. The Annual or, Obituary of the members of the Society of Friends in Great Britain and . ld. Widow of Timo-thy Kean. 134 ANNUAL MONITOR Elizabeth Kelsall 51 22 5 1913 Wyresdale. Wife of George Kelsall. Mary Kemp 87 15 1 1913 Brighton. A Minister. New King .. ..101 11 4 1913Southport. Claygate. Widow of Fredk. E. Hannah Kitching 78 20 8 1913 Malton. Widow of James Kitching . 80 21 10 1912 Bewdley. Widow of Langley Kitching. Louisa Kitching .. ..77 7 10 1912Clevedon. A Minister. Widow of Louisa Kitching was the fo


. The Annual or, Obituary of the members of the Society of Friends in Great Britain and . ld. Widow of Timo-thy Kean. 134 ANNUAL MONITOR Elizabeth Kelsall 51 22 5 1913 Wyresdale. Wife of George Kelsall. Mary Kemp 87 15 1 1913 Brighton. A Minister. New King .. ..101 11 4 1913Southport. Claygate. Widow of Fredk. E. Hannah Kitching 78 20 8 1913 Malton. Widow of James Kitching . 80 21 10 1912 Bewdley. Widow of Langley Kitching. Louisa Kitching .. ..77 7 10 1912Clevedon. A Minister. Widow of Louisa Kitching was the fourth child ofJames and Esther Wilmot, and was born at Bristolin 1835. An eager, high-spirited child, ardentand impulsive in everything she undertook—with pretty curly hair and a colour like awild rose —she spent a very happy childhood. She was sent to Sidcot School in the daysof Benjamin and Ann Gilkes, but she only stayedtwo years, and then went to a private school,where her greatest fault was her quicknessat figures. Go to your seat, said the teacher Henry Kershaw 9 8 1913 Sarah King 03 12 12 1912. Louisa Retching LOUISA KITCHING 135 sharply, one day. M you cipher like a boy. When Louisa Wilmot was only fourteenyears old her mother died very suddenly; Thissorrow was the firs! of a long series of trials andbereavements, which all through her life had apeculiarly chastening effect. She wont as a teacher to Sidcot Schoolwhen she was twenty one, and is still rememberedlovingly by her pupils. In 1862 she was marriedto William Kitching, and they began their longand happy married life of 44 years in a smallhouse at Ackworth. They had a large family,and very limited means, but found so muchpleasure in their little ones and in the life ofthe School and of the Meeting that the yearspassed happily away. In 1880 William Kitchingshealth broke down, and the family moved toSouthport, where, under altered surroundings,health wras restored, and a little school graduallybuilt up. A time of


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