letter excerpt The Dix Family Archive
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The Dix's


Edward Dix (1616)
John Dix (1640)
John Dix (1672)
John Dix (1702)
Jonathan Dix (1745)
John Dix (1782)
Asa Clapp Dix (~1813)
John Edwin Dix (1816)
Mary Adelaide Dix (1819)
Edwin Augustus Dix (1860)
William Frederick Dix (1867)
Alison Joy Dix (1905)
Tennille Dix (1902)
Norman Brooke Dix (1909)
Eleanor Alice Dix (1941)
Joy Tennille Dix (1947)
Elizabeth Gay Brooke Dix (1952)
Ann Alexandra Dix (1957)

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William Frederick Dix

[newspaper article text:]

The Orange Chronicle
Saturday, June 9, 1900

A charming wedding took place Saturday afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock, at the residence of Mr. And Mrs. William A. Tennille, 77 Carnegie avenue, East Orange, when their daughter, Miss Mary Alice Tennille, was married to William Frederick Dix, editor of the Home Journal, of New York, and son of Mr. And Mrs. John E. Dix, of 132 Harrison street, East Orange, formerly of Newark. There were only the immediate families and a few intimate friends present at the ceremony, which was solemnized by the Rev. Dr. James M. Ludlow, pastor of the Munn Avenue Presbyterian church, assisted by the Rev. John R. Fisher, of Newark, a cousin of the bridegroom. The house was elaborately decorated with palms and roses by Massman. The maid of honor was Miss Edith Ludlow, daughter of the officiating clergyman, and the bridesmaids were Miss Caroline Briggs, of New York, and Miss Sallie Miller, of Waterbury, Conn. The best man was Professor Howard Crosby Warren, of Princeton University, and the ushers were Charles G. Titsworth, of Newark; George F. Tennille and William A. Tennille, Jr., brothers of the bride, and Alden Freeman, of East Orange. The bride wore a rich gown of white satin closed at the throat, made with a full court train and trimmed with rare old point lace. She carried a bouquet of white bridal roses and wore a diamond brooch, the gift of the bridegroom. The maid of honor and the bridesmaids wore white organdie and large white hats and carried bouquets of pink roses. A large reception followed the ceremony, from 4 to 6 o'clock, and later Mr. And Mrs. Dix left on their wedding tour. They will reside in a house now being built for them on Harrison street.


Related Articles

North Jersey Courier, Friday, December 26, 1930
Collects Armor and Weapons Visits Strange Sections

Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History Of the Landed Gentry Including American Families With British Ancestry, 1939
Listing for William Frederick Dix

New York Herald Tribune, Wednesday, September 12, 1945
William F. Dix Dies



 

 



Copyright 2002 Gabriel Brooke, (website). Transcription and editing: John Thomas, (website). Design and production: Marc Kundmann, (website).