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Mary Ellison Baars

1,610 bytes added, 20:57, 17 October 2008
New page: {{Infobox Biography | subject_name =Mary Ellison Baars | image_name = | image_size =225px | image_caption = | date_of_birth = | place_of_birth =June 10, 1855 | date_of_...
{{Infobox Biography
| subject_name =Mary Ellison Baars
| image_name =
| image_size =225px
| image_caption =
| date_of_birth =
| place_of_birth =[[June 10]], [[1855]]
| date_of_death =
| place_of_death =
| occupation =
| religion =[[Christ Episcopal Church|Episcopalian]]
| spouse =[[Henry Baars]]
| parents =John Franklin and Annie Bryan Dunwody
| children =[[John Ernest Baars]]<br/>[[Theo Dunwody Baars]]<br/>Annie Ellison<br/>Henry Baars, Jr.
}}
'''Mary Ellison Baars''', née '''Dunwody''', was the wife of [[Henry Baars]].

Henry and Mary Ellison met after the [[Civil War]], as Henry was re-establishing his company's office in Savannah, Georgia. They were married, and in [[1870]] Henry elected to move to Pensacola, where lumbering prospects seemed far better. From [[1871]] forward, fortune smiled upon the Baars. They had eight children, four of whom survived infancy.

Throughout their married life, Henry and Mary Ellison Baars enjoyed a unique "game". On gift giving occasions, he would ask her what she wanted, and she would respond: "Just buy me a piece of land." Baars did, and eventually Mary Ellison's holdings exceeded 6000 acres, all in the path of the city's growth. At one time, the Baars built [[Cordova|a mansion]] on the city's perimeter. Mary Ellison intended to develop the surrounding area with vacation homes for wealthy northerners; however, the plan was scrapped when economic conditions soured, and the area was eventually developed as the [[Cordova Park]] neighborhood.

{{bio-stub}}
[[Category:Baars family|Baars, Mary Ellison]]

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