Allegheny County PA Archives- News: Nugent-Werren, Jun 1916 Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Victoria Valentine, , Jul 2008 Copyright 2008. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/allegheny/ ________________________________________________ http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/allegheny/newspapers/nugent-werren.txt McDonald PA Outlook, 24 Jun 1916 Mrs. Sarah NUGENT WERREN of Steubenville, Ohio, in looking over a list of applicants for license in a Pittsburgh paper in April, saw the name of Daniel NUGENT, of Southside, Pittsburgh. Having been separated when an infant from her mother, Sarah NUGENT, she new nothing of her relatives and wrote to Daniel. He told her the names of his relatives and traced her relationship. She met Dan in Pittsburgh, May 13, and a family reunion took place. The long-lost Sarah was brought by Mrs. Dan NUGENT and daughter, to visit her sister-in-law, Mrs. John NUGENT, now Mrs. TOUHEY, of 811 Idlewood avenue, East Carnegie. John NUGENT died some years ago ... his widow and several ... and daughter. Sara NUGENT's mother died in Pittsburg during the cholera epidemic nearly 60 years ago, and the little girl mysteriously disappeared when six years old. She was placed in the county home and when 11 years old went to live with the old GLENN family at Noblestown, where she remained 40 years and then married Robert WERREN, moving to Steubenville where WERREN died three years later, and she since lived alone. She remembers the names of her brothers and sisters, especially John, because he wore a red dress when a baby, and she recalls that her father used to set her on a horse's back occasionally. She does not remember her mother nor the name of the town where she lived. The family made many efforts to locate Sarah, but were unsuccessful and gave up the search years ago. She learned through Mrs. John NUGENT TOUGHEY that her mother is buried in old Trinity church yard, Pittsburgh, and remarked that "It will be the greatest thing on earth to see my mother's grave." It seems hardly possible that a person could live till the age of 40 at Noblestown, within 8 miles of two brothers and a sister and yet have no way of locating them. There is every possibility that she rode on the same trains or passed them on the streets of Carnegie, as she was there occasionally, and has upwards of 25 relatives here. James NUGENT, a brother, married a daughter of the late Louis HARD and his son Dan, lived at the Hard tavern on East Main street, attending the old frame Mansfield borough school 35 years ago. He will be remembered by some of the old pupils who are now between 40 and 50 years old.--Carnegie Item