Elizabeth Clarke Mawney Cole (1813-1891)

Compiled and written by David R. Schleper, 2023

Elizabeth Clarke Mawney was born Aug. 13, 1813, in Cranston, Rhode Island. Her parents were John Mawney and Ruth C. Gladding Mawney (1790-1815). Elizabeth’s paternal grandparents were Dr. John Mawney (1750-1830) and Elizabeth Prentice Clarke Mawney (1765-1803).

Dr. Mawney was born in Cranston and was the son of John Mawney and Amey Gibbs of Providence, Rhode Island. He first married Nancy Wilson. The second marriage was with Elizabeth P. Clarke (1765-1803). Dr. Mawney was a physician, and a colonel in the Rhode Island Militia during the Revolutionary War, according to Gaspee Info.

He was a member of the party that burned the British vessel Gaspee in 1772, and following the incident removed a bullet from Lt. Duddingston, the vessel’s commander. Fifty years after the American Revolution, Dr. Mawney was among the four veterans of the Gaspee incident still living and was honored by the State of Rhode Island.

The Gaspee Affair was a significant event leading up to the American Revolution. HMS Gaspee was a British customs schooner that enforced the Navigation Acts in and around Newport, Rhode Island in 1772. According to an article, “An Act of War on the Eve of Revolution,” on the U.S. Naval Institute website, the Gaspee ran aground in shallow water while chasing the packet ship Hannah on June 9 near Gaspee Point in Warwick, Rhode Island. A group of men attacked, boarded, and torched the Gaspee.

The event increased tensions between the American colonists and British officials, following the Boston Massacre in 1770. British officials in Rhode Island wanted to increase their control over trade—legitimate trade as well as smuggling—to increase their revenue from the small colony. But Rhode Islanders increasingly protested the Stamp Act, the Townshend Acts, and other British impositions that had clashed with the colony’s history of rum manufacturing, slave trading, and other maritime exploits.

This event and others in Narragansett Bay marked the first acts of violent uprising against the British crown’s authority in America, preceding the Boston Tea Party by more than a year and moving the thirteen colonies toward the war for independence.

Elizabeth married William Albert Cole (1815-1902). William’s parents were William Davis Cole (1780-1842) and Mercy Pearce Cole (1782-1847). His grandparents were Capt. John Cole, Jr. (1749-1825), and Virtue Davis Cole (1755-1820); and Joseph Pearce (1760-1814) and Sarah Havens Pearce (1760-1845).

Elizabeth and William had eight children.

The first child was William Davis (1842-1880). William was a Civil War veteran and was buried near the front entrance of Valley Cemetery. He served in Company I of the Ninth Minnesota Infantry, along with several other Shakopee young men. William never married and returned home to Eagle Creek (now part of Shakopee) after the war to live with his parents and siblings and a neighbor to Samuel Pond. Sadly, he died at age 37 due to consumption, also known as tuberculosis.

Their second child was Henry Harry Barton (1843-1925). Harry, like his other siblings, was born in Baltimore City, Maryland, and moved to Eagle Creek. Like most of his siblings, Harry was buried at Valley Cemetery in Shakopee.

The next child was Sarah Elizabeth. Sarah, who was born in 1844 in Baltimore City, married Pvt. George Sidney Mayfield (1843-1932) in 1866. Both are buried in Valley Cemetery, with Sarah dying in 1918.

The fourth child of Elizabeth and William was Anna Frances (1846-1929). Anna married George Washington Murphy (1843-1918). George’s parents were Richard G. Murphy (1801-1875) and Sarah Sally Lemen Murphy (1809-1846). George lived with his family at what is now the Landing in Shakopee. He was also in the Civil War (1861-1865). In Valley Cemetery is a tall spire, which is a monument for Richard G. Murphy. Richard came to the Shakopee area after being appointed Indian Agent in the territory of Minnesota in 1848. He built a large hotel and operated a wharf and ferry service on the Minnesota River just east of Shakopee (now part of Shakopee), along with his youngest son, George. Anna and George were buried at Valley Cemetery.

The fifth and sixth children were Harriet Baron (1850-1924) and Kate (1851-1946). Harriet married George C. Christ (1833-1915). Kate married George A. Pettey (1841-1890), who was in the navy in 1863. All of them are buried at Valley Cemetery in Shakopee.

Elizabeth and William’s seventh child was Eliza Mercy (1853-1939). Eliza married Lewis Sharpless (1836-1899) in Shakopee on Nov. 3, 1885. Lewis first married Jane Burke, and they had five children before Lewis moved to Shakopee and married Eliza. Both Eliza and Lewis were buried at Valley Cemetery.

The final child born to Elizabeth and William was Minnesota (1855-1918). Minnesota, also known as Minnie, was born when Minnesota became a territory, and so that is why she was named Minnesota. Minnie married George Washington Kinsey (1834-1917). George is on the monument with William David Cole. He was another Civil War soldier. George married Minnie in 1882. They are both buried at Valley Cemetery.

Elizabeth Clarke Mawney Cole died Sept. 15, 1891, and was buried at Valley Cemetery in Shakopee, along with her husband and her children. A few years later, in 1902, William Albert Cole died.

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