and competent journalism for the next four decades. It featured some of the best reporters in the business-Joseph Barnes, Homer Bigart, Russell Hill, Joseph Driscoll, Joseph Mitchell, Tom Wolfe-and top drawer political columnists such as Walter Lippman, David Lawrence, Joseph Alsop, and Roscoe Drummond. Following Ogden Reid's death in 1947, the paper began a steady decline, undergoing numerous financial setbacks. In 1961 media entrepreneur John Hay ("Jock") Whitney became majority shareholder, publisher and editor-in-chief, investing $40 million in a vain aempt to save the paper. The newspaper's last issue as the Herald Tribune was published April 24, 1966. It merged with two other struggling New York papers, the Journal American and the World Telegram and the Sun to form the World Journal Tribune, which began publishing September 12, 1966 after a lengthy strike. It ceased publication May 5, 1967. See also: New York Tribune, April 10, 1841-April 12, 1842; New York Daily Tribune, April 22, 1842-May 1, 1850 and May 13, 1850-April 9 1866; New York Tribune, April 10, 1866-March 18, 1924; New York Herald, New York Tribune, Massachusetts rch 19, 1924-May 30, 1926; New York Herald Tribune, Massachusetts y 31

    3. [S4] Source #20, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-504161776/rose-elizabeth-cleveland-in-familysearch-family-tree.
      Rose Elizabeth Cleveland Birth names: Rose ClevelandRose E.Rose E. Cleveland Gender: Female Birth: June 13 1846 - Fayeville, Onodaga, New York Death: Nov 22 1918 - Italy Parents: Richard Falley Cleveland,Ann Cleveland (born Neal) Siblings: Anna Hastings (born Neal Cleveland), William Neal Cleveland, Massachusetts ry Hoyt (born Allen Cleveland), Richard Cecil Cleveland, President (Stephen) Grover Cleveland, Massachusetts rgaret Louisa Bacon (born Cleveland), Lewis Frederick Cleveland, Susan Sophia Yeomans (born Cleveland)

    4. [S296] Source #805, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-504161776/rose-elizabeth-cleveland-in-familysearch-family-tree.
      Rose Elizabeth Cleveland Birth names: Rose ClevelandRose E.Rose E. Cleveland Gender: Female Birth: June 13 1846 - Fayeville, Onodaga, New York Death: Nov 22 1918 - Italy Parents: Richard Falley Cleveland,Ann Cleveland (born Neal) Siblings: Anna Hastings (born Neal Cleveland), William Neal Cleveland, Massachusetts ry Hoyt (born Allen Cleveland), Richard Cecil Cleveland, President (Stephen) Grover Cleveland, Massachusetts rgaret Louisa Bacon (born Cleveland), Lewis Frederick Cleveland, Susan Sophia Yeomans (born Cleveland)

    5. [S297] Source #875, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-504161776/rose-elizabeth-cleveland-in-familysearch-family-tree.
      Rose Elizabeth Cleveland Birth names: Rose ClevelandRose E.Rose E. Cleveland Gender: Female Birth: June 13 1846 - Fayeville, Onodaga, New York Death: Nov 22 1918 - Italy Parents: Richard Falley Cleveland,Ann Cleveland (born Neal) Siblings: Anna Hastings (born Neal Cleveland), William Neal Cleveland, Massachusetts ry Hoyt (born Allen Cleveland), Richard Cecil Cleveland, President (Stephen) Grover Cleveland, Massachusetts rgaret Louisa Bacon (born Cleveland), Lewis Frederick Cleveland, Susan Sophia Yeomans (born Cleveland)

    6. [S308] Source #1601, https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-504161776/rose-elizabeth-cleveland-in-familysearch-family-tree.
      Rose Elizabeth Cleveland Birth names: Rose ClevelandRose E.Rose E. Cleveland Gender: Female Birth: June 13 1846 - Fayeville, Onodaga, New York Death: Nov 22 1918 - Italy Parents: Richard Falley Cleveland,Ann Cleveland (born Neal) Siblings: Anna Hastings (born Neal Cleveland), William Neal Cleveland, Massachusetts ry Hoyt (born Allen Cleveland), Richard Cecil Cleveland, President (Stephen) Grover Cleveland, Massachusetts rgaret Louisa Bacon (born Cleveland), Lewis Frederick Cleveland, Susan Sophia Yeomans (born Cleveland)