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Hannah Emeline Palmer, was born March 24, 1825 in Taftville Connecticut. She was the eldest child of Asher & Joanna (Eames) Palmer. (Her father, Asher Palmer, had four older children from his marriage to Hannah Pettis, who died some time between 1822 and 1824.) At the age of 20, Hannah married William H. Larkham of Voluntown, Connecticut. They settled on the farm in Voluntown that William's great-grandparents had established in the 1700s. It was here that six of their eleven children were born. Hannah and William Larkham had the following children:
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In 1857, William and Hannah left Voluntown and lived on rented farms in nearby Griswold, North Stonington, and Canterbury, Connecticut. After William's death in 1884, Hannah purchased her own farm on Plain Hill, Norwich, Connecticut, where she lived to be almost 91 years old. Hannah was buried with William H. Larkham in the Larkham family plot at Packerville Cemetery near the Packerville Baptist Church in Plainfield, Connecticut. Four of Hannah and William's children (Henry, George, Julia, and John) are also buried there.
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On her ninetieth birthday Hannah's younger sister, Sarah Harvey Palmer wrote the following poem for her:
TO
MY SISTER ON HER Dear white-haired
sister, would I could No longer
glimmering clear and white We'll lighten
the burdens for the tired arms, And surely
you have developed Sarah H.
Palmer |
Hannah Emeline Palmer
Larkham
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