Matches 901 to 1,150 of 12,200
# | Notes | Linked to |
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901 | according to the 1880 census and her obituary | Cullivan, Mary Ann (I14684)
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902 | According to the 1880 census her father was born in Switzerland (but this may be an error carried down from above). | Davis, Mary “Mamie” (I16033)
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903 | According to the 1880 census. | Pollock, Julian Savage (I4598)
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904 | According to the 1900 and 1910 censuses, he immigrated in 1896. I cannot find the original immigration record. Wedding record (digest): Vincent Taormina, born in Italy on 31 Dec. 1878, residing at 4431 Penn Ave, Pittsburgh, occupation stovemaker [an error for "shoemaker"]; and Maria DiVittorio, born in Italy 25 Jan. 1882, residing at 236 Edmund St., Pittsburgh. Consent of Salvator DiVittorio, living at 236 Edmund St. Married 27 May 1900 by Rev. B. Riscopo. In 1900 a James & Mary Taormina are living at 4431 Penn Ave.; he was born Dec. 1878, she born Apr. 1882. He's a shoemaker. Despite the date variations, this must be them, with Vincent as James. He traveled home, and arrived back in the US on the S.S. Carpathia on 16 Oct. 1908 in New York with his son Antonio. The record says that he's going to visit his wife Maria DiVittorio at 7808 Tioga St. in Pittsburg [the city was spelled that way at the time], so they had moved by then. Place of birth for Vincenzo is Trabia, Palermo, and he said his closest relation at home was his father Mr. Antonio Taormina in Trabia. Antonio his son was aged 7, a U.S. citizen; his place of birth was Pittsburg, PA. Tioga is off of N. Braddock on the Pittsburgh east side—at the time, this was more in the country. This also matches Vincent's address on the 1910 census. In the 1910 census, a John & Mary Haas are living at 7808 Tioga, so the Taorminas had left by then. On 6 Dec. 1911 his two youngest sisters and his mother arrived on the Cretic, bound directly from Brockville, Ontario. The family had settled there by 1911. What had happened is that both Anthony and Sam, another brother, had gotten sick—and Sam died—and a Dr. told them to move somewhere with cleaner air. On the Cretic as well was a Vincenzo Taormina, aged 16 (b. abt. 1895), from Palermo bound for Pittsburgh. He was also born in Trabia. His closest relative back home is his father Filippo Taormina. He's going to find his uncle Filippo Campisi at 7808 Tioga St. (Either he's mistaken, or confused, or the Haas family was renting, or moved). In any event, other related Taorminas, then, seem to have immigrated, and others appear in the censuses in and around Pittsburgh in 1900 and later. By about 1910, then, the family had moved to Canada. He took the Oath of Allegiance to Canada on 27 June 1922. His son Vincent Ignatius also recalled that the family moved to Brockville abt. 1909-10. Naturalization papers were completed in Brockville on 20 June 1922; at that point he gives his last name as Thormin. There was a findagrave record that placed him in Oakland Cemetery, Brockville, Ontario, Canada, but it is gone now. | Taormina, Vincenzo (I9)
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905 | According to the 1900 census and her obituary notice | Gillmartin, Rose (I14596)
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906 | according to the 1900 census; there must be an error, however, since his brother Arthur was born just 5 mos. earlier. | Pitard, Louis Octave (I10853)
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907 | According to the 1911 census, when she was living with her daughter Mary Anne, she arrived in Canada in 1886. | Watson, Mary Ann (I14065)
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908 | according to the 1920 census | Ruiz, Elizabeth (I15895)
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909 | according to the 1920 census | Family: Marc E. Strauss / Alice Helene Colomb (F10722)
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910 | according to the 1930 census | Family: Henry Miller / Evelyn Ross Coffee (F9619)
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911 | According to the 1930 census, both of her parents were born in Mexico, as she was. There are no children listed with them in 1930. Much information about her comes from that census, but is clearer on her petition for naturalization. She and Turney were married when she was 20. | Monarres, Gaudalupe "Lupe" (I5751)
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912 | according to the 1930 census, when she and her husband are both listed has having been first married 8 years before. | Family: Bernard J. Kelly / Margaret Markey (F9614)
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913 | According to the 1940 census, a note in the margin says that “Mr. Birdsong filled out blanks in California in the first part of May.” Shortly after his wife’s death in March 1967, a note appeared in the Redlands, San Bernardino Co., CA newpaper that the “Birdsong, Hugh W. and Mayme V. Cucamonga Homstead” was for sale, (Cucamonga being the name of an area in Redlands). | Birdsong, Hugh Williford (I15981)
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914 | According to the ANB, her last name and parentage are unknown. Wikipedia names her as Swinnerton, with no source. | Johanna (I13558)
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915 | According to the History of Cooper County, Missouri, by W. F. Johnson, referring to her son: "Mr. Frances Lyon Myrtle (Rogers) Roberts was born in Bunceton, MO., January 23 1871. she is a daughter of Capt. Ferdinand A. and Sallie (Lionberger) Rogers, the latter of whom was born in 1847 and died in 1915 and was a daughter of Isaac H. Lionberger, a pioneer of Cooper County. Capt. Rogers was born in 1832 and died in 1879. He had the honor of being the first sheriff of Cooper County elected on the democratic ticket after the close of the Civil War. He served in the Confederate Army as captain of a company, was made prisoner and confined on Johnson's Island. He was married after the close of the war to Sallie Lionberger. Mrs. Sallie (Lionberger) Roberts was a descendant on the maternal side from Capt. John Ashby, grandfather of her mother, Mary (Ashby) Lionberger, who served in the Revolution. The children born to Capt. F A and Sallie Rogers were as follows: Mrs. Frances L M Roberts of this review; Mary died at the age of 18 years; and Chatte, wife of Frank Waltz, station agent of the M. K. & T. R. R. at Boonville. Capt. Rogers was born in Ohio and descended from Virginian ancestry . After the close of the Civil War, he located in Bunceton, MO., and served six years as sheriff of the county. He was filling the duties of this official position at the time of his death. Capt. Rogers was an influential and commanding figure in Cooper county for many years." | Lionberger, Sallie (I7203)
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916 | According to the Memoirs of Georgia>, "Henry, the ninth son, father of Ezekiel H., was born in North Carolina in 1800 [sic]. When a youth me moved to Bibb County, Ga, and became a planter of moderate means and married Nancy O. Childers, of Washington County, Ga., fomerly of Noth Carolina. He becamse the father of eight children, of whom there are now [1895] living: Ezekiel H., Sarah, widow of Benjamin A. Hudson, and Martha, wife of Richard R. Williams. He became a resident of Houston county in 1828, was a whig in politics, and was ready at all times to defend his principles in a solidly democratic community. His death occurred in 1840 and that of his wife in 1866. He was among the most substantial citizens of his county anbd a man of wide popularity." | Wimberly, Henry (I4881)
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917 | According to the ANB, she was a childhood friend of her husband's. Her father was apparently John Dandridge Henley, USN, a nephew of Martha Washington. | Henley, Eliza (I1684)
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918 | According to the Annals of Warren, in a page on wild animals showing up in towns, "During the deep and drifted snows of March, 1829, a stray deer, weighing about 200 lbs., was killed in Thomaston by Lincoln Levensaler. This was the last of these beautiful tenants of the forest, slain in our vicinity; though a few years later, two carabous made their appears and were shot at in Warren and its vicinity." | Levensaler, Lincoln (I3550)
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919 | According to the Argall website, "William Argall was also a fine Tenor (singer). He made a tour of Australia in 1913, and was later billed (wrongly) in the USA as an Australian Tenor." | Argall, William (I15891)
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920 | according to the baptismal record, she was born "le dixe de julliet dernier," and baptized “le duxieme jour” of the next month. | Goutelle De Beaumier, Marguerite Louise (I13631)
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921 | According to the Barker pedigree, he and his wife removed from Duxbury to Swansey, Massachusetts; he says that their first child was born at Hingham, but after that all their children were born in Duxbury. Deane notes the move as well. See: L. Vernon Briggs, History and Genealogy of the Briggs Family, 1254-1937. | Briggs, Cornelius Jr. (I643)
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922 | According to the Barker pedigree, she and her husband removed from Duxbury to Swansey, Massachusetts. Deane notes the move as well. He says that their first child was born at Hingham, but after that all their children were born in Duxbury. | Barker, Ruth (I2598)
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923 | According to the Binney History, she was born in Philadelphia, married Philip Lansdale of the Pennsylvania Bar, went to Europe with her mother in 1872, and died in 1876. She seems to have died from complications from childbirth. There is an erroneous erratum at the end of the Binney genealogy (page 260) which says to read "Lausdale" for "Lansdale." | Binney, Maria Templeton (I8546)
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924 | According to the biography of her son Henry, she was born in England. Perhaps. She was the sister of Lydia, her husband's first wife. She had 14 children with him. Also called “Arah.” | Whipps, Avery (I4401)
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925 | According to the biography of his grand-son Henry (son of Thomas T. and Avery Whipps), he was born in England, though this is not correct according to Newman, who is much more accurate. He built a house named "Montmorence" in Baltimore Co. which Newman describes as "pretentious." It was inherited by his son John Tolley. According to Peden, his family bible, spanning the years 1734-1863, has been published; Peden gives information from it. | Worthington, Samuel (I9111)
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926 | According to the Brinton history, "John lived on a farm of two hundred acres in Kennett Township, about a mile below the forks of the Brandywine. His son John inherited the property, and lived there for many years." | Brinton, John Sr. (I11346)
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927 | According to the Colonial Dames application for Mary K.C. Riggs, He had a daughter named Ruth who married John Hall (d. 1791), who was a son of Edward Hall (d. 1743/44), in turn a son of Edward Hall (d. 1714, m. Jane Sisson). I don't see who these Halls are. | Marriott, Augustine (I10271)
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928 | According to the compilation Marriages of Some Virginia Residents, series 1, vol. 2 (page 311), comp. Dorothy Ford Wulfect, (Naugatuck, CN:pub. by the author, 1963), Vincent Dye was born abt. 1715; her reference is to the Hartford CT Times Genealogy Page (30 Aug. 1958). He married Sarah Artepe before he left. Because this couple had 15 children they are an important originary family for much work on the subsequent Dyes. They stayed in New Jersey until after the Revolution, and all their children were born. He then bu 1782 migrated from New Jersey to Prince William Co., VA. He located himself just south of what is now Manassas. I don't know that he was in the Revolutionary War, but brothers and cousins of his were. His will is recorded in Prince William County: Given Name: Vincent Surname: Dye Year of first entry: 1796 Wills/Book: H Wills/Page: 166 Inventory and Appraisements/Book: H Inventory and Appraisements/Page: 180 Accounts/Book: H Accounts/Page: 373 Final Account/Book: H Final Account/Page: 180 | Dye, Vincent A. (I9304)
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929 | According to the Darlington history, he was "disowned by Concord Monthly Meeting, 1m. 7, 1784 for mustering with the militia. His further history unknown." | Brinton, John III (I11463)
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930 | according to the death record of their daughter Migmon | Family: Boyd Goodrich / Louise Dufour (F10611)
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931 | According to the Driver history, "Elder Davis was on a committee to treat with Mrs. Nathaniel Rogers to preach in Linebrook. He was one of the founders and ministers of LInebrook parish church; he gave the land on which the church stood." According to Gage's history of Rowley, "Linebrook parish is constiututed fo inhabitants of Rowley and Ipswich. November 15, 1749, a church was organized there by the signature of sixteen males to a covenant. This was on the same day of the ordination of their first minister, the Rev. George Leslie, and preparatory to it." The family of his grandson Israel Davis and his second wife Sarah Dresser is recorded in the Linebrook church records. | Davis, James (I15787)
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932 | According to the Early Records of Rowley, Benjamin Scott. Brought with him his wife Margaret. She was the widow Margaret Scott who was executed in Salme 22 Sept. 1692, as guilty of "certain detestable arts called Witchcraft and Sorceries." He had nine children; death not of record; will dated 6 June 1618; proved 26 Sept. 1671; inventory taken July, 1671." | Scott, Benjamin (I6117)
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933 | According to the Everett history, "she was born and grew up in Ipswich, MA; in 1659 she accompanied her mother and step-father to Andover MA where she m. and lived the rest of her life." Sources disagree over her parents; this conflict even appears on her findagrave page. Osgood and Noyes list her parents as Christopher Osgood and Margery Fowler. Others identify their parents as John Osgood and Sarah Booth. The Everett history says that this is incorrect. I go with Osgood and Noyes and Everett. The Osgood history says that "it is probable that Thomas [Osgood, her brother] and his entire family were in the Dorchester, Mass., emigration which went to South Carolina about 1697." If that's so, perhaps her sons John and Jonathan migrated there at the same time. | Osgood, Deborah (I4652)
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934 | According to the Everett history, John Russ "grew up in Newbury MA but family moved to Andover MA in 1645; he m. and lived the rest of his life there; owned a grist mill on the Shawsheen River; was a dep. to the Gen. Ct; in 1711 he and his wife were listed as members of the new organized South Church, Andover." Three of his children, Andrew, John, and Jonathan, moved to Berkeley Co., South Carolina, near Charleston. Jonathan is along the main line this site traces. | Russ, John Jr. (I4640)
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935 | according to the family record, "Our little girl was born on June 30 1868 at 1/2 past 8 o'clock dead." | Pitard (I15927)
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936 | According to the Frazee history, Hannah "was born, I think, on June 3, 1789 or '90. She married Josiah Pollock, and raised a large family, most of them boys." None of the children are named in the volume. | Frazee, Hannah (I13526)
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937 | According to the grave, "Daughter of William Enoch Lansdale and Effie L. Daw Lansdale. Unmarried, entered Visitation Convent. Withdrew before final vows due to illness (Rhuematoid Arthritis)." | Lansdale, Kathryn Muriel (I11411)
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938 | According to the Harlan history, he seems to have married two Harlan sisters; this is not in the Baldwin history cited here. He had 11 children, all apparently via Mary. | Baldwin, Anthony (I11339)
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939 | According to the headstone application, and here: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=13121847 | Scudder, Lt. James Blair (I3388)
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940 | According to the History of Hingham, "RICHARD, prob. a widr., and advanced in yrs., came to Hing. in 1636, and d. here 25 Jan. 1660-61. In his will of 20 Feb. 1659-60, proved 2 May, 1661, mentions dau's Dinah, Elizabeth, and Margaret w. of Thomas Lincoln (the husbandman), to whose eldest s. Joshua, the testator gave his lands in Hing." | Langer, Richard (I10371)
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941 | According to the history of his brother Thomas, she lived near Minerva, Bracken Co. | Worthington, Julia (I12628)
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942 | According to the James Brackett Descent, the following letter was written by Charles as a letter of introduction to his brother Ralph's new wife Florence Putnam: "I, Charles, was 23 years of age when I first came to Phoenix, Arizona on January 15, 1894. At that time there was only one through railroad line in Arizona and that was the Southern Pacific, 35 miles away with a jerk water line into Phoenix. The conductor asked me where I was going and I told him to the insane asylum to meet my brother George and he accommodated me by stopping the train to let me off at 24th Street. I stayed in the best hotel in Phoenix, paid 25 cents for my bed, and there were four of us to a room. "There were two hotels at that time. The Luhurs, which still stands and has been remodeled, also an old adobe on forth street called the Lemon Hotel. The First National Bank was the only bank. Our capital was situated in a log building at Prescott, Arizona and our territorial governor was Mr. McCord, our population was half Mexican. Tucson a railroad town was larger and much more advanced than Phoenix. Glendale consisted of a store and blacksmith shop. Our street cars were drawn by horses and one night after riding out to the asylum I saw one held up. Two men took $20.00 away from the conductor and disappeared into the mesquite thicket. "At that time it was the rule no naked Indian or one wearing only a breech cloth be allowed in town, so at city limits they stopped and pulled over their head an old straight wrapper. Then on leaving they would run to the city limits and yank off their clothes. The mothers carried their babies on their backs and the children of school age were run down and roped in order to bring them to school. After the first year they came readily. "I first worked for the Bartlett Heard Co. in their orange grove. This job lasted four months. From there I went with George to work at the asylum as dairy man and stayed two years. While working there I married Clara Duncan on July 31, 1895. Then I went work for Mr. Welch and had charge of his orange grove. On July 1896 I returned to Texas for a year. On returning to Phoenix I went to Buckeye and took up a homestead five years. During this time it was necessary for me to take my team etc. and work with the other ranchers to repair our dam across the river in order to have irrigation. I finally sold out and moved to Phoenix and bought the eighty I now live on. "All my children were born in Arizona except Lucretia, who was born in San Marcos, Texas—Wilford and Erele on the homestead and the others in Phoenix—one boy James Duncan, born on the homestead, died and was buried at Liberty, Arizona. At this time I have fourteen grandchildren. "Charles McLellan December 15, 1937" | McLellan, Charles Adams (I6205)
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943 | According to the marriage certificate, he was “natif de lat paroisse darith et habitant de celle de Lescheraine.” | Morand, Joseph (I15378)
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944 | according to the marriage license application | Little, Evelyn (I14710)
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945 | according to the marriage record | Watkins, Ruth (I14709)
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946 | according to the marriage record | Barker, Clementine (I14711)
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947 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I14713)
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948 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I14714)
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949 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I14716)
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950 | according to the marriage record | Smithey, Marie Rita (I14717)
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951 | According to the marriage record, both were age 28 at their marriage. In 1930, he was living at 630 Pine Street, New Orleans, LA. | Gregory, William B. (I4529)
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952 | According to the Maryland Archives Biographical Series (written for school children), Charles Calvert grew up with the knowledge that he would some day become the Third Lord Baltimore and Proprietary Governor of Maryland. As the son of ]Cecil Calvert and Anne Arundell, Charles lived the privileged life of an English noble. Charles was also raised Roman Catholic, just as the rest of the Calvert family was. As a young man, Charles witnessed the religious conflicts between Protestants and Catholics in the English Civil Wars. He watched his father, Cecil, handle very difficult political situations in order to protect his control of the Maryland Province. Cecil Calvert sent his 24-year-old son Charles to Maryland in 1661. Charles replaced his uncle Philip Calvert as Governor. Philip then became Charles' advisor in government affairs. Charles remained colonial Governor until his father's death in 1675. The colony's population and economy expanded quickly in Charles' term. Charles created four new counties on the Eastern Shore. During his term as Governor, Charles ordered many public projects to help Marylanders. He built court houses, jails, roads and highways. He improved the defense of the colony by building magazines where gunpowder could be stored. Under his administration, Maryland's government passed laws regulating how people could leave land to their heirs when they died. Charles also reformed the lower house in the Maryland Assembly, now called the House of Delegates. He decided to restrict voting to men who owned properties worth 40 pounds. He also ruled that only men who owned 1,000 acres of land could be elected as a delegate. He changed the voting requirements, because he was concerned that less wealthy delegates might oppose the Proprietary government. Slaves's lives were made more difficult under Charles's government. During his term, the Assembly officially made slavery legal, and ordered that slaves serve their masters for life. In 1675, Cecil Calvert died in England. Charles inherited his father's lands, title and government roles. He became the Third Baron of Baltimore and new Lord Proprietor of Maryland. He was the first member of the Calvert family to serve both as Maryland's Governor and Lord Proprietor. Charles went to England shortly after his father died, but returned to live in Maryland and oversee the colony personally. During his years as Proprietor, there was a boundary dispute between Maryland and William Penn's Quaker colony in Pennsylvania. Charles left Maryland and sailed back to England in 1684 to settle this dispute with William Penn. Before the boundary line could be verified, another revolution happened in England. Two Protestants, King William and Queen Mary accepted joint rule of England. Since Charles was Catholic, the new King and Queen took away his right to govern Maryland. Now Maryland was ruled directly by the English Monarchy and overseen by a Royal Governor. Charles died in 1715 before he could recover power over his colony. In that same year, King George I granted Charles' grandson full proprietary rights to govern Maryland. The grandson was named Charles after him, and appears as a tiny boy in a famous portrait of his grandfather. | Calvert, Governor Charles 3rd Lord Baltimore (I5667)
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953 | According to the McDonald biography of Augustus Tomlinson (available on the Texas Histories page), evidence of their children and parents comes from Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. by Donald J. Hébert. I have yet to consult this myself. How and why did his family move from Germany and Pennsylvania to Louisiana? I am not sure of how this family's story works as yet. There is work on German settlement (the "German Coast") in Louisiana which I have not yet consulted. This family apparently came from Germany via Pennsylvania; I don't know how that plays into the the German Coast settlers. Perhaps the Hartmans moved because they had family in Louisiana? > A Jacob and a James and an Andrew Hartman also appear in newspapers (The Planter's Journal, Franklin, Attakapas Co., around 1849-1853; see on Chronicling America. | Hartman, Michael (I3894)
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954 | According to the MIHP application, "Lucy A. B. Worthington conveys to Richard H. Lansdale et ux. "Parts of tracts Snowdens Purchase, Addition, Linthicum's Discovery and Inspection." 213 acres.-(Deed Book EBP 8 Folio 255)" | Lansdale, Richard Hyatt "Uncle Dick" (I282)
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955 | According to The New Prussian Noble's Lexicon, des Frieherrn von Zedlitz (Murkig, Leipzig, 1830—this is the reference given in "Legend II" by Alma von Rosenberg in vol. 1 of the family history), this family applied for the Kurlandic Knighthood in 1620 as of the nobility. The arms were given on 2 August 1631. | von Rosenberg, Gotthard Piele (I3202)
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956 | According to the Osgood history, "The Andover records give no account of him or any of his family after the birth of his child Mehitable (1674). . . . It is probably that Thomas and his entire family were in the Dorchester, Mass. emigration which went to South Carolina about 1697." Perhaps his sister Deborah's sons John and Jonathan migrated there at the same time. | Osgood, Thomas (I4666)
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957 | According to the Penn Archives--see at http://www.archives.upenn.edu: Morris Hacker, Jr. (October 29, 1866 - March 3, 1947) entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1882. He was the son of Morris Hacker and Isabel Wetherill. Not much is recorded about Hacker's athletic pursuits at University if Pennsylvania as a freshman. During his sophomore year, however, he is known to have been very active in athletics, serving on the class teams for football, baseball, tennis and lacrosse and as a member of the Class of 1886 Lacrosse Club. He also joined the Zeta Psi fraternity during his sophomore year. During his junior year, Hacker was a substitute on the University Baseball team and a member of the class teams for football, baseball, cricket and lacrosse. He also joined the Class of 1886 Tennis Club. In his senior year he was the member of the Class of 1886 Racket Club as well as of his class football team. As an undergraduate, Hacker also served as one of the models for Eadweard Muybridge's landmark study, Animal Locomotion. Matriculating in the Towne School of Sciences but leaving the college before the end of his senior year, he became a civil engineer. His professional life included the positions of Chief Engineer of the Ohio Railway and Electric Company, and Superintendent of County Roads as well as Building Inspector in Washington, D.C. An Orthodox Quaker, he served as a member of the Appeal Division of the Registration Board, Washington, D.C. during World War I. | Hacker, Morris Jr. (I12913)
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958 | according to the pension application filed by his wife. | Prados, Jean Baptiste Eugene (I3080)
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959 | according to the pension file | Davis, Capt. Israel (I11951)
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960 | According to the photo, findagrave seems to have transcribed this date incorrectly. I assume that he belongs here as one of the children of Julius and Louise; In the 1910 census Louise says that 2 of her children have died. | Umland, Gust. (I14051)
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961 | According to The Political Graveyard, ". Delegate to Continental Congress from Maryland, 1774-75, 1779, 1783-84; member of Maryland state senate, 1786-95." According to the Biographical Dictionary of the U.S. Congress, he was "a Delegate from Maryland; born near Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Md., November 27, 1729; completed preparatory studies; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice at Annapolis; member of the council of safety; delegate to the Maryland convention in 1775; Member of the Continental Congress in 1775; continued the practice of law; died on his plantation, "The Vineyard" (now known as "Iglehart"), near Annapolis, Md., March 8, 1797; interment in the family burial ground on his estate." | Hall, John (I4309)
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962 | According to The Political Graveyard, "Democrat. Lawyer; member of Illinois state senate, 1853-59 (3rd District 1853-55, 20th District 1855-57, 1857-59); circuit judge in Illinois, 1860; delegate to Illinois state constitutional convention 9th District, 1869-70; candidate for U.S. Representative from Illinois, 1872." | Bryan, Silas Lillard (I8695)
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963 | According to The Political Graveyard, "Democrat. Member of Maryland state house of delegates, 1777-97; state court judge in Maryland, 1791-92; member of Maryland state senate, 1801-02; U.S. Representative from Maryland at-large, 1802-05." | Bowie, Walter (I4267)
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964 | According to The Political Graveyard, "Member of Maryland state house of delegates, 1785-90, 1801-03; state court judge in Maryland, 1790-96; Governor of Maryland, 1803-06, 1811-12; Presidential Elector for Maryland, 1808; member of Maryland state senate, 1809-10." He had his portrait painted by Katherine Walton (d. 1938) (see the Maryland Archives, the Annapolis Collection, Accession number: MSA SC 1545-1078). | Bowie, Governor Robert (I3979)
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965 | According to the Political Graveyard, he was Mayor of Annapolis, 1851-52. | Worthington, Brice T.b. (I6674)
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966 | According to The Political Graveyard: "U.S. Representative from Maryland 2nd District, 1811-15, 1819-26; member of Maryland state senate, 1815; Presidential Elector for Maryland, 1816; Governor of Maryland, 1826-29; U.S. Senator from Maryland, 1833-37; died in office 1837." He seems to share a common ancestry with Thomas Richard Kent from Anne Arundel Co. | Kent, Governor Joseph (I8455)
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967 | According to the records, she "m. Joseph E. Beaty, 6th day of 8th month, 1812, moved to Ohio, and d. 1st day of 8th month, 1890." | Briggs, Anna (I11453)
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968 | According to the references given, Courts returned to Otley, Yorkshire and married Margaret Robinson on April 7, 1645 in Otley Parish (Yorkshire Parish Soc., 164). She was the daughter of Anthonie Robinson (Robynson), and had been baptized in Otley 1 Oct. 1620. Her father was b. 1589 and died June 15, 1668. Her mother was Mary (also Marie) Saxton, b. 1593 in Otley (dau. of Lawrence Saxton). She married Anthony 26 June 1614, and died 28 August 1632. On Otley, see http://www.otley.co.uk/index.html. | Robinson, Margaret (I9547)
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969 | According to the stories about her mother, she was put in an asylum after her mother’s death. | Turnbull, Blanche (I10856)
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970 | according to the Tufts genealogy: Mary, son of Peter Tufts, was b. 19 June 1655; m. 15 Oct. 1674, John (son of John Edes, rector of Lawford, Essex Co., Eng.), b. in England 31 March, 1651; ship carpenter; res. Charlestown. This couple had children: -John, b, 1680; -Edward, b. 1681; -Mary, b. 1684, m. Thomas Willet,1708; -Peter, b. 19 Aug 1686; Jonathan b. 1688; Boston, Marblehead; m. Jane Willet, 1712; -Sarah, b. 1691, m. Charles Wager, 1713. John Eades married to Mary had a son John in Charlestown b. 22 Jun 1680; that would seem to be this one. But: John Eades married to Catherine had a son John who was born on 25 October 1680. | Tufts, Mary (I15811)
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971 | According to The Villager, he "was a prominent local citizen and landowner for whom Davidsonville was named. He studied Methodism in Washington, D.C., and lived and farmed in Davidsonville." He seems to have been part of the early 19th century Methodist revival, then, since there is no evidence that his father, buried at the nearby Episcopal church, was Methodist. One of his children, George Earnest, is buried at an Episcopal church. Four of this couple's children died as infants. | Davidson, Rev. Thomas (I12946)
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972 | According to the vital records, he was born and died on the same day. But, the will of his father Stephen Hall names Stephen in the order as his oldest son. Virtually all secondary sources I have seen on the web give this birthdate as the birth of his oldest son, a merchant in Boston. I have no idea what to make of this problem. Willard has him as "the Lieutenant" who died in 1755, which could only have happened if he was born abt. 1670, since the Lt's age is given as 85 on his gravestone. | Hall, Stephen (I15857)
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973 | According to the von Lieven family history, she and her husband had 6 children. This seems to refer to those who survived to adulthood. She was a widow at her marriage to von Rosenberg. | von Lieven, Agnesa Gertruda (I11802)
|
974 | According to the von Lieven history, she lived with her husband for 10 years before she died, though no dates are given. | von Rettelshorst, Margaretha Benigna (I16651)
|
975 | According to the Woodward history, "Caleb., Sr., must have been born about 1760, as he was a boy of about 17 years at the time of the battle of Brandywine, for he viewed it from the hills of his home. He removed to East Marlborough township, near Unionville, about 1780." According to the Darlington history, his wife "received a certificate from Concord, 11m.1.1781, to New Garden, and thence back to Concord, 12m.4, 1784. She was disowned 4m.4, 1787 for marriage to her first cousin, Caleb Woodward, b. 10m.10, 1757; son of Nayle and Lydia (Brinton) Woodward, of East Marlborough township. He married a second wife, Elizabeth Baldwin, b. 4m.19, 1773, daughter of Anthony and Mary (Harlan) Baldwin, by whom he had children, Caleb, William, Joseph, Elizabeth, Mary, Elvina, Baldwin, and E. Malinda. He resided in East Marlborough, near Unionville, where he died about 1840. By his will, dated February 18, 1839, he devised all of his estate to his daughter, Elvina Woodward." | Woodward, Caleb Sr. (I9528)
|
976 | According to this he was a naturalized citizen. | Brossmann, Carl “Charles” Henry (I3362)
|
977 | According to Thomas (S201, 53), he was an attorney in Philadelphia, PA, and his wife was from Philadelphia as well. | Thomas, John Moylan (I7893)
|
978 | According to Thomas, "He was one of the earliest settlers on the Pautextent river, in Maryland, there being a surveyor's warrant to lay out for him the Broad Neck there, say fifty acres, July 15, 1651. He was probably the Thomas Thomas who first came over with Thomas Passmore, in the latter part of 1635." (S201 85). This couple had 4 children. They are not related, at least in America, to the Thomas family of West River, MD. | Thomas, Thomas (I9242)
|
979 | According to Thomas, he "is said to have been an officer in the British Army," and therefore could not have been a Quaker when an adult. | Coale, Philip (I11054)
|
980 | According to Thomas, she "entered the Georgetown Convent in 1847." | Snowden, Eliza (I11278)
|
981 | according to tombstone | Couret, Emma Olivia (I10315)
|
982 | according to tombstone. | Johnson, Joseph (I7669)
|
983 | According to Vose, his widow (second wife Jane McIntyre) was appointed administratrix 29 May 1855. | Robinson, Thomas Vose (I14336)
|
984 | According to Waldo Lincoln, "Thomas Lincoln "the husbandman," was brother of Stephen Lincoln and like him came from Wymondham, Norfolk, Eng., and settled at Hingham in the autumn of 1638. . . . He resided on Fort Hill street, ‘on the upland by the highway going to Weymouth mill.' His wife, Margaret, was daughter of Richard Langer, who settled in Hingham in 1636." He refers here to the history of Hingham (3.16; and 2.422 for the Langers). | Lincoln, Thomas "The Husbandman" (I9955)
|
985 | According to Waldo LIncoln, Stephen Lincoln "came to New England from Wymondham, county Norfolk, England, with his wife Margaret and his son Stephen, in the ship ‘Diligent,' arriving Aug. 10, 1638, and soon after settled in Hingham" (10). His reference here is to the History of Hingham (2.476) In his will he also mentions his mother Joan, who also apparently immigrated with him in the "Diligent." | Lincoln, Stephen (I10370)
|
986 | According to Warfield he was "Deputy Sheriff and Register of Wills at Annapolis prior to 1790, when his widow, Elizabeth Brice Gassaway, made a deposition concerning the Rutland estate. He was succeeded by his half-brother, General John Gassaway, an officer in charge of Annapolis during the War of 1812." This implies that general John was the son of his father Henry and Henry's second wife, Dinah Battee, but I'd like confirmation of this. | Gassaway, Thomas (I12892)
|
987 | According to Warfield he was an "assistant cashier of the Farmers National Bank of Annapolis, and recorder fo teh ancient South River Club." | Gassaway, Louis Dorsey (I724)
|
988 | According to Warfield, "When a girl of sixteen, Grace O'Neil arrived at the Bermudas in the ship 'Diana.' Becoming Mrs. Waters, they removed to Elizabeth City, now Hampton, where their first son, William, was born. He became an active citizen of Northampton. Upon the death of Edward Waters, the widow became the wife of Colonel Obedience Robins." | O'Neil, Grace (I11775)
|
989 | According to Warfield, he was "the founder of the Annapolis branch" of the Gassaways (173). Warfield says that "Henry Gassaway [was the] oldest son of Major Thomas and Susannah (Hanslap) Gassaway," but he must mean the youngest son. | Gassaway, Henry (I6727)
|
990 | According to Warfield, she had 11 children with her husband Louis Gassaway. | Hendry, Rebecca (I12891)
|
991 | According to Welsh, "His home was the original plantation of Henry Oneal Welsh [his uncle] in A.A. Co., inherited by his father Rd. in 1794. He was vestryman at All Hallows' Parish Church, 1826, ‘28, ‘38-45." | Welsh, Thomas (I6752)
|
992 | According to Whitley, this couple had 11 children. Some of them are given Quaker dates, but not the first two, which seems to indicate that they became convinced around 1700 or shortly after. | Duckett, Richard (I6638)
|
993 | according to wife’s obit. | Bernos, John H. (I15562)
|
994 | according to wife’s obituary | Harrison, Edward (I15472)
|
995 | According to Worrall, in a section about the movement from stage coached to railroads, "William Hartshorne (1742-1852) and Phineas Janney (1778-1852), Quaker merchants from Alexandria, were the main promoters of the Little River Turnpike. After Phineas took over management of the turnpike compan in 1802, it was observed that his reports to his board of directores were invariably ‘full of thees and thous and common sense.' Phineas's father, Israel Janney (1752-1823), Quaker farmer, store-keeper, and miller of Goose Creek, was a leading light for the building of the Leesburg-Georgetown turnpike." Worrall also records that, in 1793, "William Hartshore, 51, a Quaker merchant from Alexandria, who had been on friendly terms with [George] Washington for twenty years, was one of the six Friends who went to Sandusky [Ohio, to meet with the Iroquois]. The six were away from home four summer months in 1793. Ten tribes were represented at Sandusky, of whom the Iroquois, Shawnees, Wyandots, and Delawares expressed pleasure at the Quakers' presence ‘as peaceable and just men.' The six friends listened quietly while Indian spokesman addressed the U.S. Commissioners, headed by Timothy Pickering, Washington's Postmaster General. Is the Great White Father willing to make the Ohio River the boundary line?, the Indians asked. Will he move the whites off our land west of the River? Timothy Pickering replied at length, saying in essence, No, it is not possible but the U.S. will pay well for the land. The Indians did not accept this reply, and another treaty talk was set for the summer of 1794 at Lake Canandaigua in New York State. The Iroquois asked for Quakers to be present again and William Savery and three more Philadelphia Friends attended. But this conference, too, ended inconclusively. Then the U.S. turned again to a mailed fist solution of the problem. In August 1794 Anthony Wayne commanding the Western Army crushed a force of 2,000 braves in Ohio's Miami River valley. General Wayne then burned the surrounding Indian villages, and in 1795 he dictated the terms of the Treaty of Greenville. That opened Ohio for settlement and condemned the tribes to live on reservations." For an article about him, see A. Glenn Crothers, "Quaker Merchants and Slavery in Early National Alexandria, Virginia: The Ordeal of William Hartshorne," in Journal of the Early Republic 25.1 (Spring, 2005): 47-77. Among much other information about his life and community, this short biography appears early in the article: "Hartshorne's early life in Virginia offered little foreshadowing of his future radicalism. Born in New Jersey in 1742, he moved south in 1774 at the tail end of a significant migration of Friends to northern Virginia that began in 1740s. In early 1775 he established a partnership with local merchant John Harper and in the 1780s established his own "general hardware and all purpose store," where he sold a wide variety of imported manufactured goods and purchased the agricultural products of the northern Virginia countryside. The town of Alexandria grew and prospered in the postrevolutionary years when northern Virginia's farmers shifted from tobacco to grains, sparking significant economic development. Hartshorne'sbusiness grew along with the town. Responding to the increased production of grains in the 1790s he constructed a mill on the outskirts of the town on what he soon called the Strawberry Hill plantation. By the early nineteenth century the mill had become the centerpiece of his business activities and in 1803 he moved his residence to the plantation. Hartshorne also invested heavily in Alexandria real estate, at his peak owning eighteen town lots. At the same time, he joined in the political life of the community. After Alexandria was incorporated in 1780 he served in the town government, beginning as a tax commissioner and surveyor of the streets, and eventually serving as a member of the city council in the late 1780s and early 1790s. Thereafter,he left active politics, though he remained a staunch Federalist and, like most Quakers, supported the new federal constitution in 1787." (48-9) | Hartshorne, William H. (I2937)
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996 | According to Worrall, in a section about the movement from stage coached to railroads, "William Hartshorne (1742-1852) and Phineas Janney (1778-1852), Quaker merchants from Alexandria, were the main promoters of the Little River Turnpike. After Phineas took over management of the turnpike compan in 1802, it was observed that his reports to his board of directores were invariably ‘full of thees and thous and common sense.' Phineas's father, Israel Janney (1752-1823), Quaker farmer, store-keeper, and miller of Goose Creek, was a leading light for the building of the Leesburg-Georgetown turnpike." I don't see a Phineas as his son in the EAQG, as below, but that doesn't mean that there wasn't one. Worrall also records that he was an emmissary from the Virginia meetings to the Ohio indians in 1796, bearing letters from the Secretary of State and the blessing of George Washington. William Hartshorne was also and emissary on other trips. Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy: Virginia [p.609] GOOSE CREEK MONTHLY MEETING Loudon County, Virginia Israel born 28-5-1752 died 18-8-1823 marry (1) 5-5-1773 Pleasant HAGUE who died 4-3-1779 daughter Francis & Jane (YARDLEY) Hague 4 child: Jane, Abijah, Sarah & Phineas. Israel marry (2) 17-8-1790 Ann PLUMMER daughter Joseph & Sarah (Pipe Creek Md) 7 child: David, Pleasant, Jonathan, Daniel, Israel, Jr., Lot Tavenner & Deborah Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy: Virginia Loudon County, Virginia: Israel born 28-5-1752; died 18-8-1823; son of Jacob & Hannah (INGLEDUE) Janney, of Loudon Co., Va.; marry (1) 5-5mo-1773 at Fairfax meetinghouse, Pleasand HAGUE; died 4-3mo-1779; daughter of Francis & Jane (YEARDLEY) Hague of same Co. Israel was granted certificate to Pipe Creek monthly meeting, Md. 22-7-1780 to marry Anna PLUMMER; daughter of Joseph & Sarah Plummer, of Frederick Co., Md.; they were marry 17-8-1780 at Pipe Creek meetinghouse; Anna (PLUMMER) Janney, 2nd wife of Israel Janney, removed with husband, received on certificate from Pipe Creek monthly meeting, Md. 23-12-1780. Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy: Virginia Loudon County, Virginia: Israel born 28-5-1752; marry 1st 1772 Pleasant HAGUE, daughter Francis & Jane; marry 2nd 17-8-1780 Ann PLUMMER, daughter Joseph & Sarah; 4 child. by 1st wife; 7 by 2nd Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy: Virginia Loudon County, Virginia Francis, recently deceased, and who was disowned 27-5-1780 "for taking the Test and joining the Revolutionary Army," presented to this Mtg, before his death, a paper confessing himself asking "forgiveness of the Lord and sympathy of Friends, subscribing himself "your afflicted friend, Francis Hague 28-10-17 80"; his acknowledgment "is now accepted by this Mtg. At the same Mtg (28-10-1780) the Mtg ack that the three orphan sons of Francis Hague viz: Francis, Samuel & Jonah were now wards of the Mtg., appointed Mahlon, Joseph & Israel Janney & john Schooley as a committee to look after their welfare and to try to provide for them an opportunity to learn suitable trades. At the Mtg held 23-12-1780 the Comm reported they had found a suitable place for Samuel. At the meeting held 24-8-1782 it was reported that Jonah Hague (above) had personally chosen Benjamin Purdom & Wm. Hough as his Guardians, who were approved by the Mtg and directed to bind Jonah Hague to Abel Janney, a Hatter, to learn the Hatter's Trade and to "join him by Indenture to serve said Abel Janney till he arrives at the full age of 21 years" There is no record of what was done about Francis Hague, the eldest son. | Janney, Israel (I9159)
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997 | according to ww1 Draft | Liuzza, Joseph Philip Jr. (I14781)
|
998 | according to WW1 draft record | Somerset, Walter J. (I14179)
|
999 | according to ww1 draft registration | Eagan, Eugene Prentiss (I15173)
|
1000 | According to Zimmerman (S122), some have claimed that her last name is Beard, but there seems to be no evidence for this. | Ruth (I8952)
|
1001 | Act 1053: https://archives.bordeaux-metropole.fr/ark:/75241/vta5c2ebf9e95820/daogrp/0/95 | Avril, François (I16192)
|
1002 | Act 240 A: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vtae1ab2e78844f778e/daogrp/0/32 | Avril, Jeanne (I16089)
|
1003 | Act 434: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vtafaf0d87921ac2681/daogrp/0/59 | Avril, Louis (I16087)
|
1004 | Act 798: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vta795b9cdfc59440b8/daogrp/0/84 | Avril, Hugues Auguste (I15198)
|
1005 | Act A 116: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vta079d92aacc549c82/daogrp/0/19 | Avril, Marie (I16088)
|
1006 | Act A 812: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vtaf8b2e278b4a186bb/daogrp/0/70 | Avril, Angelique (I13648)
|
1007 | Act A 852: https://archives.gironde.fr/ark:/25651/vtaac289ef6b0a65c70/daogrp/0/63 | Avril, Catherine René (I15189)
|
1008 | Actually, it should be "Poydras"; aged 4 | Bemiss, Cloudsley (I13048)
|
1009 | Actually, it should be "Poydras"; aged 6 | Bemiss, Alice (I13046)
|
1010 | Actually, it should be "Poydras"; aged 8 | Bemiss, Barsilla (I143)
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1011 | Ada and Laura are the youngest of 5 children in the 1915 NY State Census. There are two Notre Dame cemeteries in Worcester; I'm not sure at which one he's buried. | Santimaw, Frank (I15143)
|
1012 | Ada and Laura are the youngest of 5 children in the 1915 NY State Census. | Anna (I15142)
|
1013 | address at death, according to the death record. | Tureman, Thomas Young Payne "Pap" (I2704)
|
1014 | address from obituary and death certificate | Tomlinson, William Ruben (Willie) (I3876)
|
1015 | Advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt during the New Deal and through the War. | Hopkins, Harry (I16406)
|
1016 | Adwood is not in Cheshire? | Heald, Mary (I2240)
|
1017 | after 1900 census | Neal, Walter Algernon (I7498)
|
1018 | After Henry Sewall's death, she married Charles Calvert, and became the mother of the 4th Lord Baltimore. See Barnes' article for a bibliography on her. The connection of this family to the tree is via her first husband's son Nicholas Sewall, who married into the Burgess family. She may also be a Plantagenet descendant. According to Barnes as well, she comes from a noble British bloodline: "the Lowes were a family of gentry status from Denby, County, Derby, and her mother was a relative of the Earl of Shrewsbury. . . . "Lady Jane is noteworthy for more than her bloodlines, however. At a time when most land grants were made to men, she was the patent holder of numerous tracts in Maryland. In Dorchester County she patented 600 acres called Indian Neck, 1,000 acres called Warwick (for the home county of her first husband), 200 acres called Secretary's Point (at one time Henry Sewall was Secretary of the Province), and 3,000 acres called Derby (for her own county of birth). In St. Mary's County she patented 1,200 acres called Mattapany Sewall, which had originally been patented by Henry Sewall for 1,000 acres. In Talbot County she patented 1,000 acres called Sewall's Range which was originally surveyed for Henry Sewall. In what is now Worcester County she patented 1,000 acres called Low Adventure (possibly for the Lowe family) and 1,000 acres called Hap Hazard. "In all, Jane Lowe Sewall Calvert patented 9.000 acres of land. She was not the only woman to patent land in early Maryland in hre own name, but the acreage granted her far surpassed that of any other woman in the colony. Jane died intestate, and tehre is not rewcord of how much erh personal estate was worth. The first lady of Maryland is one of the few, if not the only, woman to be designated as a propositus for whom applicants may claim membership in the National Íociety of Colonial Dames of America." | Lowe, Jane (I5666)
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1019 | After her husband's death, she and her sister Caroline, and her daughter Jennie, often traveled to Switzerland, likely for her health. | McLellan, Helen (I3380)
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1020 | After her marriage, she and her husband moved to Waldoboro, Maine. | Sylvester, Michal (I3562)
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1021 | After his daughter Sarah was born, he moved to western North Carolina (the part that was later Tennessee). From there he moved to Logan Co., Kentucky in late 1793, after Rezin Jr. was born. On Feb. 19, 1800, he moved to Livingston Co., Missouri, on the Ohio River. In 1809, the family moved again (and for good), south to St. Landry Parish, Louisiana. This is where his son Jim Bowie finally grew up. Rezin and Rhesa, his twin brother's name, are names of Scots origin. | Bowie, Rezin Pleasant (I4010)
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1022 | After his father's death in 1878, his mother placed him in the Lafayette Asylum for Destitute boys. | Bemiss, Richmond Cyrus (I13045)
|
1023 | After his father's death in 1878, his mother placed him in the Lafayette Asylum for Destitute boys. After he grew up, he lived with his mother for most of his life, and never married. | Bemiss, St. John Downing (I13047)
|
1024 | After his first wife, Sarah, died he migrated to Mason Co., Kentucky. He married his second wife there about 1800, and then went to Miami Co., Ohio in about 1803. | Dye, Andrew (I9490)
|
1025 | After his marriage he moved to Shelby Co., Tennessee which is also where his cousin John Waters lived (I5295). | Waters, Richard Duckett (I5300)
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1026 | After marrying he moved to Kittery, Maine, where his children were born; Holman just lists the first three. According to the summary of Lowell given in Lash, "John Decker married Sarah Bennett, January 21, 1705-06, the daughter of Dr. David Bennett and Mary (Plummer) Bennett (Rowley Vital Statistics). They moed from Rowley to Kittery, Maine, where their oldest son John was born in 1707 and then moved to Newington, N.H. . . . According to [Lowell], he moved to Portsmouth, N.H. in 1730. . . . he died at the home of one of his sons in Wiscasset, Maine, in 1754; his wife Sarah died about the year 1752." | Decker, John Jr. (I6121)
|
1027 | After she died, her younger sister married John Gregg. Her first name is given in S253. Middle name also "Malvina." | Hamilton, Damaris Melvina (I4229)
|
1028 | After the 1850 census I can find no further record of him. He is likely to be the nephew who, according to reports, died with his Uncle Dr. Jean Baptiste Hacker in 1854; articles describe his nephew as a "lad of 13" who died with him and his daughter. | Pitard, Octave Florian (I177)
|
1029 | After the 1860 census, no further records are evident. | Pitard, Mary (I13469)
|
1030 | After the 1880 census, no further records are evident. A “Mrs. John T. Pitard” appears in a newspaper article in 1894 (“The Newboy’s Festival: Patronesses of the Picayune Table,” Times-Picayune, Tuesday, 10 April 1894, p8). He seems to be the only likely candidate for who her husband could be, but it’s a slim bit of evidence. | Pitard, John (I10839)
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1031 | After the death of her father James, she lived with John Higgins Strain until she married her husband; this no doubt is why her son John was named after him. She died suddenly of peritonitis. An obituary of her death is in the Lansdale Bible. According to this, the family moved from Montgomery County to Anne Arundel County "16 years ago," which would be about 1890. In fact, they moved just after her husband Thomas Franklin Lansdale died, "leaving his widow and five small children who are grown now." They moved there to a farm they called "Enfield," named after a farm which had been owned by Lansdale ancestors. The family was quite poor, the poorest, John Lansdale Sr. said, of all of their neighbors in the community. In the 1900 census, the only child not living in her household is Richard Hyatt, who would have been about 17. | Strain, Eliza Wimberly (I33)
|
1032 | After the death of her first husband, J.B. Mahe-Desportes, she is left as the "tutor" of their two minor children, about which exist a series of probate papers. | Lacoste, Catherine Eulalie "Emilie" (I13622)
|
1033 | After the early death of her husband, she raised her three boys alone in what was called the "Ash Court, an earlier Ogilvie property at the fortress wall in Memel." | Ogilvie, Amalie Dorothea (I12976)
|
1034 | After the war he moved from Fishing Creek, SC, to Livingston, Kentukcy. | Love, Andrew (I13228)
|
1035 | After the War he was a Professor of natural history at Virginia Agricultural And Mech, Blacksburg, Va., February 1873. I have included his direct line back to the Mason family of "Gunston Hall"; there are other children along the way I have not necessarily included. | Ellzey, Dr. Mason Graham (I7854)
|
1036 | After the war he was later a Judge in the Orphan's Court of Montgomery Co., Maryland. | Griffith, David (I2961)
|
1037 | After the war, "He was for several years member of Board of Selectmen of Oxford, and also Supt. of Schools of the same town. He was Trial Justice for over fourteen years. Member of AF&AM of Maine; and T. A. Roberts Post, GAR of Maine." | Edwards, Sydney Danforth (I1660)
|
1038 | After the war, and her husband's death, she moved to Frederick Co. to live with Thomas W. Lupton (b. about 1826--I assume a brother?). She is listed in the census with the last name Lupton, though her children are as Simpson. Three of her children (Jonas, Anna, Emma) are living with her there in Opequon Twp.; three others (John, Margaret, Sarah) are living in another household (James ?Cather's) in Back Creek Twp., Frederick Co. | Lupton, Sarah J. (I7307)
|
1039 | After whom the Maryland county was named. Married at only 13. She had 9 children in all. Neither she nor her husband every visited Maryland. She was descended from the very well connected Arundel family of England, who had been related to other other wise connected to monarchs for centuries. | Arundell, Anne (I735)
|
1040 | agd 23, born in Louisiana as with both parents; living with her husband in her father's household | Prados, Lucie Marie Bernos (I149)
|
1041 | age 1, born in Maryland | Parker, Cordelia (I10154)
|
1042 | age 10, born in Louisiana as with both parents | Hartman, Jerald (I10865)
|
1043 | age 11, born in Maryland | Lansdale, Charles (I10256)
|
1044 | age 12, born in Louisiana as with both parents | Hartman, Benton (I10864)
|
1045 | age 14, born in Louisiana as with both parents | Hartman, Roger (I10863)
|
1046 | age 16, mulatto, born in Louisiana; in the household of Daniel Maupay (her cousin Lorenza Fernandez's husband). | Bertus, Zelia Elizabeth (I8218)
|
1047 | age 17, born in Germany | Umland, Johanna (I6416)
|
1048 | age 17; living with her father and uncle John H. Strain | Strain, Eliza Wimberly (I33)
|
1049 | age 18 (born Aug. 1871); born in Maryland as with both parents | Owens, Elizabeth Deale (I5134)
|
1050 | age 18, born in Maryland like both parents | Gore, Minerva J. (I10348)
|
1051 | age 18, single, born in Illinois; machinist at shipyard; both parents born in Wales. | Middleton, Trevor Clywd (I91)
|
1052 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I10985)
|
1053 | age 1; with his parents, in his grandmother's household | Strain, Mary Jane (I5758)
|
1054 | age 2, mulatto, born in Louisiana | Maupay, Cecilia Marie "Cecile" (I48)
|
1055 | age 21, "clerk," born in Lousiana | Degrange, Joseph H. (I198)
|
1056 | age 21, born in Maryland like both parents, "farmer" | Gore, Octave (I10347)
|
1057 | age 22 yrs, 6 mos, 24dys | Worthington, Dr. Thomas E. (I12488)
|
1058 | age 22, born in Louisiana; both parents born in Germany | Schwabe, Louise "Lulu" (I15135)
|
1059 | age 22, planter; he is living in his mother-in-law's household, and is mistakenly named Augustus Hartman (a ditto mark is mistakenly carried down). | Tomlinson, Capt. Augustus Austere (I3871)
|
1060 | age 23, born in Alabama | Benedict, Henry O. (I13756)
|
1061 | age 25 | Fernandez, Lorenza Maria (I3100)
|
1062 | age 25, born in South Carolina (this age is definitely young) | Simmons, Caroline Rebecca (I117)
|
1063 | age 26, "at home" | Lansdale, Thomas Franklin (I32)
|
1064 | age 27, born in Maryland, like both parents | Gore, Rosalie (I10346)
|
1065 | age 29 (born Mar. 1871); born in Maryland; father born in Maryland, mother in Pennsylvania; lawyer | Perkins, Clarence Warrick Sr. (I6592)
|
1066 | Age 34 when married. | Sanford, Elizabeth Virginia (I2710)
|
1067 | age 34, his wife Catherine age 40 | Lansdale, Charles (I7598)
|
1068 | age 36, born in England | Sullivan, Ann (I4355)
|
1069 | age 37 (27 at marraige); born in Louisiana as with parents. | Arata, Lucie (I3703)
|
1070 | age 39; born in Maryland; father born in Maryland, mother in Pennsylvania; lawyer | Perkins, Clarence Warrick Sr. (I6592)
|
1071 | age 4, born in Louisiana | Leblanc, Marie Joseph Oscar (I10352)
|
1072 | age 40 | Simmons, Caroline Rebecca (I117)
|
1073 | age 40, "manufacturer," real estate worth $77,000 | Lansdale, Thomas Hyatt (I270)
|
1074 | Age 45, born in Virginia | Holmes, Mahala (I7756)
|
1075 | Age 46, born in Virginia; farmer; realty 15,000 | Vansickler, Philip (I7755)
|
1076 | age 47, born in Wales, immigrated 1896; plaster contractor | Middleton, Joseph (I13873)
|
1077 | age 47; living in his brother Charles’ household | McLellan, Alden Charles (I61)
|
1078 | age 48, born in England | Sullivan, Ann (I4355)
|
1079 | age 49, born in Ohio; father born in New Jersey, mother in Ohio | King, Sarah (I6080)
|
1080 | age 4; with his parents, in his grandmother's household | Strain, James Archibald (I6029)
|
1081 | age 6, born in Louisiana | Couret, William Henry Jr. (I3733)
|
1082 | age 6, born in Louisiana | Waters, Laura B. (I10216)
|
1083 | age 68, "gardener," born in France | Maupay, Daniel Sr. (I6215)
|
1084 | age 8, born in Maryland as with both parents | Owens, Elizabeth Deale (I5134)
|
1085 | age 8/12 (census taken in June; born in Sept. 1899); born in Maryland as with both parents | Perkins, Clarence Warrick Jr. (I6594)
|
1086 | age 9, at home, born in Louisiana; father born in Alabama, mother in Louisiana | Davis, Minerva (I7179)
|
1087 | age 9, born in California; father born in New York, mother in Maryland | Macy, Mary Lloyd (I16407)
|
1088 | age 9, born in Maryland | Hodges, Thomas (I10558)
|
1089 | age according to 1880 census | Savage, Margaret Currens (I4206)
|
1090 | age and place taken from her marriage record. | Pollock, Louise "Lou" G. (I5896)
|
1091 | age at death 11 yrs, 9 mos. | Sellman, George Constantine (I12964)
|
1092 | age at death 7 yrs., 1 m., 11 days | Sellman, Maria Elizabeth (I12963)
|
1093 | age at death was 10 yrs., 6 mos., and 7 days. | Sellman, Anne Callahan (I12962)
|
1094 | age at death was 17 yrs., 10 mos., and 7 days | Sellman, Mary A.d. (I12958)
|
1095 | age at death was 29 years, 10 months, 17 days | Zumstein, Phoebe (I15503)
|
1096 | age at death was 3 yrs., 5 mos., and 22 days | Sellman, Samuel Thomas (I12960)
|
1097 | age at marriage was 26 | Fallier, Charles Edouard Gustave (I3657)
|
1098 | age at marriage was given as 35 | Geipel, Johanne Juliane Henriette Friederike "Hannchen" (I3654)
|
1099 | age de soixante ans | Meyer, Chrétien (I3805)
|
1100 | age estimated because she was 18 at her marriage | Sparrow, Matilda (I6999)
|
1101 | Age given as “quatre ans” on the death record. | Pitard, Jeanne Marie (I8253)
|
1102 | Age given on the death record as “un ans.” | Pitard, Julien (I8252)
|
1103 | age is a census estimate, though the censuses conflict | Barrow, Madeleine Mahala (I5352)
|
1104 | age recorded as 59 | Hill, Ester (I9031)
|
1105 | aged | Skinner, Joseph Bucey (I6791)
|
1106 | aged | Guillotte, Alice (I14211)
|
1107 | aged 11, born in Virginia, as "Mary" | James, Mary (I7270)
|
1108 | aged 15, born in Ohio | Lansdale, Mary E. (I10521)
|
1109 | aged 46, born in Colorado; father born in New York, mother born in "U.S."; no profession | Smith, Kate Estelle (I5184)
|
1110 | aged 8, born in Maryland | Marriott, Edward (I3647)
|
1111 | aged "(40)" [looks like a guess]; born in Kentucky; father in Pennsylvania; mother in Connecticut | Hamilton, Eliza Jane (I10819)
|
1112 | aged 0 | Currens, James B. (I16980)
|
1113 | aged 1 | Strain, Thomas Truxton (I5756)
|
1114 | aged 1 | Lansdale, Emma Neota "Neta" (I6511)
|
1115 | aged 1 | Stoppel, William Henry (I16789)
|
1116 | aged 1 (b. Sept. 1898), b. in D.C. | Lansdale, Gilbert Russell (I6877)
|
1117 | aged 1 (born Apr. 1899), born in Washington; father born in Illinois, mother in Washington; boarder; name given as as "Baby"--no name yet | Root, Anna Evelyn (I11551)
|
1118 | aged 1 (born Aug. 1898 as a twin); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Wiltz, Alice Theresa (I14693)
|
1119 | aged 1 (born Aug. 1898, as a twin); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Wiltz, Alcine Joseph Sr. (I14692)
|
1120 | aged 1 (born Feb. 1899); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Hemenway, Ola (I14592)
|
1121 | aged 1 (born July 1898); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Turnbull, Blanche (I10856)
|
1122 | aged 1 (born July 1898); born in Louisiana; father born in Illinois, mother in Maine | Palmer, Sadie (I13693)
|
1123 | aged 1 (born June 1898); born in Louisiana; father born in Mexico, mother in Louisiana | Portas, Inez Catherine (I3143)
|
1124 | aged 1 (born May 1899); born in Louisiana as with both parents | DuCros, Wilna Felicity (I14727)
|
1125 | aged 1 (born Nov. 1898); born in Louisiana; at school | Markey, Bernard John (I14513)
|
1126 | aged 1 (born Sept. 1898); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Bourgeois, John Harold (I14723)
|
1127 | aged 1 10/12, born in Louisiana as with both parents | Marshall, Doris Copley (I14701)
|
1128 | aged 1 4/12, born in Louisiana as with both parents | Draube, Joseph Edward Jr. (I13016)
|
1129 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I14164)
|
1130 | aged 1 9/12 | LeDoux, Gustave Pitard (I4618)
|
1131 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1189)
|
1132 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Private (I3731)
|
1133 | aged 1 and 1/2; born in Louisiana as with both parents | Pitard, Clarence James Jr. (I150)
|
1134 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2038)
|
1135 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I7653)
|
1136 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I5602)
|
1137 | aged 1 and 3/12, born in Maryland as with both parents | Weedon, Margaret Myles (I6607)
|
1138 | aged 1 and 4/12 (census taken in April); born in Maryland as with both parents | Perkins, Charles Franklin (I6597)
|
1139 | aged 1 and 5/12 (census taken 15 April); born in Louisiana as with both parents | Degrange, Prof. Elmore Joseph (I11319)
|
1140 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I3301)
|
1141 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I10515)
|
1142 | aged 1 and 8/12 (in June of 1880); as "Nathan," with his father in his grandfather Couret's household | Couret, Nelson Francis (I3704)
|
1143 | aged 1 and 9/12, born in Delaware; both parents born in Maryland | Weedon, Prof. William Stone (I4082)
|
1144 | aged 1 year | Robinson, Jackson (I1347)
|
1145 | aged 1 year, 8 mos. | Curling, Ada R. (I11848)
|
1146 | aged 1 yr 1 mo; born in Texas as with both parents | Umland, Alan (I14047)
|
1147 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I13708)
|
1148 | aged 1, born 7 Feb 1900 | Wooding, Leonard Douglas (I14097)
|
1149 | aged 1, born 7 Mar 1901, as "Baby Wooding" | Wooding, Beryl Dorothy (I14098)
|
1150 | aged 1, born Apr. 1901 | Wooding, Maude Alfreda (I5036)
|
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