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Source Title | The Clinton Courier |
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Thomas W. Quinn |
Bartholomew Quinn |
'?Bartholomew Quinn, who died a t Kirkland, June 17, 18S2, was a son of Bartholomew and Bridget Quinn, of Kings County, Ireland. His father died in his own county, about 1850.Bartholomew Qulnn, 79, of Kirkland, a veteran of the Spanish- American War and an employee of the Langdon & Hughes Electrical Co. Inc. of Utica, when the firm started in business, died March 3, 1958 in a Utica hospital after a three-month illness. Mr. Quinn was born July 21,1876 in Kirkland, a son of Thomas F. and Alice Houston Quinn. He was an electrician by trade and was employed all his life by Langdon.& Hughes, retiring 23 years ago. He married Mary L Rauscher _Uiu^-2VW03-trrSt. Agnes Church, Vernon Center. They moved to Utica after their marriage and returned to Kirkland about 1935. Mrs. Quinn died three years ago. Mr. Quinn served in the U. S. Volunteers Infantry In the Spanish- American War and was a corporal in Co "C" 26th U. S. Volunteers Infantry. He saw duty in the Philippines. He was a communicant of the Church of the Annunciation, Clark Mills, and was a member of E. H. Liscum-O. Ross Wheeler Camp 33, United Spanish War Veterans, Utica; the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 181; the Holy Name Society of the Church of the Annunciation, and the Third Order of St. Francis. Mr. Quinn leaves two sisters, Mrs. Daniel H. Pryor aad Mrs. Vincent Stockbridge, both of Seneca Turnpike, Kirkland; five brothers' John F. Quinn, Whitesboro; Edward M. Qulnn and Thomas W. Qulnn, Klrkland; William B. Quinn, Utica; and James P. Quinn, New York City, and several nieces and nephews. The funeral was Tuesday from the Heintz Funeral Home, 10 E. Park Row, Clinton, and the Church of the Annunciation," where a requiem high Mass was celebrated. Burial was in St. Mary's Cemetery, Clinton.Most of his labors in this country have been at the Franklin, and late years at the Kirkland Iron Works.June 10, 1862, Bridget, his mother, with her eight children, arrived in America, consisting of five boys arid three girls, only four of wliich now survive |
The Clinton Courier. |