Cornelia Churchill

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Cornelia Churchill (Rutjes)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, United States
Death: December 23, 1921 (70)
Bronx, New York, Bronx County, New York, United States
Place of Burial: New York, Queens County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Adolphus John Rutjes and Theonie Marie Louise Rutjes
Wife of Mortimer W. Churchill

Managed by: Robert A Prusak
Last Updated:

About Cornelia Churchill

Birth: Feb., 1851 Charleston Charleston County South Carolina, USA Death: Dec. 23, 1921 Bronx Bronx County New York, USA

Cornelia Rutjes Churchill (or Churchell) was the only child of Adolph John Rutjes (b. ca. 1825) and his first wife Théonie Marie Louise Alexandrine de la Rivière Mignot Rutjes (1819-1875). Her father's family were Dutch from Appeldorn in present-day western Germany. Her mother was from an aristocratic French family that had resettled in Charleston in the first decade of the 19th century following the successful slave rebellion on the French colony of Saint-Domingue (Haiti). Her mother's first husband was Rémy Mignot (1801-1848), a French immigrant and confectioner by whom she had four children. Soon after Rémy's premature death Théonie married Rutjes, a close friend of the family. Rutjes and Théonie took over the Mignot business and grew it into a successful catering establishment patronized by the Low Country elite.

As war threatened, Rutjes and his wife sent the four Mignot children to live with his relatives in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Théonie remained behind, apparently with Cornelia. The family was burned out of their house by the Great Fire of 1861 and removed to the relative safety of Columbia, SC, where Théonie opened a boarding house. By 1870, reunited with Rutjes (whose whereabouts during the war is unknown), Théonie and Cornelia were living in Raleigh, NC. A.J. Rutjes was now proprietor of the National Hotel.

In Raleigh Cornelia met a young bookkeeper Mortimer Churchill (1843-1873) from Upstate New York. They were married on May 5, 1870 in Raleigh. Sadly, Mortimer died three years later of consumption. The couple had no children. The widowed Cornelia never remarried but instead lived with her parents until Théonie's death in 1876. Afterwards, she lived with relatives in New York, then Boston. Around 1906 she returned to New York and took a room in a women's boarding house in Manhattan, until she fell ill with cancer and died at the House of Calvary, a Catholic hospital for destitute women with terminal illness.

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A Historical Gown A modiste in Fourteenth street, New York, has on exhibition an elaborate satin gown, whose history can be traced without a break, it is claimed, to its original owner and wearer, Queen Marie Antoinette....Its asserted genuineness is thus made out: During the spring following the execution of Louis XVI, January 21, 1793, the revolutionary tribunal decreed that the furniture and entire contents of the Tuileries should be disposed of. The sale continued six months, and would have continued much longer had it not been legally stopped. Pierre de la Riviere, minister of foreign affairs, then bought three gowns belonging to Marie Antoinette, which passed to his son, who went to San Domingo, and fled, during the last insurrection on the island to Philadelphia. The gowns descended to his daughter, Mme. Remi Mignot, of Charleston, S.C., (granddaughter of Pierre de la Riviere), who was afterward married to M. Rutjes, of that city. Through her the pale yellow satin came into possession of her eldest daughter, now Mrs. Churchill, and from her the modiste purchased it some months ago....One of the two gowns, a blue one, was given to another daughter of Mme. Mignot, who, after marriage, removed to Holland, and it was used as covering for some handsome pieces of furniture now in possession of her husband, living at the little town of Einhoven, North Brabant. The third, a purple gown, having been owned by a sister of Mme. Mignot, returned to madame after her sister's death, and was burned during the great fire at Charleston in 1861. The authenticity of the sole surviving gown appears to be pretty well established. [The New York Times, June 19, 1880.]

Family links:

Parents:
 Théonie Marie Louise Alexandrine de la Rivière Mignot Rutjes (1819 - 1875)

Spouse:

 Mortimer W. Churchill (1843 - 1873)

Siblings:

 Adolphus John Mignot (1835 - 1911)*
 Adrian Paul Mignot (1844 - 1923)*
 Cornelia Rutjes Churchill (1851 - 1921)

*Calculated relationship

Note: Thanks due to Thomas Wayland for providing death certificate of Cornelia Churchell.

Burial: Calvary Cemetery Woodside Queens County New York, USA

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Created by: John W. Coffey Record added: Jan 01, 2013 Find A Grave Memorial# 102919140 Cornelia <i>Rutjes</i> Churchill Added by: Maspeth

Cornelia <i>Rutjes</i> Churchill Cemetery Photo Added by: ronzoni

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https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=102919140

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Cornelia Churchill's Timeline

1851
February 1851
Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, United States
1921
December 23, 1921
Age 70
Bronx, New York, Bronx County, New York, United States
????
Calvary Cemetery, New York, Queens County, New York, United States