Vital Statistics: Obits: Mrs. Lytta H. Cory, c. 1881: Coryville, McKean Co, PA Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Beverly Schonewolf. 4bevswolf@MAIL2.LCIA.COM USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. ____________________________________________________________ From an old newspaper, date unknown. If a descendant is interested in the original, please contact me. OBITUARY Mrs. Lytta H. Cory, who died at her son's residence, Captain A.H. Cory, in Coryville, on Monday the 28th ult., was born in Benson, Vt., January 26, 1789, where she resided the most of the time until coming to Tioga County, Pa., in 1811. Her father coming some years previous she accompanied him, driving a loaded team and returning alone with it to Vermont. She was married after her return to Thomas R. Cory, who was hurt at the raising of a bridge across the Tioga River from which injury he survived but a few days and died on the 15th of June, 1833, leaving her a widow with four children, the oldest nineteen and the youngest five years old, Captain A. H. Cory, now of Pa., Dr. B.F. Cory, now in Florida, A. B. Cory, now printing a newspaper in Arkansas, and a daughter Lytta, who died in Ironton, Ohio, in 1868. She remained a widow, making her home with her children, but was engaged in teaching most of the time until her sixty-fifth year. She came to McKean County with her children in 1837 and has since that resided in Ohio, Missouri, Texas and Arkansas; she has been down the Allegany and Ohio River to Ironton, Ohio, three times and returned. She was with her younger son in Missouri at the breaking out of the rebellion and fled south before the Union Army, retreating with Gen. Price, and for two weeks was unable to get one night's rest, being so closely pursued by the Union army; and many times when they halted to prepare a meal, before it was ready the shells of their pursuers would commence whizzing by, causing them to leave even before a craving appetite could be appeased; but at last she found a safe retreat in a then small town in Texas, but now the city of Dallas, where she remained untio the close of the war, not hearing a word from her children north, or they a word from her. In the fall of 1865 she resolved to again visit her friends in the north and set out from Dallas, riding quite a distance, first in a lumber wagon and camping out at night before reaching steam navigation. Going by way of New Orleans she traveled in all twenty-three hundred miles, without seeing a face she had ever seen before. Spending all her means she borrowed $40 and finally reached Dr. Cory's, in Ohio, where she remained a short time and then came back to McKean County in 1869, to her son's, where she remained until her death. Mrs. Cory read for the past twenty years without spectacles and was reading a newspaper the Saturday before her death and became greatly interested in the subject. She had read the bible through by course three times and commenced it again on her ninetieth birthday and had read it over half way through when she died. She was awakened to the subject of religion when only eight years old, and though she was losing her mind with her strength in her last days, when the subject of religion was introduced she at once would become animated and her mind would brighten up and become as clear as the noon-day sun, repeating passage after passage of holy writ and Isaac Watts' psalms and hymns. One would think after hearing her repeat them they were all stored away in her memory. Nothing so animated her for a few of her last years like the subject of the salvation of the soul. She had been a professor for eighty-four years and as she moved from place to place she had united with some christian organization, regardless of name, only so she could enjoy the society of christian believers and professors. Rev. S.D. Morris addressed a full house at her funeral from the words of Paul in 2nd Timothy 4 6-8. She often said she had become so feeble she could do no good and why she was kept alive she could not tell, but she was willing to wait God's appointed time. ---------- >