Author's Note: My apologies for this very brief post. We have been away for two weeks and I'm still re-acclamating to being home. I do, however want to call to mind the four individuals who died in the month of April and are interred at the Presumpscot/Grand Trunk Cemetery. It is said that simply saying their names aloud, assures they will be remembered always!
Agnes Wilcox: was born c. 1820 in Scotland and came to the United States with her first husband John Dixon and three children. Sometime later, her husband died and she re-married George Wilcox. Agnes Wilcox died at the age of 44 years old on April 2, 1864. Her memorial stone is still intact and made of white marble.
Joanna Ilsley Galvin: was one of nine children born to Jonathan (1738 -1809) and Dorcas Ingersoll Ilsley (1738 -1809), on February 14, 1769. She married Irish School Master, Timothy Galvin shortly after his arrival in the United States. Joanna was the mother of five children. After her husband, Timothy's death, it appears Joanna went to Calais, Maine, probably with one of her sons until her death on April 4th, 1840. There is some evidence that she may have been brought home to Portland, and laid to rest near her husband Tim and daughter Harriot Galvin. A remnant of the grave site exists in the broken monument to Harriot Galvin.
Joseph Merrill: was a resident of what is now East Deering, born in 1757 as one of the many Merrill's who settled in Maine. Although his government issued monument memorializes his service in the Portland Rifle Company during the War of 1812 when he was about sixty years old, the truth is, he also served during the Revolutionary War when he was a much younger man. Joseph Merrill was a farmer and apparently had a close relationship to Joseph Merrill Sawyer who became the executor of his will when he died. Joseph Merrill died at the age of 65 on April 8, 1823. The inscription on the monument has unfortunately started to fade.