Sam H. Milliken

M
     Sam H. Milliken is the son of Elias K. Milliken.

Samuel Milliken1

M, b. circa 1840
     Samuel Milliken was born circa 1840 at Indiana.1 He was the son of John Milliken and Harriet Louisa Hord.1 He was clerk on a steamboat in 1860.

Citations

  1. [S28] Family Search, online http://www.familysearch.org/eng/default.asp, 1850 Census Paducah, KY, Division 1.

Dr. Samuel Edwin Milliken MD1

M, b. 2 December 1866, d. 18 September 1949
Dr. Samuel E. Milliken
     Dr. Samuel Edwin Milliken MD was born on 2 December 1866 at Mansfield, Tarrant County, Texas.1,2 He was the son of Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken and Annie Henrietta Campbell.1 He graduated in 1887 at Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky.3 He was the author of an article that was eventually published and listed on the National Library of Medicine, National Institute of Health website. in 1892.4 He lived in 1892 at New York, New York County, New York.5 He married Sallie Haynes Gibbs, daughter of Hon. Barnett Gibbs and Sallie Haynes, on 3 October 1894 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas; MISS GIBBS' WEDDING
______

It Will be Solemnized at the Family
Home This Afternoon.

The marriage of Miss Sallie Haynes Gibbs, daughter of ex-Governor and Mrs. Barnett Gibbs, to Dr. Samuel E. Milliken, of New York city, will take place this afternoon at 5 o'clock, at the family home on Live Oak street.
Mr. and Mrs. Milliken will leave this evening for their home in New York city, via Galveston.
The wedding will be a quiet family affair.6,2 He was the first chief of surgery at the University of Dallas Medical Department in 1900.7 He lived in 1911 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas.8 He married Kate Oliver between 1920 and 1930 at Texas.9 He and Sallie Haynes Gibbs were divorced before 1924 at Texas.10 He was written about in The Encyclopedia of Texas about 1925:

"S.E. Milliken, M.D., Marvin Building, came to Dallas from New York City in 1897 following a period of ten years' training in the best hospitals of the East and began the general practice of medicine and surgery, specializing in the latter branch. He is now attending physian at St. Paul's Sanitarium an lecturer on orthopedic surgery in St. Paul's Training School for Nurses. Before coming to Dallas Dr. Milliken did a great deal of writin on surgery and allied topics.
A native Texas, Dr. Milliken was born at Mansfield in Tarrant County, December 2, 1886. His parents were Captain Samuel and Annie Henriertta (Campbell) Milliken who came to Texas just before the outbreak of the Civil War. Captain Milliken was a steamboat captain and built and operated boats on the Mississippi from Paducah, Kentucky, to New Orleans. After removing to Texas he devoted his time to ranching and built the first frame house where Ballingernoe stands.
Dr. Milliken was educated at Ad Ran College, now Texas Christian University, which was them located in Thorpe Springs. He studied medicine and graduated from the medical department of the University of Louisville in 1887. He served as interne in Saints Mary and Elizabeth Hospitals at Louisville in 1887 and 1888 and then became house surgeon in the Hospital for Ruptured and Cripplesd in New York City, being made assistant surgeon for the same hospital in 1889 and remaining there until 1892 when he was made lecturer on surgery for the New York Polyclinic Schoo; and Hospital for post-graduates. From 1894 to 1897 he was attending surgeon to Randel Island Hospitals and in 1897 came to Dallas. For a while Dr. Milliken was professor of surgery at Baylor Medical School and he also operated a private sanitarium in Dallas for 20 years. He was a member of the Board of Health in Dallas for two years.
Dr. Milliken was married October 3, 1894, in Dallas to Miss Sallie Gibbs of Dallas, daughter of former Lieutenant Governor Gibbs, now deceased. Then have three children, Samuel Gibbs, a nedical student at the University of Texas, Miss Catherine and Miss Dorothy Milliken.
Dr. Gibbs is a Fellow of the American Medical Association, State and County Medical Societies, the Dallas Country Club and Chamber of Commerce. He is a firm believer in the future of Dallas and says that now it is the best city of its size in the United States.2

He died on 18 September 1949 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, at age 82; (History of the Dept. of Surgery at Baylor Medical Center, Ronald Coy Jones, MD.)11

Obituary for Dr. Samuel E. Milliken

"Retired Dallas Physician Dies; Burial Monday - Private funeral services for Dr. Samuel E. Milliken, 8715 Canyon Drive, a Dallas physician for fifty years, will be held at 4 p.m. Monday at Marrs-Mundy-Quill Funeral Home, 3000 Maple. The Rev. Ben Gillespie will officiate and burial will be in Oakland Cemetery. Dr. Milliken died Sunday at his home. He was born in Mansfield, Tarrant County, and attended school in Louisville, Ky. He began his practice in New York City and moved to Dallas in 1899. Dr. Milliken retired from practice eight years ago. He was a member of the American Medical Association, the American College of Surgeons, the Dallas County Medical Society, Gibraltor Masonic Lodge, Knights Templar, Hella Temple and past president of the High Noon Club. Surviving are his wife; a daughter, Mrs. Katherine Busch; a sister, Mrs. Marie Griffin, Chickasha, Okla; and four grandchildren. Pallbearers will be James Crowder, Joe Leopold, Pat Milliken, William Milliken Griffin, Dr. T. C. Gilbert and Robert West."

- Published in the "Dallas Morning News."12

Children of Dr. Samuel Edwin Milliken MD and Sallie Haynes Gibbs

Citations

  1. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.490 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  2. [S62] Portal To Texas Hstory, online http://texashistory.unt.edu/, S.E. Milliken; Citing: The Encyclopedia of Texas; Compiled and Edited: Ellis A. Davis and Edwin H. Grobe, Publisher: The Texas Developement Bureau, Dallas, Texas; Page 547; Accessed: 30 Mar 2022.
  3. [S233] Internet Archive, online http://archive.org, American College of Surgeons, "Yearbook", 1923, Chicago, Illinois, accessed 23 Apr 2013 (http://www01.us.archive.org/stream/yearbook1923ameruoft/…).
  4. [S232] NCBI online, online http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, Public Health Pap Rep. 1892; 18: 174–175, courtesy of American Public Health Association, accessed 23 Apr 2013 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2266534/pdf/…).
  5. [S233] Internet Archive, online http://archive.org, Google Books, "Public Health Papers and Reports", Volume XIX, 1894, Irving A. Watson, Sec. American Public Health Association, accessed 23 Apr 2013 (http://archive.org/stream/publichealthpap15assogoog/…).
  6. [S29] RootsWeb, online http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/, Miss Gibbs' Wedding, transcribed from the October 3, 1894, Dallas Daily Times Herald, Pg. 6, Col. 1, accessed 30 Aug 2012 (http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jwheat/…).
  7. [S232] NCBI online, online http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, Ronald Coy Jones, MD, "History of the Department of Surgery at Baylor University Medical Center", courtesy of Baylor Health Care System, 2004, Baylor University Medical Center, accessed 23 Apr 2013 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1200650/).
  8. [S78] Fold3.com, online http://www.fold3.com, City Directories for Dallas, Texas, John F Worley Directory Co, Pg 676.
  9. [S78] Fold3.com, online http://www.fold3.com, 1930 US Census, Dallas, TX JP1, ED 57-66, Pg 1A.
  10. [S18] Ancestry.com, online http://www.ancestry.com/, U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 [database on-line]; Dorothy Milliken; Dallas, Texas, City Directory, 1924; Publisher: John F. Worley Directory Co.; Accessed: 30 Mar 2022.
  11. [S79] Find A Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com, Memorial page for Dr Samuel Edwin Milliken (2 Dec 1866–18 Sep 1949); Memorial ID: 37146551; Citing: Oakland Cemetery, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Mary Echols (contributor 46590677); Accessed: 28 Mar 2022 ((https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37146551/…).
  12. [S79] Find A Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com, Memorial page for Dr Samuel Edwin Milliken (2 Dec 1866–18 Sep 1949); Memorial ID: 37146551; Citing: Oakland Cemetery, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Mary Echols (contributor 46590677); Citing The Dallas Morning News; Date: 19 Sep 1949; Page: 9; Accessed: 28 Mar 2022 ((https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37146551/…).

Samuel Gibbs Milliken Jr.

M, b. 15 December 1935, d. 20 November 2007
     Samuel Gibbs Milliken Jr. was born on 15 December 1935 at Houston, Harris County, Texas.1 He was the son of Dr. Samuel Gibbs Milliken Sr., M.D. and Harriet E. Bain. He married Edna Marie Splittgerber circa 1962.1 He died on 20 November 2007 at Austin, Travis County, Texas, at age 71.1 Gibbs Milliken (1935 - 2007)
Professor Samuel Gibbs Milliken, Jr. of West Lake Hills, a naturalist and expeditionary artist, lived a life of adventure. He was born in Houston on December 15, 1935, and passed away in Austin on November 20, 2007. He is survived by his devoted wife of 45 years, Marie Splittgerber Milliken; daughter, Tamara Milliken Galbi and husband Dwight, daughter, Adana Milliken Gipson and husband Mike; grandsons, David and Paul Gipson; sister, Alice Milliken Combs; numerous nieces, nephews, and their families. His parents, Dr. Samuel Gibbs and Harriet Bain Milliken, and sister Harriet Milliken Gould, preceded him in death. Primarily raised in Kerrville, Texas, Gibbs graduated from Schreiner Institute, attended the University of Colorado, and received his Bachelor of Science degree from Trinity University in San Antonio. He began his career with Texas Parks and Wildlife as a field photographer and served as curator of natural science and exhibitions at the Witte Museum in San Antonio. He then completed his Master of Fine Arts in 1965 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. Upon receiving his master's degree, he accepted a teaching position with the University of Texas at Austin. Always a dreamer and an idea man, Gibbs made a profound impact on those he mentored during his 41 years as a Professor of Art and Latin American Studies. An excellent teacher and communicator, he touched the lives of countless minds as he conveyed a rare aesthetic view of the world. His legacy also lives on in his artistic works, which include paintings, drawings, and photographs. Public and private collections house his works, some of which include the Cranbrook Academy of Art, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, and the Butler Institute of American Art. His career had many facets, including work as an artist with the NASA Apollo Space Program moon surface materials and the NASA Tektite II Underseas Project. He had a great passion for Latin America and led numerous expeditions into the Amazonian rainforest. As a lover of indigenous cultures and director of the Organization for Tropical Research, Gibbs documented and collected ethnographic artifacts, some of which he donated to the Houston Museum of Natural History. Although he traveled widely, Gibbs most enjoyed Texas' natural resources and found pleasure in fly-fishing its many waterways and gulf coast. A gear and gadgets lover, he was a writer and photographer for Texas Parks and Wildlife magazine for many years and worked on these articles even in the last few weeks of his life. The family would like to thank: Drs. Kent Beasley, Shad Dabaghi, Ksenija Corak, and John Whitaker; their staffs, and Seton and Cornerstone Hospitals. These people, along with many close friends, enabled Gibbs to continue with his dreams while fighting his illnesses. Please join the family for a celebration of Gibbs' life on Thursday, November 29, 2007, 3:00 p.m., at the Riverbend Church Smith Chapel, 4214 Capital of Texas Hwy North (Loop 360) Austin, Texas. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Gibbs Milliken Scholarship Fund, Department of Art and Art History, The University of Texas, 1 University Station D-1300 Austin, Texas 78712-0337.

Published in Austin American-Statesman on November 26, 2007.1

Citations

  1. [S100] Legacy.com, online http://www.legacy.com/NS/, Gibbs Milliken, obituary, Austin American-Statesman, November 26, 2007, accessed 18 Aug 2012 (http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/statesman/obituary.aspx).

Dr. Samuel Gibbs Milliken Sr., M.D.

M, b. 21 October 1895, d. 23 March 1945
     Dr. Samuel Gibbs Milliken Sr., M.D. also went by the name of Gibbs.1 He was born on 21 October 1895 at New York, New York County, New York.2 He was the son of Dr. Samuel Edwin Milliken MD and Sallie Haynes Gibbs.3 The following article was printed in the Dallas Southern Mercury newpaper on 2 Feb 1899:

Hon. Barnett Gibbs has a bright grandson, Gibbs Milliken, the three year old son of Dr. and Mrs. S.E. Milliken. Gibbs is a thoroughbred, one of the most thoroughly up-to-date youngsters in the Lone Star State. Last Sunday morning the mother of young America dressed Gibbs in his Sunday clothes and gave him a few instructions as to how he should deport himself at Sunday school, it being his first venture. He was told it was his duty to answer all questions promptly and correctly, and was given an insight into the Garden of Eden, the story of creation, the names of the first man and woman, etc. Just before his departure for church the following dialogue ensued:
Mother - "Gibbs, who was the first man?"
Gibbs - "Adam."
Mother - "Who was the first woman, my son?"
Gibbs scratched his head, hesitated a moment then replied, "Mrs. Adam!"
The rehearsal terminated abruptly and the three-year-old was the master of the situation. - Beau Monde.1
He graduated in 1914 at Austin, Travis County, Texas; College of Arts.4 In the 1917 edition of the General Register of the University of Texas, Samuel was listed as being a student at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.4 He began military service in 1917 at Leon Springs, Bexar County, Texas, at the First Officers Training Camp.2 He ended military service in 1919.2 He married Harriet E. Bain, daughter of Robert M. Bain, after 1919 at USA. He was found on a passenger list on 13 July 1919 at New York, New York.5 He died on 23 March 1945 at Houston, Harris County, Texas, at age 49.6

Children of Dr. Samuel Gibbs Milliken Sr., M.D. and Harriet E. Bain

Citations

  1. [S62] Portal To Texas Hstory, online http://texashistory.unt.edu/, Park, Milton, editor. Southern Mercury. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 2, 1899, Pg.7, Newspaper, February 2, 1899; digital images, (http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth185788/ : accessed August 30, 2012), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, http://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries, Denton, Texas.
  2. [S128] Unknown compiler, History of Texas World War Heros, Pg. 167.
  3. [S62] Portal To Texas Hstory, online http://texashistory.unt.edu/, S.E. Milliken; Citing: The Encyclopedia of Texas; Compiled and Edited: Ellis A. Davis and Edwin H. Grobe, Publisher: The Texas Developement Bureau, Dallas, Texas; Page 547; Accessed: 30 Mar 2022.
  4. [S202] W.J. Maxwell, UT General Register, Samuel Gibbs Milliken, Pg. 230, 1917 edition.
  5. [S137] Elis Island, online http://www.ellisisland.org, List of US Citizens, S.S. Celtic from Liverpool 3 Jul 1919 arriving New York 13 Jul 1919, page 1, line 12.
  6. [S126] "Unknown short article title", 28 July 1945, Pg. 969, Death Listings.
  7. [S100] Legacy.com, online http://www.legacy.com/NS/, Gibbs Milliken, obituary, Austin American-Statesman, November 26, 2007, accessed 18 Aug 2012 (http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/statesman/obituary.aspx).
  8. [S32] USGenWeb Archives, online http://www.usgwarchives.org/, Harris County, TX - Births 1926 (http://files.usgwarchives.net/tx/harris/vitals/births/1926/…).

Samuel Henry Milliken1,2

M, b. February 1897, d. 10 January 1950
     Samuel Henry Milliken was born in February 1897 at Tennessee headstone lists 13 Jan 1896 as DOB.1,2 He was the son of John Beard Milliken and Annie E. Grizzard.1 He died on 10 January 1950 at USA at age 52. He was buried after 10 January 1950 at Stewart County, Tennessee.

Citations

  1. [S35] Tennessee GenWeb, online http://www.tngenweb.org/, 1910 Census of Stewart County (http://www.tngenweb.org/stewart/1910cens.rtf).
  2. [S35] Tennessee GenWeb, online http://www.tngenweb.org/, 1900 Census of Stewart County (http://www.tngenweb.org/stewart/1900cens.rtf).

Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken1,2

M, b. 30 June 1817, d. 27 January 1898
     Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken was born on 30 June 1817 at Paducah, McCracken County, Kentucky.1,2 He was the son of William Milliken and Nancy Ramsey.1,2 He married Mary Horn circa 1840.3 He married Mary Ann Haun circa 1850 at USA. He was was involved in a "street fight, with pistols" with Col. Richard A. Bacon in which Col. Bacon was shot and expected to recover on 29 December 1856 at Paducah, McCracken County, Kentucky.4 He married Annie Henrietta Campbell circa 1860.5 Circa 1871, Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken moved his family from Johnson County to Thorp Springs just north of Granbury in Hood county. He purchased a portion of the homestead of Pleasant Thorp and "built a cottin gin, and established a resort hotel, which advertised the medical benefits of the nearby waters."6



After his arrival Capt. Milliken and Pleasant Thorp established the first college in the area, Thorp College.7 He died on 27 January 1898 at USA at age 80.1

Child of Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken and Mary Ann Haun

Child of Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken

Children of Capt. Samuel Ramsey Milliken and Annie Henrietta Campbell

Citations

  1. [S5] Mary Ellen Dorsey, "Descendants of Charles Milliken", Person ID #96.
  2. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.489 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  3. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.488 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  4. [S234] Chronicling America, online http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov, Memphis Daily Appeal. (Memphis, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1857. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress, accessed 29 Apr 2013. <http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045160/…
  5. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.490 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  6. [S204] TSHA Handbook of Texas Online, online http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook, David Minor, "THORP SPRING, TX", Accessed: April 20, 2020 (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hlt16).
  7. [S204] TSHA Handbook of Texas Online, online http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook, Rhonda L. Callaway, "THORP SPRING CHRISTIAN COLLEGE", accessed April 20, 2020 (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/kbt26).
  8. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.489-490 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  9. [S5] Mary Ellen Dorsey, "Descendants of Charles Milliken", Person ID #288.

Dr. Samuel Ramsey Milliken M.D.1,2

M, b. 28 November 1879, d. 3 December 1922
Dr. Samuel Ramsey Milliken, M.D. (Provided by Smsdv at FindAGrave.com)
Photograph by Picasa
     Dr. Samuel Ramsey Milliken M.D. was born on 28 November 1879.3,2 He was the son of William Dickerson Milliken Sr. and Margaret Crockett Young.1 He was educated in 1902 at New York, New York County, New York.4 He lived in 1911 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas.5 He married Elsa Caroline Schoellkopf, daughter of Gottlieb Henry Schoellkopf and Hedwig Boll, before 1917.6 He began military service circa 1917 in the medical corps of the United States Army.4 He and Elsa Caroline Schoellkopf lived in 1917 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas.6 He ended military service circa 1918.4 He was reccomended for a commission of Captain to the M.R.C by the Texas State Medical Association. in 1918.7 He died on 3 December 1922 at Washington, District of Columbia, at age 43.3,4 He was buried after 3 December 1922 at Dallas, Dallas County, Texas.8

Child of Dr. Samuel Ramsey Milliken M.D. and Elsa Caroline Schoellkopf

Citations

  1. [S5] Mary Ellen Dorsey, "Descendants of Charles Milliken."
  2. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg.502 "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina."
  3. [S5] Mary Ellen Dorsey, "Descendants of Charles Milliken", Person ID #477.
  4. [S126] "Unknown short article title", 30 Dec 1922, Pg. 2246, Death Listings.
  5. [S78] Fold3.com, online http://www.fold3.com, City Directories for Dallas, Texas, John F Worley Directory Co, Pg 676.
  6. [S28] Family Search, online http://www.familysearch.org/eng/default.asp, Margaret Milliken Birth Certificate (daughter), accessed 4 Oct 2011.
  7. [S127] "Unknown short article title", Texas Medical Association, Volume XIV, May 1918-April 1919, Pg. 233.
  8. [S79] Find A Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com, Memorial page for Dr Samuel Ramsey Milliken (28 Nov 1869–3 Dec 1922); Memorial ID: 107941964; Citing Greenwood Cemetery, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA; Maintained by RMLeahy (contributor 46809355); Accessed: 1 Apr 2022 (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/107941964/…).

Sandol Humphreys Milliken1

F, b. 27 October 1877, d. 7 April 1918
Sandol Milliken (Provided by footlightnotes.com)
     Sandol Humphreys Milliken was an actress in new York until her marriage. The following was written about her in "Who's who on the stage, 1908":

Milliken, Miss Sandol (Mrs. Carlos French Stoddard):
Actress, was born in Nashville, Tenn., and was educated in Washington, D. C., and in Paris, France. Her first stage apearance was with Augustin Daly's company, where she was seen only in small parts. She then became a leading ingenuewith Henry Donnelly's Stock Company at the Murry Hill Theatre, New York. She then joined W. H. Crane's company, playing Katrina in "Peter Stuyvesant," and Reckless Griggs in "A Rich Man's Son." In 1900 Miss Milliken played in "The Sprightly Romance of Marsac" with Macklyn Arbuckle, and the following season was with Jefferson De Angelis in a "Royal Rogue." Then followed successive seasons with "The Liberty Belles " and "The Defender." Later she went under Charles Frohman's management, playing in "The Bird in a Cage," and "The Unforeseen" at the Empire Theatre, New York. The fall of 1903 she supported Miss Maude Adams in "The Pretty Sister of Jose," and also supported Robert Edeson, as Mary Cahill in "Ranson's Folly." Miss Milliken was married to Carlos French Stoddard, of New Haven, Conn., March 3, 1904, since which she retired from the stage.2
She was born on 27 October 1877 at Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee.1 She was the daughter of Hon. William Alfred Milliken and Mary Humphrey.1 She married Carlos French Stoddard, son of Ezekiel Gilbert Stoddard and Mary de Forest Burlock, on 3 March 1904 at New York, New York County, New York.3 She died on 7 April 1918 at Connecticut at age 40.4,5

Children of Sandol Humphreys Milliken and Carlos French Stoddard

Citations

  1. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, Pg. 510; Supplement - Children of William Alfred Milliken.
  2. [S277] Mocavo.com, online http://www.mocavo.com/, Milliken, Miss Sandol, "Who's who on the stage, 1908 : the dramatic reference book and biographical dictionary of the theatre : containing careers of actors, actresses, managers and playwrights of the American stage", Authors: Walter Browne and E. De Roy Koch, Publisher: B.W. Dodge, New York, 1908, Page: 314, Accessed: 14 Mar 2014 (http://www.mocavo.com/…).
  3. [S96] NY Times, "Sandol Milliken Married"; 4 Mar 1904.
  4. [S101] Sandol Stoddard, "Email from Sandol Stoddard," to Keith Hunter, dated 20 Aug 2010.
  5. [S18] Ancestry.com, online http://www.ancestry.com/, Sandol Milliken Stoddard, Connecticut Deaths and Burials Index, 1650-1934, accessed 13 Nov 2011.

Sarah Elizabeth Milliken1

F, b. 7 October 1859
     Sarah Elizabeth Milliken was born on 7 October 1859 at Henry County, Tennessee.1 She was the daughter of William M. Milliken and Gilley A. Hartsfield.1 She married Elias P. Cook after 1875 at USA.1

Citations

  1. [S86] Rev. Gideon Tibbitts Ridlon Sr., History of the Families Millingas, William M. Milliken, Sarah Elizabeth Milliken "Millikens of Orange Co., No. Carolina", Pg. 495-496.