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Matches 10,601 to 10,850 of 12,200

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10601 She was a quaker who only married to Thomas Sprigg when he converted. Galloway, Elizabeth (I8023)
 
10602 She was a Quaker who seems to have convinced her husband. Morgan, Jemima (I12104)
 
10603 She was a Quaker, but her husband was not, at marriage. Because their children were born/recorded in the West River meeting books, he must have converted to Quakerism at their marriage.

She is included on the Quaker Ancestors page.

On this family, see:

1. Giles, Louis F., "The Giles Family of Harford County," MGSB 35 (1) (Winter 1994) 3-21.
2. Giles, Louis F., III, "The Giles Family of Old Somerset," MGSB 27 (2) (Spring 1987) 226-232. 
Giles, Elizabeth (I4065)
 
10604 She was a Queen of Rex in 1924. Fayssoux, Margaret Hayward (I3308)
 
10605 She was a remarkable woman and a key to much later genealogical history, if only by the number of her descendants.

According to Richard Hutchinson, "William And Ann (Simpson) Hutchinson lived in both Middlesex County and Monmouth County, New Jersey, in the early 1700s. They had 13 children. We know this fact because of the inscription on Ann's gravestone in the family burial plot on their homestead land. The inscription reads: "Sacred to the Memory of Ann Hutchinson, Relict of Wm Hutchinson Esqr. departed this Life Jany. 4th 1801. Aged 101 years 9 Months and seven days. She was mother of 13 children, and Grand Mother and great grand mother, & great great Grand Mother of 375 Persons." Their first born child was a Robert Hutchinson, born 11 December 1720. Therefore, one can assume that they were married in, or about, 1720."

See under her husband's narrative for information about her burial place. 
Simpson, Ann (I763)
 
10606 She was a sister to John Gregg Fee the abolitionist and founder of Berea college, but in 1849 she was married to a slaveowner. Fee, Adeliza (I9899)
 
10607 She was a widow by then, and "age 50" Simmons, Caroline Rebecca (I117)
 
10608 She was a widow living in Taylor's Court, Bow Lane, London in 1705 (S192, 71). Woodward, Mary (I9203)
 
10609 She was a widow when she married Benjamin Waters, so Fowler may not be her maiden name. Fowler, Hannah (I8689)
 
10610 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5025)
 
10611 She was adopted from the orphanage asylum by the Harding family, who were friends of her mother's.

In the 1900 census she has been married to J.D. Stephens, and has not yet had any children. He is a plantation overseer.

In the 1920 census her birth place is given as Maryland, but this must be her; she has four girls, and children's names match up with her obituary. 
Bemiss, Alice (I13046)
 
10612 She was aged 18 at her marriage (according to the 1930 census, where she is aged 22). This would mean that she was married in about 1926. This differs from the Von Rosenberg family history, which only gives one wife for William Wesley, Murrel Adams. I assume that Murrel Adams was his first wife, and this one was his second. This second wife makes sense to have married him in 1926 because the children are born soon after that.

It is conceivable that her names is "Lessie Murrell Adams," but the dates don't fit. 
Lessie (?) M. (I10514)
 
10613 She was aged “vingt-deuze” at her marriage. Boiaval, Elizabeth (I8340)
 
10614 She was an art student of her father's. He died in her house in February of 1891. Lungkwitz, Helene Clara (I1878)
 
10615 She was an immigrant from Ireland. O'Brian, Nancy (I2244)
 
10616 She was Andrew Harwood's second wife.

In the 1880 census, she and her husband are living next to a Luce famiy, Joseph (aged 57), and his wife Emma B. (aged 28), all born in Massachusetts. 
Luce, Margaret Bleecker (I1671)
 
10617 She was apparently her husband John's second wife.

Her brother-in-law William also married a Knox. 
Knox, Joanna (I8186)
 
10618 She was apparently named in honor of William of Orange, which tells something of the family's protestant political leanings, and the reason for emigration after supporting the Stuarts. Weems, Williamina (I7057)
 
10619 She was appointed an elder of Goshen Meeting in 1796. Pratt, Sarah (I2537)
 
10620 She was at the State Normal School in Towson, Maryland in March of 1934. Riggs, Katherine Lansdale (I599)
 
10621 She was born 10 days before her father's death. JLSr. remembers meeting her in Baltimore when she was an old, and still handsome, lady.

She was still living in 1902, according to receipts I have. Her portrait, with her husband, was painted by Hans Heinrich (or Henry) Bebie (d. 1888).

This couple had no children, but they adopted Eleanor Freeland. According to Eleanor's letter dated Nov. 10, 1926, they were married in the parlor at Essex "over 70 years ago."

It would seem that she died around 1902; there are receipts from 1903 which describe Eleanor their adopted daughter as the adminstrator of Dr. Robert's estate. 
Franklin, Maria Waters (I351)
 
10622 She was born 1678, but baptized 1698, apparently to convert to be Episcopalian to marry her husband. She is included on the Quaker Ancestors page.

She inherited 164 acres of Bridge Hill and Doden when her mother died, and this couple lived at Bridge Hill, where all of their children were born (S207, p. 33). 
Plummer, Elizabeth (I3453)
 
10623 She was born during the last of the great outbreaks of the Plague that had started in Europe in 1348 and recurred for centuries. This is why she was baptized two years late. The Parish records for Allauch and the Marseille area are very sparse for the later part of 1720. See here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Plague_of_Marseille Jullien, Claire (I16331)
 
10624 She was born in the winter, in the middle of a great blizzard.

In the photo, John Lansdale is on the left, Margaret Hall is in the middle, and Chloe Wimberly is on the right. It is at "Enfield" in April of 1906.

According to Phoebe Taylor (Jan, 2004), "Chloe Wimberly Lansdale and Douglass Riggs helped my father-in-law [Richard Hyatt Sr.] raise Margaret, Richard and Tom after Olivia drowned in that Maryland mental hospital. Aunt Chloe died in the early 1970s after a long nursing home stay in Sandy Spring following a debilitating stroke. Douglass has also died." 
Lansdale, Chloe Wimberly (I36)
 
10625 She was born in Virginia, but her grandmother Elizabeth Brashear had moved from Virginia to Maryland in 1663; there must have been movement back and forth up and down the Chesapeake, then, in her parents' and grandparents' generations. Sellman, Ann (I3328)
 
10626 she was born on a trip north from new Orleans to Philadelphia. According to her sister Cecilia's notes in the family records,

"Nous sommes partié pour le nort le 27 d'Avril 1851."
"Nous sommes arrivé de Nord let 3 Septembre 1851."

In 1870, I assume that "Laura, Carlene, and Emma" are Daniel Maupay's children living with their oldest sister Cecilia and his son-in-law Gustave Pitard's family:

1870 U.S. Federal Census > Louisiana > Orleans > New Orleans Ward 4 > Page 763
Dwelling 435/Family 436
C.H. Fernandez, 65, female, white, $5000 real estate value, $2000 personal property,b LA
Emilia Pitard, 52 (sic), white, b LA
Gustav Pitard, 31, clerk at cotton p..ker, b LA
Daniel Pitard, 7 months, b LA (B Nov 1869)
Laura Maupay, 20, white, at home, b LA
Carlene Maupay, 19, white, b LA
Emma Maupay, 17, white , b LA,
Jane Henry, 62, black, domestic servant, b LA
Matilda Henry, 25, black, domestic servant, b LA

1880 U.S. Federal Census > Louisiana > Orleans > All Townships > District 29 > Page 46C
Dwelling 155/Family 215
G. Pitard, white, male, 42, head, married, hardware, he and parents b LA
Cecile, white, female, 32, wife, married, keeps house, b LA, father b Pa, mother b LA
Wid. Fernandez, white, 74, grandmother, widowed, at home, she and parents b LA
Daniel Pitard, white, 10, son, at school, b LA
Gustave Pitard, white, 9, son, at school, b LA
Anita Mesh, mulatto, 38, servant, widowed, she and parents b Mexico
Fernand Mesh, mulatto, 7, servant, he and parents b Mexico
Jos. W. Gall, mulatto, 20, servant, he and parents b Mexico 
Maupay, Caroline (I6225)
 
10627 She was born only three days before her mother died.

The dates line up with James Savage's first wife, but she carries the middle name of his second. 
Savage, Susan Duff (I5853)
 
10628 She was buried with her parents' family, the Coopers; this is the inscription:

NOT DEAD BUT ONLY SLEEPING
MY DARLING MAMMA
MARGARET ANNA COOPER
WIDOW OF THE LATE
THOMAS YOUNG PAYNE TUREMAN
BORN
JUNE 16, 1848
ENTERED INTO HEAVEN
DECEMBER 2, 1902
A NATIVE OF NEW ORLEANS
MAY HER SOUL REST IN PEACE
"THE DEATH OF THE SAINTS
IS DEATH OF THE LORD" 
Cooper, Margaret Anna (I4360)
 
10629 She was called "Aunt Mary" by the family of John Lansdale, Jr.; his daughter Mary Lansdale (I29) was named after her, as her family were close friends of the Lansdales.

She was apparently quite a pistol of a personality. She was a strong woman, long-lived, who drank old-fashioneds until the day she died.

She lived at “Tudor,” where there are a number of family pictures take around 1940. Tudor has since burned. 
Estep, Mary Louisa (I5101)
 
10630 She was called "Lottchen." According to Alma Julie von Rosenberg's notes, she was "the daughter of the brother of Dorothea Froelich . . . [and] a cousin of the children of Peter Carl von R [the immigrant] and the very special favorite of Johannes Carl von Rosenberg [Peter Carl's son b. 1826-d. 1906, and Alma Julie's grandfather, so presumably this story has some authority]. This Charlotte, called "Lottchen," was the cousin to whom Carl Johannes [sic] finally condescended to answer a letter after he had firmly declared he would never write a letter to any one in Germany again, because of the grief of the mistreatment of them all during the political upheaval, the sacrifice of their beautiful home, the loss of their jobs after a splendid education—and to Texas for a better life—and they found it too. And this letter was answered after thirty years—because she pleaded for news from them all." Froelich, Caroline Marie Charlotte (I5475)
 
10631 She was called "Mère." There is a picture of her in family video. Gamard, Lucie Caroline (I45)
 
10632 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5031)
 
10633 She was descended from a Revolutionary War veteran, Sgt. Joseph Coombs (1752-1817), who appears in the DAR registers; several of her descendants name her as a step on the way back. Coombs, Nancy (I3574)
 
10634 She was descended from Chester Co., Pennsylvania Quaker families. According to the Woodward history, "E. Malinda, daughter of Caleb, married John Lansdale, and had three children; she resides in Washington, D.C., and, with her sister, Mary Edwards, are the only two of the family now living [in 1879]."

She is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. 
Woodward, Emma Malinda (I6879)
 
10635 She was descended from Friends in Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania, from Sadsbury Meeting. Her father had moved to New Orleans in 1830 from Phila., and in the process moved away from Quakerism.

Despite her northern and Quaker ancestry, she was very involved in the United Confederate Veterans association. Confederate Veterans July 1909: 7-8 Magazine records her election, at the South Carolina UCV Reunion, as a vice-president for the Mississippi Chapter. Also mentioned is "Mrs. W.J. Behan," of New Orleans, re-elected as the President, and Daisy M.L. Hodgson of New Orleans, re-elected as recording secretary.

One meeting in New Orleans of the local Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy, on Jan. 19, 1901 (Lee's Birthday) from the Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 28, ed. Reverend J. William Jones, can found at the Perseus Project (http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/); it records that she was elected president of the local chapter in 1901:

"The natal day of General Robert Edward Lee, appropriately observed throughout the South, Jan. 19, 1901.
The exercises at New Orleans, La., under the auspices of the local Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy, peculiarly impressive. [ . . . ]
Mrs. Alden McLellan, Chairman of Committee on Designs, said:
Your Committee on Designs begs leave to report that during the past year floral tributes were sent for [ . . . ]
The annual election of officers was then declared in order, and Mrs. Dickson was gracefully honored with a renomination. In a few pleasant remarks Mrs. Dickson thanked the Chapter for the honor conferred upon her, but declined the nomination, expressing her belief in rotation in office.
Mrs. Alden McLellan, wife of General Alden McLellan, President of the Soldiers' Home, and one of the most lovable women in the Chapter and a most devoted worker was then put in nomination for the Presidency and unanimously elected.
In a few pleasant remarks Mrs. McLellan expressed her appreciation of the high honor conferred upon her. [ . . . ]
The hearing of reports and election of officers being finished, the remainder of the session was devoted to exercises in which the most beautiful and touching tributes were paid to the memory of General Lee. [ . . . ]"

She presided later that year at Jefferson Davis's birthday celebration (see in the Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29, ed. Reverend J. William Jones, found at the Perseus Project [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/]).

She is buried in the McLellan tomb in Lafayette Cemetery, with this inscription:

SARAH. J. COOPER
WIFE OF
ALDEN McLELLAN
BORN OCT. 2, 1844
DIED OCT. 18, 1911
[OBVERSE]
SARAH J. COOPER 
Cooper, Sarah Jane (I52)
 
10636 She was descended from the Mason family of Virginia. Page, Jane Byrd (I12418)
 
10637 She was descended from the Ridgelys, but since it is via a female line, Newman does not explain how (see 2.461, 3.152, where Elizabeth Ridgely m. Thomas Maccauley; and 3.176). Maccauley, Mabel (I5771)
 
10638 She was first married to a man named Montana. She had four children by that first marriage. Mangiardi, Frances (I14696)
 
10639 She was first married to a Mr. Chubbuck; living with her in the 1880 census is a "son," Edward, aged 12, whom I guess is by her first marriage. Terrell, Clara (I6386)
 
10640 She was for a time living in Jackson, Mississippi with her uncle Robert Pitard, the violinst. In her 1923 wedding announcement to Paul Turnbull she is named as his former assistant.

U.S. City Directories have an entry for "Blanche C. Turnbull" in 1925 living at 3112 W. College in Shreveport, La. In 1956, she is still living in Shreveport, a office secretary. 
Coffee, Blanche M. (I7587)
 
10641 She was from Saint-Domingue. She most likely fled the slave revolts on the islands in the 1790s. Many of those fleeing went to Cuba, esp. to Santiago, where their daughter Isabel was born. Benjamin's baptismal certificate notes the parents' origins.

The only person I can find who might be her in the 1850 census is the "widow Laurent," living in the 3rd Ward, 1st Municipality of New Orleans, but she is aged 39 (and born in Lousiana), not over 75. 
Laurens, Susanna (I5016)
 
10642 She was her husband Heinrich's second wife. Named as the daughter of Johann Wilhelm on the Geschlechts register.

According to the von Lieven history, she lived with her husband for 43 years 6 months, and gave birth to 2 sons, 6 daughters, of whom 4 daughters survived to adulthood.

On the von Rosenberg Stammtafel she is named Anna Katharine v. Kosskolls Berghoff. 
von Koskull, Anna Catherina (I16621)
 
10643 She was in some way disabled. In his will, her father George says that “I will and bequeath all of the property real and personal of which I die possessed to my Wife to assist in raising the children dependant up on at this writing and to care for as much as possible my youngest Daughter who is of unsound mind.” Hemenway, Rose (I14626)
 
10644 She was Joseph Cope's second wife. Gilbert, Eliza (I10840)
 
10645 She was killed in a sleighing accident at the foot of Catholic Church Hill in Owensville. McCaleb, Annie C. (I7110)
 
10646 She was killed in a traffic accident. Brown, Blanche (I14572)
 
10647 She was known as "Granmama" to her grandchildren. She was also the family historian for the von Rosenberg family, and the author and compiler of the first volume of the von Rosenberg family history. von Rosenberg, Alma Julie (I14)
 
10648 She was known as "Julchen." She had 12 children, and so was a very busy housekeeper. She and her neighbors would arrange turns cooking soup for more indigent neighbors. She was a small person, very energetic, and wore her hair in braids around her head with a velvet bow. She died at 65 of uremia. Groos, Julie Wilhelmine Christine (I19)
 
10649 She was known as "Mistress Anne," and was a Quaker Minister. Also called "Hannah."

According to Kelley, "An interesting minute of a 1694 Meeting at the home of Richard Galloway II, now ‘Cedar Park,' follows: ‘It is the unanimous consent of the Women Friends of the Women's Yearly Meeting than an Epistell be writ unto our friends and sister in London and it is agreed by the consent of the said Meeting that our friend and sister Anna Galloway should write it.' Ann Galloway, the wife of Samuel Galloway I, was called a Quaker Minister in 1697. As has been previously indicated, she is affectionately referred to by her present-day descendants as ‘Mistress Ann'" (59).

Was she, possibly, related to the Richard Webb who immigrated to Chester Co., Pennsylvania in 1700? 
Webb, Anne (I7952)
 
10650 She was known as "Weenie," and was much beloved. Clearly, from her portrait and textiles she produced, including a quilt and two couch pillows that remain, her favorite color was maroon. Some of her tapestries/wall hangings are in the Louisiana State Museum in their textiles collection, as examples of Newcomb Style Art Embroidery.

She was for a time the Recording Secretary of the Orleans club. She also kept clippings of all social events in New Orleans which her family was involved with or attended--and there were many.

Note this resource, described here: http://www.nutrias.org/~nopl/spec/scrapbks.htm, in the Scrapbook collection of the Louisiana Division of the New Orleans Public Library:
Programs, ca. 1896-1906 [#35]; 2 v.
Clippings from programs of concerts, operas, plays and other events in New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, and possibly elsewhere. At least one of the volumes was kept by Mrs. A. W. McClellan. Both are small (6"x9") notebooks with clippings pasted in. Handwritten marginal notes indicate when, where, and with whom the various performances were viewed. Volume 2 appears to have been used as a diary or for other writings before the clippings were added. It also includes a program for the inaugural ceremonies of E. A. Alderman as president of Tulane University in 1901, a partial program for the St. John Rowing Club's races in 1900, and a partial program for the Crescent City Jockey Club dated March 17, 1900. Volume 1 includes a "programme" for New York's Cafe Boulevard. 
Degrange, Helen Pauline "Weenie" (I51)
 
10651 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2133)
 
10652 She was living in her granddaughter Aline's household. Normand, Cidalise (I4857)
 
10653 She was living in Scranton, PA in about 1920. Hutton, Edith (I4078)
 
10654 She was living with her father Joseph in the 1860 census, named Priscilla Busey.

Her children Joseph and Thomas were living with her in 1860. Joseph died in West River a few years later, and Capt. Thomas Skinner was named as his father. I assume that Thomas, a ship's captain, was often away, and that Priscilla lived in her father's household with their children.

The children do not seem to have returned to Baltimore.

Dr. Waters' account book notes that her account was "settled in full" in November of 1867 by "M.R. Bucey," who I assume is her sister Marion Rebecca. When this appears in Dr. Waters' account books, it often means that the patient has died. 
Bucey, Priscilla (I6847)
 
10655 She was living with her sister Mary Strain at the 1880 census.

There was another Nancy Jane Strain who m. William Bowie on May 1, 1834; this is not the same! That Nancy Jane was the daughter of Robert and Mary Wilson Strain. According to the Bowie family history, the Nancy J. Strain who married William Bowie had a younger brother James Madison Strain who lived in Pittsboro, MS (317). 
Strain, Nancy Jane (I3869)
 
10656 She was married at age 17; the Justice of the Peace signed a consent for her to marry JH DeGrange; the guardian's/notary's name is Drosain Matrijean. [This is the husband of her half-sister Julia Fields.]

On her marriage certificate, she is named the daughter of "John McMilland & Mary."

Her funeral was at St. Theresa's Church. She is buried in the DeGrange tomb in Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans.

A burial record in St. Louis #2 simply says "Degrange, infant of Mrs., died June 11, 1874." 
McMillan, Ellen (I199)
 
10657 She was married at the Watkins-Hecht house, "Middlegate," in Pass Christian, a house with some beautiful gardens that was apparently lost in Katrina. Hecht, Dorothy Watkins (I6351)
 
10658 She was married before she was 16. She was "beloved by all" and fondly remembered by her grandchildren since she took care of them after their mother, her daughter Johanna's, death, until her son-in-law Peter Carl re-married four years later. Veithofer, Johanna Dorothea (I3619)
 
10659 She was married first to a Dent. Wilkinson, Rebecca (I4420)
 
10660 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I28)
 
10661 She was not Margery Beall, daughter of Ninian Beall? Wight, Margery (I9050)
 
10662 She was not quite 28 when married. Ogilvie, Amalie Dorothea (I12976)
 
10663 She was of Welsh background. She was a nurse, and met her husband when he was wounded during the Revolution. Jones, Elve Ap Catesby (I4011)
 
10664 She was probably born in St. Domingue in 1804. Church records are missing after 1803 in Port-au-Prince. Her family was in Port-au-Prince then, since her father signed another birth record there as a witness that year, and her brother Augustin died there that year. Pitard, Angelique Adelaide (I17188)
 
10665 She was probably, according to Newman, the daughter of George Traherne of Virginia. Traherne, Elizabeth (I12102)
 
10666 She was read out of the Phila. Monthly Meeting for her second marriage to John Clark in 1746. Bolton, Hannah (I16350)
 
10667 She was reburied in Grandview Cemetery in Campbell Co. in 1965. Houseman, Katherine (I9881)
 
10668 She was related to the Carrolls of Carrollton in some way. Carroll, Mary Clementine (I12353)
 
10669 She was second married to a von Ruck or von Ryk. von Rosenberg, Louise (I16808)
 
10670 She was the 6th grandchild of Metta Brossman, the only one (I think) born after her death in 1928. The first 4 were photographed at her funeral, standing in a row with the tallest behind. von Rosenberg, Lois June (I288)
 
10671 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I11010)
 
10672 She was the daughter of Richard Warfield and Sarah Gaither (See Newman, AAG 1.90, 1.447)

She was listed as Head of Household in the 1790 census, so her husband must have died that year before it was taken. 
Warfield, Elizabeth (I2071)
 
10673 She was the executrix of her husband's will in 1792-93.

Her Boothbay birth record says December 2, 1741, but this must be an error for Dec. 2, 1751. She is listed as Israel Davis' second child, and Hannah Davis, b. 1755, is described as her third.

Charles, the son of Israel, is baptized in Ipswich in 1750. Sarah daughter of Israel is baptized there in 1751. Only the year is given for the two children. I assume, though, that these account for this place which Israel lived before his second marriage there, ins 1754, to Sarah Dresser. 
Davis, Sarah (I6113)
 
10674 She was the last Battee who owned Essex; she passed it on in her will to her nephew Benjamin Franklin (1783-1822, the son of her sister Anne Battee and Jacob Franklin). His portrait was in the parlor at Essex.

Will, 39 fol. 109, dated Mar. 14, 1822. Mary Deale here is Mary Franklin Deale (1777-1812; I3330); her son is James Deale (1810-1876, I3817):

"In the name of God, Amen--I Elizabeth Battee of Anne Arundel County in the State of Maryland, being of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding to make this my last Will and Testament and aftere the payment of my debts and funeral charges I give and devise as follows, to wit:

"I give and devise my undevided moiety of a tract or parcel of land adjoining Richard Harwood, Osborn S. Harwood, Doctor William Murray and Thomas Bird to James Deale, eldest son of my last neice Mary Deale, to him and his heirs forever.

"I give and devise my undevided moiety of the farm on which I now dwell Benjamin Franklin, my nephew, and to his heirs forever, provided he will give up his undevided moiety onf the tract or parcel of land adjoining the Estate of Richard Harwood, Osborn S. Harwood, Doctor Wiliam Murray and Thomas Bird to James Deale, eldest son of my late neice Mary Deale, and his heirs forever, and in case my nephew Benjamin Franklin will not give up his part of the land above described to James Deale (son of my last neice Mary Deale, it is then my will that James Deale, sone of my last neice Mary Deale shall have my undevided moiety of the lands on which I dwell to hiim and his heirs forver.

"Signed--Elizabeth Battee (seal)
Witnesses: James N. Stockett, Thomas Leitch, Francis Bird." 
Battee, Elizabeth "Aunt Betty" (I3340)
 
10675 She was the last of the sisters to be living; she was living alone, in a boarding house, in the 1920 census. She lists her mother's birthplace as Puerto Rico on the 1900 and 1920 censuses. Pitard, Rosa (I13654)
 
10676 She was the last owner of Tulip Hill by direct descent; it was sold in 1877 to Henry M. Murray, whose wife was a relative via the Galloways. Hughes, Anne Sarah (I7916)
 
10677 She was the mother of 9 children with her husband before she died. Rodriguez, Gertrude (I8947)
 
10678 She was the niece of His Eminence Cardinal Gibbons, who officiated at her funeral in 1909 with much ceremony, according to contemporary newspaper accounts. Swarbrick, Alice Mary (I13918)
 
10679 She was the only one of her siblings to marry. All the rest lived together at "Essex" their whole lives. Waters, Catharine "Kate" (I5142)
 
10680 She was the second of Friedrich Casimir von Lysander's three wives. von Rosenberg (I16655)
 
10681 She was the second wife of Johann Groos the Elder, and probably the father of Antonius. Catherina (I2718)
 
10682 She was the widow of Jacob Mercer as her first husband. Wolden, Mary (I16902)
 
10683 She was there on a visit to her son. Love, Jane (I13233)
 
10684 She was under the age of 15 when her father George Yate died. Yate, Anne (I5417)
 
10685 She was unmarried as of 7 Dec. 1663, about the time of her sister Susanna's death. Ewen, Ann (I8403)
 
10686 She was widowed before 1931. Gamard, Katie Alice (I3684)
 
10687 She was widowed before the 1880 census. Elizabeth (I3471)
 
10688 She was “single” at her death. Somersett, Emma M. (I14174)
 
10689 She was, according to John Hall, "one of the loveliest characters I ever knew. I am very glad I lived to know that generation. [. . .] They were born before the Civil War, and in their childhood imbibed the charm and noble characteristics of that wonderful period; they never loast it, and were always to me very charming and attractive. Although a great many of them lived through those two very great convulsions of our modern American civilization, the Civil and World Wars, they were not spoiled by them."

From J. Harris Franklin's genealogical notebook: "'Aunt Liza'--Her father's daughter--a devoted wife and kinswoman." After her father's death, in 1896, she finally married her long-time fiancée. His notebook has her marriage date as October 25, 1896. She also wrote two memoirs about the family.

A plaque dedicated to her is placed at old St. James Parish church. 
Franklin, Eliza (I602)
 
10690 She was, like her sister Harriet, a well-known American sculptor. She specialized especially in animals. See her entry at the Wikipedia. She married into the wealthy Huntington family who are noted for, among other things, the Huntington Library in Los Angeles. Hyatt, Anna Vaughn (I3946)
 
10691 She was, like her sister, a noted sculptor. Hyatt, Harriet Randolph (I3945)
 
10692 She works on updating and correcting aspects of Kendall's work on the Quaker Greggs. Source (S509)
 
10693 She would seem to be named "Elizabeth" here, aged 1 Lyons, Mary Elizabeth (I16562)
 
10694 She would seem to be related to the Thomas family of West river, but note that her son Gerald married into the Sandy Spring Quaker family of Brooke.

"Another prominent union of Quaker families occurred when Johns Hopkins I and Elizabeth Thomas declared their intentions and were married on February 16, 1759, in accordance with Quaker rites. Elizabeth was the daughter of Samuel and Mary Snowden Thomas. Johns Hopkins I had married Mary Gillis and after her death Mary Richardson Crockett, widow and daughter of Joseph Richardson. Samuel Hopkins, who was born in February 3, 1759, the son of Johns Hopkins I and Elizabeth Thomas, married Hannah, daughter of Joseph and Hannah Jones Janney in August, 1792. Their son, born in May 16, 1795, became the great Baltimore Financier." 
Thomas, Elizabeth (I5530)
 
10695 She would seem to be the “E.A. Eagan” with her father on the 1880 census?

She was a pianist who performed at concerts with Robert Pitard in the Pitard-Eagan orchestra before they were married at Crystal Springs, called the Mississippi Chautauqua.

Wedding announcement, Times-Picayune, 15 Aug. 1906, p11:

Pitard-Eagan

Crystal Springs, Miss., Aug. 14 - Miss Kate Eagan and Robert C. Pitard, of New Orleans, were married here to-night at the home of the bride, by Rev. H. Walter Featherstun. The bride, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I.M. Eagan, was in charge of the music department at Belhaven College, Jackson, Miss., last sessions. The groom is one of the leading musicians of the South. A reception was held at the home of the bride's parents, the couple departing for their home, in Jackson.

her gravestone says “Little Bobbie and his Mother,” would mean that she had a son named Robert as well. 
Eagan, Kate (I6233)
 
10696 She's there as a 20 year old in the 1850 census, but Eaton only lists the two older children, not her. McLellan, Amiah (I14332)
 
10697 She, with her sister Estelle and cousin Helen McLellan, used to attend Camp Thorvald in Sewanee, Tennessee; pictures of her exist from 1918, though not after.

She lived on Audubon Place in the late 1960s / early 1970s. 
McLellan, Anna (I85)
 
10698 Sheriff and later Judge in Cooper Co., Missouri. Lionberger, Isaac H. (I7204)
 
10699 Shirk names her as Hester; Newman, whose work was later, names her as Anne, and her mother as Hester the wife of Thomas Besson, whose land adjoined Gassaways. Besson, Anne (I6536)
 
10700 shoemaker; married to Antonina DiVittorio Di Vittorio, Onofrio (I17251)
 
10701 Short article in New Orleans States, 18 May 1919, p9:

File Suit to Recover Interest in Lost Shares

Miss Grace Feahney, Miss Lelia Feahney, Mrs. Edna Feahney Hoffman, and Mrs. Floryda Feahney Michel, children and heirs of the late Charles Feahney, filed suit in the Civil District court Saturday against their mother, Mrs. Grace Bennett Feahney, widow of Charles Feahney and the Hibernia Bank and Trust Company, to recover their interest in five shares of capital stock of the defendant bank, together with dividends accrued theron from the date of an alleged transfer of the stock, as they were respectively paid.

Also see in Times-Picayune, 18 May 1919, p3:

The ownership of five shares of the capital stock of the Hibernia Bank and Trust Company, valued at $2400, is claimed in a suit filed Saturday in the Civil District Court by Grace Feahney, Lelia Feahney, Mrs. Floryda Feahney Michel, and Mrs. Edna Feahney Hoffman, four of the six children and sole heirs of the late Charles Feahney, formerly a grocer here. The plaintiffs claim Mrs. Grace Bennet Feahney, widow in the community of Charles Feahney, pledged this stock to secure personal debts, and that the bank has improperly transferred the certificates to persons unknown to the petitioners. 
Bennett, Grace Fairbanks (I742)
 
10702 signed his name as “William Michel Burns.” Gives a relative who will always know his address as Mrs. J.D. Mayorga, at 1005 Joseph St. He was working for H.G. Hills, a store at Calliope and Broad. Burns, William J. Jr. (I15469)
 
10703 Signer of the Declaration of Independence; Governor of Maryland. See his entry in the American National Biography. He had his portrait painted twice by Charles Wilson Peale, in 1823 and 1836 (see the Annapolis Collection at the Maryland Archives, Accession numbers:  MSA SC 1545-1056 and MSA SC 1545-1117; they are in the Maryland State House).

According to the U.S. Congress Biographical Directory, he was a "Delegate from Maryland; born at "Wye Hall," near Abingdon, Queen Anne (now Harford) County, Md., October 31, 1740; was graduated from Philadelphia College in 1759; studied law in Annapolis, Md., and in the Middle Temple, London, England; was admitted to the bar in 1764; returned home and commenced the practice of his profession at Annapolis in 1764; member of the provincial assembly 1771-1774; Member of the Continental Congress 1774-1779; a signer of the Declaration of Independence; served in the State senate 1777-1779; chief judge of the superior court of Maryland 1778-1780; chief justice of the court of appeals in prize and admiralty cases 1780-1782; Governor of Maryland from November 1782 to November 1785; was influential in establishing Washington College in Chestertown, Md., in 1786; delegate to the State convention in 1788 which ratified the Federal Constitution; appointed by President Washington as judge of the United States Court for Maryland and served from 1789 until his death at "Wye Hall," Queen Anne County, Md., October 23, 1799; interment in the family burial ground, Queen Anne County, Md."

His house is quite a beautiful place, in Maryland (see www.annapolis.org). 
Paca, Governor William (I9011)
 
10704 Simpson history gives 1889 as birth year, but I go with the year from the 1900 census McCormick, Ella Boyce (I7648)
 
10705 Simpson history says 1880, but I go with the year from the 1900 census McCormick, Hallie Emily (I7645)
 
10706 Sister of August Siemering. She was the mother of 8 children with Friedrich Groos between 1875 and 1888. Siemering, Anna (I8948)
 
10707 Sister of Patrick Henry. Henry, Elizabeth (I13980)
 
10708 Sister to his first wife Charlotte. Ilsley, Hannah (I950)
 
10709 Sister to Rebecca, his brother James's wife. Birdsall, Ruth (I13158)
 
10710 Sister to Ruth, his brother Andrew's wife. Birdsall, Rebecca (I13254)
 
10711 Skordas gives this for him: "Of Anne Arundel Co. Service 1667." This means that he came as an indentured servant, and after servitude (7 years or so) could claim his 50 acres of land.- Arnold, Richard (I3819)
 
10712 Skordas mentions that Col. Lewis Stockett "demands land in 1666 for transporting himself." Stockett, Col. Lewis (I5580)
 
10713 Skordas mentions that he was transported in 1658, along with two of his brothers Henry and Thomas. Stockett, Dr. Francis (I5581)
 
10714 Skordas says that Henry Stockett, brother to Francis, was transported in 1658. Stockett, Henry (I5582)
 
10715 Skordas says that Lewis Stockett immigrated in 1666 and demanded land at that point, but Newman places him in Maryland earlier, saying that Col. Lewis Stockett was made commander of forces on the Isle of Kent in 1664. He was unmarried.

To see:

Maryland Genealogies by Gen. Publ. Co., Inc. 1980, p. 138, a consolidation of articles from Maryland Historical magazines

Calvert Co. Gen. Newsletter Vol. VI, #2 May 1992, p. 7 
Stockett, Col. Lewis (I5580)
 
10716 some are visible at books.google.com Source (S688)
 
10717 Some of her letters are the subject of Rowland's article. Dulany, Ann (I11089)
 
10718 Some of John Taliaferro the immigrant. Taliaferro, Francis (I2179)
 
10719 Some six children of his are married bteween 1663 and 1679, including Magdalena. Möller, Johann (I1785)
 
10720 something in funny on this record: she is named “Mayme V. Tomlinson”--Tomlinson being Hugh’s *mother’s* name, not her’s, surely. Perhaps V is an abbreviation for her real last name. Family: Hugh Williford Birdsong / Mayme V. Tomlinson (F11278)
 
10721 Something to look up: William Amel Sausaman, Ten Generations of Hixsons in America, (1977, Springfield, Illinois). Hixson, Mary (I9301)
 
10722 son Benjamin's baptismal record; Lucerne is on his death certicate Mouchon, Jean (I5017)
 
10723 Son of Jacob Thomas and Sarah Russell. Thomas, Philip (I10040)
 
10724 Son of John Moore, immigrant to Pennsylvania. He and his wife Sarah "removed to the northern part of Chester County and became members of Uwchlan Montly Meeting." Moore, Thomas (I2536)
 
10725 Son of Martin W. Eagan of Copiah Co., Mississippi, who must have been a planter, since on the 1860 slave schedules he is listed as owner of 14 slaves. Eagan, Ira Manning (I15172)
 
10726 Son of Mayor Capedeville. A long description of their wedding appears on the Times-Picayune, 26 Apr. 1908 "Society" column. Capedeville, Auguste (I15269)
 
10727 Son of Pilgrim immigrant Elder William Brewster. Brewster, Elder Jonathan (I10444)
 
10728 Son of Rev. John Browne and Joanna Cotton. Had 8 children; Abigail was the oldest. Browne, Rev. Thomas (I1231)
 
10729 Son of Thomas and Ann Truman, brother to her sister Rachel's husband. Truman, William (I13219)
 
10730 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I9060)
 
10731 Sophia was Johann von der Howen's first wife. von Brunnow, Sophia (I16603)
 
10732 Source to check: Charles Brashear, A Brashear Family History Brashear, Elizabeth (I7028)
 
10733 Source: "Ferlot, Marie; Succession of," in Memoires du Bayou Lafourche 4.1:8. It is also available from the Louisiana Division of the New Orleans Public Library. Ferlot, Marie Hypolite (I6227)
 
10734 sources are not cited, though the site is based on published work, cited on its homepage, by Robert Moon. Source (S485)
 
10735 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I14714)
 
10736 sponsors at baptism were Louis Juerre and Marie Jeanne Focheux. Charpentier, Marie Louise (I16175)
 
10737 Sponsors at baptism were Simon Chevrey and Françoise Robinet. Charpentier, Françoise Victoire (I16171)
 
10738 Sponsors at the baptism were Viscount Agustin Hilarion Cesar de Santo Domingo, Chevalier of the Military Order of St. Louis, and his wife, Vicountesse Marie Charlote Jaury. The names and titles indicate that they would seem to have been leaders of the émigré community. Pitard, Maria Augustina (I15555)
 
10739 sponsors were "Juan Baptista Herpin" and "Marguarita Josephina Bodin" Pitard, Jean Baptiste Octave (I13649)
 
10740 SSDI date Conaway, Andrew Watson (I4958)
 
10741 SSDI information Conaway, Andrew Watson (I4958)
 
10742 SSDI Reference Pue, Clarence Haxall (I5157)
 
10743 SSDI reference Pue, Barton Grundy (I5160)
 
10744 SSDI reference, as Mary Male. Pue, Mary Lansdale (I5159)
 
10745 SSDI reference, where his birthdate is given as 11 October. Brown, Carroll Thornton Jr. (I1170)
 
10746 SSDI reference, which gives 11 Oct. as his birthdate. Pue, Harry Hutton (I5158)
 
10747 SSDIndex Berry, Violetta Lansdale (I12236)
 
10748 ssn data McLellan, Charles William (I97)
 
10749 SSN data Hartshorne, William Davis (I1185)
 
10750 SSN data Ligon, Percy Garland "Pete" (I1188)
 
10751 SSN data Hill, Chloe Wimberly (I4872)
 
10752 SSN data Hill, Cornelia Lansdale "Kee" (I4941)
 
10753 SSN data Hill, Thomas Lansdale "Danny" (I4949)
 
10754 SSN data Cagle, Edward Beale (I4957)
 
10755 SSN data Trapnell, Joseph (I5626)
 
10756 SSN data Gladys A. (I5939)
 
10757 SSN data Neveu, Waldo (I6625)
 
10758 ssn data Palmer, Sadie (I13693)
 
10759 ssn data Palmer, Horatia (I13694)
 
10760 ssn data McLellan, Charles Wilford (I13698)
 
10761 ssn data McLellan, Whitton H. (I13700)
 
10762 SSN data Putnam, Florence B. (I13712)
 
10763 SSN data Putnam, Florence B. (I13712)
 
10764 ssn data Hillman, Dewey (I13713)
 
10765 ssn data Bradford, George W. (I13715)
 
10766 SSN data Cressy, Mignon (I14241)
 
10767 SSN data Cressy, Mignon (I14241)
 
10768 SSN data Faget, Dr. Edouard Beeg (I14242)
 
10769 SSN Data Faget, Dr. Edouard Beeg (I14242)
 
10770 SSN Data. Holliday, Alexander Rieman (I9071)
 
10771 ssn index Beall, Gabrielle (I6621)
 
10772 SSN information Hill, Nancy Waters (I4955)
 
10773 SSN information Ligon, Edith Corinne (I5163)
 
10774 SSN information Ligon, Edith Corinne (I5163)
 
10775 SSN seems to have his birthdate improperly as 1870. Haro, Henry Jean François (I15997)
 
10776 St. James Parish gives May 12. Hanslap, Frances (I10767)
 
10777 Start of marriage record:

“Le six novembre mil sept cent soixant dix sept h.p. Julien le Moux fils majeur de trente sept ans de defunts Jean et Marie Lizé originaire et domicilié de la paroisse de la Magdeleine de Châteaugiron et Renée Pitard veuve de Julien Boué . . . .”

On her parish death record she is Renée Pitard spouse of Julien Lemoux, age 47 years (which seems two years too old). 
Pitard, Renée (I13967)
 
10778 starts at image 62/670.  Source (S1169)
 
10779 Stephen Clough, HOH; Males 16 & up: 1; males up to 16: 1; Females: 3; and no one else. If his wife was living, it might seem that he had 1 son and 2 daughters. Clough, Capt. Stephen (I3364)
 
10780 Stephen's family cannot be clearly link to the Salisbury family, but there is a brief discussion of Stephen in the volume--the story of his attempted rescue of Marie Antionette. Source (S271)
 
10781 stepson, aged 9; living with his mother Mathilde and stepfather Lucien LeDoux and their family Janin, Gilbert (I16559)
 
10782 Stetson (S369) gives Ruth's mother's name as Elizabeth; I go with S365 here, as his work is more recent. Hyland, Ruth (I10508)
 
10783 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12347)
 
10784 stillborn Florence (I10656)
 
10785 stone inscribed "Consort of Aaron Gregg"; http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=63247813 Demoss, Mary "Polly" (I6052)
 
10786 stone inscribed "Daughter of John & Isabella. age 11 months. 20 days" Gregg, Mary Ann (I12536)
 
10787 Stone inscribed "Daughter of John & Isabella. in 32nd year" Gregg, Laura Ellen (I12541)
 
10788 Stone says 1860; I go with the obit. Maupay, Edward (I13658)
 
10789 Styled as Sieur du Préau on his daughter’s marriage record. Barbard, Louis (I8304)
 
10790 suicide Hughes, Robert Simpson (I7419)
 
10791 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Callender Fayssoux Hadden, Jr. / Living (F2166)
 
10792 Tables are included at the end of the volume. Source (S1007)
 
10793 Taken from http://www.sallysfamilyplace.com/Wheeler/truxton.htm, Jan. 2004:

Will of Thomas Truxtun, Esq. 4 Nov 1820 - prob. 18 May 1822 Philadelphia Co PA
- Income of my estate to my wife: Mary Truxtun for herself and my unmarried daughters: Cornelia, Gertrude.  After decease of said wife, estate to my daughters: Elizabeth, wife of Theodore Talbot, Anna Maria wife of Dr. Thomas Henderson, Mary wife of John Swift, Esq, Emily wife of George Beal, Cornelia, Gertrude.
- Whereas I did give to my daughter Eliza or her husband in joint company with Henry Hammond or Evelina his wife land in Wayne County, Penna., which has been sold for taxes, my will is that $1000 be deducted from Elizabeth's share of my estate.
- Whereas I did give daughter Anna Maria after her marriage to Dr. Henderson (through Charles Biddle, Esq, $300) also proceeds from my share of Washington City lots purchased from late Benjamin Stoddert, Esq. $700 less be given her.
- "My valuable  books to be equally divided among  my six daughters and not sold at auction."
- "No demand to be made of Henry Benbridge for the bond I hold of him, as it might distress his family, nor of William Truxtun for his maintance heretofore, and the sums of money expended on him before he came of age when he should have provided for himself and become respectable, nor of Evelina Hamond up to the date of this instrument for her board and clothing for herself and children, nor for neglect in attending to Wayne County Lands as that neglect I impute to her husband Henry Hammond."
- Devises "My gold watch, seal key and Badge of the Cincinnati to my grandson: Truxtun Swift. My excellent brass sextant made by Ramsdel in London and telescope to my grandson Truxtun Henderson, All my other instruments and cloaths to my grandson Truxtun Beal. my full likeness picture to my daughter Elizabeth; the elegant rich silver urn given to me by the merchants and underwriters of Lloyds's London, and the case containing it with the gold medal voted me by Congress, the former in honor of making prize of the French National Frigate La Insurgent of 40 guns and the latter for vanquishing the French National Frigate LaVengeance of 54 guns which services I performed with U. S. Frigate Constellation of 38 guns under my command, I give the first to my daughter Cornelia and the latter to my daughter Gertrude, they being the youngest of my children. And I direct that these testimonials of the transactions which produced them may be preserved in the family as memorials of two naval actions performed in the very infancy of the Navy of the United States of North America, as much for the encouragement and imitation of those who succeed the commanders of the present day as to perpetuate my gratitude to those who have favored me with so honorable an evidence of their sense of the services I have rendered my country. I constitute and appoint my wife Mary Truxtun executrix.

Letters of Administration upon the estate of Mary Truxtun deceased were granted 21 Oct 1823 to Aquilla A Browne. 17 July 1829 he petitioned to be discharged from his trust as adm. of Thomas Truxtun and of Mary Truxtun, both deceased. So discharged.

Ref: Family History: PA Gen #1 - GPF III ST-Z, "Commodore Thomas Truxtun, U S Navy, of Jamaica LI, Perth Amboy, NJ Philadelphia PA" compiled by Lewis D Cook. 
Truxton, Commodore Thomas (I6043)
 
10794 Taken from the stone; in another place, Caughron gives June 16 as the date on the stone Barker, John H. (I12049)
 
10795 Taken from WPA records, Louisiana State Museum, RG 324. Reference to this found on ancestry.com. Source (S704)
 
10796 Tarleton Family Tomb, Dunn, Florence Lula (I6101)
 
10797 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3691)
 
10798 Teillé is in the Diocese of Nantes. His wedding record to Anne Marie Macquiau says that he was from Mouzeil, a village just a few km. to the west of Teillé.

Records are lacking in Mouzeil before 1668, and his birth record is not apparent after this. Presumably, then, he was born before this date.

He was styled “sieur de la Clause”; “sieur” is a bourgeois title that indicates that he owned some property. 
Pitard, Pierre (I15316)
 
10799 Thank you to David Quénéhervé for tracking down her and her parents in Ghent. Verhegghen, Françoise Marie Emanuelle (I8317)
 
10800 Thank you to David Quénéhervé for tracking down his and his family’s records in Belgium.

According to his son Alphonse Jr.'s death record, Alphonse Sr. was a native of Ghent, Belgium. Alphonse's Sr.'s obituary implies that he immigrated to the U.S. in about 1839: "Alfonse Gamard, in the sixty-eighth year of his age, a native of Belgium and for the last 35 years a resident of this city" (Daily Picayune, 20 November 1874, p 4, col. 4). This would make his arrival in New Orleans about 1839. This coincides with his marriage and the birth of his first child. He would have been about 33.

There is also this passenger arrival record from 1824:

Name: A. Gamard
Arrival Date: Nov 24, 1824
Gender: U
Port of Departure: La Havre
Ship Name: Brilliant
Family Number: 310421
National Archives' Series Number: M259-4
Port of Arrival: New Orleans

It seems likely that this is the same person; he would have been 18 at the time of this record. He seems, then, to have been moving back and forth. Perhaps he decided to settle in New Orleans because of his marriage.

His son Alphonse Jr.'s death record also records Caroline R. Simmons’ last name (this is also just about the only record the name "Simmons"). No marriage certificate exists for the couple in NOLA marriage records, and no marriage record exists for the couple in the NOLA parish church records. They may have been married in SC (see under his wife for mor here, however). While there is a "Pauline Gamard" in LA on the 1840 census, no other Gamards appear in LA or in SC at the time. Alfonse and his family appear in 1850.

A letter exists from Alphonse Gamard the immigrant dated 1848; it is a letter to his wife in Rapides parish from France, written in French, when he made a trip back there. If he was for the "last 35 years a resident," why was he writing to his wife in Rapides Parish? Note this immigration/arrival record, which seems to have been from that trip:

Name: ??? Gamard
Arrival Date: Nov 27, 1848
Age: 35
Gender: U
Port of Departure: La Havre
Place of Origin: Belgium
Ship Name: Vesta
Family Number: 120644
National Archives' Series Number: M259-29
Port of Arrival: New Orleans

In 1849 a case is recorded, Gamard v. Hart, that was appealed to the Lousiana Supreme Court over the ownership of a slave; see here on Google Books. The suit mentions that “Gamard was a country merchant, doing a very limited business. He was insolvent, by his own admissions in his proceedings on his surrender, at the date of his sale [of the slave, in 1843], and continued to be much embarrassed in his affairs at the date of the donation [in 1845].”

Family history has it that there was apparently a split in the family between his son Alfred and the rest after Alfred married into the protestant Hewitt family. 
Gamard, Alphonse Sr. (I3696)
 
10801 That she is a daughter of James and Martha is not absolutely confirmed, but is very probable by the proponderance of evidence. A daughter of her age is in James Strain's households in the 1830 and 1840 censuses. Strain, Achsah (I11938)
 
10802 The "Johnson family cemetery" of S281 contains the graves of his family, and the family of his son David. Johnson, John Jr. (I2719)
 
10803 The "son and heir" of his father Thomas. Marriott, William (I8090)
 
10804 The "son and heir" of his mother Ann (Newman 1.315); he was also named in the will of his great-grandfather Col. Charles Hammond (Newman 1.243). Marriott, Thomas (I8087)
 
10805 the 1850 census gives her age as 23, meaning her birth would be abt. 1827 Wimberly, Eliza Chloe (I267)
 
10806 The 1860 census gives her age as 10, and younger than her brother Milton.

In 1910, this family was living in Prince William County; in 1920, this couple alone was living in Washington, D.C.

I can't find this couple on the 1900 census, however, or their children. 
Gulick, Isabelle (I7366)
 
10807 The 1860 census gives his age as 12, two years older than his sister Isabelle. Gulick, Robert Milton Ash (I7369)
 
10808 The 1870 mortality schedule gives Ireland Sullivan, Ann (I4355)
 
10809 The 1880 and 1900 censuses record Mount and Keener families living next to each other in Baltimore. Mount, John Keener (I6593)
 
10810 The 1880 census says he was born in Massachusetts. His oldest daughter Zulme in the 1880 census seems to have been born to a first marriage.The 1910 census has "M3" under whether he's married, which would seem to indicate that he's been married 3 times.

He and his sons ran a large canning plant for fish in Gulfport, Mississippi. 
Dunbar, George Hacker (I9611)
 
10811 The 1900 census gives Sept. 1896 Leas, Hulbert (I14729)
 
10812 The 1900 census gives this date as May 1858. Portas-Martinez, Enrique (I15942)
 
10813 The 1900 census looks like 1877, but it must be 1879 from the 1880 census reading Turney, Jessie (I4109)
 
10814 The 1900 census says "Dec. 1864" at age 35. Degrange, George Edward (I202)
 
10815 The 1900 census says that a son Norbert Jr. is living with his parents, aged 3, born Feb. 1897. This conflicts with the NOLA birth indices, which say that Joseph Edward was born in January. Joseph Edward must be the 1 child that his mother lists as living, however, because he published a memorial to his father in 1926.

The NOLA death index also lists "Norbert Wiltz Jr." as dying at 10 mos. on 5 June 1894. I assume that that name on the 1900 census, then, is incorrect, and that it must refer to Joseph, one month off. 
Wiltz, Joseph Edward (I14678)
 
10816 The 1900 census says that he was born in Kentucy, but both of his parents were born in Louisiana—the 1910 and 1920 censuses, however, say both of his parents were born in Kentucky.

No children appear with them on censuses. 
Henry, William (I15540)
 
10817 The 1930 census shows her as the wife of Argue (?) D. van Osdol (who was born in Indiana in about 1898, like both his parents). So, this would seem to be her first married name; I assume Cresswell ("K" is the initial in 1930) is her maiden name. Cresswell, Hazel (I1852)
 
10818 The US Fencing Hall of Fame site's "Roll of Honor" describes Raoul Tanneret as a student of Gilbert Rosiere, who "taught fencing to many a Creole gentleman" at the Orleans Fencing Club.

Raoul Tanneret is listed as a notary for New Orleans from 3/1/1882 to 5/31/1886 by the New Orleans Notarial Archives.

There are these three death records, which may be of siblings:

Tanneret, Charles 3 yrs M W 1/18/1850 12 159
Tanneret, Edgar 3 mos - - 7/7/1868 43 56
Tanneret, Seraphine 14 mos F W 8/10/1852 13 308 
Tanneret, (Francis) Raoul (I3747)
 
10819 The Vital Records of Topsfield, Massachusetts says that she was born in Topsfield.

He seems to have been married twice:

Jan. 16, 1766 to Rebecca Hubbard
March 29, 1792 to Sarah Holden

(see in the Vital Records of Holden, Massachusetts to 1849: https://archive.org/details/vitalrecordsofho00hold/page/n3)

Israel the son of Israel and Betsy is baptized in Ipswich in 1791 in Linebrook Parish Church. 
Davis, Israel (I15763)
 
10820 The Vital Records of Topsfield, Massachusetts says that she was born in Topsfield. Davis, Hannah (I15774)
 
10821 The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy traces his ancestry back to the 17th century.

He appears on voter registration lists in San Francisco, California in 1869, 1873, 1875, 1882, 1888, 1890, 1892, 1898 at various addresses. He was married in Louisiana in 1890. He is also listed as "married" on the 1880 census; the only possibility in the household is "Posey G. Coffee."

In the 1910 census he is living with his wife Blanche and four daughters in his father-in-law Arthur Pitard's household. 
Coffee, Frank Larned (I185)
 
10822 The AG-BI gives this for a source: British invasion of Md, 1812-1815, By Will. Matthew Marine (Baltimore, 1913): 333. Did he serve in the War of 1812, then? Iglehart, James Jr. (I6982)
 
10823 The announcement of her marriage appeared in the New York Times dated 29 Apr 1897 and the New York Tribune dated 29 Apr 1897. Gill, Olivia Murray Bispham (I1504)
 
10824 The announcement of his marriage appeared in the New York Times dated 29 Apr 1897 and the New York Tribune dated 29 Apr 1897. Thompson, James Madison (I13780)
 
10825 The application says "Jeffries," but I can't find a place named Jeffries in New Hampshire. Parker, Edwin Llewellyn (I5879)
 
10826 The Archives of Canada tells this about him: “Son of Robert and Annie Gammon; husband of Fern Katherine Gammon, of Lethbridge, Alberta. B.A., B.Sc.”

Would his wife’s name be “Katherine Fern”? 
Gammon, Robert Ross (I15372)
 
10827 The are four different parts of the "Baltischen Ritterschaft" volumes, on Kurland, Estland, Livland, and Oesel Source (S1151)
 
10828 The article by Hunt also discusses her family. B/c she was a recusant, she in fact took the alias Elizabeth to hide her identity. Tentershall, Mary (I5419)
 
10829 The attached biography of her husband includes the story of the Ramsay family as well, including her grandfather Jonathan Ramsay of Kentucky. Ramsay, Martha Hannah (I12687)
 
10830 The author is a well-published historian who has turned to focus on his family; he does not record data or sources in the same fashion as genealogists, but this is how family genealogies should be written. Source (S516)
 
10831 The author of One Hundred Years Ago, S287 on this site. Murray, Elizabeth Hesselius (I9730)
 
10832 The author of an autobiography.

On his marriage, he writes:

"On the 9th day of the 3d month 1826, I was married in Friends' meeting house in Alexandria, to Elizabeth, daughter of John and Elizabeth Janney. Her parents had been residents of Alexandria, but were both deceased, and she lived with her stepmother Ann Janney. My wife and I were distantly related; our grandfathers being first cousins. We had known and esteemed each other for many years, and our friendship gradually ripened into a warmer and more tender affection, which being sanctioned and confirmed by the holy rite of matrimony, has resulted in a union that I regard as the greatest of all my temporal blessings. In prosperity and adversity she has been a safe counsellor, a sympathizing companion and a helpmeet steadfast in love and devotion.
   Soon after our marriage we went on a tour to the Falls of Niagara, thence to Montréal and Québec, returning by way of Lake Champlain and through several of the New England states. It was a season of unalloyed enjoyment."

According to Mangus, "Mirroring the nation's populace at large, Loudoun County Friends differed over slavery. In 1853 Samuel Janney, a member of the Society of Friends, proclaimed that slavery was nonexistent among his fellow Quakers in Loudoun County (Life of George Fox 466-72). Janney's claim regarding the Quakers and their ownership of slaves was delusory. Throughout the early nineteenth century, elders dismissed numerous Friends from Loudoun County's two meetings for owning slaves. Quaker minutes commonly listed notations such as ‘reported as holding slaves' or ‘extreme cruelty to a black boy & girl' as reasons for dismissal. The property tax records of Loudoun County in 1860 listed Janney, himself, as owning a slave with William Holmes, a fellow Quaker. Why Janney owned this slave is unclear. Perhaps he purchased the slave from an abusive master, similar to his acquisition in 1856 of a slave woman and child. Perhaps warm memories of the slave woman who cared for him as a young child motivated Janney to own this slave. Whether the minister violated Quaker precepts against slavery is unclear. What is clear is that slavery was a very divisive issue among the Quakers of Loudoun County." (Some references have not been included in this quotation). Immediately after purchasing the two women in 1856, Mangus adds in a note, he immediately gave them their freedom, but did not file paperwork for a while to this effect. Therefore it is possible that the slave in 1860 was the daughter he had purchased in 1856, and that the mother had died in the meantime. His opposition to slavery is well attested, and his home was a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Mangus's article does not focus on slavery, but on what Quakers did in Loudoun during the war, and how they were affected and treated by Union and Confederate forces (esp. Mosby's Rangers) during it. Friends did join the Confederacy and the Union, he contends, in much greater numbers than previously noted; which side they joined was aligned with whether they owned slaves. 
Janney, Samuel McPherson (I11080)
 
10833 The author of The Hall Family of West River (1941). He discusses all of his ancestors there, which is why I've included them in this file. He is my third cousin, three times removed; we have a common ancestor in Arnold Waters and Rachel Franklin. Hall, Thomas John III (I4282)
 
10834 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I11419)
 
10835 The baptismal record for her son J.B. Octave Pitard says that she was from the Parish of St. Andrew, Bordeaux, Dept. of Gironde, France. This is the parish that belongs to the cathedral; the cathedral in Bordeaux is the Cathédrale Saint-André de Bordeaux. The certificate also gives her parents' names.

Her marriage record also says that she was a "native of area of Saint-Andre de Bordeaux," and that she was "fille mineur et legitime de Jean Avril et Marguerite Andat." It says that she has a tutor, Jean Seguin. A tutor would be appointed at the death of both parents. Her mother had died in 1794, when she was named the "vivante epouse du sieur Jean Avril.”

She does not appear in the NOLA death records index, or in records of funeral expenses from 1843-46, or in the cemeteries' interment books for 1843-45. Her certificate of burial, however, places her in St. Louis #2. 
Avril, Angelique (I13648)
 
10836 The bible record of Ebenezer Clough Source (S772)
 
10837 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Bernard Hodges Williams, Jr. / Living (F2272)
 
10838 The Biographical Encyclopedia has 1851.  McLellan, William Jr. (I14409)
 
10839 The biography of his son Edgar in the Historical Review of South-East Texas says that he was born in Georgia, though this seems to be an error, perhaps for his own father William or another Tomlinson. This biography say of Augustus:

"Augustus A. Tomlinson, a native son of Georgia, when a young man in 1849 made the overland trip to California, and later returning to Louisiana he was an overseer on a sugar plantation there for a few years or until moving with his young wife to Marshall [Harrison Co.], Texas, where he became identified with wholesale and retail mercantile pursuits. In 1860 he joined the Texas Rangers, and he was stationed at Ringgold Barracks when the Civil war was inaugurated. Enlisting in the Confederate army, he served until the close of the war, and was made captain of the scouts in Colonel T. B. Likens' Regiment. In 1865 he resumed his mercantile pursuits at Harrisburg [In Houston], and he continued there for several years, but his death occurred at Bellville on the 3d of July, 1898, when sixty-eight years of age."

In the 1860 census for him—his wife is not in this household—there is a T.R. Hartman in his household, an attorney-at-law, aged 22 (b. abt. 1838). Presumably he was a relative of his wife's.

His wife does not seem to be living with him in the 1860 or 1870 census, and in 1870 the only child living with him was Willie Ruben. Apparently they were living apart at the moment. In these two censuses he was also living with his step-family the Farrows, with whom he was apparently in business (at least, in 1870 they had the same profession, "stock dealer"). In 1880 he was living in his son Edgar's household, this time with his wife. 
Tomlinson, Capt. Augustus Austere (I3871)
 
10840 The birth dates for her on the 1870, 1880, and 1910 censuses seem to conflict by 3-4 years with those on the 1900 and 1920 censuses; I go with the former. Simpson, Lillian E. (I7333)
 
10841 the birth record gives "17--" in Brown. Duckett, Martha (I8147)
 
10842 The birth record gives a date of 27 Sept. 1857; the 1900 census gives April 1855. I go with the census, thinking that he and his brother are nowhere else recorded as twins. Markey, Nicholas Thomas (I14510)
 
10843 The birth record is just a last name. She may have been a stillborn twin of Lawrence. Hacker (I15230)
 
10844 The birth record of her son "Vizente" names her "Maria Lucia Thomachichi, native of Ture in the jurisdiction 'de Venecia y ambos vecinos de ista cuidad.'" I am not sure what place "Ture" might refer to.

Her father's first name is not given there, but her mother's name seems to be Elena Sagioli. I take her last name from there and the burial record. Her grand-daughter Lucie Maurice's baptismal certificate, 1829, gives her name as "Romacci." Perhaps it is Tomacci?

Philip "Morris," her son-in-law, witnessed her death record.

There is also this death record in New Orleans:
Bravat, Marie Virginie . . . 37 yrs F, W 3/2/1844 . . . vol. 9, p. 796 
Tomachichi, Maria Louisa (I4687)
 
10845 the birth record says “obiit dies 13a 7bris eiusdem anni”—that is, died on 13 September of the same year Avril, Marie (I16122)
 
10846 The Bleeckers were descended from a Dutch family who immigrated to Albany, NY in the seventeenth century; see S105 for more information.

In the 1850 a "Miss Bleeker" is living in her household, aged 54, born in New York. 
Bleecker, Charlotte (I8538)
 
10847 The book "Early Families of Southern Maryland," vol. 1, by Elise Greenup Jourdan contains a section on the Orme family.

Note this:

Montgomery County, Maryland Land Records
500. Negro Daniel recorded manumission 17 May 1797, to wit. The bearer hereof, Negro Daniel, having been manumitted to be absolutely free at the death of my mother-in-law, Isabell Stallings, in the mean time is permitted to hire himself to any person wanting his services without any interruption from me, as witness by hand this 20th of February. Jeremiah Orme. 
Orme, Jeremiah (I10159)
 
10848 The book "Early Families of Southern Maryland," vol. 1, by Elise Greenup Jourdan contains a section on the Orme family. Orme, Elizabeth (I10557)
 
10849 The book presents the same descent in several different ways in several parts. Source (S363)
 
10850 The Boutte family is an Acadian/Cajun family. Some Information here is from http://www.acadian-cajun.com. For an article on this family, see: "Boutte, Francois-Cezar; Family of," Attakapas Gazette 9.1: 33. Boutte, Francoise Cezar Sr. (I12658)
 

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