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Sarah Knox Taylor : ウィキペディア英語版
Sarah Knox Taylor

Sarah Knox "Knoxie" Taylor Davis (March 6, 1814 – September 15, 1835) was the daughter of Zachary Taylor, who was a career military officer during her life and later became President of the United States. She met Jefferson Davis when living with her father and family at Fort Crawford during the Black Hawk War. They married in 1835 and she died three months later of malaria.
Margaret Mackall (Smith) and Zachary Taylor had three surviving daughters and one son. Sarah Knox Taylor was their second child and spent some years growing up in military installations. Her father became a general and commanded forts; her mother provided most of her education. Sarah was given the nickname "Knoxie," which originated from her middle name and from Fort Knox II in Vincennes, Indiana, where she was born. In the early 1830s, her father commanded Fort Crawford at Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, and was involved in waging the Black Hawk War. His wife and children were living there with him.
At age 17, Sarah fell in love with Jefferson Davis, a recent graduate of the United States Military Academy and a lieutenant, who was second to General Taylor at the fort. Davis was transferred to St. Louis in 1833, yet managed to keep in contact with the woman whom he wished to marry. Taylor admired Davis for his soldiering skills but opposed the romantic match. The Taylors' older daughter had already married Army surgeon Robert Crooke Wood, and they were raising three young children in a desolate frontier outpost. Together with their own experience, the Taylors felt that the military life was too hard and did not want Sarah to be an Army wife.〔Cooper 2000, p. 65.〕
==Marriage and death==
After discussions with his older brother Joseph Emory Davis, Jefferson decided to resign from the Army so that he could marry Sarah. He returned to Mississippi to develop his Brierfield Plantation next to his brother's Hurricane Plantation. Joseph gave Jefferson the land, called Brierfield because it was largely covered with brush and briers.〔Cooper 2000, pp. 75–79.〕
He and Sarah Taylor (now 21 years old) married on June 17, 1835, at the home of her aunt, near Louisville, Kentucky.〔Davis 1996, pp. 69, 72.〕 Both of the newlyweds contracted malaria on a summer visit to Davis's sister, Anna Davis Smith, in St. Francisville, Louisiana. Sarah died of it, just three months after her marriage to Jefferson, still at his sister's home. Jefferson nearly died of it as well.〔Davis 1996, 74–75.〕
The young Mrs. Davis was laid to rest near other members of Jefferson Davis's family, in the cemetery located on the site of the (former) Locust Grove Plantation. The cemetery has been preserved by the state and is now known as the Locust Grove State Historic Site.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Sarah Knox Taylor Davis 1814–1835, Wife of Jefferson Davis )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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